
George P Burdell
Favorite team: | Georgia Tech ![]() |
Location: | Piney Point Village, Texas |
Biography: | |
Interests: | |
Occupation: | |
Number of Posts: | 306 |
Registered on: | 8/25/2014 |
Online Status: | Not Online |
Recent Posts
Message
re: Just got roll tided on the Prague metro
Posted by George P Burdell on 4/13/25 at 1:53 pm
Got a Geaux Tigers and exchanged high-fives in Pamplona just before the first rocket went off for the Running of the Bulls.
re: Final Pitch of Nebraska Game
Posted by George P Burdell on 3/2/25 at 2:44 pm
quote:
To the LEFT of the batter is my son and I with the same reaction. Wring him up!
I had to go back and watch it again to see if I was reading your post correctly. Two sets of fathers and sons behind home plate, only feet away from each other, with identical reactions. This makes a great video even greater.
And, interesting to note, fewer than 100 combined lifetime posts on TD, at least among the Dads. Post more, gents.
re: Can the Rant show Kevin Peoples some appreciation?
Posted by George P Burdell on 10/15/24 at 7:41 pm
Yeah, c’mon, prople.
re: 1987 Georgia win in Athens
Posted by George P Burdell on 9/16/24 at 11:50 am
quote:
Maybe clips from this game will get in to Cocktail 2
Exceptionally well done, sir
re: Anyone watching Hard Knocks* Offseason? LSU getting a lot of visibility
Posted by George P Burdell on 7/24/24 at 12:07 am
Just binge-streamed the first four episodes on Max. Jayden and Malik got a ton of love from the Giants in the fourth episode leading up to the draft.
Recommend for Tiger fans, definitely.
Recommend for Tiger fans, definitely.
re: Recruiting Confidential ... Great read from The Athletic
Posted by George P Burdell on 1/3/24 at 12:54 pm
Ah, that makes sense. Grazie, buddy. Tried to only include the most interesting questions, but happy to delete if directed.
re: Recruiting Confidential ... Great read from The Athletic
Posted by George P Burdell on 1/3/24 at 12:39 pm
ETA to original post. Sorry for the wall of text, but character caps are a real thing here.
Did you sign with the school that offered you the best NIL deal? If not, how much did you leave on the table to sign with where you ultimately decided to go?
• It wasn’t a big difference for me in terms of the total package. All the schools offered about $300,000 to $400,000 per year with the ability to earn more.
• I left some money on the table, about $50,000. But I signed with my dream school.
• The dollar figures were similar so NIL wasn’t a priority for me. I’m worried about the big bucks later. My relationship with the coaches, watching them practice and seeing it was really was the biggest factor.
• I had another school offer me the same NIL deal in total, but with a signing bonus. The signing bonus would’ve been basically a really nice car. The NIL deal is like an NFL rookie contract. I had an agent handle it all for me. As soon as NIL came out, my dad was like, “You need an agent.” When schools call, they have the position coach, head coach and the money man from the collective call you. That last guy is the one who talks about NIL with the agent.
• I signed with the team that gave me the best chance to make the NFL, not the most NIL money.
• I didn’t sign with the school who offered me the biggest NIL deal I could’ve gotten, but coming from where I come from, any money I receive from a college is life-changing money.
• I signed completely off the bond I built with coaches. I didn’t start talking about NIL until recently. I’ll be making about $80,000 to $100,000 per year. A couple other schools had similar offers.
• No, I didn’t. I signed with (my school) and they gave me like $90,000. I feel like it’s not really about the money for me and I like (my school). … I want to say (my best offer was about) $200,000. They came in the process late and (my school) was there since my freshman year so it was easy."
• I didn’t sign with the school who offered the biggest deal. In total, it was probably about $300,000 in difference for the three years. Why did I go to the school offering less money? Because in the long run I could go somewhere where I can stay focused — not be distracted — and get on the field right away.
• I signed with the school who offered me the best NIL deal. Other schools threw a lot of big numbers out, but the school I signed with I trusted I’d get the money because I saw other guys got it.
• I left some money on the table. I didn’t bring up NIL until my official visits. One team told me if I committed early and helped bring other guys in, they’d give me $40,000 a month up until I signed. But I didn’t sign with them.
• To be honest, I didn’t. I don’t really look at all that stuff right now. I (chose) the school that, I wouldn’t say showed the best love, but it was a school where I just really liked being around the people and I felt like I could make an impact there. … I’ll get (NIL) later on. I think I’m looking to invest in myself now and then get a bigger bag later on.
• I’m not sure. I didn’t really ask about NIL, money-wise. That wasn’t really on my mind. I knew it was gonna come, but I just wasn’t really concerned about it.
Did you partake in any trolling of fan bases with comments on social media for your personal enjoyment?
• A little bit. I’d put out photos of myself at a school I wasn’t visiting just to see what people might say. There were times I’d put out like statements — like you’d do if you were decommitting — to scare people. You just need to have fun sometimes.
• I loved messing with fan bases. I did that to the school I almost signed with.
• I trolled people indirectly. Usually it was our rival. As far as adding followers, I added teams to my list at times and it worked.
• Yeah. I was trolling (a rival school), like posting stuff saying I was gonna commit there. I was just doing it for fun.
• Me and one of my high school teammates would send out certain hashtags and emojis to get fan bases from other teams on social media riled up. It was more about being bored and wanting to do something to see how people might react.
• A little bit. I did it to the fans of the school I was previously committed to just because I was tired of them. I’d ask them: “How was that flip for you?”
• I dropped a top 10 when I was really only looking at four or five schools. I did it for the followers. I got like 231,000 views for it and picked up followers.
• Every day. To get my followers up? Every day. Gosh. All the emojis, all the question marks, “Is this home?” I was getting all my committed friends to send me messages just so I could reply and be like, “Should I come here?” Follow me up. Follow me up. Follow me up.
Who were the nicest coaches you met during the process — from schools you didn’t sign with?
• Sonny Dykes at TCU and Jim Harbaugh at Michigan. Dykes is a family-oriented coach. I have the utmost respect for coaches from Texas.
• I really liked (Georgia) coach (Kirby) Smart, (ex-defensive backs coach) Fran (Brown). (Miami defensive coordinator Lance) Guidry and (executive director Dennis Smith). Just good people. They talk to you about more than football.
• (Florida’s Billy) Napier is a really good dude. So is (Mike) Norvell at Florida State. Coach (Kirby) Smart is a business guy.
• (SMU’s) Rhett Lashlee. He was the most genuine head coach. You can tell it was the real him. Some coaches like to put a face on during the game and another off the field. He was him on and off the field. That’s actually how he acts and moves.
• (Miami’s) Mario Cristobal and (Penn State’s) James Franklin. It doesn’t have to be just about football with them.
• I would say coach KB. (Keith Bhonapha). He was at Oregon State and now he’s at Michigan State. He went with the head coach. I think for him, it’s bigger than football. Obviously we’d talk a lot of ball, but he checked in during the holidays just on a day-to-day basis, so I thought that was cool.
• (Ohio State’s) Ryan Day. You feel like you can talk to him about anything.
• (Alabama’s) Nick Saban. He was different than I expected.
• I would have to say coach Matt Moore, the O-line coach from West Virginia. Just the coolest guy, man. He gave grandfather, uncle vibes all the time. He’s a down South guy, so he always had the hospitality. He’s a good person.
• I want to say between (Tennessee’s) coach Heup (Josh Heupel) and (Oregon’s) Dan Lanning. Coach Heup, down to earth guy. … He’s really nice. Off the field, he’s a nice guy. Good person and he actually cares about his players. He knows his players. His players can come to him, and I see that with my own eyes. And then Dan Lanning, not a lot of people know this, I’m not sure, but his wife had cancer. … I feel like just to open up about that — because he knew me for probably about four or five, six, seven months (and) he’s known his wife probably for forever — I don’t know how to say it, but he’s a soft heart.
