Archive for June 30th, 2009
Infraction for kweli/: Insults/useless banter
Post: What are you downloading? (http://www.thedugout.tv/community/showthread.php?p=2426186)
User: kweli/ (http://www.thedugout.tv/community/member.php?u=13984)
Infraction: Insults/useless banter
Points: 1
Administrative Note:
Message to User:
—Quote—
No abusing the n00b.
—End… more
So Will There be ANY way to Create Plays in Madden 10?
Has anyone confirmed the rumor about being able to import plays from the PSP?
Can we still import plays from Head Coach?
Is there any chance of a web based play creator making an appearance after release? more
Market Movers: Tuesday June 30
All the early betting moves from today’s racing at Brighton and Hamilton.
Brighton
14:30
Itsher 6.80 in to 5.00
Jonny Ebeneezer 11.50 in to 7.00
Ask Jenny 4.60 out to 7.80
15:00
Rockys Pride 2.36 in to 1.83
17:00
Rocket Rob 3.15 in to 2.64
17:30
Orpens Art 13.50 in to 9.40
Hamilton
14:15
Waveband 3.75 out to 5.40
14:45
Metroland 3.50 in to 2.88
15:15
Aldaado 3.45 in to 2.72
Northside Prince 4.20 out to 6.00
16:15
Tae Kwon Do 7.00 out to 9.40
17:15
Ingleby Princess 5.90 in to 4.30
17:45
Curlew 4.00 in to 3.15
more
player happyness
sorry is this belongs elsewhere
but now…i’ve got a player who at the start of april has played 22 matches and made 4 subs and he is still complaining about play time.
is this a bug or how can i resolve it ? more
Question about RTTS.
I’ve never really played RTTS until tonight and I must say its pretty interesting. However, before I devote too much time to it I’d like to know just a few things.
#1. Are there any game-killing bugs that I need to be aware of? I remember there was something early on but it was fixed via a… more
Belmont Stakes Review
There was a lot of excitement leading up to this weekend’s Belmont Stakes race, but few could have predicted the final outcome of the event. With jockey Calvin Borel facing the chance to become the first triple crown winner since 1978, everyone was expecting his horse Mine That Bird to cross the finish line in first place. more
World Cup 2010 Betting: What can we learn from the Confederations Cup?
Jonathan Wilson looks back over the Confederations Cup and assesses each team’s chances in the next big international football tournament – the 2010 World Cup.
The end of Goal!, the official film of the 1966 World Cup, scripted by Brian Glanville, is strangely elegiac. Rather than focusing on England’s celebrations, we see a cleaner slowly sweeping the terraces the morning after the final, pushing the tattered rosettes and discarded newspapers into a pile. This, it says, is the aftermath of glory, the grim low after the high, the sense, perhaps, that this great achievement after which you strived might not be worth all that much after all.
David Duval felt something similar after winning the Open in 2001, precipitating a slump from which he has never emerged – although his top-three finish at the US Open this year perhaps suggests he is on the rise again. He is [100.0] to win the Open which begins at Turnberry on July 16.
The same spirit haunts the end of tournaments, even for journalists.
You work at great intensity for the span of the tournament plus the preparation (maybe seven weeks in total for a World Cup; probably three weeks here), talking to and arguing with the same people, travelling vast distances, writing huge amounts and sleeping little (which is why the coffee is so necessary; come on Fifa, sort that out for next year). And then, suddenly, it’s over.
There’s no great party to mark the end, no climax, no closure. The final, in some ways, is your hardest day of work, what with match-reports, quotes pieces and general overviews to be written. And then, slowly, everybody drifts away from the press-centre. Perhaps you have a drink in the hotel bar, but the truth is that usually you’re too tired to socialise. All you want is your bed, and then the flight home so you can get on with seeing your family, watching the bad TV, eating the cheese on toast, or whatever it is that makes your life feel comfortable.
Perhaps the most important lesson from this Confederations Cup is that that feeling is the same after a fortnight-long tournament as it is after a month-long one. Presumably, the adrenaline keeps you going, and the problem comes psychologically as you cross the finish line.
But what else have we learned? Well, Brazil, the champions, are rather better than their early results in qualifying might have suggested.
Dunga, unyielding in the face of criticism, has discovered a happy balance in midfield, and Luis Fabiano has proved himself an exceptional front-man, not merely in terms of his finishing, but his general play holding the ball up and leading the line. Their spirit, meanwhile, is exceptional: late goals and dramatic comebacks are an indication of great heart.
The USA are more of a puzzle. They have an issue with discipline that cost them the game against Italy, and that must be resolved. Then they were ragged against Brazil in the group, superb against Egypt, resilient and disciplined against Spain, and impressive again in the final. Inconsistent they may be, but they could be awkward opponents in the World Cup.
Spain ([5.8] to win the World Cup) are excellent but beatable, and while the absence of Andres Iniesta and Marcos Senna must be taken into account, both Iraq and USA showed they can be frustrated by teams who defend deep in midfield against them. The use of Albert Riera over David Silva perhaps suggests that Vicente del Bosque recognises that and is looking to include a crosser who can exploit Fernando Torres’s aerial ability.
The world champions, Italy [14.5] , look stale (six of their players in the 3-0 defeat to Brazil were over 30), and need rejuvenation. Marcello Lippi, arch-pragmatist that he is, will presumably look to damage limitation early on in the World Cup, and try to build up momentum (but then, that has been the Italian way at almost every World cup).
Egypt [240.0] , who may not even make the World Cup, as they scrap for a single place with Algeria and Zambia, remains enigmatic, brilliant on their day, awful on others. New Zealand [1000.0], meanwhile, are desperately limited, and surely will not come through their qualification play-off against either Saudi Arabia or Bahrain.
The hosts, South Africa [120.0], meanwhile, have made points both on and off the pitch. Given the differing scales of the tournaments, it would be rash to draw too many conclusions about their capacity to host the World Cup based on the Confederations Cup but, one or two minor issues aside, this tournament has increased rather than decreased confidence. more


