Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Saints message board
#11
on top of  all that they were saying aint fans even had whistles to try and mess up the rams O---that there should be a penalty(yell all ya want but mimicking the ref to throw off the game)  SHAME
Reply

#12
Hey New Orleans,

[Image: raw?appid=YMailNorrinLaunch&ymreqid=2ed0...NePJFcLA02][Image: eqljrw.jpg]
Reply

#13
Not one of them had the self-awareness (or the intellectual honesty) to admit that THEY won their only Super Bowl under similar circumstances (conspiracy theory and all)- except they were the beneficiaries of the terrible calls.  They really should shut the Farve up and accept that "The Refs giveth... and the Refs taketh away."  At least they got their Super Bowl (tainted as it is).
Reply

#14
God I love this thread!! 
Reply

#15
Even still this morning. I was hearing... They need to rectify this wrong. Heard one guy even saying the league should make the Rams forfeit the game...Baawaaahahaha!!!
So now this cheating dirty team is a victim? The team that was given a 1st down in OT in FG range on a Brees throw away they called PI. After cheating all game and being out played. Do any of these clowns remember? You do know coaches and players were suspended right??? Everyone of these clowns who are crying for Brees and the Saints today should apologize to Farve and us Viking fans 1st.
I'm with you Vikergirl. Suck it Saints!!!
A karma ran over your dogma. F you Saints!
Reply

#16
Though this non call was fairly obvious, these refs have been terrible for a long time. Every team gets hosed by non calls. Sometimes several per game. It is more prevalent in the playoffs because the refs don't want to be the ones to determine the outcome. How ironic.
Reminds me of the Packers. The calls are fine when they go their way, but they cry like a skinned cat if they go against them.
The entire Saints organization can cry me a river. I'm rather enjoying it as justice served.
And no. I don't hate, nor have I ever skinned a cat. Lol!
Reply

#17
Dudes.... WTF?!

We are Vikings.... We should invade that message board and pile on the misery!
Reply

#18
Honestly this is the high point of the playoffs for me. Don't give a shit about the Super Bowl. Last years miracle. Now the Saint's feeling the misery of being hosed by the refs...priceless. Cry away it only makes it sweeter. Cry for 2 weeks till the game if you like. Please do actually.
Reply

#19
Could you imagine if the Vikings had a bounty system in place?  Oh, wait...

Exerts from Gunslinger.

On September 8, 2008, a year before Brett Favre would join the organization, the Minnesota Vikings traveled to Lambeau Field to face the Green Bay Packers. Aside from being Aaron Rodgers’s debut as a starter, the game was noteworthy for its physicality and aggressiveness. In the first half alone, the teams combined for 12 penalties for 86 yards. It was a sloppy, messy, nasty affair, and in the days and weeks following the Packers’ 24–19 win, Minnesota’s coaches stewed. After watching the tape, they were convinced that Nick Barnett, Green Bay’s outstanding linebacker, had gone out of his way to injure Adrian Peterson, the Vikings halfback.
The rival franchises played again nine weeks later, and three days before kickoff a Minnesota coach stood up in a team meeting, mentioned Barnett by name, and said, “I will give $500 to anyone who takes this motherfucker out of the game.”
This was hardly a shocking move in the Vikings’ locker room, where piles of money were regularly collected—then distributed as rewards—for injuring opposing stars. “It was part of the culture,” said Artis Hicks, a Minnesota offensive lineman. “I had coaches start a pot and all the veterans put in an extra $100, $200, and if you hurt someone special, you get the money. There was a bottom line, and I think we all bought in: you’re there to win, and if taking out the other team’s best player helps you win, hey, it’s nothing personal. Just business.”
Although the Barnett affair occurred in 2008, Hicks insists the Vikings were no different a year later, when Brett Favre was quarterback. He recalled no one on the team complaining, nobody arguing with the approach. “This isn’t a game or culture for the fainthearted,” Hicks said. “You bleed, you suffer, you sacrifice, and if need be, you try and knock people out. It’s the NFL
Reply

#20
Holy balls I am getting so much pleasure reading their forum.
Reply



Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)

Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2024 Melroy van den Berg.