Futbol Americano
- Cross Traffic
- Eternal Scobode
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 8:55 am
- Location: Boise, ID
Futbol Americano
Nice to see they left up the security fences that are used for soccer.
Mexican Super Bowl, more like the Mexican Toliet Bowl with the pathetic Niners and Cardinals.
Mexican Super Bowl, more like the Mexican Toliet Bowl with the pathetic Niners and Cardinals.
-
- Elwood
- Posts: 246
- Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2005 4:32 am
Re: Futbol Americano
Lol I thought the exact same thing. For a second I thought to myself "wow that is different having fences", then in a second I figured it out.Cross Traffic wrote:Nice to see they left up the security fences that are used for soccer.
Mexican Super Bowl, more like the Mexican Toliet Bowl with the pathetic Niners and Cardinals.
- The Assassin
- Raider Fan
- Posts: 3171
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 12:27 am
- Location: Las Vegas,Nevada 89130
- frodo_biguns
- gibbering dumbfuck
- Posts: 2202
- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2005 10:03 am
Re: Futbol Americano
I actually liked listening to it in espanol! Sounds exciting.Cross Traffic wrote:Nice to see they left up the security fences that are used for soccer.
Mexican Super Bowl, more like the Mexican Toliet Bowl with the pathetic Niners and Cardinals.
- The Assassin
- Raider Fan
- Posts: 3171
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 12:27 am
- Location: Las Vegas,Nevada 89130
- The Assassin
- Raider Fan
- Posts: 3171
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 12:27 am
- Location: Las Vegas,Nevada 89130
Warner's a good Christian...Neely8 wrote:What a douche Kurt Warner is. The kid is talking to him about the game and he completely ignores him. !
Whenever I hear someone say I'm a born again Christian... I run as fast as I can.
Our resident redneck is now grading airports...JHawkBCD wrote:Was in the Mexico City airport on Monday... what a shithole.
the truth
Mexico City is auditioning for their shot at relocating the Saints. Tagliabue already announced that they would not consider another small market (ie. San Antonio), and they've been looking for an excuse to bring Mexico into the fold for a long time.
Santos de Ciudad de Mexico. Has an interesting ring to it, perhaps.
Santos de Ciudad de Mexico. Has an interesting ring to it, perhaps.
Nope. Not dead.
JHawkBCD wrote:Mexico City is auditioning for their shot at relocating the Saints. Tagliabue already announced that they would not consider another small market (ie. San Antonio), and they've been looking for an excuse to bring Mexico into the fold for a long time.
Santos de Ciudad de Mexico. Has an interesting ring to it, perhaps.
100K in the stands and 18.1 million in Mexico City alone says he might not be wrong.....
- d-townmike
- "Q-Town"
- Posts: 778
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:23 pm
- Location: Now in the STL!
Sounds like a Raider home game to me, except for the 105K attendance part.d-townmike wrote:105,000 people there and none care about either team, and are waiting for the perfect time to start rioting and dropping urine filled bags on the field once they realize that there's no biting of dicks and more scoring unlike the sport that they're really "passionate" about.
Nope. Not dead.
- Cross Traffic
- Eternal Scobode
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 8:55 am
- Location: Boise, ID
- The Assassin
- Raider Fan
- Posts: 3171
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 12:27 am
- Location: Las Vegas,Nevada 89130
- Cross Traffic
- Eternal Scobode
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 8:55 am
- Location: Boise, ID
- The Assassin
- Raider Fan
- Posts: 3171
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 12:27 am
- Location: Las Vegas,Nevada 89130
- frodo_biguns
- gibbering dumbfuck
- Posts: 2202
- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2005 10:03 am
Would the NFL allow the team keep more than 53 men on their roster?Neely8 wrote:JHawkBCD wrote:Mexico City is auditioning for their shot at relocating the Saints. Tagliabue already announced that they would not consider another small market (ie. San Antonio), and they've been looking for an excuse to bring Mexico into the fold for a long time.
Santos de Ciudad de Mexico. Has an interesting ring to it, perhaps.
100K in the stands and 18.1 million in Mexico City alone says he might not be wrong.....
Kidnappings still plague Mexico
By Eliza Barclay
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Washington, DC, Jun. 9 (UPI) -- Kidnapping in Mexico has long been a lucrative industry that has plagued the country's psyche with fear and filled the pockets of plotters and conspiring law enforcement officers.
While federal data from the Mexican Attorney General indicates that the country's kidnappings are on the decline, experts say official conclusions are wrong.
