For all the anti college football geeks...

Anonymous
OP, I’m going to make your head explode. I went to Michigan, lived so close to the Big House I could hear the games, and never attended a single one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What on earth does this even mean. I totally disagree with you, football has absolutely nothing to do with college education. It’s a waste of money.


I believe the OP said "college experience" not "college education"

For a lot of people, the OP is correct. College is more than just books, and being a part of a community is a piece of that experience.


Why is this lost on people? So sad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Chase that ball up and down the field! My dog does it, and you can enjoy watching other humans do it (not even doing it yourself). Go, sportsing!


My brother and I were top flight NCAA D1 athletes. I was the mediocre one at a 3.8 GPA but did go on to the absolute top of the class at a top law school. My brother 4.0 phi beta kappa and went on to become a world renowned PhD economist. We were good students because we were mentally resilient and valued that personal element. We were poor and paid for every penny of our schooling on our own. In interviews I am consistently curious about people such as yourself in terms of mental toughness and resilience. Of course people and hires are important and we dig deeper but your dismissal of sportsing would cause a deeper dig. This is not to say athletics would be required but rather a wholesale dismissal of the same without any recognition of what they can bring raises questions. I went to the second best (ratings) that gives athletic scholarships and my teammates are remarkably successful. They all were tough and resilent.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:DS prefers going to a college that makes sports and outdoor experiences accessible. Can’t stand sitting for hours watching men tackle each other. Loves basketball, so he plays it—not watches it.


Loves a sport played indoors? Watching a ball go up and down a court? Your son is a saint. I bet he has no relationship with the FB players... 🤡
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DS prefers going to a college that makes sports and outdoor experiences accessible. Can’t stand sitting for hours watching men tackle each other. Loves basketball, so he plays it—not watches it.


Loves a sport played indoors? Watching a ball go up and down a court? Your son is a saint. I bet he has no relationship with the FB players... 🤡


This response is completely nonsensical.
Anonymous
IU crushing Nebraska like this is wild... Army about to go 7-0 and nationally ranked with a chance to make the playoffs? Yeah, college football is fun.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, I’m going to make your head explode. I went to Michigan, lived so close to the Big House I could hear the games, and never attended a single one.


LOL, no... but we all now know that you're a D & D pro. No heads expodeded here beyond laughter. 🤣
Anonymous
I went to P5 school and loved football Seturdays. However, I’m completely disillusioned with the portal, NIL, and college coaches with $13 million salaries.

My daughter goes to D3 school with a ranked (for D3) football. She still goes to the football games, enjoys beautiful fall days and actually knows the players who are taking legitimate courses of study.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I went to P5 school and loved football Seturdays. However, I’m completely disillusioned with the portal, NIL, and college coaches with $13 million salaries.

My daughter goes to D3 school with a ranked (for D3) football. She still goes to the football games, enjoys beautiful fall days and actually knows the players who are taking legitimate courses of study.


Yes, you meant this as a dig but proves the point. College football is a fabric of the experience. It doesn't matter where but fall games are absolutely the best.
Anonymous
I’m confused why you started this thread - is it for people who don’t like football? Or people who like pro football but not college football?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m confused why you started this thread - is it for people who don’t like football? Or people who like pro football but not college football?


No one can help if you're dense. This isn't a hard intellectual thread.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m confused why you started this thread - is it for people who don’t like football? Or people who like pro football but not college football?


No one can help if you're dense. This isn't a hard intellectual thread.


No need to be rude. You are justifying stereotypes of football peeps tho
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m confused why you started this thread - is it for people who don’t like football? Or people who like pro football but not college football?


No one can help if you're dense. This isn't a hard intellectual thread.


No need to be rude. You are justifying stereotypes of football peeps tho


If facts are "rude" not sure how a conversation is possible. Your "stereotypes" have already formed your opinion. Why comment unless to get that dopamine hit of getting a useless jab in? 🤣
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:College football is in the fabric of the College experience. Look no further than College Gameday today at UT and today's slate of games. GA @ TX tonight will be epic.


Honestly, how old are you


How old are you?


Old enough to recognize a pu—y ass b-tch when I see one 😂


But not old enough to know that not everyone likes the same things?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:College football is in the fabric of the College experience. Look no further than College Gameday today at UT and today's slate of games. GA @ TX tonight will be epic.


Honestly, how old are you


How old are you?


Old enough to recognize a pu—y ass b-tch when I see one 😂


But not old enough to know that not everyone likes the same things?


Yikes, your commen sense and clarity might be met with bellicose responses.
Forum Index » College and University Discussion
Go to: