CURIOUS INDEX, 2/22/08
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American Samoa rules. 15 percent of American Samoan football players go on to play college football, an astonishing rate for any place, much less one plonked out in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The players share mouthpieces, so short are they on equipment, meaning the arrival of a Pop Warner league sponsored by USA Football (the governing authority in amateur football in the mainland) could increase the number of players with the Polamalu fringe sticking out of the helmet playing in college ball. By percentage, American Samoa could be the most football-crazed spot on the planet. We’ll all be doing the Haka soon enough, and couldn’t be happier about it. For an intimate look at what practice on that one good field looks like, here’s some youth football scrimmage footage taken in American Samoa that looks pretty representative: tin roofs in the back ground, looming, lush volcanic hills, a soggy field, and lots of really thick kids playing their asses off in the slog. Subway Domer have TAH-NOO-TAH press conference. TAH-NOO-TAH SAY HE NO PREFER NOTHING AT NOTRE DAME–HIM AT NOTRE DAME! THIS ALL THAT MATTER! RAAAAHAHHHHHHHHH!!! HIM WORK WITH KOR-WINN BROWN TO MAKE BEST PACKAGE, NOT FIGHT OVER WHO GETS STEAKBONE OF CHIEF DEFENSE MAN! Jeremy Elder, the Alabama football player who used a gun to get $26 off a pair of Alabama undergrads in an alleged robbery this week, will seek youthful offender status. This could reduce his sentence, and would also officially distinguish him from those old and busted non-youthful offenders in the jail. Elder really could have made more money selling the gun, but he wouldn’t have had a chance to recoup the investment multiple times over. You know the saying: sell a gun, and you eat once; teach a man to mug, and he’ll eat decently for a week before he’s shot or arrested. They’re not supposed to talk back! Phil Fulmer responds to columnist John Adams’ column earlier this week calling for Fulmer’s firing for failing to address the disciplinary issues swarming around the Vol football program. Phil, you obviously don’t understand this: columnists write stuff, and you sit there and take it. Respond to bloggers–we’re just guys living in our mom’s basements, and we need the publicity because Mom’s trying to get us to pay rent, man! “Our internal discipline is based on one factor alone: the course that is most likely to help that individual young man make amends and get his life straight,” Fulmer wrote in the column that will appear in Friday’s edition. “I’ve undoubtedly made some mistakes, but I try to do what I think is in the best interest for each young man.” We should mention that Tennessee is only second in the Fulmer Cup standings at this point. Cough. Joel has the whole letter over at RTT. Finally, this guy rules. If you’re going to give the finger to fans, don’t soft-pedal it: put it to the floor and don’t let up ’til the engine locks up or you run out of gas. |
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25
the GIANT 1 inch thick plate that’s been covering half of Roswell Rd
I thought that was just how Roswell Road is. We love our giant metal plates.
I want to have a road here named “Giant Metal Plate Boulevard”. Which GA legislator do I call?
Comment by Rival — February 22, 2008 @ 10:55 am
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#20 - those licensing fees are paid by the car owner though higher tag fees for prestige plates. The state even gets to pocked some of the extra dough, so why should they care? The bottom line is that they should be beholden to current Georgia citizens as opposed to citizens of other states who graduated from a GA school. GA is not its own country looking out for its citizens living abroad. State citizenship is determined by residence alone.
I’ve said my peace. Now I’m just gonna hang up and wait on my cheesecake.
Comment by TIGERinATL — February 22, 2008 @ 10:50 am
23
I am no expert, but I’m pretty sure the extra $25 the state of GA receives for each plate outweighs the miniscule (like, pennies?) amount per plate paid to UF in licensing fees. I live here — and between the public education crisis and the GIANT 1 inch thick plate that’s been covering half of Roswell Rd for a month now without repair, something tells me that GA could use the money.
Comment by GatorAM — February 22, 2008 @ 10:45 am
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Herb @ 7 - Allow me to point you to: English MP Boris Johnson in a charity “friendly” against Germany.
Duncan “disorderly” Fletcher calmly discussing a tackle with Paul Ince
best for last… Scott Parker tackling Joe Cole…
Comment by DC Trojan — February 22, 2008 @ 10:42 am
21
I think the state had three flags during my time at Georgia Tech. For a brief period I believe even those NASCAR tailgate Budweiser flags were being considered as a legit replacement.
Comment by Brian — February 22, 2008 @ 10:41 am
20
Not to defend GA politicians but…The use of a school’s logo is subject to licensing fees …why should GA, or any other state, allow the issuance of a required state license plate to become a source of revenue for an out of state school unless other states reciprocate and allow the same potential revenue stream to flow to GA schools?
Need to show your school spirit? Buy a bumper sticker.
