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*** Saturday DE update

Some news to pass along this Saturday.

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We have repeatedly mentioned that Clemson has two DEs in the crosshairs for another spot.

One of those has been Ijamsville (Md.) Oakdale’s Dominic Nichols.

Nichols took an OV to Michigan two weeks ago and has been deliberating visiting Clemson again before making his decision.

Per our latest intel, we are no longer tracking Nichols.

NOTE: As is the case with all material posted by contributors here, please do not copy/paste or summarize any portion of this post to other message boards or social media, as it is a direct violation of copyright laws. Thank you.

OT: Sky Diving for dummies (or a dummy)

In lieu of the sub disaster this past week, I'm asking for a little help from anyone on here who has experience skydiving. For reference, my daughter wanted her high school graduation present to be her dad taking her skydiving. Unfortunately for her (not me, lol) she graduated in 2020 and Covid pretty much "shot" that down. Now she graduates from UNC-G in December so it's been brought back up again. I get the following:
- don't do it
- find something else to do

However this is something she really wants to do and I can't let her "one up" me, and quite frankly I kind of want to do it. So I'm starting the planning process now and would like any recommendations. Appreciate all responses.........that are helpful, lol.
  • Wow
Reactions: tallulahtiger30319

Herbie: People underestimating how much more movement there will be

Herbstreit was with McAfee today and made some interesting comments about realignment. Not a matter of if but when and where.

Says SEC/Big 10 likley going to "at least" 20 apiece.

Where does everyone end up? We'll see. Can tell at the end he even wonders what it all means but does appear to be in the works.

"After this year."
"What's left of the ACC."

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‘Everybody loves Americans'

‘Everybody loves Americans’: Why US tourists are a hot commodity

By: Blane Bachelor - CNN.com

Justin Albertynas, a travel industry expert based in Vilnius, Lithuania, has some good news for US travelers who might be a bit self-conscious about the “ugly American” stereotype.

His opinion: “It’s not true at all.”

“Europeans in general, and all the European businesses that I’ve made contact with during my years in the industry, they’re always welcoming to Americans,” explains Albertynas, who’s CEO and co-founder of Ratepunk, a startup whose browser extension scans major travel booking sites to uncover the lowest price on hotel rooms.

“Especially when they are from New York or LA, everybody is kind of putting them on a pedestal. So, actually on the contrary to the ugly American fad, everybody loves Americans.”

Not everybody might share Albertynas’s sentiment. But the tourism industry does seem to love at least one aspect of US travelers: their spending power.

The US market has long been a coveted demographic for tourism boards, tour operators and destination management companies (DMCs) throughout the world for numerous reasons, perhaps most notably because of their incomes: Averaging about $70,000 annually, salaries in the US are the seventh-highest in the world.

Discretionary income means higher budgets for travel expenses, and American tourists indeed tend to spend more on dining, hotels and organized tours than their counterparts in Europe and elsewhere, tourism experts say; they’re accustomed to tipping, too. They also take longer trips and often bring a passel of loved ones with them.

All of which means that as the travel industry continues to recover and businesses try to recoup losses from the downturn years of the pandemic, Americans could be even more coveted.

“This is something that’s always been happening, but given the pandemic and the lost business for a lot of travel brands when American tourists weren’t coming, I think it’s become even more important to remarket those experiences,” says Michael Rozenblit, co-founder of The World Was Here First, a travel site focused on US and European destinations and promoting responsible tourism.

“Following these couple of years when Americans were staying closer to home, there’s a renewed interest in operators and DMCs remarketing toward US tourists again now.”

Of course, the current summer crush – in Europe, for example, 55% more US travelers are projected to visit than last season – isn’t solely because of savvy marketing campaigns; it’s also the result of years of pent-up wanderlust.

Regardless, factor in the relatively strong dollar against currencies like the euro and the new normal of work-from-anywhere policies, and the US market appears poised to retain its spot high on the list of in-demand travelers for the foreseeable future.

A continent full of coveted travelers

Catherine Chaulet, president and CEO of Global DMC Partners, a network of independently owned DMCs and event planners, notes that along with the US, other markets in North and South America, including Canada, Mexico and Brazil, also have strong appeal in the tourism industry.

“These travelers are following the same trends, especially corporations,” Chaulet says. “They have money, they want to travel, and as a result, they’re sought-after demographics.”

One of the splashiest recent initiatives aimed at US and Canadian travelers is Tourism Australia’s “Come and Say G’day” campaign. Starring actors Rose Byrne and Will Arnett, the animated short film was launched in New York in October 2022, featuring Byrne, who’s originally from Australia, as a kangaroo, and Arnett, a Canadian, as a plush unicorn mistakenly placed in an Australian gift shop.

The nine-minute film has earned more than 50 million views as part of the organization’s ongoing effort to boost tourism numbers from high-yield US travelers – the second-largest international market behind China for Australian tourism, according to Chris Allison, vice president for The Americas at Tourism Australia.

“The latest results from Tourism Australia’s Consumer Demand Project (CDP) – our key research tool – show very positive results for the US market,” Allison tells CNN via email.

Similarly, G Adventures, a small-group adventure travel operator based in Toronto, describes the US as the “strongest, fastest-growing segment” out of its five key selling markets, which also include Canada, the UK, Germany and Australia, according to Steve Lima, vice president of growth in the US and Latin America.

“We continue to see US clients driving the highest ratio of seats on any one departure,” Lima says. “Increased resources, budgets and campaign funding are continually being awarded to the US region because of this. We’ve definitely seen an increase in national tourism boards coming to us here in the US with co-op marketing opportunities to increase their share of US travelers.”

Some online travel agencies, or OTAs, travel apps and other travel-centric startups are following a similar playbook by adjusting their marketing strategies specifically to target American travelers.

Ratepunk’s Albertynas explains that since the company had its soft launch in March 2022, it has continued to allocate more of its advertising and marketing budgets specifically toward the North American market.

“Sixty percent of content marketing spending goes to bloggers and influencers in the US and Canada, and our PR department has a clear objective to prioritize US and Canada-based publications,” Albertynas says.

“These decisions have proven very effective, and we have seen great returns. We have noticed that the US market is highly interested in and engaged with our work in the travel industry, and we’re slowly ‘dipping our toes’ and seeing how far we can push our marketing in the US.”

‘There’s an enthusiasm in Americans when they travel’

Chaulet also points out that, in addition to their purchasing power, American travelers tend to have certain cultural characteristics that make them especially appealing to tourism organizations.

“There’s an enthusiasm in Americans when they travel, which is really very much appreciated,” she explains, adding that immersive, exclusive experiences are increasingly in demand.

“Overall, I find that a lot of Americans and certainly Canadians are very interested in the local culture, the local foods, as part of the experience. Generally, they like to have access to exclusivity, so activities or venues that are difficult to get by yourself, anything that is unique, is particularly sought after by Americans.”

And while Americans are often criticized for their lack of work-life balance compared to some other Western nations, the explosion of remote work has sparked an uptick in US travelers bringing friends and family along for conferences and other business-centric events – and sticking around for a while afterward, too.

As a result, destinations that position themselves as an appealing place for both business and leisure can reap huge benefits, Chaulet says. “The biggest trend we’re seeing, and Americans are doing this, is when these workers travel, they bring their family and can work remotely and stay longer in the destination as well,” she says. “The blend of group and individual is happening a lot.”

Peter Anderson, managing director of Knightsbridge Circle, a membership-based luxury travel concierge service that opened a US office in 2022, notes another significant distinction of US travelers: their willingness to listen to the advice of experts.

“As a travel and lifestyle concierge, we also find that US members are far more likely to take on our recommendations, which makes for happier clients,” Anderson explains.

“Europeans have stronger opinions and already know what they want, even if it’s against our advice. We’ve experienced European clients booking a hotel against our advice and didn’t have a good time, which is frustrating for all parties involved.”

A flurry of new international flight routes from the US

One of the strongest indicators of how the tourism industry continues to court American travelers: newly launched airline routes and expanded service to the States. Although air travel demand has been growing globally since most pandemic restrictions have been lifted, tapping into the lucrative US market remains a top priority for many airlines, including both major carriers and budget operators.

“Opening new routes is immediately an opportunity for DMCs to target those audiences,” Chaulet says.

This June, British Airways started a new route from Cincinnati to London – an immensely popular destination for American travelers, especially royals watchers, over the last year – operating with a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner on five weekly flights during the summer (and four in the winter).

American travelers keen to experience New Zealand can take advantage of Qantas’s just-launched service from New York’s JFK to Auckland with three weekly flights, also on the Dreamliner. In addition, according to Allison, of Tourism Australia, airline seat capacity between the US and Australia is projected to reach 88% of pre-pandemic levels with 123 flights per week by the end of 2023.

Turkish Airlines and Emirates also continue to expand their US routes. Turkish’s four-times-weekly service from Seattle to Istanbul launched in 2022, with Detroit and Denver slated to start in Q4 of 2023. And this April, Emirates launched the first-ever service from Newark to Dubai, a 14-hour journey.

Meanwhile, the budget carrier segment is booming with new airlines and routes that service the States popping up with increasing regularity. One of the original players, French bee, launched in 2016 with nonstop flights from the US to Paris and Tahiti and has since expanded its US network significantly, with three additional routes from New York, Los Angeles, and Miami to Paris launched in 2021 and 2022.

French bee president Marc Rochet says the US market has responded especially well to the airline’s “a la carte” model, which features an economy and a premium cabin (no business class) and three ticketing options. Another bonus: French bee flies into Paris-Orly Airport, so passengers can avoid congested Charles de Gaulle, which is also about 25 minutes farther than Orly by car.

“Since the beginning, we have specifically targeted American travelers who rank price a top factor when booking international travel,” Rochet says. “We have seen such a strong demand from the US market that we have increased our daily frequencies across all routes this summer and onward.”

Budget carriers, including PLAY Airlines, an Iceland-based carrier whose routes between Europe and the US stop in Reykjavik, and ZIPAIR, which is a low-cost subsidiary of Japan Airlines that just launched service from San Francisco to Tokyo, also have entered the market – all with an eye on attracting American passengers.

In fact, PLAY, which started flights in April 2022, has just come off its busiest month on record: It carried 128,894 passengers in May, a 26% jump from April figures. It also recently announced service to Amsterdam, with four total destinations in the US.

“When PLAY began transatlantic flights last year, it marked a spark in growth,” CEO Birgir Jónsson told CNN Travel via email. “East Coast destinations including Boston, New York and Washington D.C. appeal to European passengers visiting the US, and they’re also key travel hubs bringing American tourists to Iceland and the rest of Europe.”

Tax Evasion for Dummies Authored by Hunter Biden

Nothing like concealing $2,500,000.00 in cash revenue

Then have a friend pay the tax bill and penalties which had to run after all the taxes originally due, interest , penalties and extras probably close to 3 to 4 million

So you get a sweetheart deal with serving no time where most people would get mucho years

So swing and miss on this one you Biden supporters as if this were Trump or DeSantis or any Conservative Supreme Court Nominee you would be frothing out of all body orifices

So jump in as I am not willing to keep having to listen to pathetic excuses when criminal conduct is rampant and clearly visible to the world

What If?

SEC becomes The SEFL (South Eastern Football League) 24 teams..... six 4 team divisions (maybe even a relegating lower division/league for the Dukes, Vandys, South Carolinas of the World) , rotating schedules like the NFL.... divison winners play division winners the following year etc. NFL style playoffs....I mean... why not? As much as I hate to admit it, College Football as we knew it, is dead. NIL is already here, paying players salary, players union etc. WILL be here at some point. Why not go ahead and embrace it? get a commissioner/college presidents/newly formed conference board of directors..... to put salary cap, establish operating rules.... The NCAA is impotent at this point. Not saying this is better than what we have grown up with and are used to, but its too late to put the toothpaste back in the tube, might as well go with the flow and make the best of it at this point.....

OK - I will put down the crack pipe and go back to my fantasy world now.... no more mushrooms for breakfast

SEC throwing Texas right into the deep end

SEC throwing Texas right into the deep end

By: Dan Wetzel - Yahoo! Sports

Texas Football didn’t need the money — if anything, its got too much. It didn’t need the hype — one good quarter of play spurs declarations of “Texas is Back.” It didn’t need a boost of recruiting credibility — top-five classes are common.

It certainly didn’t need a path to the College Football Playoff — the one it had in the Big 12 was actually easier.

No, Texas (and to a degree Oklahoma) jumped to the SEC because it was bored, because it wanted something new, because, despite a 91-72 record since 2010, it wanted a challenge, the biggest challenge actually.

Well, the Longhorns are about to get their wish.

The SEC released its 2024 schedule Wednesday, the first with no divisions and 16 teams due to the arrival of the Horns and Sooners.

There are more difficult slates — hello, Florida. There are bigger games — would Georgia at Alabama interest anyone?

There may not be a single program in the country, however, that will walk into 2024 with as much of the spotlight, the rivalry venom and the pressure as Texas.

Win or lose, ready or not, this isn’t going to be dull.

Texas will play in at least four games that are likely the biggest and most anticipated in the entire nation on their respective weekends, and that doesn’t count a couple others that could wind up that way. ESPN’s "GameDay" might as well set up a satellite office next to Steve Sarkisian’s in Austin.

Sept. 7, Texas visits Michigan in a major non-conference clash and television ratings bonanza.

Soon after — likely as part of a Welcome to the SEC doubleheader with Alabama visiting Oklahoma — the Longhorns will host current two-time reigning national champion Georgia.

Oct. 5, it’s Red River Rivalry time, with the annual season-defining battle against Oklahoma in Dallas amid the Texas State Fair.

Late November brings the renewal of the blood feud (even if UT won’t admit it) with Texas A&M. The teams have played 118 times but not once since 2011, when the Aggies left for the SEC. Now they are back as conference foes and the first game will be in College Station, perhaps as part of a demand by A&M athletic director Ross Bjork. The intensity will be alarming.

These are four titanic clashes and don’t even include a visit from Florida or a trip to Fayetteville to reboot the historic Hogs-Horns series that once dominated the sport, most notably in 1969 when President Nixon showed up for the “Game of the Century.” (Visits by Kentucky and Mississippi State and a trip to Vanderbilt round out the SEC slate.)

Oh, and the projected starting quarterback for the 2024 season?

No less than Arch Manning.

For a Texas program that doesn’t just covet center stage but believes it is something of a birthright — that the college football world revolves around it — this was pretty much the goal. The Longhorns were willing to rock the foundation of the entire sport just to grab it.

Everyone knew a schedule like this was coming, but seeing it laid out on Wednesday brought reality home. It could have been even stronger had the SEC moved to a nine-game slate, rather than stick with eight. That will likely be changed for 2025 and beyond.

Call it arrogance or call it intelligence, but Texas grew weary of having its sizable fan base, reliable television audience and oversized brand prop up (or so it believed) the Big 12. It no longer wanted so many trips to a little college town on the plains, let alone trying to sell Austinites on buying tickets for off-brand opponents.

Everything is bigger in Texas and if nothing else, Texas craved the big-time.

The fact that it kept losing to the likes of Texas Tech and TCU and Kansas and Baylor and Iowa State and the rest of the Big 12 somehow didn’t matter. Neither did the fact there has been just one 10-win season since the glory days of Mack Brown.

Texas believed it was better than the company it was keeping and fair or not, it had enough clout to change it.

So now comes reality. Is Sarkisian’s program ready not just for the grind of the SEC, but the series of monster clashes that challenge anyone? Recruiting is great, but recruiting is always great for Texas.

The new day is coming. The next challenge is almost here.

Texas wanted to matter again and the SEC gave it that before it even played a league game.

The Longhorns may not be the best team in 2024, but 2024 is going to deliver a whole lot of Longhorns.

Who knows if Texas is actually “Back.” It is back to mattering, though, no matter what.

Gamecocks land Georgia running back

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South Carolina Lands Big Bodied Peach State RB Matthew Fuller

By: Caleb Alexander - Southcarolina.rivals.com

South Carolina football has successfully secured a commitment from 2024 running back prospect Matthew Fuller, adding depth to a position of need for the Gamecocks' 2024 recruiting class who will still look to add 1-2 RBs in addition to Fuller. Standing at 5'10" and weighing 196 pounds, the Jesup, Georgia native who plays for the brother of Gamecock great Connor Shaw, Jaybo Shaw, at Wayne County looks to bring a solid physical presence to the backfield.

Matthew Fuller is a 5.5-rated prospect according to Rivals.com, and though he might not have the flashiest offer list, his potential on the gridiron is evident. Fuller had received 21 total offers, but it was the Gamecocks who eventually won the battle for his commitment, with South Carolina, Minnesota, and Iowa State being his biggest Power-5 scholarship opportunities.

Despite being a lower-profile recruit, Fuller has been on South Carolina's radar for some time. The Gamecocks' coaching staff recognized his talent early on, with the team's recruitment spearheaded by primary recruiter Montario Hardesty. The Gamecocks needed to secure a strong running back for the 2024 recruiting class and Fuller is a solid start on that goal. After offering Fuller in May, it didn't take long for the mutual interest to crescendo, with an official visit this past weekend sealing the deal.

With Fuller's commitment, South Carolina's 2024 recruiting class continues to take shape. As of now, the Gamecocks have twelve committed players for the 2024 class, including Fuller. The class currently ranks 27th nationally and 8th in the SEC, showing the progress being made under the guidance of Head Coach Shane Beamer and Director of Player Personnel Taylor Edwards.

While the path that led Fuller to South Carolina is clear, his journey as a Gamecock is just beginning. His role in the team will be further defined as he integrates with the squad and showcases his talent on the field. We're only halfway through a very busy June in recruiting, so we expect there's plenty more good news to come for the Gamecocks as the summer rolls along.
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