Favorite team:LSU 
Location:Baton Rouge
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Number of Posts:631
Registered on:7/1/2014
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Never gave this much thought, but maybe LF wanted 7 in honor of Mathieu, who attended the same high school in NOLA.

Or maybe he's an LSU historian and a big fan of Rondell Mealy or Bert Jones?

quote:

I guarantee you if Leonard Fournette said I'll sign on the condition of wearing #18 my freshman year then he'd get that number


Nope, LSU is much bigger than LF, and LF knows this.

18 is sacred. One earns 18, and teamvote was accurate in this instance... :lol:

re: Louder stadium

Posted by SouthdownsTiger on 9/4/14 at 11:28 pm
quote:

Seismographs measure movement, not noise. Still impressive that the Hodson pass generated that much motion but it wasn't crowd noise.


So noise alone doesn't make things move?
Might wanna look into the workings of a speaker, or maybe even your own ears, which operate by noise vibrations the brain turns into what is commonly known as speech.

quote:

And there were several identifiable registered events last year when the Seahawks rocked the Saints on MNF. So it does happen in places other than TS


And here is this tool's bailout part. :lol:
quote:

(kind of like bryant denny or new kyle)


Try not to give your dumbass away so easily next time. :lol:
This guy thinks LSU fans go to games because of their seat location?

Dude...It's all about the game day partying/socializing scene much moreso than that.

Troll elsewhere.

re: Louder stadium

Posted by SouthdownsTiger on 9/4/14 at 9:22 pm
quote:

Paid maybe


Such a Negative Nancy. :lol:

re: Louder stadium

Posted by SouthdownsTiger on 9/4/14 at 9:13 pm
Not to get too scientific or anything, but only Tiger Stadium has registered enough ruckus to register as an earthquake.

The west-coasters will claim both Autzen and the Seahawk's stadium as louder, but that's mostly just them having a huge inferiority complex and targeting Tiger Stadium as the venue to beat.

These clowns are trying to fabricate decibel levels thru engineering just to match what just comes natural down here.

Its hilarious. :pimp:
You'd think this would be easy to find but no...

Somebody help me out here. :lol:
When will you rantards learn the decision making process?

Cam Cameron will decide the number of snaps each QB is allocated.

Jeez..........

:lol:
quote:

Germans


And people wonder why Germans think the world revolves around them. :cheers:
quote:

The OBC with nothing to lose is always dangerous


Im not sure SOS has that much fight left in him to be honest. He's done well at USC without a doubt, but that game had to shock him as much as it did the rest of us. As an offensive guy himself, all he can really do is yell at his defensive coaches/players a lot and go play some golf.

Some teams aren't built to defend the spread as well as others.
Clemson has been much better than Arkansas lately, who hasn't btw, not seeing why a war tiger plainsmen would cry over something so trivial.

:violin:
Along with UGA, they were a trendy pick to win the SECEast. The saying goes its always better to lose early rather than late, but to lose at home like they did was a shocker.

I guess my real question is, can we write off USC for 2014, or does SOS still have any magic left.



#4 Kwon Alexander

Seemed to be in on most every play for the defense.
quote:

why would LSU want to run the ball and shorten the game?


That's something LSU would want to do vs Auburn or A&M, teams that depend on pace. Not these guys.

quote:

have you paid attention to les miles coached LSU teams in the last few years


As a matter of fact I have. I think he's learned to defer to assistants more, and CC probably isn't interesting in grinding out a win over this cupcake via mostly the running game. He'll want to get the passing game plenty of reps.



I think it depends on how good a team's defense is. If a team has a shitty defense, ie A&M and Oregon for example, then the focus becomes to simply outscore the opponent, and running as many offensive plays as possible obviously facilitates that line of thinking.

However, I think the balance of power in college football remains with the power teams, those with the ability to run the ball and control the clock while allowing their defense to support that.

The hurry-up offense has its advantages, and you see old-school programs like LSU and Alabama using it some, but they'll never join those teams who seem to be looking at quantity of plays over quality of plays.

quote:

i think the LSU qb's might throw 12 passes combined in this game.


:lol:

They could and still cruise to an easy win.

But why the frick would they do something like that?

Haven't seen anything that silly since last watching a Monty Python classic. :spank:
quote:

Why is the backup QB always the most popular guy on the team? This is like every year. Last year it was Jennings who needed to play. AJ is young too, and needs all the game reps he can get.


Just think back to when Jarrett Lee was thrown in the mix way before he was ready. Dude set records for INT's and INT's returned for TD's his first year.

In hopes of not repeating past mistakes/history alone, logic says to play BH as much as possible just in case something happens to AJ.
I'd be willing to bet LF himself would welcome a reprieve from all the 3 heismans in 3 years talk.

I don't think the fans overall doubt he'll eventually be the beast predicted, but rather just one sub-group is actually responsible for all the silly early hype.

Just my opinion here, but I think Les was telling BUGA nation to relax, in of course his unique way.
Put it this way, I'm fairly certain Cam Cameron would like to see Harris get some meaningful playing time, if for no other reason than 'just in case'.

The QB 'battle' appears to be over, but you also need your #2 guy to have some reps just in case. One hit or nick, and boom...we might need a ready and tested BH to step in.