ADVERTISEMENT

Allright, gotta do an OT political thread

Apologies in advance.

So this is not about who you support, D or R. What is chapping my ass is the onslaught of the media, R politicians, and everybody else and their dog anointing Trump as the R nominee and lambasting Nikki Haley for not dropping out after a caucus and one primary. Both insignificant, population-wise. And Trump's "landslide" victory in NH where he got 54% of the vote. Gee, a 5-4 victory in Baseball is not a landslide.

In 1992, Bill Clinton did not win his first primary until #6. His next win came in primary #13. The Comeback kid. It wasn't until Super Tuesday that he pretty much flattened the competition.

But flash forward to 2024. A stupid redneck Iowa caucus and an actually pretty competitive NH primary but oh Trump is the guy and everyone bow at his altar.

How about the pundits and the Trump sycophants STFU and let democracy run its course?

Scam Alerts

Now I doubt any of you smart folks here would fall for these scams, but you never know, so I thought I would share them with everyone.

The first one was a telephone scam that happened to get through the blocking software. The message was supposedly from Spectrum, and they said my monthly bill had been credited with a 50% discount and if I wanted to continue the offer in future months I needed to call the number they gave me. Immediately suspicious about that, I did search on Spectrum for $50 Spectrum discount (I didn't hear it correctly) and there were several results that were calling it a scam. The one I looked at said that if were to call the number they were just fishing for financial info/ID, like accounts or SSA #'s. Even miss hearing the message at $50 instead of the actual 50% they said was an immediate red flag, as you really can't expect any favors from any cable company.

The next scam was a particularly poor one, IMO. It was an email message (copied and pasted below) that for some reason didn't get shuffled off into the "Spam" folder and hit the Inbox. It was listed as being from Davina Mautner, which immediately was suspicious. Generally once an email like this that hits the preview pane gets deleted immediately, but I thought I would check a couple things for fun.

So here is how poor this effort was:
  • Sender listed in the Inbox and the signature at the end of the note don't match
  • Info in message is gobbledygook
  • No actual company name is provided
  • Incorrect grammar/spelling is always a tipoff-"ustomer"? lol
  • Nampa is in Idaho, not South Dakota
  • No "Wheeler Ridge Drive" comes up in South Dakota
  • Zip Code 42066 is in Kentucky
**********************************
Greetings to Respected Client leadership ,

Thank you for deciding on our service #EVCXUJXICQWWE . I hope my assistance today was beneficial to you. We value your time and assistance.

ustomer Code : XJHE8D8CJF3O
Order ID : 11503
Transaction Date : 2024, Jan 26


Yours faithfully,

Sue Nimocks
Wheeler Ridge Dr, Nampa, South Dakota 42066
********************************

As the old Sergeant used to say in Hill Street Blues- "Hey, hey, hey, be careful out there!".

Duplicate post-Ignore this one

Now I doubt any of you smart folks here would fall for these scams, but you never know, so I thought I would share them with everyone.

The first one was a telephone scam that happened to get through the blocking software. The message was supposedly from Spectrum, and they said my monthly bill had been credited with a 50% discount and if I wanted to continue the offer in future months I needed to call the number they gave me. Immediately suspicious about that, I did search on Spectrum for $50 Spectrum discount (I didn't hear it correctly) and there were several results that were calling it a scam. The one I looked at said that if were to call the number they were just fishing for financial info/ID, like accounts or SSA #'s. Even miss hearing the message at $50 instead of the actual 50% they said was an immediate red flag, as you really can't expect any favors from any cable company.

The next scam was a particularly poor one, IMO. It was an email message (copied and pasted below) that for some reason didn't get shuffled off into the "Spam" folder and hit the Inbox. It was listed as being from Davina Mautner, which immediately was suspicious. Generally once an email like this that hits the preview pane gets deleted immediately, but I thought I would check a couple things for fun.

