Waquoit
Mr. Positive
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
- Messages
- 36,402
- Reaction Score
- 101,776
That kinda goes with pants.Load Management
That kinda goes with pants.Load Management
Confused by this. Walk-off means the play allowed the team to walk off the field, ending the game. If a hit drives in the winning run to end the game, it's a walk-off.“Walk off”. I could swear it used to be reserved for the first batter in a tie game in bottom of the 9th or extra innings. Now, it’s used for every extra inning game when a guy gets a hit driving the winning run home.
Yeah, technically the "OBE" is called the "American".“Zone defense”; that’s an oxymoron.
“OBE” and “NBE”. It’s BEast.
A player or coach you’d like if he was on your team or hate if he was on another team. JC on any other team is still a JC.
Depends.That kinda goes with pants.
There’s a meme of Booger McFarland going around right with super obvious captions “if he makes this field goal they will have 3 more points than they do now”The worst ever....."This is a key play", when it's 4th and 10 with 43 seconds in a 2 point game. REALLY?
Those two are annoying, but the winner for most insipid phrase ever is "New York Football Giants".
Onions
FOHHHHHHHHHHHHOnions
Oh yeah here are a few I’m done with
Diaper dandies
He’s a high riser
Duke
Unc
Cuse
Aac
Mark Emmert
I think the "we/us" criticism is one of the most overplayed tropes in sports. Sports is nothing if not tribal. By buying tickets, cheering the team on, spreading the hype (when there is any), etc., we are in fact part of the entity that is <insert team name here>."Scholly"
"Natty"
Any reference to a favorite team as "we" or "us." You are not on the team.
ESPN
As opposed to the New York Baseball Giants