Monday, December 2, 2019

College and Professional Sports Are Crooked as a Dog's Hind Leg

"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." -- Arthur Schopenhauer

You don't have to be a police detective to see there's an epidemic of game-fixing going on in college and professional sports. All you have to do is remove the blinders and open your eyes.

I first started to realize it was true when I read an article by Brian Tuohy a few years ago about how the NFL fixed the playoffs in 2001-02. The idea was to let the Patriots win it all as a "patriotic" gesture in the wake of 9-11.

Stuff like that happens all the time these days. For example, Boston won the World Series because of the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, and Houston won the World Series in 2017 to give that city something to cheer about in the wake of the epic flooding that ruined so many people's lives.

It makes for a better human-interest story that way!

You can read all about Brian's book, "The Fix Is In," on his web site: www.thefixisin.net

For those of you who are on Facebook, also see The Fix Is In Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/TheFixIsInTuohy. Sports fans from all over the country who have realized games are being fixed on a regular basis post their observations there. They've discovered that college and professional sports have little more integrity than professional wrestling.

That includes every Division I college team in the country, as well as Major League Baseball, the NFL, the NHL, the NBA, the PGA Tour and the LPGA Tour.

Even high school games are fixed sometimes.

And judging from the reaction I've gotten to this blog, there are lots of sports fans out there who know something's wrong. Sports Fraud now has more than 100,000 page views.

Readers find this blog by searching the Internet for phrases such as "Freemasons control the NFL" and "college basketball games are rigged." That's because fans all over the country are getting fed up with seeing their favorite teams take a dive.

Everybody has to throw a game once in a while. The Chicago Bears' 16-15 "loss" to Philadelphia  in the playoff game was one of the most obvious fixes of the 2018-19 NFL season.

Michigan threw the Ohio State game on Nov. 30, 2019, giving up 56 points at home in a game they could have won if they'd been allowed to give 100 percent on every play.

And to cite just a few obvious examples from the 2018 college football season, Ohio State threw the Purdue game, and Michigan threw the Notre Dame game and the Ohio State game. That doesn't include all the games when the favorite still won but deliberately shaved points, such as Ohio State's ridiculous 52-51 victory over Maryland and Michigan's 20-17 squeaker against Northwestern.

Michigan had the better team and would have won the Ohio State game if it hadn't been fixed.

The Wolverines have had 50 consecutive years of Top 20 recruiting classes, including lots of Top 10 recruiting classes, but now they're 2-17 against OSU since 2001. Hahaha! Are we really supposed to believe those games were all on the level? Even Bo was 5-5 against Woody!

Rutgers (1-11) "held" Ohio State to 52 points in Columbus. Did they have a better defense than Michigan last year?

And the following teams held OSU to less than half what they scored in their 62-39 "victory" over Michigan: Purdue 20, Penn State 27, Michigan State 26, Minnesota 30.

Do all those teams have defenses that are twice as good as Michigan's? Hahahaha!! Michigan had the top defense in the league in 2018 and one of the best in the country.

Even the oddsmakers made Michigan a 5-point favorite on the road.

Michigan would have left the field littered with crushed Buckeye nuts if they'd been allowed to give 100 percent in that game.

Speaking of fixed games from 2018, the Freemasons hit the Daily Double on Saturday, Dec. 29, when Michigan and Notre Dame were both required to take a dive in the biggest games of the year.  Michigan, a 6-point favorite, got blown out by Florida, 41-15, and Notre Dame "lost" to Clemson, 30-3.

See the 33 in that score, 30-3? That's because the 33rd degree is the highest level of corruption available in Freemasonry. They often put their signature 33  on the games they fix.

How anyone could seriously claim that it looked like Michigan and Notre Dame were trying to win those games is beyond me. A first-grader could tell those games  were fixed.

And the Michigan basketball team threw the Wisconsin game on Jan. 19, 2019, after starting the season 17-0. They rarely commit turnovers when they're actually trying to win, sometimes only 2 or 3 in a game. They had 16 in the Wisconsin game. What a hoax! Plus they shot 28 percent from the 3-point line, about half their normal percentage when they're actually trying to make the shots.

