Tennessee Quarterback Brian Maurer’s Ex-Girlfriend Rips Him On TikTok After Breakup

Silas Walker/Getty Images


College relationships are, with very few exceptions, as successful as a VIP event orchestrated by Bill McFarland.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe that the last one to work out was Manti Te’o and what’s her face. Oh, that’s right, she didn’t have a face. Or a name. Or a pulse. But at least it didn’t end up in heartbreak. Just severe, unwavering public humiliation. That counts for something?

Relationships for college athletes are even more confounding. That’s like going to an all-you-can-eat buffet every day and just piling a scoop of brussel sprouts onto your plate. At least you’re getting nutrients while you cry.

It should be illegal, or at the very least a violation of team policy, for SEC quarterbacks to enter into exclusive relationships.

Even if that young woman is as attractive as the University of Tennessee’s Morgan Hood.

Ms. Hood was the girlfriend of Tennessee quarterback Brian Maurer before things evidently ended unceremoniously.

Hood took to TikTok, a new social media platform for the youths that makes me feel like Clint Eastwood in Gran Torino, to announce her split with the freshman quarterback. It’s, well, it’s somethin’.

Maurer retorted to his former lover on Instagram, appearing to claim that the TikTok was an attention grab.

Instagram


The feud has reached Long Paragraph Posted To Instagram levels. Critical mass.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B6BCDJZB899/

Moral of the story: lovers come, lovers go, life goes on. When you get to my age, you don’t even feel anything anymore. Love is for the weak. You can’t get heartbroken if you stay lonely [insert guy pointing to head meme].

P.S. And yes Morgan, you are correct. It is a very slow news day.

[h/t Busted Coverage]

 

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Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.