Sunday, August 08, 2010

notre dame-usc: great comeback or hoax?

On Nov. 30, 1974, Notre Dame lost to Southern Cal 55-24 in what was thought to be one of the most incredible comebacks in college football history. The Irish jumped out to a 24-0 lead before USC ran off 55 unanswered points.

But was it really an amazing comeback, or was Notre Dame required to throw the game? Thanks to ESPN Classic, I can now provide the answer, and the answer is that it was all a hoax.

You see, something truly amazing was going on at the same time of the Notre Dame-Southern Cal game, and that was the burgeoning (and ill-fated) romance between yours truly and the girl I was destined to marry and who was destined to divorce me as part of the preconceived plan to destroy my life.

We were both sophomores in college, home for Thanksgiving weekend, and one of my "friends" suggested that we go out on a double date. Our dates were two girls who had graduated from Niles High School with us in June 1973, and we went to see a double feature at the U.S. 31 Drive-In. The movies that were showing were "Gimme Shelter," the story of the satanic rock and roll band, the Rolling Stones, and their ill-fated Altamont concert, at which a fan was stabbed to death while Mick Jagger sang "Sympathy for the Devil," and "Jimi Plays Berkeley," a documentary about a Jimi Hendrix concert in Berkeley, Calif.

At any rate, my future bride was the daughter of the president of the local Notre Dame fan club. Notre Dame football had always been a big part of her family's life, and by the time we arrived to pick her up, there was already a somber atmosphere in the home. As I recall, USC had already taken the lead and was pouring it on. Her dad was in no mood to socialize.

I wasn't much of a Notre Dame fan at the time, and I didn't think much about it. I was more interested in the daughter. I started to fall in love with her that night, and we were married a year and a half later. That's another story, addressed elsewhere on this blog.

Also addressed elsewhere is the fact that I was born into a satanic cult, somehow escaped, and was then targeted for destruction by the cult. My "romance" with the young lady in question was a key element in the grand scheme of things. So that first date was all part of the set-up.

What I'm alleging is that Notre Dame was required to throw that game as part of the satanic ritual that was to become my life.

For example, after Notre Dame jumped ahead 24-0 in the second quarter, USC scored just before the end of the first half and deliberately missed the extra point. Actually, it was blocked, but the kicker deliberately hooked a low line drive into the Notre Dame defense to make it appear accidental.

I know this because I recorded the game when it was shown on ESPN Classic recently. If I hadn't had a chance to watch the game again, I probably never would have figured it all out.

By missing the extra point, that left the halftime score 24-6, and since 6 is a satanic number, the message was that this game is going to be turned upside down as part of a satanic ritual. The score of 24-7 just wouldn't do.

To start the second half, Notre Dame kicked off to Anthony Davis, who was widely known to be the most dangerous runner on the USC team, if not the nation. He had scored six touchdowns against the Irish in their last visit to Los Angeles in 1972, and Notre Dame had avoided kicking to him in the first half. Why would they deliberately kick to him to start the second half unless they intended to throw the game?

Davis took the second-half kickoff and ran it back 102 yards for a touchdown to cut the Notre Dame lead to 24-12. The Irish kickoff coverage was uncharacteristically terrible, as Davis sailed along virtually untouched.

After a lousy punt, USC took over on the ND 38-yard line, and Pat Haden completed a long pass to John McKay. Then Davis scored again, and the extra point made it 24-19.

On the ensuing possession, Tom Clements completed a pass to Pete Demmerle on third down and eight for an apparent first down, but Demmerle uncharacteristically coughed up the ball despite not being hit very hard at all. Now USC had a first down at the ND 36.

Three plays later, Davis ran it in for another touchdown, and also ran in the two-point conversion to give USC a 27-24 lead. All this against a defense that had effectively contained USC in the first half with no trouble whatsoever. Are we to believe that Notre Dame's vaunted defense just collapsed in the second half?

On the next series, Jim Lampley was reporting from the sideline, and USC offensive tackle Otis Page was mugging for the camera in the background. This was significant because Otis had been a high school classmate of mine in 1970, 1971 and 1972 at Saratoga High School in Saratoga, Calif. He was one year behind me in school, so he would have been a freshman at USC that year. I noticed that he got into the game in the fourth quarter after USC had taken a commanding lead.

I believe Page's national TV appearance was deliberately engineered by ABC to further emphasize that this game was being orchestrated specifically for me.

Notre Dame was then forced to punt and gave up a 54-yard return, again with uncharacteristically poor coverage. Haden then connected with McKay on another touchdown pass, as Notre Dame's secondary again fell apart and left him all alone. The extra point made it 34-24.

After Clements threw an interception, Haden completed another bomb to McKay against blown coverage to put USC ahead 41-24 just before the end of the third quarter. Notre Dame had given up a school-record 35 points in the third quarter.

Erick Penick fumbled to start the fourth quarter, and Haden immediately exploited Notre Dame's suddenly pathetic secondary for a 16-yard touchdown pass to Shelton Diggs and a 48-24 lead.

Clements' third interception of the day was returned for a touchdown, and the extra point made it 55-24. The number 55 was significant because both my future bride and I were born in 1955. I believe the number was intended to further stamp this particular game as part of the satanic ritual that was to destroy my life.

Late in the game, Dennis Thurman fumbled a punt return for USC, which helped ensure that the Trojans wouldn't score again and erase the magic number 55.

About two weeks later, Ara Parseghian resigned as the Notre Dame coach. You figure it out.

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Im a TI, and sorry, but this sounds farfetched. It also would sound crazy and schizophrenic to any non TI. Why not filter out the unbelievable coincidences when presenting this to the public, to help build credibilty about organized stalking?
And I havent seen this game- but great defenses do fall apart, and sputtering offenses build momentum. There is such a thing as a 'huge comeback' in sports.

March 9, 2011 7:52 AM  
Blogger brussellsprout said...

LOL! Although this type of experience is not typical for TI's, it still needs to be exposed. And in my case, it's extremely relevant to the story of what can happen when a mind-control victim breaks away from his programming and leaves the satanic cult into which he was born. It also demonstrates the corruption involved in college sports and the amazing power the Illuminati have to accomplish anything they want to while going undetected by most people.

I don't care whether or not anyone believes it, because I know it's true, and I'm just interested in getting the truth out there. And it's not far-fetched at all. It's well-documented. Anyone who watches the game will know what to look for and will be able to see how it was done.

Nothing will ever be done about any of this anyway, because the monsters in charge of destroying the lives of innocent people will soon be in their underground bunkers, and everybody else will be wiped off the face of the Earth when Planet X swings by. If I were you, I'd focus on helping other people prepare for the impending destruction of civilization. Everything else pales in comparison.

And if you're really a TI, why not build your own web site and refer people to it instead of posting here anonymously? That would enhance YOUR credibility, don't you think?

By the way, the fixing of college and professional sports is widespread, and it's not that difficult to tell when it's going on. See this: http://thefixisin.net/

March 9, 2011 8:38 AM  

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