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Tiger Woods arrested in Florida on DUI suspicion

http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/30/us/tiger-woods-arrested-dui-new-details/index.html

(CNN)Tiger Woods' 2015 Mercedes-Benz showed signs of "fresh damage" on the driver's side of the vehicle when he was found asleep at the wheel the morning of his arrest on suspicion of driving under the influence, police records show.

New documents released late Tuesday afternoon by Jupiter, Florida, police reveal that both tire rims on the driver's side of the Mercedes had minor damage and the front and rear tires on that side of the vehicle were flat.

Police also observed damage to the bumper on the driver's side, white scrapes and scuffs on the rear bumper, and the passenger side rear taillight was not working, according to the documents.

Jupiter police discovered Woods early Monday on the side of the road, with his car running, its brake lights illuminated and right turn signal flashing, according to the arrest report released earlier Tuesday. He was by himself and wearing his seat belt.

The report said Woods had to be awakened and that his speech was slurred. Woods told police he was coming from golfing in Los Angeles and he didn't know where he was, the document said.

According to the report, he later changed his story and asked how far he was from his house. Woods has a home on Jupiter Island.

The report said Woods also told police he "takes several prescriptions."

Predicting Offensive, Defensive Rookie of the Year

Speaking of guys running....I remember seeing a video...recently...where a guy "thinks" he's running away from an arrest, only to be shot dead...and he was running like I run in my dreams...slow as hell. I wonder if he believed he was actually going somewhere. It's funny but not funny, cause he was killed. But people THINK they are really moving fast when if they could look at themselves on film...they aint going nowhere.

This is exactly what the krapper was protesting about. Some old black dude at a traffic stop, starts to jog away like a tortoise for some reason, cop shoots him 7 times in the back. For real?

.

Spruce ready to bounce back

Marquez North- 6'2 223 lbs Big fellow was Injury prone in college and his rookie debut.
Man I like North's tape....Damn shame if he can't get on the field...I just can't see a team cutting him without trying to get him healthy.

.people are locked in thinking that Spruce, Kupp, and Cooper are all strictly slot guys
Not strictly....but IMO....My opinion...they are or will be MORE effective in the pros...as slot receivers...you can play anyone out wide...Tavon's been out there for 4 years....but what is their impact on the game? I'd add Woods in there as well...

@flv
what's the odds on Spruuuuce, North, and Thomas making the squad? And not as a parlay either:dizzy:...someone is gonna get cut outta these 3...and it's a damn shame. Too soon for bets?:cool:

R.I.P. Gregg Allman

http://variety.com/2017/music/news/gregg-allman-manager-recalls-final-days-1202447277/

Gregg Allman’s Longtime Manager Recalls the Singer’s Final Days and Their Career Together (EXCLUSIVE)
Jem Aswad
Senior Music Editor@jemaswad

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tophdimgs.com

Gregg Allman, who passed away Saturday due to complications from liver cancer, was a cofounder of the legendary Allman Brothers band and a peerless pioneer of Southern rock — and by extension the entire jam-band movement.

Yet when he joined forces with his longtime manager Michael Lehman in 2004, his contributions and legacy were under-recognized and his business affairs were not in optimal shape. Lehman got to work on changing that, and over the past dozen-odd years Allman not only toured regularly, he released four solo albums — including 2011’s Grammy-nominated “Low Country Blues” and the forthcoming “Southern Blood,” due in September.

He established the Laid Back music festival in partnership with Live Nation, held the “All My Friends” career-retrospective concert in 2015, and established music scholarships at both the University of Georgia and through Syracuse University’s Bandier Program. In the process the two became not just close business partners but also close friends, and on Sunday Lehman shared memories from those years with Variety.

What were the last few months with Gregg like?

I last saw him a couple of weeks ago, and we’d spent a lot of time together over the past couple of years in Northern Florida as well as his home in Savannah [Georgia]. We talked about music, friendship, the arts, his relationship with his kids [Allman had four children, all but one of whom are musicians].

A couple of weeks ago we Facetimed with each of them. And as things started to slow down and we knew that his life was coming to a close, we started talking about preserving his legacy, and especially the new record, “Southern Blood” — that made him light up.

