Friday, August 03, 2007

NFL TRAINING CAMP NEWS


Terrell Owens returned to practice with the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday afternoon for the only workout of the day. Owens was back on the field in full uniform and taking part in drills. T.O. sat out both workouts Wednesday, a day after coach Wade Phillips had the receiver take it easy to rest a sore hamstring. Phillips said Wednesday that Owens wasn't injured. Owens missed 14 straight workouts in training camp last year because of a hamstring problem, though an MRI showed no major problems.....
Rams WR Torry Holt told the media Thursday that his surgically repaired right knee (torn cartilage) is not perfect for the start of the year. "To be very modest, 70 percent," Holt said. "It's feeling pretty good -- not bad. I'm coming around. I'm cutting and doing the things that I've done in the past, so that's a good sign. I'm just going to keep building on it, keep strengthening, keep icing and picking my spots within this training camp and, most importantly, be ready to roll once we open up against Carolina." Rams coach Scott Linehan added that he won't push Holt much in camp so that he's ready to start the season....
Vikings rookie running back Adrian Peterson left Thursday's practice with an injury after taking an elbow to his hip while catching a pass in a drill, but he said it wasn't serious. His status is day to day, but he's unlikely to participate in weekend scrimmages against the Chiefs. Backfield mate Chester Taylor is also not expected to suit up against the Chiefs. He has been bothered this week by a bruised forearm. "It's not a big deal at all," said Peterson, who called the injury a minor hip pointer....

Russian sub plants flag under North Pole


Thursday, August 02, 2007

NFL NEWS AND NOTES


Randy Moss missed the New England Patriots morning practice Thursday, one day after the wide receiver apparently injured his left leg during a passing drill. Moss pulled up midway through Wednesday's practice. Medical trainers applied ice to his upper left leg, and he later left the field under his own power. Patriots coach Bill Belichick did not discuss the specifics of Moss' injury and did not know when Moss would return to practice. "Randy's good, day to day," Belichick said after the team's first practice of the day....
Broncos linebacker Warrick Holdman was carted off the field and taken by ambulance to a hospital Thursday after he appeared to injure his head or neck. There was no immediate word on the extent of his injury, although he was moving his arms and legs. Holdman appeared to hit the crown of his helmet on another player's helmet and crumpled to the grass midway through the morning workout. He was rolled over onto his back after a minute, but stayed down for eight minutes. His teammates gathered around him as he was strapped to a headboard and carted off the field to a waiting ambulance.....
The San Antonio Express-News reports that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is OK with waiting until the end of the 2007 season to renegotiate Tony Romo's contract. Romo is scheduled to be a free agent after this season. "If he's the quarterback I think he is, he's going to get his money," Jones said. "When we've had a quarterback that could compete at a Super Bowl level, we've always paid -- and welcomed the chance to do it. ... We want Tony to be our quarterback for a long time."....

Peter King from Sports Illustrated reports that new Browns RB Jamal Lewis appears to be in great shape coming off of offseason ankle surgery. Lewis is motivated to have a rebound season and wants it to be known that his weight is no longer an issue. "I weigh 239, not 251 or 252, like I used to," Lewis said. "This is the best I've felt in a long time."

A Special Counsel for Spitzer

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

NFL TRAINING CAMP NEWS

Dallas Cowboys receiver Terry Glenn had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee Tuesday, the same day Terrell Owens got a break from practice to rest his sore hamstring. While an MRI showed no serious damage after Glenn hurt his knee in practice Sunday, the decision was made to have the procedure after he kept having pain. He is expected to be out about two weeks. "There's a little positiveness here because if there's a little something loose there, we can get it out," owner Jerry Jones said. "There was something loose, some little cartilage or something in the joint. They thought they'd get it out now. We don't think it's serious."




Frank Gore, the San Francisco 49ers Pro Bowl running back, broke a bone in his right hand Monday during the first padded practice of training camp and might not play in the preseason. Gore was injured during a non-contact ball-handling drill, and coach Mike Nolan said he would not practice with the team for the remainder of the week. Gore will be re-evaluated next Monday, and Nolan expects him to return to practice then with a cast on his hand. "He'll be ready for the latter part of preseason, but his participating in the preseason, we'll wait and see on that," Nolan said....

