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MourningView posted:The chargers are gonna play in a stadium that'd be the 4th smallest in the Sun Belt and it's still an upgrade I was curious. A list of capacities in every NFL and FBS Stadium: 1. Michigan Stadium, Michigan - 107,601 (B10) 2. Beaver Stadium, Penn State - 106,572 (B10) 3. Ohio Stadium, Ohio State - 104,944 (B10) 4. Kyle Field, Texas A&M - 102,733 (SEC) 5. Neyland Stadium, Tennessee - 102,455 (SEC) 6. Tiger Stadium, LSU - 102,321 (SEC) 7. Bryant-Denny Stadium, Alabama - 101,821 (SEC) 8. Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium, Texas - 100,119 (B12) 9. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, USC - 93,607 (Pac 12) 10. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles Rams - 93,605 (NFL) 11. Sanford Stadium, Georgia - 92,746 (SEC) 12. Rose Bowl, UCLA - 92,542 (Pac 12) 13. Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, Florida - 88,548 (SEC) 14. Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn - 87,451 (SEC) 15. Memorial Stadium, Nebraska - 86,047 (B10) 16. Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, OU - 84,389 (B12) 17. MetLife Stadium, New York Giants - 82,500 (NFL) 18. MetLife Stadium, New York Jets - 82,500 (NFL) 19. Memorial Stadium, Clemson - 81,500 (ACC) 20. Fed Ex Field, Washington Redskins - 82,000 (NFL) 21. Lambeau Field, Green Bay Packers - 81,435 (NFL) 22. Notre Dame Stadium, Notre Dame, 80,795 (IND) 23. Camp Randall Stadium, Wisconsin - 80,321 (B10) 24. Williams-Brice Stadium, South Carolina - 80,250 (SEC) 25. AT&T Stadium, Dallas Cowboys - 80,000 (NFL) 26. Doak Campbell Stadium, FSU - 79,560 (ACC) 27. Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans Saints - 76,468 (NFL) 28. Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City Chiefs - 76,414 (NFL) 29. Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver Broncos - 76,125 (NFL) 30. Bank of America Stadium, Carolina Panthers - 75,419 (NFL) 31. Spartan Stadium, Michigan State - 75,005 (B10) 32. NRG Stadium, Houston Texans - 72,220 (NFL) 33. Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium, Arkansas - 72,000 (SEC) 34. New Era Field, Buffalo Bills - 71,608 (NFL) 35. Legion Field, UAB - 71,594 (CUSA) 36. Faurot Field, Missouri - 71,168 (SEC) 37. M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore Ravens - 71,008 (NFL) 38. Mercedes-Benz Stadium - Atlanta Falcons - 71,000 (NFL) 39. Kinnick Stadium, Iowa - 70,585 (B10) 40. Qualcomm Stadium, SDSU - 70,561 (MWC) 41. Husky Stadium, Washington - 70,500 (Pac 12) 42. Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia Eagles - 69,596 (NFL) 43. Nissan Stadium, Tennessee Titans - 69,143 (NFL) 44. Lincoln Financial Field, Temple - 68,532 (AAC) 45. Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara 49ers - 68,500 (NFL) 46. Heinz Field, Pittsburgh Steelers - 68,400 (NFL) 47. Heinz Field, Pitt - 68,400 (ACC) 48. Century Link Field, Seattle Seahawks - 68,000 (NFL) 49. FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland Browns - 67,895 (NFL) 50. Everbank Field, Jacksonville Jaguars - 67,246 (NFL) 51. Lucas Oil Stadium, Inianapolis Colts - 67,000 (NFL) 52. Gillette Stadium, New England Patriots - 66,829 (NFL) 53. Gillette Stadium, UMass - 66,829 (IND) 54. U.S. Bank Stadium, Minnesota Vikings - 66,655 (NFL) 55. Lane Stadium, VT - 66,233 (ACC) 56. Raymond James Stadium, USF - 65,890 (AAC) 57. Raymond James Stadium, Tampa Bay Bucs - 65,890 (NFL) 58. Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati Bengals - 65,515 (NFL) 59. Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Dolphins - 65,326 (NFL) 60. Hard Rock Stadium, Miami - 65,326 (ACC) 61. Ford Field, Detroit Lions - 65,000 (NFL) 62. Alamodome, UTSA - 65,000 (CUSA) 63. Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Mississippi - 64,038 (SEC) 64. LaVell Edwards Stadium, BYU - 63,725 (IND) 65. University of Phoenix Stadium, Arizona Cardinals - 63,400 (NFL) 66. Kenan Memorial Stadium, UNC - 62,980 (ACC) 67. California Memorial Stadium, Cal - 62,717 (Pac 12) 68. Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, Memphis - 62,380 (AAC) 69. Soldier Field, Chicago Bears - 61,500 (NFL) 70. Jack Trice Stadium, ISU - 61,500 (B12) 71. Scott Stadium, UVA - 61,500 (ACC) 72. Davis Wade Stadium, Mississippi State - 61,337 (SEC) 73. Kroger Field, Kentucky - 61,000 (SEC) 74. Jones AT&T Stadium, TTU - 60,862 (B12) 75. Memorial Stadium, Illinois - 60,670 (B10) 76. Boone Pickens Stadium, Okie State - 60,218 (B12) 77. Puskar Stadium, WVU - 60,000 (B12) 78. Carter-Finley Stadium, NC State - 57,583 (ACC) 79. Ross-Ade Stadium, Purdue - 57,236 (B10) 80. Sun Devil Stadium, ASU - 56,232 (Pac 12) 81. Arizona Stadium, Arizona - 56,029 (Pac 12) 82. Grant Field, GT - 55,000 (ACC) 83. Papa John's Cardinal Stadium, Louisville - 55,000 (ACC) 84. Autzen Stadium, Oregon - 54,000 (Pac 12) 85. Oakland Alameda County Coliseum, Oakland Raiders - 53,286 (NFL) 86. Memorial Stadium, Indiana - 52,959 (B10) 87. High Point Solutions Stadium, Rutgers - 52,454 (B10) 88. Maryland Stadium, Maryland - 51,802 (B10) 89. Sun Bowl Stadium, UTEP - 51,500 (CUSA) 90. TCF Bank Stadium, Minnesota - 50,805 (B10) 91. Stanford Stadium, Stanford - 50,424 (Pac 12) 92. Folsom Field, Colorado - 50,183 (Pac 12) 93. Memorial Stadium, Kansas - 50,071 (B12) 94. Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, ECU - 50,000 (AAC) 95. Aloha Stadium, Hawaii - 50,000 (MWC) 96. Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium, KSU - 50,000 (B12) 97. Carrier Dome, Syracuse - 49,250 (ACC) 98. Ryan Field, Northwestern - 47,130 (B10) 99. Rice Stadium, Rice - 47,000 (CUSA) 100. Falcon Stadium, Air Force - 46,692 (MWC) 101. Rice-Eccles Stadium, Utah - 45,807 (Pac 12) 102. Reser Stadium, Oregon State - 45,647 (Pac 12) 103. McLane Stadium, Baylor - 45,140 (B12) 104. Amon G Carter Stadium, TCU - 45,000 (B12) 105. Alumni Stadium, Boston College - 44,500 (ACC) 106. Spectrum Stadium, UCF - 44,206 (AAC) 107. Colorado State Stadium, Colorado State - 41,200 (MWC) 108. Bulldog Stadium, Fresno State - 41,031 (MWC) 109. Vanderbilt Stadium, Vanderbilt - 40,350 (SEC) 110. Wallace Wade Stadium, Duke - 40,000 (ACC) 111. TDECU Stadium, Houston - 40,000 (AAC) 112. Nippert Stadium, Cincinnati - 40,000 (AAC) 113. Rentschler Field, UConn - 40,000 (AAC) 114. Dreamstyle Stadium, New Mexico - 39,224 (MWC) 115. Joan C Edwards Stadium, Marshall - 38,019 (CUSA) 116. Michie Stadium, Army - 38,000 (IND) 117. Cajun Field, Louisiana Lafayette - 36,900 (Sun Belt) 118. Boyd Stadium, UNLV - 36,800 (MWC) 119. Albertsons Stadium, Boise State - 36,387 (MWC) 120. M.M. Roberts Stadium, Southern Miss - 36,000 (CUSA) 121. Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, Navy - 34,000 (AAC) 122. Ladd Peebles Stadium, South Alabama - 33,471 (Sun Belt) 123. Kelly/Shorts Stadium, CMU - 32,885 (MAC) 124. Martin Stadium, Wazzu - 32,248 (Pac 12) 125. Gerald Ford Stadium, SMU - 32,000 (AAC) 126. BB&T Field, Wake Forest - 31,500 (ACC) 127. Johnny "Red" Floyd Stadium, Middle Tennessee - 31,000 (CUSA) 128. Centennial Bank Stadium, Arkansas State - 30,964 (Sun Belt) 129. Apogee Stadium, North Texas - 30,850 (CUSA) 130. CEFCU Stadium, SJSU - 30,456 (MWC) 131. Malone Stadium, Louisiana-Monroe - 30,427 (Sun Belt) 132. Aggie Memorial Stadium, New Mexico State - 30,343 (Sun Belt) 133. Rynearson Stadium, EMU - 30,200 (MAC) 134. Waldo Stadium, WMU - 30,200 (MAC) 135. Yulman Stadium, Tulane - 30,000 (AAC) 136. FAU Stadium, FAU - 30,000 (CUSA) 137. InfoCision Stadium, Akron - 30,000 (MAC) 138. H.A. Chapman Stadium, Tulsa - 30,000 (AAC) 139. Bobcat Stadium, Texas State - 30,000 (Sun Belt) 140. Veterans Memorial Stadium, Troy - 30,000 (Sun Belt) 141. War Memorial Stadium, Wyoming - 29,181 (MWC) 142. UB Stadium, Buffalo - 29,013 (MAC) 143. Joe Aillet Stadium, LaTech - 28,019 (CUSA) 145. Stub Hub Center, Los Angeles Chargers - 27,000 (NFL) 146. Glass Bowl, Toledo - 26,248 (MAC) 147. Mackay Stadium, Nevada - 26,000 (MWC) 148. Maverik Stadium, USU - 25,513 (MWC) 149. Dix Stadium, Kent State - 25,000 (MAC) 150. Paulson Stadium, Georgia Southern - 25,000 (Sun Belt) 151. Yager Stadium, Miami (OH) - 24,286 (MAC) 152. Kidd Brewer Stadium, App. State - 24,050 (Sun Belt) 153. Doyt Perry Stadium, Bowling Green - 24,000 (MAC) 154. Peden Stadium, Ohio - 24,000 (MAC) 155. Huskie Stadium, NIU - 23,595 (MAC) 156. FIU Stadium, FIU - 23,510 (CUSA) 157. Georgia State Stadium, Georgia State - 23,000 (Sun Belt) 158. Scheumann Stadum, Ball State - 22,500 (MAC) 159. Houchens Industries-L.T Smith Stadium, WKU - 22,113 (CUSA) 160. Foreman Field, ODU - 20,118 (CUSA) 161. Kibbie Dome, Idaho - 16,000 (Sun Belt) 162. Jerry Richardson Stadium, Charlotte - 15,314 (CUSA) 163. Brooks Stadium, Coastal Carolina - 15,000 (Sun Belt)
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 20:31 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:47 |
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9. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, USC - 93,607 (Pac 12) 10. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles Rams - 93,605 (NFL) ....why
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 20:36 |
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HannibalBarca posted:9. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, USC - 93,607 (Pac 12) NFL fans are slightly fatter than CFB fans and take up more seating space.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 20:57 |
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I like how Neyland says 102k but we regularly shove 107k+ in there. It used to be 104k and the record attendance was 109k in 2000 against UF I think.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 21:50 |
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Joey Freshwater posted:I like how Neyland says 102k but we regularly shove 107k+ in there. It used to be 104k and the record attendance was 109k in 2000 against UF I think. Could probably fit more but the average BMI in Tennessee, etc.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:00 |
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Joey Freshwater posted:I like how Neyland says 102k but we regularly shove 107k+ in there. It used to be 104k and the record attendance was 109k in 2000 against UF I think. Yeah I was just going by what the listed capacity it is. A bunch of the college stadiums have higher max recorded attendances
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:02 |
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vyst posted:Could probably fit more but the average BMI in Tennessee, etc. It really helps that like 90% of the stadium is bleachers and not actual seats
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:03 |
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Kim Jong Il posted:Schiano inherited a rebuilding job. His normal season was 8 wins and he wasn't a particularly good coach. That's the norm for a mediocre coach at Rutgers. Frank Burns in the 70s was actually considered a far better coach, he was very competitive when Rutgers did play teams like Tennessee and Alabama in his day. Burns wins are almost all over modern FCS teams and a lot of them were DII back then. He played UT once and Bama twice, all losses. They didn't regularly start scheduling major programs until later in his tenure, at which point they coincidentally were also pretty bad. quote:Not true. Winning percentage of Rutgers coaches between Burns and Schiano: .446, .447, .200. That's a weird definition of mediocre, my dude. Schiano got them to a relatively consistent 6-8 wins and Flood coasted on that for a couple years, otherwise they have sucked rear end since they started regularly playing major conference opponents instead of Princeton and Bucknell
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:06 |
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Joey Freshwater posted:I like how Neyland says 102k but we regularly shove 107k+ in there. It used to be 104k and the record attendance was 109k in 2000 against UF I think. IIRC capacity has to do with amount of seats available, and attendance includes everyone in the building (press, players, recruits visiting etc.)
