12 - 0
11 - 1
10 - 2
9 - 3
8 - 4
7 - 5
6 - 6
5 - 7
4 - 8
3 - 9
2 - 10
1 - 11
0 - 12
I really know that it appears that we won't win that many games. If we falter to McNeese.............. this will be the worst day in the history of the program! I was talking to a former player & his take is that Bustle & his staff will depart with 4 or less wins. WHY DO WE EXCEPT LOSING EVERY DAM YEAR!!! I'm sick of it!!!
Note to self: If ever you write something in all caps because you are trying to make your point known, make sure to use proper grammar and not write things that will embarrass you such as 'except' when you really mean to write 'accept'. Doing such things will make you lose an extraordinary amount of credibility with those who read your comments.
Holy hyperbole, Batman!!!
Jeese, and here I was thinking that losing to DII North Alabama was the low water mark.
From their official site "UNA's win over Southwestern Louisiana in 1997 marked just the fifth win ever by an NCAA Division II school over a Division I opponent since the NCAA restructuring in 1973."
THAT, my friend was the worst day in the history of the program.
AND, we are a LOOOOONNNNGG way away away from that with no plans to return.
So cheer up.
I am just glad I'm not a Stanford fan -
"UC Davis Stuns Stanford For Improbable 20-17 Win
Grant finds Smith with just eight seconds to deliver Aggies upset win
Tony Kays makes a 19-yard catch to the 6-yard line on the Aggies' winning drive on Saturday.
Sept. 18, 2005
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Jon Grant stepped into the huddle before UC Davis' final drive and delivered a message to his teammates that would have seemed most improbable just a few hours earlier.
"What better stage could we be on. We're at Stanford Stadium. We're about to go on a game-winning drive," Grant told his teammates.
Then he delivered, capping a 72-yard march with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Blaise Smith with 8 seconds left Saturday night to stun Stanford 20-17 and spoil coach Walt Harris' home debut for the Cardinal.
After UC Davis (1-2) lost its opening two games to New Hampshire and Portland State, going on the road against a Pac-10 team didn't seem like the place for a team making the transition from Division II to Division I-AA to get its first win.
After falling behind 17-0 midway through the second quarter, it seemed even more unlikely, but the Aggies didn't give in and became the first non-Division I-A team ever to beat Stanford."
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