One of the biggest questions marks for Sunday's game between the San Diego Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs is the status of TE Antonio Gates. He's suffering from a foot injury and didn't practice at all this week.
In a Todd Haley-coached team, you generally have to practice to play but Gates has gone a week without practicing and played before so you can't rule him out.
He's listed as questionable for this Week 3 game and it really is up in the air whether he plays. Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union Tribune predicted on XX 1090 in San Diego that Gates will play but he admits that's a guess at this point.
The importance of Gates in this game? Pretty big, if you ask me. It seems like Gates always kills the Chiefs. You'd have to go back to 2007 to find a Chiefs-Chargers game in which Gates didn't make an impact. His worst game in that time span is five catches and 55 yards, while his best game is seven catches ,118 yards and two touchdowns. With the injury to S Eric Berry, this is going to be an area of focus for the Chiefs defense.
Stevegilliard News
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Leave Chris Christie Alone: Neverending 2012 Presidential Rumors Hurt Republicans
New Jersey governor Chris Christie is not running for president in 2012. He has said so himself many, many times. And yet this week, once again, rumors have surfaced that the freshman governor is “in talks” with Republican bigwigs to hop in, months behind a nine-person Republican field already cannibalizing itself more than a year before the actual election. No matter what Christie himself does, it seems his nonexistent campaign has mutated into the zombie presence of this election cycle: no matter how many times the candidate himself tries to kill it, the undead rumors keep come back to munch on Republican strategist brains.
The chatter commenced anew thanks to NewsMax‘s recent article claiming Gov. Christie would decide “in days” whether he was running for President after a “hush-hush powwow” between top Republican donors and the New Jersey governor. The context of the piece is even more bizarre than the rumors that the governor is thinking about it. It is apparently Indiana governor Mitch Daniels– the great Republican hope that never was– who is pushing for Christie to jump in. Christie has both publicly noted he finds the current GOP field unsatisfactory and that he really, really has no interest in running for president, can everyone just leave him alone now?
No, apparently; they can’t. The whispers culminated in this breathless report leading this morning’s Politico Playbook:
Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s debate stumble provided an opening for Ken Langone, co-founder of The Home Depot, to renew his effort to use donor pressure to lure New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie into the GOP race. Langone has been making calls to potential donors and bundlers, urging them to hold back on jumping to Perry or Mitt Romney, arguing that Christie might run. Christie is still reluctant, although the donor persistence is something the party hasn’t seen in 30 years. A person familiar with Christie’s mind phoned Playbook after Maggie Haberman and others disclosed the new frenzy:
“There are three reasons [Christie probably won't take the bait.] One is: He genuinely believes that he’s not prepared on an issue and substance basis to address all of the things you have to address as a candidate, and he’s leery of learning on the fly. Two, the performance of Perry shows the dangers of late entry: It’s right in front of him. And while others use that as a reason for him to GET in, for him, it’s the opposite – it’s the reason that validates his decision NOT to get in this late. And the third is that … you sit and look at the map … and the path for Chris Christie [to get more delegates than Romney] is difficult to chart … If he gets in, the first thing he has to do is beat Perry and establish himself as the REAL anti-Romney. And the path to doing that is difficult: Perry’s not going to just drop out.”
For most of the election cycle, the Christie rumors had been treated as something of a childish obsession in the party arising out of the desperation of not having sufficiently “electable” (whatever that means) candidates in the top tier– akin to the bizarre floating around of names like Rep. Paul Ryan and former New York governor George Pataki during the time Perry was still considering a run. As Jon Stewart put it then in a moment of “even broken clocks are right twice a day” brilliance, the candidates were like trendy toys an increasingly impatient mother bought her children, with none meeting the demands of the child (“Before I get you anything, where is your Ron Paul?!” Stewart’s “mother” demanded to a child begging for a “Perry”).
But the Christie phenomenon is something different inasmuch as it has proven not to be ephemeral. For every other “candidate” being tossed into the fray without consent, a short “no, I’m not interested” has been enough to dissuade the mysterious donors that start up these rumors in the first place. It worked for Rep. Ryan and Pataki, and people mostly stopped talking about Mike Huckabee and Donald Trump after they declared the Republican nomination wasn’t for them (though, to be fair, media exhaustion had just as much to do with the latter). Gov. Christie, on the other hand, has to deny the rumors about once a week, finally giving up with the realization that the only possible way to the buzz around his “campaign” would be to kill himself. This may be evidence that he would be a much more formidable candidate in the election, but by promulgating– both publicly and in surreptitious “donor” meetings– the idea that not even the Republican base would vote for the 2012 nominee if he isn’t Chris Christie, the party does itself a disservice. Independents respond to passion more than anything from parties they perceive as jaded, and no one in the past two decades has channeled that passion more efficiently than Barack Obama. As Donald Rumsfeld famously proclaimed, you go to war with the army you have, not the army you want to have, and Republicans need to let go of the idea that loudly griping that their army isn’t good enough is no way to win a political war.
So, no, Christie is probably not even going to bother swatting these rumors down; he’s too busy saving the hospital that birthed yours truly and moonlighting as a campaign strategist to this sixth grader– the job New Jersey taxpayers pay him to do, and the job that he needs to excel in to give these rumors any weight in the first place. And while some candidates with flimsy resumes– yes, we’re looking at you, Herman Cain– think they can waltz into the presidency unprepared while others with actual political experience, but maybe less charisma, get shunned, should these almost certainly false rumors be just that, Christie will only wisely emerge as a more formidable candidate in 2016 or 2020, and for Republicans, it should be well worth the wait.
The chatter commenced anew thanks to NewsMax‘s recent article claiming Gov. Christie would decide “in days” whether he was running for President after a “hush-hush powwow” between top Republican donors and the New Jersey governor. The context of the piece is even more bizarre than the rumors that the governor is thinking about it. It is apparently Indiana governor Mitch Daniels– the great Republican hope that never was– who is pushing for Christie to jump in. Christie has both publicly noted he finds the current GOP field unsatisfactory and that he really, really has no interest in running for president, can everyone just leave him alone now?
No, apparently; they can’t. The whispers culminated in this breathless report leading this morning’s Politico Playbook:
Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s debate stumble provided an opening for Ken Langone, co-founder of The Home Depot, to renew his effort to use donor pressure to lure New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie into the GOP race. Langone has been making calls to potential donors and bundlers, urging them to hold back on jumping to Perry or Mitt Romney, arguing that Christie might run. Christie is still reluctant, although the donor persistence is something the party hasn’t seen in 30 years. A person familiar with Christie’s mind phoned Playbook after Maggie Haberman and others disclosed the new frenzy:
“There are three reasons [Christie probably won't take the bait.] One is: He genuinely believes that he’s not prepared on an issue and substance basis to address all of the things you have to address as a candidate, and he’s leery of learning on the fly. Two, the performance of Perry shows the dangers of late entry: It’s right in front of him. And while others use that as a reason for him to GET in, for him, it’s the opposite – it’s the reason that validates his decision NOT to get in this late. And the third is that … you sit and look at the map … and the path for Chris Christie [to get more delegates than Romney] is difficult to chart … If he gets in, the first thing he has to do is beat Perry and establish himself as the REAL anti-Romney. And the path to doing that is difficult: Perry’s not going to just drop out.”
For most of the election cycle, the Christie rumors had been treated as something of a childish obsession in the party arising out of the desperation of not having sufficiently “electable” (whatever that means) candidates in the top tier– akin to the bizarre floating around of names like Rep. Paul Ryan and former New York governor George Pataki during the time Perry was still considering a run. As Jon Stewart put it then in a moment of “even broken clocks are right twice a day” brilliance, the candidates were like trendy toys an increasingly impatient mother bought her children, with none meeting the demands of the child (“Before I get you anything, where is your Ron Paul?!” Stewart’s “mother” demanded to a child begging for a “Perry”).
But the Christie phenomenon is something different inasmuch as it has proven not to be ephemeral. For every other “candidate” being tossed into the fray without consent, a short “no, I’m not interested” has been enough to dissuade the mysterious donors that start up these rumors in the first place. It worked for Rep. Ryan and Pataki, and people mostly stopped talking about Mike Huckabee and Donald Trump after they declared the Republican nomination wasn’t for them (though, to be fair, media exhaustion had just as much to do with the latter). Gov. Christie, on the other hand, has to deny the rumors about once a week, finally giving up with the realization that the only possible way to the buzz around his “campaign” would be to kill himself. This may be evidence that he would be a much more formidable candidate in the election, but by promulgating– both publicly and in surreptitious “donor” meetings– the idea that not even the Republican base would vote for the 2012 nominee if he isn’t Chris Christie, the party does itself a disservice. Independents respond to passion more than anything from parties they perceive as jaded, and no one in the past two decades has channeled that passion more efficiently than Barack Obama. As Donald Rumsfeld famously proclaimed, you go to war with the army you have, not the army you want to have, and Republicans need to let go of the idea that loudly griping that their army isn’t good enough is no way to win a political war.
