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Post by toungeincheek on Nov 19, 2023 23:35:04 GMT -5
Ok so I can’t go to this game in person and was wondering the cheapest way to get big 10 network because I don’t have any tv service (or YouTube tv etc). Just looking for the cheapest monthly subscription I can cancel after this match lol. Any recs? A bar
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Post by badgerbreath on Nov 19, 2023 23:46:47 GMT -5
For all those who are not caught up... Badgers have only managed to be in their preferred lineup in 5 of their last 11 matches.
Hammill and Robinson were both out for Rutgers, Maryland and Ohio State forcing the badgers to play in a 5-1 with Ashburn blocking and setting Smrek (who is usually set by Hammill). Smrek was out for Maryland, PSU and Purdue with concussion protocol forcing Orzol from L to OH, GG from DS to libero, and TTA to the RS. Also, Franklin had to take on more passing responsibility with Orzol hitting.
The badgers have not really looked like themselves in any of these new configurations. They've done OK, but have not been at the level we saw earlier in the season. It will be nice to see them in the lineup that has worked the best since they landed on it late in the preseason.
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Post by volleystan on Nov 19, 2023 23:52:45 GMT -5
For all those who are not caught up... Badgers have only managed to be in their preferred lineup in 5 of their last 11 matches. Hammill and Robinson were both out for Rutgers, Maryland and Ohio State forcing the badgers to play in a 5-1 with Ashburn blocking and setting Smrek (who is usually set by Hammill). Smrek was out for Maryland, PSU and Purdue with concussion protocol forcing Orzol from L to OH, GG from DS to libero, and TTA to the RS. Also, Franklin had to take on more passing responsibility with Orzol hitting. The badgers have not really looked like themselves in any of these new configurations. They've done OK, but have not been at the level we saw earlier in the season. It will be nice to see them in the lineup that has worked the best since they landed on it late in the preseason. They absolutely annihilated Rutgers, Maryland, and Ohio State in the 5-1. Like I think I get the overall point, but this just isn’t accurate.
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Post by badgerbreath on Nov 19, 2023 23:58:08 GMT -5
For all those who are not caught up... Badgers have only managed to be in their preferred lineup in 5 of their last 11 matches. Hammill and Robinson were both out for Rutgers, Maryland and Ohio State forcing the badgers to play in a 5-1 with Ashburn blocking and setting Smrek (who is usually set by Hammill). Smrek was out for Maryland, PSU and Purdue with concussion protocol forcing Orzol from L to OH, GG from DS to libero, and TTA to the RS. Also, Franklin had to take on more passing responsibility with Orzol hitting. The badgers have not really looked like themselves in any of these new configurations. They've done OK, but have not been at the level we saw earlier in the season. It will be nice to see them in the lineup that has worked the best since they landed on it late in the preseason. They absolutely annihilated Rutgers, Maryland, and Ohio State in the 5-1. Like I think I get the overall point, but this just isn’t accurate. Those teams just aren't very good this year. My only point is that they are better in the 6-2 with Smrek than in either the 5-1 or in the 6-2 without Smrek. Also, moving back and forth has probably slowed their progress as a team by messing with specific relationships.
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Post by SportyBucky on Nov 20, 2023 0:03:30 GMT -5
Tall girl was back for Indiana game hitting over 600 with 10 kills in 3 sets.
Oh dear. Not good news. Oh, but according to NE fans being without Smrek is just like being without whomever your outside hitter is...who's backed up by two just like her. This is tongue in cheek.
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Post by tablealgebra on Nov 20, 2023 0:29:53 GMT -5
Oh, but according to NE fans being without Smrek is just like being without whomever your outside hitter is...who's backed up by two just like her. This is tongue in cheek. I want to be fair, Krause is easily the most terminal of Nebraska's outsides this year. But with Batenhorst having learned to pass pretty decently, she's not even that much of a downgrade because they are always in system (H. Kubik is an even better passer as far as I can tell but just doesn't seem to get it done at the net).
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Post by pcll0718 on Nov 20, 2023 1:09:46 GMT -5
Oh, but according to NE fans being without Smrek is just like being without whomever your outside hitter is...who's backed up by two just like her. This is tongue in cheek. Check the October 9th Big Ten Player of the Week for whatever her name is, the one hitting .366 in Big Ten matches this year. Ironically, Krause and Smrek are the 2 most efficient pin hitters in the B1G over course of second half of B1G matches in 2022 and full 2023 season. Significant loss to each team when missing. Backups are backups for a reason. God Bless her, she works hard and has her moments but Krause’s backup is a career .176 hitter, but Nebraska is still making it work This is not tongue in cheek.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 20, 2023 2:05:45 GMT -5
Is The tall girl going to be back? Sorry but I screwed her name up every time so I’m taking the safe route. Key players and name spellings can be found in the OP of each Wisconsin game thread.
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Post by rjaege on Nov 20, 2023 2:41:03 GMT -5
Is The tall girl going to be back? Sorry but I screwed her name up every time so I’m taking the safe route. Yes, one might have to fight through auto-correct. But otherwise, how hard is it? It's five letters long. It's not a common name outside of WI.
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Post by rjaege on Nov 20, 2023 2:45:06 GMT -5
Oh, but according to NE fans being without Smrek is just like being without whomever your outside hitter is...who's backed up by two just like her. This is tongue in cheek. Jealous? You wanted more from the transfer portal? Really?
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Post by naujack85 on Nov 20, 2023 3:10:31 GMT -5
Yes, one might have to fight through auto-correct. But otherwise, how hard is it? It's five letters long. she's almost seven feet long That seems unfair
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Post by rjaege on Nov 20, 2023 3:19:51 GMT -5
Wisconsin vs. Nebraska | Friday, Nov. 24, 2023 3 PM Central | UW Field House Madison, Wisconsin
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It’s Black Friday, and has become tradition, the two shades of red meet for an epic clash.
| | | | | | 24-3, 15-3 B1G | | 27-0, 18-0 B1G | | | |
Follow Along🎟: SeatGeek.com📺: Big Ten Network (TV)🦡🎧: FoxSports 1070 AM Madison🌽🎧: Huskers Radio Network📊: StatBroadcastPlayers to WatchWisconsin#13 - OH Sarah Franklin 6-4 R-JR | | #52 - MB Carter Booth 6-7 SO | | #10 - MB/RS Devyn Robinson 6-2 SR | | | | | | #12 - OH Temi Thomas-Ailara 6-2 GR | | #9 - MB Caroline Crawford 6-3 SR | | #14 - MB/RS Anna Smrek 6-9 JR |
Nebraska#27 - OH Harper Murray 6-2 FR
| | #5 MB Becka Allick 6-4 SO
| | #13 - RS Merritt Beason 6-4 JR
| | | | | | #8 - L Lexi Rodiriguez 5-5 JR | | #15 - MB Andi Jackson 6-3 FR | | #2 - S Bergen Reilly 6-1 FR |
HistoryThe Series: Nebraska leads 20-12-1. In Madison: Wisconsin leads 7-4-1. In Bloomington: Nebraska leads 11-4. Neutral: Nebraska leads 5-2. The Streak: Nebraska won the last match. Last Meeting: Nebraska won a five set match on 10/21/2023 in Lincoln. Did you know…? The original Black Friday occurred on September 24, 1869, when a group of “robber-barons” of the age - Jay Gould, a railroad tycoon; James Fisk, a cotton smuggler; and Abel Corbin, a real estate speculator who was brother-in-law to President Ulysses S. Grant - were foiled in their plan to corner the US gold market. Though greenbacks were the legal tender in the US, international trade was still executed in gold. Since it would take weeks, sometime months for a transaction to occur, the price would fluctuate with the unstable gold/greenback exchange rate. If gold went down or the greenback price went up, merchants would be liable – often at a substantial loss – to cover the cost of the fluctuations. To protect merchants against risk, the New York Stock Exchange was created so gold could be borrowed at current rates and merchants could pay suppliers immediately and make the gold payment when it came due. About $20 million of gold was available in New York, but the US Government held >$100 million in reserves. They slowly released gold into the market to keep the price steady. A cartoon showing Gould stirring up the gold market, represented by caged bulls and bears fighting. Grant is shown running holding a bag of gold.The trio of slippery financiers had leveraged Corbin’s connections to President Grant to secure the appointment of their friend, Major General Daniel Butterfield, as assistant treasury secretary. The men insinuated themselves into Grant’s orbit and began trying to influence the administration’s monetary policy in the hopes that gold would remain scarce and prices would remain high. Through proxies, the conspirators had quietly bought up gold over the preceding months, with the agreement that Butterfield would tip the men off to the US government’s plans for gold sales. President Grant, meanwhile, had grown suspicious of the duo as the price of gold soared, and on that Friday at the end of September, he ordered the Treasury to sell off $5 million in gold. Gold prices dropped, and the stock market followed. Gould had been tipped off to the President’s move but he did not tell his co-conspirators, instead secretly selling off his gold before the government stepped in. It’s estimated that he managed to net $12 million on the affair. Fisk didn’t profit, but he did weasel out of his massive losses, claiming third-party brokers had made the trades without his knowledge. Despite multiple allegations of malfeasance and an official investigation by Congress, the men leveraged their political connections and employed a brigade of attorneys to avoid spending a single night in jail. Photograph of the blackboard in the New York Gold Room, September 24, 1869, showing the collapse of the price of gold. Handwritten caption by James A. Garfield indicates it was used as evidence before the House Committee of Banking & Currency during hearings in 1870.In 1975, Steely Dan, the rock group consisting of multi-instrumentalist Walter Becker and singer Donald Fagen, wrote a song about the whole affair. “Black Friday” was released that same year on their “Katy Lied” album. It was the first single off the album and reached #37 on the Billboard charts. "In Bloomington" really?
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Post by HOLIDAY on Nov 20, 2023 3:34:36 GMT -5
Is The tall girl going to be back? Sorry but I screwed her name up every time so I’m taking the safe route. Yes, one might have to fight through auto-correct. But otherwise, how hard is it? It's five letters long. I watched the complete denigration of someone who accidentally said Shrek.
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Post by HOLIDAY on Nov 20, 2023 3:36:08 GMT -5
Oh, but according to NE fans being without Smrek is just like being without whomever your outside hitter is...who's backed up by two just like her. This is tongue in cheek. Who doesn’t love a good pissing match.
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Post by HOLIDAY on Nov 20, 2023 3:37:37 GMT -5
Wisconsin vs. Nebraska | Friday, Nov. 24, 2023 3 PM Central | UW Field House Madison, Wisconsin
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It’s Black Friday, and has become tradition, the two shades of red meet for an epic clash.
| | | | | | 24-3, 15-3 B1G | | 27-0, 18-0 B1G | | | |
Follow Along🎟: SeatGeek.com📺: Big Ten Network (TV)🦡🎧: FoxSports 1070 AM Madison🌽🎧: Huskers Radio Network📊: StatBroadcastPlayers to WatchWisconsin#13 - OH Sarah Franklin 6-4 R-JR | | #52 - MB Carter Booth 6-7 SO | | #10 - MB/RS Devyn Robinson 6-2 SR | | | | | | #12 - OH Temi Thomas-Ailara 6-2 GR | | #9 - MB Caroline Crawford 6-3 SR | | #14 - MB/RS Anna Smrek 6-9 JR |
Nebraska#27 - OH Harper Murray 6-2 FR
| | #5 MB Becka Allick 6-4 SO
| | #13 - RS Merritt Beason 6-4 JR
| | | | | | #8 - L Lexi Rodiriguez 5-5 JR | | #15 - MB Andi Jackson 6-3 FR | | #2 - S Bergen Reilly 6-1 FR |
HistoryThe Series: Nebraska leads 20-12-1. In Madison: Wisconsin leads 7-4-1. In Bloomington: Nebraska leads 11-4. Neutral: Nebraska leads 5-2. The Streak: Nebraska won the last match. Last Meeting: Nebraska won a five set match on 10/21/2023 in Lincoln. Did you know…? The original Black Friday occurred on September 24, 1869, when a group of “robber-barons” of the age - Jay Gould, a railroad tycoon; James Fisk, a cotton smuggler; and Abel Corbin, a real estate speculator who was brother-in-law to President Ulysses S. Grant - were foiled in their plan to corner the US gold market. Though greenbacks were the legal tender in the US, international trade was still executed in gold. Since it would take weeks, sometime months for a transaction to occur, the price would fluctuate with the unstable gold/greenback exchange rate. If gold went down or the greenback price went up, merchants would be liable – often at a substantial loss – to cover the cost of the fluctuations. To protect merchants against risk, the New York Stock Exchange was created so gold could be borrowed at current rates and merchants could pay suppliers immediately and make the gold payment when it came due. About $20 million of gold was available in New York, but the US Government held >$100 million in reserves. They slowly released gold into the market to keep the price steady. A cartoon showing Gould stirring up the gold market, represented by caged bulls and bears fighting. Grant is shown running holding a bag of gold.The trio of slippery financiers had leveraged Corbin’s connections to President Grant to secure the appointment of their friend, Major General Daniel Butterfield, as assistant treasury secretary. The men insinuated themselves into Grant’s orbit and began trying to influence the administration’s monetary policy in the hopes that gold would remain scarce and prices would remain high. Through proxies, the conspirators had quietly bought up gold over the preceding months, with the agreement that Butterfield would tip the men off to the US government’s plans for gold sales. President Grant, meanwhile, had grown suspicious of the duo as the price of gold soared, and on that Friday at the end of September, he ordered the Treasury to sell off $5 million in gold. Gold prices dropped, and the stock market followed. Gould had been tipped off to the President’s move but he did not tell his co-conspirators, instead secretly selling off his gold before the government stepped in. It’s estimated that he managed to net $12 million on the affair. Fisk didn’t profit, but he did weasel out of his massive losses, claiming third-party brokers had made the trades without his knowledge. Despite multiple allegations of malfeasance and an official investigation by Congress, the men leveraged their political connections and employed a brigade of attorneys to avoid spending a single night in jail. Photograph of the blackboard in the New York Gold Room, September 24, 1869, showing the collapse of the price of gold. Handwritten caption by James A. Garfield indicates it was used as evidence before the House Committee of Banking & Currency during hearings in 1870.In 1975, Steely Dan, the rock group consisting of multi-instrumentalist Walter Becker and singer Donald Fagen, wrote a song about the whole affair. “Black Friday” was released that same year on their “Katy Lied” album. It was the first single off the album and reached #37 on the Billboard charts. "In Bloomington" really? I am borrowing this
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