You’re correct in saying that. I was simply saying that chromosomes don’t necessarily define biological gender. To expand more on your point, how many people are transgender? Also less than 1%. How many trans people have been in the Olympics (as their gender identity) since 2004, when trans people were first permitted to compete? A total of 1. How many of them have medaled? Zero. The NCAA doesn’t have time to craft policies that would run counter to the National and international organizations. Easier to follow than to lead. We can debate all day about whether or not trans people should compete as the gender they identify, but that’s what these organizations are paying people to figure out - how to be inclusive and how to make it fair.
Partially. You assume your sex chromosomes are what they are because you have no reason to believe otherwise. However, there aren’t simply two sets. It’s more complicated than that. Even your own example doesn’t account for people born with androgen insensitivity syndrome, XY people who do not have the ability to process testosterone and subsequently are born with XX genitalia. Most people with this condition don’t know they are XY until they find out that the reason they do not have a menstrual cycle is because internally they do not have a uterus. So what team do they play for?
This is why the NCAA punted the issue. The IOC has their own rules, and so do professional sport governing bodies.
I’m cool with this as long as the following three things happen in conjunction with this.
1. The NCAA requires that all student athletes meet the school’s acceptance requirements, the requirements that non-student athletes adhere to.
2. The NCAA no longer funds athletic scholarships, OR all athletic scholarships are guaranteed in full for four years once an athlete signs on the dotted line.
3. The NCAA ensures that any third party facilitation of profiting off of a player’s image or likeness nullifies an athletic scholarship (boosters, cash handshakes, etc).
I’ve taken shit for 15 years living in Ohio as a proud Michigan fan. I went to The Game last year dressed in bright maize sweater and blue sweatpants and you could see me in a crowd. After The Game, OSU fans didn’t sneer at me or treat me like shit or give me a hard time. They sadly said, maybe next year. Even OSU knows Michigan isn’t shit and it makes them sad because it’s not a rivalry for them anymore, it’s a check mark on the way to the playoff. So yeah. The season is over, and the best we can hope for is a win over the team in Columbus because they get dysentery on the way up to the Big House.
Your child is one. The best scenario is that she sleeps the entire time while you enjoy the game. Unless she's extremely used to loud buzzers, rowdy people, crowd noise, bright lights, and strange smells, she's going to be miserable. That much stimulation is overwhelming for a baby, and she won't even remember the game.
Right, because they expected the dog to blow out its back and need to pay for a surgery on the back of a wedding. No worries, just let the pooch die a painful death because Mike here thinks it should.
Sorry to hear you have so much disdain for people in general.
Give me a break. The spot is not the only issue we have with the game. Pass interference calls on critical third downs, the spot that frankly was bullshit and badly reviewed, the fact that one of the refs had been banned from officiating for poor performance in the past, the fact that one of the refs was an Ohio native and self professed fan of Ohio State, the cheap shot Weber threw right in front of the official that wasn't called, I can keep going but I don't want to. Go away. We didn't ask for your two cents on how your team somehow came away with a win when your team has been the most penalized team in the big ten all year but somehow cleans up all of that for just two penalties for six yards in the biggest game of their career against their worst rival. It wasn't just the goddamn spot. Go back to eleven warriors if you don't like what you're reading here.
It doesn't really matter where you're drafted as long as you're a first round pick. Obviously there are busts but the average NFL career of a first rounder is 11 years. The average for anyone past the first round is 3 years.
Shot in the dark here, but could Purdue be an attractive landing spot for a guy like Bo Pelini? They can certainly pay him more, he wasn't a slouch at Nebraska, and he can recruit.
Interesting that your apparent perspective and experience with mental illness is the equivalent of looking through a window from the far side of a room.
For Dave, I pray that he has found peace from whatever he battled and lost to.
For Dave's family, friends, and fans, I pray they will find comfort.
For you, I hope you might learn how to understand the concept of shades of grey.
Not really a blunder. Go for the field goal and the win and the NC slot, which was 57 yards I believe, or take a knee and go into overtime. It's just improbable that it'll happen on a field goal where you have your linemen defending a kicker versus a squad ready to tackle the return man.