So here is how poor this effort was:
  • Sender listed in the Inbox and the signature at the end of the note don't match
  • Info in message is gobbledygook
  • No actual company name is provided
  • Incorrect grammar/spelling is always a tipoff-"ustomer"? lol
  • Nampa is in Idaho, not South Dakota
  • No "Wheeler Ridge Drive" comes up in South Dakota
  • Zip Code 42066 is in Kentucky
**********************************
Greetings to Respected Client leadership ,

Thank you for deciding on our service #EVCXUJXICQWWE . I hope my assistance today was beneficial to you. We value your time and assistance.

ustomer Code : XJHE8D8CJF3O
Order ID : 11503
Transaction Date : 2024, Jan 26


Yours faithfully,

Sue Nimocks
Wheeler Ridge Dr, Nampa, South Dakota 42066
********************************

As the old Sergeant used to say in Hill Street Blues- "Hey, hey, hey, be careful out there!".

ACC 2024 FB schedule

2024 ACC FB schedule. 17 teams, no Divisions, 8 conference games? So you play only half of your conference mates? I guess there will be championship games, but HTF do you figure that out when you only play half your league? Nonsense. Stanford plays at Syracuse, Clemson, and NC State. Plus non-con ND. Cal? At Auburn, FSU, Pitt, Wake Forest and SMU. That will be fun! And in the notes - no existing ACC teams will travel to California in back to back seasons. Gee Stanford and especially Cal, that sounds fair compared to your schedule!

Can't wait to see Stanford and Cal's M and W basketball, baseball, W soccer and VB schedules.

  • Like
Reactions: KRUSTYtheCOUG

End of Bucs game, other

I thought the same thing at the end of the Bills game. 30-odd seconds left, 4th down. And I didn't realize the potential FG was 49 yards, or that the kicker was only 3-8 from that distance. And what about a block? Or if they punted, a punt return, couple of long passes, whatever? The game was not over. No matter how slim the chances, there was a chance. Major brain fart by coach. A player can't call timeout?

And I'm sure all you Swifties are happy to know about the record viewership for this game. Although I was more interested in Jason Kelce's antics.



College Football Fans

I have empathy for Husky fans in the coaching chaos and transfer upheaval. For one, as a die hard Coug Fan, over the past 20 plus years we have lived versions of the portal, recruiting no-shows, and coaching chaos. I wouldn't wish this on any fan. On the other other hand, I am excited to see what God is going to do with the average Husky fan's character. If they are slightly similar to me, then there is going to be a refinement of character around arrogance, humility, obsession, and bias, with the continued quest to bleed your school's colors but to use self-control with the mouth.

Every now and then an occasional lightning bolt might be in order. LOL

Stupid NFL Playoff scheduling

Ok so today we have Houston at Baltimore at 4:30 local time. Why so late? It'll be a bit chilly that late. Sunday's early game is at 3PM - in a dome! Late Saturday game at 5:15 in San Fran - OK not that bad, supposed to be in the 50's.

Then Sunday, Bucs at Detroit at 3PM in their indoor stadium. But the late game, KC at Buffalo, starts at 6:30? wh wh wh why? Wouldn't it make more sense to have that be the early game?

Good read ~ How Dickert minimized roster turnover...

How did WSU’s Jake Dickert minimize roster turnover? ‘It takes a team’​

Greg WoodsJan. 19, 2024 at 5:14 pm
By
The Spokesman-Review
Weeks before Washington State’s football season ended, before the Cougars played their final game in the Pac-12 as we know it, Jake Dickert went public with one assertion.

“It’s going to be open-target season on our players,” Dickert said.

By that he meant the way representatives from other schools would surely try to lure his players away, using lucrative NIL offers to ransack his team through the transfer portal. Dickert believed in his program, he said, but retaining players in this day and age isn’t always so simple.

So all the Cougars did was hold on to nearly all non-graduating seniors and maintain nearly their entire staff. Starting wideout Josh Kelly hit the portal and transferred to Texas Tech. Quarterback Cam Ward declared for the NFL draft, then veered course and committed to Miami. Those were the only WSU starters to hit the portal and transfer elsewhere.

