Pick 6!?!

Black Irish

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I'm not a football junkie (was in high school and college) so maybe others can help me here. I don't watch pro, but I do watch college (Notre Dame faithfully every Saturday as well as other games of interest). Is it just me, but has the term "pick six" suddenly become obnoxiously ubiquitous out of nowhere? It seems like everyone has been saying it for the past week or so. It's really annoying, and needs to die a quick death. ESPN commentators need to stop saying this and go back to giving Notre Dame poisonously back-handed compliments, when they aren't outright trashing the Irish.
 

phork

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Pick-6 is the term that has been universally adopted for an INT returned for a TD.. Not sure what your gripe is.
 

Black Irish

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It just seems like I've been hearing way too much of this out of nowhere. I get the terminology, but all of the sudden it seems like every sports analyst is screaming this at every opportunity. My gripe is being beaten over the head with this obnoxious catch phrase du jour.
 

phork

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It just seems like I've been hearing way too much of this out of nowhere. I get the terminology, but all of the sudden it seems like every sports analyst is screaming this at every opportunity. My gripe is being beaten over the head with this obnoxious catch phrase du jour.

Its not du jour, its been this way for years. If you are tired of being "beaten" over the head with it, tell the offenses to stop throwing them.
 

MacIrish75

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I think the term, du jour, for this season has been "getting the opponent's offense 'off schedule.'"

I do hate that one. I'm 24 and the term "Pick 6" has been around for as long as I can remember.
 

SaltyND24

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It just seems like I've been hearing way too much of this out of nowhere. I get the terminology, but all of the sudden it seems like every sports analyst is screaming this at every opportunity. My gripe is being beaten over the head with this obnoxious catch phrase du jour.

Wamp, Wamp....Moving on, seriously smh!
 

dshans

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... Is it just me, but has the term "pick six" suddenly become obnoxiously ubiquitous out of nowhere? It seems like everyone has been saying it for the past week or so. It's really annoying, and needs to die a quick death.

Catch phrases come and go. Sometimes, though, they suffer a lingering death.

"On schedule," in regard to a game plan or expectations, seems to be a short-lived (thankfully) example. "Pick Six," sadly, seems to "have legs." It's a convenient distillation of "the pass was intercepted (picked off) and returned for a touchdown (six points)."

Hell, I still bristle when I hear or read "grow" (as in a company's profits, the economy, etc.) rather than "increase or "expand." I can't shake the image of men and women in Brooks Brothers suits in the fields hoeing, planting and watering crops (with watering cans) of lettuce, corn and wheat.

Then there's "recorded before a live studio audience." Are some shows recorded before a dead studio audience?
 

NDPhilly

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I think the term, du jour, for this season has been "getting the opponent's offense 'off schedule.'"

I do hate that one. I'm 24 and the term "Pick 6" has been around for as long as I can remember.

Yes I've thought the exact same thing. I barely heard it before this year now they mention it 2-3 times a game.
 

returnofthemack

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I don't have a problem with "pick-6", but I hate when announcers, coaches, etc. say "hit them in the mouth".
 

BGIF

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Catch phrases come and go. Sometimes, though, they suffer a lingering death.

"On schedule," in regard to a game plan or expectations, seems to be a short-lived (thankfully) example. "Pick Six," sadly, seems to "have legs." It's a convenient distillation of "the pass was intercepted (picked off) and returned for a touchdown (six points)."

Hell, I still bristle when I hear or read "grow" (as in a company's profits, the economy, etc.) rather than "increase or "expand." I can't shake the image of men and women in Brooks Brothers suits in the fields hoeing, planting and watering crops (with watering cans) of lettuce, corn and wheat.

Then there's "recorded before a live studio audience." Are some shows recorded before a dead studio audience?

Archer Daniels Midland has been "growing" profits for 90 years out of the pockets of American taxpayers. I understand Brooks Brothers created "The Gentleman Farmer's" attire.
 

NDinL.A.

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It just seems like I've been hearing way too much of this out of nowhere. I get the terminology, but all of the sudden it seems like every sports analyst is screaming this at every opportunity. My gripe is being beaten over the head with this obnoxious catch phrase du jour.

Sorry, but you're way off here bro. The term has been around for quite awhile...and it's going anywhere. In fact, about 8-9 years ago, my buddies and I were in a bar and we were brainstorming ideas about starting a gambling league. We ended up agreeing on a league in which we'd all pick 6 games against the spread every week, and at the end of the year the winner would get x amount of dollars. I called it the "Pick 6"...so it's been a popular term for at least that long. I know you said you don't pay attention to much pro football, but this term has been used a ton for a long time. There's no "all of a sudden" to it.

I think the term, du jour, for this season has been "getting the opponent's offense 'off schedule.'"

I do hate that one. I'm 24 and the term "Pick 6" has been around for as long as I can remember.

Thank you! Drives me nuts! I think I first heard it during the ND-Pitt game. when Urban used it all game. At first I thought it made sense, but then he used it ALL GAME long and that quickly got old. Pick 6 happens rarely...2nd and 3rd down happen all the time. So the 'off schedule' phrase got played out really fast.
 

DillonHall

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I think the term, du jour, for this season has been "getting the opponent's offense 'off schedule.'"