I live in Ohio and frankly, I was flabbergasted when Cardale was named the starter at the beginning of the year. My thought process was simple. Would OSU have lost the National Championship with JT at the helm? If the answer was yes, then Cardale should be the starter. If the answer was no, then JT is the right man for the job. That's not meaning any disrespect for Cardale. But the fact is that the TEAM was clicking on all cylinders when they hit the B1G Championship and Cardale happened to be put into a position to succeed. That being said, now that they've handed the reins over, OSU is about to become more dangerous. They're a better team with JT and they are going to figure that out in a hurry. It's going to be a showdown come November.
You seem to have forgotten the year that open tryouts were posted for kicking and punting because those units were so bad. I think it was 2008. So yes. Use a scholarship for a kicker. Special teams are important.
Did it occur to you at any point that it might be a bad idea to ask strangers for a picture of shirtless college boys? That might have been a substantially important clue.
To be honest, I don't really care about Starz. We have lots of kids who were highly ranked already. We need development and coaching. Effort. A killer instinct. I'm glad highly rated recruits are interested in Michigan but Hoke was a good recruiter too. Wins solve a lot of problems with recruiting.
Women have to be a little more passive aggressive than that. We get a lot of revenge on the base paths. I can't begin to tell you how many times I rung the bell of a bad attitude player. I was a third baseman and sometimes I'd just let the ball hit her in the back on a pickoff play. I'd put a little more mustard on a tag than needed or I'd aim for a sensitive place. Getting revenge at the plate is harder because the game is so much faster and the base paths are shorter. Pitchers will keep the ball high and tight on players but not in the numbers. I can say for myself that I was not a nice ballplayer.
Keep in mind though that stealing signs usually happens from the dugouts, watching the coaches. For the most part, coaches call pitches.
I coach softball. The most dedicated thing that I do is work hard at helping my players pursue their goals in the sport, and most of them want to play in college. That's what I push for. I want them to succeed.
I also love Olympic lifting. Right now I'm trying to drop a weight class so I can lift in the 69 kilo class. After college I let myself go quite a bit and I've had to work really hard to get back into shape. The most dedicated thing I do in this is eat right. I want a cheeseburger so bad, but I'll eat the salad instead.
For every one Ccijanovic that dares to speak up about the powerlessness of a student athlete, there are hundreds who stay silent because of the derision that the one experiences. Being told to "man up" is why we have concussion lawsuits. We can't have it both ways - complaining that coaches make too much money and the NCAA has too much power and then scorning kids who rely on these sports for scholarships for not being grateful for their education.
I'm interested to see if part of the due diligence on behalf of the Seahawks included determining where other teams had him ranked on their draft boards. He went in the second round, which tells me that the Seahawks weren't the only ones interested in him early. I'm not convinced that the Seahawks didn't do their due diligence. I think they assessed the liabilities and decided that he was worth the PR risk. The Seahawks also didn't have a glaring need for a DE which tells me that they might handle the fallout a little better than other teams that need depth at the position.
As it is, however, I don't think the Seahawks failed everyone. I think they failed the family of the victim, but they didn't not fail anyone any more than other teams do when they resign or give chances to players with suspicious backgrounds. The Cincinnati Bengals are a prime example of a team that regularly signs players with records. That in no way excuses what happened with Clark, but it's a bit of a blanket statement to condemn the Seahawks for doing exactly what every other team does on a regular basis. The issue is not with the team, it's with the NFL giving lip service to victims of domestic violence but not enforcing regulations or punishing teams for signing players with criminal histories. The problem is, with the media attention span, this will be forgotten as soon as the next story crops up.
Oh sure, mock one of the very best softball coaches in America, if not the world, because she's a middle-aged woman. Never mind the fact that she resurrected and has presided over one of the winningest programs at Michigan, and has never had a losing season as a head coach. I'm sure your credentials are just as stellar.
MGoUsers griping about recruiting commitments/decisions, especially from relatively unknown players. In coaches we should trust. CRAZY SUBS AND HARBAUGH.
Any college football fan tweeting at high schoolers and college players.
Grammar.
People who post idiotic political bullshit on Facebook.
