Friday, October 28, 2011
Manny Pacquiao: 10 Reasons He Might Not Want to Fight Floyd Mayweather
Manny Pacquiao (53-3-2, 38 KOs) has accomplished more than most boxers ever get to do. On November 12, he gets to finish one last piece of the puzzle against Juan Manuel Marquez (53-5-1, 39 KOs), or does he?
There's one name that is forever connected to his own, regardless of how much Pacquiao grows tired of it. That name is Floyd Mayweather (42-0, 26 KOs).
Mayweather is the ultimate defensive force in boxing, while Pacquiao has become the ultimate offensive force in the game.
They are connected by similar opponents, the hopes and wishes of the general public and the fate of boxing. But is that enough to make the fight happen?
While the reasons why Mayweather may not want to face Pacquiao have been explored by various authors, reasons as to why Pacquiao may be reluctant to take the fight are not nearly as widely discussed.
So without further ado, here are 10 reasons Pacquiao may not want to face Mayweather.
Both sides must keep moving in NBA labor dispute
Philadelphia, PA – It was Winston Churchill that said "if you're going through hell, keep moving."
Thursday night was the first time that the NBA owners and players demonstrated any lucid thinking during the lockout, the kind of every man common sense that indicated they understood what the rest of us already knew, the fact that they can't afford to miss an entire season.
Yeah, the NHL once missed an entire campaign in 2004-05 while Major League Baseball made the colossal mistake of canceling the World Series back in 1994. Both have rebounded to overcome their hubris to flourish but no sports entity, not even the mighty NFL earlier this year, has had the unmitigated gall to slap the fans in the face during the worst economy since The Great Depression.
Any optimism that both sides realized that and the lockout was finally nearing an end turned out to be just another false alarm when the third straight day of talks broke off Friday without a deal.
Facing an unforgiving calendar, the NBA then canceled the remaining games in November and gave up practically any hope of having a full 82-game schedule with commissioner David Stern saying it wasn't "practical, possible or prudent to have a full season now."
"We held out that joint hope, but in light of the breakdown of talks, there will not be a full season under any circumstances," Stern said at a news conference. "These are not punitive announcements. These are calendar- generated announcements."
That was a stark contrast from Stern's demeanor after a pair of marathon negotiating sessions over the previous two days where both he and union head Billy Hunter were almost giddy with the progress being made.
The lone major figure that tempered things a bit was union president Derek Fisher, who called the progress being made "minor."
"We're working at it," the Lakers' veteran said on Thursday. "It's a tough process and as we move through and try to close the gap in as many places as we can, it gets tougher towards the end."
Fish may be on his last legs as a player but he may have a future as a 21st century Nostradamus since everything came crashing down on Friday with Basketball Related Income remaining the major sticking point between both sides, who were still unable to agree on a split of a $4 billion dollar pie.
The players held firm, wanting at least 52.5 percent of BRI with the owners still pressing for a 50-50 split.
Talks turned contentious from there, with Stern saying Hunter walked out on the meeting and Hunter stressing he couldn't sell an even split of BRI to the players.
"Our number was our number," said Hunter. "We just couldn't bridge the gap."
A curious stance since missing a month of the season will reportedly cost the players $400 million in revenue. Compromising and getting down to 51 percent of BRI, a number most think the owners will take over a projected seven-year deal, would only cost a total of $280 million.
"Both sides are very badly damaged. The amount of dollars lost to the owners is extraordinary and the amount lost by players under individual contracts is also extraordinary," said Stern. "But that's what happens in a labor dispute when there's a shutdown."
The players argue that they are already coming down from 57 percent of BRI in the last collective bargaining agreement and will never see that number again. Likewise if they come off the 52.5 number but that seems like a specious thought process since most of the players affected by this agreement will be out of the league by the next CBA. It's Hunter's and Fisher's job to get the best deal they can for this group of players.
So where do we go from here?
Well, no new talks are scheduled but there is little chance the parties are going to blow this up over the few remaining inches that need to be traversed. You can bet they will be talking early next week.
Remember the only way out of hell is to keep on moving.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2011/10/28/both-sides-must-keep-moving-in-nba-labor-dispute/#ixzz1c8RlZxMg
Philippine youth bows to Japan, fails to secure bronze in Fiba U16
Even the bronze medal eluded the Philippines.
Energen Pilipinas failed to salvage the third place with a 81-94 loss to Japan Friday in the Fiba Asia Under-16 in Nhat Trang, Vietnam.
Philippines’ youth squad, which failed to break the curse against South Korea after a 58-67 heartbreak Thursday night, could not catch a break against Japanese all game.
After trailing by as many as 20 points at the end of the third, but Energen Pilipinas managed to make a run in the payoff period and trim down Japan’s lead to eight points, 77-85.
Jan Cani and Kyles Lao scored 16 points apiece to lead the Philippines in their final match of the tournament.
Japan’s Daiki Kaneko forefronted his squad’s assault with a game-best 25 points.
The fourth place finish by Energen tied the record set by the last batch of U16 in the 2009 Fiba Asia edition led by Kiefer Ravena.
Meanwhile, China was simply unstoppable in clobbering South Korea, 92-52, to clinch the crown anew and move on to the Fiba World U17 Championship.
Recent Sports Stories
Philippine youth bows to Japan, fails to secure bronze in Fiba U16
Cardinals force game 7 vs Rangers in World Series
Petron, TNT collide; Meralco-Alaska tiff precedes ‘rematch’
Fiba Asia U16: PH Youth bows to Korea, ends world berth bid
PSC wants P10M more for SEA Games
Ababa pads lead to 2 over Casas
Boxers Joan Tipon, Orlando Tacuyan out of SEA Games
Beckham, Galaxy test Azkals Dec. 3
San Beda dominates swimming in 2011 UniGames
A $100,000 bonus to fight Donaire
Energen Pilipinas failed to salvage the third place with a 81-94 loss to Japan Friday in the Fiba Asia Under-16 in Nhat Trang, Vietnam.
Philippines’ youth squad, which failed to break the curse against South Korea after a 58-67 heartbreak Thursday night, could not catch a break against Japanese all game.
After trailing by as many as 20 points at the end of the third, but Energen Pilipinas managed to make a run in the payoff period and trim down Japan’s lead to eight points, 77-85.
Jan Cani and Kyles Lao scored 16 points apiece to lead the Philippines in their final match of the tournament.
Japan’s Daiki Kaneko forefronted his squad’s assault with a game-best 25 points.
The fourth place finish by Energen tied the record set by the last batch of U16 in the 2009 Fiba Asia edition led by Kiefer Ravena.
Meanwhile, China was simply unstoppable in clobbering South Korea, 92-52, to clinch the crown anew and move on to the Fiba World U17 Championship.
Recent Sports Stories
Philippine youth bows to Japan, fails to secure bronze in Fiba U16
Cardinals force game 7 vs Rangers in World Series
Petron, TNT collide; Meralco-Alaska tiff precedes ‘rematch’
Fiba Asia U16: PH Youth bows to Korea, ends world berth bid
PSC wants P10M more for SEA Games
Ababa pads lead to 2 over Casas
Boxers Joan Tipon, Orlando Tacuyan out of SEA Games
Beckham, Galaxy test Azkals Dec. 3
San Beda dominates swimming in 2011 UniGames
A $100,000 bonus to fight Donaire
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Many Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather Jr fight Bob Arum says maybe…
(ThyBlackMan.com) Bob Arum of Top Rank lashed out at unbeaten Floyd Mayweather Jr. yesterday in an interview, saying that it’s Floyd Mayweather Jr who doesn’t want to make the fight happen with Arum’s fighter WBO welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao.
Arum said to ESPNLosAngeles “What Floyd Mayweather Jr hates is Manny’s right hand. Mayweather has no chin and Manny will knock him out. Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr is a three or four round fight, period.”
Here’s my take on this: Floyd Mayweather Jr isn’t the least afraid of Pacquiao’s right hand because he doesn’t hit as hard as the last guy that Floyd Mayweather Jr beat WBC welterweight champion Victor Ortiz. Why would Mayweather be afraid to fight someone smaller, weaker and older than Ortiz?
No, Floyd Mayweather Jr isn’t afraid of fighting Pacquiao. But what he does want is for Pacquiao to agree to staying in the U.S to be available for Mayweather’s Olympic style random drug tests for the entire training camp and not having Manny Pacquiao be unavailable for the testing by spending half the training camp time in the Philippines. This is something that could be easily taken care of Pacquiao would simply say yes to staying in the U.S, but thus far it doesn’t look like it’s going to happen.
Arum has a negative view on the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight ever happening, saying “That fight will never, ever happen.”
I think it’s up to Arum. If he wanted to make the Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao fight happen he could very, very quickly. Arum has got the ability to convince Pacquiao of practically I believe. If Arum pushed Pacquiao to stay in the U.S so that he could be tested for performance enhancing drugs, I think Manny Pacquiao would agree in a second. But it’s up to Arum. I personally think he doesn’t want Manny Pacquiao to fight Mayweather because the Manny Pacquiao gravy train could come to a screeching halt after Floyd Mayweather Jr humiliates Pacquiao in an embarrassingly one-sided loss.
A lopsided loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr would likely badly hurt Pacquiao in future PPV bouts, and I think Arum doesn’t want this. It’s easier to match Pacquiao up with old guys like 40-year-old Shane Mosley, 38-year-old Juan Manuel Marquez, as well as his Top Rank stable fighters Antonio Margarito, Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey, and Timothy Bradley where there’s not much danger. At the same time, Arum, trainer Freddie Roach and Manny Pacquiao can throw out Mayweather’s name every once in a while and say he doesn’t want to fight. That way boxing fans will put the blame on Floyd Mayweather Jr instead of looking at Manny Pacquiao and his management as the reason the fight hasn’t been made.
Arum said to ESPNLosAngeles “What Floyd Mayweather Jr hates is Manny’s right hand. Mayweather has no chin and Manny will knock him out. Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr is a three or four round fight, period.”
Here’s my take on this: Floyd Mayweather Jr isn’t the least afraid of Pacquiao’s right hand because he doesn’t hit as hard as the last guy that Floyd Mayweather Jr beat WBC welterweight champion Victor Ortiz. Why would Mayweather be afraid to fight someone smaller, weaker and older than Ortiz?
No, Floyd Mayweather Jr isn’t afraid of fighting Pacquiao. But what he does want is for Pacquiao to agree to staying in the U.S to be available for Mayweather’s Olympic style random drug tests for the entire training camp and not having Manny Pacquiao be unavailable for the testing by spending half the training camp time in the Philippines. This is something that could be easily taken care of Pacquiao would simply say yes to staying in the U.S, but thus far it doesn’t look like it’s going to happen.
Arum has a negative view on the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight ever happening, saying “That fight will never, ever happen.”
I think it’s up to Arum. If he wanted to make the Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao fight happen he could very, very quickly. Arum has got the ability to convince Pacquiao of practically I believe. If Arum pushed Pacquiao to stay in the U.S so that he could be tested for performance enhancing drugs, I think Manny Pacquiao would agree in a second. But it’s up to Arum. I personally think he doesn’t want Manny Pacquiao to fight Mayweather because the Manny Pacquiao gravy train could come to a screeching halt after Floyd Mayweather Jr humiliates Pacquiao in an embarrassingly one-sided loss.
A lopsided loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr would likely badly hurt Pacquiao in future PPV bouts, and I think Arum doesn’t want this. It’s easier to match Pacquiao up with old guys like 40-year-old Shane Mosley, 38-year-old Juan Manuel Marquez, as well as his Top Rank stable fighters Antonio Margarito, Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey, and Timothy Bradley where there’s not much danger. At the same time, Arum, trainer Freddie Roach and Manny Pacquiao can throw out Mayweather’s name every once in a while and say he doesn’t want to fight. That way boxing fans will put the blame on Floyd Mayweather Jr instead of looking at Manny Pacquiao and his management as the reason the fight hasn’t been made.
Underdog Boxing: $100,000 bounty on Donaire's head
Top Rank is taking steps to ensure that the travesty that was Nonito Donaire versus Omar Narvaez will not happen again. A ton of blame went their way because of the horrible fight and it is good to know that they are taking steps to prevent the same thing from happening.
Their solution is to promise a 100,000 dollar on Donaire’s head and, truth be told, they should do the same for Manny Pacquiao. Because Pacquiao and Donaire are known for their devastating power, some of their opponents choose to not fight back as an act of self-preservation. If they fight back, chances are they will get beaten to a bloody pulp and lose. If they choose not to fight back, they will still lose but they skip through that nasty business of getting beaten to a bloody pulp bit, which also means they will enjoy their purse better after the fight.
Freddie Roach has employed the same tactic for Pacquiao’s sparring sessions. He always has 1,000 dollars in his pocket, ready to give it away to anyone who would knock Pacquiao down. It is a good amount of money and Pacquiao’s sparring partners have all tried extra hard to push him harder for a shot at the money.
It seems to be a band-aid fix as the best solution is still to choose only those fighters who will now stop fighting but this will have to do for Donaire right now. It’s a good PR move from Top Rank’s part as it will at least show the pissed off fans that they are doing something to rectify the error.
Donaire who was quoted saying that he was bored during the fight had positive things to say about the bounty. “(I’m) excited about the future matchups considering the $100k bounty on my head. Great to be working on the same path as Top Rank Boxing," he said.
Another reason for him to be happy is that he’ll have the equal opportunity to get the money. The 100,000 dollars will be a “win" bonus, meaning the winner will get the money on top of the guaranteed purse. This is currently being done in the UFC and its’ not clear yet if a knockout is required to get the bonus.
Now that Top Rank and Donaire are moving on from the embarrassing event last week, they are looking at three possible opponents for Donaire’s debut at 122. The always entertaining WBO junior featherweight beltholder Jorge Arce (58-6-1, 44 KOs), WBC super bantamweight titleholder Toshiaki Nishioka (39-4-3, 24 KOs), and Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. (20-1-1, 17 KOs) are all viable opponents.
Arce seems like the most logical pick as the world knows he does not stop punching. It will be a very good comeback and it will surely wash away the bad taste that Narvaez left. He is signed with Top Rank and the fight will be very easy to make.
Vasquez is also a possible opponent. Although he lost to Arce, he still is a threat in the super bantamweight division. He is scheduled for a comeback fight and if he wins that convincingly, it may convince Top Rank to book him as Donaire’s debut at 122.
However, a fight against Nishioka, who’s coming of the biggest win of his career by beating Rafael Marquez, is the better match-up. The Japanese champion is a lanky fighter and is as tall as Donaire. If Donaire wants to make a statement, he should go for the current top dog of the division.
The Narvaez fight was supposed to signal Donaire’s emergence as one of the very best in the sport but an unwilling opponent prevented it from happening. If Donaire still wants to stake his claim as one of the best, he should do away fight tune-up fights to get himself acclimated to the super bantamweight division. - OMG, GMA News
Their solution is to promise a 100,000 dollar on Donaire’s head and, truth be told, they should do the same for Manny Pacquiao. Because Pacquiao and Donaire are known for their devastating power, some of their opponents choose to not fight back as an act of self-preservation. If they fight back, chances are they will get beaten to a bloody pulp and lose. If they choose not to fight back, they will still lose but they skip through that nasty business of getting beaten to a bloody pulp bit, which also means they will enjoy their purse better after the fight.
Freddie Roach has employed the same tactic for Pacquiao’s sparring sessions. He always has 1,000 dollars in his pocket, ready to give it away to anyone who would knock Pacquiao down. It is a good amount of money and Pacquiao’s sparring partners have all tried extra hard to push him harder for a shot at the money.
It seems to be a band-aid fix as the best solution is still to choose only those fighters who will now stop fighting but this will have to do for Donaire right now. It’s a good PR move from Top Rank’s part as it will at least show the pissed off fans that they are doing something to rectify the error.
Donaire who was quoted saying that he was bored during the fight had positive things to say about the bounty. “(I’m) excited about the future matchups considering the $100k bounty on my head. Great to be working on the same path as Top Rank Boxing," he said.
Another reason for him to be happy is that he’ll have the equal opportunity to get the money. The 100,000 dollars will be a “win" bonus, meaning the winner will get the money on top of the guaranteed purse. This is currently being done in the UFC and its’ not clear yet if a knockout is required to get the bonus.
Now that Top Rank and Donaire are moving on from the embarrassing event last week, they are looking at three possible opponents for Donaire’s debut at 122. The always entertaining WBO junior featherweight beltholder Jorge Arce (58-6-1, 44 KOs), WBC super bantamweight titleholder Toshiaki Nishioka (39-4-3, 24 KOs), and Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. (20-1-1, 17 KOs) are all viable opponents.
Arce seems like the most logical pick as the world knows he does not stop punching. It will be a very good comeback and it will surely wash away the bad taste that Narvaez left. He is signed with Top Rank and the fight will be very easy to make.
Vasquez is also a possible opponent. Although he lost to Arce, he still is a threat in the super bantamweight division. He is scheduled for a comeback fight and if he wins that convincingly, it may convince Top Rank to book him as Donaire’s debut at 122.
However, a fight against Nishioka, who’s coming of the biggest win of his career by beating Rafael Marquez, is the better match-up. The Japanese champion is a lanky fighter and is as tall as Donaire. If Donaire wants to make a statement, he should go for the current top dog of the division.
The Narvaez fight was supposed to signal Donaire’s emergence as one of the very best in the sport but an unwilling opponent prevented it from happening. If Donaire still wants to stake his claim as one of the best, he should do away fight tune-up fights to get himself acclimated to the super bantamweight division. - OMG, GMA News
Alaska eyes first victory
Games today:
Araneta Coliseum
5:30 p.m.- Alaska vs. Meralco
7:45 p.m.- Talk ‘N Text vs. Petron
THE LISTLESS Alaska Aces face a dangerous opponent in their quest to finally end their misery as they play the Meralco Bolts in today’s first game of the 37th PBA Philippine Cup at the Araneta Coliseum.
In the main game, the defending champions Talk ’N Text Tropang Texters and the Petron Blaze Boosters play against each other in a rematch of last conference’s championship showdown.
Alaska is one of the two teams that have yet to win in the tournament, sporting a 0-4 (win-loss) card. The lowly Shopinas.com Clickers are the other winless squad with a 0-5 slate.
Alaska has yet to win under new head coach Joel Banal and is fresh from their worst defeat in franchise history after they got mangled by the league-leading Rain or Shine Elasto Painters, 84-120, last Sunday.
