ZRod
Well-known member
If you slowly scroll through the TD run in the tweet you can see 21 standing around in the background. It's just after 0:08.I’ve thought the same. I haven’t seen any video of what he did after this play.
If you slowly scroll through the TD run in the tweet you can see 21 standing around in the background. It's just after 0:08.I’ve thought the same. I haven’t seen any video of what he did after this play.
Ok …I see that. So, he also obviously didn’t get injured on that play.If you slowly scroll through the TD run in the tweet you can see 21 standing around in the background. It's just after 0:08.
Could he have been in shock? If it’s a compound fracture it’s not going to dangle. Maybe just really ache or throb.I’ve thought the same. I haven’t seen any video of what he did after this play.
It's very common for adrenaline to distract someone from pain; it's also not uncommon for injuries (even fractures, tendon tears, etc.) to slowly display symptoms over several seconds or minutes. One of my high school teammates didn't realize he'd broken his elbow until he started losing sensation in his pinky/ring finger on the sideline.
It also looks like he may have also taken part of Dowdell's forearm to his body and then he landed on his forearm after the tackle. Relatively innocuous hits/landings cause injuries all the time in sports. :dunno
Not at all talking about financial decision making, but thank you for your reply.If CU gets rid of him, it costs them $13 million. If they wait to let him leave on his own terms, they get to continue to reap the benefits of massive merchandising, a 20% increase in admissions, and unreal publicity. Colorado as a school does not care about football success.
Not at all talking about financial decision making, but thank you for your reply.
We got rid of a coach 2 weeks prior to reducing a buyout in half. Colorado isn’t and won’t suffer. They are spending other people’s money, they don’t care.Talking about getting rid of him without considering the financial implications is being ignorant of the factors involved.
We got rid of a coach 2 weeks prior to reducing a buyout in half. Colorado isn’t and won’t suffer. They are spending other people’s money, they don’t care.
plus, I simply stated what I’d do as AD for future of program. Yall making it about money is a whole other discussion.
We got rid of a coach 2 weeks prior to reducing a buyout in half. Colorado isn’t and won’t suffer. They are spending other people’s money, they don’t care.
plus, I simply stated what I’d do as AD for future of program. Yall making it about money is a whole other discussion.
the part where you create an argument for argument sake shows you are just trying feel good about yourself.The part where you are trying to equate Colorado's financial situation with Nebraska's is clear evidence that you don't know the situation about which you are speaking.
Colorado is not in a financial situation anything close to Nebraska's, and this is almost entirely about money. The people making this decision will weigh the damage they think Sanders might do to their program and what that might cost them (financially), to the cost of buying him out/losing the revenue he generates. To think it's not about money is odd.
We got rid of a coach 2 weeks prior to reducing a buyout in half. Colorado isn’t and won’t suffer. They are spending other people’s money, they don’t care.
plus, I simply stated what I’d do as AD for future of program. Yall making it about money is a whole other discussion.
CU doesn't have the finances to pay a $20M buyout. That is absolutely part of the decision making process. To say otherwise isn't living in the real world.
The CU athletic department is broke. Their non-Sanders/Hunter NIL is non-existent. The CU AD flat out said he didn't know where the money to pay Deion would come from.