I do hate that one. I'm 24 and the term "Pick 6" has been around for as long as I can remember.

Like NDinLA said, I heard it for the first time from Urban Meyer during an ND game. I didn't like the repetition but I thought it was interesting to learn some of his philosophy and the emphasis he puts on first down on both sides of the ball. I'm assuming that other commentators picked up the term from Urban and not the other way around. And it's really caught on though like you said...I think I may even recall Kelly saying it once or twice.
 

Old Man Mike

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Catch phrases are part of the toolbox of the human mind. Such phrases blurt out unconsciously when the blurter is either not clever enough to be more "contemplative" about thinking before speaking, or not relaxed enough in his job so as to be slightly hysterical about filling airspace with noise. They are similar to the "you know"s or the "you understand what I'm saying"s that are equally obnoxious in "normal" speech.

These things tend to disappear or at least moderate with the professional maturity of the person in the particular job/activity which requires a lot of fast remarks. Catch phrases will continue to be used because they are also a form of mental laziness. They replace actual thought and relieve the mind of doing any work at the moment.

I have at least a little sympathy for the announcers who employ these stale tools. The inhuman medium of continuous-noise television commentary requires them to fill every second with verbiage whether worth listening to or not. Those who can do it get a new contract; those who cannot get fired. Some phrases will be convenient and stick, and in fact comfortably dim into the consciousness as "normal" to the game. We have huge numbers of these: TD, Upset, Sack, Hail Mary [imagine up-tight protestants when THAT first came up], Home Run, Blitz [vs. the now-defunct "Red Dog"], etc etc to infinity. "Pick Six" is going to join those phrases, as it is descriptive and almost poetic in sound. "Getting behind schedule" is more awkward and probably won't.

My biggest puzzlement is how anyone can work themselves up into an emotion where they actually care much about such things? They are not prejudicial to Notre Dame nor anything we care about and appear to have no agenda of any kind. Is our National Cultural Psyche this intolerant of "being disturbed"? Maybe this is merely the product of too much time on our hands as we wait for the game to start. Or... could it be a CIA conspiracy? {"They", as we know, don't even HAVE to have a reason}.
 

Black Irish

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Sorry, but you're way off here bro. The term has been around for quite awhile...and it's going anywhere. In fact, about 8-9 years ago, my buddies and I were in a bar and we were brainstorming ideas about starting a gambling league. We ended up agreeing on a league in which we'd all pick 6 games against the spread every week, and at the end of the year the winner would get x amount of dollars. I called it the "Pick 6"...so it's been a popular term for at least that long. I know you said you don't pay attention to much pro football, but this term has been used a ton for a long time. There's no "all of a sudden" to it.



I'm not disputing the existence or use of this term prior to last weekend. It just seems that "all of the sudden" college football announcers have been using it a lot over the past week, compared to the rest of this season. Maybe they all started playing the lottery recently.
 

Green Goblin

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The real annoying term that came out of nowhere but caught on like wildfire is "Moxy"

Kid's got moxy! Moxy, moxy, moxy... lol
 

BeauBenken

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I thought everybody hated the RKG thing.

And when does "Pick 6" pick up the meaning of "a phrase or term particularly relating to football that becomes widely overused". That'll be great.
 

BGIF

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The real annoying term that came out of nowhere but caught on like wildfire is "Moxy"

Kid's got moxy! Moxy, moxy, moxy... lol

It didn't come out of nowhere. It came out of Maine.

"Moxie" isn't new. It's the name of a soft drink that's been around for about 150 years. They had an aggressive marketing campaign tieing their product to an energy boost and an active life style long before "The Pepsi Generation", RedBull, etc. The "Moxie Man" was around before the Marlboro Man was born. You'll hear the term used in James Cagney and George Raft movies from the 30's and 40's.
 

NDinFL

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It didn't come out of nowhere. It came out of Maine.

"Moxie" isn't new. It's the name of a soft drink that's been around for about 150 years. They had an aggressive marketing campaign tieing their product to an energy boost and an active life style long before "The Pepsi Generation", RedBull, etc. The "Moxie Man" was around before the Marlboro Man was born. You'll hear the term used in James Cagney and George Raft movies from the 30's and 40's.

Case in point. (Beau)

reps BGIF
 
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Actually I believe that Bill Simmons was in agreement with the OP. I think he was in favor of the term Touchdown After Interception (TAINT)
 

dshans

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Archer Daniels Midland has been "growing" profits for 90 years out of the pockets of American taxpayers. I understand Brooks Brothers created "The Gentleman Farmer's" attire.

It isn't just ADM. Throw in Cargill, Northrup King and a bunch of others. And it isn't just taxpayers burdened with subsidies to and tax breaks for these behemoths; it's consumers as well.

Years ago (more than I care to admit) I was hired to videotape a number of depositions in a civil lawsuit filed against ADM, Cargill and others, including some European conglomerates. The suit was filed by a California bottler of 7-Up and other beverages that used high fructose corn syrup to recover damages that resulted from artificially high prices for the sweetener due to a price fixing scheme concocted by Big Ag. ADM, et al. had been convicted on criminal charges for their illegal scheme.

His claim was for the money he wasn't able to recoup from consumers through higher prices for the end product. He passed some of the cost to the buyers but "ate" much of the increase due to market pressure at the retail level.
 
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