Do you think they got ahead 24-7 and suddenly remembered the plane crash? You are a sick individual to blame a football loss on the deaths of those people.
Don't taze me bro, I agree but you got me quoted.
Do you think they got ahead 24-7 and suddenly remembered the plane crash? You are a sick individual to blame a football loss on the deaths of those people.
Don't taze me bro, I agree but you got me quoted.
Thanks for posting Oklahoma State guy. I think you are making some good points. I doubt that anything short of two T Boone Pickens type donors will ever elevate us in a football.
I don't claim to be T Boone Pickens, but a large enough football filled with helium would do it.
Zero impact? Get a grip on reality and don't let delusions rule your life.
Seriously? Is that what you're trying to convince yourself of? Zero impact?
So the coaches who are on the road with their team, trying to focus the players on the game at hand, wouldn't be shaken up by the death of a friend and colleague? Remember, this wasn't just ONE coach losing a friend that day, it was EVERY coach.
You don't think that impacted them? Kept them from focussing on the task at hand? You don't think the players were mourning?
The disgusting thing is that ESPN put money before class and played a game that should've been delayed. If the crash had happened a day earlier, it probably would've been.
You think the team that destroyed Oklahoma the following week and was a 27 point favorite that night, lost that game with none of it being due to the tragedy? Wow!!!
Here's a quote from DE Richetti Jones that was printed in the Tulsa World:
If you think it didn't matter to the team, why did Gundy choose to hand our Fiesta Bowl trophy to Coach Budke's widow at the award ceremony immediately after we beat Stanford? Do you think it might be because she had apologized to Gundy for the crash possibly costing the football team that game? Do you think he might have been telling her there are more important things than football and basketball games, and that everything turned out okay?
[video=youtube_share;hm_IHNaxI3M]http://youtu.be/hm_IHNaxI3M[/video]
Zero impact? Get a grip on reality and don't let delusions rule your life.
Blaming a football game loss on a plane crash is very low class.
"Faux outrage?" I let my wife read your remark and I would get bumped by your mods if I quoted what she said about it.Your faux outrage at getting called out on leveraging a plane crash as an excuse for losing a football game is baffling. Did you forget that Oklahoma State was up 24-7 in that game at one point? How would you explain that? Pinning the loss on the plane crash is an excuse of epic proportions - and a pathetic one at that.
And no, none of this is meant to minimize the plane crash on the whole, because clearly (as I said before) it was a true tragedy and it meant so much more than a football game. You would do well to remember that, too.
I will agree with you that the game should not have been played that night had OSU requested not to. If I remember right (and I'm not sure I do, but I think so), our AD Jamie Pollard offered to move the game to Saturday instead. I'm sure ESPN played a role in keeping it on Friday in some way, and if Gundy had said to move it, then it should have been moved.
FRIDAY MORNINGOffensive tackle Parker Graham:“When we woke up and heard the news about the basketball coaches, that just automatically pulled a string at your heart.”
Former defensive end Richetti Jones: “I woke that day and turned the TV to ESPN like I always do, and the first thing I saw was the news about the coaches. So I called around to people that I knew were in Stillwater and they confirmed it for me. From there, I was in a daze of slow motion and mixed emotions. How do you react to something like that? Do you sit around and play, talk and laugh like you usually do? Or do you choose your next action wisely, because you don't know how people are going to react to you not caring or acting like nothing has happened? So everyone was walking around on egg shells.”
Wide receiver Charlie Moore: “When Coach Gundy called us all, that was something really sad.”
BEFORE THE GAME
Jones: “I really respect Coach (Mike) Gundy addressing the team with the right words. I know it had to be tough for him. What do you tell a whole team? We all knew what had happened, so it wasn't a secret, so what can you really say to use to get our minds right and handle this situation the right way?”
Gundy: “It was quiet for the rest of the day. It was quiet at the hotel, quiet in meetings, quiet on the bus ride. It was somewhat quiet in the locker room before the game.”
Graham: “I just remember trying to get focused and still trying to maintain that edge, while still feeling that remorse for the people we lost.”
Gundy: “You fly in and you stay a long ways away, and then you get on a bus and you drive over there (to Ames). And you go out on that field and that grass is about (a foot) tall, and it's unlike what we play on down here. We play on grass fields, but it's manicured to perfection, and that's a northern grass and it feels different. They're putting 50 or 60,000 people in those stands now. They're all wearing the same colored T-shirt. And you kind of get put to sleep, because I think players now are attracted to flashy things. My point was, if you think you're going up there to play them and it's going to be a fun trip, you're wrong, in my experience.”
Jones: “I couldn't tell you how my teammates felt exactly, but I can tell you I could look at some of them and I knew that they weren't where they needed to be mentally and weren't ready to play a game.”
Gundy: “You fly in and you stay a long ways away, and then you get on a bus and you drive over there (to Ames). And you go out on that field and that grass is about (a foot) tall, and it's unlike what we play on down here. We play on grass fields, but it's manicured to perfection, and that's a northern grass and it feels different. They're putting 50 or 60,000 people in those stands now. They're all wearing the same colored T-shirt. And you kind of get put to sleep, because I think players now are attracted to flashy things. My point was, if you think you're going up there to play them and it's going to be a fun trip, you're wrong, in my experience.”
You are a giant tool."Faux outrage?" I let my wife read your remark and I would get bumped by your mods if I quoted what she said about it.
I'm not blowing it out of proportion. You're minimizing it to validate your vainglorious attitude that allows you to believe you had a victory that was unsullied by tragedy. Here are some more quotes from the Tulsa paper from the players about that morning and day:
You get the victory. I never denied it. In fact, I wrote to congratulate your fans. I felt that was the class thing to do.
I guess what baffles me is how some fans on here, when addressing an OSU fan, don't say, "Yeah...we won...but I feel crappy about how we won." That would be the classy thing to do...whether you believed it or not.
However...history will remember that victory came with an![]()
I guess what baffles me is how some fans on here, when addressing an OSU fan, don't say, "Yeah...we won...but I feel crappy about how we won." That would be the classy thing to do...whether you believed it or not.
"Faux outrage?" I let my wife read your remark and I would get bumped by your mods if I quoted what she said about it.
I'm not blowing it out of proportion. You're minimizing it to validate your vainglorious attitude that allows you to believe you had a victory that was unsullied by tragedy. Here are some more quotes from the Tulsa paper from the players about that morning and day:
You get the victory. I never denied it. In fact, I wrote to congratulate your fans. I felt that was the class thing to do.
I guess what baffles me is how some fans on here, when addressing an OSU fan, don't say, "Yeah...we won...but I feel crappy about how we won." That would be the classy thing to do...whether you believed it or not.
However...history will remember that victory came with an![]()