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quote:
Originally posted by Grave Digger:
Why is Slocum due credit for great onside kicks. Mason Crosby is lights out with onside kicks, that's all him.

And the players have nothing to do with leaving their lanes, missing tackles and getting beat 1-on-1?

#idonthavefactstobackthisup, but I think the players have some blame in the poor ST play.
I'm not saying Slocum sucks, I think he's below average compared to the rest of our staff and the league, but I don't think he deserves all the credit for the onside kick. The execution is what made that play, Crosby and Nelson executed to perfection and it was McCarthy's decision. I will give Slocum credit for designing a good play, putting the right guys on the field and they obviously practiced it it enough to get it right, but I'm not going to declare the guy a good coach for one play. His track record is mediocre at best.

I don't blame him for the play against Chicago, that was an execution problem. Execution problems are not his fault, that's the players responsibility.The reason I think he's below average is that he has consistently been given the right people for coverage teams and he they're still undisciplined. THAT is a coaching issue.
quote:
Originally posted by Herschel:
I see the # sign in front of compounded words recently and wonder if this is some texting thing I missed? Confused
It's used in twitter:
quote:
What Are Hashtags ("#" Symbols)?

Definition: The # symbol, called a hashtag, is used to mark keywords or topics in a Tweet. It was created organically by Twitter users as a way to categorize messages.
Hashtags: helping you find interesting Tweets

People use the hashtag symbol # before relevant keywords in their Tweet to categorize those Tweets to show more easily in Twitter Search.
Clicking on a hashtagged word in any message shows you all other Tweets in that category.
Hashtags can occur anywhere in the Tweet.
Hashtagged words that become very popular are often Trending Topics.
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for example: #packers.

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