The No. 9 ranked University of Florida Gators and the No. 24 ranked University of Virginia Cavaliers are in South Florida and are preparing for their December 30th matchup in the 86th Capital One Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium. Virginia Offensive Coordinator Robert Anae and select offensive players met with the media this morning at the Renaissance Fort Lauderdale Cruise Port. Video is available at:https://www.orangebowl.org/media/info/pressbox/ Virginia Offensive Coordinator Robert Anae Q. Let me ask you about a couple of those kids. Olu is a transfer, Bryce is a transfer, and you guys do things a little unorthodox with the jersey and some of the culture that you guys believe in. Is that at all hard to take a transfer and get them engrained in that as opposed to maybe a little more run-of-the-mill?ROBERT ANAE: Not when your organization is tightly orchestrated. If there’s loose ends and those things are half committed to, then they don’t really take traction. So someone new would come in and kind of see the unravelling of the seams. I think these transfers come in, and they go, whoa, what is going on, whoa. And everybody is bought in, and whoa. They work so hard, and oh, my gosh, look how they break down an opponent, look how they prepare for a game. Once these transfers see that, they go, oh, my gosh, this is really cool, I kind of like it here.Q. How did it work with Bryce because I feel like your quarterback and your star player, if he’s not all in, there can be those loose ends.ROBERT ANAE: Oh, absolutely. The result shows 100 percent the buy-in. And Bryce being our quarterback — the way the game has changed, this is now a quarterback sport, and Bryce being the quarterback and one of the top playmakers and the most committed guy in the process, now everybody else falls in line. And in my opinion, that’s exactly what happened.Q. Obviously you thought he was a good player and that’s why you wanted to get him. What did you think he would achieve in terms of impact on the program?ROBERT ANAE: Athletically he’s spot on. Athletically he’s developed as a passer. You know, when you recruit a kid, you just are looking at really the bottom level really when you look at it from a recruiting standpoint because all we’re doing is trying to get the best player we can, so to say, hey, we saw all this, nobody saw all this. What we did not see on the recruiting film is how committed he is to the process. What you don’t see on the film is his ability to lead others in the process. And dang, did he overachieve in that realm. Had no idea that he would be that kind of person, that kind of leader on a team.Q. When you build a program, part of what you’re building is roster management and succession plans and things of that nature. I imagine it’s hard to lose a player of Bryce’s impact. From what you were just talking about, the leadership, (indiscernible) do you think he’s absorbing some of what Bryce has done?ROBERT ANAE: Way back when? Horse and buggy days, I suppose. Me and my group were sitting in their freshman room, and we got to see Jim McMahon and those guys do stuff. Next thing you know, it was our turn to do stuff. And yeah, you get to see it firsthand. You get something in your brain that says, hey, that’s how it looks, that’s how it works. Next thing you know, you’re out there doing that stuff. So yes, I do believe modeling is a big part in program — long-term succession plan, long-term success, yeah.Q. A year ago you guys kind of faded down the stretch of the regular season. You lost some close games and talked about wanting to finish better. But this year you finished strong in the regular season. Just a better team this year or why were you able to do that?ROBERT ANAE: Yeah, the pieces those guys, Joe, who is, all the guys that are here on the offensive side, that absolutely is the reason for the difference. That hurt. Kind of like our basketball team, that hurt, that postseason thing.I think those kids take it on themselves to commit at a better level, a higher level, and you know, we’re here because of that I do believe.Q. You were the center of that National Championship team? That’s pretty awesome.ROBERT ANAE: I was a guard. Coach moved me to guard that year.Q. Was it Bosco at quarterback?ROBERT ANAE: Yeah, Robbie. Steve Young and I were freshman. He didn’t redshirt, I did, so it put us a class apart. But talking to him, yeah, we sat there and saw McMahon and those guys, and we’re sitting in those rooms, next thing you know it was our turn, and away we went. So I do believe modeling is pretty important. He was talking about quarterback, how is it going to be in the future. Virginia Quarterback Bryce Perkins Q. We talked with your dad recently, and I think one of the things that struck me is he never heard you mentioned the letters NFL. Your dad and your brother played in the NFL. Is that something you think about much?BRYCE PERKINS: Yeah, I mean, I think about it, but I also know that the things I do now, it’s going to influence that more. In thinking about the NFL, I’m focused on now in order to get to. I’m never really too concerned about saying or thinking about the next step until this step is