The Mexican daily El Universal Wednesday obtained a report from the Attorney General's office, which cited that only four remaining kidnapping groups in the country are large enough to be classified as organized crime rings.
According to the document, the PGR has broken up over 45 groups dedicated to the crime and arrested 292 kidnapping suspects since President Vicente Fox took office in 2000. It also claims to have rescued 424 victims, and that only 5 percent of all ransoms demanded by kidnappers have been paid.
But Mexican crime experts say the real figures on kidnappings and other crimes could be five times as high as the government figures. The government's numbers are inaccurate in part because many victims are unwilling to report crime out of fear of neglect from the notoriously corrupt police.
René Jiménez Ornelas, who tracks kidnappings at Mexico's National Autonomous University (UNAM), told El Universal he estimates there are around 3,000 kidnappings a year.
"Mexico has a history of complicity between law enforcement an actual kidnappers," Armand Peschard-Sverdrup, director of the Mexico project at the Center for Strategic & International Studies in Washington, DC, told United Press International. "As a result, law enforcement is still seen skeptically by the Mexican people."
Mexico City police are known for frequently enhancing their modest salaries with bribes for traffic offenses and other small transgressions. And authorities have reported instances of police taking part in hold-ups and kidnappings.
Guillermo Velasco Arzac, the director and president of Mexico United Against Delinquency, a civil organization, announced June 2 Mexico ranks second in the world for the highest number of kidnappings registered each year.
"The phenomenon of kidnapping in Mexico is derived from the lack of coordination between the country's political bodies," Velasco Arzac said.
Velasco Arzac, also a member of the Civic Advisors for Public Security and Justice, said a change in Mexican penal laws is urgent. He added the number of abductions in the country "as it continues to be high, is occupying second place in the incidence of this crime" at the global scale.
Nevertheless, he signaled that year after year the number of this type of crime has gone down in Mexico. But he asserted because "the bands of kidnappers have not fallen apart," the phenomenon of kidnapping continues to register high incidence in the country.
Velasco Arzac said additionally the penal laws are obsolete and insufficient for attacking the problem.
Meanwhile, President Vicente Fox said Wednesday his government is not evading its responsibility around kidnappings and guaranteed that it will redouble its resources and collaboration with states to combat the illicit crimes.
In a recent report from the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations reported that in the last decade kidnappings have multiplied in countries like Mexico, Spain, Germany, Poland, the United Kingdom, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Mexico exemplifies the gravity of the phenomenon, which has doubled its figures between 2001 and 2002 from 245 to 464 incidents of kidnapping, according to the report.
Armand Peschard-Sverdrup noted that the prevalence of kidnapping in Mexico is a small part of a much broader problem that beleaguers Mexico's judicial system.
"As long as Mexico has a problem of impunity and a lack of professionalism among the Mexican law enforcement, problems like kidnapping will continue," Peschard-Sverdrup said. "But the Attorney General has done an incredible job of professionalizing the federal law enforcement so far."
Mexican Attorney General Rafaél Macedo has created a Mexican version of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, called the Agencia Federal de Investigacion.
Most promising, Peschard-Sverdrup said, is President Fox's comprehensive judicial reform proposal which will come up in the next Congressional session beginning in September.
"Judicial reform will be an important part of the upcoming legislative debate," Peschard-Sverdrup said.
- Diogenes
- The Last American Liberal
- Posts: 6985
- Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 7:00 pm
- Location: Ghost In The Machine
You mean Debartalo.drummer wrote:This is a Godawful team , the worst I've ever seen a Niner team , talent and depth wise .
Fukkin' York fucked this franchise good .
You wanted to mortgage the future for the present...
Welcome to the future.
Message brought to you by Diogenes.
The Last American Liberal.
The Last American Liberal.
- drummer
- Give the drummer some
- Posts: 1278
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 8:26 am
- Location: San Francisco , Homeless mecca of the USA
True , once the salary cap came in , but York has paid big for some shit players . I think Garica is still counting against thier cap , as well as a few others who aren't on the team .Diogenes wrote:You mean Debartalo.drummer wrote:This is a Godawful team , the worst I've ever seen a Niner team , talent and depth wise .
Fukkin' York fucked this franchise good .
You wanted to mortgage the future for the present...
Welcome to the future.
Terry Donahue is also responsible for this abortion too .
-
- 2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
- Posts: 29350
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
- Location: Lookin for tards
Can't remember what you posted?Diogenes wrote:^^^^^^^^^^^^BSmack wrote:A Tardinals fan running smack on the once proud 49ers franchise?
