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I remember Johnson saying in his freshman year, when he was just a tall, gangly guy all elbows and kneecaps, that "You will see him at the next level."Scholly.
I remember Johnson saying in his freshman year, when he was just a tall, gangly guy all elbows and kneecaps, that "You will see him at the next level."
As an aside and more as an expression of my pleasant surprise than anything else, I saw today that Darren Waller is still in the NFL, starting tight end for for Oakland, I think? Who would have thought based on his trials and travails at Tech?
Butler is one clutch sob! Worth his weight in gold.
Go Jackets!
In fairness, I always did like the guy who won the game.It is obvious from his teammates reactions and they they celebrate him, that he is very well liked. Must be a great feeling for him. He seems to stay very humble though
I have no idea what to make of that. Except he has an abundance of confidence and seeks the spotlight. He literally has a leg up then, because an NFL kicker is here today, gone today, and what he did yesterday means nothing. Good for him.
the Chiefs social media team made itI have no idea what to make of that. Except he has an abundance of confidence and seeks the spotlight. He literally has a leg up then, because an NFL kicker is here today, gone today, and what he did yesterday means nothing. Good for him.
Ah, that explains it. As long as he doesn't start to buy into it, because the NFL is a very brief career for most all, and particularly for kickers. I knew a high school coach once, a good one, who scorned what he called "commie kickers." Behold one day he had one. He figured it was either that or lose and get fired.the Chiefs social media team made it
In fairness, I always did like the guy who won the game.
Nah, not really. But the test of likeability comes when he misses the kick that loses the game. And he will, because, well, they all do at some point. Maybe kicking is what Kipling had in mind. I think I'd fold like a saltine in a rain storm.Sounds like your call name fits you [emoji57]
Nah, not really. But the test of likeability comes when he misses the kick that loses the game. And he will, because, well, they all do at some point. Maybe kicking is what Kipling had in mind. I think I'd fold like a saltine in a rain storm.
“A woman's guess is much more accurate than a man's certainty”[emoji6]
I saw a sign once that read "If a man speaks out loud in the forest and there is no woman around to hear him, is he still wrong?". I saw it years ago and still don't know the correct answer!
That's one for you.Yes this would be the true test. “If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two impostors just the same.” This is also a true test of a Tech fan. But remember @Skeptic, “A woman's guess is much more accurate than a man's certainty”[emoji6]