Michael Myers

Michael Myers
leverage
It's been pretty impressive. He's long and tall. He's down there getting leverage on every play. That's why he's so good.
front guys pass trying
Right now we're trying to pass as much as we can, and the guys up front are finishing,
believe chance dakota entering legal location remote scholars south upheld warm
I think most legal scholars believe the South Dakota statute has a very remote chance of being upheld - a snowball entering a warm location in its chance of survival.
calls rather within
We'd rather go forward, but we have to play within the defense, and if it calls for us to drop, we drop.
amount collected scratch today
The amount collected today won't even make a scratch in the amount that is owed.
careers talked
We have talked a lot about getting a new beginning, ... We don't ever want to be apart. We want to end our careers here.
crawl scratch
Now we know what it takes. So we just take it back to the off-season and crawl back up from scratch again.
build
We've just got to come back and build upon what we did this year.
answer court perceptive students
The more perceptive students answer that the court didn't make that determination.
far sponsor writes
They are far more than a sponsor who just writes a check.
gets great pass prepared running
He gets you prepared for all situations. He's a great teacher, techniquewise, pass rushing, running game. He's just a great all-around coach.
anybody helps
I'll like anybody that comes in and helps us win.
small-numbers years common-sense
I am troubled by the lack of common sense regarding carbon dioxide emissions. Our greatest greenhouse gas is water. Atmospheric spectroscopy reveals why water has a 95 percent and CO2 a 3.6 percent contribution to the 'greenhouse effect.' Carbon dioxide emissions worldwide each year total 3.2 billion tons. That equals about 0.0168 percent of the atmosphere's CO2 concentration of about 19 trillion tons. This results in a 0.00064 percent increase in the absorption of the sun's radiation. This is an insignificantly small number.
taken men errors
'Scientific' computer simulations predict global warming based on increased greenhouse gas emissions over time. However, without water's contribution taken into account they omit the largest greenhouse gas from their equations. How can such egregious calculation errors be so blatantly ignored? This is why man-made global warming is 'junk' science.