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aubiefifty

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Everything posted by aubiefifty

  1. son of a tiger showed his behind on here about tubs and after the nation and even his own brother spoke out for being racist he has not apologized nor extended the convo because he is not man enough to admit when he is wrong.
  2. you boys get a nice erection picking on me and ichy? you people like to get sh*tty about stuff and cry so why single anyone out? it is like you guys are channeling your inner orange man...............feel better? jusat so you know bitching will not ger you anywhere. you people lost your mind protectinig captain bone spurs for years claiming everthing said about him was a lie. how is that holding up boys? damn right i will not let you forget. some of you christians acted very unchristian. well waity with all the hate in religion now maybe you were being perfect christians..........
  3. Ivanka Trump & Jared Kushner's Reportedly Shady Finances Are Being Called Out by This Former Donald Trump Ally Kristyn Burtt ~3 minutes If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, SheKnows may receive an affiliate commission. Chris Christie was once a Donald Trump ally, but now, he’s a competitor in the race for the Republican Party nomination for president. The former governor of New Jersey isn’t just criticizing his opponent on the campaign trail, he’s also taking on Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner’s previous roles in the White House. More from SheKnows One of Donald Trump's Biggest Republican Critics Just Launched His 2024 Presidential Run At a New Hampshire town hall forum on Tuesday, Christie went right for the jugular when it comes to the controversial couple’s finances. “The grift from this family is breathtaking,” he said at his campaign launch. “It’s breathtaking. Jared Kushner and Ivanka Kushner walk out of the White House, and months later get $2 billion from the Saudis.” He’s referring to the $2 billion funding that Public Investment Fund, which is backed by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, put into Kushner’s investment firm. This investment is currently being investigated by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform to determine whether Kushner used his position of influence for financial gain. And Christie didn’t stop there with his criticism; he had a lot more to say about the Breaking History author’s perceived abuse of power. “You think it’s because he’s some kind of investing genius? Or do you think it’s because he was sitting next to the president of the United States for four years doing favors for the Saudis?” He continued, “That’s your money. That’s your money he stole and gave it to his family. You know what that makes us? A banana republic.”
  4. news.yahoo.com Ryan Bort 3–4 minutes Pat Robertson - Credit: Steve Helber/AP Images Pat Robertson, the televangelist who ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 1988, died on Thursday at age 93. The Christian Broadcasting Network, which Robertson founded in 1960, announced the news Thursday morning. Robertson is widely credited with ushering Christian-conservatism into mainstream politics in the 1980s and 1990s, and laying the groundwork for the modern right-wing culture war. He has a history of extreme, bigoted commentary — including that gay people and abortion caused 9/11, that Haitians deserved the 2010 earthquake that ravaged the island nation, and that feminists are evil. More from Rolling Stone Leonardo DiCaprio, Covid Masks, and God: An Incomplete List of Who and What the Right Is Blaming for Russia's Invasion 'Vanderpump Rules' Reunion Twist: Was Raquel's Confession Worth the Wait? Chris Stapleton Cancels Outdoor New York Concert Due to Wildfire Smoke The 700 Club, Robertson’s long-running program on the CBN, was his most common platform for hate. In the days after 9/11, he brought on pastor Jerry Falwell to discuss the tragedy. “I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People for the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America, I point the finger in their face and say, ‘You helped this happen,'” Falwell said, to which Robertson said “I totally concur” and that the “agenda” has been adopted by the “highest levels of our government.” Robertson’s bigotry toward gay people was boundless. He said on The 700 Club that he wished Facebook had a “vomit button” for when he came across a picture of gay people kissing, equated gay people with Nazis and Satanists, and suggested God unleashed hurricanes and other natural disasters as punishment for homosexuality. “I would warn Orlando that you’re right in the way of some serious hurricanes, and I don’t think I’d be waving those flags in God’s face if I were you,” he said of Disney World’s Gay Days. “It’ll bring about terrorist bombs; it’ll bring earthquakes, tornadoes, and possibly a meteor.” Robertson was very much an active participant in the modern, far-right Christian conservatism he helped create. He supported Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020, and described those trying to stop him from doing so as “revolting against what God’s plan is for America.” After a gunman killed 60 people in Las Vegas in 2017, Robertson blamed “disrespect” for Trump. Robertson broke from the former president after the 2020 election, however, saying Trump needed to “move on” from the loss and that it would be “a mistake” for him to run again in 2024. Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence Click here to read the full article.