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that Vikings RB Chester Taylor was carted off the practice field Tuesday with a right shoulder contusion, according to coach Brad Childress. Taylor was later spotted on an exercise bike wearing padding with no hard cast. He did not comment on the status of his arm....

Packers coach Mike McCarthy said Monday that the knee injury sustained by projected starter Vernand Morency was worse than the team's medical staff originally thought, and that he now expects Morency to be out "a couple" of weeks. The good news: McCarthy said Morency probably won't need arthroscopic surgery. "I don't think so, no," McCarthy said. "(Team doctor) Pat McKenzie just thinks it's a little more serious than he initially thought. Just like I said, it's going to be maybe a couple weeks."

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Not So Fast Cut-and-Run KOOKS!

Good news from Iraq...Bad news for Democrats.

Monday, July 30, 2007

COLLEGE FOOTBALL NEWS AND NOTES



Arkansas DT Marcus Harrison likely will miss at least the team’s season opener against Troy. The 6-3, 310-pound Harrison, a second-tier prospect for the upcoming draft, hurt his left knee at a practice in March when he suffered torn cartilage and a bone bruise.....

Texas sophomore LB Sergio Kindle, one of the best young players in college football at the position, was arrested over the weekend and charged with driving while intoxicated.....

North Carolina State TE Anthony Hill, who had been considered an emerging prospect for the 2008 draft, will miss the upcoming season after undergoing reconstructive knee surgery earlier this week. Team doctors reportedly discovered Hill had a damaged ACL that required surgery.....

LSU RB Alley Broussard, who had once been considered a top draft prospect, has announced that he is quitting football. Broussard though will remain in school and expects to graduate later this year. Broussard finished his career with over 1,500 career yards rushing and 18 TDs, but it could have been so much more. Broussard, in fact, started ahead of former Tiger Joseph Addai, Indianapolis’ #1 pick in 2006 who helped the Colts win the Super Bowl, but hurt a knee in 2005 and has barely played since.

Former 49ers Coach Bill Walsh Dead at 75

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Pork Farm

Food shortages in Africa, fuel inefficiency, illegal immigration — farm subsidies are partially to blame.

Sunday talk show tip sheet

Saturday, July 28, 2007

NFL NEWS AND NOTES



Giants defensive end Michael Strahan did not show up for the start of training camp Friday and is contemplating retirement, Jerry Reese, the team’s general manager, said.....

The Kansas City Star reports that Chiefs RB Larry Johnson did not report to training camp. Johnson is demanding a new contract and says he won't show up to camp until a deal is done. Moreover, Johnson's agent claims the Chiefs haven't made Johnson an offer since June 1. "The money I'm seeking for Larry is not out of line with other deals that have been signed in the last few months," agent Alvin Keels said. "People around the league would look at what we're asking as being very fair. We haven't been presented with anything we believe is fair. We're prepared to sit out until the right deal is presented to us.".....

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the Rams and QB Marc Bulger have agreed to a six-year deal with $26 million guaranteed. Rumors were that Bulger would hold out of camp without a deal, but he showed up on time, and a deal was reached soon thereafter.....

HoustonTexans.com reports that the Texans and veteran WR Keenan McCardell have agreed to a one-year contract. McCardell, a native Houstonian, is expected to compete for the No. 2 WR job but could just as easily end up as the No. 3/slot option.....

Friday, July 20, 2007

Pentagon Rebukes Sen. Clinton on Iraq

The Pentagon told Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton that her questions about how the U.S. plans to eventually withdraw from Iraq boosts enemy propaganda.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Monday, July 16, 2007

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Monday, July 09, 2007

NFL NEWS AND NOTES


Maryland sophomore OT Jared Gaither had a solid pro-day style workout prior to Thursday’s supplemental draft this morning. With representatives from all 32 NFL teams in attendance, Gaither measured in at just a tad under 6-9 and weighed 324 pounds. Gaither also reportedly ran well for a big man posting a 40-time in the 5.00 to 5.15 second range; he also did the short shuttle in around 4.50 second and the 3-cone drill in the area of 7.20 seconds. For the record, Gaither’s time in the 3-cone drill was considerably faster than any OT at this year’s combine, while his short shuttle time would have been third fastest. His 40-time would have been somewhere between 4th and 8th fastest. The only down note for Gaither was the fact that he was only able to do 15 reps pressing 225 pounds, ostensibly because he has a slightly strained shoulder.

