Don't forget to bet against black coaches

Wade

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

never in doubt. thanks shaw.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

NFL coaches looking to go 1-3 SU 2-2 ATS if Cincy doesn't come back.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

If I was running the Bucs, Lovie would be fired at halftime. Its one thing to get absolutely run out of a building(Atlanta game) once a year. But to have it happen twice in a year, is a disgrace.

Does this team practice? Or do they sit around eating fried chicken and watermelon all week at the facility?
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

never in doubt. thanks shaw.

David Shaw is such a silly LIL MONKEY.

I'll never ever forget him BLACKING up the game against U DUB last year. They could have literally named the score. But what does the SILLY LIL MONKEY do. He takes the air out of the ball with 12 minutes left in the 3rd Q, with a 7 point lead. Makes no attempt to try to score again, until he was forced to when DUB mounted a comeback. Stupid fucking MONKEY. BLACKS the game up and fucks over all the CARDINAL backers. Powers to be at the NFL, are said to be salivating to get SHAW in the league as a HC. Stupid piece shit will be worse then Lovie
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Black coaches go 1-3 ATS with Caldwell the only victor. Bengals won't cover but may win or tie.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Mike Smith is far and away the worst coach in the league. NOT EVEN CLOSE. Not a doubt in my mind he has a SMIDGE of NIG in him.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Mike Smith is far and away the worst coach in the league. NOT EVEN CLOSE. Not a doubt in my mind he has a SMIDGE of NIG in him.
From Wikipedia:

Smith is the oldest of eight children. Mike and his wife, Julie, have one daughter, Logan who is thirteen years old. Mike is the brother-in-law of former NFL head coach*Brian Billick.

8 kids? Got to have had some siblings on the Maury Povich show.
 

Wade

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

thanks sumlin. you couldn't have made it any easier. Alabama up 38-0.

 

Drnkyourmlkshk

EOG Dedicated
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

thanks sumlin. you couldn't have made it any easier. Alabama up 38-0.



Lol you are retarded. Alabama would pay hire him in a second if Saban ever left. He also has one of the best ats records of any hc in cfb. I love when you bump this thread when the other quote black hires have great days for bettors. How did Hazel and Taggert do today racists?
 

JavyBaez9

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Betting against black coaches is a smart statistical play merely for the reason that lots of them get their jobs due to affirmative action. :lightbulb:

In the NFL, they even have to interview a black coach first before hiring anyone else. Damn shame.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Can't wait to watch coach Shaw get chewed up and spit out in the NFL. He's going to make former Raiders coach Dennis Allen look like Parcells
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

thanks sumlin. you couldn't have made it any easier. Alabama up 38-0.


Coach Sumlin is such a SILLY LIL NIG

Glad to see people make money off these black coaches, inferior genetics. most are 2 or 3 chromosomes short of a full deck. It is what it is
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches


6-2 ATS so far this season. Due for regression?
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Coach Shaw NIGGING it up again:LMAO

Never ever change Coach. Make us that promise
 

Cuonzo

EOG Enthusiast
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Damn it
 

railbird

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Offensive Coordiater Hue Jackson led the Bengals to 0 pts.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Getting ready to watch Coach Shaw NIG this game up against the Beavs. On O State large for one reason and one reason only. Coach Shaw is a SILLY LIL NIG.

Never change Coach. Make us that one promise. That's all we'll ever ask
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Marvin wins but fails to cover.
Lovie loses but covers.
 

Wade

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

thanks marvin for the good plus money.
 

winner_13

EOG Senior Member
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

I wonder if there are any black people on this forum that are extremely offended by this thread
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Lol you are retarded. Alabama would pay hire him in a second if Saban ever left. He also has one of the best ats records of any hc in cfb. I love when you bump this thread when the other quote black hires have great days for bettors. How did Hazel and Taggert do today racists?

You black, bruh?
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Marvin and Tomlin get embarrassed. Lovie fails to cover against Atlanta. Caldwell the only black coach to cover on a last minute comeback.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Is Rivera half black?? A smidge of NIG in him??
 

evade

EOG Addicted
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Can we have updated records for ALL black coaches or is it going to be random bumping when they lose? It's almost like the way touts maintain their records.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Marvin and Lovie win outright as sizeable underdogs, Caldwell loses and fails to cover. Tomlin -5.5 tomorrow at TN.
 

Wade

EOG Master
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

titans an easy cover
 

winner_13

EOG Senior Member
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

How does EOG let these threads continue? You just called him a "silly lil nig"
 

winner_13

EOG Senior Member
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

And said they have inferior genetics.