This is a great moment in football history.
Not very good with the reading comprehension in this forum either.
Not like its good smack. But its a start. Being a Cards fan, I'm sure you're out of practice.You mean Debartalo.
You wanted to mortgage the future for the present... Welcome to the future.
- Diogenes
- The Last American Liberal
- Posts: 6985
- Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 7:00 pm
- Location: Ghost In The Machine
What part of...BSmack wrote:Can't remember what you posted?Diogenes wrote:^^^^^^^^^^^^BSmack wrote:A Tardinals fan running smack on the once proud 49ers franchise?
This is a great moment in football history.
Not very good with the reading comprehension in this forum either.
Not like its good smack. But its a start. Being a Cards fan, I'm sure you're out of practice.You mean Debartalo.
You wanted to mortgage the future for the present... Welcome to the future.
This is a Godawful team , the worst I've ever seen a Niner team , talent and depth wise .
Fukkin' York fucked this franchise good .
....didn't you get?
My response wasn't 'smack', mearly fact.
Ninerfan got it, too bad it went over your head.
Message brought to you by Diogenes.
The Last American Liberal.
The Last American Liberal.
- See You Next Wednesday
- De Gustibus Non Est Disputandum
- Posts: 1487
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 9:34 pm
I gotta believe that sending those teams to Mexico to play a football game ahs to be some sort of violation of International law, Geneva convenetion or something. We already kicked their asses in the mid 1800's, did we really need to add to their pain?
"As democracy is perfected, the office of president represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron."
- H.L. Mencken (1880 - 1956)
- H.L. Mencken (1880 - 1956)
-
- 2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
- Posts: 29350
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
- Location: Lookin for tards
Did you hear the fans whistling every time the Cards kicked a FG or a 49ers player failed to run a kick out of the endzone? Even the Mexicans recognized horrible football when they saw it.See You Next Wednesday wrote:I gotta believe that sending those teams to Mexico to play a football game ahs to be some sort of violation of International law, Geneva convenetion or something. We already kicked their asses in the mid 1800's, did we really need to add to their pain?
- Diogenes
- The Last American Liberal
- Posts: 6985
- Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 7:00 pm
- Location: Ghost In The Machine
I guess special teams isn't much of a concept down south.BSmack wrote:Did you hear the fans whistling every time the Cards kicked a FG or a 49ers player failed to run a kick out of the endzone? Appearantly the Mexicans know as much about football when as I do.See You Next Wednesday wrote:I gotta believe that sending those teams to Mexico to play a football game ahs to be some sort of violation of International law, Geneva convenetion or something. We already kicked their asses in the mid 1800's, did we really need to add to their pain?
-
- 2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
- Posts: 29350
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
- Location: Lookin for tards
6 field goals isn't anything to cheer about.Diogenes wrote:I guess special teams isn't much of a concept down south.BSmack wrote:Did you hear the fans whistling every time the Cards kicked a FG or a 49ers player failed to run a kick out of the endzone? Appearantly the Mexicans know as much about football when as I do.See You Next Wednesday wrote:I gotta believe that sending those teams to Mexico to play a football game ahs to be some sort of violation of International law, Geneva convenetion or something. We already kicked their asses in the mid 1800's, did we really need to add to their pain?
Unless you're a Cards fan.
-
- 2014 JFFL Champion
- Posts: 4553
- Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 1:59 pm
Actually they saw more scoring last night than they had in 12 previous years of soccer games in that stadium.BSmack wrote:Did you hear the fans whistling every time the Cards kicked a FG or a 49ers player failed to run a kick out of the endzone? Even the Mexicans recognized horrible football when they saw it.See You Next Wednesday wrote:I gotta believe that sending those teams to Mexico to play a football game ahs to be some sort of violation of International law, Geneva convenetion or something. We already kicked their asses in the mid 1800's, did we really need to add to their pain?
- Diogenes
- The Last American Liberal
- Posts: 6985
- Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 7:00 pm
- Location: Ghost In The Machine
If your OLine is in such disarray that the only reason you even try to run the ball is to keep your QB out of the hospital, you're going to suck in the red zone.
As bad as they are playing with their size, the coordinater needs his as fired.
Injuries aside.
And if 6FG=1W, I'll take it.
Better that than no offensive TDs.
As bad as they are playing with their size, the coordinater needs his as fired.
Injuries aside.
And if 6FG=1W, I'll take it.
Better that than no offensive TDs.
Message brought to you by Diogenes.
The Last American Liberal.
The Last American Liberal.