Tag Archives: frustration

Kandi Burruss reveals she’s QUIT Real Housewives Of Atlanta after 14 seasons amid frustration over Bravo’s del – Daily Mail

  1. Kandi Burruss reveals she’s QUIT Real Housewives Of Atlanta after 14 seasons amid frustration over Bravo’s del Daily Mail
  2. Kandi Burruss Says She’s Leaving ‘The Real Housewives of Atlanta’: ‘I’m Going to Take a Break’ Variety
  3. Andy Cohen and Bravolebs React to Kandi Burruss’ RHOA Departure: “One of the Greats” Bravo
  4. RHOA star reveals she’s quitting reality show after 15 years leaving fans ‘crying’ and ‘blin… The US Sun
  5. Kandi Burruss’s Exit Is Death Knell for ‘Real Housewives of Atlanta’ Pajiba Entertainment News

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Conor McGregor nixes December UFC return, expresses frustration – MMA Junkie

  1. Conor McGregor nixes December UFC return, expresses frustration MMA Junkie
  2. Conor McGregor on Potential UFC Return: They’re Not Going to Let Me Fight in December Bleacher Report
  3. Conor McGregor backtracks on UFC 296: ‘It doesn’t look like it’s going to happen’ MMA Fighting
  4. Conor McGregor announces he won’t be fighting this December at UFC 296: “I’m being kept from my livelihood” BJPENN.COM
  5. Conor McGregor denied? ‘They’re not going to let me fight in December’ MMA Mania
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Michael Chandler expresses frustration with Conor McGregor’s USADA situation: ‘Where you at, boy?’ – Yahoo Sports

  1. Michael Chandler expresses frustration with Conor McGregor’s USADA situation: ‘Where you at, boy?’ Yahoo Sports
  2. Conor McGregor, Dillon Danis reunite in new training photos MMA Mania
  3. UFC fans convinced Conor McGregor won’t fight again after latest footage goes viral GIVEMESPORT
  4. Michael Chandler vents frustration over Conor McGregor still not being enrolled in USADA testing: “One hundred and seventy-nine days left” | BJPenn.com BJPENN.COM
  5. Michael Chandler expresses doubt at Conor McGregor fight happening in 2023: ‘Where you at, boy?’ MMA Fighting
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Driver accused of killing Charlotte bride on wedding night expresses remorse, frustration from jail – WSOC Charlotte

  1. Driver accused of killing Charlotte bride on wedding night expresses remorse, frustration from jail WSOC Charlotte
  2. South Carolina suspect in alleged drunken crash that killed bride seeks release on bail: jailhouse calls Fox News
  3. Woman accused of drunk driving that killed bride on wedding night says her ‘life is over’ in jail call Yahoo News
  4. Jamie Lee Komoroski getting special treatment in jail with sheriff’s help after fatal wedding night crash New York Post
  5. South Carolina woman accused of drunken crash that killed bride, gets special treatment in jail: reports Fox News
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Jurgen Klopp voices more frustration with referee, VAR after Liverpool draw vs Aston Villa – The Athletic

  1. Jurgen Klopp voices more frustration with referee, VAR after Liverpool draw vs Aston Villa The Athletic
  2. Liverpool v. Aston Villa | PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS | 5/20/2023 | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. HIGHLIGHTS: Liverpool 1-1 Aston Villa | FIRMINO scores late on emotional farewell Liverpool FC
  4. Unai Emery proud of Aston Villa as European bid goes to Premier League final day The Athletic
  5. Explained: Why Cody Gakpo’s equaliser for Liverpool against Aston Villa was ruled out by VAR – despite the ball coming off Ezri Konsa in the build-up Goal.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Meghan Markle’s Reported Frustration with This ‘Silly’ Part of Royal Life Proves How Similar She Is to Princess Diana – Yahoo Life

  1. Meghan Markle’s Reported Frustration with This ‘Silly’ Part of Royal Life Proves How Similar She Is to Princess Diana Yahoo Life
  2. What Were the ‘Brutal’ Protocols That Meghan Markle Had to Follow Before Becoming a Royal? Netflix Junkie
  3. What “Cruel” Protocols Did Meghan Markle Have To Follow Before Becoming A Member Of The Royal Family? ⋆ Somag News Somag News
  4. Meghan Markle’s Reported Frustration with This ‘Silly’ Part of Royal Life Proves How Similar She Is to Princess Diana SheKnows
  5. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Aaron Judge’s Yankees frustration comes out during free agency

Aaron Judge’s latest honor comes with an ominous warning for the Yankees.

Judge was named the Time Athlete of the Year on Tuesday after he hit an American League record 62 home runs last season for the Yankees. Breaking that record could be the last thing he does in pinstripes.

In the accompanying Time article, Judge offered some rare insight into his free-agency thinking and took a shot at the Yankees for their decision to reveal the details behind their failed extension talks before last season.

Aaron Judge on the cover of Time

Aaron Judge in Time

Before Opening Day and Judge’s deadline to reach a contract extension, GM Brian Cashman held a press conference in which he announced the Yankees had offered Judge a seven-year, $213 million that he turned down.