The Oregon-Michigan men's basketball NCAA Tournament game on March 23, 2017, was another glaring example of what I'm talking about. Fast forward this brief highlight video to the 2-minute mark of the video to see Oregon score the winning  basket with 1 minute left in the game:

Uncontested Game-Winning Basket

Watch the slow-motion replay as D.J. Wilson, No. 5 for Michigan, backs off and allows Oregon to score without even contesting the shot. And this was the game-winning basket in the regional semifinals, with a trip to the Elite 8 on the line!

Wilson is a  great shot-blocker and could have easily blocked that shot if he'd been allowed to, but the fix  was in, so he had to do as he was told. Blocking that shot would have meant the end of his career, because game-fixing is  serious business.

Speaking of Michigan, their "loss" to Michigan State on Oct. 17, 2015, when the punter fumbled the ball away on purpose and let MSU score the winning touchdown on the last play of the game, was probably the most obvious fix of the 2015 college football season, and that's saying a lot, because the competition was so fierce.

The Masons also stuck it to Michigan when they fixed the Orange Bowl game on Dec. 30, 2016. One of the most obvious ways in which the Masons left their fingerprints on that crime scene was the final score -- Florida State 33, Michigan 32.

That's because the 33rd degree is the highest degree of corruption available in Freemasonry. Occult numerology is extremely important to the Masons, so they like to use the number 33 and various other occult numbers to signal those in the know when they've fixed a game.

Michigan never should have been playing in the Orange Bowl in the first place. They started out 9-0 and would have gone undefeated and played for the national championship if they hadn't been required to throw the Iowa game and the Ohio State game.

The Masons also fixed the Michigan State game on Oct. 8, 2017, when seventh-ranked Michigan coughed up the ball five times en route to a 14-10 loss at home, despite being heavily favored to defeat one of their biggest rivals. Third-ranked Oklahoma was also forced to throw a game that day when they lost at home to Iowa State.

Every now and then I post a comment on a newspaper web site or a fan forum, and when I do, sports fans flock here to get the information they can't get anywhere else, because the mainstream media are all in bed with the corrupt Masonic system that rules college sports, professional sports and the rest of the world.

By the way, as of January 2017, Facebook has paid me the ultimate compliment by banning me from commenting on various team sites, including the Michigan and Michigan State football and basketball pages and the Chicago Bears fan page. If there's nothing to my allegations, why was it necessary to resort to censorship to prevent my fellow sports fans from reading what I've written about this subject?

I'll tell you why -- they know it's the truth, and they don't want sports fans to know the truth. The success  of college and professional sports depends on the success of the cover-up -- they know that if the truth gets out, they're finished.

The same thing happened to me when I joined an Indiana University fan site. After I signed up, I promptly pointed out  that the Hoosiers threw an NCAA Tournament game against Syracuse in 2013, and posted a link to this blog, which I had just recently launched. I was then immediately banned from that forum. LOL!

Unfortunately, the coach ends up getting blamed when his team gets caught up in the scandal. What no one seems to notice is that the players are making "mistakes" on purpose because the fix is in.

Indiana fired Tom Crean after the Hoosiers got blown out by Georgia Tech in the opening round of the NIT in 2017, but it wasn't his fault that his team was required to throw so many games. If they'd been allowed to give 100 percent in every game, they probably would have ended up something like 29-4 instead of 18-15.

Before writing all this off as a "conspiracy theory," consider the recent study that found "conspiracy theorists" to be more sane than those who refuse to consider alternative explanations for events:
http://www.collective-evolution.com/2014/12/08/study-suggests-conspiracy-theorists-are-the-most-sane-of-all/

Speaking of conspiracies, illegal activities far more serious than game-fixing flourish everywhere. Prosecutors charge people with the crime of conspiracy every single day. Are prosecutors "conspiracy theorists?"

Stop living in La La Land and start living in the real world. Not everything that happens in the real world is random. Sometimes it's because two or more people were working together to bring about a desired result. That's the definition of a conspiracy.

For example, there's a massive conspiracy going on right now in government agencies and the news media to cover up the fact that most of us are going to get killed very soon when Planet X goes raging through the solar system and causes an extinction level event here on Earth. You can read all about that on my other blog here:

http://brussellsprout.blogspot.com/

My motivation for launching this blog is the fact that I don't enjoy being deceived and I don't like seeing other people being deceived. Although it's a small matter compared to the more serious problems in the world, it's still something that ought to be stopped, and the gangsters in charge of fixing all these games should be prosecuted and put behind bars, where they belong.

