Tag Archives: Terry

Cody Rhodes pays homage to Terry Funk: SmackDown highlights, Aug. 25, 2023 – WWE

  1. Cody Rhodes pays homage to Terry Funk: SmackDown highlights, Aug. 25, 2023 WWE
  2. WWE veteran pays moving tribute to Terry Funk – “He was always an older brother to me” (Exclusive) Sportskeeda
  3. WWE celebrates the legendary career of Terry Funk: SmackDown highlights, Aug. 25, 2023 WWE
  4. “I Loved Him… R.I.P”: Fans Join Sylvester Stallone in Mourning Saddening Demise of WWE HoFer Co-Star – EssentiallySports EssentiallySports
  5. “I know they had to rewrite Cody’s” – Veteran on WWE changing SmackDown script after Bray Wyatt’s death (Exclusive) Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Emoni Bates: Can former Prep Phenom recreate himself with Cavs? – Terry Pluto Scribbles – cleveland.com

  1. Emoni Bates: Can former Prep Phenom recreate himself with Cavs? – Terry Pluto Scribbles cleveland.com
  2. From can’t-miss to the second round: Emoni Bates has another chance to prove he is special Yahoo Sports
  3. Emoni Bates and Donovan Mitchell exchange hyped messages after Cavs draft youngster Cavaliers Nation
  4. ‘100% promise y’all won’t regret it’ – Emoni Bates, and 2 Cleveland pro athletes, react to Cavs drafting him cleveland.com
  5. 3 things to know about Cleveland Cavaliers’ 2023 draft pick Emoni Bates WKYC.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Gwyneth Paltrow trial – live: Goop mogul owes Terry Sanderson $3.2m for charm lost in ski crash, lawyers claim – The Independent

  1. Gwyneth Paltrow trial – live: Goop mogul owes Terry Sanderson $3.2m for charm lost in ski crash, lawyers claim The Independent
  2. Gwyneth Paltrow’s defense leans on experts in ski trial KSL.com
  3. OJ Simpson throws weight behind Gwyneth Paltrow in her 2016 ski crash trial: ‘I had two smashes with same woman on those slopes’ msnNOW
  4. Dropping Paltrow lawsuit would provide ‘cure’ for plaintiff, court told Yahoo Canada
  5. What the newly uncovered group chat in the Gwyneth Paltrow ski collision trial reveals The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Terry Hall: lead singer of the Specials dies aged 63 | Terry Hall

Terry Hall, the lead singer of the Specials and a former member of Fun Boy Three and the Colourfield, has died aged 63, his bandmates in the Specials have confirmed.

“It is with great sadness that we announce the passing, following a brief illness, of Terry, our beautiful friend, brother and one of the most brilliant singers, songwriters and lyricists this country has ever produced,” the band tweeted.

“Terry was a wonderful husband and father and one of the kindest, funniest, and most genuine of souls. His music and his performances encapsulated the very essence of life… the joy, the pain, the humour, the fight for justice, but mostly the love.”

The band asked for respect for Hall’s family’s privacy.

Neville Staple, Hall’s bandmate in the Specials and Fun Boy Three, said he was “deeply saddened” by the news.

“We knew Terry had been unwell but didn’t realise how serious until recently,” he wrote. “We had only just confirmed some 2023 joint music agreements together. This has hit me hard and must be extremely difficult for Terry’s wife and family.”

Hall joined the first incarnation of the Specials – then called the Automatics – shortly after the Coventry band formed in 1977, replacing vocalist Tim Strickland. After a stint as the Coventry Automatics, they became Special AKA, known as the Specials. The pioneering 2 Tone band rose thanks to the support of Joe Strummer, who invited them to support the Clash live, and of BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel.

They released their debut single, Gangsters (a reworking of Prince Buster’s Al Capone) in 1979, which reached No 6 in the UK singles chart. They would dominate the Top 10 over the next two years, peaking with their second No 1 single, and calling card, Ghost Town, in 1981. The lyrics, written by the band’s main songwriter, Jerry Dammers, dealt with Britain’s urban decay, unemployment and disfranchised youth.