complete.Q. Is that pretty easy to do?BRYCE PERKINS: Yeah, because I mean, there’s still things and goals I want to accomplish in college. I don’t overlook anything, especially nothing that goes on in college. When thinking about the NFL, I can’t think about it until after my college career is done, so that’s why I do a pretty good job and kind of want to focus on college and all the goals that I have in college before I even think about worrying about the NFL.Q. Do you see yourself as an NFL style quarterback? It seems there are more of those now, more quarterbacks like you than there were maybe 10 years ago in the NFL.BRYCE PERKINS: Yeah, definitely. And I’m getting better. I feel like I get better every year as far as whatever it is, something little. So I feel like my ceiling is high. I haven’t reached my potential yet. And how the NFL is shifting, there’s room and there’s a place for my style of play. And I think it can be very effective, and Lamar Jackson, amongst others, he’s just a more recent, has been very influential on the type of player, the type of system that teams run.It’s going to give a lot of guys chances, and I feel like I fit right into that.Q. Adding on to that, when Lamar came to the NFL (indiscernible) how does that motivate you, and at the same time what does that put into your game plan and motivation?BRYCE PERKINS: Yeah, I mean, I think you have to — you look at it, and even without them, you have to make sure that you’re better because there’s always going to be doubts, and there are always going to be like, well, you should play this, and just being as a black man and not being a traditional image of what a quarterback has looked like, there’s going to be people saying this and that saying you shouldn’t play this because that’s not what they’re used to. So by them doing what they’re doing, and this isn’t the way, and they’re kind of making an open door for people coming behind them that have aspirations of playing quarterback, but maybe were told that you should play this or you should play that because you can run a little bit, and the NFL is for guys 6’4″, 6’3″, 6’5″, guys that don’t look like us that can stay still and kind of move.By them doing what they’re doing, it makes younger kids, way younger than me, starting in middle school, decide to play football. Maybe they’ll have the opportunity to play quarterback because they see it’s possible through the eyes of the many people that are playing.Q. You guys are in the Orange Bowl, but is this season what you thought it would be?BRYCE PERKINS: I haven’t really heard any doubters. You hear doubters, but it’s nothing new than what we have been hearing. I mean, for us, we know that this is not the ceiling for us, so I think as a team, we know that our team and organization is built on unbroken growth, and you look at Coach Mendenhall’s years here, from two wins, to six wins, to eight wins, to nine wins and looking forward to being ten, we think and we know how we run and how our culture is operated and set up, that it’s built to keep increasing and keep moving forward.I mean, next year most of the guys are coming back. We’re losing great guys on both sides of the ball, but this team is stacked with talent, and we’re in the Orange Bowl for the first time, and I expect that we’ll do even better next year.That’s the way Coach Mendenhall’s programs are built and the way that I see us going for the years to come.Q. What would a win mean to you?BRYCE PERKINS: A lot, because nobody has ever done it before. Well, one other team has done it before. So for us to get it right aligns with all our goals. It sets us up to be one of the best teams in UVA history, just being mentioned with the other great 10-win team. It’s a testament to our hard work throughout the summer, our hard work and transition from last year to this year, and the culture and the players who built and kind of set the platform when they first got here. A lot of these guys were on the two-win team and kind of see the transition from the program and how it came from not a bowl game to three bowl games in a row. Virginia Center / Offensive Guard Victor Oluwatimi VICTOR OLUWATIMI: The weather it nice. It’s a little warmer than I want in December, though. But I like it.Q. When you made the decision to go to Virginia, what did you think — not the ceiling because you never want to say ceiling, but where did you think the program was headed and at what pace?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: Man, honestly when I was thinking about Virginia, I didn’t really know where it was going and all that. I knew that they just hired a coach like a year ago, Coach Mendenhall, but you never know because I think the first season they were 2-10 and then I knew before I decided to come they were 6-7. So it wasn’t a great season, but it was definitely on the rise. I didn’t know where they were going to end up, but I just had faith.Q. Did you ever think about being in the ACC title game, being in the Orange Bowl this year? It seems fast.VICTOR OLUWATIMI: Well, when I got here, seeing the talent that we had, seeing how we worked, seeing how our coaches, how well they put us in positions to win, I thought we were going to get here last year, honestly, just the way the flow of the season, and then at the end of the season some things happened and we didn’t finish strong, so we weren’t able to get there. But that’s what I expected last year. This year it finally happened.Q. You’re a pretty thoughtful guy; when you think about — it’s almost weird in a sense but you guys have taken very incremental steps with this program. You mentioned last year you kind of couldn’t finish it, this year you finished it off. What was different from your vantage point? What was different that made — was this team just a little bit better, or was there something that changed, that was learned, that was done differently to let you finish?