A secondary motivation for me in posting this blog is to gain some measure of revenge against the Freemasons for all the heartache and misery they've caused me through the years. Not to mention millions of other sports fans, players and coaches, and the rest of the world. See this: http://henrymakow.com/300902.html

For more on the Masonic connection to all this, and to learn why Michigan, Notre Dame, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue, Penn State, North Carolina, the Chicago Bears, Indianapolis Colts, Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, Chicago Bulls and various other teams are required to throw so many games, see this: http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-history-of-great-events-of-this.html

See this post for information about how football games are fixed:
http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2015/02/how-football-games-are-fixed.html

See this post on how to fix a baseball game:
http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2014/11/how-baseball-games-are-fixed.html

And see this post for more details on the fixing of some Michigan games, Super Bowls and various other contests: http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-hail-mary-hoax-super-bowl-iii-and.html

There's lots more about how to fix a basketball game here:
http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2013/04/how-games-are-fixed.html

And here: The Fixing of the NCAA Tournament in 2015

Doesn't it make you mad when your favorite team is required to lose or keep the game close because the game is fixed? Not to mention all the heartache and misery inflicted on the players and coaches for being forced to collaborate in fraud, and to the clueless fans who suffer disappointment after disappointment without ever suspecting anything is amiss.

Much of this blog focuses on Michigan because I graduated from U of M in 1978 and I've been a Michigan fan ever since high school. I follow Michigan more closely than the other teams, so naturally I know more about them. But what I'm saying here applies to every major college and professional team in the country, because they all have to take a dive every now and then. Michigan just has to do it more often, as I'll explain.

For example, how about the 17th-ranked Michigan basketball team losing at home in December 2014 to the New Jersey Institute of Technology -- a team that got blown out by Albany and UMass-Lowell? If you believe that game was on the level, I've got some beachfront property in Arizona I'd like to sell you. It's right next door to Rich Rod's place.

Not to mention the follow-up home game, a 45-42 "loss" to Eastern Michigan. Are we really supposed to believe that a team that knocked off Oregon and Syracuse and took Villanova down to the wire couldn't manage to defeat the New Jersey Institute of Technology or Eastern Michigan in consecutive home games? LOL! Are you Michigan fans really that naive?

And losing by 30 points to Arizona and then getting clobbered at home by SMU? Are we really supposed to believe a well-coached team suddenly collapsed for no reason at all? That they suddenly stopped showing up for work, stopped making easy shots, stopped hustling for loose balls and rebounds, stopped boxing out on the boards? If these games had been on the level, Michigan would have started out the 2014-15 season at least 9-2, not 6-5.

The real Michigan basketball team is the one that defeated Oregon and Syracuse, and nearly knocked off 12th-ranked Villanova in Brooklyn. The one that showed up during that four-game losing streak in December was an impostor -- a team that was ordered to take a dive or else. And so was the Michigan team that showed up in most of the Big Ten games. If they'd been allowed to give 100 percent in every game, they would have made it into the NCAA Tournament again.

Some games are fixed by the Freemasons to punish me for breaking away from the multi-generational Masonic cult into which I was born, for refusing to worship the Devil like everybody elese, and for choosing good over evil and truth over lies. See this: http://brussellsprout.blogspot.com.

Freemasons like to use the number 55 in the final scores when they've fixed a game, because I was born in 1955. They also like to use 6 and 30 a lot because I was born on 6-30-55, and 26 and 76 because I was married to a Masonic agent on 6-26-76 (666 -- The Mark of the Beast).

The number 55 popped up on Nov. 25, 2014, when the Michigan basketball team was forced to take a dive in their 60-55 "loss" to Villanova, and also on Dec. 3 when North Carolina lost at home to Iowa, also 60-55, in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge.

Those pesky numbers, 55 and 30, also popped up again on Dec. 9, 2014, when the Michigan women's basketball team, which had been undefeated at home,  got blown out by 30 points, 85-55, by Princeton at the Crisler Center. That game was played just prior to the ridiculous spectacle of the men's basketball team "losing" to Eastern Michigan.

And the numbers 55 and 30 figured prominently in Michigan State's ridiculous 71-64 overtime "loss" at home on Dec. 20 to a Texas Southern team that had a record of 1-8 coming into the game.  MSU led at halftime, 30-25, and Texas Southern won the second half, also 30-25, to make the score 55-55 at the end of regulation. Also, the two teams combined to score 55 points in each half.

