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Everything posted by Dr Z
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So he is going to play every game like he does against Ken+, got it.
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I would be interested to read those thoughts, since this is a fan forum and all.
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How hard was that.
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This is the spot to include the Twitter LINK so members can consider the twitter source....for the millionth time.
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Wouldn't it be odd if Zeke decides he doesn't want to play basketball anymore after this year. That would be our best prospect in football (Wagner) and basketball doing the same in back to back years?!? Not a prediction, just an observation. PS If Zeke wanted to move up in the draft, the best way to do that would be having a great NCAA tournament. That gets kids noticed.
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Follow up simulation article next week is "What if Randy Moss DIDN'T Play for Marshall in 1997?"
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New 2012 recruit: Big Red DL William Houst
Dr Z replied to ZachTheZip's topic in Akron Zips Football Recruiting
Scout Profile -
Just got back from a long holiday weekend. Got to try some new brews at The Publick House. Got to try the Belgian Double White. Worth picking up IMO. The Imperial Porter was just average. Stay clear of Secret Ale. The Abbot 12 was the winner for me. Awesome! PS All these were on tap there. If your on the island, it's a nice place to stop, food was very good. If you see a bottle of Abbot 12 sold locally, let me know.
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Awesome!
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Top 144 Men's Basketball Teams for 2012-2013
Dr Z replied to Dave in Green's topic in Akron Zips Basketball
I really don't care where someone that doesn't know the team or the league "ranks" us. I want to know what KD and the team's expectations for the year are. That is how I judge a successful, or failing year. KD is pretty open about his expectations, and ill be interested in reading them. Personally I want to be in the top 32 or 16 when it's all said and done. This is the year that some of us diehards circled when Zeke committed, and it hasn't changed for me. This is the year it must happen. -
John Harris of the Tribune writes that This is Only the Beginning for PSU
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Synthetic turf conversion now reaching area high schools
Dr Z replied to ZippyRulz's topic in Off Topic, Smack & Jokes
Only one person left to catch on. High school football destroys his field every year. -
When will we be recruiting 2nd tier kids instead of 3rd tiers?
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INteresting fact about professional soccer
Dr Z replied to Spin's topic in Akron Zips NCAA Championship Soccer
Are you old enough to remember the Cleveland Barons? My dad took me to a few games as a toddler. The NHL moved to Cleveland from Oakland in 1976. The Barons never came close to filling the arena in their two years in Cleveland. The team's home opener only drew 8,900 fans. They only drew 10,000 or more fans in seven out of 40 home games, and attendance was actually worse than it had been in Oakland. Fearing that two franchises were on the verge of folding, in 1978 the league granted approval for the Barons to merge with another financially troubled team, the Minnesota North Stars. The North Stars were the surviving team. -
Your right, they should sell it for $3. That way the BJ headline can read UA Triples Their Money on Rubber Bowl Investment
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INteresting fact about professional soccer
Dr Z replied to Spin's topic in Akron Zips NCAA Championship Soccer
America’s most-attended sports events 1. Indianapolis 500, @ 300,000. In 2004, the Indianapolis Star finally undertook a monstrous effort to count exactly how many seats are at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Their count? 257,325. And while hundreds of thousands of people could fit into the infield, observation by trained analysts has indicated that far fewer than that actually did. So we're looking at about 300,000 people in attendance at every 500. 2. Brickyard 400, @ 300,000. Sort of a cheat, because like the Indy 500, this NASCAR race is held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. All of the above stats apply, of course. 3. Daytona 500, @ 250,000. NASCAR attendance figures are notably slippery. The tracks themselves don't release figures, so attendance estimation is often left to a media member who stands in the press box, surveys the stands, and estimates attendance at "about X." Now, that guess could be right on the money, or it could be off by 50,000. Still, combining the grandstands and the infield at Daytona gets you a figure of about a quarter-million. And only five of them aren't Dale Earnhardt fans. 4. Texas Motor Speedway races, @ 171,000. Everything's bigger in Texas, especially attendance figures, and Texas's two NASCAR races usually draw about 171,000 fans apiece. And this won't be the last time Texas shows up on this list. 5. Kentucky Derby, @ 164,858. As with the NASCAR races, it's difficult to estimate exactly how many people pile into the infield at Churchill Downs, though the 2011 Derby apparently set a record this year for attendance. The number who remain sober through the entire Derby afternoon remains pegged at a steady 0. 6. Tie, Bristol races, Talladega races, @ 160,000. 2010 marked the first time a Bristol race hadn't sold out in decades. Prior to that, hundreds of thousands of race fans descended on this tiny hamlet in the Tennessee hills, created the largest city for a hundred miles in any direction, and then vanished as quick as they arrived. And although Talladega's attendance has dipped sharply in recent years, the stadium and the infield can handle in excess of 160,000 fans -- plus a few thousand more in the surrounding campgrounds who couldn't make their way through the gates. 