Originally Posted by Chief Pagan:
Well, when I was in college I would say a lot of things happened after midnight that I have a lot of fond memories of.
But it's certainly more dangerous being in a car on the interstate after midnight especially on a weekend.
Avoid the left hand lane on the interstate in such conditions. Drunk idiots that go the wrong way will get into what they think is the right hand lane, but is actually the left hand lane going the opposite direction. It probably doesn't happen all that often, but a head-on collision at interstate speeds is disastrous. [Reply]
Originally Posted by RedinTexas:
One addendum. "Be thankful as hell that the consequences of your mistakes are no worse than what they are. You are getting off very lightly."
That's great advice for Rashee's dad to give him. Football coaches need to be more focused on making him the best football player they can. Spare the whole organization the moral lessons like it's the last scene of a Cosby Show episode [Reply]
Originally Posted by Vladimir_Kyrilytch:
That's great advice for Rashee's dad to give him. Football coaches need to be more focused on making him the best football player they can. Spare the whole organization the moral lessons like it's the last scene of a Cosby Show episode
Originally Posted by Vladimir_Kyrilytch:
That's great advice for Rashee's dad to give him. Football coaches need to be more focused on making him the best football player they can. Spare the whole organization the moral lessons like it's the last scene of a Cosby Show episode
Respectfully, I disagree. Maturity makes for a much better player and teammate. Immaturity will make a player into a locker room cancer. Every player can become better, but it takes maturity to listen to a coach and accept that you have things to learn. The first step is to accept responsibility for your actions and a major part of that, for Rice, would be accepting the fact that he is very, very lucky that his incident is no worse than it is. [Reply]
I just love the ridiculous idea of Andy taking 10 seconds to remind Rashee about how his incident could have killed somebody (including Rashee himself) and then needing to leave practice and go home early because the talk zapped him of all his coaching energy and focus. [Reply]
Originally Posted by RedinTexas:
Avoid the left hand lane on the interstate in such conditions. Drunk idiots that go the wrong way will get into what they think is the right hand lane, but is actually the left hand lane going the opposite direction. It probably doesn't happen all that often, but a head-on collision at interstate speeds is disastrous.
Something like this happened near where I live about a month ago.
A 68 year old man got confused and somehow got into the wrong lane on the interstate. He was going south in the northbound lane. He hit another vehicle head on. That car had 3 people in it.
The irony is he was sober and the people he hit were all drunk. All 4 died. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Vladimir_Kyrilytch:
That's great advice for Rashee's dad to give him. Football coaches need to be more focused on making him the best football player they can. Spare the whole organization the moral lessons like it's the last scene of a Cosby Show episode
You think the organization that invested millions in the guy and plan on him being a key piece in the future success of the team should just keep their mouths shut, because it's Rashee's father's responsibility to give Rashee advice and moral lessons? It's so painstakingly exhausting for a coach to have a passing word with a player unless that word has to deal with coaching?
Fuck your dense. You cannot be a real person. [Reply]
Originally Posted by RedinTexas:
Respectfully, I disagree. Maturity makes for a much better player and teammate. Immaturity will make a player into a locker room cancer. Every player can become better, but it takes maturity to listen to a coach and accept that you have things to learn. The first step is to accept responsibility for your actions and a major part of that, for Rice, would be accepting the fact that he is very, very lucky that his incident is no worse than it is.
Nope father's are the only ones allowed to give life advice. Coach Reid might lose a couple of years from his coaching life if he got involved like that! [Reply]
Originally Posted by Hoopsdoc:
Something like this happened near where I live about a month ago.
A 68 year old man got confused and somehow got into the wrong lane on the interstate. He was going south in the northbound lane. He hit another vehicle head on. That car had 3 people in it.
The irony is he was sober and the people he hit were all drunk. All 4 died.
Khyree is the 3rd Vikings player to pass away from a car accident, the other two is Tarvaris Jackson and Jeffrey Gladney, it is just unfortunate [Reply]