So, no, Christie is probably not even going to bother swatting these rumors down; he’s too busy saving the hospital that birthed yours truly and moonlighting as a campaign strategist to this sixth grader– the job New Jersey taxpayers pay him to do, and the job that he needs to excel in to give these rumors any weight in the first place. And while some candidates with flimsy resumes– yes, we’re looking at you, Herman Cain– think they can waltz into the presidency unprepared while others with actual political experience, but maybe less charisma, get shunned, should these almost certainly false rumors be just that, Christie will only wisely emerge as a more formidable candidate in 2016 or 2020, and for Republicans, it should be well worth the wait.
Diana Nyad begins new attempt at Florida swim
HAVANA (AP) - American endurance swimmer Diana Nyad began her second attempt in as many months to traverse the 103 miles of sea between Cuba and Florida, waving goodbye to well-wishers before jumping feet first into the still water at a Havana marina, then stroking toward the horizon.
The 62-year-old Los Angeles woman hoped to break her own world record for open-water swimming without a shark cage that she set in 1979 when she stroked from the Bahamas to Florida.
Her last attempt at the Cuba-to-Florida crossing failed Aug. 9 due to a crippling asthma attack that forced her gasping from the water after 29 hours.
Nyad insisted that this time around she was ready to brave the choppy seas, schools of jellyfish and limits of human exhaustion to accomplish her lifelong dream.
As darkness fell, about an hour and a half into the swim, Nyad's team sent a Twitter message that she was "going strong."
Just before she set off from Hemingway Marina on Friday evening, assistants smeared grease on her shoulders to prevent chafing during the planned 60-hour journey. She pumped her fists in the air as her support team blew horns and cheered from waiting boats.
"I feel good. I feel very good," Nyad said. "But as you know, it really doesn't matter how I feel right now."
She acknowledged being a little more subdued than the last time she departed from this same marina.
"Not that I was ever cocky, but having been through this now and been so deeply, emotionally disappointed, I don't want to take anything for granted," Nyad said.
"It's not that I don't want to enjoy every moment and savor it, but it doesn't do any good to act like, 'Hey I've got this in the bag, this is going to be easy.'"
Before jumping in, Nyad weighed herself, tipping the scales at 146 pounds. She said she expected to lose about 15 pounds over the course of the journey. Her schedule called for to reach Florida early Monday morning.
She hoped to take advantage of what she called a "magical window" of calm seas and favorable weather forecast to last through the weekend.
Last month after her previous attempt failed, Nyad had vowed there would be no repeat, but she joked earlier Friday that nobody should have believed her.
"Don't listen to athletes when they say it's over," she said.
Nyad likened herself to former boxer Roberto Duran, who retired in 1998 at age 47 only to re-enter the ring a year later.
Nyad denied her problems in the last attempt had anything to do with her age, saying she could have fought through the choppy waves and "excruciating" shoulder pain. But she hadn't anticipated the 11-hour asthma attack that she blamed on a reaction to a medicine she had never used before. She said the asthma had her flailing through the water "like a dying, floundering fish."
Even with those problems, she made it about 50 miles (80 kilometers) into the 103-mile (166-kilometer) haul.
In the ensuing weeks she concluded that the aborted attempt was not so much a failure as a dress rehearsal, an unplanned but necessary part of a training regimen that included a bunch of shorter swims.
"The asthma took me down, but ironically enough, that 29-hour swim was like a very, very expensive training swim," said Nyad, who earlier this year estimated it took a half-million dollars to get her to the first attempt.
"I'm in better shape than before. I'm more prepared than ever," she added.
Without a cage for protection, Nyad is relying on special equipment that surrounds her with an electric current imperceptible to humans but strong enough to keep most sharks at bay. Kayakers also are paddling alongside to gently prod away any that make it through.
For the length of the crossing, Nyad will not be allowed to touch the boat if the record is to count. Nor can her team physically aid her other than to pass her food, medicine, a new swimsuit and so on.
She will try to sustain her energy by eating the likes of peanut butter sandwiches and pasta, and said she sings Beatles, Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin songs in her head to keep her mind occupied, especially during nighttime.