Notre Dame is a frequent victim of the game-fixing scandal because I grew up in South Bend and was a classmate of Mike Parseghian's at Jefferson Elementary School in the fall of 1964. That was the year that Mike's father, Ara Parseghian, began his illustrious career as the head coach at Notre Dame. Also, I lived in South Bend during the 1990s while I was working for the South Bend Tribune, and my daughter graduated from Notre Dame.

Even women's basketball games are fixed sometimes. The previously undefeated Notre Dame women's basketball team got blown out at home by Connecticut, 76-58, on Dec. 6, 2014, and then had to go into overtime to defeat DePaul, 94-93, in their next game. Two consecutive games that were obviously fixed. Notice the 76 and 93? I got married to a Masonic agent in 1976 and she divorced me in 1993 as part of the plan to destroy my life.

Leaving their numeric fingerprints on the final score is the Freemasons' way of letting me know the game was fixed for my benefit (or detriment).

For more on the fixing of women's basketball games, see this: http://sportsfraud.blogspot.com/2013/04/even-womens-basketball-games-are-fixed.html

Ruining my favorite pastimes is just one small part of the Freemasons' sadistic campaign to destroy my life. They've been trying to drive me to suicide for the past 10 years, but I refuse to do it, and one of the main reasons why is that I don't want to give them the satisfaction. It's too complicated to explain in detail here, but there's lots more about all this on my other blog at http://brussellsprout.blogspot.com.

For hundreds of years, the world has been ruled from behind the scenes by a secret cabal of criminally insane, devil-worshiping mass murderers known as the Illuminati. They're the richest, most powerful and most evil people in the world, and they use their henchmen in the Masonic lodges and other secret societies to carry out their secret agenda. See this: http://www.savethemales.ca/000166.html

Fans should be directing their anger at the Freemasons in charge of fixing the games, not at the helpless coaches and players, all of whom already have a gun pointed at their head.

When the fix is in, coaches, players and referees are required to throw the game, to act like they're trying, even though they're not, and to keep the whole sordid affair a deep, dark secret. If they were to talk, their careers, their lives and even the lives of their loved ones would be in grave danger. Blackmail is widely used by psychopaths in our society to cover up their crimes -- most of which are a lot more serious than game-fixing.

All this is covered up by the mainstream media. I worked for daily newspapers myself for about 25 years as a reporter and editor, and I started out as a sports writer, so I know a thing or two about daily newspapers and TV stations, and how corrupt they are. But now that I'm retired, I'm about as far from mainstream as it gets, so buckle up and get ready for a wild ride.

I want to make it clear that in most cases, I don't believe players are throwing games for personal gain. They're doing it because they have no choice if they want to continue playing. It's required by the Masonic gangsters who rule college and professional sports, and everything else in this country, and they don't get anything out of it other than being allowed to stay on the team.

Not only do you have to be a good athlete to play major college and professional sports, you also need to have some acting ability.

Don't be one of those clueless fans who just chalk up a fixed game to an "off night." Watch the games carefully, and ask yourself if it really looks like they're giving it the old college try. Chances are, at least one team isn't, and sometimes neither team is -- at least not on every play.

ESPN Classic, ESPNU, the Big Ten Network, the Fox sports channels, the CBS College Sports network and others all show reruns. If a game seemed suspicious to you, watch the replay and look for the telltale signs. Eventually, you'll be able to tell when a game is fixed.

Record the games as often as possible and analyze them from the standpoint of an investigator whose job is to look for evidence that a game is fixed. I think you'll be amazed at what you find.

The corruption in college sports also extends to the announcers and the news media for failing to point out the obvious truth. I've noticed many times that when a call is blown or a player makes a truly outrageous and willful mistake, the announcers fail to point it out and the network doesn't show the replay. They just gloss over it.

Now, don't get me wrong, I went to Michigan and I like to see the boys do well. But all this losing isn't what irks me. What disgusts me is their not being allowed to win because they're forbidden to play up to their potential. Sometimes they're allowed to win, but they're required to make lots of "mistakes" and keep the game close, like the Akron game at Michigan Stadium on Sept. 14, 2013, which the Michigan football team barely won, 28-24, despite being a 37-point favorite.