Recent Comments
You’re correct in saying that. I was simply saying that chromosomes don’t necessarily define biological gender. To expand more on your point, how many people are transgender? Also less than 1%. How many trans people have been in the Olympics (as their gender identity) since 2004, when trans people were first permitted to compete? A total of 1. How many of them have medaled? Zero. The NCAA doesn’t have time to craft policies that would run counter to the National and international organizations. Easier to follow than to lead. We can debate all day about whether or not trans people should compete as the gender they identify, but that’s what these organizations are paying people to figure out - how to be inclusive and how to make it fair.
Partially. You assume your sex chromosomes are what they are because you have no reason to believe otherwise. However, there aren’t simply two sets. It’s more complicated than that. Even your own example doesn’t account for people born with androgen insensitivity syndrome, XY people who do not have the ability to process testosterone and subsequently are born with XX genitalia. Most people with this condition don’t know they are XY until they find out that the reason they do not have a menstrual cycle is because internally they do not have a uterus. So what team do they play for?
This is why the NCAA punted the issue. The IOC has their own rules, and so do professional sport governing bodies.
Ah. That explains it. It stuck out to me as odd, so thanks for clearing that up.
Not the typed out comment, but the picture at the top where the 〽️ starts the word Michigan.
I always appreciate new commit posts but...
Why is Michigan spelled wrong...
As a resident, I can assure you that we are always having a tough time...so that’s fair.
I’m cool with this as long as the following three things happen in conjunction with this.
1. The NCAA requires that all student athletes meet the school’s acceptance requirements, the requirements that non-student athletes adhere to.
2. The NCAA no longer funds athletic scholarships, OR all athletic scholarships are guaranteed in full for four years once an athlete signs on the dotted line.
3. The NCAA ensures that any third party facilitation of profiting off of a player’s image or likeness nullifies an athletic scholarship (boosters, cash handshakes, etc).
I’ve taken shit for 15 years living in Ohio as a proud Michigan fan. I went to The Game last year dressed in bright maize sweater and blue sweatpants and you could see me in a crowd. After The Game, OSU fans didn’t sneer at me or treat me like shit or give me a hard time. They sadly said, maybe next year. Even OSU knows Michigan isn’t shit and it makes them sad because it’s not a rivalry for them anymore, it’s a check mark on the way to the playoff. So yeah. The season is over, and the best we can hope for is a win over the team in Columbus because they get dysentery on the way up to the Big House.
Yes. 2010. Under RichRod.
Any time a coach had to put out an open tryout or ask the soccer team to try out for the kicker job.
Signed,
Married to a
Signed,
Married to a UD grad.
I sincerely hope it works out.
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Sorry to hear you have so much disdain for people in general.
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For Dave, I pray that he has found peace from whatever he battled and lost to.
For Dave's family, friends, and fans, I pray they will find comfort.
For you, I hope you might learn how to understand the concept of shades of grey.
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Florida State won the NC.
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Keep in mind though that stealing signs usually happens from the dugouts, watching the coaches. For the most part, coaches call pitches.
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Kiante Enis, class of 2016.
Most recent track meet: TEC Meet
100m: 10.94 (1st)
High Jump: 5-6 (1st)
Discus: 137.3 (1st)
http://www.ihigh.com/tec/article_227501.html
247 Football Ranks
Composite 3 star
http://247sports.com/Player/Kiante-Enis-37427
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I also love Olympic lifting. Right now I'm trying to drop a weight class so I can lift in the 69 kilo class. After college I let myself go quite a bit and I've had to work really hard to get back into shape. The most dedicated thing I do in this is eat right. I want a cheeseburger so bad, but I'll eat the salad instead.
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As it is, however, I don't think the Seahawks failed everyone. I think they failed the family of the victim, but they didn't not fail anyone any more than other teams do when they resign or give chances to players with suspicious backgrounds. The Cincinnati Bengals are a prime example of a team that regularly signs players with records. That in no way excuses what happened with Clark, but it's a bit of a blanket statement to condemn the Seahawks for doing exactly what every other team does on a regular basis. The issue is not with the team, it's with the NFL giving lip service to victims of domestic violence but not enforcing regulations or punishing teams for signing players with criminal histories. The problem is, with the media attention span, this will be forgotten as soon as the next story crops up.
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Any college football fan tweeting at high schoolers and college players.
Grammar.
People who post idiotic political bullshit on Facebook.
Twitter.
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