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    • Dam bro you to good to come to exit 29 sunrise blvd for a game. Been up and down 95, and cross country to Ireland and China and still won’t pay them panthers a visit …sheesh make me think you don’t wanna see the nicest public school football field and the best band I. Florida atleast 1 time. lol.    just joking with you bro: that’s a great game to attend, if it wasn’t on the same day as the BIGGEST GAME in Florida the SOUL BOWL with Dillard and ely I would have most definitely gone as well. 
    • I have that on my schedule.  Plan on buying my ticket as soon as they go on sale and be in line well before they open the gates.  I’ll sit on the Rockets side because I became a fan of their’s after the 2010 state final against Haha Clinton-Dix and his Dr. Phillips Panthers.  I like MNW as well but my heart is with Central.  
    • Yes I was shocked as well when I saw the schedule. They usually play on a Friday.
    • So, I think an oversimplified version of the rules is this:  if you transfer after playing but a single game for one team, you are ineligible to play for your new team the rest of the year . . . unless you and/or the new team can convince the county administrator where the new team is located that there's a really good reason why you should be able to play for the new team.  I think when the FHSAA drafted up the rule, it anticipated that very few players would meet the criteria for the exception to the rule.  Think of a situation where a kid's parents both die in a horrible car accident and the kid has to move across the state to live with his aunt and uncle . . . why shouldn't that kid be able to continue playing high school football at his new school?  But once the camel's nose got under the tent, the exception has been become the rule.  Every kid can make the argument that if you don't allow him to play at his new school, you could potentially deprive him of an opportunity to earn a college scholarship -- even if he's the back-up punter.  For the most part, and notwithstanding the rule as written, there's usually no one around to argue against allowing a kid to play at his new school, so the requests routinely get approved now and the rule is essentially meaningless. Just my 2 cents.  
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