It was my goal to make sure it would be a big, special album, even though that it became clear that Gregg wasn’t necessarily going to be able to promote it, even if he was here, and that was something we were going to be prepared for.

How long was he working on the album?

He started recording probably a year to two years ago with [producer] Don Was and his solo band, he spent about 12 days at Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals [Alabama, where classic songs by Aretha Frankin, Wilson Pickett, the Rolling Stones, Lynyrd Skynyrd and many others were recorded; Allman’s bandmate and brother Duane, who died in 1971, played on several sessions there].

His health at the time was okay, he was already struggling a little with the recurrence of his liver cancer. He would have good days and bad days and we worked around it as best we could. Some days were better than others but there were enough takes to make something really special.

We documented a lot of the recording sessions, so we have a tremendous amount of video footage and still photography from the sessions. Gregg was so happy to be at such an iconic studio, where his brother had recorded and so much incredible music had been made over the years.

Gregg’s longtime friend Jackson Browne duets with him on “Song for Adam,” can you say which other guests are on the album and which songs are on it?

It’s comprised of a bunch of really cool covers and a couple of original tunes, but I really can’t say much more beyond that. Gregg really wanted to keep [information about the album] tight and I have to respect his wishes — he wanted to surprise his friends and his fans.

But I think it’s a record that everyone’s really going to be excited to hear — his vocals are so compelling, and hearing them and knowing where he was in his life’s journey, it’s just chilling, honestly.

gregg-allman-michael-lehman.jpg


How did you come to work with Gregg?

I’m an attorney by training, I was doing work for [The Who singer] Roger Daltrey and around 2004 I was referred to Gregg by The Who’s business management, who were also representing the Allman Brothers at the time. Gregg was looking for someone new to take on his business.

He was coming to New York for some shows and we met within a few days of the opportunity being presented, we hit it off immediately, I was asked to come to that night’s show and he told me I was hired if I wanted it. I worked with him ever since.

What was he like to work with?

He was a very warm person. He wanted to be involved in his business and he wanted to be respected. For many years he had neglected a lot of his business affairs; he probably didn’t pay attention because of his various struggles with drugs and alcohol over the years.

By the time I met him he was clean, and and really wanted someone fresh that would talk about business with him, share ideas partner with him and give him a real sense of having control. He was a great client to have — super easy to work with because he really wanted to be involved. He’d already had an incredible career but unfortunately from time to time had been neglected.

What are some of the accomplishments you and he are most proud of?

I loved to be able to help him shine: He was so warm and so vulnerable and he had never really been given his due. I just wanted to polish what was already so special.

Who were some of his closest musician friends?

Gregg was a very private person and he would not necessarily see them often but of the other artists he considered to be close friends, I think at the top is Jackson Browne — they go back to their late teens, when they were both starting to make it in L.A.

Keith Urban held a special place for Gregg, Tim McGraw, he and Taj Mahal were very good friends, Keb Mo, Dr., John, Elton John, he had a unique group of friends. And very close to the end, he and Jackson were in communication a lot because they were working on “A Song for Adam,” and Jackson wanted to be there for Gregg.

Did he talk much about Duane?

He would think or talk about Duane almost every day. Duane’s presence was very much felt in the house, with pictures and letters and through Duane’s daughter Galadrielle, who Gregg really treated like another of his children. He loved her — she was an ever-present reminder of Duane.

I remember, I guess it was during the Allmans’ 40th anniversary concerts, Eric Clapton guested [Duane famously played on Clapton’s 1970 “Layla” album] and I brought Galadrielle into Clapton’s dressing room to introduce them and the they both just started weeping. It was an incredible moment.

But he talked about the early days a lot. I remember once we were in Nashville, where Gregg was born, and I had always asked him to show me his childhood home, and for one reason or another we’d never had time, but one day six or seven years ago we did.

So me and Gregg and his closest friend Huell “Chank” Middleton and a driver found his childhood home, he hadn’t been there since he was 6 or 7 years old, but he remembered how to get there. We rang the doorbell and a mother answered, with a couple of kids getting ready for soccer practice, and we just blew her away, she had no idea he had lived there.

