Definitely somewhere that the archaic dialects are spoken and the archaic, more French-like, spellings of words ("theat
re,"
etc.) are used. The correct spelling in the United States is "center."
Yes, this is light trolling of our friends from other former parts of the British Empire, especially the English, but it is intended in a good-natured way, a joking response to the way some English people like to troll us with gems like "Americans don't speak English; they speak American." I'm basically replying with "Nah, dawg. We speak the
modern language. You're still speaking the archaic dialects!"
Wanna talk archaic? Some of their spellings are actually more
Latin-like than French-like. "Fæces"? Really? In the 21st Century? BENE, PROAVUS! (That's Latin for "OK, Great-grandpa!") That is, some of the spelling quirks in the U.K. (and, to be fair, most of the rest of the places formerly subjugated as parts of the British Empire) are not left over from the Normans 950-odd years ago. They're left over from the frickin'
Romans, who pulled out of Britain 1615 years back.
I say I'm joking, so I want to state clearly the non-joking reality. "Center" is technically the correct spelling in the USA, but given that a significant fraction (and possibly a majority) of native speakers of English in the USA now can't do basic verb conjugation according to the current recognized grammatical rules of U.S. English (past participles are a disaster - I read and hear crap like "should have ran" or "needs to be ran" all the time from native speakers, including some pretty smart ones), we probably shouldn't worry too much about the order of the last two letters in the word "center."
Also, we have friends here from the U.K., Australia, and Canada, and I'm not going to seriously tell them "centre" is wrong if one of them writes it. In fact, it occurs to me now that the middle part of the handle of the OP,
@HawkRiderFan, might be a reference to the Saskatchewan Roughriders, in which case the OP was very likely using the correct spelling from where the OP was educated.
Having been educated in the USA, I prefer the
modern U.S. spellings over the
archaic U.K.-and-most-of-the-rest-of-the-former-Empire spellings, so yeah, I would have written "center," but it's not like I was confused and didn't know what the original post's title meant.
ObOL: As others have said in this thread, it's a young OL and one that was built without any expensive free-agent signings or trades. Those are really good things. Still, I've been fooled before (more than once, I'm embarrassed to say) into thinking the OL would be good enough and then seen during the season that it wasn't even close, so I'm waiting to see. Young and inexpensively acquired are good things, but aren't
that good if the line is awful again.