“We kind of said, ‘Hey, let’s keep this between us,’” Judge said. “I was a little upset that the numbers came out. I understand it’s a negotiation tactic. Put pressure on me. Turn the fans against me, turn the media on me. That part of it I didn’t like.”

Aaron Judge and wife Samantha Bracksieck at the Buccaneers game on Dec. 5, 2022.
Getty Images

The comments come as the winter meetings are in full swing and a potential Judge signing happening any day now. The Giants have long been seen as the top threat to the Yankees to sign away the northern California native. It would be something that Judge predicted in 2010, his wife Samantha Bracksieck reminded him.

“I said, in 10 years, I’ll be married to Sam and playing for the San Francisco Giants.” Judge said. “I was like, that’d better not get out.”

It’s out now and it has to give Yankees fans a queasy feeling about their chances of re-signing the 30-year-old. Cashman said at the winter meetings on Monday the Yankees had made several offers to Judge, but he had no insight as to if they were the favorites to re-sign him.

Aaron Judge on Oct. 22, 2022.
Getty Images
Aaron Judge hits his 62nd home run
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“When I was young and getting into the game, all guys ever talked about was, ‘Hey, wait until you become a free agent,’” Judge told the magazine. “You’re getting a chance to make your own decision, start a legacy somewhere, start something new somewhere. I’m looking forward to the whole process, man. It’s going to be special.”

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Frustration for Uruguay in stodgy goalless draw against South Korea | World Cup 2022

There appear to be three sorts of games at this World Cup. There are the games in which the stronger team batters the weaker team (Spain, England, France). There are the shocks, in which the stronger team is undone by an opponent that is slightly better than it has anticipated (Saudi Arabia, Japan), and there are the evenly matched games in which nothing much happens (the others). With just one shot on target (plus two that hit the post), this was very much in the third category.

The temptation is to come up with a tenuous grand theory as to why this should be. There is barely any data but, still, let’s indulge ourselves. Could it be that all three types of game are the result of the lack of preparation time, four weeks compressed into four days? Some sides, having played in continental competition last year and comfortable with how they intend to play, are still in rhythm from their domestic seasons and so hit their stride immediately.

Others could have done with more time to fine-tune, to try to generate something approximating to the cohesive styles that now predominate at club level. Aware of their shortcomings they become naturally more risk-averse, defensive structures being far easier to assemble than the attacking systems that can overcome them, and the result is stodginess. And this was extremely stodgy – or, as the South Korea coach, Paulo Bento, put it, “a very competitive game with a very high level of play between two teams that respected each other”.

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This is a World Cup like no other. For the last 12 years the Guardian has been reporting on the issues surrounding Qatar 2022, from corruption and human rights abuses to the treatment of migrant workers and discriminatory laws. The best of our journalism is gathered on our dedicated Qatar: Beyond the Football home page for those who want to go deeper into the issues beyond the pitch.

Guardian reporting goes far beyond what happens on the pitch. Support our investigative journalism today.

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One of the nicest things about World Cups is meeting old friends. Usually that means journalists, or Belgium, but Uruguay have a pleasing array of familiar faces so that watching them is like idly turning on a random snooker tournament in the middle of the afternoon and finding that Jimmy White is still gamely taking on John Higgins. There was Luis Suárez, scuffling around up front, a magnificent irritant – although, given he managed just 14 touches, perhaps neither so magnificent nor so irritating as he used to be. There, coming off the bench were the flared cheekbones of Edinson Cavani. And there, at the heart of the defence, gnarled, implacable, half as old as time, was Diego Godín. He even headed against the base of the post three minutes before half-time for old time’s sake.

Matías Viña’s athletic attempt to score fails against South Korea’s Kim Seung-gyu. Photograph: Alessandra Tarantino/AP

There was also Martín Cáceres still chugging up and down with his man-bun. Of the Uruguay back four, it was he who had the most work to do, with Na Sang-ho probably South Korea’s greatest threat. It was from the FC Seoul forward’s low cross that Hwang Ui-jo fired over after 34 minutes. The right-back Kim Moon-hwan sank to his knees in despair which, given there was at least an hour still to play, seemed an overreaction – but perhaps he knew just how few chances there would be.

And Uruguay play in a pleasingly unchanging way. Football may always be developing. We may now live in a world of high lines and low blocks, of half-spaces and transitions. But Uruguay, for all the talk of the revolution wrought by former coach Óscar Tabárez, remain steadfast, always defending – even if there was a slightly distressing moment early in the second half as Rodrigo Bentancur, a product of Tabárez’s holistic approach to youth development, performed a figure-of-eight pirouette to extricate the ball from trouble just outside his own box.

Sometimes it is beautiful, as when José María Giménez dispossessed Son Heung-min with a delicious sliding tackle five minutes into the second half. But mostly it is just slightly frustrating: why, when they have such talent in the side, are they seemingly so reluctant to use it?

“We wanted to match their level of aggression,” said Bento. “We managed to do so during the first half.” At the Asian Cup in 2019, the criticism of South Korea was that they dominated the ball and did little with it. The first half here seemed to be following that pattern, but Uruguay gradually began to assert themselves as the game went on. “We couldn’t put pressure on Korea and lost precision,” said the Uruguay coach, Diego Alonso. “We had to change at half-time and were able to defend higher.”

But they did not assert themselves enough to win the match, or really to cause much of a threat, at least until Federico Valverde pinged a 25-yarder against the post in the 89th minute. Avoiding defeat, perhaps, is the most important thing in the opener in the group, but this was a game in which it felt both sides would happily have shaken hands on a draw at half-time.

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Aaron Rodgers admits frustration with Matt LaFleur’s play calling at end of regulation

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The Packers ended up beating the Cowboys in overtime, but Aaron Rodgers thought they had a chance to get it done in regulation. Instead, with 1:38 remaining in the fourth quarter, coach Matt LaFleur called for two running plays and then, after a third-down incompletion, the Packers punted.

The Packers quarterback was caught on camera giving LaFleur an earful as he left the field.

Rodgers admitted afterward he was frustrated at LaFleur’s decision to play for overtime.

“Just every single play call, probably,” Rodgers said of the source of his frustration, via a postgame transcript from the team. “I felt like we were like 30 yards from ending the game in regulation, and also felt like it was two minutes, so I was going to be calling those, and I was in a pretty good rhythm. Obviously, I didn’t have a ton of attempts, but felt like I was in a pretty good rhythm. I felt like I threw the ball just about exactly where I wanted to, so I wanted a chance to go win the game.”

The Packers punted with 22 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, lost the overtime coin toss but stopped the Cowboys on downs in overtime and won it with a field goal. The Cowboys, who led 28-14 in the fourth quarter, had been 195-0 in franchise history when leading by 14 points after three quarters.

LaFleur calling the end-of-regulation play calling “indecision” on his part, knowing the Cowboys had three timeouts remaining if the Packers had to punt with too much time remaining.

“It didn’t work out, at least in that moment, but it did work out obviously for us to be able to come out on top,” LaFleur said. “A lot of times when we get in those situations, we give Aaron a ton of freedom to kind of run the show. I’d say typically, he does such a great job with it. So, hindsight is 20/20, but that was on me, totally.”

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Packers’ Aaron Rodgers expresses frustration toward Matt LaFleur after questionable late-game play call

The Packers gutted out a much-needed win against Dallas Cowboys as the 31-28 overtime victory snapped the club’s five-game losing skid. While Aaron Rodgers was able to help move the offense down the field to set up the game-winning field goal in overtime, this win didn’t come without the quarterback briefly butting heads with coach Matt LaFleur.

With less than two minutes left to go in regulation, the Packers defense was able to force a three-and-out by the Cowboys and gave their offense the ball back at their own 33-yard line with a chance to win the game. After two running plays brought them to a third-and-1 situation at their 42-yard line, Green Bay called a timeout and LaFleur proceeded to call a pass play, which fell incomplete. 

After that play, Rodgers was seen expressing his frustration to LaFleur about his decision to pass the football instead of running it. Had they kept the ball on the ground, they likely would have had a better chance of not only moving the chains but it wouldn’t have stopped the clock giving Dallas time to possibly go down the field and win it for themselves. 

“I felt like we were about 30 yards from ending the game in regulation,” Rodgers said after the game, via PackersNews.com, “and also felt like it was 2-minute, so I was going to be calling those. And I was in a pretty good rhythm. Obviously, didn’t have a ton of attempts tonight, but I felt like I was in a pretty good rhythm. I felt like I threw the ball just about exactly where I wanted to tonight, and I wanted a chance to go win the game.”

While Rodgers’ displeasure with that play call was evident in that clip, he and LaFleur were seen working on play calls together on the sideline immediately after and it didn’t seem like either held too much of a grudge whatsoever. 

“They had three timeouts, and I knew we needed like 30-some-odd-yards to potentially get into field-goal range,” LaFleur said. “So we were calling these run-pass cans, and if we got the look for the pass, we were going to call the pass. We ran it on first down and then ran it on second down, and then on third down they played it well. We tried to take a shot play again, another run-pass can, and it didn’t work out – at least in that moment. But it did work out, obviously, for us to come out on top.

“A lot of times when we get in those situations, we give Aaron the freedom to run the show. And I’d say typically, he does such a great job with it. So, you know, hindsight is 20-20, but that was on me totally.The decision also didn’t prove fatal either as the Cowboys were only able to travel 19 yards on that ensuring possession before the end of regulation. 

In overtime, the Green Bay defense stopped the Dallas offense after Mike McCarthy made a questionable decision himself by opting to keep his offense on the field and go for it on a fourth-and-3 try from the Packers’ 35-yard line. Dak Prescott’s pass fell incomplete, the Packers gained possession and Rodgers led the offense 55 yards down the field to set up Mason Crosby’s game-winning field goal. 

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