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Post by mikegarrison on Dec 29, 2017 20:26:20 GMT -5
I am an avid user and protector of using bro in place of libero. Especially when talking. Flows much better. Plus, I feel like it represents the mindset and demeanor of a lot of liberos. I’m probably in the minority, but that’s ok. That's OK. We all have a right to be WRONG!, and you are exercising yours.
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Post by mikegarrison on Dec 29, 2017 20:27:33 GMT -5
So, you want me to spell out s-c-h-o-l-a-r-s-h-i-p every frigging time???? My fingers are already cramping up... Why yes. I didn't call you out by name, but your post actually triggered mine.
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Post by redbeard2008 on Dec 29, 2017 20:46:46 GMT -5
So, you want me to spell out s-c-h-o-l-a-r-s-h-i-p every frigging time? My fingers are already cramping up... Why yes. I didn't call you out by name, but your post actually triggered mine. Do you think I didn't realize that? If I can be understood just as well using seven letters as 11, I'll just keep right on doing it, thank you very much. I ain't writing a treatise. I'd rather type "scholly" than "schollie" (one less friggin' key that has to be punched).
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Post by hochee on Dec 29, 2017 20:50:35 GMT -5
"season-ending ___________."
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Post by Wolfgang on Dec 29, 2017 20:58:49 GMT -5
"student-athlete" "dance" as in NCAA tournament
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Post by Wolfgang on Dec 29, 2017 21:25:44 GMT -5
"dd"
Does this mean "darling daughter" or "dip%*$# daughter" or "dearest daughter"?
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Post by Millennium on Dec 29, 2017 21:32:30 GMT -5
"Daddy"
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Post by BuckysHeat on Dec 29, 2017 22:20:34 GMT -5
Curious, what are the objections over “volleyball IQ”? It is a meaningless cliche and overused. Listen to any single interview after any match and all the players in every sport say the same exact things (with different words of course). Listen to any coach in any sport and you will hear the exact same thing only in coach-speak. It is a catchall phrase that is used to say that a person who has been playing for and trained heavily for 10 years knows the game they are playing.
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Post by Wolfgang on Dec 29, 2017 22:31:48 GMT -5
So, if players who specialize in the sport of volleyball, practice 20+ hours per week in that sport, watch volleyball video for analysis, but is not said to have high volleyball IQ, does that mean, comparatively speaking, the rest of us are absolute volleyball idiots?
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Post by tomclen on Dec 29, 2017 22:50:05 GMT -5
Pac-12 Football. At least not before September of 2018. It's becoming D2 football.
Not sure any PAC12 FB team could defeat Nebraska. And I'm talking about Nebraska's Volleyball team.
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Post by Fight On! on Dec 29, 2017 22:52:37 GMT -5
Curious, what are the objections over “volleyball IQ”? It is a meaningless cliche and overused. Listen to any single interview after any match and all the players in every sport say the same exact things (with different words of course). Listen to any coach in any sport and you will hear the exact same thing only in coach-speak. It is a catchall phrase that is used to say that a person who has been playing for and trained heavily for 10 years knows the game they are playing. So I can see it is a cliche, but that doesn’t make it meaningless in my opinion. Even after 10 years of training some players have bothered to learn the nuances of the game more deeply than their peers.
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Post by hebrooks87 on Dec 29, 2017 22:54:22 GMT -5
"dd" Does this mean "darling daughter" or "dip%*$# daughter" or "dearest daughter"? Depends on what day of the week it is.
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Post by c4ndlelight on Dec 29, 2017 22:55:04 GMT -5
Pac-12 Football. At least not before September of 2018. It's becoming D2 football. Not sure any PAC12 FB team could defeat Nebraska. And I'm talking about Nebraska's Volleyball team. Oregon beat Nebraska in both football and volleyball this year, so . . . .
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Post by abcd098 on Dec 29, 2017 23:01:17 GMT -5
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Post by wonderwarthog79 on Dec 29, 2017 23:05:44 GMT -5
"In system." "Out of system." Anything with "system" in it.
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