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aubiefifty

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  1. Auburn Football Kickoff time, TV network announced for Auburn at South Carolina Updated: Nov. 08, 2021, 11:46 a.m. | Published: Nov. 08, 2021, 11:46 a.m. By Tom Green | tgreen@al.com Auburn’s final road game of the season will take place in primetime. Auburn’s trip to Columbia, S.C., on Nov. 20 to take on South Carolina will kick off at 6 p.m. and will air on ESPN, the SEC announced Monday. Read more Auburn football: Bowl projections for Auburn after Week 10 Statistically speaking: Auburn’s defense has turned it around in the red zone Auburn defense “not satisfied” despite not allowing any touchdowns against Texas A&M This will mark the second straight season that Auburn has traveled to South Carolina. The two teams met in 2020 during the league’s altered 10-game, SEC-only schedule thanks to the pandemic, and the matchup was the added cross-division game for each school. South Carolina won that game, 30-22. Auburn leads the all-time series with South Carolina, 10-2-1. This year’s meeting will be just the 14th all-time between the Tigers and Gamecocks and only the fifth time the game has been played in Columbia. Auburn is 3-1 all-time at Williams-Brice Stadium, with last year’s result the lone loss. Before the Tigers make the trip to the Palmetto State, they will host Mississippi State at Jordan-Hare Stadium this weekend for an 11 a.m. kick. South Carolina, which walloped Florida at home in Week 10, will travel to Missouri this weekend. Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.
  2. SEC rivals square off when the No. 16 Auburn Tigers (-5.5) Wager $10 on AUB To Beat MSST:$14.70 Win by 5.5:$19.09 To Lose:$28.50 (6-3, 0-0 SEC) host the Mississippi State Bulldogs (+5.5) Wager $10 on MSST To Beat AUB:$28.50 Lose by less than 5.5:$19.50 To Lose:$14.70 (5-4, 0-0 SEC) on Saturday, November 13, 2021 at Jordan-Hare Stadium. Auburn is favored by 5.5 points. The point total is set at 50. For more great betting and fantasy insight, join the SI Winners Club Newsletter. Odds for Auburn vs. Mississippi State Bet Now! 11/13, 11:00a MSST MSST AUB AUB Spread +5.5(-105) -5.5(-110) Money Line +185 -213 Over Under > 50.5(-105)< 50.5(-110) Bet Now! 11/13, 11:00a MSST MSST AUB AUB Spread +5.5(-105) -5.5(-110) Money Line +185 -213 Over Under > 50.5(-105)< 50.5(-110) Over/Under Insights Auburn and its opponents have gone over the current 50-point total in five of nine games this season. Mississippi State and its opponents have combined to score more than 50 points in six of nine games this season. The two teams combine to average 59.3 points per game, 9.3 more than the total in this contest. This contest's total is 4.9 points more than the 45.1 these two squads combine to surrender per game this season. The Tigers and their opponents have scored an average of 55.2 points per game in 2021, 5.2 more than Saturday's total. The 53.9 PPG average total in Bulldogs games this season is 3.9 points more than this game's over/under. Auburn Stats and Trends In Auburn's nine games this year, it has five wins against the spread. The Tigers have covered the spread twice this season when favored by 5.5 points or more (in three chances). Auburn has eclipsed the over/under in 44.4% of its opportunities this year (four times in nine games with a set point total). The Tigers average six more points per game (31.3) than the Bulldogs give up (25.3). Auburn is 4-1 against the spread and 5-0 overall this season when the team records more than 25.3 points. The Tigers average 427.1 yards per game, 105.2 more yards than the 321.9 the Bulldogs give up per contest. When Auburn amasses more than 321.9 yards, the team is 5-2 against the spread and 6-1 overall. The Tigers have nine giveaways this season, while the Bulldogs have 12 takeaways . Find the latest spread and moneyline odds for Auburn at SISportsbook. Mississippi State Stats and Trends In Mississippi State's nine games this year, it has five wins against the spread. The Bulldogs have covered the spread once this season when underdogs by 5.5 points or more (in two chances). Mississippi State's games this season have hit the over on four of nine set point totals (44.4%). The Bulldogs put up 8.2 more points per game (28) than the Tigers allow (19.8). Mississippi State is 5-3 against the spread and 5-3 overall when the team puts up more than 19.8 points. The Bulldogs collect 432 yards per game, 69 more yards than the 363 the Tigers give up. In games that Mississippi State churns out more than 363 yards, the team is 4-3 against the spread and 4-3 overall. This season the Bulldogs have turned the ball over 13 times, five more than the Tigers' takeaways (8). Head to SISportsbook to find the latest moneyline, spread and over/under odds for this matchup. Season Stats Auburn Stats Mississippi State 31.3 Avg. Points Scored 28 19.8 Avg. Points Allowed 25.3 427.1 Avg. Total Yards 432 363 Avg. Total Yards Allowed 321.9 9 Giveaways 13 8 Takeaways 12 By Data Skrive