Sunday, July 08, 2007

SCIENCE Magazine Waffles on Warming

The American scientific establishment is starting to take baby steps away from taking sides in the politics of global warming. It's sad to have to read science articles for political spin, like some announcement by the Kremlin. But climate change has now become so politicized that SCIENCE magazine reflects at least as much politics as honest science. You have to read it for spin.


SCIENCE magazine is the flagship journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which is the professional advocacy group for scientists in the United States. SCIENCE is both the profession's political journal (telling readers how to get government grants, for example), and it also has original findings. So it has an openly political side, as well as a real science side.


The last issue of SCIENCE is waffling like mad on the global warming fad, warning its readers that it may not be so settled a question. Under the headline "Another Global Warming Icon Comes Under Attack," SCIENCE writer Richard Kerr writes:
"...a group of mainstream atmospheric scientists is disputing a rising icon of global warming, and researchers are giving some ground." ...

"Robert Charlson of the University of Washington, Seattle, (is) one of three authors of a commentary published online last week in Nature Reports: Climate Change. ... he and his co-authors argue that the simulation by 14 different climate models of the warming in the 20th century is not the reassuring success IPCC claims it to be."
(IPCC is the supposed international scientific consensus document on global warming - JL).
"... In the run-up to the IPCC climate science report released last February ... 14 groups ran their models under 20th-century conditions of rising greenhouse gases. ... But the group of three atmospheric scientists ... says the close match between models and the actual warming is deceptive. The match "conveys a lot more confidence [in the models] than can be supported in actuality," says Schwartz. [....]

"Greenhouse gas changes are well known, they note, but not so the counteracting cooling of pollutant hazes, called aerosols. Aerosols cool the planet by reflecting away sunlight and increasing the reflectivity of clouds. Somehow, the three researchers say, modelers failed to draw on all the uncertainty inherent in aerosols so that the 20th-century simulations look more certain than they should." [Italics added]
What? "Somehow" they missed the biggest unknown factor in climate prediction?

Highly qualified climate scientists have long warned that warming estimates have at least one giant question mark: Water vapor and other tiny particles in the atmosphere. By failing to include reliable estimates of such "hazes" (not necessarily pollutants, as the article says), global warming models are likely to err wildly on the side of warming. It's the unseen elephant in the living room.

The SCIENCE article therefore finally admits what scientific critics have been saying for years.


Interested readers should also take a good look at the graph in the SCIENCE article, which superficially seems to support the global warming story. But notice the vertical bars at the right side of the graph, which show the "90 percent confidence interval" --- the chances that the graph line is actually where it is shown to be. Turns out that the orange confidence interval includes all the points on the graph between 1930 and 2000... meaning that we can't tell that any of those points are different from each other with even 90 percent certainty. And that's not even including the big Black Hole of water vapor.


Now "90 percent confidence" might sound like a lot. But in standard scientific publications a 95 percent confidence level is the minimum acceptable level. The reason is that one can just run a study 10 times, and achieve a 90 percent confidence level purely by chance. So we normally demand a higher standard of proof --- at least 95 percent confidence. The data in the SCIENCE graph therefore does not meet routine scientific standards.

Many scientists will read this item as a red flag, cautioning that all is not well in the global warming game.

Happy Earth Day - and never forget that telling the truth is the first, indispensible step toward wise management of our resources.

Friday, July 06, 2007

NFL NEWS AND NOTES


The Chicago Bears signed first-round draft pick Greg Olsen to a five-year contract on Tuesday, making the tight end from Miami the first player taken in the first two rounds to agree on a deal. The 31st overall pick, Olsen was the first tight end taken in the opening round by the Bears since they chose Mike Ditka from Pittsburgh in 1961. Olsen had 87 receptions for 1,215 yards with six touchdowns in three seasons with Miami, leaving after his junior season.....

The Chiefs have re-signed TE Mike Pinkard to a two-year deal. He originally signed with the Chiefs in 2004 but bounced around the league over the last two years....

The New Orleans Times-Picayune reports that the Saints have signed LB Dhani Jones to a one-year deal. Jones will compete for a spot in the starting lineup and should come away with a gig. "They have Scott Fujita, Mark Simoneau, Scott Shanle and a host of linebackers that are coming in," Jones said. "I will provide the depth, but also will push those linebackers so that we can compete going into next season."....