Betting on the better coach is okay, maybe most of the non black ones are better than black coachs but calling people a "silly lil nig" and saying they're inferior is too far.
 
Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

Re: Dont forget to bet against black coaches

:LMAONever ever change Coach Hazell. Promise us:LMAO
 

Woodrow Wilson

EOG Dedicated
Re: Don't forget to bet against black coaches

Franklin has been good, but even he crapped his pants today losing to Illinois laying nearly a td. :lightbulb:
 
Re: Don't forget to bet against black coaches

U wot m8
http://www.racismreview.com/blog/2014/11/21/college-sports-black-coaches-season/

College Sports: Why Few Black Coaches Again This Season?


November 21, 2014*•*Michael R*•*academic,African Americans,*sports


Have you ever wondered to yourself while watching a college football game on a Saturday afternoon why there are so many (often times a majority) black players on the field, but*an overwhelming majority of fans and coaches are white?*If you have not, rest assured you are not alone. The black athlete and everything else white seems to be the norm. The problem, however, is this racial standard continues to hamper blacks’ progression throughout US society, and is even more elucidated in the very institution one would expect the most progress to be made – sport.
When considering the historical and systemic nature of racism in the US (see Feagin, 2006), much more attention has been placed on economic, political, educational, and legal institutions. The institution of sport, however, tends to be overlooked. Perhaps this is the case because of*its egalitarian fa?ade*that gets displayed to the public. What is not being shown is the real racial inequality that has and continues to exist in the leadership structure of sport. Most prominent is the multi-billion dollar industry of NCAA Division I collegiate athletics. For instance, according to Lapchick, Hoff, and Kaiser’s (2011) latest*Racial and Gender Report Card for college athletics, black male student-athletes are*overly represented (60.9% and 45.8%)*in the two most revenue generating sports (basketball and football, respectively); however, black head coaches for men’s basketball and football are*represented at 21% and 5.1%, respectively, and assistant coaches at 39.5% and 17.6%, respectively. Even worse,whites dominate (81.8%) the athletic director role*as well. Considering sport represents a microcosm of society, reflecting its ideals, hierarchies, and problems (see Edwards, 1973; Eitzen & Sage, 1997; Sage, 1998), it is not surprising to see whites in a position that guarantees them the most abundant financial rewards. As a result of this white hierarchy, though, blacks wishing to enter the coaching profession continue to face racial barriers.

Hawkins (2001) argues the power structure of NCAA Division I predominantly white institutions of higher education (PWIHE) “operate as colonizers who prey on the athletic prowess of young black males, recruit them from black communities, exploit their athletic talents, and discard them once they are injured or their eligibility is exhausted” (p. 1). Thiscolonial model*seems fitting, given several researchers (e.g., Eitzen, 2000; Hawkins, 2001; Lapchick, 2003) have found that black student-athletes on PWIHE campuses are entrenched in a system that exploits them politically, economically, and racially. For those black student-athletes who do survive the abuse, they continue to find their professional outlook limited.

The notion of*stacking in sport, or positioning of players to central or non-central positions on the field based on race and/or ethnicity, often surfaces as an explanation as to how whites carry on their dominance in sport leadership. Whites have traditionally placed themselves in more central positions, positions associated with greater interaction, leadership, and intelligence; while blacks have been situated in more peripheral positions, which are linked to less leadership, minimal interaction, and greater athletic ability. Brooks and Althouse (2000) found there to be a correlation between those higher up in the leadership ranks (e.g., head coach, athletic director) with past playing position. In particular, prestigious sport jobs are generally acquired by those who have played more central positions (e.g., quarterback in football, pitcher in baseball); thus, because blacks more often are relegated to peripheral positions (e.g., wide-receiver in football, outfield in baseball), blacks are often framed as less qualified to enter leadership positions beyond the playing field.

Further explanations (e.g., Sagas & Cunningham, 2005; Sartore & Cunningham, 2006) demonstrate blacks’ promotional and/or hiring coaching opportunities are thwarted due to the tendency of white decision-makers choosing white candidates (qualified and unqualified) over qualified blacks. This struggle for racial equality is more troubling given those with the final hiring decision (i.e., athletic director) perceive employment opportunities to be equal for blacks (Tabron, 2004), which ultimately trickles down to those wishing to enter the coaching profession (e.g., black student-athletes), since they perceive they will have to contend with racial inequality prior to and once in the profession (e.g., Cunningham & Singer; Kamphoff & Gill, 2008). This racist sporting reality, similar to wider US society, illustrates blacks have a long way to go for racial justice.
 
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