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Sport americani (NFL, MLB, NHL, ...)


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Mi sembra di intuire che i Buccaneers siano i nuovi Warriors

NON È UN PROBLEMA DI OBAMA O TRUMP.  NON È UN PROBLEMA DI RISPETTO DELLA BANDIERA O DELL'INNO O DEI SOLDATI.  La morale la puoi fare quando hai capito il problema, non prima. Esattamente com

L'ho vista nel pomeriggio di ieri....ma alla fine ero distrutto dalla gioia e solo in serata mi sono dato una calmata per vedermi l'altra partita  Onestamente non ci sto capendo più un cazzo   inc

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Odio i Rams, è ufficiale.

 

C'è una maledizione quest'anno.

Ok, non ne guardo più O.O 2/2 quando non guardo

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Allora...

 

Houston (11-1) (vince la AFC South)

New England (9-3) (vince la AFC East)

Baltimore (9-3)

Denver (9-3) (vince la AFC West)

 

Indianapolis (8-4!)

Pittsburgh (7-5)

 

Cincinnati (7-5)

 

4 partite dalla fine. Scontri diretti: NE vs HOU, BAL vs DEN, PIT vs CIN, HOU vs IND (x2)

 

Denver ha il calendario migliore delle prime 4 (Baltimore + 3 sparring partners);

Houston deve vincerne 3 su 4 per avere il 1° seed;

New England controlla il proprio destino: un 4-0 (difficile, HOU e SF next) gli garantisce il bye;

Baltimore è nei guai. Ha il calendario nettamente peggiore ed è quella messa peggio a livello di personale.

 

PIT deve vincere contro CIN, ed è dentro.

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Ci metterei la firma, per incontrare Baltimore...nel frattempo abbiamo perso pure Ike Taylor

 

Ieri immensi Luck e Wilson...con RGIII un trio da favola, che draft in quanto a QB..tra i migliori di sempre? :iminlove1:

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Eli :fuckahah :fuckahah :fuckahah

 

Comunque i Giants (7-6)ora affronteranno i Saints in caduta libera a NY, poi 2 trasferte difficilissime ad Atlanta e Baltimore, prima di chiudere con la cicloturistica casalinga contro gli Eagles. Pronostico 2-2 e record 9-7

 

Was (6-6), che insegue ad una partita di distacco avrà Baltimore ancora in casa, poi due trasferte non difficili come Phila e Cleveland e l'ultima in casa contro Dallas, che potrebbe essere abbondantemente fuori per allora. Pronostico.....

Daje RGIII piazzami un 4-0 ed elimina questi pagliacci.... :sbrilluccico

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Tre W consecutive (tutte con rivali della NFC East), 3-1 negli scontri interdivisionali (maledetto TD Eli-Cruz), una gara dietro ai Giants.

Già essere a questo punto è un grande traguardo.

 

Con quella difesa sui ricevitori che ci ritroviamo è difficile, ma a questa squadra si può dire tutto tranne che non ci provi sempre.

 

Dai ragazzi :sbrilluccico

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One of the most painful messages in the Dallas Cowboys’ long history was delivered in the sterile, cramped environment of the team’s charter Saturday afternoon.

 

The Cowboys had lost one of their own, and another sat in jail on suspicion of intoxication manslaughter.

 

Linebacker Jerry Brown Jr., a recent addition to the team’s practice squad, was dead. His close friend and roommate, nose tackle Josh Brent, had been at the wheel.

 

In an ironic twist, Pro Bowl offensive tackle Erik Williams had been injured in a single-car accident before the Cowboys traveled to Cincinnati to face the Bengals 18 years ago. While Williams’ injuries were significant, no one else was in the car when he crashed into a guardrail. That also crash took place six days before the game.

 

Never before have the Cowboys tragically lost a teammate at the hands of another within 48 hours of kickoff.

 

“We are deeply saddened by the news of this accident and the passing of Jerry Brown,” Jerry Jones said in a statement issued before the team landed in Cincinnati for Sunday afternoon’s game. “At this time, our hearts and prayers and deepest sympathies are with the members of Jerry’s family and all of those who knew him and loved him.”

 

Peter Schaffer represents Brent. Late Saturday evening, he issued this statement on behalf of his client:

 

“I am devastated and filled with grief, filled with grief for the loss of my close friend and teammate, Jerry Brown,’’ Brent said. “I am also grief-stricken for his family, friends and all who were blessed enough to have known him. I will live with this horrific and tragic loss every day for the rest of my life. My prayers are with his family, our teammates and his friends at this time.”

 

A day unlike any other in club history began early Saturday morning when Brent, returning from a nightclub where he and Brown reportedly had partied with other teammates, clipped a curb with his Mercedes, which hurtled roughly 900 feet and came to rest upside down in the middle of the road.

 

Club officials were informed at 9:15 a.m. that Brent had been involved in an accident. He was being held while Brown, the passenger Brent had desperately tried to pull from the burning car, was dead.

 

The quandary: Irving police had not yet notified Brown’s next of kin. But the Cowboys had a walk-through scheduled before their departure for Cincinnati and could not ignore Brent’s and Brown’s absence.

 

Jones and head coach Jason Garrett asked everyone to assemble in the team’s Valley Ranch locker room at 10:45. The players were told that Brent and Brown had been involved in a significant automobile accident. The two assured the players that more information would be shared as soon as possible.

 

The Cowboys charter was scheduled to leave for Cincinnati at 1:30 p.m. The police notified the club shortly before departure that Brown’s mother had been contacted.

 

Garrett asked that everyone other than players, coaches and football staff step off the plane. While reporters, broadcasters and airline employees stood on the tarmac, Garrett delivered the news that the Cowboys had lost one of their own. Brown was dead, and Brent, who had been supposed to start against the Bengals, was in jail.

 

Chaplain Jonathan Evans then led the team in prayer before everyone else was ushered back onto the plane.

 

The team’s charter arrived in Ohio around 5 p.m. The mood was somber as the players quietly filed into their downtown hotel around 5:20 p.m. Garrett stared straight ahead as he walked to the elevators.

 

This was far different from the typical arrival. No one was talking. No pictures were allowed. Fans were sequestered one floor above where the players entered the hotel.

 

The players and coaches headed into meetings at 7:30 p.m. for their final preparation going into Sunday’s game with the Bengals. The few who mingled in the lobby later in the evening mostly declined to talk.

 

One who did was backup linebacker Alex Albright. He said Garrett had done a good job of addressing what everyone should remember about Brown while getting across that the season was still on the line and that the team must go forward.

 

“You can’t really describe it,” Albright said. “It’s difficult. You never expect anything like this to happen, and then it does.

 

“We’re just trying to handle it the best we can.”

 

Brent had been scheduled to make his sixth start of the season for the injured Jay Ratliff. The young nose tackle has blossomed in his third season. Brent ranks second among the team’s defensive linemen with 35 tackles. He forced a fumble that cornerback Morris Claiborne returned for a touchdown in last week’s win over Philadelphia.

 

“He’s really matured as a player,” Garrett said earlier in the week.

 

Now, Brent’s future with the Cowboys is in doubt.

 

And one of his best friends is dead.

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The most expensive team in sports history spent another $147 million on Saturday night. This came 3½ months after the Los Angeles Dodgers spent $250 million, which came two months after they spent $42 million, which came two weeks after they spent $85 million, which came eight months after they spent $160 million, which came less than 18 months after they filed for bankruptcy.

 

This is something unlike what the sports world ever has seen: a franchise with seemingly no limits. The Dodgers handed Zack Greinke the largest contract ever for a right-hander and the highest per-annum salary for any pitcher with a six-year, $147 million deal

 

:saswtf:

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