  3. 247sports.com Harsin: Being 'better' the goal for Bo Nix and entire Auburn offense ByJason Caldwell 4-5 minutes 2 Minute Drill: Auburn's offense falls flat at Texas A&M AUBURN, Alabama—Coming off of back-to-back strong performances throwing the football, Bo Nix and the Auburn offense had a rough outing against Texas A&M last Saturday in a 20-3 loss to the Aggies. Going six straight quarters without a touchdown, dating back to the second half against Ole Miss two games ago, Auburn’s offense has plenty of issues to go around and it doesn’t stop and end with quarterback play, Coach Bryan Harsin said. “He didn't have his best game, obviously,” Harsin said of his junior quarterback. “There were things and reasons why. yYou know, it's not always just on that one particular position and I've said that before. I think the quarterback gets way too much credit and way too much blame, and I still believe that. “It's a matter of going back and making sure that, one, he's playing better. Two, the guys around him are playing better and we have a better plan and we execute those things more consistently throughout the week of practice so come game time we're able to execute it when the game is going fast. And you're playing against a good team, which A&M's a good team and I don't want to take anything away from who they are. Their defense is very good, and those guys play fast. But we can play fast, too. You've got to be able to do that through four quarters.” Completing just 20-41 passes for 153 yards with no touchdowns and one interception along with a costly fumble, Nix was unable to make anything happen in the passing game against an Aggie defense that was physical at every level. Harsin said the deficiencies on offense against Texas A&M rest on everyone’s shoulders. “We also had some clean pockets, chances to throw it, and then opportunities in there as well where we could’ve picked some blitzes up and we didn’t pick them up,” Harsin said. “That’s the thing that’s a little misleading for a quarterback is when you get somebody right in your face, and the O-line’s supposed to slow them down and it looks like you’re just running out of there. Well, the guys up front need to do their job, too. There was enough of that so all the way around on the offensive side, it’s not any one player in particular, it’s everybody, execution, the whole plan of just making sure that we’re going to be better at those things moving forward.” Preparing to face a Mississippi State defense that is one of the best in the country at stopping the run, giving up just 102 yards per game, Auburn’s offense is going to need to make plays down the field to beat the Bulldogs. Harsin said that’s not a focus just when the team rolls into Jordan-Hare Stadium, but it begins on the practice field this week. “The players on that side of the ball, the coaching staff, it’s pretty obvious that we need to score touchdowns in order to win games and at the end of the day we haven’t done that well enough,” Harsin said. “We have another opportunity this week to go work on that and create that. Those things have to happen every single day for us. What I know about our team and our offense in particular is it doesn’t just happen on Saturday. That’s what I know. If it’s emphasized every day, if it’s focused every day, if it’s executed every day then we’ll have a lot better opportunity to not be at the very bottom and not scoring points on the offensive side.” 2COMMENTS Kickoff for Saturday’s game is scheduled for 11 a.m. CST with television coverage on ESPN. *** Subscribe: Receive the latest Auburn intel and scoops*** ">247Sports
  4. 247sports.com Nix on mistakes at Texas A&M: 'I shouldn't make those kinds of plays' ByNathan King 4-5 minutes Takeaways From CFB Week Ten (Late Kick Cut) Bo Nix has now faced two of the nation’s best defenses in his last four games. And things were better for the Auburn quarterback against the No. 1 team in the country than they were over the weekend in College Station. After scoring eight touchdowns in its past two games — both ranked wins over Arkansas and Ole Miss — Auburn’s offense displayed massive flaws across the board in a 20-3 loss at Texas A&M. Nix went 20-of-41 with 153 yards (a paltry 3.7 yards per attempt) with two turnovers, including a fumble that was scooped and scored by Texas A&M in the fourth quarter for the game’s only touchdown. The protection was porous, Nix looked uncomfortable and his receiving corps didn’t create separation, as the junior QB’s longest completion of the evening went for 15 yards. Of his 41 passes, only five were caught by an Auburn wide receiver. “They did a good job schematically,” Nix said Monday of Texas A&M’s defense on The Next Round radio program in Birmingham. “I think coming off an off week, they did a good job scheming some things up for us. … We had a hard time getting things going and getting in a rhythm, and it’s all a credit to them.” Nix said the aforementioned scheme from Aggies defensive coordinator Mike Elko was the biggest similarity from Auburn’s matchup earlier in the season with Georgia, which boasts the nation’s best defense. “They can kind of make an offense confused just by what they’re doing on third downs and the coverages and blitzes that they bring,” Nix said. “Similar players talent-wise, and then they do a good job; they suffocate you a little bit and do a lot of guessing.” In a 34-10 home loss to Georgia at the beginning of October, Nix went 21-of-37 for 217 yards and an interception, but his receivers dropped six passes in the game, and his offense wasn’t kept out of the end zone. According to Pro Football Focus, Nix’s overall grade from the Texas A&M loss (44.3) is the worst of his career. When facing pressure against the Aggies, Nix’s passing grade of 26.9 was the third-worst in all of the FBS in Week 10, ahead of only Middle Tennessee State’s Nick Vattiato and Rice’s Jake Constantine. Nix found himself in a funk after his fumble for a touchdown. He completed only five of his final 15 passes of the game and threw a pick. “An experienced quarterback like myself, I shouldn't make those kinds of plays,” Nix said of his unforced fumble. “I should just tuck it and take the loss and live to play another down. That’s completely on me; it should have never happened.” Auburn continually failed to find a “spark” in the passing game, as Bryan Harsin put it postgame, but the head coach said he did not consider benching Nix for T.J. Finley, like he did in Week 4 in the fourth quarter against Georgia State. “I felt like Bo could get us back in the game, that we could get that spark,” Harsin said. “That’s something that he’s shown and that we’ve done throughout the season, we just didn’t get it.” Auburn has now gone its last six quarters without an offensive touchdown. In 18 drives since their most recent trip to the end zone right before halftime against Ole Miss, the Tigers have scored 6 points, punted nine times, missed two field goals and turned the ball over three times. “All of the offense — we all can do better, starting with myself, and then going along down the line,” Nix said. “We have to do a better job being consistent in all aspects of the game — rushing and throwing, then sprinkling in some creativity in there. We’ve just got to play better. We’ve shown it in the past few weeks; we’ve played well. We’ve just go to do better moving forward.” 44COMMENTS *** Subscribe to Auburn Undercover for the latest news and intel, podcasts, recruiting coverage and more ***
  5. Here are the newest SEC bowl projections: Bowl Date Location Matchup Orange (CFP semi) Dec. 31 Miami Georgia vs. Oklahoma Sugar Jan. 1 New Orleans Alabama vs. Okla. St. Fiesta Jan. 1 Glendale Texas A&M vs. N. Dame Texas Jan. 4 Houston Miss. St. vs. Kansas St. Citrus Jan. 1 Orlando Ole Miss vs. Michigan St. Outback Jan. 1 Tampa Auburn vs. Wisconsin Gator Dec. 31 Jacksonville Arkansas vs. Clemson Duke’s Mayo Dec. 30 Charlotte South Carolina vs. Pitt Music City Dec. 30 Nashville Tennessee vs. Penn State Liberty Dec. 28 Memphis Kentucky vs. Texas Tech Birmingham Dec. 28 Birmingham Florida vs. Louisville
  6. Auburn opens as home favorite against Mississippi State By Tom Green | tgreen@al.com 2 minutes Mississippi State quarterback Will Rogers scrambles during an SEC game against Auburn on Dec. 12, 2020, at Davis Wade Stadium in Starkville, Miss.AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis Auburn opened as a home favorite for its penultimate game at Jordan-Hare Stadium this season. Coming off a double-digit road setback against Texas A&M, No. 16 Auburn opened as a four-point favorite against Mississippi State, according to VegasInsider.com. The Tigers (6-3, 3-2 SEC) will host the Bulldogs (5-4, 3-3) on Saturday at 11 a.m., with the game airing on ESPN. Read more Auburn football: Auburn defense “not satisfied” despite not allowing any touchdowns against Texas A&M Bryan Harsin didn’t consider another second-half QB change in loss to Aggies Auburn has worst offensive performance in years in loss to Texas A&M Auburn leads the all-time series with Mississippi State, 62-29-3. Saturday’s matchup will be the 93rd all-time meeting between the two SEC West rivals and the 65th time the game has been played on the Plains. Auburn holds a 43-19-2 record at home against Mississippi State. That includes each of the last two times the game has been played at Jordan-Hare Stadium, in 2019 and 2017. The Tigers have won each of the last two games against the Bulldogs and four of the last five in the series. Auburn will look to rebound from its loss to Texas A&M and keep its SEC West hopes afloat against Mississippi State, while Mike Leach’s program will try to bounce back from a loss to Arkansas. Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.
