Girls want to be with him and guys want to be him. Tim Riggins got a ton of screen time this week and it didn’t go to waste. He moved in with the Taylors and his initial flirtation with Shelly had me a little worried. A few more days under the same roof (and if Tami hadn’t said anything to her sister) and the two might have had a little tryst when no one was around. Given Shelly’s sauciness and his tendency to fall for older women, it was a serious possibility.
But Riggins can’t catch a break. He does the right thing by protecting Julie at the party, but I had a sick feeling when he was putting her to bed that someone was going to walk in and get the wrong idea. And that’s exactly what happened. Eric’s biggest fault is that he doesn’t listen. What he walked in on certainly looked bad, but he knows that Riggins is a good guy. Their clothes were all on and one look at the condition of his daughter would have confirmed Riggins’ story. But when Eric gets pissed, he just tells people to shut up and then walks away (or kicks them out).
It’s a shame because he had a sort of “son that I never had” vibe going with Riggins. First, he says he likes having Tim around because it “evens up the gender teams” and then the two are playing ping-pong at 5 AM. It will be interesting to see if/how this relationship is repaired. Riggins could use a strong father figure and Eric fits the bill.
The tornado scene was pretty cool and Tim’s actions in the store (in protecting Julie) certainly fueled her little crush. Those two are in two completely different worlds, so a potential relationship would be a bad, bad idea.
Speaking of relationships, what the freck is Tyra thinking? Landry risked his future to protect her, and she drops him seconds later so that she can date the sleazy quarterback from a rival school? It’s one thing to take some “time off,” but to immediately date the enemy is just insane. Her confession at the dance that he makes her “feel too much” spoke volumes, but Tyra is a mature, intelligent young woman. It never should have gotten to that point.
I thought the whole storyline about a tornado forcing a rival team into Dillon a little unbelievable, especially with the way that the Laribee kids were acting. It’s pretty ballsy to walk onto someone else’s turf – someone who’s doing you a favor – and act like a total asshole. Given the enormous depth of most of the show’s characters, I thought the Laribee kids (and their coach) were paper-thin.
In other news, Buddy had to deal with the engagement of his ex-wife (are they even divorced?), which led to a pretty good scene with Buddy begging for another chance on the doorstep of his old house. I like Buddy when he’s feeling good about himself, so let’s hope that he moves on and doesn’t spiral downward into depression.
We should get some football next week with the Dillon/Laribee battle, and given all the off the field drama between the two teams, it promises to be an interesting game.