I think he drives it.
lebomb and bleed ride shotgun while the mommybabies ride on the luggage rack
I'm not talking to you.
You are an idiot.
what? at least i don't touch atrains choad. blake & atrain: choad on choad action if anyone of the other choad trolls are interested!weak
you hang out with skank moms who only like you because of your "disposable income" you keep bragging about
I think he drives it.
lebomb and bleed ride shotgun while the mommybabies ride on the luggage rack
lol, tlf
I'm sure those kids give a whether they see their mother or not. Which, from your thread, they don't see them much at all.
LMAO good bump in the club Steven
http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/show...=109350&page=2
is this the official opinion of the UTSA library staff?
i digress. larry coker will not be the 2011 coach of the year, but for what we're building, he's just right!
and because i'm an equal opportunity hater, here's some love for choader buck harvey!
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/c...ce__again.html
Buck Harvey: Coker lands in the wrong place – again
Larry Coker has always told stories on himself, and he did years ago. Then, when he worked as a Miami assistant coach, he said he lived in the same house for a half-dozen years.
And his next-door neighbor didn't know who he was.
Coker might have remained anonymous. But then Butch Davis left Miami for the NFL, and a few coaching candidates turned down the school. The Hurricanes saw signing day approaching, and they liked the idea of continuity. What followed pushed Coker into a world where he didn't belong.
And because of that?
He may have found another.
UTSA certainly found a likeable man to coach its first football team. Coker arrives without ego, a trait usually essential for today's wealthy, high-powered, sideline salesman.
Coker speaks no differently now than when he came within a double-overtime loss of back-to-back national les. Then, he had fame and money and access, and he loved the perks.
Such as: He could get school athletic gear whenever he wanted.
“That didn't happen as an assistant,” he said then. “Now, when I go to the equipment manager, I get what I want.”
He was the common man with the common problems. He would throw on a pair of sweats to take his car in for repairs, just as he always did. But now fans would come up to him and congratulate him on his success.
Standing there, unshaven, Coker said he had an epiphany. “You can't go out looking like a bum anymore,” he told himself.
He was easy to root for. He'd worked his way up, putting in 31 years on various staffs, and one memorable stop was a Class B high school in Oklahoma. Then, he and his wife lived in a trailer on an Indian reservation.
So he'd earned his chance with Miami, and, after only a couple of seasons, everyone knew him. He took a call from an NFL-wired agent who said six pro jobs probably would be opening up.
Would he want to go after one?
“I don't see myself in the pros,” Coker said then.
Of course he didn't. He was coming to Texas to talk to coaches' clinics, and he was signing a 5-year contract worth about $2 million a season. He was the real thing in so many ways.
“I'm not the only one who could have done this,” he said at the time.
As it turned out, Coker was too right. Others could have done what he did, and that's the twist to this story. As real as Coker was personally, he wasn't as a coach.
He would lose games, and he would go along with the gutting of his coaching staff, and the Hurricanes brawled under his watch. He proved to be what he always was, a career assistant.
Only now, years after Miami fired him, is his record clearer. This spring NFL teams aren't expected to take even one Hurricanes player on the first day of the draft. On the second, only one, a cornerback, is expected to go.
These are Coker's draft classes, and they don't compare to the ones he coached. Miami has had at least one player drafted in the first round every year since 1995. And starting in 2001 the Hurricanes averaged almost five first-round picks a year for four years.
Coker deserves credit for not wasting such talent, but he'd also been the ultimate right-person-in-the-right-place. As a Miami-area columnist would write in retrospect, Coker had been “Ringo Starr replacing Pete Best on the Beatles.”
Coker had been swept up by the power of it, and that continues even now. After all, when UTSA looked around, it couldn't take its eyes off of someone with a national championship on his résumé.
It didn't matter that UTSA landed such a coach for a $200,000 annual salary, or that Coker is 60 years old. UTSA was impressed. Famous coaches such as these aren't always available, are they?
Maybe Coker works out. But instead of a coach who didn't grow into his job in Miami, would a better fit for UTSA have been someone else?
Someone who had built a program already? Or had a more current track record? Or was younger and hungrier and a better recruiter?
That's the other twist.
As it once was with Coker, these options weren't well known.
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oh yeah and way to take the bait like all the other dumb asses did
"grandma, who's that guy that is licking your butt"
"that's your uncle lebomb. tell uncle tlf to moisturize my boob."
always with the personal insults peewee...![]()
and you haven't tried using insults?
you are an idiot
It's a personal opinion based on watching NCAA football since the late 80s.
I DO NOT CARE![]()
Is that what the girls scream at their kids when they tell them they miss their mommy?
there's a difference between me saying blake likes choad and saying i just got back from choading your mother...it's a fine line
Your mom likes the "fine line" look on her vag.
She has to keep up the looks if she's going to start charging for her services.
nice making fun of the disabled people![]()
no, there's really no difference.
but if you try to say that you just got back from choading my father, then we have a reason to go.
you are an idiot.
u r a major player in choadergate 2009
nobody mentioned disabled people.
you are the one that made the connection of short bus to disabled people.
you are an idiot.
yeah, we know you dont care about the mommybabies.
you already made that clear.
Disabled people......re s......utsa students.....whats the difference?
u r a major idiot
that's ok...my personal opinion is that coker fits utsa in the same mold of what usf did with leavitt (albeit leavitt is several years younger)...it's the same basic principle: build a staff, build a team, build a sports complex, gain community support, and be compe ive within 10 years...that's the blueprint.
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