In March, the San Diego Chargers traded CB Antonio Cromartie to the New York Jets for a 3rd round draft pick. That 3rd round draft pick can become a 2nd round draft pick if the Jets move on to the next round in the playoffs. The Jets will head to Indianapolis to face the Colts on Saturday at 5pm (ET). What a dilemma!! So, do we root for Rex Ryan, Antonio Cromartie, Ladainian Tomlinson and the cocky Jets that kicked us out the playoffs last season? OR do we root for the Manning family with Peyton leading the Indianapolis Colts? [...]
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Tag Archives: only
The Thursday Challenge: There Can Be Only One! Edition
The French actor plays the Scottish character and the Scottish actor plays the Egyptian/Spanish character?
I have only one question for you this week, and you will find it after the jump…This is one of those questions that will either be very hard, or very easy. Either way, you’ll be able to get back to gorging yourself in short order!
The question is this: One football club is often credited with being the first football club of any kind outside of the United Kingdom and the club responsible for introducing elements of what would become both gridiron and “proper” football to the U.S.- what was the name of this club, and when and where did it exist?
That’s it.
Enjoy yourselves today. As I said to some of you in another “venue” earlier this week, how about we’re all nice to each other for a change? Couldn’t hurt, could it?
As always, no answers in the comments section, send them to us at avoidingthedrop@gmail.com before midnight next Tuesday.
Good luck.
Last Call: Only Turkeys Have Left Wings
Ahoy ahoy friends. Tomorrow is Thanksgiving, or as Frank Lampard calls it “why wasn’t I born American? day.” While the focus tomorrow may be on the American version of football — I dare someone to find a soccer player with more effeminate hair than Tommy Brady, by the way — there is still the other kind about. People lucky enough to have today off will no doubt have been thrilled to watch Champions League action, or I assume as much because I’m writing this at nine in the morning. Tonight we have some Copa Sudamericana action with Palmeiras taking on Goias, and tomorrow we have a slate of Copa Italia games with the highlight for me being high flying Lazio (remember Mauro Zarate?) taking on Serie B’s Albinoleffe. Is this the highlight because they have “albino” in their name?
But overall the nighttime schedule tonight is a bit light on intrigue and unless you’re big into English Conference play tomorrow does belong to the NFL and genetically engineered birds from hell, so talk amongst yourselves tonight about whatever strikes your fancy, maybe about how people who complain about Christmas music before Thanksgiving ignore the fact that there isn’t any damn Thanksgiving music for stores to play so shuttup. Tomorrow, if you’re a Spurs supporter, pop in your favorite Milk Cup DVD and settle in with a nice pint of virgin-eggnog. Everyone else enjoy the time off with your friends and family, be safe, and for the love of God if you’re frying a turkey know what you’re doing.
The only thing that’s been great about Cutler has been the misery
If only the Bears would run the ball the way they run their mouths
FIFA Addresses Corruption As Only FIFA Can

FIFA’s ethics committee addressed the recent vote-selling scandal publicly yesterday, announcing that the two executive members caught on tape by The Sunday Times offering to sell their votes, Amos Adamu of Nigeria and Reynald Temarii of Tahiti, are provisionally suspended pending a further investigation. A final hearing will take place next month.
“The decision to provisionally suspend these officials is fully justified and should not be put in question. The evidence that has been presented to us today has led us to take this provisional measure, as we considered that the conditions were definitely met to take this decision and we deem that it is crucial to protect the integrity of the 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cup bidding process. We are determined to have zero tolerance for any breach of the Code of Ethics,” said the chairman of the Ethics Committee, Claudio Sulser.
The press conference to announce the suspensions started over ninety minutes late and raised more questions than it answered; none of the FIFA officials involved would explain how the voting procedure for the World Cup bids, set to take place just a few weeks after the final hearings for Adamu and Temarii, would change if at all. A delay in the vote was generally dismissed as unlikely.
Keeping the focus on the allegations surrounding Adamu and Temarii, FIFA vice president Jérôme Valcke and his cohorts also stonewalled on the rumored investigation of two bidding nations for collusion; in the aftermath of yesterday’s proceedings, word has leaked that the bids in question are Spain/Portugal, bidding for 2018, and Qatar, a bidder for 2022. The possibility that the latter could be kicked out of the running for 2022 would be a boon to the American bid, which dropped it’s 2018 aspirations last week.
Vote-trading is specifically prohibited by FIFA’s regulations; any expectation that bidders would not trade votes or cooperate to improve their respective chances seemed naive, but nations were explicitly warned about vote-trading by Valcke just a month ago.
By holding the bidding for two World Cup at the same time, FIFA created a situation where vote-trading was inevitable. Again maintaining that questions should pertain only to the cases of Adamu and Temarii, Sulser and Valcke would not concede that the dual-bid process was a mistake.
To close to show, FIFA president Sepp Blatter addressed the perception that FIFA is corrupt.
“I was a little bit surprised that you say is FIFA corrupt? FIFA is actually in the world of sport a well-recognised organisation and institution and if there are some activities that are against the ethics and the morals that’s why the ethics committee came in.”
“Our society is full of devils and these devils, you find them in football. We have to fight for fair play, we have to fight for respect and especially we have to fight that the people in charge of FIFA behave as they should do and if this is not the case then we have to intervene.”
Blatter’s humorous incredulity and seeming hypocrisy aside, the important thing from an American perspective is the relative health of the US bid. FIFA’s secret ballot system, suddenly complicated by the possibility that there will be two less voters than expected, does not allow for much confidence. Despite everything the American bid has going for it – including infrastructure, potential revenue, a glut of large stadiums, etc. – bid leaders are still unsure where they stand. The corruption scandal has only touched the US because The Sunday Times reporters chose to pose as American; the idea that US-based businessman were believable as bribers, and therefore that the bid took a perception hit, is a trifling concern. In light of Spain/Portugal and Qatar falling under suspicion, the Americans suddenly look like upstanding citizens.
Better yet, there now appears to be no reason for the Americans to speak out on the corruption scandal and declare their innocence. Had they chosen to do so prior to revelations that Spain/Portugal and Qatar were under investigation (provided the reports are accurate), they may have given off a guilty image. If the bid is clean, or its leaders were at all unsure if the US was one of the two nations in question, protesting might have done more harm than good. Though still unclear on its chances, the bid is free to head down the stretch with the goal in sight.
The controversy might also benefit the US bid, in that the voting process should be as on the up-and-up as it could possibly be; voters way of running afoul of the ethics committee will be on their best behavior. Collusion could be eliminated, or minimized, giving the strong US bid the upper hand simply because it’s the best of the 2022 bunch.
Logic and merit have rarely mattered in the halls of FIFA. They may still have little sway in the future, but the scandals erupting around the 2018 and 2022 bidding competitions give them a chance of relevance. If merit does matter, the US bid stands a very good chance.
But this being FIFA, there’s a very good chance there’s more where all of this came from.
Only English in Lino Lakes please, but not “English-only”
George Orwell is LOLing in his grave.
The man who authored the new ordinance in Lino Lakes restricting the list of languages the city government could use to communicate with citizens t…
The Blotter

