BadlandsGrizFan said:Officiating was disgusting. Cost us 1-2 possessions.
Also. Idaho is really good. Gotta play good to beat a team like that. We played like shit. QB played like shit. Combine that with disgusting officiating you leave yourself open to get beat.
grizfan406 said:indian-outlaw said:Rosie has never been any good no matter where he was at. The problem is that pease is no better.
You guys are idiots and out of your mind. Rosie called a phenomenal game, QB missed a few throws and the throws he did make our guys dropped them. That is not on Rosie one bit. Here is a couple highlights from his bio...
He then made his first foray into the Big Sky Conference as an assistant at Eastern Washington in 2000 and took over as the Eagle's offensive coordinator from 2001-2002. As the OC, Rosenbach led EWU to the nation's top overall offense in 2001 (514.5 yards per game) and orchestrated a 30-21 win over the Griz in 2002 with 541 yards of total offense.
In his first year at WSU, the Cougars went 10-3, finishing at No. 9 in the final AP poll with a 28-20 win over Vince Young and No. 6 Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Under Rosenbach's tutelage, quarterback and Havre, Mont., native Matt Kegel threw for 2,947 yards and 21 touchdowns as an All-Pac-10 second team selection.
Rosenbach also coached Cougar great Alex Brink who was drafted by the Houston Texans in 2008 and played four more seasons in the CFL after setting several WSU school passing records. Brink was also a two-time Wuerffel Trophy finalist, honoring the college football player who best combines exemplary community service with outstanding academic and athletic achievement.
In his first season with UNLV, the Rebels advanced the Heart of Dallas Bowl, their first bowl appearance since in 15 years and the team's only appearance this century. Rosenbach's offensive unit tallied the second-most points in school history that season, as quarterback Caleb Herring set a UNLV season-record by completing 63 percent of his pass attempts.
grizfan406 said:indian-outlaw said:Rosie has never been any good no matter where he was at. The problem is that pease is no better.
You guys are idiots and out of your mind. Rosie called a phenomenal game, QB missed a few throws and the throws he did make our guys dropped them. That is not on Rosie one bit. Here is a couple highlights from his bio...
He then made his first foray into the Big Sky Conference as an assistant at Eastern Washington in 2000 and took over as the Eagle's offensive coordinator from 2001-2002. As the OC, Rosenbach led EWU to the nation's top overall offense in 2001 (514.5 yards per game) and orchestrated a 30-21 win over the Griz in 2002 with 541 yards of total offense.
In his first year at WSU, the Cougars went 10-3, finishing at No. 9 in the final AP poll with a 28-20 win over Vince Young and No. 6 Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Under Rosenbach's tutelage, quarterback and Havre, Mont., native Matt Kegel threw for 2,947 yards and 21 touchdowns as an All-Pac-10 second team selection.
Rosenbach also coached Cougar great Alex Brink who was drafted by the Houston Texans in 2008 and played four more seasons in the CFL after setting several WSU school passing records. Brink was also a two-time Wuerffel Trophy finalist, honoring the college football player who best combines exemplary community service with outstanding academic and athletic achievement.
In his first season with UNLV, the Rebels advanced the Heart of Dallas Bowl, their first bowl appearance since in 15 years and the team's only appearance this century. Rosenbach's offensive unit tallied the second-most points in school history that season, as quarterback Caleb Herring set a UNLV season-record by completing 63 percent of his pass attempts.
Grizbeer said:grizfan406 said:You guys are idiots and out of your mind. Rosie called a phenomenal game, QB missed a few throws and the throws he did make our guys dropped them. That is not on Rosie one bit. Here is a couple highlights from his bio...
He then made his first foray into the Big Sky Conference as an assistant at Eastern Washington in 2000 and took over as the Eagle's offensive coordinator from 2001-2002. As the OC, Rosenbach led EWU to the nation's top overall offense in 2001 (514.5 yards per game) and orchestrated a 30-21 win over the Griz in 2002 with 541 yards of total offense.
So 9 years total as an OC at 2 of the best teams in the BSC and 0 BSC championships?
gotgame75 said:grizfan406 said:You guys are idiots and out of your mind. Rosie called a phenomenal game, QB missed a few throws and the throws he did make our guys dropped them. That is not on Rosie one bit. Here is a couple highlights from his bio...
He then made his first foray into the Big Sky Conference as an assistant at Eastern Washington in 2000 and took over as the Eagle's offensive coordinator from 2001-2002. As the OC, Rosenbach led EWU to the nation's top overall offense in 2001 (514.5 yards per game) and orchestrated a 30-21 win over the Griz in 2002 with 541 yards of total offense.
In his first year at WSU, the Cougars went 10-3, finishing at No. 9 in the final AP poll with a 28-20 win over Vince Young and No. 6 Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Under Rosenbach's tutelage, quarterback and Havre, Mont., native Matt Kegel threw for 2,947 yards and 21 touchdowns as an All-Pac-10 second team selection.
Rosenbach also coached Cougar great Alex Brink who was drafted by the Houston Texans in 2008 and played four more seasons in the CFL after setting several WSU school passing records. Brink was also a two-time Wuerffel Trophy finalist, honoring the college football player who best combines exemplary community service with outstanding academic and athletic achievement.
In his first season with UNLV, the Rebels advanced the Heart of Dallas Bowl, their first bowl appearance since in 15 years and the team's only appearance this century. Rosenbach's offensive unit tallied the second-most points in school history that season, as quarterback Caleb Herring set a UNLV season-record by completing 63 percent of his pass attempts.
Damn that's awesome that Rosie had success15-20 years ago! Where is that guy? Should we start printing MISSING posters? Maybe we can send Marty McFly back in time to resurrect him!:lol:
Remember these pearls of wisdom?grizfan406 said:indian-outlaw said:Rosie has never been any good no matter where he was at. The problem is that pease is no better.
You guys are idiots and out of your mind. Rosie called a phenomenal game, QB missed a few throws and the throws he did make our guys dropped them. That is not on Rosie one bit. Here is a couple highlights from his bio...
He then made his first foray into the Big Sky Conference as an assistant at Eastern Washington in 2000 and took over as the Eagle's offensive coordinator from 2001-2002. As the OC, Rosenbach led EWU to the nation's top overall offense in 2001 (514.5 yards per game) and orchestrated a 30-21 win over the Griz in 2002 with 541 yards of total offense.
In his first year at WSU, the Cougars went 10-3, finishing at No. 9 in the final AP poll with a 28-20 win over Vince Young and No. 6 Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Under Rosenbach's tutelage, quarterback and Havre, Mont., native Matt Kegel threw for 2,947 yards and 21 touchdowns as an All-Pac-10 second team selection.
Rosenbach also coached Cougar great Alex Brink who was drafted by the Houston Texans in 2008 and played four more seasons in the CFL after setting several WSU school passing records. Brink was also a two-time Wuerffel Trophy finalist, honoring the college football player who best combines exemplary community service with outstanding academic and athletic achievement.
In his first season with UNLV, the Rebels advanced the Heart of Dallas Bowl, their first bowl appearance since in 15 years and the team's only appearance this century. Rosenbach's offensive unit tallied the second-most points in school history that season, as quarterback Caleb Herring set a UNLV season-record by completing 63 percent of his pass attempts.
uofmman1122 said:I'm completely over Rosie.
His offense has had the same problems every year since he's come back.
montanaguy said:Spanky2 said:You guys are a bunch of crybabies! Good teams lose sometimes. We got beat by a better team today. It’s that simple.
Exactly. How many times have we seen our guys in the playoffs and somewhere in mid-season 'fans' are having a tantrum?
We seem to have outgrown this conference. I'm sure the PAC 12 will issue us an invite any day now.AZGrizFan said:montanaguy said:Exactly. How many times have we seen our guys in the playoffs and somewhere in mid-season 'fans' are having a tantrum?
If our goal is to simply be “in the playoffs”, why not move up and just be “in a bowl game”?
indian-outlaw said:We seem to have outgrown this conference. I'm sure the PAC 12 will issue us an invite any day now.AZGrizFan said:If our goal is to simply be “in the playoffs”, why not move up and just be “in a bowl game”?
grizfan406 said:Grizbeer said:So 9 years total as an OC at 2 of the best teams in the BSC and 0 BSC championships?
You judge head coaches by championships, you judge OC's by production. He had productive offenses. Who knows how good or bad the defense or ST's on his teams were, he can't control that. All he can control is the offense and his offenses were damn good.
grizfan406 said:Grizbeer said:So 9 years total as an OC at 2 of the best teams in the BSC and 0 BSC championships?
You judge head coaches by championships, you judge OC's by production. He had productive offenses. Who knows how good or bad the defense or ST's on his teams were, he can't control that. All he can control is the offense and his offenses were damn good.