  5. i still cannot believe to this day someone has not punched or slapped the crap out of him.male or female. oh well. he is going to make ankle bracelets famous again.
  6. Clarence Thomas wrote a scathing, nearly 50-page dissent about why the Supreme Court should have gutted voting rights Kelly McLaughlin ~3 minutes Associate US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas poses for the official photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, DC on October 7, 2022.Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas dissented in Thursday's 5-4 ruling on Allen v. Milligan. He wrote a nearly-50-page dissent about his disagreement with the ruling. Thursday's ruling found that Alabama violated the Voting Rights Act's ban on racial gerrymandering. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas wrote a scathing, 48-page dissent in the court's ruling that Alabama violated a ban on racial gerrymandering. The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 on Thursday, holding a lower federal court's decision that Alabama violated the Voting Rights Act with congressional districts that discriminate against Black voters in the state by largely clumping them together into one district. The surprise ruling prevented the court from gutting the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, both conservatives, joined the Supreme Court's liberal-leaning justices in the ruling. Thomas was one of four conservative justices who opposed Thursday's ruling. In his dissenting opinion, Thomas wrote that the court's decision has turned Section 2 — the part of the Voting Rights Act used bans gerrymandering based on race — into "nothing more than a racial entitlement to roughly proportional control of elective offices —limited only by feasibility — wherever different racial groups consistently prefer different candidates." Thomas said the Voting Rights Act doesn't require Alabama "intentionally redraw its longstanding congressional districts so that black voters can control a number of seats roughly proportional to the black share of the State's population." "If it did, the Constitution would not permit it," he wrote. More dramatically, Thomas said he would have ruled that the Voting Rights Act had no power at all to prevent state legislators from racially gerrymandering districts — grouping minority votes along racial lines to dilute their power. Thomas said he's "long been convinced" that the Voting Rights Act only regulates voters' ability to actually get to the ballot or cast it. The gerrymandered maps were used in the 2022 election. Republicans won all six non-Black-majority congressional districts. The sole Black-majority district went to Democrats. Alabama will now need to redraw its electoral maps. Read the original article on Business Insider
  7. Trump indictment TODAY? Mark Meadows FLIPPED? let's separate facts from fiction here's what we know, and what we don't know Jeff Tiedrich Jun 8 holy s***! a firehose of Trump-indictment news, near-news and speculation erupted across social media yesterday afternoon and on into the evening. Trump indictment on Thursday! Trump got a target letter! Mark Meadows flipped! for sure, s*** is getting realer than real, but there’s a lot of smoke and noise out there right now. let’s try to make some sense of it. has Mark Meadows flipped? mayyyyybe. at about 3:30pm (New York time) yesterday, the UK newspaper The Independent reported that Mark Meadows had flipped and would be pleading guilty to several lesser charges in exchange for limited immunity, and the entire internet — myself included — lost their ******* minds. but is it true? posssssibly, but we can’t know for sure, because right now, 18 hours later, The Independent is the only source reporting it. George Terwilliger, Mark Meadow’s lawyer, denied that a deal to plead guilty had been reached, but “but did not address the matter of immunity.” we do know that Mark Meadows recently testified to a grand jury. but that’s all we know for sure. it’s anyone’s guess. of all the characters in this drama, Mark Meadows has been the most tight-lipped about his activities. is Trump getting indicted today? almost certainly not. the same Independent article also reported that The Department of Justice is preparing to ask a Washington, DC grand jury to indict former president Donald Trump for violating the Espionage Act and for obstruction of justice as soon as Thursday “as soon as” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. a prosecutor asking a grand jury to vote on an indictment and a prosecutor bringing that indictment usually doesn’t happen on the same day. former prosecutor and current lawyer Renato Mariotti tweeted: I’m seeing tweets predicting a Trump indictment tomorrow. Take those tweets with some healthy skepticism. We have confirmed reports of grand jury testimony today, and it’s unlikely an indictment is returned a day later. Don’t retweet a rumor just because you hope it’s true. did Trump get a target letter? **** yes, he did. this one’s being reported all over the place, so we really don’t have to worry about its veracity. Federal prosecutors formally informed Donald Trump’s lawyers last week that the former president is a target of the criminal investigation examining his retention of national security materials at his Mar-a-Lago resort and obstruction of justice, according to two people briefed on the matter. this should come as no surprise to anyone — Trump has been melting down about it on his worthless app for days now. I wrote about it on Tuesday. and of course, after whining like a dirty diaper baby about it for days, Trump is now angrily denying that he received any such letter. which is technically true — the letter was delivered to Trump’s lawyers. so that’s where we are as I write this at 10am on Thursday morning. don’t worry — Donald Trump is going down — but probably not as quickly as we want. I hope this little explainer helped make sense of all the noise out there. everyone is entitled to my own opinion is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid
  8. deflection. do you really want to get into the crazy stuff the repukes boycott all the time? hell they have turned their back on chick fil a
  9. newsweek.com Ron DeSantis' Approval Rating Has Collapsed Ewan Palmer 3–4 minutes Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has seen his approval rating fall dramatically two weeks after announcing his 2024 presidential bid. According to online polling company Civiqs' dynamic approval rating graph, DeSantis currently has a net approval rating of negative 19 points, with an average of 55 percent of respondents disapproving of him, compared with 36 percent who have a favorable view of the Republican. The data shows DeSantis has a major unfavorable rating from those aged 18-34 (63 percent), women (62 percent), as well as African Americans (85 percent), and the Hispanic/Latino population (68 percent). In comparison, the Florida Governor's overall approval and disapproval rating was tied at 47 percent in early December. Presidential candidate and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis listens to his wife speak to a crowd on June 2, 2023, in Gilbert, South Carolina. DeSantis' approval rating has fallen 19 points over the past few months, according to Civiqs. Getty Images/Sean Rayford Around this time, suggestions that DeSantis should be the one to lead the GOP in 2024 were gaining momentum after many—including those in the Republican Party—blamed Donald Trump for the party's poor midterm performance. A number of candidates endorsed by the former president lost their races in elections across the country. In the subsequent months, DeSantis' approval rating has fallen 19 points, with polls continuing to suggest that Trump is the overwhelming favorite to clinch the GOP presidential nomination in 2024 despite his continuing legal difficulties. These include Trump pleading not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in a historic first for a former president in New York and being found liable in a civil trial of sexually abusing former Elle columnist E. Jean Carroll in the mid-1990s. DeSantis could take solace in the fact that Trump is currently recording a higher disapproval rating at 57 percent in Civiqs' tracker, with the former president recording disapproval scores in the mid-50s for most of the year. However, according to FiveThirtyEight's collection of GOP primary polls, Trump has come out on top in all the most recent surveys dating back to March, with a recent Morning Consult poll published June 6 showing the former president 34 points ahead of the Florida Governor (56-22 percent). The Morning Consult survey also showed that DeSantis is failing to chip into Trump's lead in the polls since confirming he is running for president in a glitchy May 24 Twitter Space announcement. DeSantis' poll numbers have remained stagnant compared to the previous Morning Consult survey from May 20 (21 percent), and down from his high of 34 percent recorded in January. The latest survey showed that a fourth of potential primary voters reported hearing something negative about DeSantis over the past week, the highest share since tracking began in late November. DeSantis' office has been contacted for comment via email.