Its popularity peaked in early summer 1981 as riots between young Black people and police were erupting across the UK in response to racist discrimination and the use of stop-and-search tactics. It remained at No 1 for three weeks, spending 10 weeks in the Top 40, and is widely considered one of the greatest pop records of all time. “It sits in the past, brooding and glowering at us, its remarkable, dark power undimmed,” Guardian critic Alexis Petridis wrote in 2020.

The Specials: Ghost Town – video

Among those to pay tribute on Tuesday was musician Billy Bragg. “The Specials were a celebration of how British culture was envigorated by Caribbean immigration but the onstage demenour of their lead singer was a reminder that they were in the serious business of challenging our perception of who we were in the late 1970s,” he tweeted.

The Specials were a celebration of how British culture was envigorated by Caribbean immigration but the onstage demenour of their lead singer was a reminder that they were in the serious business of challenging our perception of who we were in the late 1970s. RIP Terry Hall pic.twitter.com/PVwbXyXubq

— Billy Bragg (@billybragg) December 19, 2022

n”,”url”:”https://twitter.com/billybragg/status/1604989343218929664″,”id”:”1604989343218929664″,”hasMedia”:false,”role”:”inline”,”isThirdPartyTracking”:false,”source”:”Twitter”,”elementId”:”0d4dea45-7f40-4e7a-8126-a60e7e46f28c”}}”>

The Specials were a celebration of how British culture was envigorated by Caribbean immigration but the onstage demenour of their lead singer was a reminder that they were in the serious business of challenging our perception of who we were in the late 1970s. RIP Terry Hall pic.twitter.com/PVwbXyXubq

— Billy Bragg (@billybragg) December 19, 2022

Jane Wiedlin of the Go-Go’s and Hall’s former partner wrote that she was “gutted”. “He was a lovely, sensitive, talented and unique person. Our extremely brief romance resulted in the song Our Lips Are Sealed, which will forever tie us together in music history. Terrible news to hear this,” she tweeted.

Squeeze’s Chris Difford called Hall “a man of few words verbally but so many great words in song. I always admired and envied his sweep of the pen”, while Rowetta remembered him as “one of the greatest frontmen from one of the greatest bands. And a gorgeous, kind, down to earth man.” Badly Drawn Boy called him “a musical hero”, while Sleaford Mods said Hall was “King of the Suedeheads. A big man. Hope you find peace now mate.” Boy George tweeted that he was “very sad”, adding: “Absolutely loved him as an artist. Sad day!”

Hall was born in Coventry on 19 March 1959 to a family who predominantly worked in the car industry. He was an academically gifted child and also a noted footballer who was invited to try out for West Bromwich Albion – an opportunity his parents declined based on the inconvenience of travelling across the Midlands. After he sailed through the 11-plus exam, his parents also declined his place at a nearby grammar school.

“All of a sudden they were expected to buy books and a school uniform,” he told Fantastic Man. “I’d just been walking to school dressed in my football kit. So there’s always been a bit of that kicking around in the back of my mind. Not being educated. Wondering what would have happened if I’d gone.”

In 2019, Hall told the comedian Richard Herring that aged 12 he was abducted by a paedophile ring in France, an incident he had previously touched on in the 1983 Fun Boy Three single Well Fancy That!, which blamed a teacher for the ordeal: “You took me to France on the promise of teaching me French,” he sang.

Hall “kept it hidden” and didn’t tell his parents. “They both worked in factories. They got paid in cash. Me dad was a heavy drinker. They had their own lives, you know?”

It resulted in Hall being medicated throughout his teenage years and living with depression and manic depression. “I was on Valium when I was 13 and it took me out of life for six months,” he told the Big Issue.

He dropped out of education at the age of 14 and felt pushed towards non-conformism. “I can laugh about it now but it sort of switched something in my head, and it’s like I don’t have to do that, and that’s when I started not listening to anyone.”

Pioneering … The Specials. Photograph: John Rodgers/Redferns

His political awakening came in his teenage years “when I discovered that working men’s clubs had a colour bar on their doors. You could only get in if you were white. That really shook me. I couldn’t work it out.”

After working as a bricklayer, among other jobs, he joined his first band, the punk outfit Squad, inspired by the Clash and the Sex Pistols. His older sister, and guiding influence, Teresa introduced him to Trojan Records, while it was David Bowie’s 1975 album Young Americans that pushed Hall towards becoming a singer, he told the Guardian in 2009. “I come from a gypsy-spirited family, and everyone used to sing in pubs whether you liked it or not. I didn’t want to be that sort of singer. Then when I was 16 this album gave me a look, a sound, and a way of holding yourself. Apparently all his clothes were from WalMart at this time. He put a blond streak in his hair and we would do the same.”

Then came the Specials. The band released their self-titled debut album in October 1979 and received mass acclaim for blending a punk sensibility – and sharp lyrics about the degradation of modern Britain – with the traditional Jamaican ska sound, even explicitly updating hits by the likes of Toots and the Maytals, Prince Buster and Dandy Livingstone.

Today the album is widely considered a landmark recording: it ranked at No 42 in Pitchfork’s list of the best albums of the 1970s, and No 260 on the NME’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, published in 2013. The band released a second, even darker album, More Specials, in 1980.

The multiracial group were active in the Rock Against Racism movement, played benefit concerts for anti-racist and anti-nuclear organisations, and also supported the 1978 Right to Work march protesting unemployment. “Our government leaders aren’t interested in knowing the way people feel,” Hall told the New York Times. “If they were, they’d just resign, because they aren’t helping anybody. The kids can’t go to the prime minister and say, look, ‘We are unemployed, what are you going to do to help us?’ There’s no way they can approach people like that. So they express themselves by smashing things up.’’

After the success of Ghost Town in 1981, the band split bitterly that July. “It felt like the perfect moment to stop the Specials part one,” Hall said. “We’d gone from seven kids in the back of a van to being presented with gold discs and I never felt massively comfortable with that.

Chart success … Fun Boy Three in 1983. Photograph: Steve Rapport/Getty Images

Hall formed Fun Boy Three with his Specials bandmates Staple and Lynval Golding. They also enjoyed chart success for several years, collaborating twice with girl band Bananarama, on It Ain’t What You Do (It’s the Way That You Do It) and Really Saying Something. Hall would also land a Top 10 single with Our Lips Are Sealed, a song he co-wrote with US indie star – and then romantic partner – Jane Wiedlin for her band the Go-Go’s.

Hall would form another band, the Colourfield, in 1984, which had a hit with Thinking of You. He became a frequent collaborator over subsequent decades, working with the likes of the Lightning Seeds’ Ian Broudie, US actress Blair Booth, Toots and the Maytals, Lily Allen, Blur’s Damon Albarn – and later with his band Gorillaz – and Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart with whom he formed a duo known as Vegas in 1992.

Hall wasn’t part of a Specials reunion, the Specials Mk 2, which lasted from 1993 to 1998. He released his debut solo album in 1994, Home, produced by Broudie; a follow-up, Laugh, came in 1997.

In 2008, inspired by the Pixies’ reunion in 2004, Hall announced that he would be reforming the Specials for a tour and new music, albeit without founding member Jerry Dammers, who claimed he had been forced out. “The Specials was this big hole which took up four years of my life,” Hall told the Telegraph. “More than anything, I really wanted to see these people again.”

They embarked on a 30th anniversary tour in 2009 and performed at the 2012 London Olympics closing concert, but faced the death of drummer John Bradbury, and the departure of vocalist Staple and guitarist Roddy Radiation over the next few years.

The band would find themselves in the news again in 2017, when 18-year-old Birmingham woman Saffiyah Khan was photographed facing off with protesters at an EDL march while wearing a Specials T-shirt. “It felt like a vindication of everything the band had set out to do,” Hall said.

In 2019, they released a new album, Encore, which featured Khan performing on a new song, 10 Commandments. It charted at No 1 in the UK albums chart – their highest-ever album placing. “Achieving a first No 1 album in our 60s restored our faith in humanity,” Hall told the Quietus.

Hall was still struggling with his mental health, he admitted around this time. In 2003, he had begun self-medicating with alcohol. In the last decade of his life, he sought medication, having been wary of it since being put on Valium as a teenager, as well as taking up art therapy.

“It got to a point where I didn’t have a choice – and it’s done me so much good,” he said. “Talking about mental health problems is a conscious decision. It’s something I want to share with people.”

Hall is survived by his wife, director Lindy Heymann. They had one son; Hall has two older sons with his ex-wife, Jeanette Hall.

In 2019, Hall told Uncut magazine that he had been enjoying his 60s, an age he had aspired to since being a 27-year-old fan of musical lifers Andy Williams, Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra. “I feel blessed to have reached that stage,” he said. “A lot of people think that 60 is part of the downward spiral, which it is if you allow it to be, but you can fight it and say, no it isn’t – it’s just part of this story.”



Read original article here

Terry McLaurin stars in homecoming as Commanders rally past Colts

Comment

INDIANAPOLIS — Just before the Washington Commanders’ final drive Sunday, when they trailed the Indianapolis Colts by six with less than three minutes to go, a group of Terry McLaurin’s closest friends made their way from Section 118 at Lucas Oil Stadium down to the first row behind the team bench.

Grant Prather, 26, took the initiative and yelled to McLaurin from the stands.

“He was telling me, ‘Yo, got to go make the play to win the game!’ ” McLaurin recalled after the Commanders’ 17-16 victory. “Your family and your friends think you’re going to make every single play and you’re just going to run off into the sunset. You just don’t know how it’s going to come up.”

But Prather did — because he had seen it many times at this stadium, dating as far back as McLaurin’s middle school days.

“There was no doubt in my mind,” Prather said. “… This is just what he does.”

McLaurin’s wide receivers coach, Drew Terrell, knew how it would end, too. He saw it just last weekend against the Green Bay Packers.

“Hell, yeah,” Terrell said. “When I saw him turn and run, I looked back at [quarterback Taylor Heinicke] to see if Taylor was looking at him. When I saw that he was throwing it up, I was like, ‘Oh, yeah — game over.’ ”

And of course McLaurin’s quarterback knew. As he turned away from his intended target, Heinicke found McLaurin making a beeline to the end zone and thought, “Hey, let’s give him another shot.”

With 41 seconds remaining, McLaurin put a double move on two-time all-pro cornerback Stephon Gilmore by running upfield, turning and stopping in the flat, then turning back to the end zone as Heinicke lobbed a pass his way. With Gilmore clinging to his shoulder, McLaurin held on to the ball as he tumbled to the turf at the 1-yard line for a 33-yard gain, setting up a quick touchdown run by Heinicke to win it.

McLaurin stormed off the field after his catch, yelling: “This is my city! This is my f—ing city!”

Buckner: Taylor Heinicke gives an unstable franchise a small taste of stability

The Indianapolis native who grew up a Colts fan and idolized Hall of Fame wide receiver Marvin Harrison couldn’t have scripted a better homecoming. McLaurin’s Cathedral High teams won four state championships at Lucas Oil Stadium, he won two Big Ten titles with Ohio State there, and in his first game home as a pro, McLaurin came away as the star and savior of the Commanders’ victory, which extended their winning streak to three games.

Now 4-4, Washington is squarely in the hunt for an NFC wild-card spot — and it largely has McLaurin to thank. He had six catches for 113 yards Sunday and has been the difference-maker in consecutive weeks, proving Washington right in its decision to hand him more than $70 million on a contract extension over the summer.

His feat Sunday was shared by more 70 friends and family members who saw a performance that reinforced their years-long assessment. Among that group was Prather and six others who have been part of McLaurin’s rise since elementary school and were with him again in the bowels of Lucas Oil Stadium to celebrate his victory.

What they didn’t know was McLaurin was a decoy on the play.

“We were really trying to pry a hole open for the number two guy,” Heinicke explained. “I wasn’t comfortable throwing to the number two guy because I couldn’t see clearly. He might’ve been open. Maybe not. I don’t know.”

The play turned into a scramble drill, and when he turned left, Heinicke saw McLaurin sprint past Gilmore to the end zone.

“Terry wasn’t going to be denied,” Coach Ron Rivera said.

“Terry’s that dude,” Heinicke said. “He’s got that dog in him, and I want to continue to give him opportunities to make big plays.”

The play was another chapter in McLaurin’s storied career in Indianapolis — and the most memorable moment in an otherwise sloppy win that turned inspiring in the final minutes.

“I had a lot of confidence I was going to come down with that ball,” McLaurin said. “… It’s kind of cool to be able to make that kind of play when earlier in my career, in college and stuff, I struggled with contested catches.”

Analysis from Sunday’s win

Nothing ever comes easy for these Commanders — not even a should-win game against a Colts team featuring a quarterback who had never thrown an NFL pass. Not even when that lowly Colts team all but handed them gifts.

The Commanders were ahead 7-3 in the second quarter when the Colts (3-4-1), led by 2021 sixth-round draft pick Sam Ehlinger, ran the ball six consecutive times. The Colts made it all the way to the Washington 13-yard line before Ehlinger dropped the ball on a scramble. Washington recovered the fumble, only to burn a pair of timeouts before Heinicke threw a near-interception.

On one side, the Colts had offered an indictment of their young quarterback with a just-run-the-ball-and-don’t-screw-up game plan. On the other, Washington’s defense had been gashed, and its quarterback was seemingly out of control.

But messy is the Washington way — especially with Heinicke, who finished 23 for 31 for 279 yards, one touchdown and one interception for a 98.7 passer rating. As a locker-room favorite, he almost instantly provided a boost to the Commanders’ lagging offense in a Week 7 home win against the Packers while filling in for the injured Carson Wentz. And in spurts Sunday, that magic was there.

After connecting with McLaurin for a 42-yard catch-and-run out of the slot, Heinicke found running back Antonio Gibson for a nine-yard touchdown pass and a 7-3 lead early in the second quarter. But any momentum that drive created quickly fizzled.

The defense, playing without linebacker Cole Holcomb (foot sprain), tried to compensate by using more five-man fronts that it paired with its big nickel package (three safeties and two cornerbacks) on the back end. But the Colts and their 30th-ranked rushing attack made light work of the Commanders in the first half, collecting 92 yards for an average of 6.6 per carry. Only a pair of turnovers in the red zone spared the Commanders more significant damage.

After that Ehlinger fumble late in the second quarter, running back Jonathan Taylor fumbled deep in Washington territory late in the third. Second-year safety Darrick Forrest knocked the ball out of Taylor’s grasp while tackling him, and defensive end Casey Toohill recovered.

But Washington squandered the gift. The offense went three-and-out after Heinicke was sacked on third down. The Colts ripped off a couple of big plays before safety Kam Curl stopped them short of the goal line and Jamin Davis followed with a run stuff to force Indianapolis to settle for a field goal.

That was enough for the Colts to claim a 9-7 lead. The Commanders had plenty of time to bounce back, but they didn’t take the easy route.

On the first play of the next possession, Heinicke, under heavy pressure from defensive end Tyquan Lewis, launched a pass up the middle, where wide receiver Cam Sims was surrounded by three Colts. Linebacker Shaquille Leonard picked off the pass, and roughly a minute later, the Colts were in the end zone on a six-yard touchdown run by Nyheim Hines that expanded their lead to 16-7.

A week after looking somewhat efficient, the Commanders struggled with issues on both sides of the ball. The defense failed to eliminate big plays, allowing four of 25 yards or more. The offense struggled to create lanes for its rushers, resulting in only 96 yards on 28 carries (3.4 per attempt). And only three of Washington’s 11 drives gained more than 30 yards, thanks largely to an abysmal showing on third down (2 for 12, 16.7 percent).

Rivera couldn’t hide his frustration, even after the win, “because there are some things we should have done,” he said.

The Commanders had a chance for a touchdown earlier in the fourth, but a failed third-down attempt killed the drive and left them with three points on a 28-yard field goal by Joey Slye.

After the defense held, McLaurin got his moment in the final seconds. In the tunnel not much later, he reunited with Prather and his longtime friends. As they embraced, Prather reminded McLaurin of what he had seen and known for years.

“I grew up with Terry,” he said. “I’ve seen him score in this stadium in middle school. I saw him score in this stadium in high school. I saw him score in the Big Ten championship. So I said, ‘Go win the game, man.’ And he said, ‘I got you.’ ”

McLaurin was the star after the game. Before it, he was star-struck.

