02-13-2013, 10:49 PM
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#61
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 14,689
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoahBeanBizzel
2) A friend of mine has a friend who knows Miller's aunt. The word from Columbus is that he'll be a first-round pick. Also, Meyer recruited Cam. 'Nuff said.
3) It really depends on how you look at it. Meyer lost to FSU after he had thrown in the towel; the Georgia loss came when Tebow was injured. Neither was a legitimate loss. That's what I hold.
6) That's just not true.
7) I'll let you believe that if you want, but I know what I saw wif my own two eyeballs. Meyer's speech sent that team on a tear.
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2) You come back with "Meyer recruited Cam" but Miller was already there, you can't have it both ways.
3) A loss is a loss. Stop being delusional.
6) http://www.merriam-webster.com/dicti...comprehendable
The word you've entered isn't in the dictionary. Click on a spelling suggestion below or try again using the search bar above.
incomprehensible
7)
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02-13-2013, 10:59 PM
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#62
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 8,568
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"Meyer laid the foundation for the Florida way"
While everyone is entitled to their opinions--even when they are wrong---the above statement made in the post falls into the category of:
Complete and utter lack of credibility.  
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02-13-2013, 11:08 PM
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#63
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Senior
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 500
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by dadx4
I am not upset with urbs other than the fact that I knew all along he would bolt to tosu the second that job opened up. Also considering his last year here he really wasn't.
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That should at least have triggered a buyout. Letting him walk free of the contract period was overly generous. UF he took another college job in that time he should have owed UF whatever the contract required.
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02-13-2013, 11:09 PM
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#64
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Gator Country Gold
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wilmington, NC
Posts: 15,746
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoahBeanBizzel
My friend, you're missing my points completely. Let me address each of yours:
1) My point? Meyer developed Percy, Tebow and Spikes. He won two national championships with the three of them. one national Championship was with Zooks QB
2) A friend of mine has a friend who knows Miller's aunt. Assuming this is sarcasm. The word from Columbus is that he'll be a first-round pick. Also, Meyer recruited Cam. Recruiting and developing are not the same thing. He developed Tebow and Smith. Thats it.
3) It really depends on how you look at it. Meyer lost to FSU after he had thrown in the towel; the Georgia loss came when Tebow was injured. Neither was a legitimate loss. That's what I hold. Tebow won the Heisman that year.
4) But both of Meyer's SEC titles resulted in national championships. 'Nuff said.
5) Spurrier had a losing rekord versus Bowden. Meyer never lost to him. How can you compare them? Because they were not facing the same Bobby Bowden or the same FSU. Meyer benefited from the decline of FSU.
6) That's just not true. Yes it is.
7) I'll let you believe that if you want, but I know what I saw wif my own two eyeballs. Meyer's speech sent that team on a tear. spellcheck iz yo frind.
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I simply don't know what to say. So I just added my answers to the quote above ^
Im the first to have your back in defending Urban, but no way, no how, will I launch him ahead of Steven Orr.