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:15 |
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kittenmittons posted:IIRC capacity has to do with amount of seats available, and attendance includes everyone in the building (press, players, recruits visiting etc.) Haha really? I always just thought it was oversold with standing room only or that since the seats were bleachers they were a conservative estimate that wound up being more on gameday. Do they count the vendors too?
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:17 |
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Kim Jong Il posted:Schiano inherited a rebuilding job. His normal season was 8 wins and he wasn't a particularly good coach. That's the norm for a mediocre coach at Rutgers. Frank Burns in the 70s was actually considered a far better coach, he was very competitive when Rutgers did play teams like Tennessee and Alabama in his day. Enlighten me about Rutgers run of dominance against good teams.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:18 |
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The new Texas coach is in an interview on ESPN and he seems like such a putz.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:24 |
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For UGA's first spring game under Kirby and he was pushing for a packed house, not only were the stands themselves squeezed in like mad, but the stair wells and standing areas were full too. I don't know how many extra people that added but it is kind of funny if a spring game was the highest attended event at UGA
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:24 |
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Eifert Posting posted:The new Texas coach is in an interview on ESPN and he seems like such a putz. Yuuuuuup https://www.sbnation.com/college-football/2016/9/15/12935904/tom-herman-kiss-players-houston-cougars
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 22:49 |
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PostNouveau posted:Yuuuuuup He said he listened to hip-hop as a kid. Like it wasn't part of a greater point or anything, he just flat-out said in the interview that he listened to hip-hop as a kid.
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# ? Aug 19, 2017 23:20 |
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MourningView posted:
And one could argue, quite successfully, that those win numbers under Schiano were greatly increased with VT, Miami, and BC no longer in the ACC.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 00:09 |
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This semester I am taking a graduate seminar on the university (both critical theory about universities and university novels). Our first reading is The Higher Learning in America by Thorstein Veblen. It was published in 1918, but I believe he started working on in the 00's. Anyway, I want to share this footnote with you all. The sentence that triggers the footnote (it actually has two) reads: "Little need be said of the threadbare subterfuges by which (ostensibly surreptitious) pecuniary inducements are extended to students and prospective students who promise well as college athletes; or of the equally threadbare expedients by which these members of the guild of sportsmen are enabled to meet formal requirements f scholarship imposed by shamefaced intercollegiate bargaining. The first footnote tells of a university paying a player $40 a month as a bookkeeper for the janitor of one of the dorms. The second footnote reads:Thorstein Veblen posted:A single instance may tolerantly be admitted here. Among the formal requirements that would admit students to a free pursuit of sportsmanship, at the same university as above mentioned [the one that paid $40], without imputation of professionalism, was specified the ability to read at sight such a passage in the given foreign language as would satisfy the instructor in charge that the candidate was competent in the language in question. The instructor responsible in this case, a man of high academic rank and gifted with a sympathetic good will toward the "boys," submitted in fulfillment of the test a copy of the Lord's Prayer in this foreign tongue, and passed the (several) candidates on finding them able passably to repeat the same in English. It would scarcely be fair to distinguish this episode by giving the names and places, since equally ingenious expedients have been in use elsewhere.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 00:21 |
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Eifert Posting posted:He said he listened to hip-hop as a kid. I hate it when people talk about how weird our weirdo coach is. Like, let's just pretend the team is just self-coached. QB and MLB are calling all the plays.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 00:22 |
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alpha_destroy posted:This semester I am taking a graduate seminar on the university (both critical theory about universities and university novels). Our first reading is The Higher Learning in America by Thorstein Veblen. It was published in 1918, but I believe he started working on in the 00's. Anyway, I want to share this footnote with you all. The sentence that triggers the footnote (it actually has two) reads: "Little need be said of the threadbare subterfuges by which (ostensibly surreptitious) pecuniary inducements are extended to students and prospective students who promise well as college athletes; or of the equally threadbare expedients by which these members of the guild of sportsmen are enabled to meet formal requirements f scholarship imposed by shamefaced intercollegiate bargaining. The first footnote tells of a university paying a player $40 a month as a bookkeeper for the janitor of one of the dorms. The second footnote reads: Was there a third footnote that argued the validity of Piggly Wiggly national title claims?
