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Theoretical question

The hit is unbelievably dirty. Along with all the reasons that lots of other posters have mentioned there are at least two more to think about; at 37:41 of the game film there is a shot from behind the play and you can see the DE, eyes open, head up, lining up the hit. The other factor that really speaks to intent is that every DL from Pop Warner on up is taught to do what if you can't get to the QB? Get your hands up. The ball went to a player directly behind him and he didn't move a muscle to knock it down. He had other ideas than playing football.

And no I'm not saying the coaches put him up to it or anything like that. I think it was a crime of opportunity.
 
THE BETCH said:
Sorry Olds. Hoops started on a nationally ranked Dartmouth team. Now you?????

Not defending the ss d-bag here, but how much do fluffers make? You recommend the career choice for others?
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
MThoopsfan…being a backup punter on your fraternity flag football team does not count as playing college coach. Nice try though.

Try all-conference and all-east on a top 15 team that was the best team in the East. Over 7-3 Penn St.
Played in front of 60,000 one game that year. Played against multiple future NFL players including running backs who went to NFL. Played in ABC game with their No. 1 TV crew. Introduced on ABC before games 2 years in row. Selected as one of 2 top cornerbacks at my school in the first 50 years of Ivy League. In my school’s football hall of fame. In the Montana Indian Athletic Hall of Fame.

Again, what are football credentials? You are a joke. Keep defending your thug.
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
Beat Weber and I’ll shut up…otherwise take those ass whoopings without whining and making pathetic excuses.

I've noticed you have not yet responded to mthoops reply. Is there a reason for that? My theory is that you tried to undermine his credibility then found out he has more accolades than your thug who hit LJ and quickly shut up in fear of further embarrassment.
 
SaskGriz said:
The hit is unbelievably dirty. Along with all the reasons that lots of other posters have mentioned there are at least two more to think about; at 37:41 of the game film there is a shot from behind the play and you can see the DE, eyes open, head up, lining up the hit. The other factor that really speaks to intent is that every DL from Pop Warner on up is taught to do what if you can't get to the QB? Get your hands up. The ball went to a player directly behind him and he didn't move a muscle to knock it down. He had other ideas than playing football.

And no I'm not saying the coaches put him up to it or anything like that. I think it was a crime of opportunity.

Good post. Good additional thoughts
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
Beat Weber and I’ll shut up…otherwise take those ass whoopings without whining and making pathetic excuses.

Let's bet $250 on my playing credentials. Top 15 team, in D-I. Best team in East, i.e. Lambert Trophy winner. Starter. First team all-conference senior year.

Put up or shut up, you big mouth loser.
 
SaskGriz said:
The hit is unbelievably dirty. Along with all the reasons that lots of other posters have mentioned there are at least two more to think about; at 37:41 of the game film there is a shot from behind the play and you can see the DE, eyes open, head up, lining up the hit. The other factor that really speaks to intent is that every DL from Pop Warner on up is taught to do what if you can't get to the QB? Get your hands up. The ball went to a player directly behind him and he didn't move a muscle to knock it down. He had other ideas than playing football.

And no I'm not saying the coaches put him up to it or anything like that. I think it was a crime of opportunity.

What is a crime of opportunity?
 
Although I can appreciate the fact that you could get into Dartmouth I have NEVER heard anyone brag about playing football there or playing on TV. 😜
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
Although I can appreciate the fact that you could get into Dartmouth I have NEVER heard anyone brag about playing football there or playing on TV. 😜

Last time I checked Dartmouth is still D1, have you ever played football above peewee football?
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
Jordan you are obviously an excellent girlfriend…stand by your man!


I find it funny how you try to make mthoops look bad even though he is one of the only, if not the only user on the board who has played football at the D1 level. You have never played football at a high level and have no room to talk on this board. You discredit everything our posters say even though they have much more football experience than you. Your only response to their comments is either dodging the question or making a comment that portrays you as an insecure little bitch. Please go back to your board of 5 people and whine about the Griz with them over there.
 
