Sunday, October 31, 2010

San Francisco Giants Win World Series Game 4: 5 Reasons This Series Is Over

The Giants won in Texas, 4-0, ending a three game home park advantage in the series. More importantly, with this win, they go up 3-1 in the best of seven and only need to win one of the remaining three games to win the World Series.

Aubrey Huff's two-run shot off Tommy Hunter in the third inning put the Giants ahead to stay early in the game, and Andres Torres (double) and Buster Posey (homer) accounted for the other runs.

Meanwhile, the Rangers bullpen returned to its previous-to-game-3 form as two of the three relievers gave up runs.

Teams have seldom come back from a 3-1 deficit, although it is certainly possible. The 2-3-2 schedule means that there is one more in Texas before the series goes back to San Francisco, which makes a comeback slightly more possible.

Still, it does seem like it's all over but the shouting for the Rangers, who had a great season. But it appears that the antlers and claws may soon be put on the shelf, at least until next year.

This Giants team may be a bunch of misfits, but if so, then misfits never fit so well together.

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Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/506326-san-francisco-giants-win-world-series-game-4-five-reasons-this-series-is-over

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College cheaters could be suspended in the NFL

When a player is found to have accepted improper benefits in the NFL's silly little feeder system (often referred to as "college football"), there are currently no ramifications for his professional career. The pro game and the game that refuses to admit it's a semi-pro game are kept separate. As they should be.

For example, see the case of New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush. After he graduated from USC and took a pay cut to sign with the Saints, NCAA rules violations were found that forced Bush to eventually give back his Heisman Trophy. No one in the NFL cared much.

That could all change. There are certain people pushing for a collaborative effort between the NCAA and NFL that could result in fines, or even six- or eight-game suspensions for NFL rookies if they're found to have taken money from agents. From ESPN's Joe Schad:

The NCAA noted the possibility of "potential post-NCAA financial penalties" in a news release Monday announcing the collaborative discussions between professional and college football leaders, player agents, state law enforcement officials and NCAA executives.

The possibility of suspensions during a player's NFL rookie year -- as long as six to eight games -- is also being discussed, according to two sources involved in the collaborative discussions including representatives of the NFL, the NFLPA, the NCAA and the American Football Coaches Association.

This means that if a college player's eligibility has ended under NCAA penalty, a player such as former Oklahoma State and current Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant or former North Carolina defensive lineman Marvin Austin could be subject to penalties that extend well beyond the loss of college eligibility.

Hate. Hate. Hate is the word I'm using to describe how I'd feel if some agreement were to be reached here that kept NFL rookies off the field because of college transgressions. They're separate leagues with separate goals and separate mission statements, and I see no good reason why rules violations in one league should carry over to the other.

If you're the NFL, why would you even think about this? How does it benefit you in any way? If an NFL team doesn't like what a guy did in college, it can exercise its right not to draft him. Kind of like how any employer who doesn't like that your college career consisted of pulling tubes and watching cartoons all day can feel free not to hire you, either.

If college football were different, maybe I'd have less of a problem with this. If we were really talking about scholar athletes and a game that was unsullied by agents, shoe companies, boosters, etc., then maybe I'd be a little more sensitive here.

But that's not the world we live in. For the most part, with guys who will get to the professional level, we're talking about football factories. We're talking about young players generating huge amounts of revenue for schools, and seeing very little of that money in return. We're talking about guys who are already being paid by agents, boosters or any other number of people. We're talking about violations of rules that probably shouldn't even be rules in the first place. These are rules that no one in the NFL cares about.

And we're going to take away half of a guy's rookie season because of it? In the league today, rookies are counted on to contribute. Think about how much it would hurt a guy's career to miss that much time in the season where he's going to learn the most. This would, without question, hurt the NFL's on-field product.

And as far as I can tell, it'd get nothing out of it, except for helping college football keep up the myth that it's some kind of honest enterprise, looking out for the best interests of the innocent youngsters out there.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/College-cheaters-could-be-suspended-in-the-NFL?urn=nfl-279969

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Sponsored Post: Yes, I Jinxed Myself

Source: http://www.danshanoff.com/2010/10/sponsored-post-yes-i-jinxed-myself.html

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The Jimmy Johnson Survivor report: Episode 1

Shutdown Corner's "Survivor" correspondant is Chris Wilcox, longtime Cowboys fan and proprietor of BlueandOrange.net. He'll keep us posted on Jimmy Johnson's progress through the season.

He survived coaching under Jerry Jones; can he survive the rough terrain of Nicaragua? Jimmy Johnson, former head coach of the Dallas Cowboys and Miami Dolphins, and current studio analyst for "FOX NFL Sunday" will be one of the contestants on "Survivor: Nicaragua."

This is not the first time a former NFL personality has competed on "Survivor," as former NFL backup quarterback Gary Hogeboom competed on the 11th season in Guatemala and finished seventh. Coach Johnson will look to improve upon that performance, but after his first three days, it's not looking good for him.

For those who are unfamiliar with the show, a brief overview: Twenty strangers are split into two "tribes." Sometimes the tribes are determined randomly, but other times they are separated by sex, age or even race. This season, the two tribes are split up between 10 people 30 and younger and 10 folks 40 and older, with each side having five men and five women. The two tribes compete in immunity challenges with the losing tribe forced to go to Tribal Council, where they will vote out one of their members.

There are two wild cards thrown into the mix: First, hidden on each beach is a immunity idol that, if found, can be used by its holder to keep themselves in the game even if they are voted out. Second, a twist new to this season is a "Medallion of Power," which sounds like something out of a bad science-fiction movie. Whoever finds the Medallion of Power can use it to have an advantage in the immunity challenges if they choose to use it, but once a tribe uses the medallion, it reverts to the other tribe and they have the option of using it.

The younger tribe started the game with possession of the medallion, but chose to trade it for fire and fishing gear. Despite holding the Medallion of Power, the older tribe chose not to use it for the immunity challenge, which was a convoluted obstacle where five members of each tribe held "gutters" on a downward slope as another teammate dumped buckets of water down the gutters, which emptied into a bucket. Once the bucket was full, puzzle pieces fell from a levy and the remaining four tribemates put together a puzzle, with the first tribe to put its puzzle together being declared the winner. The older folks came up short, forcing coach Johnson's squad to vote somebody off first.

The coach had a rough go of things to start the show. He got sick during the first night and was seen throwing up, something I'm sure Terry Bradshaw and Howie Long will give him grief over on Sunday. After his side lost the immunity challenge, he openly talked with other tribe members about being the second-weakest member of the team behind Wendy Jo, the goat rancher. Several members made clear their intention to vote the coach off, finding him to be a threat to win the game due to his celebrity status. Johnson disagreed, claiming that the jury pool would be reluctant to give a man already known to be a millionaire the $1 million prize.

In the end, Wendy Jo proved to be an annoying chatterbox during Tribal Council, and those types tend to go quickly. After all, who wants to spend 39 days in close quarters with an annoying person? Coach Johnson received no votes, and he and eight other of his peers voted for Wendy Jo. She in turn voted for tribemate Yve, which the home audience probably found strange since Yve did absolutely nothing on camera of note the entire episode.

How do coach Johnson's future prospects look in this game? Not well. He didn't seem to have too many close bonds out there, and "Survivor" is a game of alliances. Jimmy T, the fisherman, is already gunning for him, though that guy seems at least a little paranoid, as he made comments that he didn't like the way another tribemate was looking at him. Beyond not having any firm alliances, he himself claimed to be the second-weakest member of the tribe, and they just voted the weakest person off. His head will be the next one on the chopping block if they lose another challenge, so I suspect he will be pushing hard for his tribemates to use the Medallion of Power in the next challenge.

Coach Johnson commented in a confessional that he was hoping to be in a tribe with the younger folks, expecting them to help carry him through the team portion of the game. This definitely would have seemed to benefit him, as he has experience in leading a group of young men to victory on the gridiron. His leadership skill set does not seem to play as well on an older tribe. Coupled with the coach's physical limitations, he does not seem to be in a position to go very far in this game. We will see if he can do anything to help his position over the next few weeks.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/The-Jimmy-Johnson-Survivor-report-Episode-1?urn=nfl-270216

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John Madden doesn't like Mike Singletary's style

Like everyone else, John Madden saw San Francisco 49ers head coach Mike Singletary lay into quarterback Alex Smith on Sunday night. Madden, who won a Super Bowl as head coach of the Raiders, told KCBS in San Francisco that what Singletary was doing wasn't coaching.

“That’s something that, a lot of things go on in a game that you’re not proud of as a coach,” Madden said. “That’s really not part of coaching, that’s sometimes I worry about that. I see youth football and I see high school football and coaches yelling at players and I cringe when I see it. I think people get the picture that’s what coaching is and believe me, that’s not what coaching is.

“I don’t know if you have to yell at players. Now, someone’s going to say, 'You yelled like heck,' but I wasn’t yelling at players, I was yelling at officials. That’s not what it is. You have to coach, you have to teach, you have to strategize, you have to encourage. That’s what coaching is, not the opposite.”

I'd tend to agree. Granted, I'm as qualified to coach an NFL quarterback as Gary Busey is to be someone's AA sponsor, but coaching is teaching and teaching is universal.

Singletary isn't the first head coach to scream at a player, of course. The "yell at a guy until he feels like a scolded little boy" method has been used by coaches in all sports; some of them quite successful: Mike Ditka, Bob Knight, Bob Huggins ... even Vince Lombardi would scream at a guy.

But a lot of milder-mannered coaches who treat their players like adults have had success, too. Dick Vermeil, Tony Dungy, Joe Gibbs, etc. You can make impressive lists on both sides.

Mike Singletary, though, is a long way away from making any list of impressive coaches. If the 49ers are a good team, as he claims they are, then being 0-5 doesn't reflect well on him. It might not be a bad idea to take advice from a guy like Madden, who's seen it all, done it all, and won it all.

Gracias, NFL.com.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/John-Madden-doesn-t-like-Mike-Singletary-s-style?urn=nfl-276933

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Tiger Woods, Long-Time No. 1, Supplanted By Lee Westwood As World's Best

Lee Westwood has officially dropped Tiger Woods from his No. 1 ranking today after PGA Champion Martin Kaymer failed to finish in the top two at the Andalucia Masters in Spain.

This marks the first time in more than five years that Tiger Woods has been dropped from his high perch, marking another bump in the road for Woods over this past year.

Woods has had a terrible year on and off the course. Last November, as most of you know, Woods' sex scandal was first revealed after a car wreck at his home during Thanksgiving precipitated the whole conflict.

Thus began the fall of the great Tiger Woods.

After emerging from sex addiction rehab, he re-entered the sporting world with a series of disappointing showings. In light of this, most expected Woods to drop from his top spot soon.

It is likely no one, however, expected Lee Westwood to take over this spot.

Westwood has been recovering from a calf injury that has allowed him to compete in only one tournament since his second-place finish at St. Andrews.

Most would have expected Martin Kaymer to jump into this spot. However, his less than spectacular finish at Valderrama has dropped him out of the Top 20.

Next in line would likely have been Phil Mickelson, but he has failed to capitalize on several opportunities and remains too inconsistent of a player to have a chance at taking the spot.

With this move, Lee Westwood becomes only the fourth golfer in history to ascend to the No. 1 spot without winning a major (he joins Ian Woosnam, Fred Couples and David Duval).

Don't expect this to last long, though. Woods has not been without the No. 1 spot for more than 26 weeks during his career, and that was back in 2004, a streak which ended with him taking the No. 1 spot until now.

The HSBC Championship in Shanghai is on the card for this week, and it has fielded a lot of strong competition. Woods will be up against Mickelson, Kaymer and Westwood, as well as a majority of golf's best.

I wouldn't expect Woods to leap back into the first-place spot this week. He has clearly still lost some of his game since his sex scandal and subsequent divorce. That having been said, though, don't expect Lee Westwood, or many others for that matter, to hold on to the spot for long. History tells us that Tiger Woods is capable of recovering and regaining his spot, and despite the way he is playing right now, it seems more than abundantly possible that he will regain his spot atop the PGA sometime relatively soon.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/506020-tiger-woods-long-time-no1-supplanted-by-lee-westwood-as-worlds-best

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The Best Line I Read This Week

Source: http://www.danshanoff.com/2010/10/best-line-i-read-this-week.html

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Justin Bieber vs. Tom Brady: The hair/rap battle is on

You know what I never thought we'd have here on Shutdown Corner? A Justin Bieber video.

But that was before I knew that Justin Bieber was awfully territorial about his haircut and that he doesn't appreciate Tom Brady trying to steal his look. So we've got a Bieber video, and I couldn't be more excited about it.

[Related: Randy Moss insults Tom Brady's hair]

He addresses Brady about 25 seconds in. Spit that hot fire, son.

If you didn't catch the line, it was:

"Call up Mr. Brady, tell him leave his hair to the guy who sings 'Baby.'"

[Related: Why Tom Brady refuses to cut his hair]

Oooooh, snap! You got served, Tom Brady. That's Justin Bieber's haircut you're sporting, bro. There's only room for one of those haircuts in the world, and you know what? Biebs is right. Tell Gisele that you need to leave that hair to the guy who sings "Baby."

[Rewind: Meet the 'other' Justin Bieber]

Many thanks, Barstool Sports.

Other popular stories on Yahoo!:
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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Justin-Bieber-vs-Tom-Brady-The-hair-rap-battle?urn=nfl-276981

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Fantasy Football Week 8 Start Em: Calvin Johnson, Detroit Lions

Fantasy Football Week 8:

Don't let the Detroit Lions' record fool you.

They have an excellent wide receiver in the form of Calvin Johnson, and this week's game against the Washington Redskins will give him a chance to really shine.

Especially when it comes to fantasy points.

Johnson is the Lions' top receiver, and you can expect him to have a great game against the No. 31 passing defense in the league.

That's right.

The Washington Redskins have struggled against the pass all season with their banged-up secondary, and Calvin Johnson is a must-start for today's game.

Another good option at wide receiver?

Percy Harvin of the Minnesota Vikings and Louis Murphy of the Oakland Raiders.

The New England Patriots may be one of the top teams in the NFL, but their passing defense leaves quite a bit to be desired.

And the Raiders will take on the Seattle Seahawks who are fantastic when defending against the rush but find themselves at the bottom of the league in passing D.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/505859-fantasy-football-week-8-start-em-sit-em-lineup-advice-injury-reports-and-more/entry/24944-fantasy-football-week-8-start-em-calvin-johnson-detroit-lions

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NFL Week 8 Picks: Green Bay Packers vs. New York Jets Prediction

Green Bay has placed an absurd number of players on injured reserve this season, as injuries have wreaked havoc on the Packers' defense in particular, a development that's led to inconsistent play for a team expected to be Super Bowl contenders early in the season.

The New York Jets haven't looked back since an opening night loss to Baltimore, as they've reeled off five straight wins, performing very impressively on offense. Offense was supposed to take a back seat to Rex Ryan's celebrated defensive unit, but the Jets are upper-middle of the pack on D.

If the Packers are going to win in the New Meadowlands, they'll need a big game from quarterback Aaron Rodgers. He is sure to be blitzed and pressured by the Jets defense, so it will be up to Rodgers to find holes in coverage.

For the Jets they will need to continue running the ball with success, but they'll also need a bounce-back performance from quarterback Mark Sanchez. Sanchez started out the season with promise, turning in some impressive performances, but has since slumped while completing only 50 percent of his passes over his last two games.

I don't think Green Bay's defense is healthy enough to contain the Jets at home, and I expect New York to pull out a tough, close win in this one. It will be Sanchez who makes the difference late in this game.

My Prediction: New York Jets 28, Green Bay Packers 24

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/505748-nfl-predictions-week-8-picks-injuries-and-bold-forecasts-for-sunday/entry/24918-nfl-week-8-picks-green-bay-packers-vs-new-york-jets-prediction

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Tip, pick, return: Kroy Biermann's defensive masterpiece

A defensive lineman batting away a pass? Nice play. Defensive lineman getting an interception? Rare and awesome. Defensive lineman taking it back for a touchdown? The highlight of a career, and maybe the best play of the young 2010 NFL season.

Here's Atlanta Falcons defensive end Kroy Biermann, getting his hand on a pass, laying out for the interception, then taking it to the house.

It was a huge play, too. It came when the Falcons only led by three, with the Browns driving (at least, as much as a team can "drive" when its quarterback is Jake Delhomme) and put the game out of reach (though you may argue that the game became out of reach the moment Jake Delhomme stepped under center).

[Photos: Top five NFL defensive ends]

Biermann's a third-year player out of Montana with eight career sacks. With athleticism like that, I like him to pile up a whole lot more before he's done in the NFL.

[Photos: Kroy Biermann moves on the field]

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Tip-pick-return-Kroy-Biermann-s-defensive-mas?urn=nfl-275905

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BlogPoll Monday: TCU, Boise and BCS

Source: http://www.danshanoff.com/2010/10/blogpoll-monday-tcu-boise-and-bcs.html

Jaime King Jaime Pressly Jamie Chung Jamie Gunns Jamie Lynn Sigler

Saturday, October 30, 2010

2010 NFL Projections and Odds

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/VegasWatch/~3/yArZkFX_lM0/2010-nfl-projections-and-odds.html

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The rise and fall of Shawne Merriman

In 2005, Shawne Merriman was a first-round draft pick, recorded 10 sacks, made the Pro Bowl, was named to the All-Pro team, and won the AP Defensive Rookie of the Year award.

In 2006, Merriman racked up 17 sacks in just 12 games, made the Pro Bowl, was named to the All-Pro team, and finished third in Defensive Player of the Year voting.

In 2007, Merriman had 12.5 sacks and was again a Pro Bowler and an All-Pro.

In 2010, the Chargers have agreed to release him outright, just as soon as he gets healthy.

That's a Lindsay Lohan-like career arc. The speed of his dazzling rise to dominance is matched only by the thoroughness of his freefall to the waiver wire. It's downright astonishing when you look at the big picture.

[Rewind video: Merriman pranked on live television]

Given the last two-plus years of injury/invisibility, plus all of his non-football issues -- the steroid suspension, the thing with Tila Tequila, the dumbest celebratory dance in sports history -- it's easy to forget how good Merriman was. Thirty-nine and a half sacks in three years? That's a Hall of Fame pace, easy. And a lot of those 39.5 sacks came against double-teams and opponents scheming against him. Merriman was an absolute game-changer, and from the second he entered the league, one of its most dominant players.

It's hard to compare it to anything, because so few players play at such a high level so quickly. Imagine what kind of catastrophe it would take for, as an example, Patrick Willis to be released in a couple of years. Or Darrelle Revis. Or maybe for the Packers to be letting Clay Matthews go in 2014.

One wonders if Merriman can ever again be the player he once was.

It's rare that someone who was once great in the NFL (or in any area of life, really) can get back to their previous high level of play after two years of no and/or poor performance. With Merriman, it's fair to wonder, too, how much of his early career dominance was steroid-fueled. He denies ever using and he went with the "tainted supplement" explanation, and he did have one very good year that came after the suspension. Still, the questions will always be there.

Based on his 2009 season, the physical dominance seems to have left him. He played in 16 games, but had just four sacks and 26 tackles. But he wasn't completely healthy, either. He hadn't fully recovered from reconstructive knee surgery, and wasn't anywhere near the same player. So far in 2010, he's mostly been sidelined with more leg injuries. When he has been out there, there's been no sign of the dominance re-emerging.

I wish the best for the man, and I hope I'm wrong, but if I had to bet on Merriman ever getting back to his 2005-2007 level, I'm afraid I'd have to bet against it.

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/The-rise-and-fall-of-Shawne-Merriman?urn=nfl-276809

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Reports: Brett Favre offers tearful apology to teammates

Beloved gunslinger Brett Favre stood in front of his teammates and apologized Monday for being a distraction, according to an AP report.

The distraction, if one does indeed exist, stems from a story on Deadspin.com in which Favre, during his brief tenure with the Jets, is alleged to have sent unwanted lewd pictures of himself to a female Jets employee.

Teammate Ryan Longwell told ESPN's Michelle Tafoya that Favre even broke down in tears during the meeting. Via PFT:

"Brett Favre actually broke down in tears and was very emotional, saying, 'I'm sorry to have been a distraction,'" Tafoya said she was told by Longwell.

Although Tafoya said that Longwell wouldn't give her all the details of the meeting, Longwell said that Favre appealed to his teammates to stick with him.

"I need you guys to carry me tonight," Favre told the Vikings, as related by Longwell to Tafoya. "I'm ready to go out there and give it my best, but I don't know what's going to happen."

What to make of this? I have no clue. I don't know if his teammates feel distracted to begin with, I don't know why Favre is emotional to the point of tears, and I don't know how it affects anything related to Monday night's game. Any comment from me on any of those things would be a total guess.

What does come to mind, though, is what Tarvaris Jackson must have been thinking while watching Brett Favre offer up an apology. If I were in his shoes, I'd be thinking something like "You know, I'm pretty sure I could've gotten us to 1-2, for way less than $16 million, and without the need for a wet-cheeked apology."

Join us for the live blog during Monday night's game.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Reports-Brett-Favre-offers-tearful-apology-to-t?urn=nfl-276199

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Which Mark Sanchez is the real Mark Sanchez?

Week One: 10-of-21, 74 yards, zero touchdowns. Sanchez is a complete liability and the Jets' biggest question mark in 2010.

Week Two: 21-of-30, 220 yards, three touchdowns. Sanchez is a conquering hero.

So, in the remaining 14 games for the Jets, which Sanchez can we expect to see more often? Is he the dink-and-dunk quarterback who needs to be hidden, or is he the guy who makes enough throws downfield to topple the mighty Patriots?

The answer, oddly, lies with the Cincinnati Bengals.

Consider the defenses Sanchez has faced. The Ravens locked Sanchez down in Week One, but they'll do that to most quarterbacks they face, won't they? Ask the Bengals. After Carson Palmer threw for 345 yards and two touchdowns in Week 1, the Ravens went out today and made him look more like Arnold Palmer. He completed just 16-of-35 attempts for 167 yards.

Now, let's look at what the Patriots have done against the pass. The team Carson Palmer threw for 345 yards and two touchdowns against? Yep, that was the Pats. And this week, of course, Sanchez went buck wild on them.

I know the season is very young, and I don't want to extrapolate too much meaning from just two games. Obviously, time will tell -- about Sanchez and the defenses he's faced.

But it does seem possible that Sanchez played a really good pass defense and struggled, and then played a not-so-great pass defense and thrived.

And if that's the case, it means we're looking at an average quarterback. It makes Sanchez a guy who can take what the defense gives him, but not much more.

That's not a criticism, of course -- Sanchez is a second-year player, and if he's an average quarterback right now, he's ahead of the curve. His long-term potential is still there. The Jets have made it clear, though, that they're gunning for a Super Bowl right now. If they're going to get there, they're going to have to do it with an average quarterback.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Which-Mark-Sanchez-is-the-real-Mark-Sanchez-?urn=nfl-270846

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10/22 Quickie: Game 6s, CFB Biggies, NFL Week 7

Source: http://www.danshanoff.com/2010/10/1022-quickie-game-6s-cfb-biggies-nfl.html

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'Project Runway' Winner Gretchen Jones Talks About Being the Season's 'Antagonist'

Filed under:

Gretchen JonesBefore the finale and right up until that heated judges debate during the finale, most viewers assumed that Denver designer Mondo Guerra would emerge as 'Project Runway's' season 8 winner, and the shock of Portland designer Gretchen Jones, the season's "bad guy," winning, left a lot of fans of the show unhappy, to say the least.

Check back Monday for our chat with runner-up Guerra, and read on for our post-finale conversation with Jones, who designed her winning collection after returning home to Portland and learning that her boyfriend had moved out of their shared home and that she wasn't going to have a place to live much longer.

She tells AOL TV that her personal life has calmed down a bit, that she was confident about the competition all along and that, yes, she's well aware of how she was perceived on the show ... and she's OK with it.

 

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Source: http://www.tvsquad.com/2010/10/30/project-runway-winner-gretchen-jones-talks-about-being-the-sea/

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View from Kingsmeadow, Volume 13: A Quaker Shakedown

After drawing Ebbsfleet United in the 2010-11 FA Cup First Round Proper, Terry Brown's AFC Wimbledon were back in action to take on Darlington.

"As with all FA Cup ties, the result is more important than the performance and although we never reached any heights on Saturday I would point out that Basingstoke is a very difficult place to win and I am really delighted to have overcome what was a really good Basingstoke performance on the day."

"Sunday's midday draw paired us with Liam Daish's Ebbsfleet, a team that is on a twelve match unbeaten run," Brown said on the draw.

"It will also bring back to Kingsmeadow last year's skipper, Paul Lorraine, along with Derek Duncan and Callum Willock, all of whom will no doubt relish the opportunity to take us on in what should be a very exciting FA Cup tie. Our games against Ebbsfleet last year were very tight and you always know you are in for a hard game against any of Liam Daish's teams."

"The bad news for Ebbsfleet is that Luke Moore saved some of his best performance against 'The Fleet' and I must say he looked very sharp in training today."

"As far as Saturday's game is concerned we picked up slight knocks to Ismail Yakubu, Ryan Jackson and Seb Brown. All are expected to be fit and available for our up-and-coming league fixture with Darlington on Saturday."

"Meanwhile, Brett Johnson had a cortisone injection in his knee on Friday. He needs a rest period of three or four days and he hopefully will be able to resume training in earnest in Thursday."

Optimism was high for the Dons as they resumed practice on Thursday.

“This week’s training has gone very well and the players have been flying in a couple of the sessions," Brown said. "We’ve got one or two problems with injuries but I don’t particularly wish to go into too much detail about them unless and until I have to. Having said that, I am sure that with a squad of 22 we should be OK for Saturday."

"On a positive note both Luke Moore and Rashid Yussuff have excelled in training this week and will both be pushing for a starting place this week."

“Mark Cooper brings his Darlington side on the back of a good win in the FA Cup last week. Having looked at the scout’s report of last week, they are certainly going to pose some problems in the box as Mark’s teams play bright, quick attacking football and they have a lot of height in the team for set pieces."

“Darlington have only lost one away fixture this year, so we know we are going to be in for a difficult game. But, our home form has been very good this season and so long as we stick to our game plan I am confident that we can continue the run. When we played Gateshead it took over 70 minutes to get a breakthrough but the crowd was very patient. Believe me that really helps, so we’ll be looking for the same again, please, if necessary.”

Scoring-wise, the Quakers are led by former Altricham ace Chris Senior and Liam Hatch. However, central midfielder Paul Terry has been lost due to a torn ACL and the failure to sign center back Sean Gregan and Northern Irelan international winger Keith Gillespie has left Darlington limping into Kingsmeadow.

Up until the weekend, Darlington had not won outside the Northern Echo Darlington Arena. That all changed in the 14th minute, when Senior made it 1-0 Darlo. A follow-through by Marc Bridge-Wilkinson in the 62nd minute made it 2-0 Quakers. Overall, the Dons just failed to impress on Saturday.

Combined with Crawley Town's 2-1 victory over Mansfield Town, AFC Wimbledon wobble down to second on the 2010-11 Football Conference National table.

The Dons will return to FA Cup action on Saturday, Nov. 6 when they face Ebbsfleet. Kickoff is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. ET.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/505505-view-from-kingsmeadow-volume-13-a-quaker-shakedown

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Elena Dementieva Retires From Tennis

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Elena Dementieva, one of the most accomplished women's tennis players of the last decade, retired from tennis Friday.

"It's so emotional," Dementieva, 29, told the crowd after Francesca Schiavone defeated her 6-4, 6-2 in her last round-robin match at the year-end WTA Championships in Doha, Qatar. "It's so hard to say goodbye to all of you. I'm going to miss you so much."

Dementieva finishes her career with 16 WTA titles after 12 years on the tour. She entered the top 20 in September 2000 and remained ranked inside the position for 524 weeks of the last 529, including this week.

Although Dementieva ends her career without a Grand Slam, one of her greatest accolades came at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, where she won the gold medal in singles, defeating Caroline Wozniacki, Serena Williams, Vera Zvonareva and Dinara Safina in an incredible run.

It is a bittersweet ending for Dementieva. Injuries plagued the Russian all season long, as she was forced to retire in the middle of her semifinal match at Roland Garros with a calf injury that later kept her sidelined from Wimbledon.

Source: http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2010/10/29/elena-dementieva-29-retires-from-tennis/

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NBA Agent Keith Glass Stands Up to Poaching

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Keith Glass was lucky.

That's the first thing he wants to make clear.

Quincy Douby
Quincy Douby, 2007
Sure, his rare victory in this case of agent-on-agent crime was the product of a number of factors, from the tireless work of his lawyer to the testimony of his son to the advantages that came with his own reputation being far more spotless than that of the accused, Andy Miller.

But if the client in question, former Sacramento Kings and Toronto Raptors guard Quincy Douby, hadn't faxed Glass' termination letter just blocks away from where Miller's office was located back on April 26, 2007, the decision that might spark change in the way the player-agent relationship is handled in the NBA might never have happened.

Douby, who Glass would later assert was coerced to change agents by Miller and his high school coach, Jack Ringel, had spoken with Glass not long before firing him. And even if he didn't know it yet, Glass' three-year process of firing back had officially begun.

 

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Source: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/10/28/nba-agent-keith-glass-stands-up-to-poaching/

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Wayne Rooney U-Turn Results in Five-Year Manchester United Deal

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wayne rooney wayne rooney manchester unitedSo it really was about the money.

The Wayne Rooney saga that had gripped the soccer world this week came to a surprising conclusion on Friday when the-24-year old forward signed a new five-year contract with Manchester United that reportedly will pay the underperforming, injured, complaining, prostitute-procuring striker up to £180,000 ($283,600) per week.

When presented with the offer, Rooney obviously was able to overcome any doubts about his relationship with manager Alex Ferguson or his crippling concern that United wasn't capable of pursuing additional high-priced talent.

 

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Source: http://soccer.fanhouse.com/2010/10/22/wayne-rooney-u-turn-results-in-five-year-manchester-united-deal/

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Magic vs. Wizards: Orlando Enjoys Easy Warmup Before Heat

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John Wall, Dwight HowardORLANDO, Fla. -- This regular-season opener looked like nothing but an extension of a cushy exhibition schedule, which the Orlando Magic breezed through by winning all seven games by an average of 26 points.

The real first game -- and the one they've been targeting since the summer -- will come Friday night in Miami when they expect to show what they really think about the endless hype surrounding the Heat.

Remember Quentin Richardson's comment from earlier this month: "F**k the Heat.''

The Magic squished the Wizards Thursday like they were stepping on some Florida cockroaches, rolling to a 112-83 victory that never was seriously contested.

Washington rookie John Wall -- the No. 1 pick of the draft with a world of potential -- had some shining moments, but they were dulled badly by an embarrassing performance by his team. The Wiz were never competitive, looking like a very young team with a very, very long way to go.

Wall finished with 14 points and nine assists, but he made only six of 19 shots. And he didn't get to the free throw line until early in the fourth quarter.

Dwight Howard led everyone with 23 points and 10 rebounds, getting serenaded by the sellout crowd with chants of "MVP, MVP.''

It was the biggest margin of victory on opening night for the Magic.

The only real spice to the game was when Magic third-string point guard Jason Williams was ejected in the final minute for his second technical foul after he grabbed the arm of official Tony Brothers. He played only eight minutes, but he was angry after getting his first technical under the NBA's new low tolerance rule.

Either the Magic are going to be really good, or the Wizards really bad.



 

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Source: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/10/28/magic-vs-wizards-orlando-enjoys-easy-warmup-before-heat/

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Report: Tarvaris Jackson May Start Over Brett Favre

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Tarvaris JacksonBrett Favre's streak of 291 consecutive starts may come to an end this weekend, whether he likes it or not.

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported that Vikings coach Brad Childress is leaning toward starting Tarvaris Jackson at quarterback this Sunday, even though Favre wants and is planning to play despite fractures in his left ankle.

Favre was on the field for drills on Friday for the first time this week. He had tape on his left ankle, threatening his ability to play on Sunday at New England.

Favre threw a few easy passes in warmups, but he didn't roll out or take any deep dropbacks while reporters were allowed to watch. At one point, someone tossed a ball Favre's way as he lightly jogged up the field and he was nimble enough to make a stutter-step catch after a slight jump.

Childress is scheduled to address reporters after Friday's practice, when the team must submit the final injury report of the week and list Favre as either probable, questionable, doubtful or out against the Patriots.



Source: http://nfl.fanhouse.com/2010/10/29/report-tarvaris-jackson-may-start-over-brett-favre/

Bianca Kajlich Bijou Phillips Blake Lively Blu Cantrell Bonnie Jill Laflin

Friday, October 29, 2010

Ochocinco sounds the alarm: Trash-talking to begin soon

As his fantasy owners well know, Chad Ochocinco isn't having a tremendous year. Statistically, The Ocho has had just one good week. In Week 1 against the Patriots, he was dominant: 12 catches, 159 yards, one touchdown.

Since then, he hasn't made more than four catches in a game, or had more than 59 yards in a game. He hasn't seen the end zone, either.

Why? Well, you might attribute it to the struggles of Carson Palmer and the Bengals passing game in general. It might be that Terrell Owens, with his three games with seven or more catches, is taking looks away from Chad. Or, it might be that Chad hasn't done enough trash talking.

You can probably guess what reason Chad's going with. From Cincinnati.com:

"I haven't been Chad at all," said Ochocinco. "I've been quiet. There's no bulletin board material. There's no excitement leading up to the game. There's no trash talking, there's no fun. Right now I'm not playing with confidence. Zero, zilch."

[...]

"Especially this bye week, it's about evaluating yourself and seeing who you are," said Ochocinco. "I haven't been the Chad of old, the Chad that we're all used to; the boisterous, sometimes borderline cocky, arrogant but that's the way I am and that's what everybody feeds off of as a city and as an organization and I haven't been that. I think when I do come back I'm going back to the Chad of old."

Well, that's good news for me, as a fellow who finds it entertaining when NFL players say and do ridiculous things. It's good news for pretty much everyone, because according to Chad, the Bengals organization and the entire city of Cincinnati feed off of his arrogance. If that's true, expect the city's crime rate to drop and economy to skyrocket, because that's one of the most arrogant things anyone has ever said.

The Bengals have a bye this week. When they come back in Week 7, they're at Atlanta. Prepare to get your feelings hurt, Dunta Robinson.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Ochocinco-sounds-the-alarm-Trash-talking-to-beg?urn=nfl-276963

Luján Fernández Magdalena Wróbel Maggie Grace Maggie Gyllenhaal Majandra Delfino

10/13 Quickie: Rangers, Lee, Agent, LeBron

Source: http://www.danshanoff.com/2010/10/1013-quickie-rangers-lee-agent-lebron.html

Julie Berry K. D. Aubert Karen Carreno Karolína Kurková Kasey Chambers

College cheaters could be suspended in the NFL

When a player is found to have accepted improper benefits in the NFL's silly little feeder system (often referred to as "college football"), there are currently no ramifications for his professional career. The pro game and the game that refuses to admit it's a semi-pro game are kept separate. As they should be.

For example, see the case of New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush. After he graduated from USC and took a pay cut to sign with the Saints, NCAA rules violations were found that forced Bush to eventually give back his Heisman Trophy. No one in the NFL cared much.

That could all change. There are certain people pushing for a collaborative effort between the NCAA and NFL that could result in fines, or even six- or eight-game suspensions for NFL rookies if they're found to have taken money from agents. From ESPN's Joe Schad:

The NCAA noted the possibility of "potential post-NCAA financial penalties" in a news release Monday announcing the collaborative discussions between professional and college football leaders, player agents, state law enforcement officials and NCAA executives.

The possibility of suspensions during a player's NFL rookie year -- as long as six to eight games -- is also being discussed, according to two sources involved in the collaborative discussions including representatives of the NFL, the NFLPA, the NCAA and the American Football Coaches Association.

This means that if a college player's eligibility has ended under NCAA penalty, a player such as former Oklahoma State and current Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant or former North Carolina defensive lineman Marvin Austin could be subject to penalties that extend well beyond the loss of college eligibility.

Hate. Hate. Hate is the word I'm using to describe how I'd feel if some agreement were to be reached here that kept NFL rookies off the field because of college transgressions. They're separate leagues with separate goals and separate mission statements, and I see no good reason why rules violations in one league should carry over to the other.

If you're the NFL, why would you even think about this? How does it benefit you in any way? If an NFL team doesn't like what a guy did in college, it can exercise its right not to draft him. Kind of like how any employer who doesn't like that your college career consisted of pulling tubes and watching cartoons all day can feel free not to hire you, either.

If college football were different, maybe I'd have less of a problem with this. If we were really talking about scholar athletes and a game that was unsullied by agents, shoe companies, boosters, etc., then maybe I'd be a little more sensitive here.

But that's not the world we live in. For the most part, with guys who will get to the professional level, we're talking about football factories. We're talking about young players generating huge amounts of revenue for schools, and seeing very little of that money in return. We're talking about guys who are already being paid by agents, boosters or any other number of people. We're talking about violations of rules that probably shouldn't even be rules in the first place. These are rules that no one in the NFL cares about.

And we're going to take away half of a guy's rookie season because of it? In the league today, rookies are counted on to contribute. Think about how much it would hurt a guy's career to miss that much time in the season where he's going to learn the most. This would, without question, hurt the NFL's on-field product.

And as far as I can tell, it'd get nothing out of it, except for helping college football keep up the myth that it's some kind of honest enterprise, looking out for the best interests of the innocent youngsters out there.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/College-cheaters-could-be-suspended-in-the-NFL?urn=nfl-279969

Radha Mitchell Raquel Alessi Rebecca Mader Rebecca Romijn Reese Witherspoon

James Harrison threatens to retire because of dirty hit sanction

One day after getting fined $75,000 for an illegal hit, James Harrison is threatening to quit football because he says he doesn't know if he'll be able to adjust his game to new NFL rules. The Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker was excused from practice on Wednesday.

His agent, Bill Parise, told Adam Schefter of ESPN:

"We wouldn't joke about this. [...] This is a very serious issue. James is very concerned about how to play football. If James is going to be fined $75,000 for making a legal tackle, then how do you go play football? It's quite frustrating to James, to coach [Mike] Tomlin, to me, to everybody."

A legal tackle? The hit on Mohamed Massaquoi was the definition of dirty. It's fairly easy to go play football after that. Just stop hitting dudes in the head.

[Photos: See images of Harrison's hit]

Brandon Meriweather of the New England Patriots gets it. He was fined $50,000 this week for an illegal hit and took the exact opposite tack of Harrison, apologizing for his actions and vowing to play within the rules.

Harrison seems to be trying to lead a revolution against the new, misguided rules about tackling. The only problem is, his hits were always illegal and punishable by fine. The linebacker would have been sanctioned even if the league hadn't instituted new rules about illegal hits. 

[Rewind: Another football player's threat to quit]

In 1993, Chuck Cecil was fined $37,500 for taking the same exact cheap shot that Harrison did on Sunday. (Considering inflation of player's salaries, that was a far greater fine than the one Harrison, who makes $13 million this year, received.) What beef does Harrison have? The Dunta Robinsons of the world can complain. James Harrison's type of play hasn't been allowed since the days of Deacon Jones.

[Related: NFL players speak out against dangerous hits rule]

Who exactly is Harrison threatening anyway? You think Roger Goodell cares if Harrison leaves the league? Of all sports, the NFL is the one least dependent on stars. (It's a stretch to even call Harrison that.) Players come and go every year. Nobody outside of Pittsburgh is going to bat an eyelid if James Harrison suddenly stops playing.

Harrison is the only one who doesn't understand this. "I'm going to sit down and have a serious conversation with my coach and see if I can actually play by NFL rules and still be effective," he said. "If not, I may have to give up playing football."

Don't let the door hit you on the way out.

Other popular stories on Yahoo!:
NFL punter arrested after drunken swim
Randy Moss' daughter lands in basketball spotlight
NFL players think star receiver is most overrated player

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/James-Harrison-threatens-to-retire-because-of-di?urn=nfl-278575

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Top Reality TV Gretchens

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Gretchen. It's an old fashioned, salt-of-the Earth name. Of German derivation, it means "reality show star." OK, it means "pearl," but are we the only ones who've noticed that some of reality's highest profile provocateurs over the years have gone by the name "Gretchen"?

We don't know if producers actually seek out potential cast members with this admittedly memorable name (not as memorable as "Mondo" or "Omarosa", but pretty memorable). Whether or not Gretchens have an inside track when it comes to casting, they almost always deliver the drama.

Attention-grabbing Gretchens. Fetching Gretchens. Designing Gretchens. Here's a list of some Gretchens whose lives you may have have followed on network TV or basic cable.

 

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Source: http://www.tvsquad.com/2010/10/29/top-reality-tv-gretchens/

Marisa Tomei Marla Sokoloff Marley Shelton Mary Elizabeth Winstead Megan Ewing

'Teen Mom' Stars Earn $60,000 a Season: How Come They're So Broke All the Time?

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'Teen Mom' stars Maci and FarrahAny fan of MTV's 'Teen Mom' knows that one of the major plot points on the show is how the young mothers struggle financially to take care of their children. But according to a recent report from Life & Style magazine, the teen moms earn between $60,000 and $65,000 for an 11-episode season.

That means since the show started airing less than a year ago, each of the 'Teen Mom' stars has earned around $120,000. We're going to assume the actual amount of cash they see is a lot less than that amount -- minus taxes, trusts for the children (we hope), and other miscellaneous expenses -- but still. That is a more than livable salary, even with the added expense of raising a child.

 

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Source: http://www.tvsquad.com/2010/10/29/teen-mom-stars-earn-60-000-a-season-how-come-theyre-so-brok/

Brittany Daniel Brittany Lee Brittany Murphy Brittany Snow Brittny Gastineau

Which Mark Sanchez is the real Mark Sanchez?

Week One: 10-of-21, 74 yards, zero touchdowns. Sanchez is a complete liability and the Jets' biggest question mark in 2010.

Week Two: 21-of-30, 220 yards, three touchdowns. Sanchez is a conquering hero.

So, in the remaining 14 games for the Jets, which Sanchez can we expect to see more often? Is he the dink-and-dunk quarterback who needs to be hidden, or is he the guy who makes enough throws downfield to topple the mighty Patriots?

The answer, oddly, lies with the Cincinnati Bengals.

Consider the defenses Sanchez has faced. The Ravens locked Sanchez down in Week One, but they'll do that to most quarterbacks they face, won't they? Ask the Bengals. After Carson Palmer threw for 345 yards and two touchdowns in Week 1, the Ravens went out today and made him look more like Arnold Palmer. He completed just 16-of-35 attempts for 167 yards.

Now, let's look at what the Patriots have done against the pass. The team Carson Palmer threw for 345 yards and two touchdowns against? Yep, that was the Pats. And this week, of course, Sanchez went buck wild on them.

I know the season is very young, and I don't want to extrapolate too much meaning from just two games. Obviously, time will tell -- about Sanchez and the defenses he's faced.

But it does seem possible that Sanchez played a really good pass defense and struggled, and then played a not-so-great pass defense and thrived.

And if that's the case, it means we're looking at an average quarterback. It makes Sanchez a guy who can take what the defense gives him, but not much more.

That's not a criticism, of course -- Sanchez is a second-year player, and if he's an average quarterback right now, he's ahead of the curve. His long-term potential is still there. The Jets have made it clear, though, that they're gunning for a Super Bowl right now. If they're going to get there, they're going to have to do it with an average quarterback.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Which-Mark-Sanchez-is-the-real-Mark-Sanchez-?urn=nfl-270846

Lucy Liu Luján Fernández Magdalena Wróbel Maggie Grace Maggie Gyllenhaal

MLS Eastern Playoff Preview: The Sprint to the Cup Begins

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mls cup playoffs

After playing 30 matches over the course of seven months, eight MLS teams now find themselves just four games away from the league title.

It's like having the eight leading runners in a marathon restart the race 10 yards from the finish line. Absolutely anything can happen, and previous MLS Cup tournaments suggest that it probably will.

In each of the past two years, the eighth seed has advanced to the championship game. In 2008, the New York Red Bulls shocked the Houston Dynamo in the first round, won the Western Conference crown and were defeated by Columbus in the final. Last year, Real Salt Lake turned the tables on the Crew before winning both the Eastern Conference and MLS Cup on penalties. RSL managed just one goal over the 240 minutes of semifinal and final play, yet walked away with the title.