By the way...Here is a small list of guys that Steve developed:
Steve developed:
| Ben Troupe | TE | | Keiwan Ratliff | DB | | Max Starks | OL | | Guss Scott | S | | Bobby McCray | DE | | Rex Grossman | QB | | Taylor Jacobs | WR | | Todd Johnson | FS | | Ian Scott | DT | | Aaron Walker | TE | | Tron LaFavor | DT | | Mike Nattiel | LB | | Clint Mitchell | DE | | Lito Sheppard | CB | | Jabar Gaffney | WR | | Mike Pearson | OT | | Reche Caldwell | WR | | Jeff Chandler | PK | | Alex Brown | DE | | Andra Davis | LB | | Marquand Manuel | SS | | Gerard Warren | DT | | Kenyatta Walker | OT | | Jesse Palmer | QB | | John Capel | WR | | Travis Taylor | WR | | Erron Kinney | TE | | Darrell Jackson | WR | | Cooper Carlisle | OG | | Eugene McCaslin | LB | | Jevon Kearse | LB | | Reggie McGrew | DT | | Mike Peterson | LB | | Johnny Rutledge | LB | | Zach Piller | OT | | Tony George | DB | | Travis McGriff | WR | | Terry Jackson | RB | | Fred Taylor | RB | | Mo Collins | OT | | Jacquez Green | WR | | Fred Weary | DB | | Elijah Williams | DB | | Ike Hilliard | WR | | Reidel Anthony | WR | | Danny Wuerffel | QB | | Jeff Mitchell | C | | Mark Campbell | DE | | Jason Odom | OT | | Dexter Daniels | LB | | Reggie Green | OL | | Chris Doering | WR | | Johnie Church | DE | | Kevin Carter | DE | | Ellis Johnson | DT | | Jack Jackson | WR | | Henry McMillian | DT | | Errict Rhett | RB | | Willie Jackson | WR | | Harrison Houston | WR | | William Gaines | DT | | Darren Mickell | DE | | Lawrence Hatch | DB | | Will White | FS | | Tony McCoy | DT | | Dexter McNabb | FB | | Cal Dixon | C | | Tony Rowell | OT | | Tim Paulk | LB | | Hesham Ismail | OG | | Ephesians Bartley | LB | | Brad Culpepper | DT | | Michael Brandon | DE | | Huey Richardson | DE | | Godfrey Myles | LB | | Ernie Mills | WR | | Richard Fain | DB | | Jimmy Spencer | DB |
__________________
UNCovered SCUMmy ViOLatiOnS rUnning amUcK For SUre
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02-13-2013, 11:21 PM
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#65
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Senior
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 500
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Meyer completely changed the culture of the program in 2005-06 that radically affected a slew if Zook players on the field and in the classroom. Steve Harris was the biggest change, but include RayMac, Joe Cohen, Dallas Baker and Brian Crum on that list for starters. Tebow, Harvin and Hernandez were also huge pieces of that 2006 team. It isn't accurate or fair to give the Zooker much credit for that championship.
The utter collapse of Meyer's program is an astounding failure. Some wondered early what his tenure would look like after 3, 4, 5 years. Implosion wasn't expected though.
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02-13-2013, 11:24 PM
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#66
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Senior
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 500
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by WESGATORS
So you think Zook left the cupboard bare?
Go GATORS!
,WESGATORS
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Not bare but woefully incomplete in terms of player development. Almost to a man, those guys credit Meyer with turning their lives around on and off the field. Leak would be a notable exception. He could play, period. But that was true from day 1. You were at those early practices. Fluid, accurate, smart.
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02-13-2013, 11:28 PM
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#67
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Premium Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 2,467
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoahBeanBizzel
Because you can't have a thread about Meyer without comparing him to Spurrier. That's incomplete. That's like a stickup kid runnin' around without no heat.
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Well then you can't have a thread about Meyer without also bringing in Woodruff, Graves, Dickey, Pell, Hall, Darnell and Zook
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02-13-2013, 11:28 PM
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#68
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All SEC
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 833
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Quote:
Originally Posted by secgator
"Meyer laid the foundation for the Florida way"
While everyone is entitled to their opinions--even when they are wrong---the above statement made in the post falls into the category of:
Complete and utter lack of credibility.   
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Right, but look at how corch Meyer won. He brought an offense to a run-first league, that nobody had ever seen, and completely took it by storm. He believed in recruiting faster players than the other team had. His offense was strategically designed to create mismatches, while getting playmakers out in space. Not even Saban and his people could handle it. Never before had the SEC seen a true passing like the one Meyer brought to Gainesville.
Picture NFL talent in the slot. At tight end. All across the line of scrimmage. It was everwhere. Meyer brought in the biggest, baddest dudes on the block. Do you realize that Harvin ran a 4.4? Who had speed like that under Spurrier? Then, he incorpotated Harvin into the running game, and he averaged 20 yards a clip. Look at the stats.
