Champ the mascot that is. Depending on how the game goes, I may not make it through the first quarter.
Champ the mascot that is. Depending on how the game goes, I may not make it through the first quarter.
I guess I don't know what y'all mean by "prepared." King probably wasn't "prepared" to jump offsides and drop an easy TD, which probably cost us 14 points. The word "prepared" appears to pass the buck to the coaching staff. But with a lead at halftime, despite the gaffes, indicates the coaches had us ready and in position to get the win with 1 half of play left. Maybe they didn't prepare us to show up in the 2nd half, but I noticed that when Higgins came in, we didn't get past midfield until Tulane went to the prevent defense. His first pass was a pick and his second pass hit a Tulane defensive lineman in the chest. He probaly wasn't prepared for that game. But the coaching staff probably wasn't prepared for Young to go down or prepared for how bad our line played, or prepared for how bad Higgins played.
...or prepared to prepare a team to play college football.
I thought this was funny... I googled "how to prepare for a football game"
1. Arrive at the stadium at least two hours prior to kickoff.
2. Find your locker. For home games, your locker will always be in the same location, with your name engraved on a plate above it. However, for road games, you'll have to search the locker room for your name written on a piece of tape.
3. Put your thigh pads and knee pads into your game pants. There are pockets sewn on the inside of the pants, and your pads slide into them easily.
4. Change out of your street clothes and into your jockstrap, game pants and T-shirt.
5. Get your ankles taped by the medical trainers in the training room.
6. Return to your locker and put on a pair of socks, cleats and gloves.
etc...
Funny, but that's all it should take to beat Tulane when they challenge you man to man.