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perstown, but the organizations and front-office employees,

in Clan- und Funwars 15.10.2019 08:57
von mary123 | 2.355 Beiträge

HOUSTON -- Houston Texans?coach Bill OBrien downplayed the significance of reports of tension between him and quarterback Brock Osweiler.CBS Sports reported Sunday that OBrien and Osweiler had a heated exchange last week?after a quarterbacks meeting while reviewing film of the Week 5 loss to the Minnesota Vikings after Osweiler had objections to playcalling.OBrien called the report the biggest non-story of the year and said its a side effect of coaching in an intense environment.Anybody thats been around me knows that I really only know one way to go about it, OBrien said Monday. Thats to work very hard and to do it in a very intense environment. I think thats the type of players we have. So when youre coaching ftball and playing ftball, and youre in a competitive environment where everyone is pulling the same rope and everybody is trying to do their very best to win the game, things are going to happen.OBrien tk over the playcalling duties from offensive crdinator George Godsey after the Texans were shut out at New England in Week 2.OBrien said it takes time for a coach and his quarterback to develop a style for working together, and he enjoys working with Osweiler.I think you really have to get to know the quarterback to understand what he likes, what hes comfortable with, and also for that quarterback to understand your style, how you do things, OBrien said. And sometimes that takes awhile.What we know about Brock is that hes a very hardworking guy. A very prepared guy. And we enjoy coaching him. Hes learning, and we just were happy to see him be able to help us win that game [Sunday] night.Osweiler was asked about the report after the Texans 26-23 victory over the Indianapolis Colts?on Sunday, and he said his interactions with OBrien and the rest of the coaching staff are nothing out of the norm.I would say the interactions that have occurred between Coach OBrien and myself, or even Coach Godsey and myself for that matter, are nothing out of the norm, Osweiler said. I think everybody wants to win. Everybody, like I said, is putting in a ton of hours and preparation to win each week, so like I said, theres nothing out of the norm.Theres no story there. We are all just working extremely hard to get wins every single week. I love coming to work every single day. I love working with Coach OBrien, Coach Godsey, and they are terrific ftball coaches. Cheap Hockey Jerseys . Tests earlier this week revealed a Grade 2 left hamstring strain for Sabathia, who was hurt in last Fridays start against San Francisco. Its an injury that will require about eight weeks to heal. He finished a disappointing campaign just 14-13 with a career-worst 4. Hockey Jerseys China . The Brazilian goalkeeper signed a loan deal with the Major League Soccer club on Friday as he lks to get playing time ahead of this summers World Cup in his home country. https://www.fakehockeyjerseys.com/ . He just needed to be his best twisting, turning acrobatic self. "I didnt need to be anybody else, I just needed to be myself and be aggressive," said Burks, who scored a career-high 34 points to spark the Utah Jazz to a 118-103 victory over the Denver Nuggets on Monday night. Fake Hockey Jerseys . The FA rejected Wilsheres appeal that the length of his punishment was "clearly excessive" and said Thursday his suspension begins with immediate effect. He will miss league matches against Chelsea on Monday and West Ham on Dec. Cyber Monday Hockey Jerseys . -- Cam Newton pranced into the end zone, placed his hands over his chest and did his familiar Superman pose. Former Yankees manager Joe Torre had a saying that seemed especially pertinent during the hell and lying of the Steroid Era. He would often tell players who were damaging the game that baseball is something you borrow. Your responsibility is to leave the game in better condition than it was when you entered.On Sunday, a new 16-member group called the Todays Era committee enshrined Bud Selig into the Baseball Hall of Fame, perhaps by deciding that Selig falls on the affirmative side of Torres criteria or perhaps because Seligs induction was always a foregone conclusion to happen while he was alive. To ensure the latter, baseball essentially held a special election, guaranteeing the nearly 83-year-old ex-commissioner and ultimate baseball insider would come up for a vote.But does Selig pass Torres litmus test? In so many ways, Seligs 20-year reign as commissioner resembles the contradictions of the Steroid Era itself. On the night of Sept. 8, 1998, at old Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Selig sat next to Cardinals legend Stan Musial when Mark McGwire hit his 62nd home run. Cubs right fielder Sammy Sosa, McGwires friendly rival that summer, raced from the outfield to hug McGwire as he rounded the bases. Watching the scene, Selig leaned over to Musial and said, This is a renaissance.In retrospect, the moment was grotesque. Baseball doesnt even celebrate it now -- McGwires 70 home runs that year, Sosas 66, or the 73 Barry Bonds would hit three seasons later. The two protagonists of the scene, McGwire and Sosa, are both disgraced -- 1,192 combined home runs, and neither are in the Hall of Fame. In fact, neither has come close: McGwire has never surpassed 23.7 percent of the 75 needed for enshrinement, while Sosas high was 12.5 percent in his first year of 2013 (it dropped to 7 percent last year). Baseball disowned 1998. Those players are radioactive. Selig is immortal.Selig would use the word renaissance often during those years, forcing the question of what kind of renaissance could be defined by a simultaneous financial rise and moral decline. Baseball has become a $10 billion money machine, and yet drugs have undermined it, a sport in which the record