Concussions
Here's something I find curious and wish some intrepid reporter would look more into - hopefully the NY Times which has helped raise national attention about the problem of concussions in the NFL and all professional sports.
Fan commentary on the Philadelphia Eagles and other Philly sports happenings. "Our capacity for hurt is matched only by our capacity for loyalty." -- Bill Lyon.
Here's something I find curious and wish some intrepid reporter would look more into - hopefully the NY Times which has helped raise national attention about the problem of concussions in the NFL and all professional sports.
Crazy to see that the Eagles are eliminated from the wildcard but at 6-8 still have a decent shot at winning the division. My friend Scott puts the odds of everything breaking the Eags way - winning the last two games, the Giants losing this week, and beating the Cowgirls next week - at 50%. Not great odds but ones you would certainly take a week ago.
Last week's Bloomberg article on the Fed's massive $7.7 trillion loans to wall street banks included quotes from Judd Gregg and Barney Frank saying they had no idea of the magnitude of the Fed's lending. (interestingly, the quotes from the now retired Gregg and the soon to retire Frank are the EXACT SAME. Are they using the same talking points?)
Random thoughts from the first half:
Peaceful protesters at UC Davis get pepper-sprayed in what law enforcement calls "standard procedure" for non-resistant individuals.
Per Huffington Post:
a law enforcement official who watched the clip called the use of force "fairly standard police procedure." ...Charles J. Kelly, a former Baltimore Police Department lieutenant who wrote the department's use of force guidelines, said pepper spray is a "compliance tool" that can be used on subjects who do not resist, and is preferable to simply lifting protesters.
After reviewing the video, Kelly said he observed at least two cases of "active resistance" from protesters. In one instance, a woman pulls her arm back from an officer. In the second instance, a protester curls into a ball. Each of those actions could have warranted more force, including baton strikes and pressure-point techniques.
"What I'm looking at is fairly standard police procedure," Kelly said.
ESPN's bias for the BCS plays out in a number and often subtle ways.
I gotta say I agree with Jesse Jackson
In his familiar, incantatory style, Jackson said that if Rocky, a fighter that existed only on the movie screen, deserved a statue in downtown Philadelphia, so did Frazier, a somewhat forgotten figure whose former gym in north Philadelphia is now a store that sells furniture and mattresses.
Michael A. Nutter, Philadelphia's mayor, has said he was working with the Frazier family to build a memorial, an idea that seemed to gain momentum with the rhythm of Jackson's eulogy.
"Rocky is fictitious; Joe was reality," Jackson said. "Rocky's fists are frozen in stone. Joe's fists were smokin'. Rocky never faced Ali or Holmes or Norton or Foreman. Rocky never tasted his own blood. Champions are made in the ring, not in the movies."
Sorry, but I don't think Frazier ever got the recognition he deserved as a Philadelphia icon.
As Ali began to tire from all the energy he had expended in the searing heat, Frazier turned up his own offense and began punishing Ali to the body and the head with his trademark hooks. By the sixth round, Frazier had staggered him in turn and seemed to be gaining control of the bout. At the beginning of the seventh round, Ali reportedly whispered in Frazier's ear, "Joe, they told me you was all washed up" Frazier growled back, "They told you wrong, pretty boy."[4]
In round 14, Frazier was almost blind as he stepped in, and was met once more with punishing blows from Ali. With the punishment from Ali closing his right eye, Frazier was effectively fighting blind in the last rounds of the fight. By the 14th round Frazier was virtually helpless, and although Ali was desperately tired and hurting, he was able to summon the energy once again to give Frazier a fierce beating, and once again Frazier was staggered and nearly knocked down before the bell ended the round.