Who was the weirdest or most arrogant coach you met during the process and why?
• Probably (Colorado’s) Deion (Sanders). It’s all love though. He goes about it in his own unique way. It’s not arrogance — just cockiness.
• (Rutgers’ Greg Schiano) was too robotic.
• Nobody was really arrogant. (Clemson coach Dabo) Swinney isn’t stuck in his ways but doesn’t really want to change much.
• I’d say coach Saban. My mom wasn’t happy with him. We were at a table eating and he acknowledged me, but not my parents. My mom said, “If you’re acknowledging my son, you should acknowledge me.”
• I didn’t like (Nick) Saban. It was just the vibe.
• (Ex-Texas A&M coach) Jimbo Fisher. I watched him in practice. He yelled and cussed at guys too much.
• Fisher and Saban. Talking to Saban felt like talking to a robot. It didn’t feel real.
Did you sign with the school that offered you the best NIL deal? If not, how much did you leave on the table to sign with where you ultimately decided to go?
• It wasn’t a big difference for me in terms of the total package. All the schools offered about $300,000 to $400,000 per year with the ability to earn more.
• I left some money on the table, about $50,000. But I signed with my dream school.
• The dollar figures were similar so NIL wasn’t a priority for me. I’m worried about the big bucks later. My relationship with the coaches, watching them practice and seeing it was really was the biggest factor.
• I had another school offer me the same NIL deal in total, but with a signing bonus. The signing bonus would’ve been basically a really nice car. The NIL deal is like an NFL rookie contract. I had an agent handle it all for me. As soon as NIL came out, my dad was like, “You need an agent.” When schools call, they have the position coach, head coach and the money man from the collective call you. That last guy is the one who talks about NIL with the agent.
• I signed with the team that gave me the best chance to make the NFL, not the most NIL money.
• I didn’t sign with the school who offered me the biggest NIL deal I could’ve gotten, but coming from where I come from, any money I receive from a college is life-changing money.
• I signed completely off the bond I built with coaches. I didn’t start talking about NIL until recently. I’ll be making about $80,000 to $100,000 per year. A couple other schools had similar offers.
• No, I didn’t. I signed with (my school) and they gave me like $90,000. I feel like it’s not really about the money for me and I like (my school). … I want to say (my best offer was about) $200,000. They came in the process late and (my school) was there since my freshman year so it was easy."
• I didn’t sign with the school who offered the biggest deal. In total, it was probably about $300,000 in difference for the three years. Why did I go to the school offering less money? Because in the long run I could go somewhere where I can stay focused — not be distracted — and get on the field right away.
• I signed with the school who offered me the best NIL deal. Other schools threw a lot of big numbers out, but the school I signed with I trusted I’d get the money because I saw other guys got it.
• I left some money on the table. I didn’t bring up NIL until my official visits. One team told me if I committed early and helped bring other guys in, they’d give me $40,000 a month up until I signed. But I didn’t sign with them.
• To be honest, I didn’t. I don’t really look at all that stuff right now. I (chose) the school that, I wouldn’t say showed the best love, but it was a school where I just really liked being around the people and I felt like I could make an impact there. … I’ll get (NIL) later on. I think I’m looking to invest in myself now and then get a bigger bag later on.
• I’m not sure. I didn’t really ask about NIL, money-wise. That wasn’t really on my mind. I knew it was gonna come, but I just wasn’t really concerned about it.
Did you partake in any trolling of fan bases with comments on social media for your personal enjoyment?
• A little bit. I’d put out photos of myself at a school I wasn’t visiting just to see what people might say. There were times I’d put out like statements — like you’d do if you were decommitting — to scare people. You just need to have fun sometimes.
• I loved messing with fan bases. I did that to the school I almost signed with.
• I trolled people indirectly. Usually it was our rival. As far as adding followers, I added teams to my list at times and it worked.
• Yeah. I was trolling (a rival school), like posting stuff saying I was gonna commit there. I was just doing it for fun.
• Me and one of my high school teammates would send out certain hashtags and emojis to get fan bases from other teams on social media riled up. It was more about being bored and wanting to do something to see how people might react.
• A little bit. I did it to the fans of the school I was previously committed to just because I was tired of them. I’d ask them: “How was that flip for you?”
• I dropped a top 10 when I was really only looking at four or five schools. I did it for the followers. I got like 231,000 views for it and picked up followers.
• Every day. To get my followers up? Every day. Gosh. All the emojis, all the question marks, “Is this home?” I was getting all my committed friends to send me messages just so I could reply and be like, “Should I come here?” Follow me up. Follow me up. Follow me up.
Who were the nicest coaches you met during the process — from schools you didn’t sign with?
• Sonny Dykes at TCU and Jim Harbaugh at Michigan. Dykes is a family-oriented coach. I have the utmost respect for coaches from Texas.
• I really liked (Georgia) coach (Kirby) Smart, (ex-defensive backs coach) Fran (Brown). (Miami defensive coordinator Lance) Guidry and (executive director Dennis Smith). Just good people. They talk to you about more than football.
• (Florida’s Billy) Napier is a really good dude. So is (Mike) Norvell at Florida State. Coach (Kirby) Smart is a business guy.
• (SMU’s) Rhett Lashlee. He was the most genuine head coach. You can tell it was the real him. Some coaches like to put a face on during the game and another off the field. He was him on and off the field. That’s actually how he acts and moves.
• (Miami’s) Mario Cristobal and (Penn State’s) James Franklin. It doesn’t have to be just about football with them.
• I would say coach KB. (Keith Bhonapha). He was at Oregon State and now he’s at Michigan State. He went with the head coach. I think for him, it’s bigger than football. Obviously we’d talk a lot of ball, but he checked in during the holidays just on a day-to-day basis, so I thought that was cool.
• (Ohio State’s) Ryan Day. You feel like you can talk to him about anything.
• (Alabama’s) Nick Saban. He was different than I expected.
• I would have to say coach Matt Moore, the O-line coach from West Virginia. Just the coolest guy, man. He gave grandfather, uncle vibes all the time. He’s a down South guy, so he always had the hospitality. He’s a good person.
• I want to say between (Tennessee’s) coach Heup (Josh Heupel) and (Oregon’s) Dan Lanning. Coach Heup, down to earth guy. … He’s really nice. Off the field, he’s a nice guy. Good person and he actually cares about his players. He knows his players. His players can come to him, and I see that with my own eyes. And then Dan Lanning, not a lot of people know this, I’m not sure, but his wife had cancer. … I feel like just to open up about that — because he knew me for probably about four or five, six, seven months (and) he’s known his wife probably for forever — I don’t know how to say it, but he’s a soft heart.
Who was the weirdest or most arrogant coach you met during the process and why?
• Probably (Colorado’s) Deion (Sanders). It’s all love though. He goes about it in his own unique way. It’s not arrogance — just cockiness.
• (Rutgers’ Greg Schiano) was too robotic.
• Nobody was really arrogant. (Clemson coach Dabo) Swinney isn’t stuck in his ways but doesn’t really want to change much.
• I’d say coach Saban. My mom wasn’t happy with him. We were at a table eating and he acknowledged me, but not my parents. My mom said, “If you’re acknowledging my son, you should acknowledge me.”
• I didn’t like (Nick) Saban. It was just the vibe.
• (Ex-Texas A&M coach) Jimbo Fisher. I watched him in practice. He yelled and cussed at guys too much.