 

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Source: http://soccer.fanhouse.com/2010/10/25/mls-eastern-playoff-preview-the-sprint-to-the-cup-begins/

Brittany Daniel Brittany Lee Brittany Murphy Brittany Snow Brittny Gastineau

NBA Agent Keith Glass Stands Up to Poaching

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Keith Glass was lucky.

That's the first thing he wants to make clear.

Quincy Douby
Quincy Douby, 2007
Sure, his rare victory in this case of agent-on-agent crime was the product of a number of factors, from the tireless work of his lawyer to the testimony of his son to the advantages that came with his own reputation being far more spotless than that of the accused, Andy Miller.

But if the client in question, former Sacramento Kings and Toronto Raptors guard Quincy Douby, hadn't faxed Glass' termination letter just blocks away from where Miller's office was located back on April 26, 2007, the decision that might spark change in the way the player-agent relationship is handled in the NBA might never have happened.

Douby, who Glass would later assert was coerced to change agents by Miller and his high school coach, Jack Ringel, had spoken with Glass not long before firing him. And even if he didn't know it yet, Glass' three-year process of firing back had officially begun.

 

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Source: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/10/28/nba-agent-keith-glass-stands-up-to-poaching/

Luján Fernández Magdalena Wróbel Maggie Grace Maggie Gyllenhaal Majandra Delfino

Seattle?s opportunism derails flailing Cardinals

SEATTLE, Wa. -- Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll called his team's 22-10 win over the Arizona Cardinals "interesting," but the real point of interest is a Seattle franchise that has made over 200 transactions this season, and somehow still stands at 4-2, atop the NFC West. They've already matched the win total for the pathetic 4-12 season of 2008; one more victory and they'll have matched 2009's total as well. Full-scale changes of this magnitude don't generally precede surprising win totals, but the Seahawks aren't focusing on the here and now. "It's great to get the win, and we had a lot of fun in the locker room about it, but we have so much room for improvement. Offensively, we ran the football okay; we're getting better. We probably lost 60 or 70 yards (on penalties) in this game, maybe that's not right, but it seemed like it on the couple of penalties on the edge that don't need to happen."

Carroll knows two things full well. First, that his team left at least three touchdowns on the field. Second, these are not your big brother's Arizona Cardinals.

If anyone out there still questions the Hall of Fame credentials of one Kurt Warner, a quick glance at the post-Warner version of the Cards should put that to rest. After Warner's retirement following the 2009 season, head coach Ken Whisenhunt was left with a grab-bag of signal callers in two different categories: underperforming veteran mediocrities (Matt Leinart, Derek Anderson) and rookies for whom, as the Doors once sang, "the future's uncertain, and the end is always near" (John Skelton, Max Hall). Leinart played his way off the team, Anderson played his way onto the bench, and Hall, an undrafted free agent from BYU most famous for being the nephew of former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Danny White, climbed his way up from fourth on the depth chart to get his first start last week against the New Orleans Saints. Beating the world champs was a thrill, but the unfriendly confines of Seattle's Qwest Field and a Seahawks defense more than ready for anything Hall threw at it combined to perplex Hall beyond any chance of victory.

Hall finished his game with four completions on 16 attempts for 36 yards, and interception, and a quarterback rating of 13.5 before he was pulled in the third quarter following a head hit from defensive end Chris Clemons. Seattle's defenders deflected or defenses at least five of Hall's passes, with rookie Walter Thurmond (who started for the injured Kelly Jennings) making his case against a team that could only complete short stuff against him. Anderson replaced Hall and started out hot, completing his first four passes and then falling apart when he was forced to play catch-up, finishing 8 of 17 for 96 yards.

Not that Seattle's offense was that much more effective - especially in the red zone - but defense and special teams stepped up once again in ways that have been unfamiliar in recent years. Arizona fumbled four times and lost all four, and two return fumbles had the Seahawks starting drives on the Cardinals' 11- and 16-yard lines. On those two drives, Seattle lost 17 yards on six plays, predominantly on a befuddling series of penalties that began with 11:09 left in the third quarter. Tight end Cameron Morrah was busted twice on consecutive plays by referee Jeff Triplette's crew for holding, taking the ball from the Arizona 13-yard line to the 33. Kicker Olindo Mare, who actually made nine field goals in his game, had to be content with the fact that only five of them counted due to various penalties.

Arizona's defense could take some credit for those stops. "We have a little something about trying not to give them six points, give them three, try to keep them out, especially in the red zone. We kind of take pride in that," defensive tackle Alan Branch said.

But as Arizona nose tackle Bryan Robinson concluded, moral victories don't count in the standings. "I feel just as bad as our offense feels right now ... I think we gave up like 150 yards rushing today; that doesn't sound too impressive to me. And then, Pete Carroll called off the dogs at the end - that was a classy move by him."

"Beast Mode" did continue to a degree, with running back Marshawn Lynch continuing his physical style and finishing up with 89 yards on 24 carries and longest run of 39 yards. Lynch continued to surprise with his ability to bounce outside on zone slides, though he humorously accused this writer of "stereotyping" him with such notions.

"Why? Why would they be surprised? They made an assumption," he said jokingly. "Why are you making me one-dimensional? No, it's just a read, you know. If everything is clogged up inside, why not run outside? It's just basically what the defense gives you; you've just got to capitalize on it."

The biggest star of the day on offense, both literally and figuratively, was receiver Mike Williams, whose story of reclamation continues at a breakneck pace. He led all receivers on both sides with 11 catches on 16 targets for 89 yards and a touchdown in which he seemed to defy the laws of physics in the way he could adjust his body to the ball and stay on bounds in the end zone.

"On the sidelines in front of us on a back-shoulder throw; a great one," Carroll said. "Down in close, there was another great grab with guys all over him. He played tough, he played physically, and he came through in a big way. That's becoming a really solid aspect of our offense, and I'm really fired up for Mike."

But of course, Mare took the day's honors overall. Kicking is a game of mindset to a great degree, and the man who was thrown under the bus a year ago by former head coach and current broadcaster Jim Mora brought that mindset to this game.

"The good thing for us is (after all the penalties) is that you keep getting reps on that hash, so you can kind of get into a groove ... I guess it's like a quarterback throwing a lot - you get in a rhythm," Mare said. "It's no different for us. We get that feeling and that confidence. I just do my job and don't worry about anybody else. We can just get it going."

That's a pretty good summary of a Seahawks team that continues to win improbably and unpredictably, with a seemingly ever-changing cast that requires a program at all times. The concept of "winning ugly" is a canard -- in this NFL, you take wins however you can get them. Especially when you're finding your way on a team that's seen so few of them recently.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Seattle-s-opportunism-derails-flailing-Cardinals?urn=nfl-279466

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