Oldschoolhornet said:
Although I can appreciate the fact that you could get into Dartmouth I have NEVER heard anyone brag about playing football there or playing on TV. 😜

Then, you are stupid.

"With both Dartmouth and Yale unbeaten and rated nationally not only in both of the wire-service polls but also in the NCAA statistics, the largest crowd to see a non-Harvard game at Yale Bowl since Army was there in 1954 assembled on one of those crackling red-and-gold New England afternoons that helped to make football popular in the first place. A large part of the conversation was somewhat defensive, with people assuring one another that this whole thing was really great, that Dartmouth and Yale could certainly perform respectably against Ohio State or Texas or anybody else, and that Ivy League football, after all, is played by students. So without question in the minds of the 60,820 people who had come to watch it, this Yale-Dartmouth match was going to settle at least the amateur college football championship of the season."

"Unfortunately for the Yale crowd, it didn't take long to establish which was the better team. Massey stuck to a plan that stubbornly insisted his two fast running backs—Dick Jauron and Don Martin—could break through between the Dartmouth tackles, despite evidence to the contrary." [Jauron and Martin both played in the NFL, and replaced Calvin Hill at Yale. You've probably never heard of Calvin Hill, the NFL rookie of the year.]

https://vault.si.com/vault/1970/11/09/just-ask-the-tailgate-set-who-is-no-1

"One thing you certainly don't expect in the Ivy League is a nationally ranked team, but that's what coach Bob Black-man fielded at Dartmouth in 1970. That year Dartmouth was undefeated and untied, producing such outstanding stats that it was ranked 14th in both the AP and UPI final polls, ahead of Oklahoma, Penn State and Southern Cal [and Alabama and Georgia]. Dartmouth's 9-0 record included six shutouts—four in a row to end the season. Among major colleges that year Dartmouth ranked second in total defense and sixth in total offense, and led the country in scoring defense."

"It was the cradle of football, and a number of its players have excelled in the NFL—Calvin Hill, Ed Marinaro, Gary Fencik and Nick Lowery, for example" [And Dick Jauron, Marty Domres, George Starke, Marcellus Wiley, Jeff Kemp, Jay Fielder, Reggie Williams, Dave Shula, John Spagola]

"https://vault.si.com/vault/1987/08/31/a-big-year-for-big-green
 
mthoopsfan said:
Oldschoolhornet said:
Although I can appreciate the fact that you could get into Dartmouth I have NEVER heard anyone brag about playing football there or playing on TV. 😜

Then, you are stupid.

"With both Dartmouth and Yale unbeaten and rated nationally not only in both of the wire-service polls but also in the NCAA statistics, the largest crowd to see a non-Harvard game at Yale Bowl since Army was there in 1954 assembled on one of those crackling red-and-gold New England afternoons that helped to make football popular in the first place. A large part of the conversation was somewhat defensive, with people assuring one another that this whole thing was really great, that Dartmouth and Yale could certainly perform respectably against Ohio State or Texas or anybody else, and that Ivy League football, after all, is played by students. So without question in the minds of the 60,820 people who had come to watch it, this Yale-Dartmouth match was going to settle at least the amateur college football championship of the season."

"Unfortunately for the Yale crowd, it didn't take long to establish which was the better team. Massey stuck to a plan that stubbornly insisted his two fast running backs—Dick Jauron and Don Martin—could break through between the Dartmouth tackles, despite evidence to the contrary." [Jauron and Martin both played in the NFL, and replaced Calvin Hill at Yale. You've probably never heard of Calvin Hill, the NFL rookie of the year.]

https://vault.si.com/vault/1970/11/09/just-ask-the-tailgate-set-who-is-no-1

"One thing you certainly don't expect in the Ivy League is a nationally ranked team, but that's what coach Bob Black-man fielded at Dartmouth in 1970. That year Dartmouth was undefeated and untied, producing such outstanding stats that it was ranked 14th in both the AP and UPI final polls, ahead of Oklahoma, Penn State and Southern Cal [and Alabama and Georgia]. Dartmouth's 9-0 record included six shutouts—four in a row to end the season. Among major colleges that year Dartmouth ranked second in total defense and sixth in total offense, and led the country in scoring defense."

