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a0t0w0

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Everything posted by a0t0w0

  1. Sickest shot of the season. Nuts like Planters ain't never seen.
  2. WE WILL WIN. BENNY BOMAYE.
  3. NU BOMAYE NU BOMAYE WE WILL WIN.
  4. NU BOMAYE! NU BOMAYE!
  5. "The hate is music to my ears. I've got my dancin shoes."
  6. For the record, we gon' wreck it, even if our record don't pop.
  7. TEACH EM WE WILL WIN. THIS IS THE SHIT. WE. HAVE. BEEN. WAITING. FOR.
  8. We get this. We will win.
  9. Shavon is like, "oh you want to be tall and white?" "I'll just be Shavon" TASTE NUTS WISCONSIN. NO CHEESE CURDS HERE. GAME ON BITCH. GAME OVER BITCH. YOU ALREADY LOST
  10. I'm here and ready to nut swang boys. Shields hits 38, Petteway with 22, Pitch with 15 We win. Gon' get SO REAL.
  11. WOKE UP IN THE NEW BUGATTI
  12. Paper banners work too! Back in my day, we'd be making banners out of women's under drawers that we had engaged in coitus with the night prior.
  13. First of all thank you for coming on here and getting all this straightened up, takes a lot to do that. Also,welcome hope you stick around, sounds like you have some things to add to this site. What silverback said. It takes guts to admit something like that (even if it is an anonymous message board). I understand the heat of the moment. Especially if it's alcohol induced (ask my couch...). The most important thing is that you acknowledged it and handled it like an adult. I'm not sure if I made any comments, but I do know I was disappointed when I heard about it. The fact that you contacted the administration and reached out to us is enough for me.
  14. NU BREAKS OUT BABY NU 84 WISKY 67
  15. Call up the people at Guinness Book of World records. Let's break that weak ass level the Kings set.
  16. Mind...blown. Ultimate blue hair argument.
  17. In defense of Miles bringing in Vooch, here was a 7 footer with skill who was not well known and available when he arrived in Lincoln. Vooch was definitely worth taking a chance on. Unfortunately, Vooch has not progressed the way one might have hoped. You can see he's better than he was last year but he still has a very long road ahead before he's going to be capable of contributing at crunch time. I suppose you reach a point where you have to decide whether to continue to call to see if the next card completes your straight or whether it's time to fold. If the odds don't stack up in your favor, it may just be time to throw in your cards and wait for the next hand rather than throwing good money after bad. And so it may be with Vooch. If you give him another year and he still hasn't developed to the point of contributing significantly, do you give him another year after that? How long does he have to show sufficient progress before you decide it's not a safe bet? Vooch is like having pocket 6 and 8 and a flop of 5, 6 and 9. So, now you have a pair of 6s which, by itself isn't good enough to bet, but you have an outside chance at a 9-high straight. If the other guy raises big after the flop, do you call, hoping to get that 7? And then pay still more to see the river if the 7 doesn't show up on the turn? Or do you cut your losses after the flop and wait for a better hand? You probably fold and feel good about the decision even if the river is a 7. And, therefore, poor Vooch. It's not to say he can't possibly progress enough to keep him around. It's just that the odds are too long. And Miles isn't playing with house money at this point. How's that for a gambling analogy? I don't mean to pee in cheerios, but I wouldn't commit chips preflop with 6 8. At the same time, Miles was more in the position of Big blind and had the small blind flat call. Essentially nothing to lose at that point. The question is, how big of a raise is it and how risky of a call is it after the flop (sophomore year)? If we don't need that scholarship- stay in the hand. Calling the raise on the flop most likely commits you to play it out. If the turn (junior year) is a blank, you feel like shit staying in and hoping the river (senior year) magically hits. So, OK, change it and say you're the big blind and everyone called. The point is, don't chase a pot with long odds hoping you get that one card that turns barely more than nothing into a low straight simply because you committed some chips to it already. The smart play might be to cut your losses. It's possible Vucetic turns into something eventually. None of us can be for sure since we're not seeing him at practice and certainly aren't seeing him in games. We can imagine what it must be looking like for him since he's not getting minutes. If there's not much chance, though, for him to become a real contributor, then quit committing chips to him now and start this spring with a new hand. I agree witcha Norm. FWIW my hope is that we hit runner-runner 6's and Vooch turns into the Ultra-nuts.
  18. This is maddening.
  19. It blows my mind that he wasn't ejected. Dude should be suspended through the B1G tournament. Agree. It wasn't as much the arm wrestling that I had issue with as much as kicking his leg back and body slamming Trice. Totally uncalled for. At the minimum he should be reprimanded by the league. Iowa fans were claiming Trice was the one holding on. I can't find a replay, but I didn't see it that way. The douche appeared to lock his arm in, pull him down and put out his leg to ensure Trice would land hard. Looked like a WWE move.
  20. In defense of Miles bringing in Vooch, here was a 7 footer with skill who was not well known and available when he arrived in Lincoln. Vooch was definitely worth taking a chance on. Unfortunately, Vooch has not progressed the way one might have hoped. You can see he's better than he was last year but he still has a very long road ahead before he's going to be capable of contributing at crunch time. I suppose you reach a point where you have to decide whether to continue to call to see if the next card completes your straight or whether it's time to fold. If the odds don't stack up in your favor, it may just be time to throw in your cards and wait for the next hand rather than throwing good money after bad. And so it may be with Vooch. If you give him another year and he still hasn't developed to the point of contributing significantly, do you give him another year after that? How long does he have to show sufficient progress before you decide it's not a safe bet? Vooch is like having pocket 6 and 8 and a flop of 5, 6 and 9. So, now you have a pair of 6s which, by itself isn't good enough to bet, but you have an outside chance at a 9-high straight. If the other guy raises big after the flop, do you call, hoping to get that 7? And then pay still more to see the river if the 7 doesn't show up on the turn? Or do you cut your losses after the flop and wait for a better hand? You probably fold and feel good about the decision even if the river is a 7. And, therefore, poor Vooch. It's not to say he can't possibly progress enough to keep him around. It's just that the odds are too long. And Miles isn't playing with house money at this point. How's that for a gambling analogy? I don't mean to pee in cheerios, but I wouldn't commit chips preflop with 6 8. At the same time, Miles was more in the position of Big blind and had the small blind flat call. Essentially nothing to lose at that point. The question is, how big of a raise is it and how risky of a call is it after the flop (sophomore year)? If we don't need that scholarship- stay in the hand. Calling the raise on the flop most likely commits you to play it out. If the turn (junior year) is a blank, you feel like shit staying in and hoping the river (senior year) magically hits.
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