Show some respec for coach Meyer. His offense was by far the most innovative any had ever seen in the SEC. I mean, nobody had ever seen anything quite like it. At its full effect, Meyer's offense average 60 points per game. Who has done that before?
__________________
"I can shoot threes now. I can finesse you. I can dunk on you. I can guard anything, and I'm rebounding better. When I block shots I catch the ball. I can post you up with my back to the basket and hit you with a post move. Or I can face you up and use my quickness to blow by you." - Chris Walker
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02-13-2013, 11:29 PM
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#69
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All SEC
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 833
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^^^^^^^^^^^^ this.
FOLLOW ME?
__________________
"I can shoot threes now. I can finesse you. I can dunk on you. I can guard anything, and I'm rebounding better. When I block shots I catch the ball. I can post you up with my back to the basket and hit you with a post move. Or I can face you up and use my quickness to blow by you." - Chris Walker
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02-13-2013, 11:38 PM
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#70
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Senior
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 500
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Meyer's way which Muschamp follows, is workaholic intensity 24/7 in everything. That can be fairly called "The Florida Way" and it is right to peg its origin to Meyer.
SOS was wildly successful too, but his way and his personal style were very different. He liked to work smart.
But "The Florida Way" isn't the same thing as Florida's winning tradition. That and the modern era for UF began with Spurrier.
It really began with Pell but got so roundly askew from probation and Hall's bad end years. Then 1990 was the launching pad.
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02-13-2013, 11:44 PM
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#71
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Heisman Candidate
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 3,108
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoahBeanBizzel
Right, but look at how corch Meyer won. He brought an offense to a run-first league, that nobody had ever seen, and completely took it by storm. He believed in recruiting faster players than the other team had. His offense was strategically designed to create mismatches, while getting playmakers out in space. Not even Saban and his people could handle it. Never before had the SEC seen
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You are talking about SOS right?
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02-13-2013, 11:59 PM
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#72
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All SEC
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,440
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Umm Meyer was going to turn Cam Newton into a TE...That wouldve been as smart as your post on this thread and Nancy Pelosi being the featured speaker at the GOP Convention.
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02-14-2013, 08:56 AM
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#73
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All SEC
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Florida
Posts: 1,229
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"Any sufficiently advanced parody is indistinguishable from a genuine kook."
__________________
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02-14-2013, 12:16 PM
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#74
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Gator Country Diamond
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Inside the War Room, No Name City, FL
Posts: 26,908
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Especially so if it isn't funny.
__________________
On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures;
he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead,
and his kingdom will have no end.
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02-14-2013, 12:59 PM
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#75
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VIP Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 19,325
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoahBeanBizzel
Right, but look at how corch Meyer won. He brought an offense to a run-first league, that nobody had ever seen, and completely took it by storm. He believed in recruiting faster players than the other team had. His offense was strategically designed to create mismatches, while getting playmakers out in space. Not even Saban and his people could handle it. Never before had the SEC seen a true passing like the one Meyer brought to Gainesville.
Picture NFL talent in the slot. At tight end. All across the line of scrimmage. It was everwhere. Meyer brought in the biggest, baddest dudes on the block. Do you realize that Harvin ran a 4.4? Who had speed like that under Spurrier? Then, he incorpotated Harvin into the running game, and he averaged 20 yards a clip. Look at the stats.
Show some respec for coach Meyer. His offense was by far the most innovative any had ever seen in the SEC. I mean, nobody had ever seen anything quite like it. At its full effect, Meyer's offense average 60 points per game. Who has done that before?
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I agree we should respect Meyer's accomplishments, as well as ding him on his failures.
On the accomplishment side - two national titles. All you really need to say.
