Dukes13thman Printad6.98W X

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dukes13thman Printad6.98W X Open Letter to Pete Carroll and all Dear Pete, Seahawks Coaches I know you are just as disappointed in Sunday’s result as any fan and probably even more so. It was a devas- INTRODUCES tating loss. There is frustration everywhere and a fair amount of anger floating around. But I have an idea THE that can turn things around. Here it is. The players have the 12th Man to help them out but you don’t TH have a Man. Let me introduce the 13th Man for you 13 Man and the Coaches. I know the number 13 is usually unlucky but, in this case, it is just the opposite. With the enormous amount of bad luck in the ‘Big Game’, we need a strong antidote and No. 13 will do the job. I once intercepted a pass in the end zone and ran for a 103 yard touchdown when I was in Pee Wee football. I was wearing, you guessed it, No. 13. It worked for me and it will work for you. The 13th Man will provide wonderful ideas for you and all the coaches, trick plays, a modern day Statue of Liberty play, sneaky stuff to make your opponents just as frustrated as all of us are right now. Consider the 13th Man your lucky charm. 206-937-6100 You know what they say, you can never have too much good luck. I hope you will see this as a positive thing 206-522-4908 for your coaches and team. We need to be positive from here on out. Yes, we lost the ‘Big Game’ but we just have to move on and the 13th Man will help us do 253-850-6333 that. What do you say, Pete? 206-382-9963 Duke Moscrip P. S. To help ease everyone’s distress, the 13th Man 206-243-5200 has made arrangements to buy all Seahawk fans a FREE small bowl of chowder with purchase of any 253-752-5444 food item! All they have to do is bring this letter into any one of our six locations. www.DukesChowderHouse.com.
Recommended publications
  • Buckeyes Back to Form in Blowout Path Before They Could Begin to Fully Chan- Northwestern Not Nel Their Concentration to the Wolverines
    Originally Published: Nov. 18, 2006 OHIO STATE VS. NORTHWESTERN Buckeyes Back To Form In Blowout path before they could begin to fully chan- Northwestern Not nel their concentration to the Wolverines. Although it had won only three games all season, Northwestern was coming off an A Major Challenge emotional road victory over Iowa and was playing some of its best football of the For Ohio State season. But early turnovers immediately stripped By MARK REA the Wildcats of any upset dreams they may Buckeye Sports Bulletin Managing Editor have harbored. “I thought our kids played hard,” first- One week after looking ripe for an upset, year Northwestern head coach Pat Fitzgerald Ohio State looked every bit the top-ranked said. “We made some mistakes early and team in the nation, using superior offensive you just can’t do that against a team as good and defensive efforts Nov. 11 to squash as Ohio State. If you make a mistake, they’re Northwestern 54-10 on a cold, windy day in going to make you pay, and that’s exactly Evanston, Ill. what happened.” The Buckeyes created three turnovers Coupled with Michigan’s 34-3 win at in the first quarter, including a fumble on Indiana, the Buckeyes and Wolverines, both the fourth play of the game when lineback- an unblemished 11-0, will meet Nov. 18 in er James Laurinaitis stripped NU receiver their traditional showdown, playing as the Shaun Herbert of the football following nation’s No. 1 and 2 teams for the first time a 21-yard gain.
    [Show full text]
  • Ewe Bourbon De Cuxe V
    A-24 •• THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. a Gavilan's Guile Sawyer BOWLING lo Gel Gels Him By in WITH HOD THOMAS Big Chance in Members of the pipe-and- Merrill’s Pizza. 17; Byars slipper Bank of Defeat of set, who get the bulk Maryland, 16; Penn Recreation. TV Bout Here CHICAGO, Nov. 21 UP). —Kid of their after-dinner exercise 14. turning the knobs the tele- *** * Garvin Sawyer of Cincinnati, -/ • ' '•'.V^SSr'j^^ir'Sß««9p '(v?.' showing signs on H Gavilan. is of might . a green hand with ambition, rust but his fighting instinct vision set. consider the Frances Wilson raised her will doings of Ernest (Pop) Wil- leading average have opportunity coming his *jjp c . ||j* v;: ;.‘‘ ¦HKmH^mj still has plenty of polish. in the Capital liams. grandfather of eight, who Women’s Major League to 117- way with the new year when he The former welterweight takes on high-ranked Zora champion, who at 31 to can show many a youngster a 21 last night with games of 145, wants thing bowling. Folley of Chandler, Ariz., in a regain the title, craftily de- or two about 152 and 92 for a 389 set. Team- Williams gets out twice a nationally televised heavy- feated Boston’s Walt Byars last mate Millie Stadler, second high weight boxing week. Friday nights he bowls the league with match January 1 ? night in a 10-rounder tele- in 114-24, had Capitol rWL, i jtJ|k on the Kenyon-Peck team with a 333 set. They -were the big at Arena.
