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Lets discuss interest in National Rivalry games...

What are the ones you most look forward to watching? Mine are:

TX @ Tx A&M - would like to see the Longhorns spank the Aggies by alot

Wash @ Oregon - would be nice to see an upset here in the BIG to scramble the ranking and BIG champion

ND @ USC - hoping that USC can play as good as they did in last years bowl game and pull the upset to knock the Domers out of CFP

Others I like to see an upset in:

Auburn @ Bama - to furhter establish their mediocrity and boost the War Eagles season on a positive note

Purdue @ IU - would ba a major upset here and would hamper the Hooshiers CFP hopes somewhat I think

OK @ LSU - let the Sooner Boomer boom on Kelly's vastly over rated Tigers bringing them further down inleague standings & out of T-25

There you have it...that is my wish list for WEEK 14 games. What is yours and why? What say you?

Some Perspective....

we are 5-4 on the season, two years ago we only won 4 games, last year we only won 8 while losing to non P5 teams, and of the 4 losses this year the teams who beat us are currently ranked #1 TN, #6 Duke, #16 Ole Miss and #19 OK. and UK coming up is #4. possibly the toughest early season schedule in school history, maybe 1986 was harder when we started 11-7.. so patience and give up expectations for the year, just enjoy the ride and cheer every win and praise the effort in losses. or something like that. simply beat the teams you are supposed to and steal a win from ones you are not. Go Cards!!!


I hate Clemson football.

I cannot believe the kind of good fortune that program has. They in no way should be ranked 17 and in no way should they be the ACC champion.

For some reason, the football gods love them and everything always seems to work in their favor. They had a lame ACC schedule with their one loss being to the best team on their conference schedule.

Then they get into the title game when Miami is upset by Syracuse. And then this lucky ass win tonight.

Those announcers were so convinced that SMU did the right thing not going for two and play for overtime, they were saying SMU has the momentum and Clemson doesn't. I was talking at the TV saying bullshit! They should have went for the two point conversion because Clemson was on its heels.

Plus I remember the Clemson luck from that Louisville game when it took two lucky breaks at the end with a long kick off return down two scores then the James Quick mistake not getting the 1st down.

I'm sick of seeing Dabo and his BS being lauded as some great team. I will be pulling for any team they play in the playoff.
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Ron English

Does everyone think this is English's last game? Personally, I think Jeff sticks with him for another year. Jeff believes in loyalty and that's a 2 way street. I know Ron does some questionable things. I wish we were more aggressive in certain situations and he tends to believe in a bend don't break defense. Although we broke quite a few times this year. We will see what Jeff does. I hope if this is Ron's last game with us it's his best. GoCards!

Pop Tarts Bowl Working Toaster Trophy designed here in town!

They designed the trophy at FirstBuild (btw, you can take a 2hr class, get certified and go use all their machinery for free to build your prototype), it's located on the Manual end of the student center where the roundabout (traffic circle) is on brandeis.

The Pop-Tarts Bowl is Cooking in Year 2. Literally.

It is a truth universally acknowledged — that last December’s death and subsequent dismemberment of a Pop-Tarts Bowl mascot was one of the greatest moments in modern sports history.
Frosted Strawberry believed it to be an honor to sacrifice his anthropomorphic form to the college football gods, holding up a sign that read, “Dreams really do come true,” as he descended into the top of a giant toaster on the field following Kansas State’s win over North Carolina State. Moments later, an edible frosted strawberry cake popped out of the bottom of said toaster. It was immediately devoured by K-State players and coaches.
The moment went viral, its reach stretching far beyond just sports fans. TODAY covered it on the morning news, and People magazine featured it. Memes of the moment have endured, with versatile usage even now, a year later. It was one of the most indelible images of the calendar year.
Pop-Tart mascot 2023

