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re: More nobody coach: Barry Odom or Joe Moorehead

Posted on 6/13/18 at 4:48 pm to
Posted by Drebin
Member since Aug 2017
4446 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 4:48 pm to
quote:

I don't hate State. Had several friends attend there. Take off your blinders and you'll notice I talk about every SEC team, State fans in particular just need to be called out more than others this off-season.



You never miss an opportunity to troll state fans. You never miss an opportunity to mock someone who dares show some optimism about their football team. You're the worst kind of fan - someone who draws self esteem from the team he roots for and their relative success...making you feel superior to everyone. I'm sure you grew up a UAB fan and became an Auburn sidewalk fan Tubby's undefeated season or something stupid like that. I recognize the behavior...I live in North Mississippi - surrounded by Ole Miss fans that grew up Memphis State fans and never set foot on campus.
Posted by msudawg1200
Central Mississippi
Member since Jun 2014
9418 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 5:33 pm to
Dude, don't waste your time and energy responding to that fool. His entire life is to get on here and put other teams down to get a rise out of their fans. He's an immature douche.
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
59491 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 5:54 pm to
quote:

You never miss an opportunity to troll state fans.

He never misses a chance to troll anybody who is susceptible. He hits everybody equally.


quote:

someone who draws self esteem from the team he roots for and their relative success

Well there is some truth to this.
Posted by TOFTR
Tennissippi
Member since Jan 2016
2925 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 5:54 pm to
quote:

You don't know 1/4th of the story....you're just reacting to an edited grainy video and a bunch of internet hearsay. Nobody has defended his actions...only that there's more to the story.

Isn't saying there's more to the story basically just trying to excuse or justify why he did it, which would be defending his actions? She could've called him whatever. She could've said whatever about any dead anyone. There's no reason for a 6'4", 301 lbs. trained athlete ever to hit an unarmed woman, especially one who's already on the ground. There is no acceptable reason, even if his mom was dead and she called her a cheap $2 whore. It's ridiculous that her saying something should put it in a different light when he's hitting her while she's already on the ground
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
59491 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 6:44 pm to
quote:

There is no acceptable reason

You must watch The View. Really, no reason? There's plenty of reasons. I’m not saying you should do it. But there’s plenty of frickin’ reasons in that arc of that story.
Posted by MedDawg
Member since Dec 2009
4457 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 7:08 pm to
quote:

Moorehead did well in his 2 years as OC at Penn State. But objectively he did it in a weak defensive conference, running Franklin's offense


Wow, that proves you know nothing.
Posted by TOFTR
Tennissippi
Member since Jan 2016
2925 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 7:17 pm to
There is no reason for a trained athlete who's 6'3" and over 300 pounds to hit an unarmed woman. It's disgusting to suggest otherwise. She was on the ground. It wasn't self-defense. Take off your maroon glasses. If he'd been in the NFL when that happened, he would've been Ray Rice'd
Posted by MedDawg
Member since Dec 2009
4457 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 7:44 pm to
quote:

There's no reason for a 6'4", 301 lbs. trained athlete ever to hit an unarmed woman, especially one who's already on the ground.


She was NOT "already on the ground". And he didn't hit her just because she said something. Damn, there are so many lies about the incident.

There is a longer video (that I saw here). Simmons' sister was on her back and the woman was on top of his sister, pummeling her. He ran over, pushed the woman onto her back, and slapped her a few times. He SHOULD have taken the woman off his sister. He shouldn't have hit her, but he was defending his sister in the heat of the moment.

The police and the courts got the whole story and Simmons wasn't found guilty of any assault. He has been a model citizen since.
Posted by TOFTR
Tennissippi
Member since Jan 2016
2925 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 7:59 pm to
quote:

He ran over, pushed the woman onto her back, and slapped her a few times

So she was on her back on the ground when he started *hitting her?
Posted by Random MsState Fan
Member since Jun 2018
1657 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:33 pm to
Yes, because Ole Miss is Good Morals University.
quote:

Why the University of Mississippi? The state of Mississippi opened its flagship university in 1848. The first chancellor of the university, F.A.P. Barnard strove to create a one of the most advanced educational institutions of the time but his efforts were interrupted by the Civil War. As sectional controversy increased, Mississippi joined the fray, following South Carolina into secession in 1861. In February, 1861, Governor John J. Pettus commissioned the University Greys. Almost all of the university's students enlisted in the new regiment and when only four students reported to campus in the fall of 1861, the university closed, while most of its students went off to fight for the cause of the Confederacy. Ultimately, the University Grays suffered a one hundred percent casualty rate at Gettysburg. General Robert E. Lee's admonishments after the Civil War to furl the battle flag seemed to hold sway for a time. The more important business of recovering from the devastation reeked by the war was tantamount. But tied closely to that recovery was the treatment of newly-freed slaves. The hopes for equality promised during Reconstruction were quickly dashed. Mississippi led in the creation of a Jim Crow state, legislating segregation with its post-Reconstruction constitution in 1890. All Southern states soon followed its example. It was not a completely dismal time--in 1882, the university admitted women to the college, ahead of most flagship universities in the South. In the early decades of the twentieth century, a cadre of New South boosters lobbied for reconciliation with the North in an effort to propel economic advancement in the still-crippled region. It has been noted that one of the best creations of the New South was the Old South, a suggestion that reflects those New South boosters' attempts to mitigate their supplication of the assistance of the North by hearkening back to a nostalgic, if illusory, "moonlight and magnolia" time under slavery. During this time period, the university became known as "Ole Miss," a moniker used by slaves to describe the wife of the plantation owner. In 1948, on the heels of his own presidential initiative on race, President Harry Truman desegregated the armed forces. In addition, he followed the recommendation of his civil rights commission and added a civil rights plank to the Democratic Platform for that year. In response to this addition, the entire delegation from Mississippi and half of the delegation from Alabama walked out of the Democratic Convention. They formed a new party, the Dixiecrats, and ran Strom Thurmond from South Carolina as their presidential candidate. In the wake of this rebellion against recognition of civil rights as a priority, students at the university rallied behind their state's politicians, unfurling the Confederate battle flag put away long before. Thus a new "tradition" began. And yet, cooler heads seemed to prevail for a time. With the defeat of the Dixiecrats, Mississippi elected a moderate governor, J.P. Coleman. In 1953, a survey conducted by the student newspaper found that a majority of students attending the university would welcome a black student. But after allowing the FBI to investigate a lynching in the state, Coleman was defeated in the next gubernatorial election by Ross Barnett. On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court abolished segregated education and massive resistance to integration began in the South. In 1962, after months of negotiation, James Meredith was admitted to the university, the first black student. Many from outside the state came to campus to repel what they saw as an attack upon their way of life, calling the occasion the last battle of the Civil War. They were joined by students and Mississippians as well. The Kennedy administration called in federal troops to quell the uprising. Caught in the middle of the Cuban Missile Crisis, President Kennedy was informed that missiles in Cuba had a range of 4500 miles. He replied, "Can they hit Oxford, Mississippi?" His retort attests to serious nature of the resistance to integration at the university. That resistance to Meredith's arrival on campus caused a night of rioting on September 30, 1962, with two dead and many wounded. Troops remained on campus for the next year protecting Meredith, who graduated the following May. In civil rights historiography, the riot at the University stands as a signal event. The University of Mississippi has changed greatly over the last 35 years. Today about 12% of the student body is black, but bullet holes still riddle the Lyceum columns in the Circle and their existence is tangible evidence of the lengths some have been willing to go to prevent racial justice. James Meredith, in a recent column in the Daily Mississippian, called "Mississippi" the most powerful word in the English language. From slavery to Civil War battles, to entrenched segregation and the violent lynchings of Emmett Till, James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman, among many thousands of others, Mississippi holds a prominent place in the memory of those concerned with human rights. And yet, throughout its history, the state has witnessed many whites and blacks who have challenged white supremacy. Too often, their story remains untold. Mississippi is the bogeyman of racism for the United States and has become the repository of all that is impossible to improve. The record of those who have challenged those stereotypes is clear. The participation in a national conversation committed to challenging racial oppression by Mississippians attests to the continued desire and willingness to change. Therefore, there is perhaps no more appropriate place to hold a discussion on race relations than the flagship university of the state of Mississippi.
Posted by TOFTR
Tennissippi
Member since Jan 2016
2925 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:34 pm to
Lol you keep posting that to deflect
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
59491 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:36 pm to


First of all, you missed the entire Bill Burr reference. Second, I love how you had to emphasize a 6'3" trained athlete over 300 pounds. So basically you're ok with a 180 pound guy doing it. Got it. 300 pound guy disgusting. 180 pound guy ok.

quote:

It's disgusting to suggest otherwise.

Get off your moral high horse snowflake. Again, you missed the Bill Burr reference and it was trashy. She got up. Disgusting is true domestic violence not some hood ratchet fight where a brother is taking up for his sister. I can't say what I'd do in that situation because I don't come from a background where I had to come out of the trailor or projects to engage in something like that. But whatever you need to spill on a message board to make yourself feel better.
Posted by TOFTR
Tennissippi
Member since Jan 2016
2925 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:50 pm to
Yeah, I'm a snowflake for saying someone who's 6'3", over 300 pounds, and literally trained to maul people his own size never has an excuse to hit an unarmed woman. You got me. I'm not sure why a reference to a Bill Burr bit would make it any better. I don't think trashy justice makes it any better. He has no excuse. No man has an excuse to hit an unarmed woman on the ground, but, by all means, keep making excuses for him
Posted by Mizzou4ever
Kansas City, Mo
Member since Nov 2011
15231 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:53 pm to
Mind boggling how people can just make excuses for reprehensible behavior.
Posted by ExpoTiger
Member since Jul 2014
6489 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 8:56 pm to
quote:

it took me about 30 seconds to remember that State replaced Mullen with an absolute nobody.


Everyone knows jimbo went 5-6 last year at FSU. No one knows Moorhead was the 2016 OC of the year? As usual, Aggies have no fricking clue what they are talking about. In a few years you will still be paying mr popularity to sit on his arse.
Posted by weremoose
Member since Nov 2015
4169 posts
Posted on 6/13/18 at 10:38 pm to
They knew who Bret Bielema was too...
Posted by DawgHorns
Member since Dec 2017
277 posts
Posted on 6/14/18 at 2:33 am to
C'mon there's no way Jimbo turns out as bad as Bert. Even I can admit that.
Posted by CNB
Columbia, SC
Member since Sep 2007
95903 posts
Posted on 6/14/18 at 3:35 am to
quote:

Everyone knows jimbo went 5-6 last year at FSU.


One year defines a coach? Especially when the starting QB gets injured in the first game?
Posted by KSGamecock
The Woodlands, TX
Member since May 2012
22982 posts
Posted on 6/14/18 at 5:55 am to
Jimbo Fisher will run the SEC West, bookmark this post.
Posted by Poker Dough
Atlanta
Member since Jan 2018
8602 posts
Posted on 6/14/18 at 6:00 am to
Only if a rapist with a cannon of an arm walks through the door, the kind of guy he will make his son dress up as for Halloween. aTm already had a Heisman winning QB that treated women like shite and didn't win dick, Jimbo won't change that. Will be interesting to see what they do with $37.5 million guaranteed left on his deal and it's obvious he was a huge mistake
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