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: I think it’s just growth, growth under Coach Mendenhall, growth under this regime, players growing together. Honestly we lost a lot of great pieces that were on the team last year, so I mean, I won’t be like, oh, we’re better than them or whatever, but we played well, and the games that were close, we finished. I think that was the difference. Maybe that’s Bryce being a year more experienced. The O-line is starting to play better towards the end of the year and things like that.Q. There’s a lot of things about this program that look like they’re on the way up. You mentioned the offensive line. Seems like you guys keep getting better and better and obviously with more experience that happens. You look at some of the young receivers and the young backs and then you’ve got the quarterback where we don’t know a whole lot. We’ve heard good things about Brendan and we know some of the guys that have been recruited, but do you ever wonder what does this offense, this program, what am I going to be in for when we don’t have Bryce Perkins?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: No, I don’t wonder about that because I stay in the moment because when you start looking forward to next year, you let games slip away that you could win this year. So definitely I stay in the moment.Q. What has been your experience, Bryce Hall suffered that injury, out for a year. People talked about him as a team leader kind of guy. What’s been your experience with him since the injury, if anything?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: Bryce is one of those people that he will talk to almost anybody. Even last year when he didn’t really know me at all when I first came, he’s a very upbeat guy. He’s either telling you scripture or trying to teach you a lesson or if you ask him a question he’s going to try to explain it and be very thoughtful. Bryce is still that type of guy. He’s upbeat even through his injury. It was funny, the other day I had my Aaron Rodgers jersey on because I’m a Green Bay fan, and he’s like, you’re a Green Bay fan, and I was like, yeah but I can become a Bryce Hall fan. One of these days, I’ll grab your jersey.Q. Remind me, where did you transfer from?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: Air Force Academy.Q. Did you watch their bowl?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: Last night? Oh, yeah, for sure. I have a lot of friends on that team that I wanted to see play well, and they did.Q. Is it fun to watch those guys you know, or is it weird to be like — do you ever think like, hmm, I wonder what it would be like if I was still there? Obviously it’s worked out well, but do you ever stop to think I wonder what that would have been like?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: No, not really about staying there and playing for the team. But you know, I definitely think like I miss some of my friends. I definitely made a lot more friends here, but I miss some of my friends and relationships that I’ve built there.Q. Bronco is a very interesting coach, different than a lot of guys, the way he runs things, the way he talks, the way he thinks about things. Did you immediately like that or was there a part of you that was like I think this guy knows what he’s doing but it’s a little different?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: I would say back when I was in high school and they recruited me, I kind of thought the staff may have been a little off or a little different. That probably — recruits are probably skeptical of those things. But once you get into the family, man, it’s really just a family atmosphere and they’re normal. They do things in an unorthodox way, but I think it’s very helpful for the growth of a young man becoming a man, having responsibilities. Each team meeting starts with best day ever, and that’s your learning, learning how to become a better leader, how to play with more grit, how to live life with more grit, how to take on challenges and want challenges, and I think they’re very good instead of just hearing football, football, football, football.Q. This may be impossible to answer, but do you think the way they do things, it’s easier or harder at first on a transfer?VICTOR OLUWATIMI: When you first get to the university, they throw a lot of things at you, so it can be overwhelming when you first get here. But after that, you’re in the family, you get your routine, and