Julio Aguilar/Getty Images
So, what comes next? What does the Pop-Tarts Bowl do for an encore? How do you even try to top a pop culture moment
“Everything combined for this crazy zeitgeist moment, and it’s really hard to follow that up,” said Matt Repchak, the Chief Marketing Officer of Florida Citrus Sports, which puts on the bowl game. “So, how do we ramp it up? How do we unleash the spectacle? Turn it up to 11?”
Event organizers tell NBC Sports that the goal was to keep parts of the brand activation that they know fans loved last year (like the edible mascot) while elevating them (like having three) and tying them even more to the actual game (like letting the game MVP pick which edible mascot to eat). The edible part of the Pop-Tart — what the winning team’s players and coaches can scoop up and eat — is made by a local bakery, Pop-Tarts brand manager Alex Sotiropoulos said. The brand’s research and development team ensures that the cake’s taste profile matches that of its packaged toaster pastries.
Pop-Tart officials also partnered with GE Appliances to build a one-of-kind toaster trophy. Last year’s trophy looked like a football-shaped toaster and had two slits presumably for Pop-Tarts, but it wasn’t functional. Fans asked if it was at all possible for the trophy to be a real toaster — and Pop-Tart and GE Appliances began working to answer that question in early November. GE Appliances called Rick Suel, the director of product engineering at FirstBuild, to see if he and his team would be up for tackling this strange request. They do custom projects all the time, but this was an ask he’d never heard before.
“The first response was, ‘OK, come on,’” Suel said. “’This is a real thing? Are you serious?’ Then it’s: ‘What does it need to look like? What are the dimensions? Is it going to be a regular toaster or do you want us to do movie magic?’
“We came up with a couple of designs that we thought might be possible. The stretch goal was an actual functional toaster.”
Pop-Tarts trophy workshop

As Suel’s team started exploring various designs and iterations, it quickly became apparent that this was doable. They 3D-printed pieces and did test-fitting with plastic parts. Then they got 300 pounds of raw aluminum — big blocks of it — and used equipment called a CNC mill to cut out the design. Out of the 300 pounds of raw aluminum came two 27-pound trophies. Each one took about 60 hours to actually build (including the interior engineering to give it the ability to toast pastries), and then hand polishing took an additional 16 hours per trophy. (One trophy will be the main trophy for the game, and the other will be used for other events and activations.)
Each trophy is 1.3x the size of a regulation football, and the toaster part of the trophy alone weighs 27 pounds. The base weighs 50 pounds, so it’ll be a heavy lift for the winning team. At the bottom of the trophy’s base is a plug tail with a 10-foot power cord attached. There’s a lever built into the trophy as well so you can pop a pastry into the slits, and they’ll toast for about 90 seconds before popping up again.
“It’s probably Guinness Book of World Records-worthy,” Suel said.
Or, at the very least, the College Football Hall of Fame.
“The toaster is, like, over 100 years old, and people thought innovation was done,” Suel said. “It’s the last appliance you would think you could innovate on. Yet here we are. It’s totally unexpected.”
Pop-Tarts trophy

But it’s also pretty much perfect. This is a bowl game sponsored by a beloved breakfast item and a brand that doesn’t take itself too seriously. Event organizers want this bowl game to stand out from the crowd, which is increasingly difficult for bowls that aren’t part of the College Football Playoff. Teams want to play in this game, and both Miami and Iowa State want to win — so their players get to eat the edible mascot. Miami quarterback Cam Ward, a Heisman Trophy finalist, has said he will play in this game instead of opting out.
So, there will be real, good football in this game. But there will also be plenty of antics, per sources. Fans can expect some sort of tribute to Frosted Strawberry, the edible mascot who died doing what he loved. We will meet Frosted Wild Berry, who is expected to be quick, unpredictable, kind of like a toddler on a sugar high, or like the actor Charlie Day. Frosted Cinnamon Roll (more laid-back and lighthearted) and Frosted Hot Fudge Sundae (tons of swagger and confidence) will round out the group. It is believed that the three live mascots will be played by former NBA mascots. Last year, Frosted Strawberry was played by former Chicago Bulls’ Benny the Bull performer Barry Anderson.
The mascots are again expected to feature heavily into the ABC broadcast when the game kicks off on Dec. 28. The eventual edible mascot self-sacrifice will either air on ABC or, if the game’s window ends, the ceremony will stream live on ESPN+. It’s exactly the kind of content that college football fans are looking for from bowl season — and makes fans both hungry and nostalgic in equal measure.
The success of last year’s bowl game spawned other opportunities for the Pop-Tart brand. It partnered with Spirit Halloween to sell Pop-Tart mascot costumes. And Sotiropoulos said at a recent Sports Business Journal conference that Pop-Tart sold 21 million more toaster pastries in the eight weeks following the game than it did the eight weeks prior to the game.
Last year, the Pop-Tarts Bowl turned into a phenomenon that transcended sports. It will try to capture that ridiculous and wonderful magic again in just a few short days.
“There’s this marriage of general public and college football fans coming together for the Pop-Tarts Bowl,” Sotiropoulos said. “Whether you’re an athlete, whether you’re a fan, whether you maybe aren’t even interested in college football — there’s something in the Pop-Tarts Bowl for you. And people just love Pop-Tarts.”


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