The pressure to stop their slide is mouting for the Aces and they are hoping that their off-season success against the Bolts will give them the needed boost going into today’s game.
The Aces defeated the Bolts, 67-61, last Sept. 24 during the Cebu City Mayor`s Cup Invitational Games and also logged an 82-80 win against the same team in a tune-up game last Sept. 17.
The Bolts are looking for a good follow-up of their impressive 80-70 trashing of the erstwhile unbeaten Petron Blaze Boosters. That was Meralco’s third win in five games.
Petron tries to rebound from that loss against the Texters, who are looking some sort of revenge.
The Texters lost to the Blazers in the Governor’s Cup Finals that denied them what could have been a rare grand slam accomplishment.
Both teams sport 3-1 records, joing the Barako Bull Energy at second place behind the 4-1 Rain or Shine.
Talk ‘N Text is fresh from a gripping 96-94 win over the B-Meg Llamados. /EDITORIAL ASSISTANT CALVIN D. CORDOVA
Araneta Coliseum
5:30 p.m.- Alaska vs. Meralco
7:45 p.m.- Talk ‘N Text vs. Petron
THE LISTLESS Alaska Aces face a dangerous opponent in their quest to finally end their misery as they play the Meralco Bolts in today’s first game of the 37th PBA Philippine Cup at the Araneta Coliseum.
In the main game, the defending champions Talk ’N Text Tropang Texters and the Petron Blaze Boosters play against each other in a rematch of last conference’s championship showdown.
Alaska is one of the two teams that have yet to win in the tournament, sporting a 0-4 (win-loss) card. The lowly Shopinas.com Clickers are the other winless squad with a 0-5 slate.
Alaska has yet to win under new head coach Joel Banal and is fresh from their worst defeat in franchise history after they got mangled by the league-leading Rain or Shine Elasto Painters, 84-120, last Sunday.
The pressure to stop their slide is mouting for the Aces and they are hoping that their off-season success against the Bolts will give them the needed boost going into today’s game.
The Aces defeated the Bolts, 67-61, last Sept. 24 during the Cebu City Mayor`s Cup Invitational Games and also logged an 82-80 win against the same team in a tune-up game last Sept. 17.
The Bolts are looking for a good follow-up of their impressive 80-70 trashing of the erstwhile unbeaten Petron Blaze Boosters. That was Meralco’s third win in five games.
Petron tries to rebound from that loss against the Texters, who are looking some sort of revenge.
The Texters lost to the Blazers in the Governor’s Cup Finals that denied them what could have been a rare grand slam accomplishment.
Both teams sport 3-1 records, joing the Barako Bull Energy at second place behind the 4-1 Rain or Shine.
Talk ‘N Text is fresh from a gripping 96-94 win over the B-Meg Llamados. /EDITORIAL ASSISTANT CALVIN D. CORDOVA
Fiba Asia U16: PH Youth bows to Korea, ends world berth bid
Vietnam—A familiar basketball nemesis dealt the Philippines another heartbreak.
The Energen Pilipinas Under-16 team’s bid for a historic world berth came to an end as South Korea handed the young Nationals its first loss, 67-58, in the Fiba Asia U16 semifinals Thursday night at the Khanh Hoa Sports Center here.
In a run fueled by Henry Asilum, the Philippines came within a basket twice, the last at 58-60, after trailing by as many as 13 points, 44-57 in the second half.
But Korea held the Philippines scoreless in the final six minutes as the young Nationals also started missing even at close range.
Asilum and Jay Alejandro paced the Philippines with 12 points each.
The loss relegated the Philippines to a bronze-medal battle against Japan on Friday afternoon.
Hoon Heo torched the Philippines with a game-high 22 points, while Nakhyeon Kim and Gookchan Kim had 16 points apiece.
Heo, son of the legendary Hur Jae, drilled seven points in a 12-2 tear that gave Korea its first double-digit advantage, 37-27, after a deadlock at 25 late in the first half.
The hot-shooting Koreans continued to sizzle in the third period, extending the lead to as many as 13 points, 57-44.
Defending champion China, the only unbeaten team in seven games, and South Korea will dispute the crown Friday in a rematch of the 2009 edition’s championship.
Both finalists will represent Asia in the 2012 Fiba U17 World Championship from July 17 to 26 in Kaunas, Lithuania.
Boasting a pair of seven-footers, China downed Japan, 82-43, in the other semifinal match last night.
A win by the young Nationals could have been historic as no other Philippine basketball team in any division has reached the World Championship for over 30 years.
Manila’s hosting of the 1978 Fiba Worlds was the last time a Philippine team reached this lofty stage, where American coach Ron Jacobs steered the country to an eighth-place finish.
An all-amateur National squad (National Consolidated Cement) also qualified in the Worlds after topping the 1985 Asian Championship in Kuala Lumpur, but the team disbanded due to the 1986 People Power.
The boys’ loss added to the many heartbreaks that South Korea dealt the Philippines in past international campaigns.
Just last month, Korea pulled off an incredible come-from-behind win over Smart Gilas Pilipinas, 70-68, in the battle for the bronze in the Fiba Asia Men’s Championship in Wuhan, China.
The Philippines also had a meltdown in the 2002 Asian Games where Olsen Racela—now the youth team’s coach–bungled two crucial free throws before Lee Sang-min buried a triple at the buzzer that spoiled the country’s bid to advance to the gold-medal match against China.
The seeming jinx continued in the 2009 Fiba Asia in Tianjin, China where the Nationals blew the lead and lost seventh place to the Koreans.
Last year, Smart Gilas also absorbed a Korean setback in the quarterfinals of the Guangzhou Asian Games.
“I reminded the players that I’ve played Korea in the past, I’ve seen them play our recent teams and we know we cant relax,” Racela said the night before his team’s crucial match.
“This Korean team is no different from the others. Their three-point shot is a big factor, that’s what we have to contain.”
Before the Korean loss, the young Nationals were on a a six-game roll, the last an 82-69 stunner over West Asian champion Iraq in the quarterfinals.
An upset over Japan (83-72) also capped the team’s 5-0 sweep of the first two rounds.
The Philippines, the reigning champion in the Southeast Asian Basketball Association (Seaba), routed Indonesia (93-30) and Vietnam (111-25) in the preliminaries, before cruising past Qatar (107-28) and Saudi Arabia (100-42) in the second round.
The scores:
SOUTH KOREA 67–Heo 22, Kim N. 16, Kim G. 16, Kim M. 7, Lee 2, Yun 2, Park 2, Koh 0, Shin 0,
PHILIPPINES 58—Asilum 12, Alejandro 12, Javelosa 7, Diputado 6, Ramos 6, Rivero 6, Cani 5, Lao 4, Heading 0.
Quarters: 19-21, 37-29, 58-50, 67-58
The Energen Pilipinas Under-16 team’s bid for a historic world berth came to an end as South Korea handed the young Nationals its first loss, 67-58, in the Fiba Asia U16 semifinals Thursday night at the Khanh Hoa Sports Center here.
In a run fueled by Henry Asilum, the Philippines came within a basket twice, the last at 58-60, after trailing by as many as 13 points, 44-57 in the second half.
But Korea held the Philippines scoreless in the final six minutes as the young Nationals also started missing even at close range.
Asilum and Jay Alejandro paced the Philippines with 12 points each.
The loss relegated the Philippines to a bronze-medal battle against Japan on Friday afternoon.
Hoon Heo torched the Philippines with a game-high 22 points, while Nakhyeon Kim and Gookchan Kim had 16 points apiece.
Heo, son of the legendary Hur Jae, drilled seven points in a 12-2 tear that gave Korea its first double-digit advantage, 37-27, after a deadlock at 25 late in the first half.
The hot-shooting Koreans continued to sizzle in the third period, extending the lead to as many as 13 points, 57-44.
Defending champion China, the only unbeaten team in seven games, and South Korea will dispute the crown Friday in a rematch of the 2009 edition’s championship.
Both finalists will represent Asia in the 2012 Fiba U17 World Championship from July 17 to 26 in Kaunas, Lithuania.
Boasting a pair of seven-footers, China downed Japan, 82-43, in the other semifinal match last night.
A win by the young Nationals could have been historic as no other Philippine basketball team in any division has reached the World Championship for over 30 years.
Manila’s hosting of the 1978 Fiba Worlds was the last time a Philippine team reached this lofty stage, where American coach Ron Jacobs steered the country to an eighth-place finish.
An all-amateur National squad (National Consolidated Cement) also qualified in the Worlds after topping the 1985 Asian Championship in Kuala Lumpur, but the team disbanded due to the 1986 People Power.
The boys’ loss added to the many heartbreaks that South Korea dealt the Philippines in past international campaigns.
Just last month, Korea pulled off an incredible come-from-behind win over Smart Gilas Pilipinas, 70-68, in the battle for the bronze in the Fiba Asia Men’s Championship in Wuhan, China.
The Philippines also had a meltdown in the 2002 Asian Games where Olsen Racela—now the youth team’s coach–bungled two crucial free throws before Lee Sang-min buried a triple at the buzzer that spoiled the country’s bid to advance to the gold-medal match against China.
The seeming jinx continued in the 2009 Fiba Asia in Tianjin, China where the Nationals blew the lead and lost seventh place to the Koreans.
Last year, Smart Gilas also absorbed a Korean setback in the quarterfinals of the Guangzhou Asian Games.
“I reminded the players that I’ve played Korea in the past, I’ve seen them play our recent teams and we know we cant relax,” Racela said the night before his team’s crucial match.
“This Korean team is no different from the others. Their three-point shot is a big factor, that’s what we have to contain.”
Before the Korean loss, the young Nationals were on a a six-game roll, the last an 82-69 stunner over West Asian champion Iraq in the quarterfinals.
An upset over Japan (83-72) also capped the team’s 5-0 sweep of the first two rounds.
The Philippines, the reigning champion in the Southeast Asian Basketball Association (Seaba), routed Indonesia (93-30) and Vietnam (111-25) in the preliminaries, before cruising past Qatar (107-28) and Saudi Arabia (100-42) in the second round.
The scores:
SOUTH KOREA 67–Heo 22, Kim N. 16, Kim G. 16, Kim M. 7, Lee 2, Yun 2, Park 2, Koh 0, Shin 0,
PHILIPPINES 58—Asilum 12, Alejandro 12, Javelosa 7, Diputado 6, Ramos 6, Rivero 6, Cani 5, Lao 4, Heading 0.
Quarters: 19-21, 37-29, 58-50, 67-58
Mayweather cleared of harassment charges
Undefeated US boxing star Floyd Mayweather was found not guilty of misdemeanour harassment charges on Wednesday in connection with comments to two security guards outside his home last year.
Justice Diana Sullivan ruled in favour of the fighter, saying she was not convinced that homeowner association security guards Aaron Ryan and Miguel Burgos feared for their safety last October in a squabble over parking tickets.
Mayweather, 34, faced up to a year in jail and a $US2000 ($A1930) fine if convicted on both charges of threatening to call in gunmen to confront guards who ticketed cars parked near his home in violation of neighbourhood rules.
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Mayweather, 42-0 with 26 knockouts inside the ring, must face two more court tests that could result in time behind bars.
A November 4 trial is set for Mayweather on an unrelated battery complaint accusing the boxer of poking a different security guard in the face during another dispute over parking tickets. Mayweather has pleaded not guilty.
Mayweather is scheduled to appear at a December 21 evidence hearing on felony charges of grand larceny, coercion and robbery from a domestic dispute with former girlfriend Josie Harris and two of their children in September last year.
Mayweather, whose attorneys have denied any wrongdoing by their client, faces up to 34 years in prison if convicted of striking and threatening Harris, stealing her mobile phone and threatening their children.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/sport/boxing/mayweather-cleared-of-harassment-charges-20111027-1mm2m.html#ixzz1bzZKufHg
Justice Diana Sullivan ruled in favour of the fighter, saying she was not convinced that homeowner association security guards Aaron Ryan and Miguel Burgos feared for their safety last October in a squabble over parking tickets.
Mayweather, 34, faced up to a year in jail and a $US2000 ($A1930) fine if convicted on both charges of threatening to call in gunmen to confront guards who ticketed cars parked near his home in violation of neighbourhood rules.
Advertisement: Story continues below
Mayweather, 42-0 with 26 knockouts inside the ring, must face two more court tests that could result in time behind bars.
A November 4 trial is set for Mayweather on an unrelated battery complaint accusing the boxer of poking a different security guard in the face during another dispute over parking tickets. Mayweather has pleaded not guilty.
Mayweather is scheduled to appear at a December 21 evidence hearing on felony charges of grand larceny, coercion and robbery from a domestic dispute with former girlfriend Josie Harris and two of their children in September last year.
Mayweather, whose attorneys have denied any wrongdoing by their client, faces up to 34 years in prison if convicted of striking and threatening Harris, stealing her mobile phone and threatening their children.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/sport/boxing/mayweather-cleared-of-harassment-charges-20111027-1mm2m.html#ixzz1bzZKufHg
NBA lockout: Owners, players focus on fixing system issues
The fatigue wore on their faces, but it hardly masked their enthusiasm.
NBA Commissioner David Stern smiled as he struggled recalling what day it was after wrapping up a 15-hour negotiating meeting early Thursday morning.
NBA Players Assn. executive director Billy Hunter smiled as he joked that players union vice president Maurice Evans should answer questions for him.
NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver smiled when Stern needled him for "allowing all hell to break loose" when he missed last week's contentious meeting because of flu symptoms.
National Basketball Players Assn. President Derek Fisher smiled when he acknowledged what he called a "slim" possibility both sides could salvage a full, albeit delayed 82-game season should they reach a deal by this weekend.
The reason for such a sudden mood change less than a week after talks broke off points to one simple reason: After reaching a stalemate on how to divide the basketball-related income, both sides instead talked about system issues. Neither side would quantify the exact progress. Stern still acknowledged the likelihood the league will scrap the games played in the last two weeks of the season. And he said, "There's no deal on anything, unless there's a deal on everything."
But the talks proved at least productive enough for another meeting to take place in New York at 2 p.m. EDT, with some optimism that Thursday's meeting will bring both sides closer to a deal.
That a 15-hour-long meeting resulting in only undefined progress on system issues would bear such optimism surely reflects on slowly the lockout has proceeded. But it also shows owners and players recognize that they were better served focusing on that area rather than on the basketball-related income.
After all, that issue caused last week's talks to end abruptly. The players union dropped their percentage from 53% to 52.5%, and even considered a bandwidth between 50%-53% depending on how much revenue the league accumulates. But Silver and San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt accused the players union of refusing to continue discussions unless they met their basketball-related income demands. Likewise, Hunter and Fisher accused the owners refusing to budge on a 50-50 split.
"If we had any hope of trying to recapture the lost games, we had to get back in and talk," Hunter told reporters. "So we parked the [basketball-related income] and talked about the system."
It's possible meetings will go sour as soon as both sides return to that issue. But for now, the strategy shift as at least has ensured more meetings, more agreements and more possibilities of brokering a deal.
RELATED:
New CBA could hurt the Lakers
Poll questions surrounding NBA lockout
Owners, players need to negotiate differently
NBA Commissioner David Stern smiled as he struggled recalling what day it was after wrapping up a 15-hour negotiating meeting early Thursday morning.
NBA Players Assn. executive director Billy Hunter smiled as he joked that players union vice president Maurice Evans should answer questions for him.
NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver smiled when Stern needled him for "allowing all hell to break loose" when he missed last week's contentious meeting because of flu symptoms.
National Basketball Players Assn. President Derek Fisher smiled when he acknowledged what he called a "slim" possibility both sides could salvage a full, albeit delayed 82-game season should they reach a deal by this weekend.
The reason for such a sudden mood change less than a week after talks broke off points to one simple reason: After reaching a stalemate on how to divide the basketball-related income, both sides instead talked about system issues. Neither side would quantify the exact progress. Stern still acknowledged the likelihood the league will scrap the games played in the last two weeks of the season. And he said, "There's no deal on anything, unless there's a deal on everything."
But the talks proved at least productive enough for another meeting to take place in New York at 2 p.m. EDT, with some optimism that Thursday's meeting will bring both sides closer to a deal.
That a 15-hour-long meeting resulting in only undefined progress on system issues would bear such optimism surely reflects on slowly the lockout has proceeded. But it also shows owners and players recognize that they were better served focusing on that area rather than on the basketball-related income.
After all, that issue caused last week's talks to end abruptly. The players union dropped their percentage from 53% to 52.5%, and even considered a bandwidth between 50%-53% depending on how much revenue the league accumulates. But Silver and San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt accused the players union of refusing to continue discussions unless they met their basketball-related income demands. Likewise, Hunter and Fisher accused the owners refusing to budge on a 50-50 split.
"If we had any hope of trying to recapture the lost games, we had to get back in and talk," Hunter told reporters. "So we parked the [basketball-related income] and talked about the system."
It's possible meetings will go sour as soon as both sides return to that issue. But for now, the strategy shift as at least has ensured more meetings, more agreements and more possibilities of brokering a deal.
RELATED:
New CBA could hurt the Lakers
Poll questions surrounding NBA lockout
Owners, players need to negotiate differently
Royal rumble: PHL Cup titlist Texters take on 3rd conference tormentor Boosters
Expect a battle royale Friday night in the PBA Philippine Cup as defending champion Talk 'N Text and powerhouse Petron clash in a highly-anticipated encounter at the Araneta Coliseum.
The two teams go into the 7:30 p.m. game, a rematch of its classic Governors Cup Finals last season, carrying similar 3-1 (win-loss) slates in a tie for second place with surprising Barako Bull. The winner will join idle Rain or Shine (4-1) on top of the standings.
The Boosters are coming off their first loss in the tournament, an 80-70 setback against the Meralco Bolts. But not even that could take the shine out of a team that won its first three outings this season.
"It's a tough game with Petron fresh from a defeat," said Talk 'N Text coach Chot Reyes. "I still believe they're playing the best basketball in the league."
In contrast, the Tropang Texters escaped with a 96-94 win over the B-MEG Llamados in their last outing in a game that saw Jared Dillinger fire a career-high 31 points.
The match also saw Kelly Williams and Jimmy Alapag's return to Talk 'N Text’s active roster after missing the team’s first three games.
Williams heralded his return by firing 23 points, while Alapag hardly saw action after suffering an ankle sprain early in the match.
While Alapag remains a doubtful starter, Ranidel de Ocampo is still not ready to suit up for the Tropang Texters.
