Football Tweets

I have my own ideas of what our uniform system should be, but since that is unlikely to ever happen...
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I think Coach Paul Johnson has taught Coach Key about the way of the Claw Hammer

What was the point in not turning the heat on?
1. Did they piss him off?
2. Did the coaches really tell staff at halftime to not turn it back on? Shouldn't the coaches be worrying more about the game than heaters in the tv booth?

Seems like there's more to the story.
 
What was the point in not turning the heat on?
1. Did they piss him off?
2. Did the coaches really tell staff at halftime to not turn it back on? Shouldn't the coaches be worrying more about the game than heaters in the tv booth?

Seems like there's more to the story.

Coaches on the field don't have heaters.
 
What was the point in not turning the heat on?
1. Did they piss him off?
2. Did the coaches really tell staff at halftime to not turn it back on? Shouldn't the coaches be worrying more about the game than heaters in the tv booth?

Seems like there's more to the story.

I assumed the heat between the coaches box and the press box was shared.
 
What was the point in not turning the heat on?
1. Did they piss him off?
2. Did the coaches really tell staff at halftime to not turn it back on? Shouldn't the coaches be worrying more about the game than heaters in the tv booth?

Seems like there's more to the story.
“Turn on the heat??? We need that gas money for NIL. Tell them it’s warm in Hell where I’m about to send this N.C State team.”
 
Their fight song uses the same tune. They came up with it first I believe. No relation to last night’s game.

“The Stanford Jonah” was written in 1913 by Ted E. Haley for the annual song contest held by the Daily Californian, but that year the song lost to Williams’ and McLaren’s “Big C.” “The Stanford Jonah” got its break in 1914, however, when the Glee Club traveled to Europe. The Glee Club learned the song en route, and performed it during their tour. As a result, “The Stanford Jonah” became popular and won the annual song competition that year. It has since become one of the more popular Cal Songs, and it is particularly popular during Big Game week.

The tune appears to be unoriginal. The author of this report is aware of versions of this song at Georgia Tech and the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. Since Cal and Georgia Tech have had very few meetings, there is speculation that Georgia Tech may have acquired the tune after the 1929 Cal vs. Georgia Tech Rose Bowl.


Actually, 1919...
 

“The Stanford Jonah” was written in 1913 by Ted E. Haley for the annual song contest held by the Daily Californian, but that year the song lost to Williams’ and McLaren’s “Big C.” “The Stanford Jonah” got its break in 1914, however, when the Glee Club traveled to Europe. The Glee Club learned the song en route, and performed it during their tour. As a result, “The Stanford Jonah” became popular and won the annual song competition that year. It has since become one of the more popular Cal Songs, and it is particularly popular during Big Game week.

The tune appears to be unoriginal. The author of this report is aware of versions of this song at Georgia Tech and the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. Since Cal and Georgia Tech have had very few meetings, there is speculation that Georgia Tech may have acquired the tune after the 1929 Cal vs. Georgia Tech Rose Bowl.


Actually, 1919...


Bullshit. I have it on good authority that @coit wrote this song in 1892 for the Tech football team.
 
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