“I just wanted to stay focused on the game, but pregame, Marvin Harrison came up to me and wanted to take a picture, and I’m like, ‘Me?’ ” he said. “That was just an extremely full-circle moment.

“You just never know when you’re a kid. You’re just dreaming and you’re standing right next to your idols … and then you get to come into the game, play in front of your family and friends and have a chance to make the play to win the game? I’m blessed.”

Read original article here

Fantasy Football Rankings for Week 7, 2022: Model says start Brandon Aiyuk, but sit Terry McLaurin

The Week 7 Fantasy football matchups bring plenty of tough questions for owners as they set their Fantasy football lineups. Should you go with a more proven option like Packers running back Aaron Jones, who faces a tough Washington Commanders defensive front? Should you roll the dice on a lower-owned, high-upside option in your Fantasy football strategy like Lions RB Jamaal Williams, who’s scored four total touchdowns in his last three outings?

Is a player like quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who’s expected to start after missing multiple games due to a concussion, safe to rely on in your Week 7 Fantasy football picks? These are the types of questions owners will have to answer before locking in their Week 7 Fantasy football rankings. Before setting your Fantasy football lineups, be sure to check out the Week 7 Fantasy football rankings from the advanced computer model at SportsLine.

When it comes to ranking players, SportsLine’s model beat human experts in Fantasy football for the past several seasons especially when there were big differences in ranking. Over the course of a season, that could literally be the difference between winning your league or going home empty-handed.

Last week, the model was extremely high on Patriots running back Rhamondre Stevenson, saying he’d finish as a top-10 player at his position. The result: Stevenson recorded 19 carries for 76 yards and two touchdowns in Sunday’s win over the Browns. He also brought in four of five targets for 15 yards. Anybody who had him in their lineup was well on their way to a huge week.

Now, the model, which simulates every NFL game 10,000 times, has revealed its Fantasy football rankings for Week 7 of the 2022 NFL season. Head to SportsLine now to see them.

Top Week 7 Fantasy football picks 

One player the model is high on this week: 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. San Francisco suffered a surprising setback against the Atlanta Falcons last week, but Aiyuk had his best performance of the season. The 24-year-old hauled in eight receptions for 83 yards and two touchdowns in the defeat.

Aiyuk has been targeted eight or more times in three of his last five outings, and that trend is expected to continue this week with the 49ers taking on the Chiefs. If San Francisco falls behind early, the 49ers will be forced to throw the ball to keep pace with Patrick Mahomes and Kansas City’s offense. That’s one of the main reasons why the model ranks Aiyuk as a top-20 wide receiver this week, making him a rock-solid WR2 option against the Chiefs. See who else to target here.

And a massive shocker: Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin, who’s recorded at least 75 receiving yards in three of his last five games, stumbles big-time and doesn’t even crack the top 20 at his position. McLaurin’s stat line against the Bears may be a bit deceiving at first glance. He finished with just three receptions for 41 yards in the Commanders’ 12-7 win over the Bears, but McLaurin was responsible for nearly half of Carson Wentz’s 99 passing yards. 

However, Wentz suffered a fractured finger in the win and he’s expected to miss four to six weeks, which doesn’t bode well for McLaurin’s Fantasy value. Plus, McLaurin and the Commanders will face Green Bay’s top-ranked passing defense this week, which is giving up just 164.0 passing yards per game this season. With such a tough matchup on Sunday, McLaurin is a player to consider putting on the bench in Week 7. See who else to fade here.

How to set Week 7 Fantasy football rankings

The model is also calling for a surprising quarterback you aren’t even thinking about to finish in the top 10 of its Week 7 Fantasy football rankings. This pick could be the difference between winning big and going home with nothing. You can only see who it is here.

So who should you start and sit this week? And which surprising quarterback could lead you to victory? Visit SportsLine now to get Week 7 Fantasy football rankings for every position, plus see which QB is going to come out of nowhere to crack the top 10, all from the model that has outperformed experts big-time.

