TBF, this guy is actually qualified for the job. He was a P5 or NFL position coach for 15 years.
TBF, this guy is actually qualified for the job. He was a P5 or NFL position coach for 15 years.
I love finding comments like these, here and in every sister site. I like to imagine their hand taking control. Angry commenter: “must...not...click on something I don’t... want to read.....” Hand: “Your resistance is futile. Muahaha!”
Hey everyone! Gizmodo’s most grizzled veteran wants us to straighten up our act.
I miss commentors smart enough to know not to click on articles they don’t want to read.
I miss Obama, before the government became a right wing dumpster fire shit show.. but I guess those two things are behind us both now, eh?
Jordan loved Oak because he was MJ’s “enforcer” on the team, a guy who evened the odds against those rough-and-tumble Eastern Conference foes, and lamented a lack of one once he left town. In fact, he had an odd endearment towards the undistinguished Dickey Simpkins during his second Bulls run because he felt he was…
Jordan was actually pretty upset when the Bulls traded Oakley for Bill Cartwright. Although he later admitted it was a good move.
Now we’re getting somewhere.
In their mid to late twenties, it’s a reasonable assumption that these two would have had 30-40 years of wages that would provide for their families, send their kids to college, etc.
Fernandez owned the boat. It was his boat. It says so right there in the words.
It sounds like the families of the two non-boat-owners are the parties suing. Not the family of the dead boat-owning guy.
“Though the boat belonged to Fernández, investigators from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission still have not been able to conclude who was driving at the time of the crash.”
The lawyer can be a problem, and so can getting drunk and high before operating a motor vehicle.
He owned the boat, it says it in the article...
Yup. By being dead, he got away scot free and won’t have to pay off anybody. That’s one lucky dude.
Not really surprising, except for the amount of damages, which I expected to be higher. And I don’t see how they aren’t rewarded it, or more likely settle near that number.
I’m not saying Oak didn’t do anything to warrant getting tossed; in the video I saw, he got physical with security, and while they were in his face, I’m not sure if they’d already gotten physical with him. But the first question hanging over everything is: why did a whole bunch of people get in his face? Did he do…
an injured Willis Reed unexpected limps out of the players tunnel and, as the crowd goes wild, totally kicks Nolan’s ass.
That’s a whole bunch of statements that basically seems to corroborate the idea that whatever Oakley did that might have merited getting him removed (if anything) didn’t start until he was already drawing attention from MSG security and supervisors for Being Charles Oakley In The Vicinity of James Dolan.