HUSKER 37
New member
Maybe it started here: http://firemarkmay.blogspot.com/2006/10/i-...orite-team.htmli told you guys a few weeks ago he makes his predictions on emotion, not fact...here's a fact--for some reason he has a bone to pick with the Cornhuskers and their fans. here's some emotion--forgive him Lord for he knows not what he does. And forgive us of the carnage we reap when we crush, son, crush. :bonez
Outland Trophy winners:
1983 - Dean Steinkuhler, G Nebraska
1982 - David Rimington, C Nebraska
1981 - David Rimington, C Nebraska
1980 - Mark May, T Pittsburgh
But others also let him "get" to them. Gator Fans are convinced he's out to get them..And W.Va...
West Virginia fans mail pennies to Mark MayWhat comes around, goes around, I guess.
ESPN commentator Mark May said, during the West Virginia football game against Virginia Tech, that Mountaineer fans were throwing pennies at the opposing players "because they couldn't afford nickels."
The next day, Martinsburg, W.Va., attorney Mike Burke mailed 50,000 pennies to May at ESPN. Burke sent along a note saying it was all the pennies that had been thrown at players from Pitt, where May played offensive tackle.
"We threw quarters at all the other visiting teams," Burke wrote. "But Pitt's players were known to be so well-paid that only pennies were necessary for them."

Mark May did not allow a sack in his junior and senior seasons (1979-80), anchoring a Pittsburgh squad that that posted a combined 22-2 record. A unanimous All-America selection and Outland Trophy recipient in 1980, May captained a team that went 11-1 and finished second in the final AP rankings. The 1980 squad featured College Football Hall of Fame teammates Dan Marino, Jimbo Covert and Hugh Green. After college, May was selected by the Washington Redskins in the first round of the 1981 NFL Draft. May played 12 years in the NFL and started in three Super Bowls, winning Super Bowl XVII and XXII. He is currently a studio analyst for ESPN.
Last edited by a moderator: