Submit Your Questions for "Hey Todd!"
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| ...or, conversely, how awesome it would be to get shrunken down to 1/4 size and then given a normal Flying V. |
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A serious note to start with this morning
What would you do for a gigantic flying V? And how awesome would you be if you rocked out on one of those?
Ok, seriously now. Where was the O against Tulane? Were we trying to hide our offense and keep it super simple and not show much so we can go into Arkansas and UGA with a realativley unrevealed offensive scheme? Or was it just simply a let down game, with comments from Mal (dumbass) Moore making it even more of a “Pushover” week?
Hell, no! A tie is like kissing your sister!
Andre is practicing
but will he play against WKY? Do you think it would be better to hold him out to avoid injury, or better to play him for more experience going into conference play?
I bleed crimson and white...I puke Vol puke orange. RTR
mr. straight bangin!
our good friend brian cook notes that brb won “mr straight bangin’” award for this weeks blogpoll – the honor awarded for the entrant with the least amount of bias toward their team in the poll. cook notes:
As we get further into the season you’ll often see rope-a-dope from disillusioned fans of teams that have just lost, and this board is the early-season version of that: neither Alabama or Florida lost, but they did struggle against overmatched opponents.
my question is concerning this perception of fans of a particular team after such a bad win or loss – is it really a disillusionment or is it the fact those fans are often the only ones to have watched (or monitored) the game in real time?
in terms of the tulane win i know that following the game drove home about every major concern i had about the team – not necessarily something i would have gleaned as fully just looking at the box score. i had the distinct feeling looking around at all the polls that the biggest reason we didn’t fall further this week was because so few of the voters had that first-hand experience of following the game.

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