Gregg spent about 45 minutes there taking pictures and reminiscing, funny stories — “I can’t believe how small Duane’s and my bedroom was,” “This is the tree where Duane tied me up once,” funny, funny stories. We were there for a concert and we invited the whole family down.

You’ve said he was at peace. Can you talk about that a bit more?

I would say he knew for the last six months that he was getting toward the end of his life, and he became resolved and peaceful. We cancelled [tour] dates when we had to, but we ended up playing through the end of October — we’d hoped to get through the end of the year but he’d had another bout of pneumonia and other respiratory ailments.

But for good or bad, he got to be home and relax, even though his true passion was being on the road. He’d listen to music, read books, see his kids, he got married to Shannon in February so he was able to take advantage of that time with her and being at his house, sitting by the pool, playing with his dogs. And thank goodness he did not suffer at the end, he died peacefully at home.






I got Gregg back into the studio — we made four records, two live ones, “Back to Macon” and the “All My Friends” concert [a 2014 career retrospective concert featuring Allman with most of his bandmates and guest appearances from Eric Church, Dr. John, Jackson Browne, Sam Moore, Zac Brown, Taj Mahal and many others], and the studio albums “Low Country Blues” and the new one. I’m very proud that we were able to clean up and organize his music publishing and tastefully market his songs from commercials: we did commercials for Bank of America, Geico and AT&T and we had placements in a lot of films, so he was really happy his that music was getting out there in a tasteful yet commercial way. Obviously there was a financial reward for doing that, but also giving a lot of songs their proper due that people hadn’t heard for years.

Another great joy was being able to turn his words into a best-selling book [“My Cross to Bear,” a 2013 autobiography written with Alan Light], we did a book tour and Gregg loved meeting thousands of fans up close. Another was the Laid Back festival, a partnership between Gregg, myself and Live Nation. The goal was to create a one-day festival of music for the more mature consumer — mature in age, anyway! — and have an elevated food and beverage experience, with diff VIP experiences for the fans. We did the first one at [New York’s] Jones Beach back in 2015, we had five last year, we have six this year and we’ll continue to grow the model in Gregg’s spirit going forward.

But maybe most of all, as a result of the “All My Friends” concert [and subsequent DVD and television broadcasts], we had raised a decent amount of money and with some of the proceeds we set up two scholarships, one at the University of Georgia’s Hodgson School of Music and the other through the Bandier Program at Syracuse University. Gregg took a real interest in them and we followed the careers of the students in those programs.

It was his wish that if anyone wants to make a donation, that they make it to the Gregg Allman Music Scholarship Endowment at the University of Georgia or the Allman/Lehman Endowed Scholarship at Syracuse.

Apart from the new album, how much material is in the vault and do you plan to release it?

We have a lot of old concerts that we’ll put out over a period of time. We did a five-night run at [New York small venue] City Winery in 2015 and we plan on releasing that — it was an incredibly intimate experience playing for just 400 people each of those nights.

Is there material from earlier in his career?

Yes. There are earlier recordings of the Allmans, I can’t really speak about those, but more specifically there are early recordings from Gregg’s solo career that we’ve been working on, some of them from the early ‘70s. Obviously our first focus will be “Southern Blood” this fall, but there’s a huge trove of incredibly special concerts — Gregg recorded every single show, so we have hundreds on tape.

Peter King: MMQB - 5/29/17 - Memorial Day Edition

Marshawn Lynch ran the ball—for zero, three and zero yards.
If we go by the law of averages, Beastmode was due for 3 yards....

“All my years being in the league, I never received more emotional mail from people than I did about that issue. ‘If any of your players ever do that, we are never coming to another Giants game.’ It wasn’t one or two letters. It was a lot. It’s an emotional, emotional issue.”

—Giants co-owner John Mara, to Jenny Vrentas of The MMQB, in her story about how the Colin Kaepernick story lives on.
I wonder what the mail was like for that punter he DID sign?

4. I think Aaron Donald will have a new contract with the Rams by opening day. They’re going to pay their best player.
like Dave says, no dugh!..Like really?!?!

