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3-7-77

This thread totally delivered.
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biga75 said:
Already up to 5 pages on Bisonville http://www.bisonville.com/forum/showthread.php?33858-3-7-77&s=646c809befc76c6636ac22bd5909aa8d" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
No way it makes 17 pages here :coffee:
Ya that's cus they got like 10 post per page and we bring 25 per page. BOOM! That's how WE roll b*tches!
 
statler & waldorf said:
Griz1952: Good read. E-mail it to the NCAA.

Invetigative bodies normally first look at the credibility of the source:

Bobby Hauck era (2003–2009)[edit]
(80-17) Record, (5-2) vs. Cats
Bobby Hauck began his tenure in 2003 and over the next 7 years would win a share of the Big Sky Conference title every year and make it to the national championship in 2004, 2008, and 2009. Unfortunately, Montana would win none of those. After the 2009 season Hauck left to take the head coaching job at UNLV.

Robin Pflugrad era (2010–2011)[edit]
(13-7) Record, (1-1) vs. Cats
In 2009, Robin Pflugrad returned to Montana to become the wide receivers coach under Bobby Hauck. After that season, Hauck left Montana to become the head coach at UNLV, and Pflugrad was promoted to replace him. Pflugrad said after his hiring that Montana would be "very fast on offense, up-tempo and upbeat." Pflugrad led Montana to a Big Sky Conference title and a national semifinal appearance in 2011, but those were vacated by the NCAA on July 26, 2013 due to infractions. Individually, Pflugrad was hit with numerous sanctions by the NCAA for his part in the infractions.

Mick Delaney era (2012–Present)[edit]
(14-8) Record, (1-1) vs. Cats
Mick Delaney is currently the head coach at the University of Montana. Delaney was hired July 26, 2012, replacing former head coach Robin Pflugrad. On July 26, 2013 the NCAA found the Montana football program guilty of multiple major infractions and one secondary infraction. None of these infractions occurred whiled Delaney was the head coach
 
CAS4127 said:
statler & waldorf said:
Griz1952: Good read. E-mail it to the NCAA.

Invetigative bodies normally first look at the credibility of the source:

Bobby Hauck era (2003–2009)[edit]
(80-17) Record, (5-2) vs. Cats
Bobby Hauck began his tenure in 2003 and over the next 7 years would win a share of the Big Sky Conference title every year and make it to the national championship in 2004, 2008, and 2009. Unfortunately, Montana would win none of those. After the 2009 season Hauck left to take the head coaching job at UNLV.

Robin Pflugrad era (2010–2011)[edit]
(13-7) Record, (1-1) vs. Cats
In 2009, Robin Pflugrad returned to Montana to become the wide receivers coach under Bobby Hauck. After that season, Hauck left Montana to become the head coach at UNLV, and Pflugrad was promoted to replace him. Pflugrad said after his hiring that Montana would be "very fast on offense, up-tempo and upbeat." Pflugrad led Montana to a Big Sky Conference title and a national semifinal appearance in 2011, but those were vacated by the NCAA on July 26, 2013 due to infractions. Individually, Pflugrad was hit with numerous sanctions by the NCAA for his part in the infractions.

Mick Delaney era (2012–Present)[edit]
(14-8) Record, (1-1) vs. Cats
Mick Delaney is currently the head coach at the University of Montana. Delaney was hired July 26, 2012, replacing former head coach Robin Pflugrad. On July 26, 2013 the NCAA found the Montana football program guilty of multiple major infractions and one secondary infraction. None of these infractions occurred whiled Delaney was the head coach

Maybe its code for CAS4127

Afterall C is 3rd letter of alphabet
AS4 just means "as 4"
The 1-2, means one 7 then two 7s
No wonder your fanbase gets a bad rap.
 
Strange accusations considering Montana has lost scholarships due to NCAA violations twice since the 70s and as recently as a few years ago, and NDSU has never.

http://m.missoulian.com/news/local/ncaa-places-um-football-program-on-probation-vacates-wins/article_051efb6a-f60f-11e2-8a0c-001a4bcf887a.html?mobile_touch=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

1971 was followed by a work-study scandal that eventually led to Swarthout's resignation. In 1972, a federal grand jury returned a 32-count indictment charging five university officials and coaches (including Swarthout) with conspiring to illegally use federal-aid money by using some of the funds to pay for fictitious jobs for athletes.[6] Though Swarthout was found innocent, the charges hurt recruiting and the student-body government decided to withdraw financial support for athletic programs.[7][8]
 
Umm, this dude has something wrong with him.

I'd feel bad for you but at least you're not out in the world hurting people... I hope. :thumb: Keep letting the crazy out if that's what keeps you sane.
 
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