"I never ever — it's the cardinal rule — I never look up because it's very depressing to see the horizon with no lights, no nothing. And I never ask my trainer here in the boat what time it is or, 'Are we almost there yet?'" Nyad said. "They're going to tell me when we're about 10 hours away."
Nyad first tried to cross the Florida Straits as a 28-year-old back in 1978, when she swam inside a steel shark cage for about 42 hours before ending the attempt.
Now 62, after celebrating her birthday Aug. 22, she has said she hopes to inspire people to lead active lives into their golden years. She also has called the swim symbolic for increasing understanding between the United States and Cuba, two nations torn by five decades of animosity and mistrust.
Marina commodore Jose Miguel Diaz Escrich, whom Nyad described as a cherished friend and who helped with logistics in Cuba, presented her with an honorary membership in the nautical club earlier Friday and called the swim a "bridge of friendship" between the countries.
"He who tries has already succeeded," Escrich said in encouragement, quoting Cuban poet and independence hero Jose Marti.
Nyad's team had hoped to attempt the swim in 2010, but was unable to make arrangements in time. This year Cuban officials were very supportive in arranging logistics and news media coverage.
"We're ready for everything that could possibly come our way this time," Nyad said, "and I just can't imagine any ending other than the ending that I want, which is to get all the way across."
"It's a dream a long time coming."
Police Locate Mother of Unattended Toddler Found in South Anchorage
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Anchorage police have located the mother of a toddler found alongside a busy street in South Anchorage.
During an interview with a KTUU photographer Wednesday evening, APD Lt. Dave Parker was approached by a man claiming to be the uncle of the young boy he saw on television. He told Parker he knew where the boy lived, and took him to a home on nearby Ramona St., about two blocks from where the child was found near Old Seward and Hanes Alley.
Police spoke with the toddler's mother, 21 year-old Genesis Senquiz, who told officers she had taken medication and was sleeping when her son managed to unlock the front door and walk out of the house.
"We're so happy that it turned out this way. Our concern was that there might have been some medical issue or something like that," said Parker.
Shortly after 1:15 Wednesday afternoon a police officer was flagged down in the area of Hanes Street and the Old Seward Highway by citizens who saw the boy near the roadway.
The officer knocked on several doors in the neighborhood in an attempt to find his parents, but were unable to.
The boy has been taken in by the Office of Children’s Services and will remain in state custody until OCS completes an investigation to assure child safety, according to APD.
Senquiz was arrested on charges unrelated to the incident. Court records show she had an outstanding warrant for drunk driving as a minor, underage drinking, and no proof of insurance.
During an interview with a KTUU photographer Wednesday evening, APD Lt. Dave Parker was approached by a man claiming to be the uncle of the young boy he saw on television. He told Parker he knew where the boy lived, and took him to a home on nearby Ramona St., about two blocks from where the child was found near Old Seward and Hanes Alley.
Police spoke with the toddler's mother, 21 year-old Genesis Senquiz, who told officers she had taken medication and was sleeping when her son managed to unlock the front door and walk out of the house.
"We're so happy that it turned out this way. Our concern was that there might have been some medical issue or something like that," said Parker.
Shortly after 1:15 Wednesday afternoon a police officer was flagged down in the area of Hanes Street and the Old Seward Highway by citizens who saw the boy near the roadway.
The officer knocked on several doors in the neighborhood in an attempt to find his parents, but were unable to.
The boy has been taken in by the Office of Children’s Services and will remain in state custody until OCS completes an investigation to assure child safety, according to APD.
Senquiz was arrested on charges unrelated to the incident. Court records show she had an outstanding warrant for drunk driving as a minor, underage drinking, and no proof of insurance.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Mr. Sulu Phasers Tim Hardaway
Okay, Jen here. I'm on Safari on a public machine so I can't text up my stuff in purple as ususal--don't see the text color thing here. Anyway, enjoy and comment away.
Monday, January 22, 2007
www.thenewsblog.net
No Drama Queen Bullshit
Unlike some bloggers, who feel oppressed by the act of writing and need to dramatically quit every few months, the simple fact is that we're moving our blog to a new domain, http://www.thenewsblog.net .
Why?
Because the new blogger works better. The old site will be frozen in place as of 5:30 PM January 21, 2007. No more posts or comments will be responded to on this site, except for the previous one.
www.thenewsblog.net is now up and running and is the News Blog's new home.
The End of the News Blog
The Doors - The End - live
The current News Blog is shutting down effective immidiately. The following post will explain why
The current News Blog is shutting down effective immidiately. The following post will explain why
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