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Posted

I guess the train horn is neither an expression nor a phrase, but if we could broaden the category a bit I think it would get some votes. 

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Posted
8 minutes ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

"We agree to disagree."

 

😆... Fight on!

Is this the hill you want to die on?

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Posted

Not for nothin' (see what I did there?), these offseason lines get used way too much - 

 

Brings something to the table

Kick the tires

Something left in the tank

 

Then there's the edge. Nobody ever mentioned the edge until one day a bright football guy whose name I don't recall started talking about DEs and LBs "setting the edge" as in, getting penetration on the outside edge of the line and holding it so the play doesn't get outside, turning it back inside where there are more defenders.

 

Suddenly every announcer started calling everything on the outside the edge. We have receivers lined up wide who are on the edge. A running back sprinting for the pylon is trying to get to the edge. DBs are chucking WRs on the edge. Or playing loose on the edge. We even invented a new position for edge rushers. Well at least that one refers to the actual edge and makes sense, but still. 

 

It was the same thing when somebody invented the word "space" to mean the open field. He's good in space. He makes tackles in space. I get it, it was a good invention of the term at the time, but holy hell was it ever overused for a few years. All of a sudden it seemed like every announcer got paid a dollar when he said the word space. Same thing happened with the edge.

 

Thanks for letting me vent.

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Posted
8 minutes ago, Tuco said:

Not for nothin' (see what I did there?), these offseason lines get used way too much - 

 

Brings something to the table

Kick the tires

Something left in the tank

 

Then there's the edge. Nobody ever mentioned the edge until one day a bright football guy whose name I don't recall started talking about DEs and LBs "setting the edge" as in, getting penetration on the outside edge of the line and holding it so the play doesn't get outside, turning it back inside where there are more defenders.

 

Suddenly every announcer started calling everything on the outside the edge. We have receivers lined up wide who are on the edge. A running back sprinting for the pylon is trying to get to the edge. DBs are chucking WRs on the edge. Or playing loose on the edge. We even invented a new position for edge rushers. Well at least that one refers to the actual edge and makes sense, but still. 

 

It was the same thing when somebody invented the word "space" to mean the open field. He's good in space. He makes tackles in space. I get it, it was a good invention of the term at the time, but holy hell was it ever overused for a few years. All of a sudden it seemed like every announcer got paid a dollar when he said the word space. Same thing happened with the edge.

 

Thanks for letting me vent.

to your point about space. We want to get him the ball in space.....instead of getting him the ball with 10 players around him

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Posted
1 hour ago, nucci said:

to your point about space. We want to get him the ball in space.....instead of getting him the ball with 10 players around him

Remember being told that CJ Spiller was great "in space?"  😃🙄

Posted
2 hours ago, Jauronimo said:

You and Bill Cosby have that in common.

 

 

Until anyone can point me to an instance where something was NOT what it, in fact, WAS, then "it is what it is" remains the most worthless arrangement of words in the history of written and oral communication.

way to take a flippant sarcastic comment to the worst connotation possible. You win the internet today Bravo. ***** 

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Posted
1 minute ago, muppy said:

way to take a flippant sarcastic comment to the worst connotation possible. You win the internet today Bravo. ***** 

You don't get jokes, do you?  

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Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, Jauronimo said:

You don't get jokes, do you?  

it didn't land with me. Kind of a sensitive subject. Cie la vie.  Cheers.

Edited by muppy
Posted
1 hour ago, nucci said:

to your point about space. We want to get him the ball in space.....instead of getting him the ball with 10 players around him

Yes, I totally get the use of the word and it's correct in its usage. But when the term was first invented for football, it suddenly became more common than a politician constantly inserting the "common sense" phrase into their new legislation. Which is another phrase I should have included in my rant. No single piece of legislation in the last 10 years has been introduced without the sponsor labeling it common sense legislation. Gets old quick.

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Posted

"tons" which is used frequently in phrases which makes no sense.  

It is a lazy writer's idiom. (When I was an editor on newspaper I rejected such use except in a quote)

 

i.e.

"He has a ton of talent"

 

Bob Dylan song:

Well, he catch you when you're hoping for a glimpse of the sun,
Catch you when your troubles feel like they weigh a ton.

 

From a cartoon site:

image.thumb.png.cd50c56908e0e5e12118edd8bf85bd0e.png

 

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Tuco said:

Not for nothin' (see what I did there?), these offseason lines get used way too much - 

 

Brings something to the table

Kick the tires

Something left in the tank

 

Then there's the edge. Nobody ever mentioned the edge until one day a bright football guy whose name I don't recall started talking about DEs and LBs "setting the edge" as in, getting penetration on the outside edge of the line and holding it so the play doesn't get outside, turning it back inside where there are more defenders.

 

Suddenly every announcer started calling everything on the outside the edge. We have receivers lined up wide who are on the edge. A running back sprinting for the pylon is trying to get to the edge. DBs are chucking WRs on the edge. Or playing loose on the edge. We even invented a new position for edge rushers. Well at least that one refers to the actual edge and makes sense, but still. 

 

It was the same thing when somebody invented the word "space" to mean the open field. He's good in space. He makes tackles in space. I get it, it was a good invention of the term at the time, but holy hell was it ever overused for a few years. All of a sudden it seemed like every announcer got paid a dollar when he said the word space. Same thing happened with the edge.

 

Thanks for letting me vent.

you forgot one Tuco. How about  "drop a dime" in the football vernacular.  I have no idea where that thought began or exactly why it's called that.  Didn't I read you about that before?.  Some other  distant board maybe lol

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