Vrede too wrote: ↑Wed Aug 12, 2020 8:31 amLou Holtz was born in 1937. He was in ROTC and then "earned a commission as a Field Artillery Officer in the United States Army Reserve at the time of his graduation from college."billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Tue Aug 11, 2020 11:15 pmPussies, no one said we can't oppose hitler and the nazis just because some people might die. Same then as today - we need college football players to entertain us.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/ncaabk ... id=ARWLCHR
Apparently, he never volunteered for Vietnam despite being only 28 when LBJ escalated in 1965. Funny that.
Note the social distancing that won't be there for football - on the field, at the tailgate parties or in the stands.Why Trump and the Republicans have turned college football into a new 'Normandy'
... The only problem with the Normandy analogy is that 4,414 Allied troops would die during the fighting on France’s beaches. Nobody is likely to countenance a number anywhere near that high to watch college football this fall ...
The NCAA has said it would be dangerous to proceed with a college football season. Carlos del Rio, an Emory University epidemiologist advising the NCAA on the coronavirus, compared the situation to something rather less heroic than the Normandy invasion. “I feel like the Titanic,” he said last week. “We have hit the iceberg and we’re trying to make decisions of what time should we have the band play.”
... Some conferences are proceeding in any case, with the Southeastern Conference and the Atlantic Coast Conference (and Big 12) leading the way....
“We’re here to say, from the state of Florida, we want you guys to play,” said DeSantis, who played baseball at Yale. He appeared to say, much like Trump, that it was more dangerous to leave college athletes to their own devices. “The environment that sports provides at a place like Florida State is a safer environment for these kids than what they would have if they didn’t have access to this environment,” the governor, who is 41, argued.
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