Jackcrevol
Ain't Got Time!
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2005
- Messages
- 73,846
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- 188,452
I’m thinking it may have been Big Jug, but I do have fuzzy recall of that era.$10 cover and bottomless drinks? Are you talking about real restaurants or a frat party my guy...
The best price to buzz I've ever had (also being on the strip for pre/post gaming too) was a spot that's gone now called Rumors I believe and they had "big gulps" for $3 or something and it was like 64 oz of beer. I don't remember walking out of the place but I only spent $12 while there![]()
First play - 4 wrs wide to the sideline, Hyatt, Bru, Tillman, Keyton. Freshman RB Sampson in the backfield. Everyone wearing red would be totally dumbfounded.It could be anything, literally any football formation. I wouldn't be surprised to see the wishbone, power-i, split backs, 3 tight ends. . . 4wrs - Tillman, Hyatt, Bru, Keyton at the same time. . . everything they've done, they've executed well and left the defense scratching their head.
On the mutts 24/7 forums a poster was saying it was from the Florida week.
Simple question? Then why didn't it come out UF week? Also...in the video you hear Smart talking about the other team scoring all those layups...lmao...hate to tell you...that aint UF's offense. That video is from this week....those posters are just lying to cover it up.
Universities will never control NIL money and have no desire to control it. The NCAA opened this can of worms and it's up to the individual recipents to manage their money. Smart ones will have someone in their corner to help them manage the money.I work in Finance and as such am probably more sensitive to this than others. I don't know the ins and outs of NIL but I really hope they either have financial advisors or some type of financial controls for the players. I don't care who you are, no one in college can immediately receive a large sum of money and it pan out well. There is no telling what I would have done if given 6 figures in college. I think in an ideal world, universities would set up a fund that releases a certain amount every semester with the full balance set to release to them when they graduate.