Seeing the results of round 14, Eddie Futch decided to stop the fight between rounds rather than risk a similar or worse fate for Frazier in the 15th. Frazier protested stopping the fight, shouting "I want him boss," and trying to get Futch to change his mind. Futch simply replied, "It's all over. No one will forget what you did here today", and signaled to referee Carlos Padilla to end the bout. Unknown to Frazier's corner, Ali had walked back to his own corner after the 14th and instructed Dundee to cut his gloves off. Ali later said that "Frazier quit just before I did. I didn't think I could fight any more."[5]
Jeremy Schapp's Frazier tribute glossed over the Ali taunting, phrasing it as "called him a loser...and worse" - while at the same time Frazier loaned Ali money as he was broke after refusing to be drafted.
RIP Smokin' Joe Frazier. Was there anyone who epitomized Philadelphia - both in personality and in professional career - more than Frazier?
USA Today expose on the dark influence ESPN has on college athletics, and particularly the dismantling of the Big East.
Nobody circles the wagon like the Philadelphia Eagles!!
Real quick in 2011. Based on the most at bats on each staff.
My friend's analysis of the Phillies' playoff flame out:
I'm sure there's a way to break it down to figure out how Howard hits
against aces. It'd be complicated, but you can find situational
hitting stats for any batter against any pitcher, so you'd then have
to add those up. My presumption is that the entire team feasts on bad
teams, bad pitching.
Let's face it, the reality is that great pitching and average hitting
is The Worst profile for playoff runs. We are the Braves now. Those
Braves teams won 100+ every season because they had the best 4 and 5
pitchers in the game. Well, those guys are bullpen mates in the
post-season.
Denny Neagle doesn't mean jack in the playoffs. Yet those Braves teams
never had real bats. Just Chipper and some OK guys like Javvy Lopez.
Well, look deep at that Phillies lineup. Polly went from an All Star
to an also ran. Utley is a helluva ballplayer but he's never gonna hit
30 homers again. Rollins is a 6-hole hitter masquerading as a lead-off
hitter.
Look at the last 10 seasons and see how rare it is that great pitching
- teams with 3 or 4 All Star-caliber arms - win the Series. The 2010
SFG are the only example, depending on how you grade the '01 D'backs
(2 Hall of Fame arms and then junk, but great offense).
Once you get to the playoffs everyone - everyone - has 2 pitchers who
can pitch effectively. What wins is great hitting matched up with good
pitching. Like the '08 Phillies and '09 Yankees and '07/'04 BoSox.
Otherwise, you're just the Braves.
Dare I say that the Phillies need more role players?
Well Boswell the supposed baseball expert has some strange column out about the lessons the Nats should learn from the Phillies $170 million payroll - basically don't spend that much.
Furcal should have been out stretching that triple. Please don't let that be the winning run.
PK writes:
Kind of crazy to think the NLCS used to be a 5 game series.
Finally, someone - in this case Ken Dryden - calls Scott Stevens' hit on Eric Lindros for what it was... not old-school hockey, but "a crushing hit to the head (e.g., Stevens on Lindros) is nothing less than an attempt to injure."
PK continues:
Also, after the Berkman homer, Roy's pitch count showed 13 Ks, 9 balls. Somewhere in the 5th or 6th inning, it showed 66 strikes, 17 balls -- he had gone on a run where he threw 53 Ks to just 8 balls. That's insane.
My friend PK was at Game 1. He writes:
Inside the park the Howard at bat reminded me of Victorino's slam against CC. A long AB, fouling off, fouling off, crowd went bonkers.
Complete deliirum as the ball clears the ATT sign.
Did something turn last week with the Eagles under Reid or was it just the anger from the fans leaving the stadium? Something feels different.
They are not a very good team right now, especially on defense. Can't stop the run.. Their vaunted secondary is only slightly better in defending the pass (which is to say not much) and the pass rush just isn't there.
On offense, Vick is getting knocked around way too much and the O-line is a patchwork.
Pathetic loss to a bad team. You could excuse the last two losses - on the road to last year's #1 seed, and to a tough division rival. But to give up 21 unanswered points to Alex Smith and unable to stop Frank Gore on 4 straight carries when the D knew they were running? Terrible!
Does Castillo keep his job?
