My Account
Sign up, and you can make all message times appear in your timezone.
Sign up
Report problem with this ad
Start a related thread
Start a related poll
Reply via Boardmail
Feb 9, 2016
2:44
:48
pm
Metallicat
Starter
I don't think it's just about when you travel, but when teams travel to play you
When BYU/Utah were travel partners the same two teams would come to Utah and take turns playing BYU and Utah. That way they cut down on travel expenses.
Start a related thread
Start a related poll
Reply via Boardmail
Report problem with this ad
Metallicat
Bio page
Metallicat
Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Last login
Apr 26, 2024
Total posts
5,623 (1,569 FO)
Report problem with this ad
Messages
Author
Time
Can someone explain why having a travel partner matters?
Eggguy
2/9/16 2:40pm
It doesn't. Hasn't for about 15 years.
Walter Bellhaven
2/9/16 2:42pm
It makes scheduling a lot easier to have teams paired up. If they are in the
jreid191
2/9/16 2:44pm
Yup. Fly to SLC to play Utah and BYU or fly to L.A. to play UCLA and USC
Mikey
2/9/16 2:45pm
travel partner benefits the other schools
cougarmanguy
2/9/16 2:44pm
I don't think it's just about when you travel, but when teams travel to play you
Metallicat
2/9/16 2:44pm
I was previously under the assumption that it wasn't about 2 teams going
BYUFam1
2/9/16 2:48pm
It matters in basketball but not football
BlueSage
2/9/16 2:48pm
Well, I totally hacked everybody else that has already answered, didn't I?
BlueSage
2/9/16 2:50pm
Someone to scratch your back when you lean forward on a long flight? Seriously
Wedgetail
2/9/16 2:54pm
Thanks for the clarification. They are less travel than destination partners.
Eggguy
2/9/16 2:58pm
It helps create awesome rivalries like Utah v. Colorado.
bob falfa
2/9/16 3:04pm
Ah, I was wondering how they became such huge rivals
CougarThug
2/9/16 5:47pm
Report problem with this ad
Posting on CougarBoard
In order to post, you will need to either
sign up
or
log in
.
Report problem with this ad