GAME The Game: Michigan @ #2 The Ohio State | Noon EST on Fox

I mean it probably wont actually happen but this would be the year if it is ever going to be happen. Nobody is that great, Oregon is the best team and they have shown they are quite beatable too. If there was a field Day could win against it's this one but like i've already said a bunch of times our horrendous special teams is gonna end up losing us another game.
Love when teams that lost to oregon chirp about how beatable they are
 
Let AG back in you pussy ass bitch.

And fuck Vandy
Arguing with Handicappers is like arguing with your blind retarded downs syndrome troglodytic cousin. Meaning, its satisfying for about 10 seconds and then you remember who you are dealing with
 
Arguing with Handicappers is like arguing with your blind retarded downs syndrome troglodytic cousin. Meaning, its satisfying for about 10 seconds and then you remember who you are dealing with
He’s an alt trying to drive up posts, nothing more.

Thats why I gave him the shit I just did.
 
That’s why we avoid you next year
I really hate this round robin schedule in conference. I always look forward to playing Purdue and Rutgers




bullshit-this.gif
 
I've never been a big SEC backer, but they are, by far, the best conference this year and it isn't even close.

Look how many teams who could be good in the B1G, who are trash this year? Michigan, USC, Washington, UCLA, Michigan State, etc. Oregon and Ohio are the only legit teams we have. PSU and Indiana have record because of their scheduling luck this year. PSU's best win is Illinois. Indiana's best win is........Michigan?

I want to argue for the B1G, but we are a train wreck this year and not because we have so many good teams and they keep beating each other. We just have a ton of teams who lost a ton of players to the draft and they are having down years.

Alabama and Ole Miss both lost to 2 crap unranked teams.

Tennessee & Texas A&M both lost to crap unranked teams as well.

And no said crap unranked teams would not be any less crap and unranked in any other conference.

The SEC is just as mediocre as the B1G this year it’s not the BS of “they are all so good they just beat on eachother!”
 
You haven't seen PSU play ONE time?! Lmao. Not that I held your opinions on anything in high regard, but now I know I can just stop altogether. Who the hell else haven't you watched this year. Lmao

I think PSU's offense is considerably improved from last year, despite averaging fewer points (I think turnovers may have played a role, they had more on defense in 2023). They average way more yards than last year and Allar's also seen a huge jump in his completion percentage (from 59.9% to 71.6%) and his Y/A (from 6.8 to 9.4). He had a fine sophomore season, but felt like he regressed in conference play. He's been a lot steadier this year IMO. Tyler Warren's also a much better player than he was a year ago (and he was still a good TE in 2023). He played well against OSU, but I felt like they didn't utilize him enough in that game... his usage should have been closer to the USC game (where he had 17 catches!). That goal line sequence in the 4th quarter was baffling.

I think PSU's been a playoff caliber team for three years, but they've had to deal with UM/OSU (save for no UM in 2024) and those games kept them out. I'm really interested to see how they do against Oregon and in the CFP.
 
lololol

As a resident and voter in the state of Ohio this pathetic.


I was curious, how much does it typically cost to pass a law:


According to available data, the average cost to pass a state law is estimated to be between $717 and $890 per statute, which includes the costs of drafting, debating, and enforcing the law, as well as the general overhead of running a state legislature; however, this figure can vary significantly depending on the complexity of the legislation and the state in question.
 
lololol

This following up the proposed measure that would make it law in Ohio for all liquor stores to open all highly sought after "allocated" bottles of whiskey when purchased to try and drive down the secondary market. Our dipshits in charge are on a real heater this month.
 
As a resident and voter in the state of Ohio this pathetic.


I was curious, how much does it typically cost to pass a law:


According to available data, the average cost to pass a state law is estimated to be between $717 and $890 per statute, which includes the costs of drafting, debating, and enforcing the law, as well as the general overhead of running a state legislature; however, this figure can vary significantly depending on the complexity of the legislation and the state in question.
This action is undisputedly perfect. Michigan did the right thing (planting the flag), ohio state did the right (defended their turf), the Police did the right thing (breaking up the incident and using O/C Spray, and the B1G did the right thing (nominal fines on both teams).
This following up the proposed measure that would make it law in Ohio for all liquor stores to open all highly sought after "allocated" bottles of whiskey when purchased to try and drive down the secondary market. Our dipshits in charge are on a real heater this month.
Sadly your dipshits (your word) are inferior than ours. I wish it wasn't, but it is.
 
Sadly your dipshits (your word) are inferior than ours. I wish it wasn't, but it is.
Not gonna lie, my normal words for our politicians are normally far more scathing so I put that nicely. Not sure if we have anyone shittier than Whitmer at this point in time, but that isn't stopping them from trying their best.
 
S-O.........F-T. Michigan has broken not only Ohio, but their politicians too.
 
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