But wrt his offense, let's not overdo it here... Meyer's offense never came anywhere near averaging 60 points a game. And while it was innovative, your point on the talent level is the real reason we scored... we could have been drawing up plays in the dirt and still scored a lot with those players.
In fact, I'd argue he wildly underperformed in 2009... he had one of the most talented and experienced all around teams to every play CFB, and averaged just under 36ppg. Honestly, that had to be hard to do - we were poorly coached on offense that year and the year after. In 2008, we were much better at 43.6ppg, but still nowhere near the 60ppg you claimed.
OTOH, SOS really did take the SEC by storm with scheme. He had good players but never had anywhere near the quantity NFL talent that Meyer assembled. Yet SOS thoroughly dominated the SEC on offense with those players, and scored over 50ppg in '95 and '96. A LOT more than Meyer's offense scored with TT, Harvin, Murph, Hernandez, Rainey, Demps, Coop, Nelson, and company behind an OL filled with big time NFL talent.
Just some perspective.
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02-14-2013, 02:25 PM
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#76
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Heisman Finalist
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 4,100
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NoahBeanBizzel has just run away with the usually tightly contested title of "Worst Post of the Year" award, and it's only February.
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02-14-2013, 02:46 PM
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#77
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Gator Country Diamond
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Inside the War Room, No Name City, FL
Posts: 26,908
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OaktownGator
I agree we should respect Meyer's accomplishments, as well as ding him on his failures.
On the accomplishment side - two national titles. All you really need to say.
But wrt his offense, let's not overdo it here... Meyer's offense never came anywhere near averaging 60 points a game. And while it was innovative, your point on the talent level is the real reason we scored... we could have been drawing up plays in the dirt and still scored a lot with those players.
In fact, I'd argue he wildly underperformed in 2009... he had one of the most talented and experienced all around teams to every play CFB, and averaged just under 36ppg. Honestly, that had to be hard to do - we were poorly coached on offense that year and the year after. In 2008, we were much better at 43.6ppg, but still nowhere near the 60ppg you claimed.
OTOH, SOS really did take the SEC by storm with scheme. He had good players but never had anywhere near the quantity NFL talent that Meyer assembled. Yet SOS thoroughly dominated the SEC on offense with those players, and scored over 50ppg in '95 and '96. A LOT more than Meyer's offense scored with TT, Harvin, Murph, Hernandez, Rainey, Demps, Coop, Nelson, and company behind an OL filled with big time NFL talent.
Just some perspective.
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Excellent perspective and perfect recall of history, by the way.
Rep next time permitted.
__________________
On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures;
he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead,
and his kingdom will have no end.
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02-14-2013, 03:23 PM
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#78
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Heisman Finalist
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 4,748
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OaktownGator
In fact, I'd argue he wildly underperformed in 2009... he had one of the most talented and experienced all around teams to every play CFB, and averaged just under 36ppg. Honestly, that had to be hard to do - we were poorly coached on offense that year and the year after. In 2008, we were much better at 43.6ppg, but still nowhere near the 60ppg you claimed.
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By 2009, the rift in the locker room was brewing. That may be a lot of the reason the 2009 team underperformed. The team was becoming divided due to Meyer's "circle of trust" and his other blatant favoritism. He had no idea how to fix that. Funny, but before UF, Meyer had never been HC at any school long enough for this kind of crap to rise to the surface.
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02-14-2013, 03:56 PM
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#79
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Gator Country Diamond
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 47,086
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator85jd
By 2009, the rift in the locker room was brewing. That may be a lot of the reason the 2009 team underperformed. The team was becoming divided due to Meyer's "circle of trust" and his other blatant favoritism.
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It's really fascinating how a few random comments can be extrapolated into a full blown narrative.
__________________
GO GATORS
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02-14-2013, 04:02 PM
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#80
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All SEC
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1,021
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orangeblueorangeblue
It's really fascinating how a few random comments can be extrapolated into a full blown narrative.
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Ask Gilly about that circle.
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