I still cannot believe the Seahawks didn't give the ball to Lynch. SMH.
I still cannot believe the Seahawks didn't give the ball to Lynch. SMH.
Per the report, he's a part-time employee who it seems may only work on game days. So 10-12 days of work per year. That's gotta be a hell of a salary.
"Ball man" from here on out.
I don't get it. How do you have an official unapproved ball?
Julien Edelman bailed rather quickly as he grew tired of being asked to give some insight into the evolution of the market economy in the southern colonies.
Looks like Goodell has got a ton of crackers stuffed into his briefcase...he must be working really hard.
Says the guy who wasn't punished for using PED's....
With the ongoing Ballghazi investigation and Brad Johnson's admitting to bribery, I'm hoping the NFL will investigate other scandals and/or conspiracy theories....mainly, I want to see the Giants investigated for stealing my Minnesota Vikings' radio signals during 41-doughnut. Also, burning jet fuel won't melt steel.
I think Belichick should be strapped to a chair with his eyelids peeled back and forced to watch Peter King bathe naked in a hot tub of takes while every columnist listed above gives him rusty trombones in turn.
So 2 pounds of pressure is a pretty tangible change. How did the referee handle the ball on every down and not notice any issue?
So what you're saying is that football coverage is refreshingly devoit of the horseshit mountain of sanctimony baby boomer writers shovel onto the rotting carcass of MLB?
He came after me REALLY hard on Twitter tonight. Prior to that I had no real opinion—just thought I'd get a quick kick out of this stupid tweet of his—but he definitely seemed to have a bit of the loudmouth bully to him (though nothing he said came across as racist, and I think a big part of his beef was fear of being…
Lou Merloni is one of the reasons that this Bostonian stopped listening to WEEI.
Nobody in Boston has ever heard the show either, by the time he got on the radio, weei already lost all it's listeners to the other station because, at the time, it was the only game in town on FM.
One of the many that kind of sum it up.
The head of Boston's Olympic bid committee is a construction company CEO. This is basically a shuttling of public funds into his construction work. As long as Boston city taxes are used, fine. If they use state taxes, we're moving out.
"Whew! Dodged that bullet."
Most of the reaction in the city is negative. Popular opinion here, where we already went through a bureaucratic nightmare in the Big Dig, is that this is going to be similarly ugly.
Boston was never asked if they wanted this— the Boston 2024 coalition refused to hold any public meetings, and it consists largely of a construction firm and other businesses that would profit greatly. Cambridge City Council, which would need to be on board given its proximity, has already voted against this.