6. I think Victor Cruz has always been a class guy, grateful for his life in football and a very good teammate. I was stunned to hear the ridiculousness of him implying last week that Eli Manning purposely passed up throwing to Cruz when he was open because the Giants didn’t want him on the team anymore.
I thought the same after we were 3-1, playing Buffalo, and Brian Quick wasn't thrown a pass until the 2nd Quarter....a BOMB....and only 3 passes total the entire Bills game. AFTER he basically WON the Cards game with 2 TD's. Hell, the Marshawn Lynch story is really about the Seahawks DIDN'T want Lynch to be the hero/star of the super bowl....Disney didn't want him up there sayin, "I only went to Disneyland, so I won't get fined..." With dreds & a "grill". Woulda been a classic advertisement. The art of denial/coverup/fainting ignorance is still alive in america...But the genius of technology will uncover all things. Kaep's story is similar...how the hell does Gabbert or Geno Smith have a job before a guy that's been to 3 NFC championship games?

Rams preview: Jared Goff looks for fresh start under Sean McVay

He had flashes last year that made you say "okay...okay....I see it now" then within 10 minutes he left me wondering why we traded up so much...I think this offense will be much better. I thinknebhas more talent than Cousins and he looks good in McVays system.

He will need Gurley and Gurley will need him. They will feed off each others games. I, for the first time in a decade, feel confident...cautiously so...but confident.

Our new and improved Rams girl.

Okay You always need a few days to adjust to a new look, that I have learned being married 23 years 24 in September and I married a brunette with blue eyes because I always felt that was the perfect combination, however, I like Dani as a blonde better, but when it comes to beautiful women I'm like a country school teacher when asked if the world is flat or round....I can teach it either way!
I have a Favorite Girl with Brown Hair and Blue Eyes too!!

Easter 2017.jpg

My Grand-Daughter!!;) Don't Tell my Wife!!(y):LOL:

Bonsignore: Rams feeling right at home in Thousand Oaks

Was coming from Palm Springs. If I pushed the issue . I would have gone. In fact I had Catre Blanz to the house just south of Simi Valley high. Will run in the park soon. Would have been about Dwayne Dopsie today.
Today(Sunday) looked like the best day.

Was wondering if you went ? I know you were Trying to get to OTA's. Might be coming out to Simi tomorrow., Is there an open practice Tuesday.
Unfortunately haven't been able to make it over to the OTA's yet!

Don't Sleep On Rookie TE Gerald Everett


That is a great video demonstration of the Reed/Everett similarities.

"These examples all come with one large caveat: To have the level of success in the NFL akin to Reed, Everett needs to improve and refine numerous aspects of his game. Though he demonstrates acceleration into his routes, he appears slow off the line. He really needs to develop his route-running overall. It lacks sharpness, urgency, and nous – such as selling the deep route better by pushing harder vertically. In his role, he will be most hurt by this on post routes against Cover 2. In that scenario, it is vital that he is able to manipulate the safety. His hands also looked inconsistent. His poor blocking should be less of an issue since he will not be playing the traditional tight-end role, but it suffers from flawed technique.

Against better competition, a lot of Everett’s plays would not have had the same results. In the first example, a better linebacker would have stayed disciplined and therefore would have been in prime position to play the ball. In the second, the deep safety would have recognized the post and broke on the ball. This is why it is so important for Everett to develop early on in his NFL career."

I'm not completely buying some of the criticism. I thought he was slower off the line to give himself space from the linebacker on the first play. He was running to openings and found them. I'm sure he has to get a little more refined in his route running. The Rams coaching will work on that. It was nice to see the plays I watched on his highlight video broken down. Players play to the competition, I imagine Everett will step it up when facing NFL competition. He sounds like the type of player that is willing to put in the work.

Poll; Tru Johnson or Janoris Jenkins!?

Hindsight isn't in play IMO. The Rams chose based on pre 2016 play. Tru had a very good 2015 and JJ was still making a dumb play or 3 or 4 per game, despite having more skill, that cost TDs. He admitted to having lapses during the game due to losing interest or something like that.

So, it was the mental side that caused Snead and Fisher to go with Tru. Plus I bet they counted on him signing a more affordable deal.

Based on 2015 I preferred Tru. I hated JJ's mistakes every game. Who knew a different coach could fix the problem.

In hindsight JJ looks like the clear choice.

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