2010年12月30日星期四
Some power balance bracelets improve your balance
2010年12月29日星期三
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offers these vaccine facts
The kameleon jewelry sale and movado bold blue are very hot now.
Even merchants of morbidity are entitled to the full protection of the law
It wasn't too long ago that the Blake Griffin show was all for naught


Micah Hyde picked off Blaine Gabbert near the sideline

2010年12月28日星期二
Senators forward Jason Spezza (shoulder) is out indefinitely
Obama is not the first president to be curious about what Americans are thinking and talking about
2010年12月27日星期一
Marie was found dead at her Pasadena home Sunday
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2010年12月26日星期日
Cities from Philadelphia to Boston
2010年12月24日星期五
Tom Brady wearing movado watch
With Sunday’s 36-7 shellacking of the first-place Bears this weekend, the Patriots established themselves as the prohibitive Super Bowl favorite—even if coach Belichick will never admit it.
Leading the charge for New England once again is Tom Brady wearing movado watch, who looks like he’s running uncontested for the NFL’s MVP award. Over his last three games, Brady has gone 3-0 with over 1,000 yards, 10 touchdowns and zero interceptions.
Even with a group of unheard-of receivers, Brady has managed to put up some of the best statistics of his career. Somehow, the Patriots traded away one of the NFL’s premier receivers and improved offensively. Brady has the Midas touch, as everything he touches seems to turn to gold.
If the saying is true and success breeds contempt, then Brady must be truly loathed. Read on and find out the ten reasons why Tom Brady is the most envied man in sports
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Renardo Sidney loves power balance bracelet
Renardo Sidney who loves power balance bracelet has issued a statement apologizing for being a part of a fight with a Mississippi State teammate in the stands between games at the Diamond Head Classic on Thursday night. Via Brandon Marcello of the Clarion-Ledger:
I'm very sorry for this incident. I had no intention of this ever happening ... I apologize for embarrassing my family, all the Mississippi State fans, my teammates and coaches ... I will learn from this and move on."
Sidney and teammate Elgin Bailey have been suspended indefinitely for their actions by the school. Athletic Director Steve Stricklin announced the suspensions on his Twitter account, saying that the length of the suspensions will be determined by their "attitude going forward." Coach Rick Stansbury mainly for power balance wholesale released a statement saying he's never seen something like this happen before.
In my 13 years as a head coach, we've never had anything like this happen before. I am very disappointed in the actions of Elgin Bailey and Renardo Sidney and in no way does it reflect the overall picture of our program. It is not how we want our men's basketball team to be viewed nationally, and it is certainly not the conduct we expect of teammates in our program, nor will it be tolerated on any level."
Bailey is expected to release a statement later Friday. It remains unclear how the fight began, but Sidney's teammates have defended him on Twitter, suggesting that he wasn't the one who instigated the altercation.
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2010年12月23日星期四
The power of a placebo drug
2010年12月22日星期三
Drunken driver sentenced to 51 years
2010 NFL MVPs after week 15
Just when you thought it was safe to name Tom Brady(notes) the league's most valuable player… As amazing as power balance.
The 2010 NFL MVP race has unofficially been a two-man race for the past couple of weeks. Week 15 eliminated all other candidates but those two individuals. Jacksonville running backMaurice Jones-Drew(notes) was held to under 50 yards on the ground in a possible division-deciding game at Indianapolis. Pittsburgh safety Troy Polamalu(notes) missed week 15 and will sit out at least this week's contest, as well, which will prevent him from catching up to the two remaining MVP candidates. Neither Peyton Manning(notes) nor Philip Rivers(notes) can compare with the two QBs listed below.Unless a robbery occurs, one of these two individuals is going to be named the 2010 NFL MVP. This Giants fan knows which player he'd vote for, even though the thought absolutely sickens me after last Sunday.
2010 NFL MVPs after week 16: QB Mike Vick
Last week, I wrote that Vick needed an amazing performance against theNew York Giants to catch up with Tom Brady. doing power balance wholesale, With the Giants leading thePhiladelphia Eagles 31-10 with just under eight minutes to play, Vick and his offense completed one of the most remarkable comebacks in recent NFL history. In a six-minute span, Vick rushed for 94 yards, threw two touchdown passes and ran in for a score. The DeSean Jackson(notes) punt return was merely the cherry on top of the rally sundae, a dessert that still makes me ill several days later.
Vick finished the day with 130 yards rushing, 242 passing yards and four total touchdowns (three passing, one rushing). He's currently third in the league in total QB rating (103.6) and he has thrown nine touchdowns and rushed for three TDs in Philadelphia's last four games. Vick's performance against my beloved Big Blue Wrecking Crew was the thing legends are made of, a six-minute span of heroics that I'll one day grow to truly appreciate; long after this season is over.
2010 NFL MVPs after week 16: QB Tom Brady
Sunday was Brady's worst performance since the week 9 loss to the Browns, and it wasn't all that bad at all. He completed 15 of 24 attempts for 163 yards and two touchdowns against the Packers in a winning effort. His 110.2 QB rating, one that any quarterback would take, was also his lowest in over a month. Brady had a few close calls but finished another game without tossing an interception, his ninth consecutive game without a pick.
Heading into the final two weeks of the 2010 NFL regular season, Brady leads the league in QB rating, TD passes (tied with Drew Brees(notes) at 31) and he's only thrown four interceptions in 449 total attempts.
Brady's complete 2010 MVP resume is more impressive than Vick, who's missed over 15 quarters this season due to injuries. Even still, Vick's historic performance at New Meadowlands Stadium on Sunday has to have even the biggest Tom Brady fan wondering if this year's MVP award isn't a lock just yet.
2010年12月21日星期二
Luxury tax
According to the Associated Press, the Yankees selling ugg boots paid $18 million on the competitive balance tax (commonly known as the luxury tax) on their payroll in 2010.
The Red Sox were the only other team taxed and paid $1.5 million.
The threshold in 2010 was $170 million. The Sox went over the threshold for the first time since 2007.
The Red Sox had a season-ending payroll of $170,650,856 for 2010. But for CBT purposes, the average annual value of contracts are taken into account along with all players on the 40-man roster and medical benefits. That total was approximately $176 million as the Sox were taxed at a rate of 22.5 percent over the threshold selling ugg bailey button.
The threshold next season will be $178 million and under the current collective bargaining agreement, any excess would taxed at a rate of 30 percent.
Barring a deal to shed salary, the Red Sox almost certainly will go over that mark in 2011.
Of course, purchasing Liverpool means the Red Sox will have to trade all their players by May 1 anyway. Everybody knows that. It's a well-known financial principle that people can only own one business at a time or risk ruin.
What made him a star
MINNEAPOLIS -- Near the end of Brett Favre's postgame news conference on Monday night, maybe the final one of his illustrious 20-year career, the Vikings quarterback was asked, if this is the end, about life after football.
"Is there one?" Favre smart-alecked back, wearing power balance.
And the quarterback drew a laugh from the folks in attendance, before saying it's something that he's actually looking forward to. That, on a day when he went from "out" to "questionable" to "playing" to "starting" before a whistle was even blow, might have been the biggest mistruth of all.
Is Favre looking forward to the end of this particular season? No question. He spent the better part of the fall combating teams trying to emulate the Saints' NFC title game strategy -- like Gregg Williams' old mentor Buddy Ryan once said, "When you hit the quarterback, sometimes the whole team feels it" -- and took the kind of beating that Steven Seagal couldn't dream up. Intent to injure is harsh, but most defenses facing the Vikings made it a point to let the quarterback know they were there
Plus, he always liked heading back to the tractor in January.
July is when the story changes. See, Favre is a football player -- always has been -- and his ability to be anything else is certainly up for question. So when it comes time again to strap it on, it's hard to believe that Favre won't get that itch again.
It's why, now, much of the public has come to resent him. But it's also why, as those masses continue to grouse and moan about the way this guy is covered in the media, they continue to tune in at record numbers.
So if this is really it, his legacy will have been altered by these last three years away from Green Bay, for better and worse. And if the final 24 hours of his career really were those on Monday, they did a lot to capture the complexity of how we'll all try to figure how Favre will be remembered.
"For me, it has been 20 great years and I said this last week, if I didn't play tonight and the season ended, so be it," Favre said. "I'll say it again -- it has been a great run. I think my stubbornness, hard-headedness and stupidity at times has enabled me to play for 20 years and play the way I've played. It's just the way I have always approached it, the way I play. I wouldn't trade it for anything. It has been everything I thought it would be and then some. My last pass was just as much fun as my first one."
Perfect. Those words tell you everything you need to know about the last 28 months, from the time the Packers pulled off the stunning 2008 trade with the Jets to the moment Chicago rookie Corey Wootton (born shortly after Favre's high school graduation) buried him into the TCF Bank Stadium turf.
They show you, first, why so many have festered a disdain for the Bayou Bomber, putting on display his penchant for playing by his own rules with little regard for the environment around him.
He hemmed and hawed over the decision to come back through the summer of 2008, then turned the early days of Packers training camp into his own personal circus. Similar kvetching was staged the next two summers with the Vikings, and he arrived each time after a whole lot of butt-smooching and on a private jet, which flies right in the face of the image perpetuated in those Wrangler ads.
And that doesn't even touch on whether or not his personal pursuits got in the way of team success.
Favre's torn biceps in 2008 rendered him ineffective, and while it took guts to go out there and play, it also helped firebomb the Jets' 8-3 start that year. His swashbuckling side also reared its ugly head in last January's NFC title game, after he put together one of his best seasons, playing the position more like a point guard. And his constant feuding with Brad Childress hung over that team, and contributed to this year's club falling to pieces before the midseason dismissal of the coach.
The Jenn Sterger case became the final car crashing into the freeway pileup of a 2010 season and, again, threw another layer of vitriol out there for the general public.
That gives you plenty to hate. But you tuned in anyway, and the reason why is simple. No matter how you slice it, Favre is compelling, and there's plenty of good to go with the bad.
The best part: For all his warts, the reason Favre continued to haul his behind out there was really rooted in why anyone who started playing this game at a young age continues for as long as they can. Plain and simple, he loves the game, and that's a fact that's pretty hard to deny.
That's why, when he woke up Monday and felt alright, the call went in to coach Leslie Frazier. It was snowing, it was going to be nasty. But most of all, it was game day, and that's always meant one thing to Favre: It was time to play.
"I wanted to play," he said. "I wish I could have lasted, but I don't regret the decision."
So he played, and we got a time capsule of what these last years were like. Favre generated drama during the day. He excited the crowd when he got out there. He drew outsized television ratings. He came out on fire and led a scintillating touchdown drive to open the game. He threw a pick. He got hurt. He left the game, doing power balance wholesale.
But really, what he showed was that, while part of this might be a craving of the spotlight of an ex-Packers quarterback, who played so many years as king in a small market, he still loves to get out there and play.
Favre's consecutive starts streak was snapped at 297 games the week before. His Vikings were eliminated from postseason contention. And yet, he wanted to play at all costs, for better or worse, and Frazier's hope is that others got the implicit message sent.
"Not only on our team, but in baseball, basketball, football, any sport," Frazier said. "To accomplish what he's accomplished, there's no reason (he had to play). He could walk away with his legacy intact. He didn't have to play tonight. He didn't have to say, 'Coach, I want to play. I want to help this team win. I want our fans to be able to see me play in this last home game.'
"Nobody would have frowned; nobody would have second-guessed if he didn't play the rest of this season. It just would have been. A great example of what it means to do your best in every situation."
In the end, history shows us that these final years will be sidelights to what Favre did in Green Bay, like Joe Montana's time in Kansas City or Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath finishing up with the Chargers and Rams, respectively. Eventually, Packers fans will forgive him, and we'll be reminded of his astronomical numbers when Peyton Manningstarts breaking them a few years down the line.
But these three years to finish Favre's career (again, if this is the end) did serve a purpose. Everyone learned a little bit more about the man, both good and bad.
And for as much as he's pushed the "simple man" notion, he'll likely remain a pretty complicated guy to figure.