I don't mind losing fair and square. If the other team plays better and deserves to win, I'm the first to congratulate them. That's not what I'm talking about. What I'm talking about is when a team loses a game on purpose. I'd like to see both teams give 100 percent in every game, the way they used to before this game-fixing conspiracy reached epidemic proportions.

The way things are set up now, playing Division I college sports is like belonging to a secret society such as Skull and Bones or the Freemasons. You're sworn to secrecy. The players and coaches are powerless to do anything about the situation, because if they talk, it will mean the end of their careers, and their lives might be in danger. It's like the proverbial elephant in the room that no one is allowed to talk about.

Imagine what it must be like to throw a game, to be subjected to ridicule and derision, and to be sworn to secrecy, unable to defend yourself or tell the truth about what happened. But that's exactly the price that players and coaches are expected to pay when they're initiated into the secret society of major college and professional sports.

It's no accident that college and professional sports have both developed into multi-billion-dollar businesses in recent years. The ruling elite announced their plans hundreds of years ago to pacify the "sheeple" with sports and other trivial pastimes to keep them from noticing that they were being systematically fleeced by a conspiracy of the richest and most powerful people on the planet -- the famlies that own the central banks, aka the Illuminati.

See this: http://www.activistpost.com/2013/08/sports-greatest-hypnotic-distraction.html

One of the biggest conspiracies of all is the conspiracy to convince you that there's no such thing as a conspiracy! That's why the mainstream media often try to cover up the truth about a conspiracy by using the term "conspiracy theory," as though actual conspiracies don't exist.

Here's a list of 33 "conspiracy theories" that turned out to be true:

http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=195848.0

And there's lots more about conspiracies that are threatening your life and the lives of your loved ones right now on my other blog, including the cover-up surrounding the fact that one or more colossal celestial bodies are headed toward Earth right now and are likely to cause an extinction level event sometime within the next year or two -- possibly even this year.

See http://brussellsprout.blogspot.com/

I know it's scary to think about, so I'm going to end this post on a more cheerful note. Please keep in mind, even if you don't survive the impending cataclysms, it's not that big of a deal. We're all spiritual beings who live forever, and we reincarnate on Earth many, many times to learn spiritual lessons.

Evidence for this is available in a wonderful book called "Journey of Souls," written by Michael Newton. You can read all about the "Journey of Souls" here: http://amazon.com/Journey-Souls-Studies-Between-Lives/dp/1567184855/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1384128520&sr=1-1&keywords=journey+of+souls

16 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  2. That's true. Soccer matches are often fixed, and fans are starting to realize it now.

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  3. I like game very much, because from my childhood I was a good player. Always I tried to success in my life. Some time I became success and some time I failed. But thought that in game there will be gain and some time it may be failed. But now a days I see game and I became very shocked when I came to know that player take financial benefits from the opponent to give them win. Why they will take like this. It is a novel occupation which can give a man financial benefits also joy.
    Serie a Live

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  4. No longer watching sports on mah LED TV but still nice to read

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  5. Does the 1997 college football season not count?

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    1. Occasionally they let Michigan win a national championship in football (1997) or basketball ((1989), but that was before the game-fixing scandal reached epidemic proportions. They even let Michigan reach the NCAA Championship Game in 2013. They don't like to make it too obvious, because people might wake up to the fact that so many games are fixed. After all, all five starters on that 2013 team are now playing in the NBA. It would have been pretty suspicious if they hadn't at least made it to the Final Four.

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    2. Also, 1997 was long before I realized that games were being fixed. Until about 2005 or so, I was a typical clueless sports fan who would never have dreamed it was even a remote possibility that a college football game or college basketball game could be fixed. Then I read that article by Brian Tuohy, and that changed everything for me. I started to notice all the ridiculous plays, the complete lack of defense, the deliberate fumbles and interceptions, and lots more. Once you get beyond the initial resistance, it's easy to see how crooked everything is. You just need to stop living in La La Land, where everything is just fine, and college sports are never fixed, and look at the world with an open mind for a change.

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  6. Does the 1997 college football season not count?

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  8. Replies
    1. Thanks for the link, Valentin. I'd already seen that article because I subscribe to Henry's newsletter. He tells it like it is. Freemasons and other secret societies control this world, and they're running it into the ground.

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  9. Revisit this one.
    2000 NIT First Round Notre Dame L 75–65
    Watch last 20 seconds of the game with UofM down by 8.
    BTW the line was UofM +9 1/2....

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