I got a friend looking to rent out his house. Probably too big for just two tough. Id look for an aibnb/rent like a champion. Don't know what there hotel situation will be like, but feel like house is the way to go if you want to be semi close
Seeing that I’m in the mortgage business, I’ve decided to ultimately just buy a house there and rent it during football season. Damn good ROI based on rent there!
Not true, I would not wish this type of stuff on any man, I hope he had sex and got some confidence becaus he fucking sucked
We each have big home wins over overrated ranked teams. We've both struggled against overmatched "conference" teams. But we also beat them and the *eye test* says we dominated that game. So no, he's not right
Brock Purdy (ISU true freshman qb) has been a gamechanger. 2nd start and now has wins over 2 ranked opponents.
USC has some freaks that are RSfresh, fresh, or SophS That team is gonna be tough at the end of the year
Spoiler: Where have we heard this before Nebraska would owe Scott Frost as much as $26 million if it moves on from coach As Nebraska’s football program continues falling to new lows, there is a way it could get a lot worse: Nebraska coach Scott Frost stands on the sideline during his team's loss to Purdue. BRUCE THORSON, USA TODAY SPORTS If school officials decided that their decision to hire Scott Frost as head coach was so wrong that they decided the best way forward would be to fire him. Saturday, the Cornhuskers fell to 0-6 for the first time in program history with an overtime loss to Northwestern, which tied the game on a 99-yard touchdown drive that ended with 12 seconds left in regulation. At present, moving on from Frost would mean the school would be obligated to pay Frost as much as $26 million. Frost's contract originally was for seven years, through Dec. 31, 2024. Nebraska would owe him $5 million for each year remaining through Dec. 31, 2022, with any partial year paid pro-rata. Then it would owe him $2.5 million for each of the final two years. The final tab for Frost likely would be offset by income from his future employment, but the school also would be looking at obligations to his 10 assistants and his top strength coach, all of whom are under contract through Dec. 31, 2019. They would be owed all of the money remaining on their deals. So if none of them were retained, that would add up to at least another $4.875 million, also subject to offset from future employment. Nebraska is still paying both of Frost’s predecessors, Bo Pelini and Mike Riley. The payout for Pelini, which is being offset by his contract as Youngstown State’s head coach, continues through February 2019 at a rate of about $1.5 million annually. Riley was owed about $6.6 million when he was fired last year. He is now an assistant at Oregon State, but his pay there isn’t doing much to help Nebraska. His salary is $50,004; he got a $35,000 signing bonus and is scheduled to get a $35,000 retention payment in 2019. In addition, Nebraska is paying former athletics director Shawn Eichorst, who was owed $1.7 million when he was dismissed last year. But he too now has another job, as Texas’ executive senior associate AD for internal affairs -- and his pay from Texas is offsetting what Nebraska owes him.
I was blown away when I heard he hit like 81% of his passes. I thought he had a terrible game but it was colored by the picks and sacks.
I had one yesterday at the bar. He was honestly the worst human being I've ever met. Basically ND shouldn't make the playoffs because they lost to Bama in 2012.
Well I'm glad the narrative has flipped from talking about how amazing we are and how Ian Book is Joe Montana to "could Notre Dame even beat a MAC team on a neutral field? YOU decide" in a week we won and 4 of the top 8 lost. If the hype was getting to them this week, hopefully the chip on the shoulder is back.
The no calls for holding were criminal. Khalid was being held at least once a series. He should have had 2-3 sacks more easy. We didn't play great but those no calls relly hurt in a tight game.