His name is out and based on googling his behavior is genetic. But he will enter the family business and continue acting like a schmuck while making more than any of us.
Was contacted via Facebook by a recent Michigan football player who graduated and was looking for a job in finance. The Facebook message was riddled with basic spelling and grammatical errors. I am disappointed to think that Michigan may not be so far above some of the football factories we like to ridicule when it comes to academic standards for athletes.
Obviously his age is an issue as well, but he seems like he'd be a better fit than Brandon. Older alumni love him, so he'd be a boon for fundraising and he has at least some background as an educator.
I've seen comments about Syracuse motivating is with their trash talk a few times. If these kids aren't 100% motivated already by playing in the final four, I doubt any locker room banter will make a difference.
Mitch McGary = MMG = Maybach Music Group, I've been scaring whoever I'm watching with by giving my best Rick Ross "huh" (or however you spell his trademark noise) whenever Big Mitch (Larry Hoover) does something exciting.
I think that the rule that athletes must wait 3 years from graduating high school to join the NFL is an underlying cause of this dilemma. Right now, players don't really have much of a choice regarding going to college if they want to play professional football someday. I'd have much less of an issue with the university making money off of Denard if he had the option to do something else; realistically, he does not.
To use an analogy, if you are a brilliant computer programmer instead of brilliant athlete , you can get a full ride to college, join a programming club on campus (not quite analogous to being on a team), and still work for Google and get paid for your talents. Obviously college is a testing ground in both instances, but once you have proven yourself it is only in football that a student cannot choose to enter the free market. The same analogy would hold true for a music student who can join an on-campus a-capella group while releasing an album or many other professions.
If football players had the choice to go pro and chose to stay in school, then fine, they are allowing their school to profit from them. Right now it isn't really much of a choice.
It is sort of halfback. When the redskins first started using the position, they moved the halfback out of the backfield and into the h-back spot. I assume it was a different player though.
It's just when I see that a guy like Juju or Hand is interested in pre-med or engineering, I get overly optimistic because if that is a top priority then Michigan is a no-brainer.
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I remember reading an article that Gronk lives entirely off of his endorsements and doesn't dip into his salary at all
http://www.bcinterruption.com/boston_college_athletics/2015/1/18/766565…
he's been here for years.
but hopefully it will be obsolete in a year.
I trust the coaches as evaluators ahead of any recruiting service.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=dermontti+dawson
trying to figure out what the hell team "Mar" was...hope they're worth the money
Obviously his age is an issue as well, but he seems like he'd be a better fit than Brandon. Older alumni love him, so he'd be a boon for fundraising and he has at least some background as an educator.
Is an appropriate word to use in discussing the aftermath of that game.
and was not as heralded of a college player. Playing with an elite PG helps though.
D-Mo left, most people thought he should've stayed.
Lewan stayed, shocking everybody.
At this point, I wouldn't be floored if 0 guys left or if 4 guys left. I'll set the over/under at 2.
are they not profiting off of a specific player?
Much more interesting now
Mitch McGary = MMG = Maybach Music Group, I've been scaring whoever I'm watching with by giving my best Rick Ross "huh" (or however you spell his trademark noise) whenever Big Mitch (Larry Hoover) does something exciting.
I think that the rule that athletes must wait 3 years from graduating high school to join the NFL is an underlying cause of this dilemma. Right now, players don't really have much of a choice regarding going to college if they want to play professional football someday. I'd have much less of an issue with the university making money off of Denard if he had the option to do something else; realistically, he does not.
To use an analogy, if you are a brilliant computer programmer instead of brilliant athlete , you can get a full ride to college, join a programming club on campus (not quite analogous to being on a team), and still work for Google and get paid for your talents. Obviously college is a testing ground in both instances, but once you have proven yourself it is only in football that a student cannot choose to enter the free market. The same analogy would hold true for a music student who can join an on-campus a-capella group while releasing an album or many other professions.
If football players had the choice to go pro and chose to stay in school, then fine, they are allowing their school to profit from them. Right now it isn't really much of a choice.
Does 90 points in 2002 mean the same thing as 90 points in 2012?
Also, what happened in 2002 that Carr's class was so much weaker than all of the other years?
I think the section on Sorrell got omitted accidentally...
I've seen mock drafts with GR3 as a borderline lottery pick along with Burke and Hardaway as a late 1st rounder.
It's just when I see that a guy like Juju or Hand is interested in pre-med or engineering, I get overly optimistic because if that is a top priority then Michigan is a no-brainer.