Kolek planning to go pro
You rool dood.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNwt_C0qGqM
See this is the type of reaction I feed off of. Too easy.
Three greatest screw jobs in the history of sports -1) Soviets over USA -1972 Olympic Men's Basketball.2) Fail Mary3) Tuck rule.
You rool dood.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KA2fHoUkG2g(Obscure.)
So if one team can't dominate the other, or at least win going away, i.e., by greater than one possession, then they deserve to get screwed at the end if the refs are incompetent? When your argument is all twisted and contorted as your above quote is, you need to re-think that you're just plain wrong.Why not come clean Benny and just admit your anti-Packer bias? At least everyone will know where you're coming from when your argument on this topic is so ridiculous.
Wow, I'm very concerned for Benny. Being able to mimic Myron Medcalf's writing so closely implies an oncoming case of dementia.
On November 12, 1982, Pryor defended his title with a fourteenth-round TKO of Alexis Arguello before a crowd of 23,800 at Miami's Orange Bowl and a live HBO audience. The fight, dubbed The Battle of The Champions by promoter Bob Arum, was eventually named the Fight of the Decade by The Ring.Pryor made $1.6 million while Arguello was paid $1.5 million. Arguello, a 12-5 favorite, was attempting to become the first boxer to win world titles in four weight divisions.The end of the fight was controversial. Arguello landed a punch in the thirteenth round that seemed to stun Pryor, and despite trailing on two of three scorecards, Arguello had things tilting in his direction. Between the thirteenth and fourteenth rounds, HBO's microphones caught Pryor's trainer, Panama Lewis, telling cutman Artie Curley, "Give me the other bottle, the one I mixed."It seemed to revive Pryor. Coming out quickly for the fourteenth round, Pryor landed a barrage of unanswered blows before referee Stanley Christodoulou stopped it. Arguello collapsed to the canvas near the ropes, where he lay for several minutes.Many speculated that there was something illegal in the bottle, but nobody checked the contents and the Miami Boxing Commission failed to administer a post-fight urine test to the boxers. Lewis and Pryor steadfastly denied that there was anything illegal in the bottle.Artie Curley said that the bottle contained peppermint schnapps to settle Pryor's upset stomach. In a 2009 documentary, former Lewis-trained boxer Luis Resto revealed that Lewis would break apart antihistamine pills and pour the medicine into his water, giving him greater lung capacity in the later rounds of a fight.
The tuck rule was a correct application of the rule in place at the time. It's not a screw job if the referee was merely enforcing a bad rule.
the refs aren't the only ones who are guilty of a screw job.
I think we've seen some modest rule clarification through the years that has actually made it easier for the refs. I'll point to the 'empty hand rule' as one improvement. I suppose this incident in Dallas might give rise to some sort of 'face guarding' clarification because I really don't think most neutral observers would say that was 'good' pass defense especially given the way DBs aren't allowed to do anything these days. Personally, I'd like the game a bit better if passing was a bit more difficult but we all know it's the superstars like Rodgers, Manning and Brady that bring in the big bucks.
I'd like to see the NFL eliminate pass interference calls on deep passes that are severely underthrown (almost like the uncatchable rule). If the DB is a half-step behind the WR but the WR needs to stop to come back to an underthrown ball, the DB is going to run into him and get flagged. When that call is made, you're rewarding the offense, often with 30+ yards, for a poorly thrown pass.
So people can't assume a touchdown but you can assume a field goal. Got it.Now that that's clear, since we know it's only a 6 point lead and Detroit then kicked a field goal, I guess you know that Dallas's ensuing drive goes exactly as it did following the 10 yard punt, despite them now needing a touchdown to keep their season alive (as opposed to a field goal to tie the game) with less time on the clock, and worse field position (but I guess you must know the return man would've returned the kickoff to exactly where the punt resulted). Do you really think Dallas's offense and Detroit's defense play the exact same way if Dallas is down 6 starting at their 20 with 5:20 left as they did with Dallas down 3 with 8:10 left in the game? Of course they wouldn't, but that doesn't fit your narrative so nobody else can conclude anything about the rest of the game except for you.I hate Detroit and they got screwed. The refs missed the call you want to make, and they made the call that they should have made, yet they inexplicably made the call and then reversed it. Beyond that, Dez Bryant should've been flagged for a 15 yard penalty. So while you want to say they have it at the 30, they should've had it at the 15. Not to mention, even if it went your way and there were offsetting penalties, isn't 3rd and 1 a lot different than 4th and 1? Because if there were offsetting penalties, that's what the situation would've been. But again, that doesn't fit your narrative.
http://www.barstoolsports.com/chicago/super-page/terry-boers-is-reporting-that-the-bears-plan-on-parting-ways-with-brandon-marshall-soon/"According to Terry Boers of 670 The Score, sources believe that the Bears have already made the decision to part ways with Marshall. According to Boers’ source, the decision came from Bears’ brass and none of the prospective general managers interviewed have disagreed with the decision."This is a total unnatural carnal knowledgeing contradiction to what Philips and McCaskey assured everyone during their press conference. Every decision about the team/players was going to be made by the new GM and coach. I unnatural carnal knowledgeing hate the Bears' execs. Moron non-football people making football decisions - especially right after they went public and said that's exactly what they wouldn't do.
unnatural carnal knowledgeing stupid. Marshall had been nothing but great with the Bears, from his attitude to his play. At least wait until the new guys come in and let them do their job.
unnatural carnal knowledgeing stupid. Marshall had been nothing but great with the Bears, from his attitude to his play.
FWIW, John Clayton was on WMVP yesterday afternoon and said that he has heard nothing about the Bears' supposed intentions to release Marshall.
The problem with the decision to get rid of Marshall has nothing to do with Marshall. Like I said, it's about non-football people making football decisions. And more importantly, it's about those same people doing the exact opposite of what they said they would be doing.