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Ketch's 10 Thoughts From The Weekend (Sark isn't getting enough credit for this...)

Only one big time OL recruit in one of the most populous states was shocking to me.
Okay, but Sark is recruiting two good ones in Washington as well. Between those, a number of good ones in Texas, and a couple of others, the opportunity for an elite OL class is there.
 
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You missed a big point on your Sark recruiting props. His staff is doing all this without the benefit of official visits. Considering getting to see UT and Austin and the personal touch of these recruiters, thats a big "hands tied behind your back" for Sark compared to those other coaches you named, that I have blanked from my memory.

You know, its not like our visits are to Collie Station or some other shithole campus. So this means a lot not just compared to our prior coaches, but who we are recruiting against. Hell its a benefit to Aggie that kids dont see their town and campus before committing. Same with Baylor and Tech.
 
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Now there’s a bucket list item for any fan of the theater, seeing a show at the Globe Theatre. I took the fam to see Antony and Cleopatra in 2014 and it was glorious, except for the planes coming in overhead to Heathrow. Get a membership so you can order tickets way earlier than the regular public. Worth it, if it’s truly a bucket list item.
Agreed. It's definitely worth it, IMO. I never noticed any planes overhead, either. Maybe I just got lucky.
 
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10. Revolutionary Road
9. Django Unchained
8. Catch Me If You Can
7. The Aviator
6. Titanic
5. The Wolf of Wall Street
4. Inception
3. The Departed
2. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
1. Gangs of New York

Once upon a time in Hollywood too high IMO. Shutter Island should be on the list as well. Basketball Diaries was brilliant too.
 
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3. Watching him throw in 7-on-7 feels like watching an elite power hitter take batting practice.

That's EXACTLY what I thought too. He just looks like a different kinda dude. Much thicker than I anticipated. It's not often your quarterback is the first guy off the bus, but he sure looks like one of those guys.
 
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No “The Revenant” in the Leo list? Looking forward to seeing how the 2022 class shakes out.

The Revenant is 2 hours of my life that seemed like 2 years which I could never recapture... I watched it with a friend of mine and his view was the same as mine.. Leo has made a lot of terrific movies- that wasn’t one of them
 
ee0e3a40b744e2eebc3b4d949eaa9055x.jpg
Texas coach Steve Sarkisian has it cooking in recruiting for the Longhorns in his first season, which isn't surprising when you consider that I predicted he would sign a top five class in 2022.

Still, I feel like we need to take a moment and show some appreciation for this staff's ability to create momentum almost out of thin air upon their arrival. Both Charlie Strong and Tom Herman had excellent rankings in their collective first recruiting class, but it took 5-6 months for both to find serious footing and results.

Sarkisian and Co. have been able to do it in 5-6 weeks, which has been critical when you realize how many top 2022 prospects in Texas have already started making decisions.

If you take a look at my recent Lone Star Recruiting Top 100 List, you'll find that three of the top five, five of the top nine and 12 of the top 22 prospects in the state have already made decisions. That's 55 percent.

Ready or not, the elite of the elite are making decisions early in Sarkisian's tenure.

To their credit, Sarkisian's staff have been more than ready.

No. 2 - The top remaining in-state options...

This list will evolve over the next 11 months, and there will be a few newcomers making breakthroughs in the rankings, especially in a COVID-dominated recruiting world, but with every passing year, it is stunning to see so many of the top names in the debut of each set of rankings end up near the top when the rankings are finished two years later.

With that in mind, here's a look at the top 15 remaining uncommitted prospects in the state by position. (LSR ranking in parenthesis)

* Players in bold have been offered or re-offered by the Texas staff

Quarterbacks

(1) Cade Klubnik (Austin Westlake)


(26) Alex Orji (Sachse)

Running Backs

(18) Jamarion Miller (Tyler Legacy)

(23) Tavorus Jones (El Paso Burges)

Wide Receivers


None

Tight Ends

None

Offensive Linemen

(6) Kam Dewberry (Humble Atascocita)

(10 Devon Campbell (Arlington Bowie)

(11) Kelvin Banks (Houston Summer Creek)

(25) Neto Umeozulu (Allen)

Defensive Linemen

(7) Omari Abor (Duncanville)

(24) Jaray Bledsoe (Bremond)

(27) Ernest Cooper (Arlington Martin)

Linebackers

(14) Harold Perkins (Cypress Park)

Defensive Backs

(2) Denver Harris (North Shore)

(15) Bryce Anderson (Beaumont Westbrook)

Athletes

(19) Brenen Thompson (Spearman)

No. 3 - Some impressions on the top remaining prospects ...


* Those four offensive line prospects are pretty much everything in this class considering what happened a year ago. Of course, the Longhorns could hit on an out-of-state guy or two, and there's always a chance that a player emerges from the shadows of the early rankings and becomes a Top 15-25 level prospect, but Banks, Campbell, Dewberry and Umeozulu (ranked in any order you want) are at the core of what this 2022 class will need in order to become a true success.

* Not including Klubnik, the skill position group is thin in impact prospects. The highest-rated skill player remaining (running backs/wide receivers/tight ends) is Miller at No. 18. The importance of the Jaydon "Don't Call Him Alfred" Blue and Evan Stewart commitments cannot be overstated, as they were the last two remaining offensive skill prospects remaining from the five-star and high four-star tiers of the rankings; Brenen Thompson could end up in that area, while technically being recruited as an athlete by a lot of schools.

* The importance of Jason Llewellyn as a prospect is probably impacted by his profile and the scarcity of players at his position. Still, the Longhorns are loaded at the wide receiver position, so if there was ever a year where they could survive a lack of tight end prospects, it's in 2022. Look for Jeff Banks to stay on Llewellyn, while looking for an out-of-state guy to poach; most of the tight ends in Texas look like developmental projects with somewhat limited upside.

* Barring a flip of Bear Alexander or Malick Sylla, the Longhorns aren’t going to fill their needs along the defensive line from the Lone Star State alone. Only Duncanville's Abor remains as an elite option.

* Historically, the value of linebackers is suspect, to say the least, but Perkins is clearly the apple of everyone's eye at his position.

* Denver Harris and Bryce Anderson are in the discussion for best remaining prospects, but there's a pile of defensive backs right outside of the top 25 that does give this position more depth than the top 15 might suggest. Aledo's Bryan Allen, Katy's Bobby Taylor, Plano John Paul's Terrance Brooks and Garland's Chace Biddle would all be in the next 10. I personally view Harris and Alexander on different, higher tiers than the others.

No. 4 - Four weekend thoughts on Maalik Murphy ...

1. While I have Klubnik and Quinn Ewers ranked as five-star quarterback prospects, I'm not sure that either are in the same league as Murphy when it comes to his physical profile and ability to throw the football on an absolute line.

Take a look at this freaking throw and its trajectory. For all of Ewers’ accuracy (and he could end up being the most accurate prospect the state has produced in a decade), he doesn't quite throw the ball consistently like this.



2. I'm really having a hard time coming up with a name for a former Longhorn that Murphy reminds me off. Maybe Chris Simms to a degree, but I think Murphy throws the intermediate and deep intermediate ball better than Simms did at the same age.

3. Watching him throw in 7-on-7 feels like watching an elite power hitter take batting practice.

4. He's got the Hook'em down correctly. This is important.

maalik-murphy-jpg.630


No. 5 - About 2022 Defensive Back Recruiting ...

If you inspect the plan for the Texas defensive backfield, you'll find that the commitment of Landon Hullaby to Oregon won’t impact the recruiting class much. Consider:

a. The Longhorns will probably take between 4-6 defensive backs, depending on the hit rate at the top of their board. The betting favorite would probably be five defensive backs, but if Texas gets everyone, they'd probably make room for a sixth difference maker. Four feels on the light side and might mean a commitment peeled off, or Texas missed on more players than anticipated.

b. With Port Arthur Memorial's Jaylon Guilbeau already committed, you'd have to think that the staff has two spots reserved for Bryce Anderson and Denver Harris.

c. A commitment by Hullaby would have left the program with less positional versatility in its remaining offers, considering Texas has offered 22 higher-rated players at the position thus far in the 2022 class. Hullaby is a really good prospect, but there's a chance that spot will be filled with a prospect with a higher/more valuable profile.

d. The reality of there being fewer spots available might create some urgency on those final spots in the remaining field of offers.

No. 6 - Uh oh ...

If there's one thing you can say with 100-percent certainty about long-time followers of the Texas men's basketball program, we can spot a late-season collapse coming a mile away.

The program has shown a repeated ability to steal a sad ending from the jaws of a successful season.

So, when the team's inconsistent form turned into a disaster against West Virginia that included an embarrassing argument between two upperclassmen/leaders of the team and blowing a 19-point lead, well.... you'll have to excuse us when we all run into the nearest room and yell, "FIIIIRRRRRREEEEEE!!!!!!!"

For most of this season, I have firmly believed that Texas would make a run in the NCAA Tournament for the first time in a decade, but this was a collapse.

The way this team fumbled and bumbled its way through the final 10 minutes was not the stuff of future NCAA Tournament success, and typically those types of runs come from a team starting to play its best basketball right about now. You won't find many college backcourts with as much experience as the trio of Matt Coleman, Andrew Jones and Courtney Ramey, which is why I've been so confident in this group in an early NCAA Tournament setting, but the decision-making and execution from this trio on Saturday was u-g-l-y.

Jones had a poor game that featured a ton of turnovers (6) and missed shots (12), several of which inexplicably felt like mistimed heat checks. Ramey was in NBA Jam "Fire Mode" when he was suckered into committing his fifth foul at a time when the team couldn't afford to lose him. Meanwhile, Coleman ruined a great shooting night when he missed the front end of a 1-and-1 that could have allowed Texas to tie the game at 84-84 with less than 10 seconds left.

Everyone following the program is preparing for the worst because it’s what we have been conditioned to expect.

It's not that this team can't make a run; it would just be insanity to expect different results and not the same thing over and over again.

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …


(Buy) I don't buy it with much confidence, though.


(Sell) I'm more worried about the closing out of the game on Saturday than the dust-up on the sidelines. It was embarrassing, but this team hasn't been playing its best basketball for a while now.


(Sell) Is this what people are saying? I think there's more excitement going down on the offensive side of the ball at the moment, which is understandable, but I don't expect this class to be dominated by its offensive prospects alone. I didn't view the Hullaby commitment as anything other than an opportunity.


(Buy) He's more game-ready right now.


(Buy) Yes and yes.


(Buy) I don't like it.


(Sell) I think common sense indicates there's a good chance of that.


(Buy) The portal will be busy.


(Buy) No question.


(Sell) I believe they are equal-sized pieces of the puzzle.


(Sell) Die Hard isn't a Christmas movie, but it is the superior movie.


(Buy) You misspelled decades.

No. 8 - Scattershooting on the world of sports...

... It sucks that the career of Charli Collier likely won't end with a better supporting cast; Vic Schaefer will eventually bring in that kind of talent.

... Tanking all of those seasons to have a chance to see Joel Embiid have a 50-piece to go along with 17 rebounds on Friday night in the middle of a potential MVP season was worth it.

... This will never get old.


... I don't get the "Carson Wentz makes the Colts a Super Bowl threat" talk at all.

... I read a mock draft on Sunday and I can honestly say that I'm not yet in draft-mode at all.

... Can't say I was surprised to see that Derrick Lewis knocked someone out this weekend. Can't say I know what Curtis Blaydes was thinking in terms of his approach.

... Novak Djokovic won No. 18 this weekend. Here's hoping he doesn't get to No. 20. Signed, a Nadal homer.

... It feels like the era of Naomi Osaka is truly upon us.

.... I feel like I'm reliving the 1999 season for the Dallas Cowboys as a Liverpool FC fan, with the injury fallout from losing Michel Irvin looking similar to what has happened since the injury to Virgil Van Dijk. It's been a nightmare. If anyone is wondering how I'm doing this weekend... I'm living in a damn nightmare, and there's no waking up from it.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 Leo DiCaprio movies ...

After doing a Denzel Washington Top 10 a week ago, I thought I'd stay in the movie wheelhouse and tackle a catalog I once was lukewarm about; now I’m a major fan.

Rewatchability played a big role in the rankings. For instance, Titanic might feel a tad low, but at the end of the day, I'd rather re-watch The Wolf of Wall Street a little more.

10. Revolutionary Road
9. Django Unchained
8. Catch Me If You Can
7. The Aviator
6. Titanic
5. The Wolf of Wall Street
4. Inception
3. The Departed
2. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
1. Gangs of New York

No. 10 - And Finally ...

Came close to a turkey vulture this weekend while walking around the neighborhood, as it was eating something near the sidewalk. I had the following thoughts and learned the following thing via the Internet..

a. Do other birds look at the turkey vulture and judge it for being so beastly looking?

b. Why do I only see turkey vultures while eating roadkill? Why doesn't it ever hang out on telephone wires around town? If they wanted to take over an area, do they just show up and the other birds get the hell out of the way because of their size and ugliness?

c. How would a suburb deal with hundreds of turkey vultures taking over like a pack of grackles? Imagine walking on a street and being surrounded by them. It doesn't seem like it would be a sightseeing thing... like... say.... a bat.

d. Did you know that a young turkey vulture will defend itself in a nest by throwing up on an intruder? Well, now you do.

View attachment 635
Thank you sir, good stuff 🙃
 
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ee0e3a40b744e2eebc3b4d949eaa9055x.jpg
Texas coach Steve Sarkisian has it cooking in recruiting for the Longhorns in his first season, which isn't surprising when you consider that I predicted he would sign a top five class in 2022.

Still, I feel like we need to take a moment and show some appreciation for this staff's ability to create momentum almost out of thin air upon their arrival. Both Charlie Strong and Tom Herman had excellent rankings in their collective first recruiting class, but it took 5-6 months for both to find serious footing and results.

Sarkisian and Co. have been able to do it in 5-6 weeks, which has been critical when you realize how many top 2022 prospects in Texas have already started making decisions.

If you take a look at my recent Lone Star Recruiting Top 100 List, you'll find that three of the top five, five of the top nine and 12 of the top 22 prospects in the state have already made decisions. That's 55 percent.

Ready or not, the elite of the elite are making decisions early in Sarkisian's tenure.

To their credit, Sarkisian's staff have been more than ready.

No. 2 - The top remaining in-state options...

This list will evolve over the next 11 months, and there will be a few newcomers making breakthroughs in the rankings, especially in a COVID-dominated recruiting world, but with every passing year, it is stunning to see so many of the top names in the debut of each set of rankings end up near the top when the rankings are finished two years later.

With that in mind, here's a look at the top 15 remaining uncommitted prospects in the state by position. (LSR ranking in parenthesis)

* Players in bold have been offered or re-offered by the Texas staff

Quarterbacks

(1) Cade Klubnik (Austin Westlake)


(26) Alex Orji (Sachse)

Running Backs

(18) Jamarion Miller (Tyler Legacy)

(23) Tavorus Jones (El Paso Burges)

Wide Receivers


None

Tight Ends

None

Offensive Linemen

(6) Kam Dewberry (Humble Atascocita)

(10 Devon Campbell (Arlington Bowie)

(11) Kelvin Banks (Houston Summer Creek)

(25) Neto Umeozulu (Allen)

Defensive Linemen

(7) Omari Abor (Duncanville)

(24) Jaray Bledsoe (Bremond)

(27) Ernest Cooper (Arlington Martin)

Linebackers

(14) Harold Perkins (Cypress Park)

Defensive Backs

(2) Denver Harris (North Shore)

(15) Bryce Anderson (Beaumont Westbrook)

Athletes

(19) Brenen Thompson (Spearman)

No. 3 - Some impressions on the top remaining prospects ...


* Those four offensive line prospects are pretty much everything in this class considering what happened a year ago. Of course, the Longhorns could hit on an out-of-state guy or two, and there's always a chance that a player emerges from the shadows of the early rankings and becomes a Top 15-25 level prospect, but Banks, Campbell, Dewberry and Umeozulu (ranked in any order you want) are at the core of what this 2022 class will need in order to become a true success.

* Not including Klubnik, the skill position group is thin in impact prospects. The highest-rated skill player remaining (running backs/wide receivers/tight ends) is Miller at No. 18. The importance of the Jaydon "Don't Call Him Alfred" Blue and Evan Stewart commitments cannot be overstated, as they were the last two remaining offensive skill prospects remaining from the five-star and high four-star tiers of the rankings; Brenen Thompson could end up in that area, while technically being recruited as an athlete by a lot of schools.

* The importance of Jason Llewellyn as a prospect is probably impacted by his profile and the scarcity of players at his position. Still, the Longhorns are loaded at the wide receiver position, so if there was ever a year where they could survive a lack of tight end prospects, it's in 2022. Look for Jeff Banks to stay on Llewellyn, while looking for an out-of-state guy to poach; most of the tight ends in Texas look like developmental projects with somewhat limited upside.

* Barring a flip of Bear Alexander or Malick Sylla, the Longhorns aren’t going to fill their needs along the defensive line from the Lone Star State alone. Only Duncanville's Abor remains as an elite option.

* Historically, the value of linebackers is suspect, to say the least, but Perkins is clearly the apple of everyone's eye at his position.

* Denver Harris and Bryce Anderson are in the discussion for best remaining prospects, but there's a pile of defensive backs right outside of the top 25 that does give this position more depth than the top 15 might suggest. Aledo's Bryan Allen, Katy's Bobby Taylor, Plano John Paul's Terrance Brooks and Garland's Chace Biddle would all be in the next 10. I personally view Harris and Alexander on different, higher tiers than the others.

No. 4 - Four weekend thoughts on Maalik Murphy ...

1. While I have Klubnik and Quinn Ewers ranked as five-star quarterback prospects, I'm not sure that either are in the same league as Murphy when it comes to his physical profile and ability to throw the football on an absolute line.

Take a look at this freaking throw and its trajectory. For all of Ewers’ accuracy (and he could end up being the most accurate prospect the state has produced in a decade), he doesn't quite throw the ball consistently like this.



2. I'm really having a hard time coming up with a name for a former Longhorn that Murphy reminds me off. Maybe Chris Simms to a degree, but I think Murphy throws the intermediate and deep intermediate ball better than Simms did at the same age.

3. Watching him throw in 7-on-7 feels like watching an elite power hitter take batting practice.

4. He's got the Hook'em down correctly. This is important.

maalik-murphy-jpg.630


No. 5 - About 2022 Defensive Back Recruiting ...

If you inspect the plan for the Texas defensive backfield, you'll find that the commitment of Landon Hullaby to Oregon won’t impact the recruiting class much. Consider:

a. The Longhorns will probably take between 4-6 defensive backs, depending on the hit rate at the top of their board. The betting favorite would probably be five defensive backs, but if Texas gets everyone, they'd probably make room for a sixth difference maker. Four feels on the light side and might mean a commitment peeled off, or Texas missed on more players than anticipated.

b. With Port Arthur Memorial's Jaylon Guilbeau already committed, you'd have to think that the staff has two spots reserved for Bryce Anderson and Denver Harris.

c. A commitment by Hullaby would have left the program with less positional versatility in its remaining offers, considering Texas has offered 22 higher-rated players at the position thus far in the 2022 class. Hullaby is a really good prospect, but there's a chance that spot will be filled with a prospect with a higher/more valuable profile.

d. The reality of there being fewer spots available might create some urgency on those final spots in the remaining field of offers.

No. 6 - Uh oh ...

If there's one thing you can say with 100-percent certainty about long-time followers of the Texas men's basketball program, we can spot a late-season collapse coming a mile away.

The program has shown a repeated ability to steal a sad ending from the jaws of a successful season.

So, when the team's inconsistent form turned into a disaster against West Virginia that included an embarrassing argument between two upperclassmen/leaders of the team and blowing a 19-point lead, well.... you'll have to excuse us when we all run into the nearest room and yell, "FIIIIRRRRRREEEEEE!!!!!!!"

For most of this season, I have firmly believed that Texas would make a run in the NCAA Tournament for the first time in a decade, but this was a collapse.

The way this team fumbled and bumbled its way through the final 10 minutes was not the stuff of future NCAA Tournament success, and typically those types of runs come from a team starting to play its best basketball right about now. You won't find many college backcourts with as much experience as the trio of Matt Coleman, Andrew Jones and Courtney Ramey, which is why I've been so confident in this group in an early NCAA Tournament setting, but the decision-making and execution from this trio on Saturday was u-g-l-y.

Jones had a poor game that featured a ton of turnovers (6) and missed shots (12), several of which inexplicably felt like mistimed heat checks. Ramey was in NBA Jam "Fire Mode" when he was suckered into committing his fifth foul at a time when the team couldn't afford to lose him. Meanwhile, Coleman ruined a great shooting night when he missed the front end of a 1-and-1 that could have allowed Texas to tie the game at 84-84 with less than 10 seconds left.

Everyone following the program is preparing for the worst because it’s what we have been conditioned to expect.

It's not that this team can't make a run; it would just be insanity to expect different results and not the same thing over and over again.

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …


(Buy) I don't buy it with much confidence, though.


(Sell) I'm more worried about the closing out of the game on Saturday than the dust-up on the sidelines. It was embarrassing, but this team hasn't been playing its best basketball for a while now.


(Sell) Is this what people are saying? I think there's more excitement going down on the offensive side of the ball at the moment, which is understandable, but I don't expect this class to be dominated by its offensive prospects alone. I didn't view the Hullaby commitment as anything other than an opportunity.


(Buy) He's more game-ready right now.


(Buy) Yes and yes.


(Buy) I don't like it.


(Sell) I think common sense indicates there's a good chance of that.


(Buy) The portal will be busy.


(Buy) No question.


(Sell) I believe they are equal-sized pieces of the puzzle.


(Sell) Die Hard isn't a Christmas movie, but it is the superior movie.


(Buy) You misspelled decades.

No. 8 - Scattershooting on the world of sports...

... It sucks that the career of Charli Collier likely won't end with a better supporting cast; Vic Schaefer will eventually bring in that kind of talent.

... Tanking all of those seasons to have a chance to see Joel Embiid have a 50-piece to go along with 17 rebounds on Friday night in the middle of a potential MVP season was worth it.

... This will never get old.


... I don't get the "Carson Wentz makes the Colts a Super Bowl threat" talk at all.

... I read a mock draft on Sunday and I can honestly say that I'm not yet in draft-mode at all.

... Can't say I was surprised to see that Derrick Lewis knocked someone out this weekend. Can't say I know what Curtis Blaydes was thinking in terms of his approach.

... Novak Djokovic won No. 18 this weekend. Here's hoping he doesn't get to No. 20. Signed, a Nadal homer.

... It feels like the era of Naomi Osaka is truly upon us.

.... I feel like I'm reliving the 1999 season for the Dallas Cowboys as a Liverpool FC fan, with the injury fallout from losing Michel Irvin looking similar to what has happened since the injury to Virgil Van Dijk. It's been a nightmare. If anyone is wondering how I'm doing this weekend... I'm living in a damn nightmare, and there's no waking up from it.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 Leo DiCaprio movies ...

After doing a Denzel Washington Top 10 a week ago, I thought I'd stay in the movie wheelhouse and tackle a catalog I once was lukewarm about; now I’m a major fan.

Rewatchability played a big role in the rankings. For instance, Titanic might feel a tad low, but at the end of the day, I'd rather re-watch The Wolf of Wall Street a little more.

10. Revolutionary Road
9. Django Unchained
8. Catch Me If You Can
7. The Aviator
6. Titanic
5. The Wolf of Wall Street
4. Inception
3. The Departed
2. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
1. Gangs of New York

No. 10 - And Finally ...

Came close to a turkey vulture this weekend while walking around the neighborhood, as it was eating something near the sidewalk. I had the following thoughts and learned the following thing via the Internet..

a. Do other birds look at the turkey vulture and judge it for being so beastly looking?

b. Why do I only see turkey vultures while eating roadkill? Why doesn't it ever hang out on telephone wires around town? If they wanted to take over an area, do they just show up and the other birds get the hell out of the way because of their size and ugliness?

c. How would a suburb deal with hundreds of turkey vultures taking over like a pack of grackles? Imagine walking on a street and being surrounded by them. It doesn't seem like it would be a sightseeing thing... like... say.... a bat.

d. Did you know that a young turkey vulture will defend itself in a nest by throwing up on an intruder? Well, now you do.

View attachment 635
Body of Lies
Revenant
What's Eating Gilbert Grape
All 3 top your top 10 list. His performance in WEGG is fantastic. The man is good in everything he does so really hard to list, but the three I mentioned are very good movies. I admit Tom Hardy deserved best actor in Revenant.
 
that turkey vulture looks like the men's bball team's play right now...U-G-L-Y
 
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How can u not have Blood Diamond in Leo’s top 10? Blasphemous!!!

This. The more I think through Leo's remarkable body of work, the more it has dawned on me that this is by heads and shoulders the worst list Ketch has ever put together. Not having The Revenant on there is a joke to end all jokes, and not having Blood Diamond or Gilbert Grape is only marginally better. Once Upon a Time In Hollywood is Tarantino's weakest film by far (well, except for Death Proof) when one considers it was in may respects a plot point by plot point redundancy of Inglorious Basterds, only with a very different setting/background with far less interesting characters and dialogue that, while quite good, is far, far, far below Tarantino's usual savantish standards. Gangs of New York is a fantastic film, but is ironically the weakest acting performance of Leo's career I would argue, although I would admit a lot of that has to do with how comparatively uninteresting his character is compared to most of the roles he chooses. It, however, doesn't even belong in the same breath as a film as The Revenant, Inception, The Aviator, or Blood Diamond IF we are looking at this as a list of Leonardo Dicaprio movies, IMO.

Also, how many times I may be willing to rewatch a film is one of the dead last things I would use to consider when ranking the greatness of any film. Schindler's List is the greatest work of art in film history by a massive, massive, massive margin IMO, but it isn't precisely a film I want to watch a lot. Conversely, I can watch virtually any one of the MCU films over and over again, but I'm not about to even consider putting any of them in serious contention for the 100 greatest films of all time, although maybe the first Guardians of the Galaxy comes close.
 
Tennis guy here. I’m afraid Federer is going to end up third out of the big three and Joke ends up #1 when the smoke clears. I have met Novak several times and he is a cool cat but I’m a huge Fed guy.

Osaka can Osuck it!!! Here is a girl that has lived in the United States since she was 2. She trains here and lives here but considers herself Japanese because she thinks the US is racist!!! F her!!

Take your political motivated crap elsewhere. The reason for her decision was spelled out by her mother: ""We made the decision that Naomi would represent Japan at an early age. She was born in Osaka and was brought up in a household of Japanese and Haitian culture. Quite simply, Naomi and her sister Mari have always felt Japanese so that was our only rationale. It was never a financially motivated decision nor were we ever swayed either way by any national federation."
 
😬

I liked R+J when I was 16, but I'm certain it wouldn't hold up so well if I watched it today.

Why? It is a fantastically acted movie from top to bottom and took a creative approach to Shakespeare never before thought of and since numerously copied with nowhere near the effectiveness.
 
@Ketchum it took you a couple weeks longer than it should have but at least you finally admitted this team isn’t making a run. “Experience” doesn’t equal good. Our backcourt def has experience which makes them about average. Had they been really coached up over 4 years then maybe we have a shot at making a run. But they really aren’t that much better than they were as freshman. Shaka is worse on the offensive end of the floor than Tom was at getting along with alumni/donors
 
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Titanic would not be on my list. I replace it with Shutter Island.
At some point, we have to acknowledge how much of a monster the movie is the history of film. Has to be in the top 10 somewhere.
 
Two things: I think the best Murphy comp is Josh Allen.

Also, didn’t Leo get an Oscar nomination for Gilbert Grape?
He did. If it was a list of his best performances, it would have made the list.
 
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