"Petron is playing above its talent, so we need to be at our best against them," added Reyes, whose bid to give the telecommunication franchise a Grand Slam ended with a heartbreaking loss to the Boosters in Game 7 of the Governors Cup Finals.
In the 5:15 p.m. curtain raiser, Meralco seeks a fitting follow up to its big win over Petron as it takes on winless Alaska.
The Bolts (3-2), however, is taking on the Aces with a lot of caution.
"Their 0-4 mark is not an indication of their roster power," said Meralco mentor Ryan Gregorio. "They are one of the elite teams in the league and they are bound to break out of the slump. We will do our best to prevent it."
The Aces suffered their worst defeat in their last game against Rain or Shine, a 120-84 rout.
"We are very cautious with our approach against Alaska. No way are we going to the game thinking that it is going to be a sure victory. We will definitely come out with a strong defensive mind-set similar to our approach when we battled the erstwhile unbeaten team Petron," said Gregorio. — JVP, GMA News
The two teams go into the 7:30 p.m. game, a rematch of its classic Governors Cup Finals last season, carrying similar 3-1 (win-loss) slates in a tie for second place with surprising Barako Bull. The winner will join idle Rain or Shine (4-1) on top of the standings.
The Boosters are coming off their first loss in the tournament, an 80-70 setback against the Meralco Bolts. But not even that could take the shine out of a team that won its first three outings this season.
"It's a tough game with Petron fresh from a defeat," said Talk 'N Text coach Chot Reyes. "I still believe they're playing the best basketball in the league."
In contrast, the Tropang Texters escaped with a 96-94 win over the B-MEG Llamados in their last outing in a game that saw Jared Dillinger fire a career-high 31 points.
The match also saw Kelly Williams and Jimmy Alapag's return to Talk 'N Text’s active roster after missing the team’s first three games.
Williams heralded his return by firing 23 points, while Alapag hardly saw action after suffering an ankle sprain early in the match.
While Alapag remains a doubtful starter, Ranidel de Ocampo is still not ready to suit up for the Tropang Texters.
"Petron is playing above its talent, so we need to be at our best against them," added Reyes, whose bid to give the telecommunication franchise a Grand Slam ended with a heartbreaking loss to the Boosters in Game 7 of the Governors Cup Finals.
In the 5:15 p.m. curtain raiser, Meralco seeks a fitting follow up to its big win over Petron as it takes on winless Alaska.
The Bolts (3-2), however, is taking on the Aces with a lot of caution.
"Their 0-4 mark is not an indication of their roster power," said Meralco mentor Ryan Gregorio. "They are one of the elite teams in the league and they are bound to break out of the slump. We will do our best to prevent it."
The Aces suffered their worst defeat in their last game against Rain or Shine, a 120-84 rout.
"We are very cautious with our approach against Alaska. No way are we going to the game thinking that it is going to be a sure victory. We will definitely come out with a strong defensive mind-set similar to our approach when we battled the erstwhile unbeaten team Petron," said Gregorio. — JVP, GMA News
Ginebra slips past Shopinas in overtime
MANILA, Philippines - For the second straight game, the Barangay Ginebra Kings overcame a late-game deficit to claim victory from the jaws of defeat, stunning the Shopinas.com Clickers, 94-90, in overtime Wednesday night at the Araneta Coliseum.
The Kings overcame a 5-point deficit in the final minute and forced an extra period, allowing Mark Caguiao to take charge and push his team to victory.
"I can't explain it. God's graces lang talaga, allowing us to get through," said Ginebra coach Siot Tanquingcen in an interview with PBA.ph.
Jay-jay Helterbrand made a trifecta in the dying seconds of the game to force overtime.
"Broken play iyon. Jayjay was supposed to go somewhere else. Pero na-deny si Mark, and Jayjay had to take the shot," Tanquingcen said.
The win puts Ginebra at 5th place in the league standings with a 3-2 record, while Shopinas remains winless through 5 outings.
It was a sorry loss for the Clickers, who held a 79-74 advantage with 50 seconds left in the game, but RJ Jazul muffed his charities, allowing the Kings to get back in the game.
The Kings took control in overtime after Caguio and KG Canaleta conspired to boost Ginebra to an 86-79 lead.
The scores:
GINEBRA 94 - Intal 16, Caguioa 16, Villanueva 9, Helterbrand 9, Canaleta 8, W. Wilson 8, De Ocampo
7, Tubid 5, Cortez 5, Wilson J. 3, Cervantes 2, Labagala 2, Aquino 2, Menk 2.
SHOPINAS.COM 90 - Jazul 15, Espiritu 13, Hubalde 11, Sena 9, Canlas 7, Menor 7, Daa 6, Mirza 5,
Ritualo 5, Hermida 4, Aquino 4, Sison 2, Se 2.
Quarterscores: 24-15, 35-38, 55-55, 79-79, 94-90
Other Headlines
Shopinas seeks first win vs Ginebra
Barako beats Shopinas for share of No. 2
Caguioa, 5 others get fresh deals from Ginebra
Kings snatch win from brink
Cabagnot leads Petron past Barako Bull
Petron standouts to be feted by PBA Press Corps
The Kings overcame a 5-point deficit in the final minute and forced an extra period, allowing Mark Caguiao to take charge and push his team to victory.
"I can't explain it. God's graces lang talaga, allowing us to get through," said Ginebra coach Siot Tanquingcen in an interview with PBA.ph.
Jay-jay Helterbrand made a trifecta in the dying seconds of the game to force overtime.
"Broken play iyon. Jayjay was supposed to go somewhere else. Pero na-deny si Mark, and Jayjay had to take the shot," Tanquingcen said.
The win puts Ginebra at 5th place in the league standings with a 3-2 record, while Shopinas remains winless through 5 outings.
It was a sorry loss for the Clickers, who held a 79-74 advantage with 50 seconds left in the game, but RJ Jazul muffed his charities, allowing the Kings to get back in the game.
The Kings took control in overtime after Caguio and KG Canaleta conspired to boost Ginebra to an 86-79 lead.
The scores:
GINEBRA 94 - Intal 16, Caguioa 16, Villanueva 9, Helterbrand 9, Canaleta 8, W. Wilson 8, De Ocampo
7, Tubid 5, Cortez 5, Wilson J. 3, Cervantes 2, Labagala 2, Aquino 2, Menk 2.
SHOPINAS.COM 90 - Jazul 15, Espiritu 13, Hubalde 11, Sena 9, Canlas 7, Menor 7, Daa 6, Mirza 5,
Ritualo 5, Hermida 4, Aquino 4, Sison 2, Se 2.
Quarterscores: 24-15, 35-38, 55-55, 79-79, 94-90
Other Headlines
Shopinas seeks first win vs Ginebra
Barako beats Shopinas for share of No. 2
Caguioa, 5 others get fresh deals from Ginebra
Kings snatch win from brink
Cabagnot leads Petron past Barako Bull
Petron standouts to be feted by PBA Press Corps
Floyd Sr. predicts Pacquiao victory over Marquez
Says only Floyd Jr. can beat 'Pacman'
MANILA, Philippines - Floyd Mayweather Sr. is predicting a victory for pound-for-pound king Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao when the Filipino champion takes on Mexican rival Juan Manuel Marquez on November 12 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
"Marquez won't win this one," he said in a FightHype.com interview. "Marquez is gonna get his a** whooped. Marquez is gonna get the sh*t beat out of him."
Mayweather said that only one fighter right now is capable of beating Pacquiao - his son, Floyd Mayweather Jr.
"Freddie Roach knows that Lil Floyd is the only fighter that can beat Pacquiao," he said.
The older Mayweather is also slamming Roach, Pacquiao's trainer, for saying that Floyd Jr. came out "slow and flat-footed" in his bout against Victor Ortiz last September 17.
"How the hell did Lil Floyd look slow when he hit Ortiz with anything he wanted to hit him with? He hit him with so many straight right hands and left hooks," Mayweather said.
Mayweather Sr. said he will try to attend Pacquiao-Marquez III. "I will try to make it out there. I like going to those fights," he said.
Other Headlines
Floyd told: Just call Manny to start fight talks
I can't force Floyd to fight me - Pacquiao
Marquez offended about possible Pac-Floyd fight
Floyd will keep making up excuses, says Khan
Pacquiao beats up Floyd's former sparring partner
MANILA, Philippines - Floyd Mayweather Sr. is predicting a victory for pound-for-pound king Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao when the Filipino champion takes on Mexican rival Juan Manuel Marquez on November 12 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
"Marquez won't win this one," he said in a FightHype.com interview. "Marquez is gonna get his a** whooped. Marquez is gonna get the sh*t beat out of him."
Mayweather said that only one fighter right now is capable of beating Pacquiao - his son, Floyd Mayweather Jr.
"Freddie Roach knows that Lil Floyd is the only fighter that can beat Pacquiao," he said.
The older Mayweather is also slamming Roach, Pacquiao's trainer, for saying that Floyd Jr. came out "slow and flat-footed" in his bout against Victor Ortiz last September 17.
"How the hell did Lil Floyd look slow when he hit Ortiz with anything he wanted to hit him with? He hit him with so many straight right hands and left hooks," Mayweather said.
Mayweather Sr. said he will try to attend Pacquiao-Marquez III. "I will try to make it out there. I like going to those fights," he said.
Other Headlines
Floyd told: Just call Manny to start fight talks
I can't force Floyd to fight me - Pacquiao
Marquez offended about possible Pac-Floyd fight
Floyd will keep making up excuses, says Khan
Pacquiao beats up Floyd's former sparring partner
It's final: Beckham's Galaxy to face Azkals
MANILA, Philippines — Roll out the red carpet for David Beckham, Landon Donovan, and Robbie Keane.
The trio will be the stars of the Los Angeles Galaxy when the two-time Major League Soccer champion meets the Philippine Azkals in a friendly match on December 3 at the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex.
LA Galaxy President Thomas Payne said the face-off between the Galaxy and the Azkals, a team made up mainly of Filipinos who grew up in Europe and the United States, is a breakthrough for the development of the sport in the Philippines.
“We want to leave something behind,” said Payne during Thursday’s press conference at a hotel in Makati City, noting that visiting exotic locales like Manila “is part of what we do to promote the sport.”
Payne said the Galaxy stars will be in full force, something that should leave Filipino fans in awe since it is rare that a top-caliber and popular squad strut their stuff on local shores.
Philippine Football Federation head Nonong Araneta said the last time a top foreign club visited the Philippines to play was in the 1970s when Cruzeiro of Brazil took on the national team.
“This is a big match for us to end the year,” said Araneta. “What more can you ask for in football?’
Dan Palami, who manages the Azkals, said he has al ready sent out invites to goalie Neil Etheridge, who plays for the Philippine team, and those based in Denmark and Germany.
The Manila leg will be a part of the Galaxy’s multi-tour in the Asia-Pacific region, according to Payne, who gave the Rizal pitch a thumbs-up sign during an inspection.
“The field was wonderful. More than what we expected. We’ve done these games all over the world. This will be a memorable night for the sport of soccer,” he said.
The Galaxy team is playing New York for the MLS crown starting Nov. 20.
Beckham remains one of the biggest players today; while Donovan is the US’s top attraction, owing to his scoring prowess; and Keane, Ireland’s main man.
The trio will be the stars of the Los Angeles Galaxy when the two-time Major League Soccer champion meets the Philippine Azkals in a friendly match on December 3 at the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex.
LA Galaxy President Thomas Payne said the face-off between the Galaxy and the Azkals, a team made up mainly of Filipinos who grew up in Europe and the United States, is a breakthrough for the development of the sport in the Philippines.
“We want to leave something behind,” said Payne during Thursday’s press conference at a hotel in Makati City, noting that visiting exotic locales like Manila “is part of what we do to promote the sport.”
Payne said the Galaxy stars will be in full force, something that should leave Filipino fans in awe since it is rare that a top-caliber and popular squad strut their stuff on local shores.
Philippine Football Federation head Nonong Araneta said the last time a top foreign club visited the Philippines to play was in the 1970s when Cruzeiro of Brazil took on the national team.
“This is a big match for us to end the year,” said Araneta. “What more can you ask for in football?’
Dan Palami, who manages the Azkals, said he has al ready sent out invites to goalie Neil Etheridge, who plays for the Philippine team, and those based in Denmark and Germany.
The Manila leg will be a part of the Galaxy’s multi-tour in the Asia-Pacific region, according to Payne, who gave the Rizal pitch a thumbs-up sign during an inspection.
“The field was wonderful. More than what we expected. We’ve done these games all over the world. This will be a memorable night for the sport of soccer,” he said.
The Galaxy team is playing New York for the MLS crown starting Nov. 20.
Beckham remains one of the biggest players today; while Donovan is the US’s top attraction, owing to his scoring prowess; and Keane, Ireland’s main man.
US supports PNoy's approach to solving Mindanao conflict
The United States fully supports the stand of President Aquino to pursue an all out justice in parts of Mindanao in the wake of the clashes that are exacting toll on civilian, military and rebel populations, saying the government the and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) must stick to the ceasefire agreement in pursuit of the peace process.
US Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell relayed the message to Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario in a meeting on Wednesday.
“We fully support the government of the Philippines’ efforts to bring security and stability to the southern Philippines, including through the ongoing peace process," Campbell said in a statement Thursday.
Japan, United Kingdom, and the European Union also voiced their support to the peace process, which is supposed to end more than 40 years of Moro rebellion in Mindanao.
Skirmishes in Basilan and Zamboanga Sibugay between government troops and the MILF started when Army soldiers went deep into a rebel stronghold in Basilan last week, prompting at least 19,000 people to seek refuge from the firefight.
Measured approach'
US Ambassador Harry Thomas said a “measured approach" on the part of government could help avoid a repeat of MILF attacks against civilian communities in Mindanao in 2008.
The attacks occurred after an expanded homeland agreement that would have given the MILF autonomy and control over vast territories in Mindanao was not signed and was later on declared as unconstitutional by the Surpreme Court, which argued that it would require a constitutional amendment.
“Recalling the sorrow and tragedy that affected hundreds of thousands of lives when violence erupted in 2008, the United States welcomes and expresses its full confidence in the careful, measured approach of the Government of the Philippines at this time of heightened tension," Thomas said.
The MILF leadership denounced one of its commanders, Ameril Umbra Kato, who responsible for the attacks.
Thomas said the US welcomes efforts to reinforce the ceasefire that has been in place since 2009. “We fully support the ongoing peace process and hope the parties can avoid violence and continue to work toward an agreement that will provide for a peaceful and prosperous future," he said. — KBK/VS, GMA News
US Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell relayed the message to Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario in a meeting on Wednesday.
“We fully support the government of the Philippines’ efforts to bring security and stability to the southern Philippines, including through the ongoing peace process," Campbell said in a statement Thursday.
Japan, United Kingdom, and the European Union also voiced their support to the peace process, which is supposed to end more than 40 years of Moro rebellion in Mindanao.
Skirmishes in Basilan and Zamboanga Sibugay between government troops and the MILF started when Army soldiers went deep into a rebel stronghold in Basilan last week, prompting at least 19,000 people to seek refuge from the firefight.
Measured approach'
US Ambassador Harry Thomas said a “measured approach" on the part of government could help avoid a repeat of MILF attacks against civilian communities in Mindanao in 2008.
The attacks occurred after an expanded homeland agreement that would have given the MILF autonomy and control over vast territories in Mindanao was not signed and was later on declared as unconstitutional by the Surpreme Court, which argued that it would require a constitutional amendment.
“Recalling the sorrow and tragedy that affected hundreds of thousands of lives when violence erupted in 2008, the United States welcomes and expresses its full confidence in the careful, measured approach of the Government of the Philippines at this time of heightened tension," Thomas said.
The MILF leadership denounced one of its commanders, Ameril Umbra Kato, who responsible for the attacks.
Thomas said the US welcomes efforts to reinforce the ceasefire that has been in place since 2009. “We fully support the ongoing peace process and hope the parties can avoid violence and continue to work toward an agreement that will provide for a peaceful and prosperous future," he said. — KBK/VS, GMA News
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Occupy Oakland: More than 100 arrested; police defend tactics
Oakland police arrested more than 100 people during a night of clashes with Occupy Oakland protesters on the streets of downtown Oakland.
The scene had finally cleared after midnight Wednesday, but police were on alert in case crowds returned.
Oakland Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan said arrests were continuing and the total number might rise. Eight-five of those arrests were made early Tuesday, when officers raided the Occupy Oakland encampment on the plaza along with an annex in a park near Lake Merritt.
Jordan justified his department's use of tear gas.
"We were in a position where we had to deploy gas in order to stop the crowd and people from pelting us with bottles and rocks," he said.
PHOTOS: Occupy Oakland protest
Protesters had also thrown paint "and other agents" at officers, he said. The crowd reached about 1,000 at its peak, Jordan said, noting that police used bean bag rounds to disperse demonstrators. He said no rubber bullets were used -- a claim disputed by protesters.
Two officers were injured, Jordan said. He did not know how many demonstrators may have been hurt.
In an interview with KTVU-TV Channel 2, Officer David Carman said he had been hammered by paintballs and more.
"The crowd started throwing bottles, paints, beer, eggs at myself and the other officers," he said.
But some activists criticized the police tactics.
Kat Brooks, an Occupy Oakland activist and spokeswoman, said she took her young daughter home about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday because she did not want to expose her to the tear gas flooding downtown Oakland.
Protesters had marched from Frank Ogawa Plaza at City Hall to Snow Park, a swatch of green near Lake Merritt where an annex encampment had also been torn down by police this morning. They then returned to City Hall.
"We weren’t there but a minute before they started giving the dispersal order," Brooks said. "The first time they said five minutes, this time they said 'now.' They shot off the flash grenades and people scattered."
Brooks said her neighbors just returned home teargassed.
"This is the most disciplined I’ve ever seen Oakland be. There was no damage to property," she said. At one point, Brooks said, several officers were hit with paintballs, but she said they had come out swinging batons.
"From the way they came into the camp this morning to the way they acted tonight, they have gone beyond what was necessary," she said.
The scene had finally cleared after midnight Wednesday, but police were on alert in case crowds returned.
Oakland Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan said arrests were continuing and the total number might rise. Eight-five of those arrests were made early Tuesday, when officers raided the Occupy Oakland encampment on the plaza along with an annex in a park near Lake Merritt.
Jordan justified his department's use of tear gas.
"We were in a position where we had to deploy gas in order to stop the crowd and people from pelting us with bottles and rocks," he said.
PHOTOS: Occupy Oakland protest
Protesters had also thrown paint "and other agents" at officers, he said. The crowd reached about 1,000 at its peak, Jordan said, noting that police used bean bag rounds to disperse demonstrators. He said no rubber bullets were used -- a claim disputed by protesters.
Two officers were injured, Jordan said. He did not know how many demonstrators may have been hurt.
In an interview with KTVU-TV Channel 2, Officer David Carman said he had been hammered by paintballs and more.
"The crowd started throwing bottles, paints, beer, eggs at myself and the other officers," he said.
But some activists criticized the police tactics.
Kat Brooks, an Occupy Oakland activist and spokeswoman, said she took her young daughter home about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday because she did not want to expose her to the tear gas flooding downtown Oakland.
Protesters had marched from Frank Ogawa Plaza at City Hall to Snow Park, a swatch of green near Lake Merritt where an annex encampment had also been torn down by police this morning. They then returned to City Hall.
"We weren’t there but a minute before they started giving the dispersal order," Brooks said. "The first time they said five minutes, this time they said 'now.' They shot off the flash grenades and people scattered."
Brooks said her neighbors just returned home teargassed.
"This is the most disciplined I’ve ever seen Oakland be. There was no damage to property," she said. At one point, Brooks said, several officers were hit with paintballs, but she said they had come out swinging batons.
"From the way they came into the camp this morning to the way they acted tonight, they have gone beyond what was necessary," she said.
Report: Andy Rooney Hospitalized in Serious Condition
NEW YORK – Andy Rooney, who delivered his last essay on the CBS TV newsmagazine "60 Minutes" three weeks ago, was in the hospital Tuesday after developing serious complications following surgery.
CBS said the 92-year-old writer's condition was stable and, at the request of his family, offered no other information about his medical problems or where he was hospitalized.
The three-time Emmy-winner was a regular presence on television's most popular newsmagazine. Since 1978, "A Few Minutes with Andy Rooney" wrapped up the Sunday night program, often with a look at the absurdities of life and language.
Rooney could talk about what was in the news or what was in his closet. One of his Emmy Awards was for an essay about whether there was a real Mrs. Smith behind Mrs. Smith's Pies.
On Oct. 2, he delivered his 1,097th and final essay, saying it was a moment he dreaded.
"I wish I could do this forever. I can't, though," he said.
True to his often cantankerous nature, Rooney noted that he hated being recognized on the street. So if you see him in a restaurant, he said as he signed off, "please, just let me eat my dinner."
He's had a long career as a writer, and that's how he saw himself. He worked for the military newspaper Stars and Stripes and wrote four books about World War II. He wrote for entertainment personalities Arthur Godfrey and Garry Moore and had a longtime partnership with newsman Harry Reasoner.
With "60 Minutes" looking for something new at the end of its show, Rooney's first essay appeared on July 2, 1978: a complaint about people who kept track of how many people died in auto accidents over holiday weekends.
CBS said the 92-year-old writer's condition was stable and, at the request of his family, offered no other information about his medical problems or where he was hospitalized.
The three-time Emmy-winner was a regular presence on television's most popular newsmagazine. Since 1978, "A Few Minutes with Andy Rooney" wrapped up the Sunday night program, often with a look at the absurdities of life and language.
Rooney could talk about what was in the news or what was in his closet. One of his Emmy Awards was for an essay about whether there was a real Mrs. Smith behind Mrs. Smith's Pies.
On Oct. 2, he delivered his 1,097th and final essay, saying it was a moment he dreaded.
"I wish I could do this forever. I can't, though," he said.
True to his often cantankerous nature, Rooney noted that he hated being recognized on the street. So if you see him in a restaurant, he said as he signed off, "please, just let me eat my dinner."
He's had a long career as a writer, and that's how he saw himself. He worked for the military newspaper Stars and Stripes and wrote four books about World War II. He wrote for entertainment personalities Arthur Godfrey and Garry Moore and had a longtime partnership with newsman Harry Reasoner.
With "60 Minutes" looking for something new at the end of its show, Rooney's first essay appeared on July 2, 1978: a complaint about people who kept track of how many people died in auto accidents over holiday weekends.
Amazon.com 3Q Profit Plunges 73%, Raises Possibility Of 4Q Loss
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Amazon.com Inc.'s (AMZN) third-quarter earnings plunged 73% because of its expensive spending program, as the No. 1 Internet retailer by sales said it could report an operating loss in the key fourth quarter.
Shares slid 14%, at $195.50 after hours. The stock hit its highest level ever last week and had since fallen 7.9% through the close.
Amazon, which has been investing aggressively in distribution and digital offerings at the expense of the bottom line in recent quarters, said the fourth quarter's bottom line could range from an operating loss of $200 million to a operating profit of $250 million. The fourth quarter includes the key holiday-shopping season.
The company also projected $16.45 billion and $18.65 billion in revenue in the current quarter. Analysts on average expected $18.15 billion, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters.
In the latest period, operating expenses jumped 48%, outstripping the pace of revenue growth. The company has posted double-digit percentage increases in expenses for over a year.
Amazon posted a profit of $63 million, or 14 cents a share, from $231 million, or 51 cents a share, a year earlier. Analysts predicted 24 cents a share.
Net sales increased 44%, to $10.88 billion. Excluding currency effects, the growth would have been 39%. In July, the company predicted $10.3 billion to $11 billion, largely better than analysts expected at the time.
Gross margin was flat, at 23.5%, but the margins of fulfillment and overhead costs to sales both weakened.
Operating income dropped 71%. In July, Amazon predicted operating income could fall as much as 93%.
Amazon.com Inc.'s (AMZN) third-quarter earnings plunged 73% because of its expensive spending program, as the No. 1 Internet retailer by sales said it could report an operating loss in the key fourth quarter.
Shares slid 14%, at $195.50 after hours. The stock hit its highest level ever last week and had since fallen 7.9% through the close.
Amazon, which has been investing aggressively in distribution and digital offerings at the expense of the bottom line in recent quarters, said the fourth quarter's bottom line could range from an operating loss of $200 million to a operating profit of $250 million. The fourth quarter includes the key holiday-shopping season.
The company also projected $16.45 billion and $18.65 billion in revenue in the current quarter. Analysts on average expected $18.15 billion, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters.
In the latest period, operating expenses jumped 48%, outstripping the pace of revenue growth. The company has posted double-digit percentage increases in expenses for over a year.
Amazon posted a profit of $63 million, or 14 cents a share, from $231 million, or 51 cents a share, a year earlier. Analysts predicted 24 cents a share.
Net sales increased 44%, to $10.88 billion. Excluding currency effects, the growth would have been 39%. In July, the company predicted $10.3 billion to $11 billion, largely better than analysts expected at the time.
Gross margin was flat, at 23.5%, but the margins of fulfillment and overhead costs to sales both weakened.
Operating income dropped 71%. In July, Amazon predicted operating income could fall as much as 93%.
John Lackey injury blessing in disguise
If the Red Sox [team stats] fall apart in 2012, fans won’t have one of their favorite targets to blame.
New general manager Ben Cherington dropped a bombshell during his introductory press conference yesterday, disclosing that right-hander John Lackey will undergo Tommy John surgery on his pitching elbow and probably miss the season.
No one ever wants to see a player hurt or cut open, but this could be a win-win for all involved.
The Sox remove one of the beer drinkers from their ranks at a time when they’re trying to alter their clubhouse culture. And even though Lackey was by all accounts an excellent teammate — we’re now learning he pitched hurt all season — something needed to change among the starting five, and this is it.
From Lackey’s perspective, he gets a year away from the slings and arrows, a year to get his life in order — he’s reportedly in the midst of a divorce — and maybe even a year to assess the way he’s conducted himself since signing a five-year, $82.5 million contract.
If he comes back in 2013 as a calmer, less combative person, that’s all to the good. And if he regains the stuff that made him an All-Star and a proven playoff performer, even better.
“Aside from just getting healthy, there could be some benefit,” Cherington acknowledged after his press conference. “You’d have to ask John to get a better answer. He’s been going through a lot. I think he’s closer to resolving some of that stuff than he was a year ago. But maybe it is an opportunity for a fresh start physically and mentally.”
The news really was a gift for Cherington on his first official day on the job. Tackling the wayward rotation projected to be unpleasant, since breaking up the group would have required one of three equally unpalatable options: a) paying someone virtually all of the $45 million remaining on Lackey’s contract to take him; b) trading a young talent like Jon Lester [stats] or Clay Buchholz; or c) getting less than market value for former ace Josh Beckett [stats].
Now the problem is solved. Cherington can’t jettison any of the three remaining starters, because the Sox are too thin at the position to withstand the loss.
Likewise, he won’t be asked about it again either, because there’s been change, now that Lackey’s out of the mix. Everybody wins.
Cherington’s comments yesterday, both before and after his press conference, also shed some much-needed light on what Lackey endured while going 12-12 with a 6.41 ERA last year.
“Let me start by saying that John Lackey pitched through circumstances this year that I don’t think anyone in this room can fully understand,” Cherington said. “And he got beat up a little for it along the way.”
Lackey underwent an MRI in May after experiencing elbow soreness, and according to Cherington it roughly resembled the one he had before signing. Everyone agreed to the conservative approach of rest and rehab, and he returned in June.
But the elbow worsened down the stretch. His last start was one of his gutsiest. Despite altering his delivery, Lackey limited the Yankees to three earned runs in six innings of a 7-4 victory. That start ended up being overshadowed by both the team’s collapse and Lackey’s postgame anti-media rant.
“He made that last start and he pitched well, but he was battling it,” Cherington said. “We felt the best thing to do was to get it checked again.”
Lackey visited Dr. Lewis Yocum in Los Angeles, and Yocum recommended surgery, which will be performed in the coming weeks.
New general manager Ben Cherington dropped a bombshell during his introductory press conference yesterday, disclosing that right-hander John Lackey will undergo Tommy John surgery on his pitching elbow and probably miss the season.
No one ever wants to see a player hurt or cut open, but this could be a win-win for all involved.
The Sox remove one of the beer drinkers from their ranks at a time when they’re trying to alter their clubhouse culture. And even though Lackey was by all accounts an excellent teammate — we’re now learning he pitched hurt all season — something needed to change among the starting five, and this is it.
From Lackey’s perspective, he gets a year away from the slings and arrows, a year to get his life in order — he’s reportedly in the midst of a divorce — and maybe even a year to assess the way he’s conducted himself since signing a five-year, $82.5 million contract.
If he comes back in 2013 as a calmer, less combative person, that’s all to the good. And if he regains the stuff that made him an All-Star and a proven playoff performer, even better.
“Aside from just getting healthy, there could be some benefit,” Cherington acknowledged after his press conference. “You’d have to ask John to get a better answer. He’s been going through a lot. I think he’s closer to resolving some of that stuff than he was a year ago. But maybe it is an opportunity for a fresh start physically and mentally.”
The news really was a gift for Cherington on his first official day on the job. Tackling the wayward rotation projected to be unpleasant, since breaking up the group would have required one of three equally unpalatable options: a) paying someone virtually all of the $45 million remaining on Lackey’s contract to take him; b) trading a young talent like Jon Lester [stats] or Clay Buchholz; or c) getting less than market value for former ace Josh Beckett [stats].
Now the problem is solved. Cherington can’t jettison any of the three remaining starters, because the Sox are too thin at the position to withstand the loss.
Likewise, he won’t be asked about it again either, because there’s been change, now that Lackey’s out of the mix. Everybody wins.
Cherington’s comments yesterday, both before and after his press conference, also shed some much-needed light on what Lackey endured while going 12-12 with a 6.41 ERA last year.
“Let me start by saying that John Lackey pitched through circumstances this year that I don’t think anyone in this room can fully understand,” Cherington said. “And he got beat up a little for it along the way.”
Lackey underwent an MRI in May after experiencing elbow soreness, and according to Cherington it roughly resembled the one he had before signing. Everyone agreed to the conservative approach of rest and rehab, and he returned in June.
But the elbow worsened down the stretch. His last start was one of his gutsiest. Despite altering his delivery, Lackey limited the Yankees to three earned runs in six innings of a 7-4 victory. That start ended up being overshadowed by both the team’s collapse and Lackey’s postgame anti-media rant.
“He made that last start and he pitched well, but he was battling it,” Cherington said. “We felt the best thing to do was to get it checked again.”
Lackey visited Dr. Lewis Yocum in Los Angeles, and Yocum recommended surgery, which will be performed in the coming weeks.
It's time for T.O. to face reality
Now that the glow of his reality-TV-show life has inevitably faded, Terrell Owens is left with this ugly truth: He’s squandered so much good will, traded in enough talent for shallow adulation and so-often exchanged your good name for fleeting press that he’s now more of an empty fraud than a famed star.
T.O. SHOW
He's been the ultimate showman and the ultimate headache. Relive the top 10 moments of Terrell Owens' career.
I say this with no joy. I say this knowing that we all help put him there. I say this knowing that he has psychological problems that make this more tragedy than farce, more social commentary than Terrell Owens takedown.
How can you not feel sorry for the guy? Here, at the end of his career, two networks and a greedy public happily consumed his demise Tuesday because everyone knows what he alone does not: He is a live-action train wreck being exploited for our amusement. He’s placed himself in the trash bin of not just sports culture but American culture. He’s been dumped in the same sorry place as Lindsay Lohan, John Edwards, Paris Hilton and the other attention-craving bottom feeders he can count as his contemporaries.
It’s sad, it’s unfortunate, but it’s true. Terrell Owens is officially a joke. Exploited by us, exploited by himself, and now at the sorry end showcasing his pathetic place in football and American culture for everyone to see.
The fact that no NFL team sent a representative to check out his hour-long workout today simply proves the point that he’s veered from big-time talent to attention-grabbing distraction to this inevitable end: A has-been. In the days ahead, maybe someone will take a chance on his surgically repaired knee and his 37-year-old body and his penchant for problems and his can’t-help-myself ego. Maybe they won’t.
Either way, the tryout his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, set up Tuesday was not the hoped-for proof that he’s ready for a comeback. The hour-long circus, broadcast live on the NFL Network and hyped on ESPN, was just a glimpse into his sad future and squandered past.
Let’s not forget this is a man who has reportedly attempted to commit suicide more than once. He’s a joke — the world laughs at him now rather than with him. He alone seems to think the good times are still rolling. Fact is, people put up with a lot if the talent is there. Too much. And this is what life looks like when that talent fades, when all that’s left is the ugliness behind the gift, the spoiled special person who’s special no more.
15 MINUTES OF FAME
Sports is the ultimate "unscripted TV." No wonder so many athletes have appeared on reality shows.
It holds true eventually for sexy women and good-looking men who decide to develop nothing beyond their bodies and beauty. True for rich guys who build relationships around money once the money vanishes. True for the bosses who bully underlings into false friendships and faux respect the moment those bosses switch jobs.
True, at long last, for one Terrell Owens.
This, too, is true: Too often those people’s demons and struggles go unchecked because the talent is too important to disturb. Suicide attempts? Let’s focus on the game Sunday. Depression issues? Winning will make it all OK. An incessant and unhealthy need for attention and false love? Sure, you can have it all – just keep catching the ball.
Part of what’s happened here is that TO got sucked into the reality-TV machine. Or more accurately, perhaps, he walked into it with arms open wide, his sights set on false fame, increased attention and that momentary fix of having more eyes and more eyes and more eyes until the world can’t stand what it’s looking at.
But what’s really sad, and what says volumes about our culture, is that TO never needed to go all “Jersey Shore” with his life. He had the gifts and the skill and a chosen profession that put his name in lights, anyway. But this is 2011, this is America, and so the drug of a reality-TV life became too much.
He wanted what too many want: Glitz, attention, that instant gratification, that sudden rush of celebrity over substance — that pull so powerful even those with fame crave a higher level of it, more of it, a more-concentrated version of their name in lights.
Everywhere you look, people who can be more choose instead to be in the limelight. It’s modern-day whoring — selling the best part of oneself for a quick payday with no thought of the consequences.
In this new paradigm, the viewing public gets its, er, momentary kicks. And the new-age whores get kicked to the curb when what they have to offer leaves them; a sad joke before they realize no one was laughing with them. Just at them.
COACH SPEAK
Brian Billick dives into the minds of NFL coaches across the league | Watch the show
The list of the famous and not-so famous blinded by klieg lights is long and varied. There are the nobodies-to-somebodies like Chris Moneymaker (who kicked off the poker craze). There are athletes like Dennis Rodman, men who should have enough but crave more and more and more until they’re a caricature of themselves.
There’s the slew of shows like “Jersey Shore,” where everyday people unleash their lives on the viewing public, making us all a little worse off.
And this isn’t limited to sports or anonymous folks thrust onto TV.
Edwards decided running for president wasn’t enough. He needed more, more, more . . . and he got it — the attention, the inflated ego, the separation from reality, and, finally, a woman who was not his wife pregnant, allegations of misusing campaign contributions to cover it up, and soon enough a trial.
Take Lohan. The talented actress — and she was — announced today she’ll be posing for Playboy. Of course she will. Blessed with remarkable skill in a field tailor-made to make her famous, she instead let her fame — and the need for more, more, more — sour her.
So it’s appropriate that today, as Edwards' trial approaches and Lohan goes all naked and Snooki remains a household name, the place Owens made for himself in the world crystallized once and for all. It’s not that no one cares about him. That’s the wrong way to look at it. They do. The cameras came, the chatter spread, I and other writers chose to write about the man. Owens got what he wanted. He got 15 minutes more. It’s what’s been lost that’s the issue: his respect, his place in the game, his chance to return from his reality-TV life and be something more substantial.
Maybe the Bears will take a flyer on the once-great wide receiver. Maybe another middling team in need of another weapon will ignore the years of trouble and drama in San Francisco, Dallas, Philly and elsewhere. If they do, it’ll be a fleeting chance. If they don’t, it’ll be no surprise.
Either way, this is Owens’ world now: A tryout no one comes to see, a joke he doesn’t get because he is the joke, a slew of problems that we should be mourning but too often mock. A joke that could end up having a decidedly somber punch line.
“I only need one team (to be interested), I only need one chance,” Owens told reporters at the event, held at a suburban Los Angeles high school. “With what I did today, it should open some eyes.”
He’s opened too many eyes, already. What’s there to be seen is sad and ugly.
Facts are facts, and here are TO’s: His contemporaries aren’t and will not be Randy Moss, Marvin Harrison, Larry Fitzgerald, Andre Johnson or the others.
They are Snooki, Lohan, Hilton and all the others who traded whomever they were for whatever person would get the world to watch.
T.O. SHOW
He's been the ultimate showman and the ultimate headache. Relive the top 10 moments of Terrell Owens' career.
I say this with no joy. I say this knowing that we all help put him there. I say this knowing that he has psychological problems that make this more tragedy than farce, more social commentary than Terrell Owens takedown.
How can you not feel sorry for the guy? Here, at the end of his career, two networks and a greedy public happily consumed his demise Tuesday because everyone knows what he alone does not: He is a live-action train wreck being exploited for our amusement. He’s placed himself in the trash bin of not just sports culture but American culture. He’s been dumped in the same sorry place as Lindsay Lohan, John Edwards, Paris Hilton and the other attention-craving bottom feeders he can count as his contemporaries.
It’s sad, it’s unfortunate, but it’s true. Terrell Owens is officially a joke. Exploited by us, exploited by himself, and now at the sorry end showcasing his pathetic place in football and American culture for everyone to see.
The fact that no NFL team sent a representative to check out his hour-long workout today simply proves the point that he’s veered from big-time talent to attention-grabbing distraction to this inevitable end: A has-been. In the days ahead, maybe someone will take a chance on his surgically repaired knee and his 37-year-old body and his penchant for problems and his can’t-help-myself ego. Maybe they won’t.
Either way, the tryout his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, set up Tuesday was not the hoped-for proof that he’s ready for a comeback. The hour-long circus, broadcast live on the NFL Network and hyped on ESPN, was just a glimpse into his sad future and squandered past.
Let’s not forget this is a man who has reportedly attempted to commit suicide more than once. He’s a joke — the world laughs at him now rather than with him. He alone seems to think the good times are still rolling. Fact is, people put up with a lot if the talent is there. Too much. And this is what life looks like when that talent fades, when all that’s left is the ugliness behind the gift, the spoiled special person who’s special no more.
15 MINUTES OF FAME
Sports is the ultimate "unscripted TV." No wonder so many athletes have appeared on reality shows.
It holds true eventually for sexy women and good-looking men who decide to develop nothing beyond their bodies and beauty. True for rich guys who build relationships around money once the money vanishes. True for the bosses who bully underlings into false friendships and faux respect the moment those bosses switch jobs.
True, at long last, for one Terrell Owens.
This, too, is true: Too often those people’s demons and struggles go unchecked because the talent is too important to disturb. Suicide attempts? Let’s focus on the game Sunday. Depression issues? Winning will make it all OK. An incessant and unhealthy need for attention and false love? Sure, you can have it all – just keep catching the ball.
Part of what’s happened here is that TO got sucked into the reality-TV machine. Or more accurately, perhaps, he walked into it with arms open wide, his sights set on false fame, increased attention and that momentary fix of having more eyes and more eyes and more eyes until the world can’t stand what it’s looking at.
But what’s really sad, and what says volumes about our culture, is that TO never needed to go all “Jersey Shore” with his life. He had the gifts and the skill and a chosen profession that put his name in lights, anyway. But this is 2011, this is America, and so the drug of a reality-TV life became too much.
He wanted what too many want: Glitz, attention, that instant gratification, that sudden rush of celebrity over substance — that pull so powerful even those with fame crave a higher level of it, more of it, a more-concentrated version of their name in lights.
Everywhere you look, people who can be more choose instead to be in the limelight. It’s modern-day whoring — selling the best part of oneself for a quick payday with no thought of the consequences.
In this new paradigm, the viewing public gets its, er, momentary kicks. And the new-age whores get kicked to the curb when what they have to offer leaves them; a sad joke before they realize no one was laughing with them. Just at them.
COACH SPEAK
Brian Billick dives into the minds of NFL coaches across the league | Watch the show
The list of the famous and not-so famous blinded by klieg lights is long and varied. There are the nobodies-to-somebodies like Chris Moneymaker (who kicked off the poker craze). There are athletes like Dennis Rodman, men who should have enough but crave more and more and more until they’re a caricature of themselves.
There’s the slew of shows like “Jersey Shore,” where everyday people unleash their lives on the viewing public, making us all a little worse off.
And this isn’t limited to sports or anonymous folks thrust onto TV.
Edwards decided running for president wasn’t enough. He needed more, more, more . . . and he got it — the attention, the inflated ego, the separation from reality, and, finally, a woman who was not his wife pregnant, allegations of misusing campaign contributions to cover it up, and soon enough a trial.
Take Lohan. The talented actress — and she was — announced today she’ll be posing for Playboy. Of course she will. Blessed with remarkable skill in a field tailor-made to make her famous, she instead let her fame — and the need for more, more, more — sour her.
So it’s appropriate that today, as Edwards' trial approaches and Lohan goes all naked and Snooki remains a household name, the place Owens made for himself in the world crystallized once and for all. It’s not that no one cares about him. That’s the wrong way to look at it. They do. The cameras came, the chatter spread, I and other writers chose to write about the man. Owens got what he wanted. He got 15 minutes more. It’s what’s been lost that’s the issue: his respect, his place in the game, his chance to return from his reality-TV life and be something more substantial.
Maybe the Bears will take a flyer on the once-great wide receiver. Maybe another middling team in need of another weapon will ignore the years of trouble and drama in San Francisco, Dallas, Philly and elsewhere. If they do, it’ll be a fleeting chance. If they don’t, it’ll be no surprise.
Either way, this is Owens’ world now: A tryout no one comes to see, a joke he doesn’t get because he is the joke, a slew of problems that we should be mourning but too often mock. A joke that could end up having a decidedly somber punch line.
“I only need one team (to be interested), I only need one chance,” Owens told reporters at the event, held at a suburban Los Angeles high school. “With what I did today, it should open some eyes.”
He’s opened too many eyes, already. What’s there to be seen is sad and ugly.
Facts are facts, and here are TO’s: His contemporaries aren’t and will not be Randy Moss, Marvin Harrison, Larry Fitzgerald, Andre Johnson or the others.
They are Snooki, Lohan, Hilton and all the others who traded whomever they were for whatever person would get the world to watch.
All about Jenna Lyons
If you own a sweater, or pencil skirt or pair of oxfords from J.Crew, you have already been acquainted with Jenna Lyons, even if you don't know her by name.
The creative director and president of J.Crew, who is currently going through a messy divorce, is credited with developing the retail behemoth's preppy-yet-offbeat aesthetic. In recent years, Lyons has become a style personality, the antidote to the Alexander McQueens and Lady Gagas of the world, known for mixing basics with the subtly quirky.
J.CREW EXEC IN MESSY SPLIT
Women deeply identify with the laid-back, 6-foot-5 creative director and have increasingly been interested in the minutiae of her life. In 2008, J.Crew sought to take advantage of Lyons' appealing personality by creating "Jenna's Picks," a section in their catalogues dedicated to her favorite items.
GETTY IMAGES FOR MERCEDES-BENZ F
Jenna Lyons with Solange Knowles at the J.Crew Spring 2012 fashion show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week.
Lyons has appeared in magazines like Glamour, InStyle and Lucky and has even been on "Oprah" in a segment filmed in her closet. Forbes magazine said that she reached "icon status comparable to the likes of superstar designers like Donna Karan and Miuccia Prada."
Lyons' family life has long been part of her story. She married artist Vincent Mazeau in 2002 in a ceremony that was covered in New York magazine.
"Vincent and I envisioned a black-tie barbecue for our wedding," Lyons said alongside photos of her in an easy, breezy wedding dress and Mazeau in a kilt.
The couple's townhouse in Park Slope has been frequently photographed, and become an object of lust for many a New Yorker. "My trick has been to approach each area like putting together an outfit," Lyons told Living Etc. "You might start with an old pair of jeans, a cashmere cardigan, or a floral belt, and work around that central fashion statement."
Earlier this year, Mazeau shot photos of Lyons and their son Beckett, 5, around the house for a J.Crew feature called "Saturday with Jenna." One of the images showed Lyons' painting her son's toes hot pink. A scandal erupted, with newscasters dissecting the image and claiming Lyons was sending confusing gender messages to her son. Jon Stewart jokingly dubbed the incident "Toemaggedon."
"I’m not surprised that [Beckett] was interested in what I was doing," Lyons told New York magazine. "My God, my toes went from white to hot pink — it was very exciting."
Originally from Palos Verdes, Calif., Lyons came to New York in 1987 to study at Parsons. In 1990, she started at J.Crew -- then a small upstart. By 2007, she had worked her way up to creative director. In 2009 she earned $750,000 and was given bonuses and benefits bringing her total pay to $4.2 million, according to reports. Last year, she was named company president.
Earlier today, Page Six reported that Lyons and Mazeau split this summer, and that divorce proceedings are getting contentious. Mazeau is seeking custody of Beckett, as well as the couple's townhouse and a large settlement, arguing that he put the breaks on his career to stay home with their son. Meanwhile, Lyons friends say she supported his career and gave him a financially comfortable life. Lyons is reportedly in love again, this time with a woman.
J.Crew would not respond to whispers of the split.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/all_about_jenna_lyons_us3sBAN6gxlENValJysmoI#ixzz1btHF4GHI
The creative director and president of J.Crew, who is currently going through a messy divorce, is credited with developing the retail behemoth's preppy-yet-offbeat aesthetic. In recent years, Lyons has become a style personality, the antidote to the Alexander McQueens and Lady Gagas of the world, known for mixing basics with the subtly quirky.
J.CREW EXEC IN MESSY SPLIT
Women deeply identify with the laid-back, 6-foot-5 creative director and have increasingly been interested in the minutiae of her life. In 2008, J.Crew sought to take advantage of Lyons' appealing personality by creating "Jenna's Picks," a section in their catalogues dedicated to her favorite items.
GETTY IMAGES FOR MERCEDES-BENZ F
Jenna Lyons with Solange Knowles at the J.Crew Spring 2012 fashion show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week.
Lyons has appeared in magazines like Glamour, InStyle and Lucky and has even been on "Oprah" in a segment filmed in her closet. Forbes magazine said that she reached "icon status comparable to the likes of superstar designers like Donna Karan and Miuccia Prada."
Lyons' family life has long been part of her story. She married artist Vincent Mazeau in 2002 in a ceremony that was covered in New York magazine.
"Vincent and I envisioned a black-tie barbecue for our wedding," Lyons said alongside photos of her in an easy, breezy wedding dress and Mazeau in a kilt.
The couple's townhouse in Park Slope has been frequently photographed, and become an object of lust for many a New Yorker. "My trick has been to approach each area like putting together an outfit," Lyons told Living Etc. "You might start with an old pair of jeans, a cashmere cardigan, or a floral belt, and work around that central fashion statement."
Earlier this year, Mazeau shot photos of Lyons and their son Beckett, 5, around the house for a J.Crew feature called "Saturday with Jenna." One of the images showed Lyons' painting her son's toes hot pink. A scandal erupted, with newscasters dissecting the image and claiming Lyons was sending confusing gender messages to her son. Jon Stewart jokingly dubbed the incident "Toemaggedon."
"I’m not surprised that [Beckett] was interested in what I was doing," Lyons told New York magazine. "My God, my toes went from white to hot pink — it was very exciting."
Originally from Palos Verdes, Calif., Lyons came to New York in 1987 to study at Parsons. In 1990, she started at J.Crew -- then a small upstart. By 2007, she had worked her way up to creative director. In 2009 she earned $750,000 and was given bonuses and benefits bringing her total pay to $4.2 million, according to reports. Last year, she was named company president.
Earlier today, Page Six reported that Lyons and Mazeau split this summer, and that divorce proceedings are getting contentious. Mazeau is seeking custody of Beckett, as well as the couple's townhouse and a large settlement, arguing that he put the breaks on his career to stay home with their son. Meanwhile, Lyons friends say she supported his career and gave him a financially comfortable life. Lyons is reportedly in love again, this time with a woman.
J.Crew would not respond to whispers of the split.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/all_about_jenna_lyons_us3sBAN6gxlENValJysmoI#ixzz1btHF4GHI
Next Generation Weather Satellite To Launch Friday
DENVER -- Ball Aerospace in Boulder will launch its $1.5 billion project on Friday from Vandenburg Air Force Base in California. The next-generation weather satellite will then begin its five-year journey observing Earth from space.
The satellite has a lengthy name: National Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project. NPP contains five on-board instruments that will collect information for more than 30 key long-term data sets. These records, which range from the ozone layer and land cover to atmospheric temperatures and ice cover, are critical for understanding the earth's climate and its changes over time.
Ball Aerospace designed and built the spacecraft bus, and since 2005 its team of scientists has run the on-board instruments through extensive testing to prepare them for the extreme elements in outer space. NPP will fly at an altitude of 512 miles and will circle the globe 14 times a day.
Scientists are enthusiastic about the new technology, which will be available following the significant weather events of 2011. according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the United States saw 10 billion-dollar disasters just this year.
"The timing of this NPP launch could hardly be more appropriate," said Dr. Louis W. Uccellini, NOAA director of the National Center for Environmental Prediction. “With NPP we expect to improve and extend our forecast skills out to five to seven days in advance for hurricanes and other extreme weather events. We expect the advanced instruments on NPP to become a foundation for the global observing system that will be absolutely essential."
NPP will be launched on a Delta II rocket built in Centennial.
For more information on the satellite mission, visit the official NPP website.
The satellite has a lengthy name: National Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project. NPP contains five on-board instruments that will collect information for more than 30 key long-term data sets. These records, which range from the ozone layer and land cover to atmospheric temperatures and ice cover, are critical for understanding the earth's climate and its changes over time.
Ball Aerospace designed and built the spacecraft bus, and since 2005 its team of scientists has run the on-board instruments through extensive testing to prepare them for the extreme elements in outer space. NPP will fly at an altitude of 512 miles and will circle the globe 14 times a day.
Scientists are enthusiastic about the new technology, which will be available following the significant weather events of 2011. according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the United States saw 10 billion-dollar disasters just this year.
"The timing of this NPP launch could hardly be more appropriate," said Dr. Louis W. Uccellini, NOAA director of the National Center for Environmental Prediction. “With NPP we expect to improve and extend our forecast skills out to five to seven days in advance for hurricanes and other extreme weather events. We expect the advanced instruments on NPP to become a foundation for the global observing system that will be absolutely essential."
NPP will be launched on a Delta II rocket built in Centennial.
For more information on the satellite mission, visit the official NPP website.
Ed Lee vetoes SF health care bill - antibusiness
Mayor Ed Lee on Tuesday issued his first veto since taking office in January, describing legislation intended to close a loophole in San Francisco's law requiring employers to provide some funding for their workers' health care expenses as bad for business.
"This legislation aims to solve an important problem, but imposes an overly broad approach to solving a discrete set of issues," Lee said in his veto letter.
The Board of Supervisors approved the proposal on a 6-5 vote last week, setting up a showdown with Lee just weeks before the Nov. 8 mayoral election, in which polls show him as the front-runner in a field of 16 candidates.
Four of his rivals, Supervisor John Avalos, City Attorney Dennis Herrera, city Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting and state Sen. Leland Yee, have signaled they will make Lee's veto a campaign issue, having rallied on the steps of City Hall this month urging him to support the plan.
It's unlikely sponsors of the legislation will get eight votes to override the veto. But Supervisor David Campos, chief sponsor of the legislation, said Lee "is taking San Francisco in the wrong direction" by limiting the funding uninsured workers can access to pay for their health care needs.
Campos said he is considering taking his proposal to the voters. It takes four supervisors to place a measure on the ballot.
The Campos plan targets the provision in the city's groundbreaking health care law that allows employers to set up individual health care reimbursement accounts for uninsured workers. Participating employers contribute up to $4,252 annually into each worker's account, but any unused money at the end of the year can go back to the employer.
Last year, 860 businesses out of the approximately 4,000 covered by the law contributed a combined $62.5 million into the reimbursement accounts, but just $12.4 million was used by workers. Employers pocketed the rest.
Under the Campos amendment, the unspent money would accrue in the accounts. Only after a worker has been off the payroll for 18 months could an employer get the money back.
Business owners and their trade association said it would force them to lay off workers, shelve expansion plans, move out of the city or close.
Lee said that while he agrees the proposal would be bad for business, he believes changes are needed.
One of his goals, he has said, is to get businesses to be less restrictive on how the money can be used. Some employers, for example, won't reimburse workers for health insurance premiums or for enrollment in a city plan that makes use of public clinics and hospitals.
The Campos amendment, he said, would not increase access to health care or protect jobs. "Moreover, this cash, pulled out of our local economy, will not be available to pay wages or grow businesses," Lee told supervisors.
The mayor formed a working group to see whether a compromise could be brokered and Lee said in his veto letter that he is "confident there is a legislative path forward."
Meanwhile, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu has offered a different amendment to address the loophole. Under his version, at least a year's worth of unused employer contributions must always be available to avoid a use-it-or-lose-it scenario.
The board was to vote on Chiu's plan Monday, but, at his urging, delayed consideration for one week.
Chiu, Campos and Lee all agree that employers should do a better job of telling workers how to access the reimbursement funds, and also want to prevent restaurants from placing a surcharge on their patrons' bills for employees' health care unless the money is actually used for that purpose.
"Once we're past this week, I'm looking forward to working with my colleagues to find a solution," said Chiu, who also is running for mayor.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/10/25/BAKG1LMB78.DTL#ixzz1btGfVOnH
"This legislation aims to solve an important problem, but imposes an overly broad approach to solving a discrete set of issues," Lee said in his veto letter.
The Board of Supervisors approved the proposal on a 6-5 vote last week, setting up a showdown with Lee just weeks before the Nov. 8 mayoral election, in which polls show him as the front-runner in a field of 16 candidates.
Four of his rivals, Supervisor John Avalos, City Attorney Dennis Herrera, city Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting and state Sen. Leland Yee, have signaled they will make Lee's veto a campaign issue, having rallied on the steps of City Hall this month urging him to support the plan.
It's unlikely sponsors of the legislation will get eight votes to override the veto. But Supervisor David Campos, chief sponsor of the legislation, said Lee "is taking San Francisco in the wrong direction" by limiting the funding uninsured workers can access to pay for their health care needs.
Campos said he is considering taking his proposal to the voters. It takes four supervisors to place a measure on the ballot.
The Campos plan targets the provision in the city's groundbreaking health care law that allows employers to set up individual health care reimbursement accounts for uninsured workers. Participating employers contribute up to $4,252 annually into each worker's account, but any unused money at the end of the year can go back to the employer.
Last year, 860 businesses out of the approximately 4,000 covered by the law contributed a combined $62.5 million into the reimbursement accounts, but just $12.4 million was used by workers. Employers pocketed the rest.
Under the Campos amendment, the unspent money would accrue in the accounts. Only after a worker has been off the payroll for 18 months could an employer get the money back.
Business owners and their trade association said it would force them to lay off workers, shelve expansion plans, move out of the city or close.
Lee said that while he agrees the proposal would be bad for business, he believes changes are needed.
One of his goals, he has said, is to get businesses to be less restrictive on how the money can be used. Some employers, for example, won't reimburse workers for health insurance premiums or for enrollment in a city plan that makes use of public clinics and hospitals.
The Campos amendment, he said, would not increase access to health care or protect jobs. "Moreover, this cash, pulled out of our local economy, will not be available to pay wages or grow businesses," Lee told supervisors.
The mayor formed a working group to see whether a compromise could be brokered and Lee said in his veto letter that he is "confident there is a legislative path forward."
Meanwhile, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu has offered a different amendment to address the loophole. Under his version, at least a year's worth of unused employer contributions must always be available to avoid a use-it-or-lose-it scenario.
The board was to vote on Chiu's plan Monday, but, at his urging, delayed consideration for one week.
Chiu, Campos and Lee all agree that employers should do a better job of telling workers how to access the reimbursement funds, and also want to prevent restaurants from placing a surcharge on their patrons' bills for employees' health care unless the money is actually used for that purpose.
"Once we're past this week, I'm looking forward to working with my colleagues to find a solution," said Chiu, who also is running for mayor.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/10/25/BAKG1LMB78.DTL#ixzz1btGfVOnH
Monday, October 24, 2011
NFL starting quarterbacks have been able to keep their jobs . . . till now
For the most part this NFL season there has been consistency at the quarterback position. Maybe they weren't all consistent in their performance, but at least teams kept rolling out the same starters week after week.
Through the first five weeks, in fact, 30 of the 32 teams started the same quarterback for every game - an NFL record. Changes were made in Indianapolis and Jacksonville following an injury to Kerry Collins and the Jaguars' choice to replace Luke McCown with rookie Blaine Gabbert.
But look at all the quarterback changes coming in Week 7. Due to poor production and injuries alike, there could be as many as six new starting quarterbacks across the league Sunday.
If you think that's a lot, consider 12 teams overall have new starting quarterbacks this season, be they rookies or acquisitions through trades and free agency.
Look around. There's Andy Dalton in Cincinnati and Cam Newton in Carolina. There's Gabbert now in Jacksonville, Kevin Kolb with the Cardinals and Matt Hasselbeck in Tennessee.
Plus, all the backups that are now getting their turn.
"You've got to see what's out there," Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan said, referring to making quarterback changes. "It's not like they fall out of trees."
No, it only feels that way given all the change, especially this week.
Here are four that are certain:
- Tim Tebow replaces Kyle Orton as the Broncos' new starter and goes home to face the Dolphins in Miami in a game where Tebow and the 2008 Florida Gators national-championship team will be honored at halftime.
Tebow got three starts at the end of last season but head coach John Fox went back to Orton to start this season. With every Denver loss, the fans screamed louder and louder for Tebow.
"It's not so much fan outcry as we're in a result-oriented business and we're 1-4," Fox explained to reporters. "It's not one guy. We'll see if this helps."
- John Beck, who attended Mesa Mountain View High, replaces Rex Grossman as the Redskins' starter and will face Newton and the Panthers on the road. Grossman was benched after being intercepted four times in a 20-13 loss to the Eagles.
For Beck, a former second-round pick from Brigham Young, it will be his first start since 2007 when he was a rookie with the Dolphins.
"There's been a lot of hard work that's gone into this," Beck said. "You never know when your opportunity's going to come and you've always got to stay ready. I've tried to do that."
- Christian Ponder, the 12th overall pick in this year's draft, replaces Donovan McNabb as the Vikings' starter and will have to face the undefeated and reigning Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers.
McNabb hasn't looked right the past two years and the Vikings' passing offense ranks 31st in the league. Ponder replaced McNabb in the fourth quarter of Minnesota's 39-10 loss to the Bears and head coach Leslie Frazier said he liked what he saw.
"Some of the things he did let me know that this game is not too big for him, it's not too fast for him," he said.
- The Raiders lost Jason Campbell to a broken collarbone last week and coach Hue Jackson will turn to either backup Kyle Boller or Oakland's new prized acquisition, Carson Palmer.
The Raiders dealt a first-round pick and a conditional second-round pick that could become a first-rounder to the Bengals for the rights to Palmer, who hasn't played since last season.
"This guy knows how to play the game and he knows how to elevate the players around him," Jackson told reporters.
Meanwhile, there also could be changes at starting quarterback with the Seahawks and Rams. Seattle's Tarvaris Jackson is hampered by a pectoral strain and could give way to Charlie Whitehurst against the Browns.
Rams quarterback Sam Bradford has a high-ankle sprain and if he in unable to go Sunday against the Cowboys, St. Louis will turn to veteran journeyman A.J. Feeley.
So much for consistency at the quarterback position, huh?
Where are the Ironmen?
The list of active quarterbacks and impressive starting streaks is short in the NFL now that Brett Favre is retired and Peyton Manning is sidelined with a neck injury.
Only three active quarterbacks have consecutive-games-played streaks of 50 or more games.
Eli Manning of the Giants presently has started the most consecutive games (109), the fifth-longest in history and two behind Tom Brady's string of 111 from 2001 to 2008.
San Diego's Philip Rivers is second on the active list with 85 consecutive starts, which ranks 12th all-time. With four more starts, he will surpass Johnny Unitas (88) and tie Roman Gabriel (89) for the eighth-longest streak by a quarterback.
Baltimore's Joe Flacco has the third-longest active streak at 53 games.
Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/2011/10/21/20111021nfl-quarterback-consistency.html#ixzz1bm2CoiNB
Through the first five weeks, in fact, 30 of the 32 teams started the same quarterback for every game - an NFL record. Changes were made in Indianapolis and Jacksonville following an injury to Kerry Collins and the Jaguars' choice to replace Luke McCown with rookie Blaine Gabbert.
But look at all the quarterback changes coming in Week 7. Due to poor production and injuries alike, there could be as many as six new starting quarterbacks across the league Sunday.
If you think that's a lot, consider 12 teams overall have new starting quarterbacks this season, be they rookies or acquisitions through trades and free agency.
Look around. There's Andy Dalton in Cincinnati and Cam Newton in Carolina. There's Gabbert now in Jacksonville, Kevin Kolb with the Cardinals and Matt Hasselbeck in Tennessee.
Plus, all the backups that are now getting their turn.
"You've got to see what's out there," Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan said, referring to making quarterback changes. "It's not like they fall out of trees."
No, it only feels that way given all the change, especially this week.
Here are four that are certain:
- Tim Tebow replaces Kyle Orton as the Broncos' new starter and goes home to face the Dolphins in Miami in a game where Tebow and the 2008 Florida Gators national-championship team will be honored at halftime.
Tebow got three starts at the end of last season but head coach John Fox went back to Orton to start this season. With every Denver loss, the fans screamed louder and louder for Tebow.
"It's not so much fan outcry as we're in a result-oriented business and we're 1-4," Fox explained to reporters. "It's not one guy. We'll see if this helps."
- John Beck, who attended Mesa Mountain View High, replaces Rex Grossman as the Redskins' starter and will face Newton and the Panthers on the road. Grossman was benched after being intercepted four times in a 20-13 loss to the Eagles.
For Beck, a former second-round pick from Brigham Young, it will be his first start since 2007 when he was a rookie with the Dolphins.
"There's been a lot of hard work that's gone into this," Beck said. "You never know when your opportunity's going to come and you've always got to stay ready. I've tried to do that."
- Christian Ponder, the 12th overall pick in this year's draft, replaces Donovan McNabb as the Vikings' starter and will have to face the undefeated and reigning Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers.
McNabb hasn't looked right the past two years and the Vikings' passing offense ranks 31st in the league. Ponder replaced McNabb in the fourth quarter of Minnesota's 39-10 loss to the Bears and head coach Leslie Frazier said he liked what he saw.
"Some of the things he did let me know that this game is not too big for him, it's not too fast for him," he said.
- The Raiders lost Jason Campbell to a broken collarbone last week and coach Hue Jackson will turn to either backup Kyle Boller or Oakland's new prized acquisition, Carson Palmer.
The Raiders dealt a first-round pick and a conditional second-round pick that could become a first-rounder to the Bengals for the rights to Palmer, who hasn't played since last season.
"This guy knows how to play the game and he knows how to elevate the players around him," Jackson told reporters.
Meanwhile, there also could be changes at starting quarterback with the Seahawks and Rams. Seattle's Tarvaris Jackson is hampered by a pectoral strain and could give way to Charlie Whitehurst against the Browns.
Rams quarterback Sam Bradford has a high-ankle sprain and if he in unable to go Sunday against the Cowboys, St. Louis will turn to veteran journeyman A.J. Feeley.
So much for consistency at the quarterback position, huh?
Where are the Ironmen?
The list of active quarterbacks and impressive starting streaks is short in the NFL now that Brett Favre is retired and Peyton Manning is sidelined with a neck injury.
Only three active quarterbacks have consecutive-games-played streaks of 50 or more games.
Eli Manning of the Giants presently has started the most consecutive games (109), the fifth-longest in history and two behind Tom Brady's string of 111 from 2001 to 2008.
San Diego's Philip Rivers is second on the active list with 85 consecutive starts, which ranks 12th all-time. With four more starts, he will surpass Johnny Unitas (88) and tie Roman Gabriel (89) for the eighth-longest streak by a quarterback.
Baltimore's Joe Flacco has the third-longest active streak at 53 games.
Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/2011/10/21/20111021nfl-quarterback-consistency.html#ixzz1bm2CoiNB
Jacksonville Jaguars take 9-0 lead in defensive masterpiece against Baltimore Ravens
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — As Maurice Jones-Drew walked off the field, his white pants had a mix of grass, dirt and blood stains. They might be worth keeping that way.
After all, few players have had that much success against that defense.
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( Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press ) - Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew (32) fumbles the football as he is hit by Baltimore Ravens strong safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville recovered the fumble.
( John Raoux / Associated Press ) - Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice, left, is tackled by Jacksonville Jaguars outside linebacker Clint Session (55) after a 4-yard run during the first half of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla.
( Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press ) - Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew (32) fumbles the football as he is hit by Baltimore Ravens strong safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville recovered the fumble.
Jones-Drew ran for 105 yards, Josh Scobee kicked four field goals and the Jacksonville Jaguars snapped a five-game slide with a 12-7 victory over the Baltimore Ravens on Monday night.
“It finally feels good to win one after all those losses,” said Jones-Drew, the first player to run for 100 yards against the Ravens since last December. “It was nice to show the world what we’re about. We beat a very good team.”
Stepping into the national spotlight for a few hours, the Jaguars used their best defensive effort in seven years to slow down Ray Rice, Joe Flacco and Co.
“You’ve got to give them credit. They played like it was their Super Bowl,” Ravens receiver Anquan Boldin said.
The victory could be a turning point for a young team trying to create confidence after losing eight of its previous nine games. Instead of talk about coach Jack Del Rio’s job security, the Jaguars (2-5) got back in the mix in the wide-open AFC South.
“We knew this was an opportunity to right things and gain a little respect,” Del Rio said.
They relied on Jones-Drew and the defense to get it done.
Jacksonville didn’t allow a first down until the 5:26 mark of the third quarter, a mix of stout defense and inept offense. Flacco finally got the Ravens (4-2) on the scoreboard with a little more than two minutes remaining. He capped a 90-yard drive with a 5-yard touchdown pass to Boldin.
The Ravens failed to recover an onside kick when the ball bounced inches short of going the required 10 yards. Scobee followed with his third field goal of at least 50 yards, tying an NFL record held by many.
“As long as I’m getting those opportunities, I will gladly take them,” Scobee said. “Given that we haven’t scored a lot of points this season, I know that every time I’m out there it’s very important.”
Baltimore had a final possession, but in fitting fashion, Jacksonville’s defense came up big. Drew Coleman stepped in front of Ed Dickson and intercepted Flacco’s final pass.
The Ravens finished with 146 total yards, the fewest yards the Jaguars have allowed since 2004.
“They basically beat us with their defense,” coach John Harbaugh said. “I don’t think it was any one thing. It was a lack of execution. It’s almost as bad as you can play on offense.”
The Jaguars set a franchise record by allowing only 16 yards in the first half, including 1 yard passing by Flacco, who was under relentless pressure for much of the night.
“We need to make sure when we’re not on our ‘A’ game, we’re not this,” said Flacco, who completed 21 of 38 passes for 137 yards.
Baltimore finally got a first down on its 28th play of the game when Rice broke off a 12-yard run. That was only the second play longer than 10 yards for the Ravens.
“We were confident about this game,” Jaguars defensive tackle Terrance Knighton said. “We knew we had to outplay them. The difference between this and the other weeks is that we started fast. Our defense is capable of that. That’s why we hold ourselves to a high standard. We just needed to taste victory. Now that we have, we’re going to keep it rolling.”
The teams combined to go 0 of 16 on third-down conversions in the opening half. The Jaguars began the third quarter with six first downs, only for the Ravens defense to stiffen after yet another mistake.
The Ravens stopped Jacksonville, but Brendon Ayanbadejo was called for a personal foul and ejected from the game when he punched Guy Whimper in the facemask after the play. That gave the Jaguars first-and-goal from the 3, but Blaine Gabbert failed to complete two passes in the end zone and Scobee kicked a 22-yard field goal.
An earlier field goal was set up by another Baltimore blunder.
After Gabbert completed passes of 24 and 11 yards to the Ravens 38, Gabbert was sacked on third-and-8 at the 40. The Jaguars chose to punt, but Paul Kruger was penalized for running into the kicker. The 5-yard penalty put Scobee in field goal range, putting the Jaguars up 6-0 with a 54-yard kick.
Scobee, who extended his franchise record with a field goal for the 15th straight game, kicked two 54-yarders.
Jacksonville needed every yard and point it could muster. The NFL’s worst offense put the game on Jones-Drew’s shoulders. He carried 30 times, most of them right into the middle of Baltimore’s revered defense.
“We just grinded them,” Gabbert said. “Mojo’s a beast back there.”
NOTES: Ravens S Ed Reed had his shoulder popped back into place in the fourth quarter, but returned after a few plays off. ... Houston’s Arian Foster was the last player to run for at least 100 yards against Baltimore. ... The Jaguars, who snapped a six-game losing streak in prime time, improved to 7-3 on Monday night. ... Rice ran eight times for 28 yards. ... Baltimore’s star was Sam Koch, who punted nine times for a 52.2 yard average.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed
After all, few players have had that much success against that defense.
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( Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press ) - Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew (32) fumbles the football as he is hit by Baltimore Ravens strong safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville recovered the fumble.
( John Raoux / Associated Press ) - Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice, left, is tackled by Jacksonville Jaguars outside linebacker Clint Session (55) after a 4-yard run during the first half of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla.
( Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press ) - Jacksonville Jaguars running back Maurice Jones-Drew (32) fumbles the football as he is hit by Baltimore Ravens strong safety Bernard Pollard during the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday, Oct. 24, 2011, in Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville recovered the fumble.
Jones-Drew ran for 105 yards, Josh Scobee kicked four field goals and the Jacksonville Jaguars snapped a five-game slide with a 12-7 victory over the Baltimore Ravens on Monday night.
“It finally feels good to win one after all those losses,” said Jones-Drew, the first player to run for 100 yards against the Ravens since last December. “It was nice to show the world what we’re about. We beat a very good team.”
Stepping into the national spotlight for a few hours, the Jaguars used their best defensive effort in seven years to slow down Ray Rice, Joe Flacco and Co.
“You’ve got to give them credit. They played like it was their Super Bowl,” Ravens receiver Anquan Boldin said.
The victory could be a turning point for a young team trying to create confidence after losing eight of its previous nine games. Instead of talk about coach Jack Del Rio’s job security, the Jaguars (2-5) got back in the mix in the wide-open AFC South.
“We knew this was an opportunity to right things and gain a little respect,” Del Rio said.
They relied on Jones-Drew and the defense to get it done.
Jacksonville didn’t allow a first down until the 5:26 mark of the third quarter, a mix of stout defense and inept offense. Flacco finally got the Ravens (4-2) on the scoreboard with a little more than two minutes remaining. He capped a 90-yard drive with a 5-yard touchdown pass to Boldin.
The Ravens failed to recover an onside kick when the ball bounced inches short of going the required 10 yards. Scobee followed with his third field goal of at least 50 yards, tying an NFL record held by many.
“As long as I’m getting those opportunities, I will gladly take them,” Scobee said. “Given that we haven’t scored a lot of points this season, I know that every time I’m out there it’s very important.”
Baltimore had a final possession, but in fitting fashion, Jacksonville’s defense came up big. Drew Coleman stepped in front of Ed Dickson and intercepted Flacco’s final pass.
The Ravens finished with 146 total yards, the fewest yards the Jaguars have allowed since 2004.
“They basically beat us with their defense,” coach John Harbaugh said. “I don’t think it was any one thing. It was a lack of execution. It’s almost as bad as you can play on offense.”
The Jaguars set a franchise record by allowing only 16 yards in the first half, including 1 yard passing by Flacco, who was under relentless pressure for much of the night.
“We need to make sure when we’re not on our ‘A’ game, we’re not this,” said Flacco, who completed 21 of 38 passes for 137 yards.
Baltimore finally got a first down on its 28th play of the game when Rice broke off a 12-yard run. That was only the second play longer than 10 yards for the Ravens.
“We were confident about this game,” Jaguars defensive tackle Terrance Knighton said. “We knew we had to outplay them. The difference between this and the other weeks is that we started fast. Our defense is capable of that. That’s why we hold ourselves to a high standard. We just needed to taste victory. Now that we have, we’re going to keep it rolling.”
The teams combined to go 0 of 16 on third-down conversions in the opening half. The Jaguars began the third quarter with six first downs, only for the Ravens defense to stiffen after yet another mistake.
The Ravens stopped Jacksonville, but Brendon Ayanbadejo was called for a personal foul and ejected from the game when he punched Guy Whimper in the facemask after the play. That gave the Jaguars first-and-goal from the 3, but Blaine Gabbert failed to complete two passes in the end zone and Scobee kicked a 22-yard field goal.
An earlier field goal was set up by another Baltimore blunder.
After Gabbert completed passes of 24 and 11 yards to the Ravens 38, Gabbert was sacked on third-and-8 at the 40. The Jaguars chose to punt, but Paul Kruger was penalized for running into the kicker. The 5-yard penalty put Scobee in field goal range, putting the Jaguars up 6-0 with a 54-yard kick.
Scobee, who extended his franchise record with a field goal for the 15th straight game, kicked two 54-yarders.
Jacksonville needed every yard and point it could muster. The NFL’s worst offense put the game on Jones-Drew’s shoulders. He carried 30 times, most of them right into the middle of Baltimore’s revered defense.
“We just grinded them,” Gabbert said. “Mojo’s a beast back there.”
NOTES: Ravens S Ed Reed had his shoulder popped back into place in the fourth quarter, but returned after a few plays off. ... Houston’s Arian Foster was the last player to run for at least 100 yards against Baltimore. ... The Jaguars, who snapped a six-game losing streak in prime time, improved to 7-3 on Monday night. ... Rice ran eight times for 28 yards. ... Baltimore’s star was Sam Koch, who punted nine times for a 52.2 yard average.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed
The McRib makes a McComeback
NEW YORK – The McRib, the elusive sandwich that has inspired a cult-like following, is back.
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
By David Paul Morris, Getty Images
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
Enlarge
By David Paul Morris, Getty Images
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
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McDonald's announced Monday that the boneless barbecue pork sandwich, usually available in only a few stores at a time, will be sold at all U.S. locations through Nov. 14.
Most of the time, it's up to local franchises to determine when and if they want to sell the McRib — except in Germany, the only place where it's always available.
McDonald's said the response was so great last November when it made the McRib available nationally for about three weeks that it decided to bring it back nationwide this year. The company, which previously hadn't sold the McRib nationally since 1994, declined to give sales numbers.
The sandwich, which is dressed with onions, pickle slices and barbecue sauce, was introduced nationally in 1982. With 500 calories and 26 grams of fat, it's slightly trimmer than the Big Mac, which has 540 calories and 29 grams of fat. And just like the Big Mac, the McRib has become a popular McDonald's offering.
There are Facebook groups such as "Bring Back the McRib!!!" There are Twitter tags, where posts range from "Lucky me, the McRib is back" to "If you eat McRibs, you need to re-evaluate what it is you actually want in life."
Last year, the guy who won McDonald's $1 million Monopoly grand prize was ordering — you guessed it — a McRib. Earlier this month, former Playmate Jenny McCarthy contacted the McRib Locator website for help finding a McRib in southern California: She found one in Fountain Valley.
The website's creator, Alan Klein, said he suspected something was up when traffic exploded from about 150 hits a day to about 4,000 in the past week or so, as more fans reported sightings. People are sending him photos of their McRib variations: the McRib with lettuce and tomato, the McRib with bacon, three McRibs stacked on top of each other.
Klein, a meteorologist in the Minneapolis area, runs the website in his spare time with help from his wife, Kimberly. He created the Locator in 2008 because he wanted to learn how to use the Google Maps program for work, and because he had fond memories of eating the pork sandwich while growing up on a hog farm.
"We've been spoiled this year and last year with it being around nationwide," he said. "But I hope it stays elusive, because otherwise nobody will come to our website."
If the McRib is so popular, why not just offer it all the time? McDonald's likes to stoke the enthusiasm with an aura of transience.
"Bringing it back every so often adds to the excitement," said Marta Fearon, McDonald's U.S. marketing director, who said she's not sure if the McRib will reappear every fall.
And how can it be called a McRib if it doesn't have any bones? Said Fearon: "That gives it this quirky sense of humor."
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
By David Paul Morris, Getty Images
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
Enlarge
By David Paul Morris, Getty Images
A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant on Nov. 3, 2010 in San Francisco, Calif.
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McDonald's announced Monday that the boneless barbecue pork sandwich, usually available in only a few stores at a time, will be sold at all U.S. locations through Nov. 14.
Most of the time, it's up to local franchises to determine when and if they want to sell the McRib — except in Germany, the only place where it's always available.
McDonald's said the response was so great last November when it made the McRib available nationally for about three weeks that it decided to bring it back nationwide this year. The company, which previously hadn't sold the McRib nationally since 1994, declined to give sales numbers.
The sandwich, which is dressed with onions, pickle slices and barbecue sauce, was introduced nationally in 1982. With 500 calories and 26 grams of fat, it's slightly trimmer than the Big Mac, which has 540 calories and 29 grams of fat. And just like the Big Mac, the McRib has become a popular McDonald's offering.
There are Facebook groups such as "Bring Back the McRib!!!" There are Twitter tags, where posts range from "Lucky me, the McRib is back" to "If you eat McRibs, you need to re-evaluate what it is you actually want in life."
Last year, the guy who won McDonald's $1 million Monopoly grand prize was ordering — you guessed it — a McRib. Earlier this month, former Playmate Jenny McCarthy contacted the McRib Locator website for help finding a McRib in southern California: She found one in Fountain Valley.
The website's creator, Alan Klein, said he suspected something was up when traffic exploded from about 150 hits a day to about 4,000 in the past week or so, as more fans reported sightings. People are sending him photos of their McRib variations: the McRib with lettuce and tomato, the McRib with bacon, three McRibs stacked on top of each other.
Klein, a meteorologist in the Minneapolis area, runs the website in his spare time with help from his wife, Kimberly. He created the Locator in 2008 because he wanted to learn how to use the Google Maps program for work, and because he had fond memories of eating the pork sandwich while growing up on a hog farm.
"We've been spoiled this year and last year with it being around nationwide," he said. "But I hope it stays elusive, because otherwise nobody will come to our website."
If the McRib is so popular, why not just offer it all the time? McDonald's likes to stoke the enthusiasm with an aura of transience.
"Bringing it back every so often adds to the excitement," said Marta Fearon, McDonald's U.S. marketing director, who said she's not sure if the McRib will reappear every fall.
And how can it be called a McRib if it doesn't have any bones? Said Fearon: "That gives it this quirky sense of humor."
The Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP): What you need to know
On Monday, the federal government announced that it would revise the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP), implementing changes that The Washington Post’s Zachary A. Goldfarb reported would “allow many more struggling borrowers to refinance their mortgages at today’s ultra-low rates, reducing monthly payments for some homeowners and potentially providing a modest boost to the economy.”
The HARP program, which was rolled out in 2009, is designed to help. Those who are “underwater” on their homes and owe more than the homes are worth. So far, The Post reported, it has reached less than one-tenth of the 5 million borrowers it was designed to help. Here’s a quick breakdown of what you need to know about the changes.
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Flashback: Last year, some mortgage lenders and government officials took action after discovering that many mortgage documents were mishandled.
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Metropolitan areas with the most expensive sales prices for single-family homes in the first quarter of 2011, according to data from the National Association of Realtors.
What was announced? The enhancements will allow some homeowners who are not currently eligible to refinance to do so under HARP. The changes cut fees for borrowers who want to refinance into short-term mortgages and some other borrowers. They also eliminate a cap that prevented “underwater” borrowers who owe more than 125 percent of what their property is worth from accessing the program.
Am I eligible? To be eligible, you must have a mortgage owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, sold to those agencies on or before May 31, 2009. The current loan-to-value ratio on the mortgage must be greater than 80 percent. Having a mortgage that was previously refinanced under the program disqualifies you from the program. Borrowers cannot not have missed any mortgage payments in the past six months and cannot have had more than one missed payment in the past 12 months.
How do I take advantage of HARP? According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the first step borrowers should take is to see whether their mortgages are owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. If so, borrowers should contact lenders that offer HARP refinances.
When do the changes go into effect? The FHFA is expected to publish final changes in November. According to a fact sheet on the program, the timing will vary by lender.
Related stories:
Government announces new program to help ‘underwater’ homeowners
Obama’s efforts to aid homeowners, boost housing market fall far short of goals
The HARP program, which was rolled out in 2009, is designed to help. Those who are “underwater” on their homes and owe more than the homes are worth. So far, The Post reported, it has reached less than one-tenth of the 5 million borrowers it was designed to help. Here’s a quick breakdown of what you need to know about the changes.
29
Comments
Weigh In
Corrections?
inShare
Gallery
Flashback: Last year, some mortgage lenders and government officials took action after discovering that many mortgage documents were mishandled.
Gallery
Metropolitan areas with the most expensive sales prices for single-family homes in the first quarter of 2011, according to data from the National Association of Realtors.
What was announced? The enhancements will allow some homeowners who are not currently eligible to refinance to do so under HARP. The changes cut fees for borrowers who want to refinance into short-term mortgages and some other borrowers. They also eliminate a cap that prevented “underwater” borrowers who owe more than 125 percent of what their property is worth from accessing the program.
Am I eligible? To be eligible, you must have a mortgage owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, sold to those agencies on or before May 31, 2009. The current loan-to-value ratio on the mortgage must be greater than 80 percent. Having a mortgage that was previously refinanced under the program disqualifies you from the program. Borrowers cannot not have missed any mortgage payments in the past six months and cannot have had more than one missed payment in the past 12 months.
How do I take advantage of HARP? According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the first step borrowers should take is to see whether their mortgages are owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. If so, borrowers should contact lenders that offer HARP refinances.
When do the changes go into effect? The FHFA is expected to publish final changes in November. According to a fact sheet on the program, the timing will vary by lender.
Related stories:
Government announces new program to help ‘underwater’ homeowners
Obama’s efforts to aid homeowners, boost housing market fall far short of goals
Jaguars stun Ravens to snap five-game skid
JACKSONVILLE – Stifling defense, ball control, veteran poise and a few timely field goals — a formula that has brought the Baltimore Ravens plenty of success over the years.
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
By Matt Stamey, US Presswire
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
Enlarge
By Matt Stamey, US Presswire
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
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It was used against them Monday night in a stunning role reversal.
In what qualifies as the biggest upset to date of the 2011 NFL season, the Jacksonville Jaguars clipped the Ravens 12-7, knocking them out of first place in the AFC North.
BOX SCORE: Jaguars 12, Ravens 7
PHOTOS: Best images from NFL Week 7
VIDEO: Highlights from the Jaguars' big win
"I'm really proud of our guys," said embattled Jaguars coach Jack Del Rio.
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"They played with a lot of grit and determination. We knew this was an opportunity to kind of right things and gain a little respect against a really good football team."
The Jaguars (2-5), who'd lost five in a row since an opening-day victory and entered the game with the fewest offensive yards in the league and fewest points in the AFC, hardly blistered the vaunted Baltimore defense, finishing with just 205 yards and nary a touchdown.
But that was more than enough to allow a revamped Jacksonville defense to make a prime-time statement. The Ravens didn't manage a single first down before halftime, gaining a mere 16 yards on 25 plays — or about two feet per snap.
"They basically beat us with their defense," said Ravens coach John Harbaugh.
The Jaguars spent heavily on the previously porous unit after the lockout, committing tens of millions to import linebackers Paul Posluszny and Clint Session, defensive end Matt Roth and safety Dawan Landry, a former Raven. They helped pay major dividends Monday, ceding just 146 yards while constantly punishing Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco and sacking him three times.
But the Ravens, who logged their initial first down with five minutes left in the third quarter, also spent plenty of time undermining themselves.
Ray Rice fumbled for the first time since 2009, a streak spanning 520 offensive touches.
Linebacker and special teams ace Brendon Ayanbadejo was ejected for throwing a punch at Jaguars tackle Guy Whimper in the third quarter.
All-Pro kicker Billy Cundiff missed a 52-yard field-goal attempt.
Paul Kruger incurred a 5-yard penalty for running into punter Nick Harris in the second period, enough to set up a 54-yard field goal for Jacksonville's Josh Scobee — he drilled one three-pointer in each quarter and tied a record by converting three from beyond 50 yards — on the ensuing play.
And Flacco was off target most of the game, completing 21 of 38 passes for 137 yards while frequently under siege behind an offensive line that did little to protect him.
"It's about as bad as you can play on offense," said Harbaugh. "The good news is, it's one loss."
The final nail came when Drew Coleman picked off Flacco with 1:25 left to seal the win.
"We probably had a three-minute span where we played alright," said Flacco.
Jaguars rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert took his own lumps, enduring four sacks, but didn't make any major mistakes on the way to notching his first NFL victory in his fifth start. His 93-passing-yard, turnover-free performance proved just enough, coupled with running back Maurice Jones-Drew, who methodically churned out 105 yards on 30 carries against the league's No. 3 rushing defense. Jacksonville won the time-of-possession battle, holding the ball for more than 36 minutes.
"I want to congratulate Blaine on his first win — I guess he's just a prime-time player," Jones-Drew said while lamenting, tongue-in-cheek ,that he couldn't celebrate very long on a short week.
After showing signs of being the class of the AFC, the Ravens (4-2) are suddenly tied with the Cincinnati Bengals in what's shaping up as a three-team divisional race, a half-game back of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"If we don't get consistency going on offense, we're not going anywhere," Harbaugh said of his team's long-term outlook.
NOTES: Jones-Drew had 104 yards from scrimmage; Rice finished with 63. … The teams were a collective 4-for-28 on third downs and combined for 16 punts and 16 penalties. … After requesting a 24-hour extension, the Jaguars sold enough tickets to avoid a local blackout of the game.
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
By Matt Stamey, US Presswire
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
Enlarge
By Matt Stamey, US Presswire
Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 105 yards in the Jaguars' win over the Ravens, his second 100-yard performance of the season.
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Prodution of SyntheticFibre Nets: Football, Tennis,
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It was used against them Monday night in a stunning role reversal.
In what qualifies as the biggest upset to date of the 2011 NFL season, the Jacksonville Jaguars clipped the Ravens 12-7, knocking them out of first place in the AFC North.
BOX SCORE: Jaguars 12, Ravens 7
PHOTOS: Best images from NFL Week 7
VIDEO: Highlights from the Jaguars' big win
"I'm really proud of our guys," said embattled Jaguars coach Jack Del Rio.
USA TODAY Sports on Twitter!
To get the latest sports news from USA TODAY, including game results, columns and features, follow us on Twitter at @USATODAYSports.
"They played with a lot of grit and determination. We knew this was an opportunity to kind of right things and gain a little respect against a really good football team."
The Jaguars (2-5), who'd lost five in a row since an opening-day victory and entered the game with the fewest offensive yards in the league and fewest points in the AFC, hardly blistered the vaunted Baltimore defense, finishing with just 205 yards and nary a touchdown.
But that was more than enough to allow a revamped Jacksonville defense to make a prime-time statement. The Ravens didn't manage a single first down before halftime, gaining a mere 16 yards on 25 plays — or about two feet per snap.
"They basically beat us with their defense," said Ravens coach John Harbaugh.
The Jaguars spent heavily on the previously porous unit after the lockout, committing tens of millions to import linebackers Paul Posluszny and Clint Session, defensive end Matt Roth and safety Dawan Landry, a former Raven. They helped pay major dividends Monday, ceding just 146 yards while constantly punishing Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco and sacking him three times.
But the Ravens, who logged their initial first down with five minutes left in the third quarter, also spent plenty of time undermining themselves.
Ray Rice fumbled for the first time since 2009, a streak spanning 520 offensive touches.
Linebacker and special teams ace Brendon Ayanbadejo was ejected for throwing a punch at Jaguars tackle Guy Whimper in the third quarter.
All-Pro kicker Billy Cundiff missed a 52-yard field-goal attempt.
Paul Kruger incurred a 5-yard penalty for running into punter Nick Harris in the second period, enough to set up a 54-yard field goal for Jacksonville's Josh Scobee — he drilled one three-pointer in each quarter and tied a record by converting three from beyond 50 yards — on the ensuing play.
And Flacco was off target most of the game, completing 21 of 38 passes for 137 yards while frequently under siege behind an offensive line that did little to protect him.
"It's about as bad as you can play on offense," said Harbaugh. "The good news is, it's one loss."
The final nail came when Drew Coleman picked off Flacco with 1:25 left to seal the win.
"We probably had a three-minute span where we played alright," said Flacco.
Jaguars rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert took his own lumps, enduring four sacks, but didn't make any major mistakes on the way to notching his first NFL victory in his fifth start. His 93-passing-yard, turnover-free performance proved just enough, coupled with running back Maurice Jones-Drew, who methodically churned out 105 yards on 30 carries against the league's No. 3 rushing defense. Jacksonville won the time-of-possession battle, holding the ball for more than 36 minutes.
"I want to congratulate Blaine on his first win — I guess he's just a prime-time player," Jones-Drew said while lamenting, tongue-in-cheek ,that he couldn't celebrate very long on a short week.
After showing signs of being the class of the AFC, the Ravens (4-2) are suddenly tied with the Cincinnati Bengals in what's shaping up as a three-team divisional race, a half-game back of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"If we don't get consistency going on offense, we're not going anywhere," Harbaugh said of his team's long-term outlook.
NOTES: Jones-Drew had 104 yards from scrimmage; Rice finished with 63. … The teams were a collective 4-for-28 on third downs and combined for 16 punts and 16 penalties. … After requesting a 24-hour extension, the Jaguars sold enough tickets to avoid a local blackout of the game.
Free Bieber campaign aims to stop S.978′s violent clampdown on online copyright
A new campaign, titled Free Bieber, has been launched to raise awareness of, and try to stop, bill S.978. Currently in Congress, S.978 would make it illegal to upload a video of yourself singing a copyright song. Those who upload such a video could face up to five years in jail, which means that people like Justin Bieber could be criminalised. You can read bill S.978 here.
Justin Bieber shot to fame by performing various famous songs on YouTube. If S.978 comes into law in the United States, such actions would be illegal. And while it’s Bieber fans who are leading the charge against S.978, many others are concerned by the way the rights of large media companies are being championed by politicians over and above the rights of the American public.
While the Free Bieber website frames the debate in comical terms, the issues are serious. The power of entertainment corporations is growing around the world, while copyright law in most jurisdictions remains rooted in a pre-internet age. Not only are campaigners calling for S.978 to be scrapped, they also want an overhaul of copyright law so that it’s fit for the 21st century.
Justin Bieber shot to fame by performing various famous songs on YouTube. If S.978 comes into law in the United States, such actions would be illegal. And while it’s Bieber fans who are leading the charge against S.978, many others are concerned by the way the rights of large media companies are being championed by politicians over and above the rights of the American public.
While the Free Bieber website frames the debate in comical terms, the issues are serious. The power of entertainment corporations is growing around the world, while copyright law in most jurisdictions remains rooted in a pre-internet age. Not only are campaigners calling for S.978 to be scrapped, they also want an overhaul of copyright law so that it’s fit for the 21st century.
Northern Lights Seen Across Southeast U.S.
Red and pink streaks filled the sky across parts of the country after Earth’s magnetic field was hit by a coronal mass ejection, enabling the Northern Lights to be seen across the southeastern part of the United States.
The ejection hit on Monday at approximately 2 p.m. ET and was seen across Arkansas, Tennessee, northern Alabama, northern Mississippi and North Carolina.
The Northern Lights, also known as Aurora Borealis, occurs when energy particles from the sun interact with the earth’s magnetic field. Though the particles were emitted from the sun on Saturday, they only hit earth’s atmosphere Monday night.
The National Weather Service Space Weather Prediction Center said that coronal mass ejection arrived approximately eight hours earlier than model guidance suggested.
Geir Øye, a veteran observer of the Northern Lights from Norway told spaceweather.com that this particular aurora was very powerful.
“These are the strongest and most beautiful auroras I’ve ever seen,” Øye said. “I can only imagine what the display must have been further north.”
kd northern lights spaceweather 111025 ssh Northern Lights Seen Across Southeast U.S.
The ejection hit on Monday at approximately 2 p.m. ET and was seen across Arkansas, Tennessee, northern Alabama, northern Mississippi and North Carolina.
The Northern Lights, also known as Aurora Borealis, occurs when energy particles from the sun interact with the earth’s magnetic field. Though the particles were emitted from the sun on Saturday, they only hit earth’s atmosphere Monday night.
The National Weather Service Space Weather Prediction Center said that coronal mass ejection arrived approximately eight hours earlier than model guidance suggested.
Geir Øye, a veteran observer of the Northern Lights from Norway told spaceweather.com that this particular aurora was very powerful.
“These are the strongest and most beautiful auroras I’ve ever seen,” Øye said. “I can only imagine what the display must have been further north.”
kd northern lights spaceweather 111025 ssh Northern Lights Seen Across Southeast U.S.
CREDIT MARKETS: Taking Cues From Stocks, Corporate Bonds Gain
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Corporate credit markets strengthened Monday, although new issuance remained scarce, as stocks were boosted by strong earnings reports and a resurgence in mergers and acquisitions activity.
Two key derivatives indexes that measure the health of corporate credit both improved Monday. The CDX North America Investment Grade index was 3.8% better from Friday's closing levels, at a midpoint of 126.4 basis points, while its high-yield counterpart was 1.3% improved at 92.6 basis points, according to index administrator Markit.
Investment-Grade Corporates
No new issues were on tap Monday as a continuous stream of earnings grabbed investor focus and deterred borrowing.
Trading in the cash market was measured. Verizon's (VZ) 6.00% issue due 2041 traded four basis points wider to 132 basis points, and was the most actively traded high-grade bond this session, according to MarketAxess.
American International Group Inc. (AIG) unveiled an exchange offer for up to $2.5 billion in debt, as it aims to reduce its overall debt levels. The company said it plans to exchange several series of junior subordinated debentures, denominated in euros, British pounds and U.S. dollars, for new notes with a lower principal amount. The company also expects the exchange to improve its interest expense and fixed-charge coverage metrics.
AIG earlier this month said it has entered two new credit facilities worth $4.5 billion to replace others that had less favorable terms.
The company in August reported that it swung to an income of $1.84 billion in the second quarter from a loss of $2.66 billion a year earlier, as its results were largely free from the restructuring costs and other extraordinary charges that have plagued the company since its 2008 bailout.
Junk Bonds
High-yield bonds gained Monday as well. Bonds issued by Ford Motor Corp. (F) and McClatchy Newspapers Inc. (MNI) gained during the day as buyers found reasons to like junk-rated debt with high yields.
Meanwhile, the new issuance market was dominated by the large $1.65 billion, seven-year senior notes issue from Kinetic Concepts Inc. (KCI). The issue's price talk is between 10.75% and 11%, and it is expected to price later Monday evening.
Municipal Bonds
Muni bonds barely budged Monday, with yields on bonds due to mature in 14 years or more rising by 1 basis point while all other maturities were unchanged, according to Thomson Reuters Municipal Market Data.
Muni-bond issuance should remain at strong levels through mid-December, according to Citi, and this week is no exception with roughly $6 billion in debt on tap. There are no blockbuster deals, notes Citi, but there are a number of medium- and large-sized issues. The Ipreo calendar shows four deals of $476 million or larger, and 18 bigger than $100 million, an "unusually large number." Citi views the diversity as a buying opportunity for investors.
Mortgages
Mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC) plummeted on Monday after the top housing regulator surprised investors by expanding an existing refinancing program to more borrowers and removing a hurdle that has kept banks from approving loans.
MBS tied to loans with high interest rates fell to the lowest level in at least six months as those mortgages are the ones seen most affected by the move to help homeowners who owe more than their properties are worth.
Under the new plan, the Federal Housing Finance Agency will allow refinancing of loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac no matter the home's value, and will extend the term of its Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP, through 2013, the FHFA said. It will waive some liabilities to banks, giving the lenders more incentive to close loans with risky characteristics.
Since 2009, only 894,000 borrowers have used the HARP, of which just 70,000 were significantly underwater. The FHFA said the changes "may roughly double or more" the number of homeowners who enroll, while analysts at Barclays Capital estimated up to 3.1 million loans are eligible for the program.
Fannie Mae 6% MBS fell 25/32 to 108-29/32--the lowest price since April 14--underperforming Treasury benchmarks by about the same degree, according to Locus, a Credit Suisse analytics platform. Fannie Mae's 4% MBS declined 4/32 to 103-5/32--lagging their benchmarks by just 1/32--helped by ongoing Federal Reserve MBS purchases and speculation that the buying could be expanded.
Treasurys
Treasury investors were lying low Monday as they awaited Wednesday's potentially groundbreaking euro-zone plan from the sidelines, leaving prices a tad lower after a tight-ranged trading session.
The fixation on Europe has led other traditional market-moving events to go mostly unnoticed--including economic reports and a recent series of Federal Reserve officials who have dropped hints about another round of quantitative easing.
Instead, attention was set squarely on the few details that did arise from the euro-zone gathering over the weekend, which showed signs of progress at figuring out the region's debt problems. This included hints of a broad agreement to keep the euro-zone banking system well cushioned, and word that officials have agreed to bolster the region's bailout fund to more than EUR1 trillion.
Still, losses in the Treasurys market were minor. This was partly because of pressure going into this week's round of supply, analysts say, but also a reflection of investors' unwillingness to stray too far from the safety of U.S. government bonds until hearing Wednesday's announcement.
In late-afternoon trading, benchmark 10-year notes declined 6/32 in price to yield 2.228%, while two-year notes lost a fraction in price to yield 0.283%. The 30-year bond lost 8/32 in price to yield 3.267% despite the Federal Reserve's $2.5 billon long-dated purchases this morning.
-By Michael Aneiro, Dow Jones Newswires; (212) 416-2203; michael.aneiro@dowjones.com
--Kellie Geressy-Nilsen, Kelly Nolan, Al Yoon, Katy Burne, Prabha Natarajan, Tess Stynes and Cynthia Lin contributed to this report.
Two key derivatives indexes that measure the health of corporate credit both improved Monday. The CDX North America Investment Grade index was 3.8% better from Friday's closing levels, at a midpoint of 126.4 basis points, while its high-yield counterpart was 1.3% improved at 92.6 basis points, according to index administrator Markit.
Investment-Grade Corporates
No new issues were on tap Monday as a continuous stream of earnings grabbed investor focus and deterred borrowing.
Trading in the cash market was measured. Verizon's (VZ) 6.00% issue due 2041 traded four basis points wider to 132 basis points, and was the most actively traded high-grade bond this session, according to MarketAxess.
American International Group Inc. (AIG) unveiled an exchange offer for up to $2.5 billion in debt, as it aims to reduce its overall debt levels. The company said it plans to exchange several series of junior subordinated debentures, denominated in euros, British pounds and U.S. dollars, for new notes with a lower principal amount. The company also expects the exchange to improve its interest expense and fixed-charge coverage metrics.
AIG earlier this month said it has entered two new credit facilities worth $4.5 billion to replace others that had less favorable terms.
The company in August reported that it swung to an income of $1.84 billion in the second quarter from a loss of $2.66 billion a year earlier, as its results were largely free from the restructuring costs and other extraordinary charges that have plagued the company since its 2008 bailout.
Junk Bonds
High-yield bonds gained Monday as well. Bonds issued by Ford Motor Corp. (F) and McClatchy Newspapers Inc. (MNI) gained during the day as buyers found reasons to like junk-rated debt with high yields.
Meanwhile, the new issuance market was dominated by the large $1.65 billion, seven-year senior notes issue from Kinetic Concepts Inc. (KCI). The issue's price talk is between 10.75% and 11%, and it is expected to price later Monday evening.
Municipal Bonds
Muni bonds barely budged Monday, with yields on bonds due to mature in 14 years or more rising by 1 basis point while all other maturities were unchanged, according to Thomson Reuters Municipal Market Data.
Muni-bond issuance should remain at strong levels through mid-December, according to Citi, and this week is no exception with roughly $6 billion in debt on tap. There are no blockbuster deals, notes Citi, but there are a number of medium- and large-sized issues. The Ipreo calendar shows four deals of $476 million or larger, and 18 bigger than $100 million, an "unusually large number." Citi views the diversity as a buying opportunity for investors.
Mortgages
Mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC) plummeted on Monday after the top housing regulator surprised investors by expanding an existing refinancing program to more borrowers and removing a hurdle that has kept banks from approving loans.
MBS tied to loans with high interest rates fell to the lowest level in at least six months as those mortgages are the ones seen most affected by the move to help homeowners who owe more than their properties are worth.
Under the new plan, the Federal Housing Finance Agency will allow refinancing of loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac no matter the home's value, and will extend the term of its Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP, through 2013, the FHFA said. It will waive some liabilities to banks, giving the lenders more incentive to close loans with risky characteristics.
Since 2009, only 894,000 borrowers have used the HARP, of which just 70,000 were significantly underwater. The FHFA said the changes "may roughly double or more" the number of homeowners who enroll, while analysts at Barclays Capital estimated up to 3.1 million loans are eligible for the program.
Fannie Mae 6% MBS fell 25/32 to 108-29/32--the lowest price since April 14--underperforming Treasury benchmarks by about the same degree, according to Locus, a Credit Suisse analytics platform. Fannie Mae's 4% MBS declined 4/32 to 103-5/32--lagging their benchmarks by just 1/32--helped by ongoing Federal Reserve MBS purchases and speculation that the buying could be expanded.
Treasurys
Treasury investors were lying low Monday as they awaited Wednesday's potentially groundbreaking euro-zone plan from the sidelines, leaving prices a tad lower after a tight-ranged trading session.
The fixation on Europe has led other traditional market-moving events to go mostly unnoticed--including economic reports and a recent series of Federal Reserve officials who have dropped hints about another round of quantitative easing.
Instead, attention was set squarely on the few details that did arise from the euro-zone gathering over the weekend, which showed signs of progress at figuring out the region's debt problems. This included hints of a broad agreement to keep the euro-zone banking system well cushioned, and word that officials have agreed to bolster the region's bailout fund to more than EUR1 trillion.
Still, losses in the Treasurys market were minor. This was partly because of pressure going into this week's round of supply, analysts say, but also a reflection of investors' unwillingness to stray too far from the safety of U.S. government bonds until hearing Wednesday's announcement.
In late-afternoon trading, benchmark 10-year notes declined 6/32 in price to yield 2.228%, while two-year notes lost a fraction in price to yield 0.283%. The 30-year bond lost 8/32 in price to yield 3.267% despite the Federal Reserve's $2.5 billon long-dated purchases this morning.
-By Michael Aneiro, Dow Jones Newswires; (212) 416-2203; michael.aneiro@dowjones.com
--Kellie Geressy-Nilsen, Kelly Nolan, Al Yoon, Katy Burne, Prabha Natarajan, Tess Stynes and Cynthia Lin contributed to this report.
Giuliana Rancic has cancer surgery
"E! News" host Giuliana Rancic underwent breast cancer surgery Thursday and is now recovering, her husband, Bill, told NBC's "Today."
"She's a trouper," he said of his wife's double lumpectomy. "She pulled through it and was kind of relieved to get it over with and get the cancer out."
He added that Giuliana, 36, hopes to return to work at E! next week. She revealed her fight against cancer Monday on "Today."
DSO player on the move?
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra might be losing another principal musician. Alexander Hanna, 25, has won the audition for principal bass for the Minnesota Orchestra, according to www.adaptistration.com, the Web site run by Chicago-based orchestra consultant and commentator Drew McManus.
As of Thursday afternoon, no official announcement has been made, and Hanna, who joined the DSO as principal bassist in 2008, was still a member of the orchestra. Hanna declined comment, as did spokeswomen at both the DSO and Minnesota Orchestra.
If Hanna, widely recognized as a rising star, were to leave, he would become one of the highest-profile musicians to depart in the wake of the musicians' strike that ended last spring and resulted in base wage cuts of about 23%. Other departures include the former concertmaster and principal timpanist.
Briefly
• President Barack Obama is scheduled to appear Tuesday on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," NBC revealed Thursday. Obama, who has appeared on Leno's talk show three times, made history in March 2009 as the first sitting president to visit "Tonight."
• Lisa Simeone, the radio host of "Soundprint," a documentary show that airs on about 35 National Public Radio affiliate stations across the country, said she was fired because she helped organize a Washington protest. The head of Soundprint Media Center cited NPR's code of ethics before she was fired, the Associated Press reports.
• Joaquin Phoenix, younger brother of late actor River Phoenix, said Thursday that his family has no plans to be involved in director George Sluizer's plans to complete "Dark Blood, the final film starring River Phoenix.
• The Electric Forest music festival at the Double JJ Ranch in Rothbury is scheduled for June 28-July 1, 2012, producers Madison House Presents and Insomniac Events said Thursday. For more: www.electricforestfestival.com.
• WWJ-AM (950) will host its Michigan Money Summit from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 29 at VisTaTech Center at Schoolcraft College, 18600 Haggerty Road in Livonia. Murray Feldman of WWJ and WJBK-TV (Channel 2) will host the free event, which will include panel discussions covering different areas of investing and financial planning.
• Saturday's Ekoostik Hookah show at the Magic Bag in Ferndale has been canceled following news that there was a death related to the jam band, promoters announced Thursday. Full refunds are available at the point of purchase. For more: www.themagicbag.com.
• Fans of former "Saved by the Bell" star Elizabeth Berkley won't want to miss her starring turn in "Lucky Christmas," a Hallmark Channel original movie that airs at 8 p.m. Nov. 12. In March, the 39-year-old actress, who grew up in Farmington Hills, released a self-help book for teen girls titled "Ask Elizabeth" (Putnam Juvenile, $16.99). For more: http://ask-elizabeth.com.
COMPILED BY B.J. HAMMERSTEIN, FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER. CONTACT HIM AT 313-223-4528 OR BJHAMMERSTEIN@FREEPRESS.COM. MARK STRYKER CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT.
"She's a trouper," he said of his wife's double lumpectomy. "She pulled through it and was kind of relieved to get it over with and get the cancer out."
He added that Giuliana, 36, hopes to return to work at E! next week. She revealed her fight against cancer Monday on "Today."
DSO player on the move?
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra might be losing another principal musician. Alexander Hanna, 25, has won the audition for principal bass for the Minnesota Orchestra, according to www.adaptistration.com, the Web site run by Chicago-based orchestra consultant and commentator Drew McManus.
As of Thursday afternoon, no official announcement has been made, and Hanna, who joined the DSO as principal bassist in 2008, was still a member of the orchestra. Hanna declined comment, as did spokeswomen at both the DSO and Minnesota Orchestra.
If Hanna, widely recognized as a rising star, were to leave, he would become one of the highest-profile musicians to depart in the wake of the musicians' strike that ended last spring and resulted in base wage cuts of about 23%. Other departures include the former concertmaster and principal timpanist.
Briefly
• President Barack Obama is scheduled to appear Tuesday on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," NBC revealed Thursday. Obama, who has appeared on Leno's talk show three times, made history in March 2009 as the first sitting president to visit "Tonight."
• Lisa Simeone, the radio host of "Soundprint," a documentary show that airs on about 35 National Public Radio affiliate stations across the country, said she was fired because she helped organize a Washington protest. The head of Soundprint Media Center cited NPR's code of ethics before she was fired, the Associated Press reports.
• Joaquin Phoenix, younger brother of late actor River Phoenix, said Thursday that his family has no plans to be involved in director George Sluizer's plans to complete "Dark Blood, the final film starring River Phoenix.
• The Electric Forest music festival at the Double JJ Ranch in Rothbury is scheduled for June 28-July 1, 2012, producers Madison House Presents and Insomniac Events said Thursday. For more: www.electricforestfestival.com.
• WWJ-AM (950) will host its Michigan Money Summit from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 29 at VisTaTech Center at Schoolcraft College, 18600 Haggerty Road in Livonia. Murray Feldman of WWJ and WJBK-TV (Channel 2) will host the free event, which will include panel discussions covering different areas of investing and financial planning.
• Saturday's Ekoostik Hookah show at the Magic Bag in Ferndale has been canceled following news that there was a death related to the jam band, promoters announced Thursday. Full refunds are available at the point of purchase. For more: www.themagicbag.com.
• Fans of former "Saved by the Bell" star Elizabeth Berkley won't want to miss her starring turn in "Lucky Christmas," a Hallmark Channel original movie that airs at 8 p.m. Nov. 12. In March, the 39-year-old actress, who grew up in Farmington Hills, released a self-help book for teen girls titled "Ask Elizabeth" (Putnam Juvenile, $16.99). For more: http://ask-elizabeth.com.
COMPILED BY B.J. HAMMERSTEIN, FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER. CONTACT HIM AT 313-223-4528 OR BJHAMMERSTEIN@FREEPRESS.COM. MARK STRYKER CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT.
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