johnnybronco
Footballguy
With all due respect to the man and what he accomplished in his career, does he fit into the ESPN Countdown crew? I just don't see it. When he talks, I just tune out, he just doesn't have the "it" factor to be on TV.
I thought Keyshawn did a very good job on draft day.Emmitt is doing okay, but Keyshawn is an idiot, imho.
Except for his prediction about the Panthers drafting Jarrett to learn from Key, and to replace him down the road.I thought Keyshawn did a very good job on draft day.Emmitt is doing okay, but Keyshawn is an idiot, imho.
Well, he's clean, he's articulate, he's...I missed Emmitt, but I think Keyshawn has been doing a great job. he's very well spoken and much less of an idiot than Irvin was.
Truly. Emmitt was solid, good take on Pennington and TJ, grammar was fine. It was Keyshawn stumbling and he pronounces supposably so clearly it makes me laugh.And the Cowboy hating begins..........![]()
Speaking on NFLN Can Jamie Dukes get anymore annoying? Wow. Well I guess he can since they give him his own show.Sort of along the same lines...With all the local broadcasters being aired on NFLN it seems to me that there's a rule that states that a local broadcast must include one former player who is almost completely unintelligible. i can't remember who was the worst, but it seemed like every game I was listening to somebody call plays and Shannon Sharp in the booth with him.
stastistics.Truly. Emmitt was solid, good take on Pennington and TJ, grammar was fine. It was Keyshawn stumbling and he pronounces supposably so clearly it makes me laugh.And the Cowboy hating begins..........![]()
The Cowboys aren't good enough to hate.And the Cowboy hating begins..........![]()
To whom is that obvious? Not to me.He is obviously a smart man,
They both stink!Emmitt is doing okay, but Keyshawn is an idiot, imho.
Not really, a thread like this is started every week.lol, i think I started something here..........woops
Hahaha!!!vandyt said:Except for his prediction about the Panthers drafting Jarrett to learn from Key, and to replace him down the road.jeter23 said:I thought Keyshawn did a very good job on draft day.Reservoir Dog said:Emmitt is doing okay, but Keyshawn is an idiot, imho.
Marvin88 said:They both stink!Reservoir Dog said:Emmitt is doing okay, but Keyshawn is an idiot, imho.
DEAR ESPN, FIRE EMMITT
One of these days, Emmitt Smith will show up at PFT headquarters and put his shoe so far up my ### that a lace will be protruding from a nostril.
But we can't keep quiet about this. Emmit was a great football player. He is unfit to be a broadcaster. He needs to go. Now.
Consider these lowlights from Monday night's pregame show, which we recorded so that we could get the quotes right.
First, Emmitt referred to his new colleague, former NFL coach Bill Parcells, simply as "Parcells."
Then, Emmitt got himself all tongue tied when talking about Mike Vick. Consider this passage: "let alone now spending three -- three years or whatever many -- however many time -- how much time he's away from the game."
Later, Emmitt made up a new word, using "trickilate" in place of "trickle."
Also, Emmitt generally needs to work on his conjugation of verbs. We understand that, in some settings, it's okay to speak in an informal, colloquial manner. But, when attempting to work as a broadcaster, it's time to talk correctly. You know, like a guy who has been to college.
It's not "he come," it's "he comes." It's not "he like," it's "he likes." It's not "all he have to do," it's "all he has to do."
There's simply no excuse for a guy who now makes a living by talking to talk so poorly. And to not demand that ESPN and other networks hire men and women who can speak properly sends a subtle message to the audience that it's perfectly okay for them to butcher the language, too.
And, please, don't send us a bunch of e-mails arguing that Emmitt is entitled to learn on the fly. There are plenty of people who could do that job better than Emmitt. He was hired for his name recognition, and nothing more. We're supposed to be impressed that ESPN was able to attract the all-time leading rusher -- and we're supposed to not notice that, if he played football like he comments on it, he would have been cut during the first week of camp.
Emmit was bad, i tuned out after hearing his first few opinions. I could almost care less how he talks, his thoughts were just....blah, blah, blah...the whole show tonight came as just more politically correct BS that seems to flow non-stop from most mainstream media outletsceo3west said:I never thought I'd say it, but they've downgraded from Irvin.
well, Emmitt says 'axed' when he's supposed to say `asked`.I think Sterling Sharpe is one of the best studio guys around.Very articulate, speaks well,knows his stuffChaos Commish said:Truly. Emmitt was solid, good take on Pennington and TJ, grammar was fine. It was Keyshawn stumbling and he pronounces supposably so clearly it makes me laugh.BigTex said:And the Cowboy hating begins..........![]()
Yes, those are the things I remembered when I posted my grammar comment above. Can't say if he was better last night -- didn't need to hear any more Vikc talk. And, speaking of that, while OT to Emmit, I could not believe they were interviewing reporters on the sideline at the expense of not calling plays -- even on a Falcons touchdown drive. I don't care if it is pre-season. They spend hours talking about whether Joey can succeed and then, instead of calling the drive talke to an Atlanta reporter who doesn't even like football. Okay, I fell better now...I think ProFootballTalk.com had the most astute commentary on Emmitt as a broadcaster:
DEAR ESPN, FIRE EMMITT
Later, Emmitt made up a new word, using "trickilate" in place of "trickle."
Also, Emmitt generally needs to work on his conjugation of verbs. We understand that, in some settings, it's okay to speak in an informal, colloquial manner. But, when attempting to work as a broadcaster, it's time to talk correctly. You know, like a guy who has been to college.
It's not "he come," it's "he comes." It's not "he like," it's "he likes." It's not "all he have to do," it's "all he has to do."
There's simply no excuse for a guy who now makes a living by talking to talk so poorly. And to not demand that ESPN and other networks hire men and women who can speak properly sends a subtle message to the audience that it's perfectly okay for them to butcher the language, too.