  10. 2–3 minutes Extremist Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) on Wednesday faced criticism after she joined the right-wing freakout over the U.S. Air Force’s celebration of Pride Month. Boebert took offense to this USAF tweet showing the silhouette of a saluting soldier and the rainbow flag, which celebrates queer pride. “We salute one flag and one flag only in the United States of America,” Boebert fumed on Twitter. “It isn’t the ‘Pride’ flag,” she added. Critics reminded the Donald Trump-endorsing Boebert of the MAGA- and Trump-themed flags often flown by the former president’s supporters, including during their Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, as seen here: Last year, rapper Tyson James, who Boebert once promoted on social media, released a music video in which he burned Pride flags and spray-painted the word “abomination” on one. Trump himself has been accused of disrespecting the Stars and Stripes on multiple occasions. See some of the responses to Boebert’s latest tweet here: You behave like a sour, spoiled 13-year-old who's full of herself as she goes on about things she knows nothing about. I know your dim-witted friends high-five you for your ugly, hateful rhetoric but it's sad how lost you are. https://t.co/vdTYbYQtuI — Kimberley Johnson 🇺🇦 (@AuthorKimberley) June 8, 2023 Your “friends” actually raise all things of flags. Religious flags, confederate flags, black flags, etc. Don’t think you can lecture us on the appropriateness of flags you illiterate moron. https://t.co/M7zyk1wtnf — Debra Dalcher (@laddeeinred) June 8, 2023 There is no flag in the image. There is a silhouette of a soldier standing in salute. The Air Force seal is present and a rainbow (Pride) banner is in the background. Even a one-dimensional mind should be able to view two-dimensional images. https://t.co/In8WUSMxtZ — Rick E. Harrold (@REHarrold) June 8, 2023
  11. Auburn football is revamping their receiving core - and it's starting to look scary Lance Dawe 5–6 minutes Auburn football's passing offense was lacking last season, to say the least. Most of the struggles to put the ball in the air revolved around poor quarterback play and an egregious offensive line. The receiver room wasn't great, but by no means was it bailing out the other two phases of the passing attack. All of this could be somewhat excused by the poor coaching on that side of the ball, but I digress. Since Hugh Freeze entered the picture last November the Tigers' three phases of the passing game have improved on paper. Auburn got their transfer quarterback in Payton Thorne. The offensive line added three portal prospects and a handful through the freshman recruiting class. Those two positions have been the primary focus for the past couple of months. It feels like the actual pass-catchers Auburn has obtained are going unnoticed, with now three players having committed through the portal... and potentially a couple more on the way. The wide receiver core caught some flack online during spring practice from some major outlets, and even head coach Hugh Freeze had voiced his thoughts on how he needed to see more progression from the players. It's not like receivers such as Camden Brown, Ja'Varrius Johnson and Koy Moore aren't talented. It's just taken a while for the unit to adjust to a new scheme that can competently throw the ball. The addition of a few more pass catchers wouldn't hurt the Tigers overall depth. Here's a look at the transfer portal prospects and commits the Tigers have as well as the currently receivers on roster: Transfer Prospects/Commits Jyaire Shorter - North Texas Shorter has played 30 games over the course of five seasons for the Mean Green (three of those seasons he played two games or less), collecting 1,320 yards and 20 touchdowns on just 58 receptions, ending his UNT career with an impressive 22.8 yards per catch. Shorter caught 23 passes for 628 yards, an average of 27.3 yards per reception. Montana Lemonious-Craig - Colorado Lemonious-Craig played in all 12 games last season for Colorado and had an amazing Spring game Saturday. Last year Lemonious-Craig caught 23 balls for 359 yards with 3 touchdowns on a team that lost 11 games. His career totals are 34 for 497 and 5 touchdowns in a very anemic offense. He decided to test the transfer portal waters after he lit up the Spring game for three catches totaling 154 yards and a touchdown. Keon Coleman - Michigan State The former four-star played alongside Auburn portal commit Payton Thorne, was the lead receiver for the Spartans last year. He caught 58 passes for 798 yards and seven touchdowns. He caught seven balls for 50 yards and a touchdown in four games during his freshman season. Caleb Burton - Ohio State (COMMITTED) The former 4-star Austin, Texas native spent one year with the Ohio State Buckeyes and will have four years of eligibility now at Auburn. On last year's roster, Ohio State listed Burton at 5-foot-11, 169 pounds. He was recruited to play both the outside and the slot positions when he was coming out of the high school ranks. This is one of Auburn's biggest gets in the portal thus far. Nick Mardner - Cincinnati (COMMITTED) Mardner spent three seasons with the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors before transferring to play for the Bearcats. In three years, he accumulated 1,270 receiving yards and eight touchdowns. He had 218 yards and three touchdowns in his lone season with Luke Fickell and Cinci. He was coached by former Auburn pass-catcher and new receivers coach Marcus Davis. The Tigers have been looking for a strong outside target in the transfer portal and Mardner may be that pickup - standing at 6-foot-6, 190 pounds, he could end up being a versatile pickup. His breakout season included 913 yards and five touchdowns in 2021, a season where he averaged 19.8 yards per catch. Rivaldo Fairweather - FIU (COMMITTED) Fairweather had 838 receiving yards and five touchdowns during his time at FIU and was the third-highest rated TE in the transfer portal. Another valuable get for Hugh Freeze's offense. Fairweather was one of the more consistent pass-catchers during spring. Rest of Receiver Room Koy Moore (562 career receiving yards) Camden Brown (123 career receiving yards) Jay Fair (34 career receiving yards) Ja'Varrius Johnson (767 career receiving yards) Malcolm Johnson Jr (110 career receiving yards) Omari Kelly (56 career receiving yards)
  12. Auburn is pushing hard after "one of the best players in the country" Andrew Stefaniak 2–3 minutes Auburn is going after class of 2024 five-star athlete KJ Bolden. Bolden will likely play safety in college but does play both sides of the ball in high school. He recently released a list of his top five schools, including Clemson, Georgia, Ohio State, Alabama, and Auburn. Locked On recruiting expert Brain Smith joined the Locked On Auburn Podcast to discuss where the Tigers stand with Bolden. Smith had this to say, "KJ's one of the best players in the country. He's at one of the best programs in the country, and he's also one of the best kids in the country. Most five-star players, once you get to this point, don't want to talk to you as much. They get bombarded enough by the Kirby Smarts and everybody else of the world. The Ohio State defensive back coach that he would be playing under is a relative of his. Lot of people thought it was Ohio State, but he's in Georgia's backyard, so maybe he'll go to Georgia. Well, now Auburn is really trending, and I asked him about it, and he said the one visit that he took, he loved the campus, he loved the vibe and everything, and I'm like, whoa, I did not expect that. I just wanted to ask him about it. I've met him a few times, and he's got Auburn right there with them. It was the outlier I didn't expect, but that's why recruiting is fun; you just never know. If they can get him back on campus this fall for a game that would go a long way. I think if they can get him on campus down on the Plains, they got a really good shot at this kid." It's exciting to see Auburn back in the conversation with some of the best talent in the nation. Bolden is a great player that would compete for playing time the second he steps foot on campus if he chose Auburn. Hopefully, Coach Freeze can finish the job and land one of the most talented players in the 2024 class.
  13. Auburn baseball's Ike Irish named a Freshman All-American Lindsay Crosby ~2 minutes Auburn designated hitter Ike Irish has been named a 2023 Collegiate Baseball Freshman All-American, the publication announced Wednesday. Irish becomes the 20th Freshman All-American in program history, including the first since four Tigers earned the distinction in 2018 – Tanner Burns, Cody Greenhill, Edouard Julien and Steven Williams. Irish, who was previously named to the SEC All-Freshman Team and Auburn Regional All-Tournament Team, finished the season as the team leader in average (.361), hits (86) and doubles (24) while ranking second in RBI (50) and total bases (130) and third in runs (48). Irish’s 24 doubles set an Auburn freshman record, eclipsing assistant coach Gabe Gross’ 23 doubles from 1999, and are tied for the sixth most in program history, including the most since 2005. He also led the Southeastern Conference and freshmen nationally in the category. The Hudsonville, Michigan, native ranked third in the league and fourth among freshmen nationally in hits, while his batting average was also good for a top-10 mark in the SEC. Irish started all 58 games in his first season on the Plains and led the team with 28 multi-hit games while tying for second with 14 multi-RBI efforts. He started his Auburn career with 13 multi-hit performances in his first 17 games, good for a .465 clip entering SEC play. The following was a release from Auburn Athletics
  14. yardbarker.com Hugh Freeze ranked as one of the top 50 coaches in college football Lance Dawe ~2 minutes Auburn football feels like it is back on the rise, and it's largely due in part to their new head coach Hugh Freeze. The Tigers have hammered the transfer portal since Freeze's arrival back in November, and after a positive spring Auburn heads into the offseason with hope and excitement. Various outlets have Freeze ranked anywhere from tenth through sixth in SEC head coaching rankings. According to Big Game Boomer, he's No. 10. BGB has Sam Pittman (Arkansas), Jimbo Fisher (Texas A&M), Mark Stoops (Kentucky), Josh Heupel (Tennessee), Shane Beamer (South Carolina), Lane Kiffin (Ole Miss), Brian Kelly (LSU), Nick Saban (Alabama) and Kirby Smart (Georgia) ranked ahead of Freeze in his list of the top 50 head coaches in college football heading into the 2023 season. Freeze is ranked No. 38 overall. The Tigers kick off the 2023 season on September 2nd at home vs UMass at 2 p.m. CT on ESPN. Here's a look at the entire 2023 schedule: Sept. 2nd vs UMass Sept. 9th at California Sept. 16th vs Samford Sept. 23rd at Texas A&M Sept. 30th vs Georgia Oct. 14th at LSU Oct. 21st vs Ole Miss Oct. 28th vs Mississippi State Nov. 4th at Vanderbilt Nov. 11th at Arkansas Nov. 18th vs New Mexico State Nov. 25th vs Alabama
  15. Cast your votes in the 2023 Auburn Undercover fan survey What are the fan base's expectations for Hugh Freeze in Year 1 on the Plains? Nathan King22 hrs By most accounts, Hugh Freeze has proven himself nicely Auburn fan base since arriving more than six months ago, spearheading a roster rebuild primarily via the transfer portal, and revitalizing the Tigers’ recruiting prowess by salvaging the 2023 class and setting the table for a promising 2024 haul. Now all that’s left is for Freeze to prove it on the field this fall. So what should that product look like in Year 1? With the busy recruiting season of June and July right around the corner, Auburn Undercover is offering our annual fan survey to gauge what the orange and blue faithful's expectations are for Freeze in his first go-around with the Tigers, the QB competition, thoughts on the schedule, where breakout stars could emerge, the trajectory of the program and more. Let’s hope the answers play out more accurately than last offseason. In our 2022 fan survey, the top results were that Auburn would win 8-9 games (47.2 percent of votes), and that Bryan Harsin would remain head coach following the 2022 season (82.3 percent). Submit your answers by scrolling through the questions in the Google form HERE. Results will be posted and analyzed Friday, so you’ve got a couple days to consider your answers.
  16. Lightning rod former Auburn HC rips ‘disastrous’ NIL system Andrew Hughes ~3 minutes Lightning rod former Auburn football head coach Tommy Tuberville ripped the current system in place for college sports' NIL rules Mandatory Credit: Photo by John Reed-USA TODAY Sports Copyright © 2005 John Reed Lightning rod former Auburn football Tommy Tuberville has been an outspoken critic of college football’s NIL system since its implementation following the COVID-stricken 2020-21 academic year and he continued his crusade against the current setup in a short video he sent to USA Today. “Today we are meeting with coaches, athletic directors and administrators from several different conferences here in Washington, D.C., talking about the disastrous new NIL rules,” Tuberville prefaced before saying, “And they are a disaster.” (h/t AL.com) Tuberville is right. Powerhouse universities like Miami have been hit with NIL sanctions, and there is minimal regulation from state to state — adding an extra layer to recruiting that has nothing to do with the academic and student-athlete futures of the recruits. Former Auburn football head coach Tommy Tuberville pitches NIL solution Tuberville made it clear in his video message to USA Today that the NIL system has positives: mainly, paying college athletes making massive profits for their universities. “I’m for players being able to be compensated for their hard work in athletics as well as academics,” Tuberville said. “We have to come to some kind of agreement where we can help the NCAA make improvements to this runaway NIL situation that we’re in as we speak.” The former Auburn football head coach also made a grand proclamation that he’d “save college sports” by continuing his efforts with senior West Virginia senator Joe Manchin to tackle the NIL problem in college sports. “Players transferring at any time? Players making deals with the help of agents with schools and then not being compensated after making these deals? We’re looking out for the player as much as for the university,” Tuberville prefaced before saying, “But we’re looking out for education and we’re looking out for the sanctity of college sports.” Truthfully, the prospect of players being able to transfer less comes at a convenient time for the Tigers after building a Class of 2023 through the portal. Hugh Freeze seemingly has things under control now in 2024 and beyond, so any such changes to NIL wouldn’t be as detrimental as they would’ve been a year ago.
  17. i would look damn good in a dress. ya dunna believe then ask me.............
  18. i posted something about that in the last couple of days. freeze said one should be ok and he had no clue on the other guy. sorry that is all i remember.
  19. of course folks will be in here with something negative to say. again..........tell em to go eat a fish head ichy. it is hard to eat a fish head with them eyes popping out at you. grins
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