In total, 18 Cougars hit the portal, which closed this month. Outside of Ward and Kelly, the Cougars’ costliest loss might have been backup cornerback Javan Robinson, who transferred to Arizona State. After that, running back Jaylen Jenkins and wideout DT Sheffield each hit the portal, but both departed the program during the season, long before transfer season had begun.

On the coaching staff, Washington State lost only a couple of support employees. No major assistant coaches took jobs elsewhere, a change of pace from the previous couple of seasons, when the Cougars lost coordinators over the winter.

It’s encouraging for the Cougars, because, on the surface several factors were lining up against them. They had just wrapped up a 5-7 season, missing a bowl for the first time in nearly a decade (outside of the pandemic-shortened 2020 season).

They scored a giant victory in court, securing the rights to the Pac-12, but as they try to rebuild the conference they’re entering a temporary scheduling agreement with the Mountain West — a departure from the Power Five status the program enjoyed for so long.

All of which is why for Dickert, losing only two starters to the portal amounted to a promising development.

“Tremendous amount of pride,” Dickert said. “The biggest thing is, you gotta realize in today’s world, everyone chooses to be here. It wasn’t like that all the time. Everyone made a choice, right? So you gotta take advantage of it. That means they’re connected to it. It means they’re connected to our staff, which I think is vitally important, and the importance of all those guys in the room and how they’re doing it and what we’re doing. And they want to be part of this program. I don’t take that lightly at all.”

Central to that approach, Dickert explained, is recruiting his own players throughout the season — not just on the day after the season ends. “If you think you’re gonna recruit them all of a sudden when [Dec. 1] hits,” Dickert said, “you’ve whiffed.”

Dickert added:

“It isn’t just the front-line starters. It’s about maintaining competitive depth so you can put them through the developmental process. … Retaining the young guys is just as important as retaining the starters. But now it takes a team of people. It isn’t just me. It’s the program. It’s how you treat them. It’s the staff. It’s a whole community of people that help retain these players.”

The Cougars also suffered just one decommitment, which came from four-star prospect Trae Davis, who flipped from WSU to Kansas State in December. Otherwise, in December WSU signed a 25-man signing class, which has ballooned into the 30s thanks to transfers like former Oregon players Kris Huston and Keith Brown.

This time around the offseason, part of that process meant Dickert staying at Washington State. Last week, when the coaching carousel began to churn with the departure of Washington coach Kalen DeBoer, Arizona’s job opened up and The Athletic named Dickert a potential candidate.

Dickert brings stability and structure to the WSU program, reporter Bruce Feldman wrote, which is part of what made him a promising candidate for the Wildcats opening. The same reasoning held back in the fall, after the Cougars bolted to a 4-0 start and Dickert’s name surfaced for the opening at Michigan State.

“There was never a conversation with Arizona, same as there was never a conversation with Michigan State,” Dickert said. “Anything that’s out there is noise until anything really happens. So didn’t pay it much credence. At the end of the day, it’s what we wanna do here at Washington State to be successful, and to me, it’s being better with the outside noise — including myself. I think at some point last year, I really felt a deep connection to be the voice for our university.”

That, Dickert said, is part of why he doesn’t feel pulled to leave WSU any time soon.

“I think coaches get themselves in trouble by overpromising,” Dickert said. “I love it here. This is my job. I’m investing in my job each and every day. If anyone could see the amount of hours and time that we all put in here. … We just kept the whole staff here, maybe for the first time in a long time. So it just shows that we’re doing things right, and we never have taken shortcuts to create success.

“Any time opportunity comes up, just put your head down and just keep working. That’s what I’ve always been about. Have I taken new jobs over time? Yeah, I wouldn’t be sitting in this seat. But I’m just really appreciative of the people that have given me this opportunity, to say the least. And I think I embody Cougs. I love Pullman, here and our place. I’m everything that Washington State stands for, so I’m excited to represent everybody.”

Greg Woods on Twitter: @GregWWoods. Washington State beat writer for The Spokesman-Review
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT