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cashfruit

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Posts posted by cashfruit

  1. Man I forgot about that....they really hosed that guy.

    165046[/snapback]

    do you think they still paid him that extra since it was only 1 play short? or do you think that if they did it would be like sayin you dont have to reach the incentive agreement just get close to it? therefore its like your mom grounds you from goin outside but she really doesnt mean it so you still can go outside? sorry i couldnt come up with a better example

  2. Yo! You the Bomb! Here be the words to a Ludacris joint:

     

    Here are some great

    Yeah come see this nigga

    come see this ol' light-skinned motha!@#$a

    I seen him and I'm addicted

    disturbin tha peace is the click

    please tell these fake ass niggas who you are

     

    I be dat nigga named Luda'

    Alert Alert it's the ATLlien intruder

    College Park waterboy, spittin in tha c-cooler

    I jam till they deaf, they call me Slick Dick Da Ruler

    Women indeed, keep ya eyes closed

    'bow blows, come out dem clothes hoe

    Low pros, low bows, watch out for the po-po

    And I chose, to be dat numba one contender, Southern offender

    !@#$in up ya whole Agenda

    When I walk you try to run

    When I run you try to hide

    You skated the snap of my finger

    Call me Golden Gley

    Its you and I, Do or Die, who am I?

    I got a pocket full of family stones, cats think I'm sly

    Oh Why try, you one of dem niggaz that like to cheat death

    and I'm one of dem niggaz that rip up Excursions

    til there is no seats left

    You sh-- out wheat chex and fart out deep breaths

    While we toss darts at the bottom of y'all v-necks

     

    -Skit

    Who?

    Dat nigga Cris?

    oh dat nigga is aight

    Dat nigga can't !@#$ wit me thou

    Let me get on da mic

    Nigga, who da !@#$ are you nigga

     

    [Ludacris]

    I be dat nigga Bronze Bridges

    Playaz wanna ball or go on strike cause of my pitches

    They think I want they bitches

    But I don't want no pigeons

    yet pigeons can scrub my dishes

    And ya'll don't want no scrubs till ya'll pull out ya'll extensions

    Ya'll in school detention that'll neva come out

    Man I'll catch yo achilles tendon and put a sock in yo mouth

    Cause we da sh-- in the South, they know what I'm talkin bout

    You see we Jack and we Daniels, y'all Earl and Ralph

    4-ize twirl it out, lick it dry and tend it to flames

    Not even Joshua can come to +War+ wit dis +Games+

    These B word niggaz is lame and come down wit da reigns

    You all wet behind da ears but its a drought in ya brain

    and dats tha simple and plain man

    Three W Dot Shhhh

    (Man dat dude Luder's got some hotter than hot shhh)

    Well sh-sh-sh-shut da !@#$ up

    Before you get cu-cu-cut-cut da !@#$ up

     

    -Hold on man

    hold on lil buddy

    ya'll talkin bout shorty man

    Shorty up at da radio station man?

    Shorty be poppin man?

    Man, Let the name be known

    who ya'll talkin bout

     

    [Ludacris]

    I be dat nigga dat lova lova

    I'm nastier than thinkin about yo' parents sex each other

    No glove, no love, betta tell yo dick to run for cover

    So when lightening strikes, you can be safe on a few rubbers

    If you know what I mean

    Not everybody is Mr and Mrs. Clean

    Some get burnt like Freddie Kruger, sweat dreams

    girls backin dey ass up now they 400 degrees Ha

    Hot girl, tryin to give to niggaz up on da block girl

    Have you screamin "STOP GIRL"

    I rock worlds with my 9 inch louieville slugga

    still wonder why they call me lova lova

    Self Explainatruim

    Ass Valedictorian

    I bring 'em back to da future like a '85 Delorium

    Da Luda drug emporium

    On da counter prescription

    you like my diction

    and my Doctor nurse convention

    I put da stethoscope quite close to yo tittie

    Have yo butt checks Red-man like Uncle Quilly

    163425[/snapback]

     

    was that a anti-rap post? because it damn sure looks like it. if you were gonna go through the trouble to post all those lyrics you shoulda at least put up some quality. ludacris? come on

  3. isnt anything with harmony, rhythm and melody considered music? i believe it is, so its music just not your kind of music and 85% isnt for me either. i agree though, rap sucks but in my opinion no music is better then true heart felt hip hop. most people who hate hip hop either hate the people makin the music and/or they cant relate to it. i cant relate to "i wanna blown my own head off" heavy metal or "i got bullied everyday of my life so now im mad" rock and roll like limp biscuit but im not gonna start a thread sayin how much i hate it because its pointless. music is like different types of food, what you love i might hate and what i love (which is the case here) you might hate.

  4. What happened to Dimebag was a tragedy, ODB just got what was coming to him.  Play with drugs and you might end up with ODB.

    161849[/snapback]

    you just made absolutely zero sense, your mans name was "dimebag" and your talkin about dirty had what was comin to him because he did coke, why was his name "dimebag"?? maybe when he was young he stole his grandmas ziplocked antique dime collection.

     

    ...anyway, i ALWAYS prefered dirty when he was coke and weeded up, his music was 100% better and he made more sense...after he got out of rehab prison his first few songs to me really sucked but after he was gettin more into his daily routine his lyrics and energy picked right back up, now he has no energy and i believe it too was a waste...of talent and wisdom

  5. i was good in football and basketball up until i was 19-20 then the weed diminished all aspirations, little league baseball took the steam outta me as far as that sport goes when i was 12 (16 at bats, 8 strikeouts...call me barry) and had no interest in playin anything else and bein from my neighborhood i never even picked up a hockey stick since your not gonna find a hockey rink anywhere around me, just a f'ed up gym and roosevelt park

  6. no particular order:

     

    randy moss

    joey galloway

    bethel johnson

    michael vick

    michael bennet (if he still counts)

    deangelo hall

    shawn springs

    lee evans

    doug gabriel

    dante stallworth

    laverneus coles

     

    ...terrence mcgee is real fast too, those guys up there are all in the 4.30 range

  7. theres so many twists and turns that i dont really sit there and try and figure it all out by myself, rather just watch it and when they tell me then i'll know. i did find out while doin a little research that jack was gonna be killed off in the pilot but the producers decided to keep him alive...my main wonder is why didnt locke get eaten by the "monster" when he came face to face with it and is that lady who snatched up sayid gonna turn out to be good and was ethan (and possibly whoever else) the people who she was runnin after with the gun or was it the monsters she was worried about

  8. i assume most of you guys visit espn but in case you missed it, heres a nice arcticle on mcgee

     

    http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/stor..._len&id=1942684

     

    Growing up in Athens, the one in Texas and not Greece, Terrence McGee never thought all that much about visiting faraway places.

     

     

    A big-time sojourn away from Athens, a city of about 12,000 that claims to be the place where the hamburger originated and which proudly touts itself as the "Black-Eyed Pea Capital of the World," typically meant driving the 75 miles northwest to Dallas. Or, for McGee, heading over to Natchitoches, La., after a successful high school career, to play football at Division I-AA Northwestern State University.

     

     

    In fact, asked on Thursday to identify the "most exotic" locale he has ever visited, the Buffalo Bills second-year veteran paused for several seconds, repeated the question, and then settled on "Florida, I guess," as his answer. A couple months from now, if the query is repeated, McGee is apt to offer a much quicker and more far-flung reply.

     

     

    “ Patience. Speed, running ability, having some quickness, all of that is important, don't get me wrong. But having the patience to allow things to open up in front of you, rather than just running full-tilt up the field, that is probably the thing that sets the really good return guys apart.”

    —Terrence McGee

     

    Barring an upset in the Pro Bowl vote, or the kind of inexplicable politics that often mark the players' segment of the balloting, the kid from tiny Athens should he headed to Hawaii as part of the AFC squad. Even McGee, noted more for busting kickoffs than any kind of braggadocio, acknowledged he's thinking of some serious Waikiki beach time.

     

     

    "I can't help but think about Hawaii, you know, with the way things are going," allowed McGee, who has authored three of the NFL's 10 kickoff returns for touchdowns in 2004, the latest coming on a game-opening, 104-yard sprint against the Dolphins last Sunday. "People are talking about it like it's going to happen. I don't want to get too caught up in it yet but, hey, I guess you can't ignore it, either."

     

     

    Nor can opposition special teams coaches ignore McGee, who is averaging 26.9 yards per kickoff return, best in the league among players with 25 or more runbacks. Certainly the former fourth-round draft choice, who appeared in 14 games last year, is a big element in the Bills' turnaround, with the team having won six of its last eight outings after a dismal 0-4 start to the season.

     

     

    In addition to last weekend's effort, McGee had touchdown returns of 98 yards against New England on Oct. 3 and of 87 yards versus Arizona on Oct. 31. For the year, McGee has 1,103 yards on 41 returns, leaving him just 178 yards shy of breaking the club record established by Charlie Rogers only two years ago.

     

     

    He needs one more touchdown return to tie the league single-season record, currently shared by Travis Williams of Green Bay (1967) and Chicago's Cecil Turner (1970). Not bad for a player better known for his punt return skills while in college and who logged just eight kickoff returns in his 2003 rookie campaign.

     

     

    Not bad, either, for a young player forced into the starting lineup at cornerback because of an injury to Troy Vincent, and whose fatigue level and penchant for the BET network has turned him into a self-avowed couch potato. At a time when many players are into video games, McGee plants himself in front of the television with a remote control, not the controls to the latest X-Box offering.

     

     

    He has always been, McGee conceded, a homebody. Not even the rarity of having taken three kickoffs "to the house," as part of the remaking of the Buffalo special teams under coach Bobby April, is enough to get McGee out and seeking the spotlight. It has largely been left for others to pump McGee, who has twice been named as the AFC special teams player of the week, for the Pro Bowl recognition due him.

     

     

    "He's just been great," said April, whose past protégés have included Deion Sanders and Rod Woodson, among others. "When he gets the ball in his hands now, there's a certain kind of expectation, you know? There's that feeling that something big could happen."

     

     

    McGee's play in the secondary, where he has started nine games since Vincent's injury, has been mixed at times. He has 67 tackles, three interceptions, three sacks, and a dozen passes defensed. Like most young cornerbacks, this has been a roller coaster existence. As a kickoff return man, though, McGee has experienced more peaks than valleys.

     

     

    McGee was taken aback this summer when April first approached him and suggested he could be a standout kickoff returner. At Northwestern State, as a four-year starter in the defensive backfield, he lined up at both cornerback and safety. His most notable deeds on special teams had come as a punt returner (56 runbacks for 972 yards and three scores) and a rusher off the corner against placements (three blocked kicks) and McGee posted just a dozen kickoff returns.

     

     

    But the former high school tailback possessed innate balance and vision, April sensed, and one other key quality that translates well to the kickoff return game.

     

     

    "Patience," explained McGee on Thursday morning, following the Bills' walk-through for this weekend's game against the Cleveland Browns. "Speed, running ability, having some quickness, all of that is important, don't get me wrong. But having the patience to allow things to open up in front of you, rather than just running full-tilt up the field, that is probably the thing that sets the really good return guys apart."

     

     

    Even on last Sunday's 104-yard return, a runback on which he wasn't touched at all, McGee was savvy enough to wait for the one really critical block that he needed, from London Fletcher, before cutting up through a yawning crease in the Miami coverage. At just 5-feet-9 and 201 pounds, McGee has deceptive strength as well, and that is crucial, too, since April has also stressed the need for hitting "the seam" hard on kickoff returns.

     

     

    The best kickoff returners characteristically have to muscle past the first wave of cover defenders, to break out of the trash inherent to the exercise, before then hitting the second level at peak speed. Then it becomes a case of either making one or two moves or simply sprinting past the defenders.

     

     

    "It just comes kind of unconsciously," McGee said. "You just react."

     

     

    The general reaction to the Buffalo special teams this year, after several seasons in which the units were much maligned along the plains of Western New York, certainly has been a positive one. With the three kickoff returns by McGee, and punt return scores by Nate Clements and Jonathan Smith, the Bills have tied the league record for combined kick returns for touchdown in a season.

     

     

    And if McGee has been unearthed as an emerging star, April, one of the NFL's premier special teams coaches but unfairly blamed for many of the kicking game problems in St. Louis the last few seasons, has seen his reputation restored. It isn't just happenstance, McGee agreed, that the Buffalo return game is suddenly so dangerous.

     

     

    "Coach April is, uh, shall we say a little bit lively?" said McGee, referring to the ever-manic special teams mentor. "He stresses how important and how serious this is, but he has a way of making it fun, too. He's brought us a long way, definitely a long way."

     

     

    For McGee, there is probably one more long trip to make, the flight to Hawaii that the kid from Athens never even dreamed about until a few weeks ago.

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