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-0339/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","hlsjs":"https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/hls.js/1.0.7/hls.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-avia":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/2.4.0/player/avia.min.js","video-avia-ui":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/2.4.0/plugins/ui/avia.ui.min.js","video-avia-gam":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/2.4.0/plugins/gam/avia.gam.min.js","video-avia-hls":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/2.4.0/plugins/hls/avia.hls.min.js","video-avia-playlist":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/2.4.0/plugins/playlist/avia.playlist.min.js","video-ima3":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3.js","video-ima3-dai":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3_dai.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js","video-vast-tracking":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/sb55/vast-js/vtg-vast-client.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here

Fantasy Football Rankings Week 5: Sleepers, starts, sits — Devin Singletary, Terry McLaurin and more

Week 5 fantasy football rankings and sleepers might be the most important yet with injuries mounting. Although, byes are coming, and things will get even dicier, so why not have some more fun (and likely incite your hatred for me) with a Top 10 rankings of “fast food” burgers. Before that, though, we’ll hit those fantasy football ranks, sleepers, buys and sells, all starting with Tyler Allgeier, Terry McLaurin and more.

#CheckTheLink-ageWaivers | True SOS Matchup RanksFantasy Football 101 (weather, lineups, trading, etc)All in Football (video pod)

2022 Week 5 Fantasy Football Sleepers

🚨 HEADS UP 🚨 These are sleepers. They will not mimic my rankings 100%. This is chasing upside and often carries more risk, but based on APA matchups, you can “go for broke” if needed.

QUARTERBACK

POSSIBLY START: Ryan Tannehill, TEN — The Commanders have allowed 10 passing touchdowns, including Cooper Rush going 223/2 last week. Tannehill isn’t passing a ton — heck, even a half-ton with 117 in Week 2 and 137 last week — but he has netted two touchdowns in two different games (versus Giants and Colts) and ran for a score in Week 3. This is a matchup play obviously.

HAIL MARY START: Zach Wilson, NYJ — Yes, the Dolphins have played a Murderer’s Row of quarterbacks since Week 1 — Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen and Joe Burrow.



Read original article here

Fantasy Football Rankings Week 5: Sleepers, starts, sits — Devin Singletary, Terry McLaurin and more

Week 5 fantasy football rankings and sleepers might be the most important yet with injuries mounting. Although, byes are coming, and things will get even dicier, so why not have some more fun (and likely incite your hatred for me) with a Top 10 rankings of “fast food” burgers. Before that, though, we’ll hit those fantasy football ranks, sleepers, buys and sells, all starting with Tyler Allgeier, Terry McLaurin and more.

#CheckTheLink-ageWaivers | True SOS (APA — Wednesday update)Fantasy Football 101 (weather, lineups, trading, etc)All in Football (video pod)

2022 Week 5 Fantasy Football Sleepers

🚨 HEADS UP 🚨 These are sleepers. They will not mimic my rankings 100%. This is chasing upside and often carries more risk, but based on APA matchups, you can “go for broke” if needed.

QUARTERBACK

POSSIBLY START: Ryan Tannehill, TEN — The Commanders have allowed 10 passing touchdowns, including Cooper Rush going 223/2 last week. Tannehill isn’t passing a ton — heck, even a half-ton with 117 in Week 2 and 137 last week — but he has netted two touchdowns in two different games (versus Giants and Colts) and ran for a score in Week 3. This is a matchup play obviously.

HAIL MARY START: Zach Wilson, NYJ — Yes, the Dolphins have played a Murderer’s Row of quarterbacks since Week 1 — Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen and Joe Burrow. So, no, I don’t expect Wilson to simply walk on the field and go for 300/2 or more.



Read original article here

Heather Dubrow addresses cheating rumors surrounding husband Terry

Heather Dubrow has entered the chat.

The “Real Housewives of Orange County” star shut down claims she’s been skipping out on shooting scenes for the upcoming season of the Bravo reality show due to cheating rumors surrounding her longtime husband, Dr. Terry Dubrow.

“This is not true, on any level,” Heather replied to an Instagram post regarding a tip that was recently sent to celebrity gossip page Deuxmoi.

The “anonymous” message contained the subject line, “cheating allegations in the OC,” and read, “This housewife has not been seen filming with her colleagues for weeks. Word on the street is … her husband’s affairs surfaced and we know who is not afraid to air it all out.”

Though the tip did not mention “Fancy Pants” or her “Botched” star hubby by name, Heather clearly felt the need to set the record straight.

