Recruiting Forum Football Talk VI

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True story… I just found out the lyric from Katy Perry’s “Waking up in Vegas” Is not “waking up the neighbors”

I never had any idea why the neighbors were awakened or why there was money involved
I never had any idea that grown men listened to her enough to be confused by her lyrics 😂😂😂

Jk, mostly
 
So I came up with a new term to describe the persistent Milton haters

They all have

Milton Overthrow Derangement Syndrome

He had those overthrows against Pitt and they just can't get over it.

Milton Overthrows Orange Players Syndrome (MOOPS)
OR
Milton Overthrows Orange Receivers Syndrome (MOORS)
 
Milton Overthrows Orange Players Syndrome (MOOPS)
OR
Milton Overthrows Orange Receivers Syndrome (MOORS)
It's such a horrible affliction

I remember the Vandy game some people with MODS gave bazooka joe a gold clap and a horray when he hit Hyatt on that deep ball

But right after that first incompletion their MODS flared up "HE JUST DOESNT HAVE IT"
 
APRIL 18.............

Not many "good' things have happened in history on my birthday:confused:

* 1902 Guatemala earthquake kills about 2,000
* 1904 San Francisco earthquake destroys most of the city
* University of Alabama was founded..


Best I could find:

Gray%20hero%20full.jpg.jpeg


April 18th, 1945, Pete Gray made his MLB debut and went 1-4.


Baseball is a difficult game to play well for those with two good arms but Pete Gray did it with one. Gray played only one season in the major leagues, 1945, but that was enough to have a lasting positive influence on people with disabilities. His accomplishment enlightened those of us who are perfectly formed, too —and it redefined how we view people with disabilities. Gray’s feel-good story was cathartic to a war-torn country, especially to disabled servicemen returning from World War II. His achievement was due to his incredible focus and determination. Gray became famous, but he was also “manipulated by club owners as well as by the media, maligned by many of his teammates, and left to wonder just how good a player he really was.”1 He deferred praise for his bravery to soldiers who had served on the battlefield. Gray spent his later years in obscurity and poverty and he would later say that he hadn’t done enough, given the opportunities he had, to help disabled people. There was one youth, however, Nelson Gary Jr., a 3-year-old, whom Gray met and befriended, and the two became forever linked by the coincidence of losing their right arms.
@TN-POSSUM you know what to do
 
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