"It was the cradle of football, and a number of its players have excelled in the NFL—Calvin Hill, Ed Marinaro, Gary Fencik and Nick Lowery, for example" [And Dick Jauron, Marty Domres, George Starke, Marcellus Wiley, Jeff Kemp, Jay Fielder, Reggie Williams, Dave Shula, John Spagola]

"https://vault.si.com/vault/1987/08/31/a-big-year-for-big-green

Why do you bother with him, PR? He’s just a freaking troll…
 
There are community colleges in California that could win the Ivy League. It’s as pathetic as the guys on this board whining about the griz losing another game to SAC and making excuses. The reality is that UM is AT BEST the second best football team in the state of Montana and a guy who played in the Ivy League couldn’t have competed at a higher level or he would have. Simple.
 
Jordan I obviously owe you an apology. I said none of the losers on this board had ever played college football and you corrected me. Your boyfriend played college football. So I missed by one. Thank you for straightening that out.
 
2021 FCS Stats Poll:

20. Dartmouth (9–1)
21. Stephen F. Austin
22. Jackson St
23. Northern Iowa
24. Princeton (9–1)

Two Ivies at no. 20 and no. 24. Princeton is ranked in the top 20 now.

Where are the community colleges?
 
AZGrizFan said:
mthoopsfan said:
Then, you are stupid.

"With both Dartmouth and Yale unbeaten and rated nationally not only in both of the wire-service polls but also in the NCAA statistics, the largest crowd to see a non-Harvard game at Yale Bowl since Army was there in 1954 assembled on one of those crackling red-and-gold New England afternoons that helped to make football popular in the first place. A large part of the conversation was somewhat defensive, with people assuring one another that this whole thing was really great, that Dartmouth and Yale could certainly perform respectably against Ohio State or Texas or anybody else, and that Ivy League football, after all, is played by students. So without question in the minds of the 60,820 people who had come to watch it, this Yale-Dartmouth match was going to settle at least the amateur college football championship of the season."

"Unfortunately for the Yale crowd, it didn't take long to establish which was the better team. Massey stuck to a plan that stubbornly insisted his two fast running backs—Dick Jauron and Don Martin—could break through between the Dartmouth tackles, despite evidence to the contrary." [Jauron and Martin both played in the NFL, and replaced Calvin Hill at Yale. You've probably never heard of Calvin Hill, the NFL rookie of the year.]

https://vault.si.com/vault/1970/11/09/just-ask-the-tailgate-set-who-is-no-1

"One thing you certainly don't expect in the Ivy League is a nationally ranked team, but that's what coach Bob Black-man fielded at Dartmouth in 1970. That year Dartmouth was undefeated and untied, producing such outstanding stats that it was ranked 14th in both the AP and UPI final polls, ahead of Oklahoma, Penn State and Southern Cal [and Alabama and Georgia]. Dartmouth's 9-0 record included six shutouts—four in a row to end the season. Among major colleges that year Dartmouth ranked second in total defense and sixth in total offense, and led the country in scoring defense."

"It was the cradle of football, and a number of its players have excelled in the NFL—Calvin Hill, Ed Marinaro, Gary Fencik and Nick Lowery, for example" [And Dick Jauron, Marty Domres, George Starke, Marcellus Wiley, Jeff Kemp, Jay Fielder, Reggie Williams, Dave Shula, John Spagola]

"https://vault.si.com/vault/1987/08/31/a-big-year-for-big-green

Why do you bother with him, PR? He’s just a freaking troll…

I enjoy showing how much of an idiot he is. The more he continues, the more he shows what an idiot he is, and he reflects poorly on Sac St, whether he went there or not. And I enjoy looking up articles on my Glory Days. Ha.
 
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