The “RHOC” star called the claim “not true” in an Instagram comment.

The “Heather Dubrow’s World” podcast host found herself dismissing similar gossip earlier this year.

“There’s a rumor online right now that Terry was banging his assistant for years,” she said during an April episode. “It’s not true. I’m not going to give it any weight or any life because it’s stupid.”

Heather shut down rumors about Terry earlier this year as well.
heatherdubrow/Instagram

“RHOC” Season 16, which marked the Dubrows’ big comeback after a four-year hiatus, saw the couple putting up a united front to combat other types of rumors — ones that had to do with Terry’s work as a plastic surgeon.

During the early episodes of last season, it was revealed that Nicole James — a “friend of the Housewives” — had sued Terry, 64, many years ago over an allegedly botched operation.

The Dubrows were furious — but not mad enough to “slam a cameraman against a wall,” like one-hit-wonder Noella Bergener had claimed.

Not only did Heather, 53, repeatedly deny the allegation, but sources close to production also assured Page Six that there was zero physicality of any kind by anyone.



Read original article here

Ron Rivera says Terry McLaurin’s extension impacts entire Washington Commanders organization

ASHBURN, Va. — Washington Commanders coach Ron Rivera viewed receiver Terry McLaurin as more than just a receiver who needed to be extended. He was a key player for an organization trying to rebuild its image amid a congressional investigation.

“He’s an organizational signing,” Rivera said. “It impacts not just the football side but the business side. It tells people we want to retain young men of this stature; we want young men of this magnitude out there representing our organization.”

Congress has been investigating Washington owner Dan Snyder since October. It held a hearing on June 22, and Snyder declined to attend or to testify via video call. The House Oversight Committee’s Democratic leadership continues to negotiate with Snyder’s attorneys to get him to testify about Washington’s workplace culture.

The drumbeat of the congressional story has drowned out other organizational on-field news. When McLaurin skipped the on-field voluntary OTA work and then the mandatory three-day minicamp, fans feared more bad news was headed their way. McLaurin worked his way from a third-round pick in 2019 — expected to be a key special teams player and backup receiver — to a guy with two 1,000-yard seasons in his first three.

Rivera stressed to McLaurin his importance to the organization in a phone call during minicamp — when McLaurin was training in Florida.

“He emphasized the priority from ownership on down was to get the deal done,” McLaurin said.

By the time Washington left minicamp June 16, there was optimism McLaurin would soon be extended. He agreed to his three-year contract worth up to $71 million — with a $28 million signing bonus — last week and signed it Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Rivera centered the McLaurin signing around how he said the organization has changed in the past two years, getting rid of others in key spots who have been accused of sexual harassment.

“As I ask, please don’t judge us from, ‘This happened at this point in time,'” Rivera said. “We’re going forward. We’re changing things. We’re trying to do the best we can. I know some people don’t think it matters, but it does matter. It shows you can change, you can adapt, you can make things better. You can correct your mistakes, and that’s what we’re doing. We’re correcting our mistakes; we’re getting a lot of support.”

McLaurin blossomed in Washington despite having played with eight different starting quarterbacks. After finishing with 919 receiving yards as a rookie, he topped 1,000 yards each of the next two seasons.

In the past two seasons combined, McLaurin ranks 11th in the NFL with 2,171 receiving yards and 12th with 164 receptions.

That’s also why he was a must have for Rivera as he juggles on-field planning with off-field news.

“We’re doing the best we can putting the best players in position so we can build something we can all be proud of,” Rivera said. “I get a little upset about it because I get it, it’s a news item. What we do on the field is important; that’s what we’re trying to do. We’re not trying to say what happened isn’t important because it is. It’s something we need to make sure societally going forward we don’t let those things happen again so we’re doing everything we can to make sure we are better.”

McLaurin said he and other team leaders have tried to look forward.

“We trust Coach Rivera’s vision and how he leads us,” McLaurin said. “He does a great job handling it and taking all the pressure on from outside voices. … We represent the organization the best way we can on and off the field. We take that seriously. It comes with work and, honestly, transparency and working hard as a collective group and building unity. Coach Rivera allows us to focus on the field. We understand what’s going on outside; we want to focus on where we’re heading.”

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site