you kind of just follow suit and try to work hard and earn everything that you can. Virginia Tight End Tanner Cowley Q. Obviously this is a big game. What’s it like for you?TANNER COWLEY: Yeah, it’s a huge opportunity for the program, first New Year’s Six. I think it just shows the growth and direction. Just being here shows where we’ve been stacking up, but winning would just be huge for the program and the fans.Q. For the unbroken growth, do you feel like you need to win this game or do you still feel like with nine wins and an ACC title there is still unbroken growth?TANNER COWLEY: I think there’s still unbroken growth regardless. We’re obviously happy to be here but we want to win. We’re preparing every day while we’re here to win.Q. What’s it going to take to win? What have you seen from Florida’s defense?TANNER COWLEY: Yeah, they’re an athletic defense. They’re fast off the edge, so just holding up that front with myself and the tackles and just playing Virginia football and executing at a high level.Q. Do you like the extra break? You’ve had some extra time to sort of scheme teams. Is that something you enjoy?TANNER COWLEY: Yeah, yeah. I think I was talking with Joe the other day, how many times do you think you’ve ran some of these plays, and we’re probably on 30 times a play with walkthrough and practice. We’ve got a good feel with the offense and good feel for what they’re doing.Q. Have you seen anything schematically that really jumps out about the Florida defense or anything strange they do?TANNER COWLEY: Nothing off. Nothing we haven’t seen yet. We’re pretty prepared for it.Q. Bowl week activities, is there a favorite thing outside of football you guys have done this week?TANNER COWLEY: I’ve been going to the beach every day, jumping in the ocean, whether it’s morning or night. I enjoy that.Q. How much freedom do they give you this week?TANNER COWLEY: There’s like sporadic hours throughout the day, but today we have a big beach day planned for the whole team. We get a three, four-hour window.Q. What was your kind of take on (indiscernible)?TANNER COWLEY: I think luckily since I only had a semester with the previous staff, obviously things were different, but I wasn’t too probably entrenched in what it used to be like, so it was easy to adapt for me. We obviously realized we do things different than anybody else probably in the country.Q. About the jersey numbers, were you at first like, he’s the coach, I’ll do it, or were you like, oh, yeah, that makes a lot of sense? What was your take?TANNER COWLEY: I think everyone at first was probably a little nervous, am I going to get the number I want. But it’s played out. It’s played out since then, and now people are excited for that night, and it’s turned into a great night for the team.Q. You’ve probably answered this a few thousand times, but the idea of going for the 10th win, seems like you guys talk about that a bunch. When did that become something that was sort of a goal that you were talking about?TANNER COWLEY: I think we addressed that after the Louisville loss when we put up each possible record and said, which do you want to be. Coach said we can be here at I think it was 6-6, something like that, or we can be down here at 10-3, going into bowl week it would have been. That’s what we addressed then, and everyone — we kind of said, well, we want to be in that lower section, so we realized that we could be there.Q. You mentioned that you were here for a little bit before. To be where you are right now, on the cusp of 10 wins, in the Orange Bowl, having played in the ACC title game, I’m sure it’s what you wanted, but when Bronco first got hired, did you think, by the time I get to this year we could be there?TANNER COWLEY: After 2-10, that was a tough season, and really — we didn’t have any bowl experience from the year before, and I definitely didn’t imagine being here and being in the ACC after that season. And then just watching the Military Bowl, the Belk Bowl, it doesn’t surprise me that we’ve just continued to climb because of the steps that he puts in this program and how hard we work every day.Q. It’s interesting, and I guess it’s the way it should work, that you guys have been very incremental. It just seems like every year, whatever was lacking the previous year, you’ve added. Is that surprising that you’ve been able to do it so clearly?TANNER COWLEY: Yeah, it is — if you look at it like that, it’s very interesting to see. But I think we focus on a lot now, too, that first year, people were probably just happy to be there and go through it all, and now this year and last year there’s been a whole different mindset going into this bowl week. We’ve been talking this week just about how great that winter and summer and off-season workouts were, spring ball, coming off that South Carolina win, how that just sticks with you. So that’s obviously the goal again. Virginia Wide Receiver Hasise Dubois Q. Can you share your thoughts on — what was it that made this team toward that second half of the season just really get it together and come up with the wins that you guys came up with to win that Coastal?HASISE DUBOIS: Honestly, I’d probably say the play of our