    [Show full text]
  • Asbury Park Woman My
    The Daily Register Monmouth County's Great Home Newspaper VOL.104 NO. 92 * SHREWSBURY, N.J. MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1981 25 CENTS Reagan concedes nation in recession WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan claims and a weak housing market. year. said yesterday that the United States is In a "We have anticiapated for some time that Joblessness hasn't been that high since the recession. It was the first time anyone in hii this situation could anise as our mid-July fore- end of the 1974-75 recession, which has been administration was willing to make such an cast for a fourth-quarter unemployment rate of called the most severe economic downturn this assessment. 7.7 percent makes clear," he said. country has experienced since the Great De- "I think there's a slight and I hope a short But Weidenbaum said Reagan's economic pression of the 1930s. recession," Reagan said on the White House program plus built-in stabilizing elements in the The Commerce Department this week will lawn before departing by helicopter to meet federal budget will assure that a recession will release third-quarter figures fr the Gross Na- with French President Francois Mitterrand at be short-lived. tional Product that are also expected to show a Williamsburg Va. "I think everyone agrees on "...With both short- and long-term interest slight decline after adjusted for inflation. that." rates declining, forces already are in motion to In the second quarter, the nation's economic The president's comment caught his Council reverse, current downward tendencies, even output as measured by real GNP declined at an of Economic Advisers and other aides by sur- though several more months of poor economic annual rate of 1.6 percent.
    [Show full text]
  • ESPN.Com - Reading Into Tourney Teams' Fortunes
    ESPN.com - Reading into tourney teams' fortunes http://espn.go.com/espn/print?id=9066746&type=story ESPN.com: NCAA Tourney 13 [Print without images] Wednesday, March 20, 2013 Reading into tourney teams' fortunes By Dana O'Neil ESPN.com Ah, brackets. So tempting with all of those empty spaces and the promises of choosing wisely. So overwhelming when you know absolutely nothing about Albany and Iona other than that they are in the same state. Consider this your study guide. Now you merely need to parse through it all and figure out which Cinderellas you trust and which would-be princes will be first-round frogs. Presuming you'll be standing around watercoolers and perhaps watering holes for the next month, I've also included a little factoid so you can amaze your friends with your vast knowledge. Like, why, for example the urban campus of Temple would choose a forest creature for its nickname. Enjoy. East | Midwest | South | West SOUTH REGIONAL Kansas (1) Write 'em in: Do you really want to bet against Bill Self? Every time KU is written off, it seems to wind up in the Final Four. This group has the makeup to do it again, with a transcendent player in Ben McLemore and a tough interior presence in the form of Jeff Withey. Write 'em out: Self's piñata this season has been Elijah Johnson, and not without reason. The point guard is the one shaky piece of this puzzle. If he goes toe to toe with a more aggressive counterpart, the Jayhawks could struggle.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of the Informational Needs of College Women Sports Spectators
    A Study of the Informational Needs of College Women Sports Spectators Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of the Ohio State University Qy Vivian Floyd Lewisj 13. S., M. S, * t The Ohio State University 1953 Approved by: ser CCUTEIJTS hapler Page ■L "::THuDucr:'"joii ....................... 1 Historical Assets of Sports and the S: octator . 1 An A: precir.tive Snorts Spectator • • • • ia At Tndicat' on of a deed ••»••• 21 3 orts Appreciation as a Concern of Education . 23 Education Seeks a Wa’r to feet the Objective of A^ prec 5 atr. on * * • 2 Slill a deed dor a Course in Sports -appreciation 3b 1 TIE KibblET. ‘'juTTJC)D AJTD PROCEDURES . 33 State::ent cf problem ••«•••• . ^ .Justification of an Assumed deed . • • • HR "etJod of Obta'ninr Data on ituder.t Felt .eeds 3^ distribution of Return;’, on Student Felt 'ceds V. Selection and Refinement of Data on Sports tc i se in too Study i.;0 Selecti n and Refinement of Questions t< se i.n the Study ^3 hrj.i1 ary Selection of Questions to . se as Subject ’"atter ..••••• 13 Final Selection and Refinement of Quest5ons • • U3 Method of Obtaining Data on Student Judgment . "ethod of Outaining Data on Adult Judgment . R7 TTethod of Refining and Interpreting Data on Student and Adult Judgment * * . • Ud Chapter Pa re Supplementary Sources U3ed to establish Sunjcct at • * • • • » • • * 71 III PRKSFUTATION GT' 1 KITS 73 Understanding and Appreciating Football • • • • • 77 Understand!nr and Appreciating Baseball • • . » • 91 Understandin" and Appreciating Basketball • • • • lOi: ■ ndcrstandinp and Appreciating Trac,: and Field • • .
