Ethan Brown

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Ethan Brown

Ethan Brown

@downtown_ebrown

Hello.. is this thing on?

Katılım Şubat 2012
372 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@PaulZeise DeChambeau has become incredibly insufferable. Rory is a class act and one of the best on the tour. Then again you’re a MAGAt so it fits.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@pittsburghfan25 @JeffCarnage @mrewanmurray When did Tirico confirm that no R&A official ever saw DeChambeau break the rules until someone phoned it in. Guarantee you they saw it themselves on a broadcast somewhere as it happened.
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Ewan Murray
Ewan Murray@mrewanmurray·
It’s understood Bryson went to the R&A’s chief executive immediately post round to request his scorecard for yesterday. His request was declined.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@unaveragefan No, I just don’t feel like you should be hating on him for reporting and making claims that he was making shit up by applying your own spin.
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Unaverage Fan
Unaverage Fan@unaveragefan·
@downtown_ebrown Ah so now you want to speak in technicality. Lmao buddy you’re just a simp for him
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@unaveragefan Sorry but when was “expected” a guaranteed stamp of 100% going to happen? It’s not. It’s saying that likely would be this week. Also, week isn’t over, not that I think it’s happening soon.
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Rep. Jack Kimble
Rep. Jack Kimble@RepJackKimble·
We will never have fair elections until we ban voting once and for all.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@RapidResponse47 There’s also wildfires happening in “Republican States.” Why are you not blaming them for poorly maintaining their forests?
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Michigan Metal 〽️
Michigan Metal 〽️@Metaleka_·
Yeah I'm going to stop you right there @DarkoStateNews and tell you the fallacies in your argument: This is exactly why your poker analogy doesn't work. Poker has one variable: the cards. Football has hundreds. You're assuming the NCAA violation automatically explains Michigan's success. Those are two separate arguments. If Michigan's rise was simply Connor Stallions, explain the timeline. Stallions had been around the program since roughly 2018. During that stretch, Michigan: • Lost 62-39 to Ohio State in 2018. • Lost again in 2019. • Got physically dominated by Wisconsin. • Finished 2-4 in 2020. If sign stealing was the secret ingredient, why wasn't Michigan elite from 2018 through 2020? The actual turning point wasn't Connor Stallions. It was football. In 2021 Jim Harbaugh hired Mike Macdonald from the Baltimore Ravens. Michigan completely changed defensively. Don Brown's defense relied heavily on aggressive man coverage, single-high looks, and pressure packages that elite offenses repeatedly exposed. Macdonald installed NFL concepts: • split-safety coverages • disguised fronts • simulated pressures • adaptable game plans • improved gap discipline Michigan immediately became one of the smartest and most disciplined defenses in college football. Then Jesse Minter took over in 2022 and 2023 and didn't miss a beat. Michigan fielded another elite defense, won a national championship, and Minter left for the NFL because of the work he produced. Mike Macdonald also returned to the NFL, coordinated one of the league's best defenses, and became an NFL head coach and a SUPER BOWL CHAMPION. Elite coaches continued being elite after leaving Michigan. Jim Harbaugh's coaching résumé speaks for itself. He rebuilt Stanford, took the 49ers to multiple NFC Championship Games and a Super Bowl, rebuilt Michigan, Then immediately returned to the NFL and changed another organization's culture. That isn't something Connor Stallions created. Ben Herbert built arguably the most physical team in college football. You don't fake fourth-quarter dominance, offensive line development, defensive line play, or conditioning with stolen signals. Then look at the players. Blake Corum (RB1B Rams) Mike Sainristil (Starting CB Washington) Aidan Hutchinson (Starting Edge Detriot) Josiah Stewart (Starting LB Rams) Josh Wallace (Starting CB Rams) Colston Loveland (Starting TE Bears) Super Bowl Champion AJ Barner (Starting TE Seahawks) Those players didn't become NFL-caliber talent because someone knew a sideline signal. They became NFL players because they were developed. Your argument also ignores what happened after the investigation became public. Michigan beat Penn State at HAPPY VALLEY by running the ball 32 CONSECUTIVE times. Michigan beat Ohio State in 2023. Then beat Alabama. Then beat Washington. Those teams had weeks to prepare, access to Michigan's film, and knew exactly what Michigan wanted to do. The games were decided by execution, talent, coaching, and physicality. You also ignore that Ohio State reportedly changed its signals in 2022 and still lost 45-23. That game was decided by explosive plays, missed tackles, busted coverages, and Michigan winning the line of scrimmage. Knowing a signal doesn't force a safety to take a bad angle on an 80-yard touchdown. The TCU game cuts against your argument as well. Michigan scored 45 points and outgained TCU but lost because of two pick-sixes, a goal-line fumble, defensive busts, and red-zone mistakes. Execution decided that game. None of this is saying Michigan didn't violate NCAA rules. If the NCAA says the advanced scouting violated its rules, then Michigan violated those rules. The leap you're making is saying that because a rule was broken, every win from 2021 through 2023 is automatically illegitimate. That's an opinion, not a conclusion established by the evidence. Michigan's turnaround lines up with modernizing its schemes, hiring Mike Macdonald, retaining that defensive identity under Jesse Minter, improving strength and conditioning under Ben Herbert, developing NFL talent, and becoming one of the nation's most physical teams. Connor Stallions may have broken NCAA rules. But reducing three years of elite coaching, player development, and championship-level football to one staffer ignores nearly everything that actually happened on the field and is BAD FAITH.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@peptometry @Metaleka_ @DarkoStateNews Per Merriam-Webster; cheat (intransitive verb): “to violate rules dishonestly.” I don’t think they were honestly violating the rules. Also, great insult. Takes me back to when kids were losing arguments in middle school.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@PurdueBballGuy Trump did not prove China stole our data and rigged our elections. He made another baseless claim to rile up his base that contracts our very own evidence gathered by the US intelligence community.
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DerekJordanCBB
DerekJordanCBB@PurdueBballGuy·
Whole lotta liberals on this app tonight screaming and yelling about Trump. Not normal activity for people who are right. Typically if someone comes out with false accusations and lies, they are dismissed. Seems like the response here is more anger and frustration, typical signs of someone caught. Not a political position, just an observation. But to me, finding out that china stole our data, openly was caught interfering and it was hid, and hundreds of thousands non citizens registered to vote, are pretty big issues. No one gives a shit about the 2020 election, but that’s all I am seeing from politicians and “experts.” What about the shit that was exposed that is actually important?
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Unaverage Fan
Unaverage Fan@unaveragefan·
Metal…. This is beautiful
Michigan Metal 〽️@Metaleka_

Yeah I'm going to stop you right there @DarkoStateNews and tell you the fallacies in your argument: This is exactly why your poker analogy doesn't work. Poker has one variable: the cards. Football has hundreds. You're assuming the NCAA violation automatically explains Michigan's success. Those are two separate arguments. If Michigan's rise was simply Connor Stallions, explain the timeline. Stallions had been around the program since roughly 2018. During that stretch, Michigan: • Lost 62-39 to Ohio State in 2018. • Lost again in 2019. • Got physically dominated by Wisconsin. • Finished 2-4 in 2020. If sign stealing was the secret ingredient, why wasn't Michigan elite from 2018 through 2020? The actual turning point wasn't Connor Stallions. It was football. In 2021 Jim Harbaugh hired Mike Macdonald from the Baltimore Ravens. Michigan completely changed defensively. Don Brown's defense relied heavily on aggressive man coverage, single-high looks, and pressure packages that elite offenses repeatedly exposed. Macdonald installed NFL concepts: • split-safety coverages • disguised fronts • simulated pressures • adaptable game plans • improved gap discipline Michigan immediately became one of the smartest and most disciplined defenses in college football. Then Jesse Minter took over in 2022 and 2023 and didn't miss a beat. Michigan fielded another elite defense, won a national championship, and Minter left for the NFL because of the work he produced. Mike Macdonald also returned to the NFL, coordinated one of the league's best defenses, and became an NFL head coach and a SUPER BOWL CHAMPION. Elite coaches continued being elite after leaving Michigan. Jim Harbaugh's coaching résumé speaks for itself. He rebuilt Stanford, took the 49ers to multiple NFC Championship Games and a Super Bowl, rebuilt Michigan, Then immediately returned to the NFL and changed another organization's culture. That isn't something Connor Stallions created. Ben Herbert built arguably the most physical team in college football. You don't fake fourth-quarter dominance, offensive line development, defensive line play, or conditioning with stolen signals. Then look at the players. Blake Corum (RB1B Rams) Mike Sainristil (Starting CB Washington) Aidan Hutchinson (Starting Edge Detriot) Josiah Stewart (Starting LB Rams) Josh Wallace (Starting CB Rams) Colston Loveland (Starting TE Bears) Super Bowl Champion AJ Barner (Starting TE Seahawks) Those players didn't become NFL-caliber talent because someone knew a sideline signal. They became NFL players because they were developed. Your argument also ignores what happened after the investigation became public. Michigan beat Penn State at HAPPY VALLEY by running the ball 32 CONSECUTIVE times. Michigan beat Ohio State in 2023. Then beat Alabama. Then beat Washington. Those teams had weeks to prepare, access to Michigan's film, and knew exactly what Michigan wanted to do. The games were decided by execution, talent, coaching, and physicality. You also ignore that Ohio State reportedly changed its signals in 2022 and still lost 45-23. That game was decided by explosive plays, missed tackles, busted coverages, and Michigan winning the line of scrimmage. Knowing a signal doesn't force a safety to take a bad angle on an 80-yard touchdown. The TCU game cuts against your argument as well. Michigan scored 45 points and outgained TCU but lost because of two pick-sixes, a goal-line fumble, defensive busts, and red-zone mistakes. Execution decided that game. None of this is saying Michigan didn't violate NCAA rules. If the NCAA says the advanced scouting violated its rules, then Michigan violated those rules. The leap you're making is saying that because a rule was broken, every win from 2021 through 2023 is automatically illegitimate. That's an opinion, not a conclusion established by the evidence. Michigan's turnaround lines up with modernizing its schemes, hiring Mike Macdonald, retaining that defensive identity under Jesse Minter, improving strength and conditioning under Ben Herbert, developing NFL talent, and becoming one of the nation's most physical teams. Connor Stallions may have broken NCAA rules. But reducing three years of elite coaching, player development, and championship-level football to one staffer ignores nearly everything that actually happened on the field and is BAD FAITH.

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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@Blue2Bongo Funny. The trophy looks exactly the same. We even have one to match. What about you?
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@Metaleka_ @DarkoStateNews That doesn’t matter. He was affiliated with the university since 2018 and there was evidence he was illegally stealing signs as early as 2021.
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@Marshall23szn Pretty sure the only people who don’t take him seriously are the Michigan fans who hate the truth. Are you saying it’s not wrong to retweet antisemitic posts, or liking posts that are pro-slavery? What about the rest of the list with more serious scandals?
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〽️arshall 〽️atters
〽️arshall 〽️atters@Marshall23szn·
This is why nobody takes Justin Spiro seriously. I’m not going to sit here and defend some of the stuff on this list because it is bad but are we serious? Retweeting a post? Liking a tweet? The Kalel Mullings “alleged” stomp 😂😂😂 Fluffing this list with BS to try and help you puff your chest just further proves how unserious you are as a “journalist”
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Signs Make Me Cope
Signs Make Me Cope@Ohiofuckinsux·
@cseem20 A great day indeed🙌 The meltdown in Columbus made it that much better🤣🤣
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ttwfo.
ttwfo.@cseem20·
ryan day deadass owe me n buckeye nation a apology for the shit that happened 11/30/24
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Ethan Brown
Ethan Brown@downtown_ebrown·
@Ohiofuckinsux @cseem20 Imagine the state of for profit Michigan athletics. Win a Natty in football by cheating, HC leaves. The heir to the throne comes in and ends up fired and arrested. Basketball hires a coach who commits assault, ends up being fired for poor performance. New coach wins a Natty…
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