In light of Akron's being one of the two worst teams in college football, I was curious about their record since moving into brand new InfoCision Field in 2009. Answer: 40-90 (.308).
North Texas is 49-59 (.454) since Apogee Stadium opened in 2011.
(10-23-2019 07:04 PM)WRCisforgotten79 Wrote: In light of Akron's being one of the two worst teams in college football, I was curious about their record since moving into brand new InfoCision Field in 2009. Answer: 40-90 (.308).
North Texas is 49-59 (.454) since Apogee Stadium opened in 2011.
see, if we went D-III (or Ivy League) we'd have a chance to do this
Quote:This year’s Battle for the Cortaga Jug was going to be extra special because it was going to take place in the Meadowlands as Ithaca College and SUNY Cortland attempted to set a new Division III record for attendance. According to the Ithaca Journal, the pair did just that with 45,161 fans showed up to the game as the Bombers (that’s Ithaca) won their third straight Jug, 32-20.
(This post was last modified: 11-18-2019 01:18 PM by GoodOwl.)
(10-23-2019 07:04 PM)WRCisforgotten79 Wrote: In light of Akron's being one of the two worst teams in college football, I was curious about their record since moving into brand new InfoCision Field in 2009. Answer: 40-90 (.308).
North Texas is 49-59 (.454) since Apogee Stadium opened in 2011.
see, if we went D-III (or Ivy League) we'd have a chance to do this
First, we can't go Ivy League. That's simply not possible.
D-III is possible, and is probably where we are headed on our current track.
The other closest example that I can find is SMU. They used to be our peer, before North Texas became our peer. They built Ford in 2000, and is a very nice facility, if a bit small (although they certainly haven't needed more seats very often). Since then, they've gone through Mike Cavan, Phil Bennett, June Jones, Tom Mason, Chad Morris, and Sonny Dykes, and only Dykes has a winning record. Counting 2019 to date, they are 86-151 (.363).
And the EZF certainly hasn't turned things around for the better for us. Maybe for the worse, although that seems unlikely, but not for the better.
(This post was last modified: 11-25-2019 07:45 AM by Owl 69/70/75.)
Quote:MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Former Minnesota Vikings kicker Fred Cox, one of the last of the straight-on placekickers and a standout on several conference championship teams, has died. He was 80.
Cox, who also co-created the Nerf football, scored a Minnesota-record 1,365 points in his 15 seasons, often kicking in nasty conditions because the Vikings played outdoors during his career from 1963-77. When he retired, he was second in NFL history in scoring behind George Blanda — who also played quarterback — and had made 282 field goals.
Cox was one of 11 Vikings to play in all four of the team’s Super Bowls, all defeats. He kicked in 18 postseason games.
During his playing days he also got a chiropractor’s license.
An All-Pro in 1969, Cox twice led the league in scoring while using a square-toed shoe to do his kicking. On a team with several Hall of Famers, including Fran Tarkenton, Carl Eller, Alan Page and Paul Krause, Cox also was a standout.
But he never earned a Super Bowl victory, and once said:
"The fans have never been able to live with the fact that we lost four times,” Cox said. “But the bottom line is that for any team to get there four times is an amazing feat."
Code:
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP MIN MIA
4 13:25 10 57 3:09 MIN Fran Tarkenton 4-yard touchdown run, Fred Cox kick good 7 24
47. Super Bowl VIII - Miami Dolphins 24, Minnesota Vikings 7
Miami ran Larry Csonka counter to the flow of traffic, making the impact of the knifing Alan Page -- the Minnesota Vikings' Hall of Fame defensive tackle -- almost negligible. Csonka ran for 145 yards, and quarterback Bob Griese threw seven passes all game. This was pretty much awful.
For you lovers of fun facts out there: Super Bowl VIII was played at Rice Stadium. You know, the Rice Owls, a Division I powerhouse. Who would've thought?
Rode my bike over to HRS. Perhaps 10 workers at the bubble sight. Layer of asphalt for the foundation say 4 inches thick in the infield of the beer bike track and no impact on pits. Seemed to be doing electrical. I thought odd that the smooth track doesn't extend all the way around as there is a section on the SW corner and S end that is just parking lot. Riding on the smooth is way better than that section. Granted the parking lot is old now and probably not well maintained, but before the smooth, racing on the parking lot must have been awful
(03-27-2020 06:47 AM)texowl2 Wrote: Rode my bike over to HRS. Perhaps 10 workers at the bubble sight. Layer of asphalt for the foundation say 4 inches thick in the infield of the beer bike track and no impact on pits. Seemed to be doing electrical. I thought odd that the smooth track doesn't extend all the way around as there is a section on the SW corner and S end that is just parking lot. Riding on the smooth is way better than that section. Granted the parking lot is old now and probably not well maintained, but before the smooth, racing on the parking lot must have been awful
(03-27-2020 06:47 AM)texowl2 Wrote: Rode my bike over to HRS. Perhaps 10 workers at the bubble sight. Layer of asphalt for the foundation say 4 inches thick in the infield of the beer bike track and no impact on pits. Seemed to be doing electrical. I thought odd that the smooth track doesn't extend all the way around as there is a section on the SW corner and S end that is just parking lot. Riding on the smooth is way better than that section. Granted the parking lot is old now and probably not well maintained, but before the smooth, racing on the parking lot must have been awful
Rice doesn't maintain something? Who ever knew?
Had a better look today-8 inches seems to be the base. Workers still there and also at the opera house
(04-01-2020 03:09 PM)GoodOwl Wrote: Oh, btw, anyone that goes by to post a few pictures? I think you can still bicycle as long as you're 6 feet away, right?