It's actually pretty remarkable how good their form is. If you watch them mid swing, they still hit the ball in perfect position... that just enter it whilst hopping. Color me impressed.
It's actually pretty remarkable how good their form is. If you watch them mid swing, they still hit the ball in perfect position... that just enter it whilst hopping. Color me impressed.
Penn Station bathroom in NYC. Worst in the World.
Look staged.
Here's the problem: the Rule 33 interpretation change from 2011 was designed to cover a situation where no one could have known that a violation had occurred had the video evidence not been there. So the committee would be on safe ground if this had ended with simply the call from the view.
But when Woods admitted…
In his statements after the round (made before he didn't realize that he had mis-played the drop), he stated he knowingly moved the ball back 2 yards off to get to a better yardage for the shot. (Yes, someone as good as TW cares about 2 yards).
Exactly. The rule says he must drop it "as near as possible." If he thought he dropped it "as near as possible" and only David Feherty's HDTV sleuthing revealed that he'd been a couple of yards off, the application of the penalty would be okay (frankly, so would no penalty at all). But he wasn't trying to drop it…
Tiger, in his words, dropped the ball in 2 yards back from the site of the original shot, and did so explicitly to gain an advantage. I think he did it because he confused the two options regarding where he could drop, not because of some sinister intent to put one over on everyone. Regardless, clearly a substantive…
i dont give a fuck about any of this bullshit.
I actually agree with a fair amount of what he says. As someone who spent $240k on undergrad and grad school, and will be paying a good chunk of my salary for the next 15 years, I can get what he is saying. The athletes at our school were given anything they want(tons of "points" to buy food, all the free athletic…
Stoops is 100% correct. My wife played college volleyball. She has no student loan debt. Traveled all over the country for free. Had a great apartment paid for with scholarship $$. Was like a queen in our college town. Has had tons of doors open for her because of her college athletics experience. Had many colleges to…
He sort of has a point. Even for an in-state student, the costs of OU life are pretty steep. Tossing in the trainers, nutritionist, medical staff and tutors, the athletes do get a pretty good amount of non-monetary compensation. That said, it should help these guys get the gravity of their education in perspective.
You could certainly poke holes in his argument against paying players, but apparently you're just not going to bother trying. is that it?
If the shoe fits, Ware it.
POW! Right in the kisser!
YES SIR!!! Best comment ever!!!
lol this article is a joke. Louisville's athletic program and Adidas are run as a business. Therefore they are about profits. I took it as support for the athlete, but it's all about perception. I would go as far as to say that you the writer of this article is a fan of a rival or Louisville or does not know how…
$anctimoney
Oh SNAP.
I kind of feel the same way about reading stuff about Kevin Ware on this site and others. Unless there's real news, isn't it just about profiting off his injury?