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 00:40 |
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Piggly Wiggly titles are the only pre bcs ones that should count All the rest were voted on by sports media, objectively the dumbest, wrongest people on the planet
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 00:44 |
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Who is more rear end, Rutgers or A&M?
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 01:17 |
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iospace posted:Who is more rear end, Rutgers or A&M? Rutgers on paper, A&M in the court of public opinion.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 01:32 |
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A&M is the embodiment of rear end, my dude.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 02:53 |
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Raku posted:Piggly Wiggly titles are the only pre bcs ones that should count I thought you were an Alabama fan
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 02:57 |
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iospace posted:I thought you were an Alabama fan who do you think has all the piggly wiggly titles bitch????
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 03:48 |
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Raku posted:who do you think has all the piggly wiggly titles bitch???? Well, which team has a pig as a mascot
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 03:49 |
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~1 more week https://twitter.com/Rubethedude/status/898282078801874944
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:04 |
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Joey Freshwater posted:I like how Neyland says 102k but we regularly shove 107k+ in there. It used to be 104k and the record attendance was 109k in 2000 against UF I think. Was that the Jabar Gaffney catch game? I know it was the Gaffney catch, I just want to remind you
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:24 |
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Raku posted:who do you think has all the piggly wiggly titles bitch???? It's a drat shame that Golden Flake titles don't exist.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:25 |
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so uh, the gators QB situation looks even worse than I thought. I'm guessing a bunch of the receivers were walk-ons, but jesus those are some bad throws for a drill. https://mobile.twitter.com/Singleshot25/status/898523385453531136/video/1
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:43 |
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My man should probably be worried about the creeping miasma of pestilence and despair that's going to turn FSU into a pile of Bones on sep 2 bfore he worried about Luke del Rio funslingin
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:48 |
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Scionix posted:My man should probably be worried about the creeping miasma of pestilence and despair that's going to turn FSU into a pile of Bones on sep 2 bfore he worried about Luke del Rio funslingin It's worse than you know
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:50 |
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Dilber posted:so uh, the gators QB situation looks even worse than I thought. I'm guessing a bunch of the receivers were walk-ons, but jesus those are some bad throws for a drill. Who the gently caress is claiming a blowout of Michigan and a close game against FSU? Like I know of zero Gator fans whose highest estimate is "we have a shot in both games, dunno".
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:50 |
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Go Broncos woooo
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 04:53 |
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3 DONG HORSE posted:Go Broncos woooo Everyone, get him
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 05:02 |
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Florida-Michigan will be the return of the mighty 6-4
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 05:07 |
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Indiana hosed up severely in some kind of eligibility snafu and cost a DB there his freshman year. Very lovely situation, feel like someone should probably be disciplined pretty severely for it.
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 05:10 |
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swickles posted:Who the gently caress is claiming a blowout of Michigan and a close game against FSU? Like I know of zero Gator fans whose highest estimate is "we have a shot in both games, dunno". Certainly no Gators here feel confident anymore
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 05:24 |
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Crotch Bat posted:Indiana hosed up severely in some kind of eligibility snafu and cost a DB there his freshman year. Very lovely situation, feel like someone should probably be disciplined pretty severely for it. how the hell does that even happen
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# ? Aug 20, 2017 06:17 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:47 |
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Roasted Donut posted:how the hell does that even happen Apparently it has something to do with the classes he's taking this term. They told him he'd be eligible with them but it turns out he's not. edit: someone on reddit has a better and (I think) more correct explanation than me randofootballguy posted:I can explain: people in compliance and the recruiting department are responsible for academic evaluations. They have to come to college with 16 core credits. Now NCAA CORE CREDITS are different at every high school. Some high schools will give NCAA core credit for ASL classes for instance while some do not. Some poor low level recruiting assistant or intern who evaluated the high school transcript gave him core credit for a class he didn't actually earn core credit for. That would change his core gpa, and the amount of core credits. It's not a huge deal though. He redshirts, catches up on core courses and he's back in no time. (although they're wrong about it not being a big deal, according to bleacherreport, he's not even allowed to practice with the team this season because of this fuckup) Pakled fucked around with this message at 07:29 on Aug 20, 2017 |
# ? Aug 20, 2017 06:21 |