O-line. Our O-line stepped up and gave Bryce time, and once you give Bryce time the team clicks. When he’s at his best, it’s basically a hassle to stop the offense. Once their O-line got to the best part, we just thrived, and we knew all the plays we needed to play and the receivers helped Bryce out, which helped the O-line out, which helped all of us out and helped the team out personally. So I feel like that’s what made us get that jump the second half of the season.Q. Did you guys have maybe like a group meeting or just talking about like, hey, guys, team meeting, just some intervention to say, hey, guys, let’s come together to really rally around the end of the season?HASISE DUBOIS: Honestly we had no specific meeting. We just all knew that we can play better based on all the spurts that we were having here and there, but then it took us a while to put it together and have it consistent. So I mean, the season, the losses early in the year helped us. We wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for them, so I feel as though that helped us and made us better.Q. Can you put into words just the whole Coastal Division in terms of how like you guys took advantage of just other teams beating up themselves? For example, you guys played Miami here, we know how that went, but these teams beat up on each other.HASISE DUBOIS: Honestly, the Coastal Division is a tough division, honestly. Almost every year it’s almost always by one game or a late race to the end of the season. Going from playing everybody, playing here in Miami, we were one of the teams banged up early in the year. We lost a corner, I was out for the second half. It was just a rough outing. But then as we were getting back healthy, other teams were getting more injured and everything, and then we just took — we don’t take that as an advantage, we just took our opportunities. We didn’t take it for granted. All the plays we’re making, all the opportunities that were given to us in all the instances, whether we were playing the ones or the twos, we just didn’t look at them as a team, and we played our best ball.Q. How do you guys build your confidence from the previous year?HASISE DUBOIS: Honestly we knew we were better than that. Our defense, they know they had a bad game, but they’ve just seen it, they corrected it and they’ve been playing confident ever since. Going against them in practice you can tell they have a different mindset, they have a different pep in their step, so I feel as though the defense will have a great outing come Monday.Q. (Question on Bryce and cutting the hair).HASISE DUBOIS: Yeah, after the game I got to get in there, too, get a little snip-snips, I’ve got to cut him up a little bit. But yeah, he told us that he’ll cut it once he beat Virginia Tech and then we forgot to tell him and then we were too riled up. But so after Orange Bowl we’ll definitely have a new man coming out of that locker room come Monday night.Q. What does it mean, he said, hey, what are you doing, but like — he’s got the hair, but he said it’s going to be a new journey for him when he cuts it.HASISE DUBOIS: I mean, honestly Bryce has had hair for a long time as you can see, but dreads that long don’t really come overnight. That’s a long process.Q. Eighth grade he said.HASISE DUBOIS: With him going back to the normal, it’s going to be funny. He’s got a weird shaped head, but it’s going to be funny once we see him. He’s not going to be anything different. He’s still going to be Bryce. Just without having dreads he’s going to be just another male figure in the sports atmosphere, so I feel as though it’ll be a great thing for him.Q. I spoke to Bryce about this being the year of the black quarterback, especially in the NFL. Obviously Lamar, Mahomes, Deshaun, Russell Wilson. What does it mean obviously when you see him throwing you these passes but obviously his success and his growth?HASISE DUBOIS: I mean, honestly it means a lot to me because Bryce is a great kid. He’s humble and everything. He’s just destined for that level. As you can see, usually people with dreads that play the big show, anybody with long hair that plays the position, they try to move them elsewhere, like quarterback and DB —Q. Like they did with Lamar.HASISE DUBOIS: Exactly, so Bryce taking it to the next level, being clean cut, I feel as though he’s very capable of being a quarterback in the NFL. Just like you said, like Lamar, we’ve got to move him positions. No, he has to stick stern to his position, quarterback. He has to go prove all the doubters wrong and prove to all the teams that passed him up that they made a mistake. Virginia Wide Receiver Joe Reed JOE REED: Coach Brum, he gives me the minus two mark. I don’t know, sometimes you just have that feeling when they kick the ball, I had that feeling, no matter where this ball is, I’m going to bring it out. I went with my feeling, and it paid off.Q. I think he said I’m going to give credit 50 percent you and 50 percent to the protection. Do you agree with that?JOE REED: Oh, for sure. It’s probably 75 percent them and 25 me. I’m watching film, I’m like, dang, I respect these guys. I have the easy part. I just catch it and run really. They do a