Funny, here's what sport's guy said about the game. Makes loss even worse given how they were ahead 20-3.
EAGLES (-9) over 49ers
… the Niners might be this year's Good Bad Team (a.k.a. a forgettable team that beats all the other forgettable teams). That won't help them this week, though. Here's why this line is so high: Vick or no Vick, San Fran averages 3.7 yards per play and gives up 5.0 yards per play; Philly averages 6.0 yards per play and gives up 5.5 yards. San Fran can't throw the ball at all: 505 passing yards total, no wide receiver has more than 80 yards. San Fran is built to play tight games, so if Philly blows it open, literally, there's no way San Fran can come back unless Ted Ginn starts ripping off kick returns. I'm laying the nine. Cautiously.
Courtesy of Tim Kurkijian.
It is the only team in major league history to improve its victory total five years in a row, with the beginning of that streak starting with a plus-.500 season. That says they were good, they got better and they keep getting better every season.
Forget about the broken hand. It was the fact that Mike Vick played at all that should be the real source of concern and controversy with Andy Reid's coaching.
I love when Jayson Stark gets to write about the Phillies.
My friend PK writes:
WaPo baseball writer Dave Shenin puts the Phillies' post-season magic number at 3.5. As in, if the Phillies can score 3.5 wins/game then they should win the Series, based on the ERA of their pitching staff and their 2011 record of 94-68 when going above that mark.
What i do know, is that MLB (Bud Selig) doesn't have the balls to call the Sox-Orioles game in the 7th to give Boston the wildcard. Could be a looong night in Baltimore if the weather doesn't change.
are we rooting for Phils to beat Braves and give Cardinals wildcard or lose and force 1 game playoff?
The Red Sox looming wild card collapse has writers hearkening back to the 1964 Phillies.
How the hell did we blow that game last night, with a 10 point lead heading into the 4th Q?
Four years ago this morning, the Phillies were 5 1/2 games out of a playoff spot with 15 to play. Three years ago today, they were tied with the Brewers atop the wild-card standings with 12 games to play. When you consider that history, what they accomplished yesterday at Minute Maid Park was nothing short of remarkable: not the fact that they clinched a fifth consecutive postseason berth with a 1-0 win over the Astros, but the fact that they did so with little more than a nod of acknowledgment.
So flipping over to the Phillies Brewers game yesterday, they posted a stat when Howard was up saying that Howard's 6 straight seasons of 30+ homers and 100+ RBIs is a franchise record.
An email from my Mom. Sorry for the belated posting.
Hi all, Phillies 9, Atlanta 0
I gave EVERYONE Cliff Lee shirts for Christmas - how did I know he would be so great?? 6th shutout this year, ERA .037
Wear those shirts with pride!!
From my favorite newspaperman.
My brother's take on the season.
Florida's Republican leaders have become notorious for being fixated on "voter fraud" and thus requiring voters provide photo id and other such strategies that really serve to disenfranchise poor and minority citizens.
Putting aside the on the field impact of the Eagles personnel moves (i.e., cuts) to arrive at their 53 man roster, it's interesting to evaluate the talent evaluation.
I've always had a strange fixation on former U. Miami star and now former Patriot safety Brandon Merriweather. I've long suspected that the Eagles were targeting Merriweather that year to become Brian Dawkins' heir apparent, but then the Pats took him just a couple slots earlier in the first round of the 2007 draft, prompting the Eagles to trade that 1st round pick to the Cowboys, drafting K. Kolb, and kick starting several years of QB drama and the Donovan McNabb departure watch.
This kind of bizarre Obama administration support for miscreant banks who flouted title and mortgage laws is why the left no longer trusts Obama. More to the point, this is exactly the kind of crony capitalism for which Republicans are known for, and now, Obama too. Not exactly the change we believed in. Not only that, but the underlying rationale for why the settlement is good for homeowners is flawed to boot.
Civil rights pioneer and West Chester, Pa. native Bayard Rustin gets a lengthy profile in the Washington Post as part of the March on Washington anniversary recognition. Rustin was an out of the closet gay back then, which caused quite a controversy in the '60s. Sad to say but it also caused a stir in the 2000s when the West Chester Area School District named its new high school "Bayard Rustin."
The NCAA is already a joke and now the NFL is following in its footsteps with the disciplinary action against Ohio State star Terrelle Pryor.
So I was looking at the Eagles' all-time stats to see where Brian Westbrook ranked after seeing that the team gave #36 out to a player this year and wondering if B. Westbrook was worthy of having his number retired.
I can't believe the Eagles assigned #36 to a player this year (Ronnie Brown). I guess they won't be retiring Brian Westbrook's number.
Well Halladay blew the game in the 9th trying go for another complete game.
it's getting ever harder to distinguish between pig and man, I mean Republican and Democrat. For instance, Republicans want to verify the immigration status of farmworkers, while Democrats oppose the plan and want to continue the financial exploitation of farmworkers because of their questionable immigration status.
That is the wording the White House is using to describe the deal to increase the debt ceiling, a deal which includes no tax revenues and $1 trillion in spending cuts. What's worse: Obama covering up his negotiating incompetence by trying to couch fiscal surrender as a "bipartisan compromise" or if he actually believes getting metaphorically raped is a consensual act.
The Eagles have always been active in free agency, signing Kearse, Owens, Samuels, etc.
Last item from Jayson Stark's column (and maybe why the kick in was needed):
The Phillies took on so little (just $200,000) of Pence's salary that they have flexibility to deal for a low-budget bullpen arm or a home run threat off the bench. They continue to talk to Colorado about Jason Giambi. And they even asked the Twins about Jim Thome, but the Twins would like to hang onto Thome until he hits his 600th homer.
Aside from starting RF for the Phillies in 2012, here's perhaps one of the best reasons for the the Phillies' trade. from Jayson Stark:
It's going to be a fascinating 24 hours in the life of the Astros. By trading away Pence for no one who figures to play in the big leagues before 2014,
Always good when you trade for the best player on another major league trade. Cossert or Singleton may be all-stars at some point but since both are under 21, that won't be for at least 3-4 years.
Mitch Williams thinks Kyle Kendrick is going to be one of the 2 players to be named later in the Hunter Pence trade.
So now that Hunter Pence has been traded for and penciled in at RF, do the Phils send Dom Brown back down to AAA for seasoning and playing time with the intent to bring him back up in September and for the playoffs or do they keep him on the major league roster for spot starts and pinch hitting?
Everyone is expecting Kolb to be traded, but were any of you (I wasn't) expecting the wholesale turnover of the roster?
Word has it that the Eagles' website had Dominque Rodgers-Cromartie's Eagles' jersey for sale earlier today but that it has since been taken down. Not sure whether it is true or not - or whether a deal to trade Kolb for DRC will even happen, but it does highlight that in the big business of professional football it's usually the marketing guys that are the first to know.
The usually stellar Phil Sheridan has lost his ever loving mind in suggesting that the Phillies trade Vance Worley or Dominic Brown (!) to rent Carlos Beltran from the hated Mets for the next four months.
This point in the NYTimes story about the pending settlement of the NFL lockout caught my eye since it is so obviously wrong.
A new rookie wage system in which even the top picks in the 2011 draft could sign contracts worth about half of what the top picks signed for in 2010, a concession by players.
NYTimes' Nate Silver has two recent analysis that should give the Obama White House pause as it dismantles the New Deal legacy by slashing funding for the poor and elderly in ongoing debt ceiling negotiations with congressional Republicans.
New public opinion surveys show that Democrats and Obama are starting to win the debt ceiling debate. (Or is it merely that Republicans are losing it?)
From today's NYTimes profile of House GOP Whip Kevin McCarthy.
"You know, when I was playing for the Philadelphia Eagles, we didn't start losing 'til Terrell Owens joined the team," he told McCarthy. "It only takes one guy to bring down a locker room."
Er, I mean the Phillies.
Again, from my hockey-knowing friend:
Watch this video of Homer's presser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aAipoOohrSU#at=324
He looks downright depressed. The implication here is Snider wanted to make the big Bryzalov move and Homer had no option but to make these moves. Again, I get and accept this with Carter, we assumed he was gone. But to move Richards, the captain and face of the franchise? There must be something bigger here.
Im listening to WIP online and reading the Inquirer right now, trying to make sense of this madness.
My Flyers' fan and hockey-guru friend chimes in:
I am completely floored.They traded two guys in the prime of their careers. Again, I think this speaks to a fundamental problem with Richards behind the scenes. Giving up this much doesn't add up. There needs to be a story behind this. I'm sure it will come out soon and he won't look good. I'm fine with Carter leavingOnly silver lining- major youth movement in Philly: shenn, Giroux, JVR, leino, versteeg etc. And they're relying on a pretty young goalie. That sounds good, but no way we're winning it all for a while
I get the need to clear cap space but I thought the idea was that bryzgslov was the final piece to a championhip team and not the start of rebuilding.
Crazy. Richards did wear down over the season and wasn't much of a playoff factor. Last year he was awesome
Chris Russell, the Redskins beat reporter for DC sports station 106.7 "the fan" FM, says a "source close to Andy Reid" tells him that this will be Reid's last year as Eagles Head Coach. It's an unsubstantiated report but does jibe with top Eagles' executives' pronouncements that the team is "going for it" this season.
Phil Sheridan dances around the unspoken issue of racism regarding Ryan Howard's unpopularity (particularly in relation to Chase Utley's popularity) among Phillies fans.
Stan Collender says Wall Street is already reacting negatively to the uncertainty of the debt limit vote. He also touches on theme and idea I already mentioned. To wit, that Dems and the administration should rattle the markets to bolster their negotiating position.
Try to imagine the virtually immediate impact on the stock price of government contractors if the administration announces on Aug. 2 that money owed to those companies will be paid after 120 days instead of 30, and you start to get a sense of how much the White House rather than Congressional Republicans are in control of the situation.
Giovanni Ramirez's alibi involves giving his 9 year old daughter a $100 bill to go buy a soda at a nearby store.
I have often said that the NBA is a paper tiger as far as popularity and particularly media coverage is concerned. When was the last time you actually paid money out of your own pocket to attend a basketball game? Do you know anybody that in recent years has similarly paid money out of their own pocket to attend a basketball game? Certainly not for a regular season game. Maybe...maybe, a playoff game.
ESPN was going to spend a goodly portion of the hourlong show pumping up the start of the NBA Finals, which were to be aired on its corporate sister, ABC, was entirely understandable. ESPN, long ago, acknowledged that its news shows were a promotional vehicle as well as a journalistic enterprise.
If you look at the four major leagues, look at them in terms of annual revenue generated, you get this kind of a rough breakdown:
NFL, $9 billion.
MLB, $7 billion.
NBA, $4 billion.
NHL, $3 billion.
But in there somewhere is the notion that the NHL seems more interested in serving its current customers in 2011, more interested in growing revenues by enhancing the experience for people who already love the game - because it already has the most affluent fan base among the four sports...In the meantime, though, it has to settle for pockets of strength, like Philadelphia (where the Flyers on CSN averaged a 2.4 rating this past season while the resurgent Sixers averaged only a 1.6).
The great political journalist Paul Kane reports on the the Kabuki theater of a "clean" debt-ceiling vote that will occur this evening and "prove" that there isn't support, or at least a majority vote, for an increase in the national debt limit without some sort of fiscal action. The GOP is taking great pains to reassure Wall Street that this vote is merely symbolic while they continue their extreme demands for massive social spending cuts and the elimination of Medicare as the cost for their vote sometime in the near future. Their demands are patently reckless and irresponsible
LA police have arrested Giovanni Ramirez in the savage beating of Bryan Stow at Dodgers Stadium. Stow's crime in Ramirez's eyes was that Stow was a Giants fan.
If I were a Democrat, I would immediately introduce a bill directing the Treasury to pay armed services personnel and social security recipients ahead of bondholders in the event the Congress doesn't raise the debt limit and the country defaults on its obligations. It sets up a nice contrast to the money changers in the House temple who want to pay off bondholders before any others.
Just another reason why fans are increasingly better off watching games on their high-def TVs at home, the Yankees and Cowboys ding you an additional 20% above and beyond the posted price for concession food. Incredible!
My favorite line from the most recent 8th Circuit ruling is this part of the dissent:
The NFL also argues, in the absence of a stay, its clubs will be required to "produce their inherently joint and collective product," which in turn will subject the League to further antitrust claims by the Players. Each of these arguments is questionable given the current juncture of affairs. The preliminary injunction does not dictate the NFL's free agency rules, or any other conduct in general, outside of the lockout. Moreover, the fact the NFL must comply with the law, i.e., the Sherman Act, does not constitute irreparable harm — it is the absolute minimum that could be expected of the League.
Only moronic democrats (or crypto-Republicans - it's hard to tell the difference) like Turbo Timmy Geithner would come up with a strategy to deal with House Republican hostage taking of the debt limit by delaying the crisis so that the Obama administration can eventually acquiesce to most of the Tea Party's demands. The debt limit was reached today. Rather than delaying the day of reckoning, why hasn't the administration tried to accelerate the debt issue and force Republicans to vote on the issue before they could organize their demands?
ESPN's Rick Reilly reevaluates the 2006-08 drafts - and reorders the picks based on how the selections have actually played, It's really surprising no one has done this on a league wide basis before.
The "league year" has not begun, which is why trades and free agent signings can't be conducted. But the draft is going forward. Does this mean that college players drafted this weekend will accrue a year of service when the league year actually begins?
Btw, I need to get a labor law expert to chime in, but how is it that - legally - the league can conduct this year's draft which, as I understand it, is be operated under the auspices of the CBA - when the CBA is expired and the players union doesn't even exist anymore?
In some ways, I'm shocked that the league hasn't postponed the draft because of the recent legal decisions.
At the very least, they need to come up with new work rules in light of the absence of a CBA and no lockout.
As of now, teams are able to trade players and sign free agents. if none do before the draft begins, or even shortly afterwards, I would imagine the players would have another lawsuit they could win related to collusion.
If i were the NFLPA, i would instruct players to again try to gain entry to team facilities today on the day of the draft and force teams to turn them away again - showing that while they have no plan for how to deal with players they are continuing with the draft.
Crazy.
The Flyers live to play another round. And my Flyer fan friend, the Big O, nailed the game 7 prediction, accurately suggesting that if the Flyers could get a 2 goal lead in the 2nd perioed they would win the game, both of which occurred.
President Obama has released his "long form" birth certificate. In theory, the document should quell the lingering yet widespread doubts about his birthplace among conspiracy minded (or is it delusional) Republicans. Yet, the document also means that congressional Democrats missed (again) an opportunity to take the offensive and put their colleagues to a difficult vote.
Congressional Democrats should have introduced a privileged resolution affirming that Obama is a native born American and the duly elected President of the United States. Because all House and Senate members take an oath to uphold the constitution, their very positions require them to remove the president if they didn't believe him to be constitutionally qualified to be president. Democrats should have forced Republicans to vote on the record on the issue and try to drive at least a slight wedge between the elected officials and the tea party base.
But being Democrats, they of course chose to do nothing.
Flyer fan fave Big O's Game 7 Prediction:
First of all, you should both know that I predicted that this series was going to go 7, exclusively because of this team's deplorable goaltending situation.
Prediction: If we have a 2-3-goal lead by the middle of the 2nd period, we win. If not, its highly likely we lose, in overtime.
My friend PK has the same thought with respect to the lockout injunction:
Good lord, could we be so lucky as to have trades and free-agent signings resume, even if it's just for 1 week? Deep down, if you're Eagles management, you've got to be praying for some break in the logjam so that we can unload Kolb. Right?
If we can unload him for a 1st rounder, we could be setting ourselves up to be real Super Bowl contenders for the next 2-3 seasons, depending on how healthy Vick can remain.
I you read the comments on all the lockout stories on profootballtalk.com it is UNBELIEVABLE how many of their readers mindlessly support the owners and blame the players for "ruining" football. That was pre-yesterday's ruling. The vast majority of comments blamed the players for the lockout. Blamed the players for being too greedy, etc. it's incredible.
Now, post-lockout injunction ruling, most of the comments are blaming the players for trying to eliminate the draft, salary caps, veteran minimum salaries, and the overall competitiveness of the league. It is incredible.
Anyway, I posted a comment that while the ruling was a clear defeat for the owners the timing could not have been better for teams as it will allow them to sign and trade players in the run up and during the draft (assuming the judge doesn't rule on the league's stay request until post-draft). Including the Eagles and their disposition of Kolb.
BTW, did you see the reports that D'Brickshaw Ferguson showed up at the Jets facility today for his off-season workout (for which he earns $750,000 as a bonus) and was refused entry by security. Guess who will be suing the Jets for $750,000 when this work stoppage is resolved.
Has any team ever started three different goalies in 6 games of a playoff series? Has any team ever won a playoff series while starting three different goalies?
The Flyers' seemingly perpetual goaltending revolving door - of starting net-minders who were just average at best (Ron Hextall's first time through, excepted) - is like the round robin of kickers the Eagles used to go through before they were able to find a go-to kicker in David Akers. Will the Flyers ever be able to win a Cup with their shortshriftedness of the goalie position.
Brian Boucher summarizes it thusly: "Isn't it always bizarre in Philadelphia for goaltenders?"
It's funny that the news media, particularly the Washington Post, are making such a big deal about the police escort Charlie Sheen received the other day from the airport to his show. The Post's editors are in such high dudgeon that they merited the situation a critical editorial. Here's hoping that the Post and other news orgs remember their outrage about inappropriate use of police resources and escorts the next time a professional sports team - like the Redskins or their opponent, or the network announcers covering said game - get similar treatment.
On either November 13 or the 30 per ProFootballTalk.com. Also per them, Mike Vick might have a hard time gaining entry to Canada for the game.
Barry Bonds was vindicated in his epic legal battle with federal prosecutors and jeff novinski, his own Inspector Javert.
he was found guilty of obstructing justice, but my money is on the judge overturning that verdict on May 20th. He "obstructed justice" by failing to answer a question clearly, not because he lied or gave false testimony.
Surprising that on the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War that the Nationals' didn't have President Abraham Lincoln win the "presidents" race in the game on Wednesday. Washington, DC is a southern city below the Mason-Dixon line, but did the Lerners not care or hope to avoid controversy by in no way recognizing this historic milestone in American history?
My friend Pk attended last night's Cliff Lee love-fest, specifically selecting this game to see Lee's triumphant return.
He reports:
The man got a thunderous standing ovation for executing a sacrifice bunt, that's about what I can tell you in terms of just how crazed the atmosphere. As part of the opening weekend, they had lotsa little kids involved in the game -- the lineups were announced by some little girl and the 1st inning at-bats were announced by some little boy.
So, it's not quite 7 pm, and the little girl is announcing the lineups for both teams. Finally, after announcing Valdez batting 8th, the little girl knows enough to give a dramatic pause. The bullpen doors open in CF, and No. 33 comes bolting outta the gate. "Batting 9th for the Phillies, pitcher Cliff Lee!!!" I don't think anyone in the stadium could even hear her say the word "Lee", because by then it was so loud, every single person standing and cheering like mad.
I think I can safely say that it was the most electric 2nd game of the season that anyone has ever witnessed.