  7. i was born an Auburn fan and i will die one. records ultimately will never change my love for Auburn. i might hurt not voice it very clear but i will always love my tigers.
  8. is that not kinda like pulling something out of the frig to cook with a pass use date and we have to keep smelling it to see if it will kill us or make us sick? lol
  9. have i made fun of you yet? go away i am armed with a can of raid...............
  10. i have no idea but i caught some grief over that statement lol
  11. Texas A&M takes down Auburn at Kyle Field for the first time 11/6/2021, 7:35pm 5-6 minutes COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Early in the fourth quarter, Bo Nix was lying face-down in the grass. Aggieland was erupting in cheer, white towels were waving in the air and Texas A&M had just scored a touchdown. Nix had fumbled on a second-and-10, Texas A&M picked up the loose ball and ran it back 24 yards for the scoop-and-score. It was the only touchdown scored by either team in the lowest-scoring game between Auburn and Texas A&M since 1911. The winning streak is over. Auburn saw its unbeaten record at Kyle Field slip away and its SEC Championship hopes fade as the Tigers lost 20-3 to the Aggies on Saturday. "We didn’t play well enough to win today," said Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin. "A&M was a good team. There’s things we have to go back and focus on. Same things that we talk about every single week; it doesn’t change. It’s a matter of doing those things consistently week in and week out." Auburn’s defense carried over from the Ole Miss game, but Jimbo Fisher and the Aggies took the points when inside Auburn territory. No fourth-down stops in the red zone for Auburn this time, just Texas A&M field goals. Texas A&M’s Seth Small made four field goals in five attempts, the only points the Aggies scored from offensive possessions. Meanwhile, the three points that Auburn scored was the lowest number of points since 2012 when Alabama shut out the Tigers 49-0. It was a career day for Oscar Chapman, who had a career-high seven punts in the game. That says it all for Auburn, which totaled 226 yards of total offense, a season-low. "I just don’t think we found that play, that momentum, that spark to really get us—on the offensive side in particular—to get us going," Harsin said. "And we had our opportunities, and you know, there was plenty of self-inflicted wounds that we had in there: dropped passes, we lost the ball -- we fumbled it." Nix completed less than 50% of his passes for the sixth time in his career for 153 yards, no touchdowns and an interception. The junior quarterback has not fared well against Texas A&M in his career and it continued on Saturday. Texas A&M is the only team in the SEC west that Nix has not had a 200-yard passing game against. Throughout his career, Nix has totaled just 397 yards passing and one touchdown pass against the Aggies in three games. As far as considering to put back up quarterback TJ Finley in, Harsin mentioned that other factors, like receiver separation and opportunities for a throw, played a role in Nix's performance. "I felt like Bo could get us back in the game, that we could get that spark," Harsin said. "That’s something that he’s shown and that we’ve done throughout the season, we just didn’t get it." While the offense struggled, the defense held its ground. Dating back to last week against Ole Miss, Derek Mason’s defense has not allowed a touchdown in six quarters. Similar to the LSU game, Auburn’s defense struggled to contain its opponent's offense on their opening possession. The Aggies drove 80 yards in 14 plays, chewing up over five minutes of clock before settling for a field goal to go up 3-0. Auburn answered with a field goal on its ensuing possession, the only time the Tigers scored. After the 80-yard opening possession by Texas A&M, Auburn's defense forced a pair of three-and-outs and held the Aggies to 70 total yards for the remainder of the half. The game was deadlocked at three by the midway point, the first 3-3 tie at halftime for Auburn since 1997. Texas A&M regained the lead late in the third when Small hit his second field goal of the night to put the Aggies in front 6-3. The field goal was the lone source of points in the third quarter, setting up a potentially-close finish in the fourth quarter. That was not the case, as offensive woes for Auburn only got worse in the fourth. The fumble recovery for a touchdown with 13:13 remaining extended Texas A&M’s lead from 9-3 to 17-3 after the Aggies converted the two-point conversion. With the rate of offensive production low, the gap between Auburn and the lead, while still only two-possession, was a far reach. Auburn only had 52 yards of offense and two turnovers in the final 15 minutes of play. "It comes down to some execution," Harsin said. "It comes down to creating some momentum. We didn't create that momentum to really get us going and to get the drive going the way we need to and having those type of plays we had in the past." Now with two losses in conference play, Auburn no longer holds the cards in the SEC West. Instead, Texas A&M will have to lose at least one conference game, either to Ole Miss or LSU, for Auburn to have a chance at Atlanta. The Tigers will return home to Jordan-Hare Stadium on Nov. 13 to face Mississippi State at 11 a.m. CST. That game will be broadcast on ESPN.