• Fisher and Saban. Talking to Saban felt like talking to a robot. It didn’t feel real.
Recruiting Confidential ... Great read from The Athletic
Posted by George P Burdell on 1/3/24 at 12:01 pm
Not a recruiting junkie, but I do follow LSU's efforts thanks to the people on this board. I've never seen this before, pretty good fly-on-the-wall stuff. I wonder if any of our guys chimed in.
LINK /
LINK /
re: Matt Mauck to Skyler Green 03 vs UGA
Posted by George P Burdell on 7/28/23 at 9:29 pm
This play is referenced all the time, rightfully so, and yet is still somehow underrated. A lot changed that afternoon, and it was surreal in many ways to watch it happen.
Yes, I was there.
Yes, I was there.
re: Share your favorite LSU Auburn memory
Posted by George P Burdell on 6/16/23 at 10:35 am

Raion Hill, with a purple rod in his leg, returning two interceptions for touchdowns in the 4th quarter (one of them a 2-pt defensive PAT) while this was happening. I was in the stadium, it was a wild night.
re: Imagine losing to Auburn & Mississippi State
Posted by George P Burdell on 5/13/23 at 10:09 pm

re: Auburn Athletic Trainers save a life
Posted by George P Burdell on 5/12/23 at 3:48 pm
Very nice reminder of something well worth being reminded of … there are so many great young people in this country.
Logged in for the first time in a long time just to upvote and to say War Damn Eagle.
Logged in for the first time in a long time just to upvote and to say War Damn Eagle.
re: Another Aggie yell leader gem
Posted by George P Burdell on 9/16/22 at 7:00 am
re: BK Press Conference cliffs & notes 8/17
Posted by George P Burdell on 8/17/22 at 5:03 pm
quote:
Captain Crown
Dude, you are seriously indispensable to my efforts at keeping up with this program we all love. Feels like I follow you on Twitter, even though I’m not on Twitter and don’t understand how or why it works.
Sincerely,
People like me, who visit TD every day but almost never post.
re: Brian Kelly left Notre Dame because he could not beat SEC teams there.
Posted by George P Burdell on 8/13/22 at 3:07 pm
So much dumbass on this board. Saban, Miles and Orgeron were a combined 4 - 24 against the SEC before coming to LSU. And Ed O had 3 of those wins and 21 of those losses before rolling out the greatest team in the history of the sport with the 2019 Tigers.
2022 could very well be a mixed-results type of season (like Saban in 2000 and Ed O in 2017), but there’s very little doubt where this thing is headed.
2022 could very well be a mixed-results type of season (like Saban in 2000 and Ed O in 2017), but there’s very little doubt where this thing is headed.
re: LSU Men's Lacrosse Club names JR Ball as Head Coach
Posted by George P Burdell on 8/3/22 at 12:16 pm
quote:
JR Ball
Great guy. All those beers at Ivar’s in the 90s seem like yesterday.
re: These 5 QBS are the only LSU QBS to make first LSU start in a season opener at home
Posted by George P Burdell on 7/25/22 at 11:38 pm
quote:
Hodson’s first two passes, if I remember correctly, were airmailed way out of bounds
My first game ever in Tiger Stadium, I remember so many details about that night. Pregame with the band, fights in the student section. Seems like yesterday and a hundred years ago at the same time.
And yes, I remember watching his first pass basically land on the A&M bench.
re: Napier and Aranda Co HC titles
Posted by George P Burdell on 10/27/21 at 11:58 am

Oh, boy.
re: Texas A&M
Posted by George P Burdell on 8/25/21 at 7:24 pm
quote:
Not as soft as your 2019 schedule
One team was soft as hell on that schedule, that’s for damn sure.
re: France, Louisiana and failure at LSU
Posted by George P Burdell on 8/25/21 at 7:16 pm

What culture do you think this comes from? Time to turn in your fan card, dummy.
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