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We canned the coach of the century's ass and it was easy for him to move out given the lack of nattys to box up. That's the standard we have at KSU, and if eff head can't produce nattys, he gotta go.
Katdaddy Quote from: Trim We canned the coach of the century's ass and it was easy for him to move out given the lack of nattys to box up. That's the standard we have at KSU, and if eff head can't produce nattys, he gotta go.THE WORD.
KatdaddyI think eff-head is the word you're searching for.
The 1969 Texas vs. Arkansas football game, sometimes referred to as the "Game of the Century", was a college football game played on December 6 in which No. 1 Texas visited No. 2 Arkansas at Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas.[2] The Longhorns came back from a 14–0 deficit after three quarters to win 15–14.[3][4][5][6] They won the Cotton Bowl Classic (by four points with a late touchdown drive) and were selected as national champions.[7]The 1969 season marked the centennial of college football, and this game decided the Southwest Conference championship, as well as its berth in the Cotton Bowl. ABC television executive Beano Cook had arranged for Texas and Arkansas to play the final game of the regular season, moving their usual October date to the first weekend in December. ABC Sports executive Roone Arledge persuaded Arkansas coach Frank Broyles to move the game with a promise that President Richard Nixon would attend, and ABC would televise Arkansas' season opener in 1970 against Stanford (and its star quarterback, Jim Plunkett).