  12. Three defining plays in Auburn’s 20-3 loss at Texas A&M By Nubyjas Wilborn | nwilborn@al.com 4-6 minutes Losing a game by 17 points when your defense doesn’t allow a touchdown is incomprehensible. Yet, Auburn (6-3, 3-2) managed to accomplish this dubious feat in Saturday’s 20-3 loss against Texas A&M (7-2, 4-2) on the road at Kyle Field. Bo Nix had one of his worst statistical performances of the season, with 153 passing yards and 20 completions on 41 attempts. He threw a late interception, but the game was pretty much academic at that point. Nix threw it 41 times, which is telling considering he had fewer than 30 attempts per game in wins against Ole Miss and Arkansas. Nix had to throw it more often partly because the running game was non-existent. Tank Bigsby led the Tigers with 69 yards on 15 attempts. Jarquez Hunter had one of Auburn’s few big plays with a 14-yard run, but he had one yard combined on his other three attempts. By Comparison, Isiah Spiller (112) and Devon Achane (98) each had more yards as individuals than the Tigers (73) combined on the ground. Read more Auburn football: Instant analysis: Auburn sputters in 20-3 loss to Texas A&M Auburn has worst offensive performance in years in loss to Aggies Bryan Harsin didn’t consider another second-half quarterback change in loss to Texas A&M - al.com “You’ve got to be able to run the ball. The run game allows us to be able to set up the passing game and give ourselves a chance to have a clean pocket as well,” Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin said Saturday after the game. “We’ve been able to do that in the previous games. That didn’t happen tonight. We didn’t have that same type of momentum in the run game.” Let’s take a look at three defining plays in Auburn’s loss against the Aggies. 3rd quarter 9:32 2nd-and-9 ball on A&M’s 16: John Samuel Shenker caught a 13-yard pass from Nix two plays earlier. Shenker’s catch was one of the Tigers’ few offensive plays over 10 yards. The game tied at three, any score here could’ve swung the game toward Auburn. Instead, Nix threw an incompletion second down. Tyreek Chappel fought through the Tiger offensive line to rush Nix on his pass attempt. Nix threw another incomplete pass on third down, creating a field goal attempt. Carlson missed the field goal. Texas A&M scored on its ensuing drive. 4th Quarter 14:13 2nd-and-10 ball on Auburn’s 35: The Tigers were down by six despite not scoring a touchdown and an earlier missed Anders Carlson field goal. Nix dropped back for a pass, and Aggie defensive lineman Michael Clemons met him in the backfield. Getting chased by a 6-foot-5, 270-pound man with evil intentions isn’t fun. Nix dropped the ball as Clemons was attempting to tackle him. Clemons got credited with a sack, but more importantly, his teammate Jayden Peevy scooped the ball up for a 24-yard touchdown run. The Aggies also converted a two-point conversion, effectively closing the door on Auburn’s hopes. “We put the ball on the ground, and A&M’s defense was able to score, and that becomes a factor in the game,” Harsin said. “And then, we miss a field goal in the red zone as well, and every point -- all points matter in games like this. So, you know, it comes down to some execution. It comes down to creating some momentum. We didn’t create that momentum to get us going and to get the drive going the way we need to and having those type of plays we had in the past.” This play was emblematic of Auburn’s woes during the loss. Pass protection broke down, leaving Nix in a dreadful situation. 4th Quarter 6:57 4th-and-14 ball on Auburn’s 34: Down by 14, the Tigers had to go for it. Shenker caught a ball from Nix and ended up one yard shy of the first down. The Tigers would’ve had to score quickly and get an onsides kick likely to tie the game. However, there was still an opportunity if Shenker could’ve found that one more yard. “We had some drives there that could’ve been touchdowns easily if we just executed a few little things. I mean, they’re a great team; they had a great plan against us, so sometimes you have those days. You hope that when you have these slow days, you can fight through it and scratch off some more points than we did, but that was the outcome today, and they’re still a great team, so you have to give them credit for that.” Nubyjas Wilborn covers Auburn for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @nwilborn19.
  13. Auburn Football Auburn opens as home favorite against Mississippi State Updated: Nov. 07, 2021, 6:39 p.m. | Published: Nov. 07, 2021, 6:39 p.m. Auburn opened as a home favorite for its penultimate game at Jordan-Hare Stadium this season. Coming off a double-digit road setback against Texas A&M, No. 16 Auburn opened as a four-point favorite against Mississippi State, according to VegasInsider.com. The Tigers (6-3, 3-2 SEC) will host the Bulldogs (5-4, 3-3) on Saturday at 11 a.m., with the game airing on ESPN. Read more Auburn football: Auburn defense “not satisfied” despite not allowing any touchdowns against Texas A&M Bryan Harsin didn’t consider another second-half QB change in loss to Aggies Auburn has worst offensive performance in years in loss to Texas A&M Auburn leads the all-time series with Mississippi State, 62-29-3. Saturday’s matchup will be the 93rd all-time meeting between the two SEC West rivals and the 65th time the game has been played on the Plains. Auburn holds a 43-19-2 record at home against Mississippi State. That includes each of the last two times the game has been played at Jordan-Hare Stadium, in 2019 and 2017. The Tigers have won each of the last two games against the Bulldogs and four of the last five in the series. Auburn will look to rebound from its loss to Texas A&M and keep its SEC West hopes afloat against Mississippi State, while Mike Leach’s program will try to bounce back from a loss to Arkansas. Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.
  14. it is possible i might have misunderstood but i can remember just being stunned. but hey we got it worked out now and that was months or a year or more ago because trunp was still in office. have a good one.
  15. the powers behind the throne so to speak? that would be a great question to ask wde? for the record i said i wonder if there was pressure. i am not anti bo. he has given some us some great games this year and then there is bad bo. so if you think that is my reasoning you would be wrong. hell i own a bo knows t s*** that is bo nix and not bo nix. i hope bo balls out because when he does well auburn does well normally.
  16. i told the story of me being molested and you made a joke about it. in fairness i probably made you mad or something but now we good. i certainly do not dislike you i just argue hard.
  17. sad but true. even if for a break sit bo and let him watch the game to see what is going on. leaders HAVE to lead and i do not believe he did that yesterday. but i think a&m has the best d in the sec after ga. those guys can probably make a whole lot of folks look bad.
  18. he is a legacy. it is weird because we have cams brother and he does not get treated like a legacy unless bringing him to auburn was what they did for him. who knows but a lot of the old timers and some supposedly in the know say over and over. my opinion? play the best player you have. maybe bo is it because we have no idea how tj is doing in practice.
  19. i cannot believe TJ is that bad. he deserves a shot. i often wonder if harsin has pressure to play bo.
  20. someone needs to get my 8000 point cherry..................wiggles eyebrows.
  21. i liked him until he got Winston and all the lying and covering up he and FSU did for that crook. he threatened a female worker at a burger joint because he was drinking free soda in those lil cups they give you for ketchup.
  22. thank you! maybe jimbo needs a jumbo enema? hell he should be happy.
  23. i met him back when he was with baby bowden. he went out of his way to be nice to me. shrugs i think it is more criminal in the shape he left FSU.
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