Comment by Greenie — February 22, 2008 @ 10:40 am
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#16 — a voice of reason…
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/shared-blogs/ajc/politicalinsider/entries/2008/02/22/a_few_questions_about_the_gato.html
Comment by GatorAM — February 22, 2008 @ 10:37 am
18
Don’t get me wrong, if someone wants to send a petition around declaring the assbackwardness of the Georgia legislature, this former Georgia resident (and UGA alum) will sign that motherf^%$er three times. But it’s not like the state government is constitutionally required to let alums of other schools have special license plates.
Personally, I’m just glad that this issue has been more or less resolved, meaning that the state lege can focus its attention on more important matters, like protecting Georgia from the anarchist spectre of people who want to decide for themselves whether they can buy beer on Sundays.
Comment by Doug — February 22, 2008 @ 10:36 am
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i was previously unfamiliar with the forearm tap when giving the bird…but consider it added to my repertoire.
Comment by gerry dorsey — February 22, 2008 @ 10:33 am
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14
crucial? no
an excellent illustration of GA’s political assbackwardness? yes
worth an email to a senator and a comment on EDSBS? sure
Comment by TIGERinATL — February 22, 2008 @ 10:24 am
15
7 - The one truth I learned in my time in the Triangle is that State sucks.
I mean, really sucks. The only campus I could possibly compare you to is, yep you guessed it, South Carolina. Both are concrete prisons stuck in the middle of the town who have off-campus stadiums at the state fairgrounds.
I get that State resents everyone turning their nose up at them, but there is a reason that everyone turns their nose up at them, you, et al.
And, “WE” don’t all go to State. I would shoot myself in the face if that were the case.
Oh, and the Duke/Carolina whining will continue until both schools defeat you by 30, instead of 20, in basketball, at least 80% of the time.
Comment by Coop — February 22, 2008 @ 10:13 am
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Just take your generic GA license plate and live with it. Is it really that crucial? Damn.
Comment by Last Dragon — February 22, 2008 @ 10:08 am
13
About 30 ethnic Samoans, many from American Samoa, currently play in the National Football League. A 2002 article from ESPN estimated that a Samoan male (either an American Samoan, or a Samoan living in the 50 United States) is 40 times more likely to play in the NFL than a non-Samoan American.
- Wikipedia, bastion of truth.
The best part is at the bottom of the wikipedia article on American Samoa, there is a link simply titled “Scouting in American Samoa” but its actually about boy scouting.
Comment by Brian — February 22, 2008 @ 9:58 am
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Polynesian translation dept:
iheonly-mainlander without spellcheck
Comment by hunglikehussain — February 22, 2008 @ 9:56 am
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TENUTAA!!!
Comment by Subway Domer — February 22, 2008 @ 9:56 am
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Although it is unusual for coaches to respond to writers, in this case I like Fulmer’s letter. A reasoned response to an article that was entirely a personal attack on him.
Comment by etsuVol — February 22, 2008 @ 9:55 am
9
Threadjack for non-dawg/non-jacket GA residents:
They want to stop issuing out of state vanity plates unless the other states offer UGA and Tech plates. Write your state senators. Be sure to make the point that UGA grads living elsewhere are not their contituents. They are employed to represent current GA residents — REGARDLESS OF THEIR ALMA MATER.
http://www.cbs46.com/news/15367141/detail.html?rss=lnta&psp=news
Go here to find your state senators:
http://www.votesmart.org/official_state.php?state_name=Georgia&state_code=GA&go2.x=11&go2.y=8
Comment by TIGERinATL — February 22, 2008 @ 9:55 am
8
Fulmer recruits Samoas. Heavily.
Comment by Allahver Fist — February 22, 2008 @ 9:53 am
7
That was a bad ass slide tackle, too. I’ve always said what soccer needs is more contact and less Dukerriffic/Carolinaish whining.
#1, for now Ken Niumatalolo is holding it down for Samoans/people of some sort of Pacific descent everywhere.
Comment by Herb — February 22, 2008 @ 9:50 am
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I have no idea what iheonly means
Comment by PW — February 22, 2008 @ 9:49 am
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Aerobab, I think you misread the percentages. If I’m not mistaken, iheonly said that 15% of American Samoan high school players go on to play in college, not that 15% of college players were from American Samoa.
But I get your point.
Comment by PW — February 22, 2008 @ 9:48 am
4
Please, more chicks giving the finger to anyone.
Comment by Unhappy Monkey — February 22, 2008 @ 9:47 am
3
Isn’t Fulmer a Samoan?
Comment by Rival — February 22, 2008 @ 9:41 am
2
Phillip Fulmer, you are officially the most pathetic coach of all time. Seriously, what coach responds to journalists? Maybe he should try recruiting instead of writing responses to a paper so he won’t get worked by almost every SEC team again.
Comment by Sad State of Affairs — February 22, 2008 @ 9:39 am
1
With 15% of CFB players being of American Samoan, I’m curious where all the American Samoan coaches are.
Comment by Aerobab — February 22, 2008 @ 9:29 am