I care. It’s redecorate. Redecorate! Got it?!Rebuild, reload, redecorate, replenish, reequip, recharge? Who the hell cares what we call it as long as we are still talking about Griz football games in late December!
I don't know what Brint said. Yes, Brint is often wrong, intentionally. We have a running contest to see who can be wrong the most. Colter is trying to join our group too.
Given that Deck and Wortham are seniors and Monte's speed. look for him next year competing more for the PR and/or KR after hopefully getting at least a few opportunities this year, including potentially in the second half of this week's CWU game.Colter has a long ways to go if he wants to be as incorrect as me!
I think it was a comment before about Monte Gillman fielding punts? I've seen him do that in practice but as the depth chart shows - and as the practices showed - Deck is the main guy. They have backup options of course though.
FIFYUNC unloads, de-loads, implodes every season...
ReconfigurationI care. It’s redecorate. Redecorate! Got it?!
Many years the top Ivy team, or 2/3, could compete with playoffs teams, not the top ones. Most years only the conf winner would have gotten into the playoffs. You can judge the Ivies by the Patriot teams they play, as well as teams like UNH and Maine and maybe a few other OOC teams.I've been thinking about the Ivies now being eligible for the playoffs. I'm wondering is if they'll ever get at large teams into the playoff field or just the conference champion. They have historically only played 10 games per year where other FCS schools play 11 to 12 games per year and starting next year can play 12 games every year. If you have teams that have only played 10 games versus teams that have played 12, it's hard to compare whose record is better. It just seems a little inequitable to me.
So who in your opinion will get the Ivy bid this year?Many years the top Ivy team, or 2/3, could compete with playoffs teams, not the top ones. Most years only the conf winner would have gotten into the playoffs. You can judge the Ivies by the Patriot teams they play, as well as teams like UNH and Maine and maybe a few other OOC teams.
The Ivies are probably more healthy later in the season, as they play fewer games, and starting with Dartmouth 10 or so years ago, the Ivies don't live tackle in practice. Dartmouth's coach Teevens had stats studied and figured out that Dartmouth would be better off not going live in practice, with fewer guys out for games, and with fewer head injuries. They figured out how to tackle without live tackling, as least as best as they could.
Don't think the Griz went fully live in and did scrimmages in fall pre-season, or at least the top of the depth chart didn't. This year.
This post reeks of the influence that “Big Fashion” and “Big Decor” have over American culture. Just when you think you’ve found the perfect throw pillows that really tie your rec room together here come “the experts” shoving something new down our throats.I care. It’s redecorate. Redecorate! Got it?!
Right!! Like the Tomahawk chop mark that needs to be in the middle of all pillows. What's that about??This post reeks of the influence that “Big Fashion” and “Big Decor” have over American culture. Just when you think you’ve found the perfect throw pillows that really ties your rec room together here come “the experts” shoving something new down our throats.
As far as I’m concerned you can take your soulless, corporate-driven, Eurotrash IKEA term “redecorate” and shove it.
Pure psychological marketing, EG. The evil geniuses at “Big Decor” discovered that when ‘chopped’ the pillows represent female genitalia in the brains of most men. Thus making them attracted to purchasing said pillows.Right!! Like the Tomahawk chop mark that needs to be in the middle of all pillows. What's that about??
There was a kid I coached in high school and went to Dartmouth that created a mobile tackling dummy while at Dartmouth with other football athletes, his head coach, and engineering students. They use the mobile tackling dummy for tackling drills rather than tackling each other. The Griz recruited him but he was dead set on Dartmouth.The Ivies are probably more healthy later in the season, as they play fewer games, and starting with Dartmouth 10 or so years ago, the Ivies don't live tackle in practice. Dartmouth's coach Teevens had stats studied and figured out that Dartmouth would be better off not going live in practice, with fewer guys out for games, and with fewer head injuries. They figured out how to tackle without live tackling, as least as best as they could.
I know about the Tackling Dummy, since I went to Dartmouth and played football. And Buddy Teevens was my brother's best friend in college. UM had a tackling dummy or two, but I was told Bobby didn't like it. Which one of these guys was your guy? "The Mobile Virtual Player (MVP), a remote-controlled robotic tackling dummy, takes the football world by storm. Invented by Noah Glennon Th’14 ’15, Andrew Smist ’13 Th’14, Elliot Kastner ’13 Th’14 ’15, and Quinn Connell ’13 Th’14"There was a kid I coached in high school and went to Dartmouth that created a mobile tackling dummy while at Dartmouth with other football athletes, his head coach, and engineering students. They use the mobile tackling dummy for tackling drills rather than tackling each other. The Griz recruited him but he was dead set on Dartmouth.
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MVP Robotics | Our Story
Discover the story of MVP Robotics, a leading robotics development company specializing in sports and tactical training. Explore our robotic tackling dummy technology and HEKTR training robot. Revolutionizing training and reducing injuries.www.mvprobotics.com
On top of that, John Gagliardi, the head football coach at St. John's University in Minnesota, instituted no tackling in their practices starting in the 1970s. He is renowned in college football with the most wins ever by a head football coach and four national championships. He has a connection to Montana - he was the head football coach at Carroll College from 1949 to 1952.
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John Gagliardi - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org