1. This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Learn More.

Photos, videos and more: OSU and its fans

Discussion in 'Sooner Football' started by badger, Nov 23, 2015.


  1. CowboyMRW

    CowboyMRW Wrestling is OSU

    It's been way too long. We were preseason #1 in wrestling this year, but lost at Iowa 2 weeks ago. This year though is our best shot in a while. We have at least 1 guaranteed NC, and a bunch of AAs. Just hope we can put it together in March.

    We haven't had lot of flops in the NFL, based upon actual production. Once off field incidents are included, then yea it's not as bright.
     
  2. champions77

    champions77 New Member

    And you would trade every damn one of them for a NC in football.
    We've had Olympians. Ever heard of Bart Conner or Wayne Wells?
    A friend was reading an old diary and one fellow who claimed he was Frank Eaton's friend says that Pistol Pete actually was an OU fan. Didn't know if you knew that or not? Time to find a new mascot. Your Pistol Pete looked a lot like Pancho Villa anyway.
     
  3. CowboyMRW

    CowboyMRW Wrestling is OSU

    Sorry bruh, ever heard of John Smith or Rickie Fowler? 2 of the greatest living Americans today, both OSU guys.
     
  4. deweydw

    deweydw Well-Known Member

    Poke flipping the double bird. It was hilarious. The play starts at 9:00, the birds come out at 9:25.

    [YOUTUBE]tpNZJdWNudo[/YOUTUBE]
     
  5. Soonerfan88

    Soonerfan88 Well-Known Member

    Loved seeing the poke choke hold over so many years, thanks Badg. :biggrin:

    And wow, just realized that was Lee Corso calling that 1988 game. :highly_amused:
     
  6. Judge Smails

    Judge Smails Well-Known Member

    [​IMG]


    Manley finally gets a read on education he missed


    October 08, 1992|By Steve Jacobson | Steve Jacobson,Newsday


    "Here's the deal," he said to the waiter. "I want a mushroom burger with Cheddar cheese instead of Swiss. No, forget it. Let's do the old English burger with lettuce, tomato and onion, which I see there."

    See, Dexter Manley was reading the menu. Dexter, who graduated from high school and stayed eligible to play four years at Oklahoma State when he couldn't read, then starred with the Washington Redskins, could handle Houlihans' menu. He made more sense than the waiter, actually.

    "I can read my own book," said Dexter, and proceeded to open it to a random passage and read it. It tells how he got the courage to go to the Lab School in Washington for help learning to read because it was too painful not to.

    The book is "Educating Dexter," which is the sequel to the locker-room whispers of "Dexter can't read." Dexter recalls how Jeff Bostic, lockering nearby, would hand him a paper to read in front of a crowd to embarrass Dexter.

    Or Dexter would be in one of his masquerade phases, sitting in his locker holding the Wall Street Journal in front of his face, and Joe Theismann, the glib quarterback, would say, "Get the funnies, Dexter, you can't read." And he couldn't.

    It's a bitter and happy and angry and infuriating tale Manley, 34, tells with the gifted touch of Tom Friend, who covered the Redskins in Dexter's time for The Washington Post. In its way, it is also a success story because Dexter sought help to get his reading level up to ninth grade. He does a radio talk show in Ottawa, where he plays in the Canadian Football League, and does a weekly column for the Ottawa Sun.

    The column is actually written by an Ottawa Sun staffer, as most athletes' stuff is, but the Ottawa Sun copy desk says most of the ideas come from Dexter and a lot of them are funny ideas. Dexter's idol is Art Buchwald. He reads Forbes and Newsweek magazines and the newspapers and is, he said, in the midst of reading a hard-cover book.

    It's an important tale because we know Dexter wasn't the only athlete to play out his big-time eligibility for a major institute of education as a complete and deliberate lie. It wasn't that Dexter couldn't read "Hamlet," it was that he could barely read "Run, Spot, Run."

    He got out of Oklahoma State with second-grade reading skills. How can that happen?

    That's his harrowing tale of being lost in the system. How did he get out of high school in Houston? How did he get to high school?

    He was left back after second grade and put into a class for the retarded. Black schools in Houston in the 1960s didn't pick up learning disabilities regularly and Manley's family certainly didn't. His mother was an alcoholic; one drug-dealing brother was shot and killed, and a half-brother is serving time for robbery.

    "In special education classes, you're going to move on," Manley said over the hamburger he ordered from the menu himself. "I knew I couldn't read and write, but in seventh grade, you don't tell that to your friends.

    "By 10th grade, look at my situation. The only thing I had going was football, and that was what I wanted. If I go back and tell them I can't read, the next thing I know I'm too old to play."

    He was big and very fast and ferocious. And he got 37 football scholarship offers. Don't blame Oklahoma State alone.

    Dexter couldn't read "Hamlet," but he could play Hamlet well. He learned to go to class and sit in the front row to look interested. He learned to scam and to plead and to shed a tear that may or may not have been real. He learned to copy from someone else's exam and to cultivate friends and girlfriends to write his papers or to take his tests. There's no question, however, that Oklahoma State was quite eager to have this football player exploiting the system. "I was a great, great athlete," Dexter said.

    He is a likeable fellow over lunch, in contrast to the defensive end who played himself into a rage. "On the football field, I want to hurt them, put their lights out," he said. "I love to do that. Does that make me a bad guy?"

    What he says ought to be studied and analyzed like symptoms in an epidemic. He is not to be taken at face value at all times. His NFL career ended in December 1991, when he tested positive for cocaine for the fourth time.

    He said the last time he used cocaine was in February 1992, and that his family means so much to him -- wife Glinda, two sons and a daughter -- and he's caused them so much suffering. "My kids mean more than drugs," he said. "But not all the time. I get that first hit, and drugs are more important."

    That's an addict peeling off one layer of his addiction. But then he still has a layer of denial. "I never escalated," he said. "I didn't freebase. I didn't inject. I just snorted."

    The denial by Oklahoma State is greater. Manley and Friend quote Dale Roark, the academic adviser at OSU, saying: "We knew he couldn't read a textbook. . . . I agree we exploited Dexter for four years, but he exploited us. Coaches further their careers with players like Dexter, and players in turn groom themselves for pro ball."

    That's too self-serving. The institution is obligated to say it won't be party to either kind of exploitation. Today's Proposition 48 -- the 700 Rule -- means Dexter Manley's second-grade reading level would have made him ineligible as a freshman. But what then?

    Dexter Manley deserves some credit for his willingness to bear the embarrassment of going to the Lab School, of hearing the whispered, "That's Dexter Manley of the Redskins and he can't read."

    Athletic directors and university presidents should be required to read the book. Some of them may learn something -- $19.95 -- cheap.
     
  7. olevetonahill

    olevetonahill Well-Known Member

    When we beat em he sends me another check for 100 LOL
     
  8. tycat947

    tycat947 New Member

    Badg, I LOVE how you always capture the pulse of the opponent! PRICELESS!
     
  9. Mazeppa

    Mazeppa Well-Known Member

  10. Mazeppa

    Mazeppa Well-Known Member

  11. SoonerMarkVA

    SoonerMarkVA New Member

    "And here, we see an image capturing Boone at the height of his vitality!"
     
  12. stoopified

    stoopified SoonerFans.com Elite Member

    My memory tells me that the OSU player had ben spewing profanity all game long,was warned once and was finally flagged for it. I also recall that every Puke fan I ran into for a month after that said THERE WAS NO NEED FOR THAT PENALTY TO BE CALLED. They ranted about the refs deciding the game, forgetting Brent Parker dropping that sure TD pass in the endzone.
     

Share This Page