7. Baseball, 115,300. This figure's a bit of a stretch, since the average baseball game is in the 30,000 range. But in 2008, the Dodgers and the Red Sox held an exhibition game in the L.A. Coliseum, and the result was the most widely attended game in baseball history. 8. Michigan football, 112,000. The universities of Michigan and Tennessee leapfrog one another in attendance, adding on bleachers atop bleachers in some bizarre arms race. The Wolverines currently hold the edge, but it won't be long until the Volunteers step up. Tie 9. Tennessee-Penn State football @ 109,000. Both stadiums (Neyland at Tennessee and Beaver at Penn State) have undergone numerous expansions in their history. Tennesee set an attendance record in 2004 against -- who else? -- Florida. (Side note: in 2005, a promoter tried to schedule a Virginia Tech-Tennessee game in Bristol, which would have broken all team sport records for attendance. Tech was willing, but Tennessee was not.) A crowd of 110,753 watched Penn State destroy Nebraska 40-7 back in 2002. 10. NBA, 108,713. In 2010, the NBA All-Star game's attendance demolished the old record of attendance for an NBA game, previously set at the Georgia Dome. And where was this mammoth All-Star exhibition played? Funny you should ask ... a little old place in Texas that shows up again, next on the list. 10. NFL, 105,121. A legit regular-season game by the Dallas Cowboys when opening their new stadium in a game against the Giants a couple years back. Sure, tens of thousands watched from a standing-room plaza, and many others couldn't even see the field, but so what? Other landmarks: As noted above, the best-attended NBA regular-season game came in, of all cities, Atlanta, where 62,046 fans showed up at the Georgia Dome to watch the Hawks play the Chicago Bulls in what was supposed to be Michael Jordan's farewell appearance. And the NHL's best-attended game was the 2008 Winter Classic, where 71,217 fans watched Buffalo and Pittsburgh at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Buffalo. The top-ranked NCAA basketball game was 2009's NCAA Championship, where 72,922 fans watched North Carolina demolish Michigan State in Detroit's Ford Field. Source: Yahoo Sports BTW MLB Far exceeds any league in the world in attendance in 2011 with a total of 73,451,522. The next closest...ANOTHER baseball league, the Nippon league in Japan at 21,679,596. -
Sell it for $1, UA will be ahead.
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INteresting fact about professional soccer
Dr Z replied to Spin's topic in Akron Zips NCAA Championship Soccer
Between June 12, 1995 and April 4, 2001, the Indians sold out 455 consecutive home games, drawing a total of 19,324,248 fans to Jacobs Field. The demand for tickets was so great that all 81 home games were sold out before Opening Day on at least three separate occasions. The sellout streak set a Major League Baseball record at the time. I don't think any soccer team in the area has that potential. -
I was told before the Info was built, RB renovations were not financially feasible. I'm guessing that is still the case.
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I think he might have been recruited as a WR, due to his size. I'm hoping he gets his jersey number since I bought it at the golf outing...booyah!
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2012 Miami RB hoping to land at Akron
Dr Z replied to ZachTheZip's topic in Akron Zips Football Recruiting
Bowden said the Zips are still waiting for his documentation to go through the NCAA’s clearinghouse, but he should be in camp in August. Source: George Thomas -
Standing ovation!?!? Dave opened things up by asking, "Well, now that you got this out of your system, you ready to go back to Cleveland and play some ball?" Letterman "I thought you were going to stick it out in Cleveland"
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Over the years Akron has been pretty successful recruiting in western PA. Coach has said many times that western PA is one of his focused recruiting areas. Today Jerry DiPaola of the Pittsburgh Tribune writes 5 star talent is becoming harder to find there. “The glory days of the WPIAL are past,” Farrell said. “If you look at the cities that produce the most talent, Pittsburgh is not in the top 10 nationally. Miami won with Miami kids. USC won with southern California kids, but Pittsburgh is not that talent wealthy.” This graphic is included in the article to demonstrate who recruits the area. Uncommitted talent listed in the Trib article: Tyler Boyd is a four star receiver yet to verbal. No Akron interest or offer. Robert Foster is a five star receiver yet to verbal. No Akron interest or offer. For reference, the PG list 22 top area talents: Post Gazette Fabulous 22 The Fabulous 22 is made up of the top players in the WPIAL and City League and a number of them go on to big things in college or play in the NFL. The team is picked by the Post-Gazette scholastic sports staff, with help from high school and college coaches. The first Fabulous 22 team was picked 31 years ago. Some of the former Fabulous 22 picks who are in the NFL are Darrelle Revis (Aliquippa), Rob Gronkowski (Woodland Hills), Steve Breaston (Woodland Hills), Paul Posluszny (Hopewell), Sean Lee (Upper St. Clair), Justin King (Gateway) and Charlie Batch (Steel Valley).
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What does a football playoff mean to the MAC?
Dr Z replied to psc2009's topic in Akron Zips Football
Part of the solution, IMO, would be to wait until week 5 or 6 before you start ranking teams. This is only a start, but I have never been for BS preseason rankings. Teams start off too high that stay in the top 25 just because they were "originally" ranked. Some teams never make the top 25 because of the early over-ranked teams.