bk is central to the game. The greatest players of Seligs time might never take the dais he will assume come July.Under Selig, baseball lost virtually every advantage that gave it its very special power as a national pastime. But there was never any question of his induction, because he succeeded in accomplishing two primary missions -- for him, really, the only two that mattered -- harmony and money. Before Selig, baseball owners did not just fight the players but also each other, cut along the interests of large and small markets. Selig, as an owner of the Milwaukee Brewers, was the consensus builder who worked the phones tirelessly in an attempt to create a kind of unity. He saw harmony through the NFL, where then-commissioner Pete Rozelle was able to bring together disparate financial interests under one umbrella for the gd of the league.Seligs most lasting accomplishment will be the greatest era of stadium building in the history of the sport. From the time he was named interim commissioner in 1992 until his retirement at the end of the 2014 season, 22 new stadiums were built. One team, the Atlanta Braves, broke ground on two. With the exception of San Franciscos, all of the stadiums were built with a majority of public money. In return for their compliance, Bud Selig made his owners and himself enormously wealthy.He also brought one of the games legends back into the fold. As a college student, Selig skipped class to watch the Milwaukee Braves. He was there in 1957, when Hank Aaron hit the 11th inning home run that put the Braves in the World Series for the first time since moving from Boston in 1952, and he and Aaron would become lifelong friends. When Selig tk over as commissioner, Aaron was a disillusioned legend, convinced the game had never respected him or his accomplishments. With Selig as commissioner, a generation of baseball people who saw Aaron as a bitter old man now hadd to face Seligs wrath.dddddddddddd. Today, Aaron is revered as a legend of the sport -- the Hank Aaron Award, given to the best offensive players in each league, bears his name. None of this happens without Seligs support.For these accomplishments, Seligs success is not to be discounted. Equally important, however, is another message Selig sent throughout his tenure, and again Monday during the announcement of his induction -- he is an owner, and the rules of accountability do not apply to the people in power. At the core of baseball has always been a never-ending battle between management and labor, and of this Bud Selig is most reflective.He was a small-market hawk dedicated to curbing the power of the big teams -- most notably the Yankees, the games most legendary franchise -- but for several of his years as commissioner, he earned a higher annual salary than almost every player. He was a primary force in the collusion battles of the 1980s, when owners were found guilty of conspiring to not sign free agents, destroying an already bitter relationship with the union. He was the face of the coup that toppled former commissioner Fay Vincent and led to the disastrous 1994 strike. Seligs response, as acting commissioner, was to cancel the World Series and allow the installation of replacement players -- until future Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor ruled that ownership had not acted in gd faith.The Steroid Era players over whom Selig presided -- McGwire, Sosa, Bonds, Roger Clemens, Rafael Palmeiro -- have been barred from enshrinement. Alex Rodriguez is sn to follow. But Selig responded Monday to the position that he ignored the rising use of steroids in the same manner he has responded for the past decade and a half: by blaming the Players Association and relying on the strength of baseballs current drug-testing policy. This position skirts the truth. Selig did not ignore the steroid threat. Instead, like the union, he actively denied a threat existed. He reacted only when the absurdity of the numbers -- the top six single-season home run records were established between 1998-2001 -- as well as heavy pressure from Congress, the IRS and the Justice Department, exposed the game. Seligs leadership did not force change. The sport simply could not deny the facts any longer.His pronouncement that baseball has the toughest testing program in America does not reconcile with his previous behavior: the steadfast refusal to lk back and investigate the sport. Selig and the league believed it could stiff-arm Congress until the government forced it to be humiliated at the 2005 hearings. Selig believed his vindication would be the 2007 Mitchell Report, but the power of the report was thwarted both by the unions refusal to cperate and by Seligs decision to take care of his friends -- his practice of always trying to tilt the deal in his favor: he appointed George Mitchell, who was on the Red Sox payroll, and his law firm, DLA Piper, which worked with MLB. The result was a powerful document that served more to hammer labor than deliver justice: The players absorbed the public shame and have been kept from Cperstown, but the organizations and front-office employees, also indicted in the document, received no punishment, at Mitchells urging. Somewhere, Selig knows this, and periodically he will say that he should have done more. In reality, there is a union to be blamed, a press, players and a cynical public, and with that is an immutable truth: the industry failed, it has paid a devastating, irreparable price, and Selig was at its head.When applied to Selig, Torres question of whether he left the game better than when he entered will likely live without consensus. The legacy of his enshrinement may very well be the eventual enshrinement of the steroid-tainted players, who so far are the only ones who have paid even a partial price from a ruinous generation of dishonesty that changed the game far for the worse. ' ' '

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