No Lon Chaney SR did not play the Wolfman. His son Lon Chaney Jr played the Wolfman.
white white senior yellow yellow senior orange orange senior green green senior blue blue senior purple purple senior red red senior brown brown senior black (1st-9th degree), there used to be a "no degree" black belt but it was removed.
he doesn't play anything, he is the vocal singer.
Nassau William Senior was born in 1790.
William Senior - journalist - died in 1920.
No
You cannot
Stick with the team you are with now. Jv has never counted for anything. Stay with the 6 man team and get better to start.
No he can not, that he would either be inelegible to play for jv if he was good enough to play on varsity
yes
If the rules don't allow it, then they can't, but it happens all the time. I don't think it's "allowed" anywhere actually. But...coaches may agree ahead of time to allow junior and senior players who don't get many varsity reps to participate. No one really keeps detailed records on JV and Frosh football games, so it's never usually an issue. The whole idea of JV and Jr squads is to prepare these guys for varsity by exposing them to game conditions.
In my hometown, no. This leads me to assume that generally, the answer is no. However, the specifics to your league can likely be found in a rule handbook in your coaches desk somewhere. Probably you could break into his office and look for it, but that would be illegal and not worth showing up all the uncoordinated kids that pay JV
Yes, if they suck that bad.
It is not a common practice, but in my state (Georgia), there is no rule against it.
freshmen, JV (junior varsity), Varsity varsity is the highest
Down.
It depends on the school, I came in as a freshmen and played jv and the next year I started varsity but my program is not the best