    [Show full text]
  • Georgia Vs Clemson (9/18/1976)
    Clemson University TigerPrints Football Programs Programs 1976 Georgia vs Clemson (9/18/1976) Clemson University Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms Materials in this collection may be protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. code). Use of these materials beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. For additional rights information, please contact Kirstin O'Keefe (kokeefe [at] clemson [dot] edu) For additional information about the collections, please contact the Special Collections and Archives by phone at 864.656.3031 or via email at cuscl [at] clemson [dot] edu Recommended Citation University, Clemson, "Georgia vs Clemson (9/18/1976)" (1976). Football Programs. 122. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms/122 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Programs at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in Football Programs by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected]. "Ik Q Ideally situated to save you time and money. When Eastern meets your distribution needs, you have an experienced group working for you in two ideal locations: Greenville, South Carolina, and Jacksonville, Florida. The recent addition of two brand new distribution centers in Imeson Park at Jacksonville gives us total floor space of 1 ,167,000 sq. ft., with more projected. Our materials handling and warehouse maintenance equipment is the finest. Our personnel hand picked. Our responsiveness to your instructions quick enough to move goods on a same-day basis.
    [Show full text]
  • 2007 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and BCS Championship
    Turf Report 2007 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and BCS Championship Turf Supplier and Installation Contractor West Coast Turf Palm Desert, California Scottsdale, Arizona West Coast Turf Proves Again It’s a Big Game Player College football fans will forever remember the For the Fiesta Bowl, stadium representatives, now-famous “statue of liberty” play that gave Boise the Arizona Cardinals, Arizona Sports and Tourism State a two-point conversion and upset victory over Authority, BCS Bowl delegates and West Coast Turf highly favored Oklahoma in the 2007 Tostitos Fiesta officials carefully inspected the field two-and-a-half Bowl held on January 1 at the University of Phoenix weeks prior to the Fiesta Bowl. They decided that the Stadium. Then, just one week later in the same area between the hash marks was worn, damaged stadium, Ohio State thrilled fans with an opening and not in acceptable condition for the high-profile touchdown run during the BCS National game. West Coast Turf specialists got to work quickly to Championship game. take out the existing turf in the middle of the field and Those memories might not exist if the turf at the planned to replace it with quality sod grown at one of their California turf farms. University of Phoenix Stadium had not held up. Luckily, Two challenges quickly became apparent, bowl officials for the two games understood the however, when deciding which type of turf to install. The importance of having a premium quality surface on the University of Phoenix Stadium had a retractable roof playing field. They needed two perfect fields for two that limited the amount of sunlight in the stadium.
    [Show full text]
  • Football for Dummies‰
    01_125366 ffirs.qxp 5/15/07 7:03 PM Page i Football FOR DUMmIES‰ 3RD EDITION by Howie Long with John Czarnecki 01_125366 ffirs.qxp 5/15/07 7:03 PM Page iv 01_125366 ffirs.qxp 5/15/07 7:03 PM Page i Football FOR DUMmIES‰ 3RD EDITION by Howie Long with John Czarnecki 01_125366 ffirs.qxp 5/15/07 7:03 PM Page ii Football For Dummies®, 3rd Edition Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc. 111 River St. Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774 www.wiley.com Copyright © 2007 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published simultaneously in Canada No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as per- mitted under Sections 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400, fax 978-646-8600. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Legal Department, Wiley Publishing, Inc., 10475 Crosspoint Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46256, 317-572-3447, fax 317-572-4355, or online at http:// www.wiley.com/go/permissions. Trademarks: Wiley, the Wiley Publishing logo, For Dummies, the Dummies Man logo, A Reference for the Rest of Us!, The Dummies Way, Dummies Daily, The Fun and Easy Way, Dummies.com and related trade dress are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Coach Mike Holmgren January 8, 2007 (Opening Statement…) “It's
    Coach Mike Holmgren January 8, 2007 (Opening statement…) “It’s pretty good, we’re still playing. I want to clear something up. Darrell Jackson probably will play. I read something on the computer that he would not play. What I said was he aggravated his foot in our game. I said this morning on my radio show and he had to come out. But actually he is feeling better now than he did Monday last week. So he’ll probably get to practice a little bit at the end of the week. (DJ) Hackett, more problematic, last week on Friday he could not play. And then when I got to the stadium and worked him out they said he could play. And he made some nice plays in the game, but then he hurt himself. It’s a basketball ankle, side. It’s not the high ankle, it’s the side.” (On Hackett’s hip being re-injured…) “Not to my knowledge. He got through the game ok that way. The thing that he hurt was his ankle.” (On Darrell Jackson being back…) “I got to see how productive. We have him back. He suited up. Now I would say he was less than a hundred percent in the game. It is good to have him back. The uncertainty of whether guys can play in your planning, and particularly at wide receiver when you have different combinations of three and four and everything, you want to try and get the guys who are actually going to be running the plays in the game to practice them.
    [Show full text]
  • America's Greatest Game
    Chapter 1 America’s Greatest Game In This Chapter ▶ Discovering why football is America’s passion ▶ Looking back on football’s progression throughout the years ▶ Figuring out how the modern football season works ▶ Recognizing what makes college games so much fun and the Super Bowl such a major event hen I was 14, a sophomore in high school, I moved out of Boston Wto live with my uncle. During my first weekend in Milford, Massachusetts, I saw my first high school football game. I had never seen anything like it. Before the game, an antique fire engine led a parade on the track around the football field while the crowd clapped and cheered. The players then thundered across a wooden bridge over a pond and burst through a banner to enter the stadium. I said to myself, “Wow, this game is for me.” I wasn’t necessarily drawn to the game itself; I simply loved what came with the sport: respect. For me, football was an opportunity to belong to some- thing, giving me confidence for the first time in my life. It was more of a per- sonal thing than it was about playing football. It wasn’t so much the football, but what football did for me. Football gave me a sense of self-worth, which I’ve carried with me throughout my life. Sure, I experienced down periods when I first started playing, but I never thought COPYRIGHTEDabout quitting. My first high school MATERIAL coach, Dick Corbin, was great to me and encouraged me to continue playing the game.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyrighted Material
    37_125366 bindex.qxp 5/15/07 7:14 PM Page 401 Index ball, 27 • Numerics • ball boy, 39 3-4 defense, 132–133, 158, 188 ball control, 94 3-4 Eagle defense, 190–192 Baltimore Colts, 88, 92, 352, 356 4-3 defense, 133–134, 158, 187–188 bands, 269 5-yard bump rule, 128–129 bang-bang plays, 179 40/25 second clock, 45 Banks, Carl (player), 164, 190 46 defense, 195–197 Banks, Chip (player), 190 50-yard line, 22, 208 Baugh, Sammy (player), 353 BCS (Bowl Championship Series), 276–278 bench area, 23–24 • A • Bettis, Jerome “The Bus” (player), 98 Bickett, Duane (player), 190 agent, 295 Big East Conference, 275 All-Americans, 285 Big Ten Conference, 274 Allen, George (coach), 348 Big 12 Conference, 275 Allen, Marcus (player), 93, 98, 144, 380 binoculars, 246, 247 Alworth, Lance (player), 92 Birk, Matt (player), 118 American Football Conference, 289 blast or dive run play, 104, 202 American Football League (AFL), 289 blind-side tackle, 114, 115 Anderson, Jamal (player), 96 blitzing, 71, 163, 180, 194–195, 245 Anderson, Morton (player), 216 blocking Anderson, Willie (player), 117, 183 field goals and PATs, 218–221 Arena Football League, 304 illegal blocks, 50, 56–58 arm strength, 66 by offensive linemen, 113, 116–118, artificial turf, 19, 24–25 124–126 assist, 166 by receivers, 78–79 Astroturf, 24 by running back, 99 Atkins, Doug (player), 343–344 3-4 defense, 126 Atlanta Falcons, 131 types of blocks, 124–125 Atlantic Coast Conference, 275 wedge, 214–215 attendance, 11, 15 COPYRIGHTEDBlount, MATERIAL Mel (player), 176–177 Auburn University, 268, 385 Blue-Gray
    [Show full text]
  • Seldom Do We Think of the Sacrifices, Risks and Hard Work the Football Squad Has to Endure
    1935 Seldom do we think of the sacrifices, risks and hard work the football squad has to endure. When the boys answered the call in September that meant the end of late hours and wild times for three months. They showed their willingness to give up almost everything for the benefit of the team. These boys were out on the field from 2:30 to 5:30 every afternoon. The results of the week’s work were thrown against the opponents’ every Saturday. The going was tough, but win, lose, or draw, there’s not one of the bunch that quit. Cooperation, not disagreement, made a smooth running machine. On the line, Bruett ably covered one end, while DeMaio took care of the other wing between kickoffs and conversions. Miscia and Archibald would be even stronger next year after their rough experience in the tackle positions. The center of the line was really the pivot post of the team with a mountain of strength in Russo, Capt. McMullen, and all-star P. Caggiano. Clark, Venner, Stiff, Bob Caggiano, Ferraro and Hirsch were tough nuts to crack in their support of the Blue and White. All Metropolitan quarterback, Angelo Fortunato, led the team in scoring with fifty-four points. Reserve linemen Melin, Pauly, Greenman, Scillia, Paine, and Raymond did yeomen work when the regulars were injured, but the unsung heroes of Montclair’s success were the Suicide Boys who scrapped, fought, and then bit the dust that the varsity might rise to greater heights. Though the Montclair gridders may not have won every game, they gave a good amount of themselves with a total of 87 points against 42 for the combined opponents.
    [Show full text]