Greg Schaino


Greg Shiano??? Yes, he is the coach at Rutgers. For what it's worth, he has turned down Michigan and Miami over the past couple years.
 


Greg Shiano??? Yes, he is the coach at Rutgers. For what it's worth, he has turned down Michigan and Miami over the past couple years.

He wasn't getting heat from Rutgers boosters when he turned down those jobs. Like Fitzgerald, he should have struck while the iron was hot. He will never again have a chance for an elite (top 15-20) job coming out of Rutgers. He is Glen Mason of the Big East.
 

He was pretty hot *&^!#*&^!#*&^!#*&^!# about 4 years ago and a lot of Minny fans were pulling for him to come here. Funny how a coach can go from not genius, to genius, to not genius again.
 


He was pretty hot *&^!#*&^!#*&^!#*&^!# about 4 years ago and a lot of Minny fans were pulling for him to come here. Funny how a coach can go from not genius, to genius, to not genius again.
I'd still take him.
 

The most impressive thing about this thread is the number of characters used to express a curse word by Sick and Tired. . . Normally when I allude to a profanity in a post I match up the number of symbols to the number of letters in said profanity.

The number of symbols used by Sick and Tired was twenty. Now, assuming Sick and Tired works under the same rule as I, that's one impressive curse word(s). The "mother" of all curse words (IMO) checks in at 12 letters as a noun, 13 letters as an adjective. Now, the natural fit marries the adjective of this word to an area of the body that I've often heard linked with an opinion (in that everyone has one). 13+7=20. Perfect fit.

However, putting those two words in the context of the sentence given us by Sick and Tired (He was pretty hot ______ about 4 years ago) doesn't make sense. So, what could he be trying to say? I'm assuming we're going with the 13 letter very bad word; what makes the most sense to me is linking that adjective with the discharge from the aforementioned region that is often linked to an opinion. Contextually, it makes the most sense.

Yet, that leaves us shy; 13+4=17. . .three letters unaccounted for. What could they possibly be? One consideration is taking the general area where said excrement comes from and making a compound word with the profanity indicating excrement. But that just seems redundant and in fact I've never heard anyone link those two profanities into one; why would one need to, the excrement profanity could only come from that particular place.

Where does that leave us? It leaves me bewildered, curious to what twenty letter word/short phrase that Sick and Tired could be teasing us with. As a fan of clever and original profanities, it also leaves me a bit jealous of Sick and Tired's genius. Thank you Sick & Tired, I can forget sleep tonight as I mull this mystery.
 

The site automatically censors words with that character string.

Sh1t = *&^!#*&^!#*&^!#*&^!#
 

The most impressive thing about this thread is the number of characters used to express a curse word by Sick and Tired. . . Normally when I allude to a profanity in a post I match up the number of symbols to the number of letters in said profanity.

The number of symbols used by Sick and Tired was twenty. Now, assuming Sick and Tired works under the same rule as I, that's one impressive curse word(s). The "mother" of all curse words (IMO) checks in at 12 letters as a noun, 13 letters as an adjective. Now, the natural fit marries the adjective of this word to an area of the body that I've often heard linked with an opinion (in that everyone has one). 13+7=20. Perfect fit.

However, putting those two words in the context of the sentence given us by Sick and Tired (He was pretty hot ______ about 4 years ago) doesn't make sense. So, what could he be trying to say? I'm assuming we're going with the 13 letter very bad word; what makes the most sense to me is linking that adjective with the discharge from the aforementioned region that is often linked to an opinion. Contextually, it makes the most sense.

Yet, that leaves us shy; 13+4=17. . .three letters unaccounted for. What could they possibly be? One consideration is taking the general area where said excrement comes from and making a compound word with the profanity indicating excrement. But that just seems redundant and in fact I've never heard anyone link those two profanities into one; why would one need to, the excrement profanity could only come from that particular place.

Where does that leave us? It leaves me bewildered, curious to what twenty letter word/short phrase that Sick and Tired could be teasing us with. As a fan of clever and original profanities, it also leaves me a bit jealous of Sick and Tired's genius. Thank you Sick & Tired, I can forget sleep tonight as I mull this mystery.
It's all part of an elaborate cosmic riddle to which only I have the answer. :cool:
 






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