great job of blocking, and his scheme is incredible, too. As the ball carrier you’re supposed to break tackles, so me breaking one or two tackles, that’s what I’m supposed to do.Q. Are you ready to return some kicks?JOE REED: Yeah, I’m ready to go.Q. How exciting is that for the last time?JOE REED: Oh, it’s very exciting, especially in this game, in this setting, at Hard Rock Stadium, couldn’t ask for a better way to go out, especially returning kicks.Q. (Indiscernible).JOE REED: I did. I probably should have scored on that one, too, so hopefully I get another opportunity like that and finish what I started this time.Q. Is there any good mojo at the same stadium this year? Does it matter to you?JOE REED: You know what, you might be right because I think my second year here I had a pretty good return at hard rock, too. I’m going to go ahead and say on Monday night I’m going to have a big return.Q. Coming back to this stadium, do you have any flashbacks of that? Have you spent much time on the field?JOE REED: Honestly, until this moment, I hadn’t even really thought about that, but man, now I’m thinking about it. Man, that’s even more reason for us to go out there and ball out and play as hard as we can, knowing that that’s where we lost B-Hall. So I’m sure once we get out there we’ll have that feeling, but right now that’s not really something we’re thinking about because we’re just happy to see how well he’s progressing in his rehab.Q. Not to be at full strength in the ACC Championship game —JOE REED: Yeah, it definitely stunk, but at the same time I think it was the best for the team. I’ll take a healthy Billy Kemp over me 50 percent any day of the week. I just had to take a different leadership role from the sideline. When Billy ran off the field after a series, he’d ask me what I saw out there, and I’d tell him, so you know, the competitor in me definitely wanted to be out there, but sometimes it just doesn’t work that way, and you have to go with the flow.Q. Were you close to getting the okay?JOE REED: No, I wasn’t very close. There wasn’t really much I could do that day, honestly.Q. You mentioned Kemp. What have you seen from him?JOE REED: Oh, man, Billy, he’s going to be a dog. He can just do anything you ask him to do, man. I call him a Swiss Army Knife. Billy, you can line him up anywhere and he’s going to be successful. He can return the ball, as well. I’m excited to see what Billy is going to bring to the table here in the future.Q. What would it mean to you guys in the program to win this game?JOE REED: Yeah, it would mean everything, especially with this being my last game as a Cavalier. You look at the fourth and fifth-year guys, Orange Bowl champions, going out with 10 wins, it would just be a testament to all the hard work we’ve done.Q. Do you talk about how much 10 wins would mean?JOE REED: We’ve talked about it a couple times. Actually only one team in UVA history has had 10 wins, and to go out with 10 wins and be in that company would be great and then just raise the bar for UVA football going forward.Q. Do you feel like you need this win to continue the unbroken growth this season?JOE REED: Oh, for sure. We definitely need this win. Even with nine wins right now, just the fact that we know what we’re capable of, we definitely need this win.Q. What do you sense are some of the keys for this game? What do you think you need to do better?JOE REED: Yeah, the first thing, it’s going to come down to ball security. The team that secures the ball the most is going to have a better chance of winning. That’s from an offensive standpoint, and from a defensive standpoint the team that takes the ball away the most is going to have a better chance of winning. So I think this game is going to come down to a lot of ball security, trusting preparation, and go out there and play with confidence.Q. Could be a shootout. Do you like shootouts?JOE REED: Yeah, I’m down for a shootout. We’ve had our fair share of those, and if that’s what it comes down to, I think we’re ready.Note: Videos and photos from all Capital One Orange Bowl events are available via Dropbox on the Orange Bowl web site at https://www.orangebowl.org/media/info/pressbox/ |
About the Orange BowlThe Orange Bowl is a 370-member, primarily volunteer non-profit sports organization that promotes and serves the South Florida community. With its primary mission since being created in 1935 to bring tourism to South Florida through an annual football game and events, it has also maintained a legacy of charitable contributions and community outreach. Orange Bowl community outreach efforts are comprised of four pillars: youth sports, fundraising and community events, academic programs and scholarships, and legacy gifts. The Orange Bowl features a year-round schedule of events culminating with the Capital One Orange Bowl on December 30, 2019. For more information on the 2019-2020 Orange Bowl events, including promotional and volunteer opportunities through the Ambassador Program presented by Panera Bread, log on to www.orangebowl.org or follow the @OrangeBowl on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Snapchat. |
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