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Why not relax, and converse into the night on the day’s events in PB NightHawks.
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Now, perhaps we're just being a bit silly here. Maybe we should expect our ministers to lie to Parliament and subvert our criminal justice system, but I expected something better than the judicial process of a banana republic.
"Scottish political website Wings Over Scotland today raised more than £60,000 in a little over eight hours to continue its commentary and analysis for another year"
http://www.wingsoverscotland.com
The reality is that we're not likely to be troubling the bookies in the later rounds so it's a moot point.
The problem only exists at national level, though, where politics trumps sport. Local Gibraltar-based teams regularly play smaller Spanish teams in Andalusia.
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/mmhk-plus-wrapper/kkieglaeipcgbfekkllmepboklglmpcl
His cloying simpering manner is as revolting as his political actions and beliefs.
'Shock as Labour MP launches foul-mouthed tirade in House of Commons
..Describing the episode, Mr Wishart said: "I was just taking a note of Scots Labour MPs who were voting in the bedroom tax motion after their famous failure to turn up last time. They didn't like it much but it was mainly banter with them as they came through the lobby.
According to the SNP MP, Mr Murphy muttered something as he went to walk past, to which Mr Wishart responded, 'nice to speak to you Jim'.
Explaining that neither men had spoken for years, the SNP MP added: "He then went beserk coming right up to my face and just repeating 'f*ck off, f*ck off, f*ck off' at me.
"At one point I thought he might take a swing. He then retreated to a group of Labour MPs and I went up to ask him what that was all about? And he did the same again.
"I was angry and shaken and just asked him to say it again, in which he duly obliged."'
http://tinyurl.com/oc4vgj2
Wee Dougie is just far too slippery to be left holding the bag like Smurf was over Falkirk.
Murray McCallum @MurrayJMcCallum 3 hrs @bobby_mckail Scottish Labour 2012 accounts at Electoral Commission show ANNUAL fundraising of £40K. @WingsScotland beats in 1 day
As for Murphy: I found his comments after the Clutha Bar crash very moving, and I'll give him some latitude because of that, at least for a while.
YouGov/Sun poll tonight - Labour lead remains six points: CON 34%, LAB 40%, LD 10%, UKIP 11%
So one in prison two sacked and more discipline hearings to come. What did the Met Commissioner say at the time about having confidence in his chaps. He must feel a right charlie now.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/scottishnews/1472989/SNPs-quake-march.html
I'd put him an inch taller than Salmond! I never knew that Salmond was such a tiny, tiny man. Is that where the 'Wee Eck' thing comes from?
c) the police might actually have been lying and/or misbehaving. Which, as we have seen, was true for at least some.
I think there's going to be more twists in this to come IMHO, and I do not just mean the libel case.
Oh, and I see Miliband did not apologise to Mitchell at PMQs, even in a week where he has been very shocked about the way his deputy has been treated. If he thinks that a newspaper smearing a politician is wrong, then surely he thinks his own smearing of a politician - at two PMQs - is wrong as well?
To quote Miliband from PMQs: "Just because a police officer has better manners than the chief whip, it doesn't mean he should keep his job."
Well, two police officers did not have better manners or behaviour than the chief whip, and they have lost their jobs. Perhaps Miliband should display some good manners and apologise?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HM-4agdgBqk
Ian Katz @iankatz1000 53m
Coming down #newsnight slipway shortly...@maitlis asks if Angela Merkel holds David Cameron's future in her hands (answer: yes). #newsnight
And that's a very thin stick for the Met and CPS to rest upon. Just the leaking of the original police log to the Sun made the police's side of the story suspect, and seem overly political.
A question: say something more serious had been said (for instance a racial epithet) that was more actionable. Would a successful prosecution be possible or likely after the police log was leaked in this manner?
http://www.scotsman.com/news/education/school-pupils-brand-snp-mp-gimp-on-twitter-1-3292348
YAWN.
And rightly so.
Mr Wallis did of course send the e-mail to an MP. Mr Justice Sweeney (yes, him again, unfortunately) sentenced him on a basis of plea, accepted by the Crown, which was by no means favourable to Mitchell.
http://www.soccertackle.com/ekmps/shops/soccertackle/images/football-goal-dollies-for-moving-free-standing-goalposts-[3]-736-p.jpg
The point is that there is a strong case that there is nothing inconsistent with PC Rowland's account of the incident in the public domain. Remember that leaking a true account to the media will get you sacked from the police (at least in theory). The only reason the officers sacked today weren't prosecuted was because the Crown considered that a charge of misconduct in public office would not have been successful because they could have successfully raised a defence that they were acting in the public interest by leaking the matter. The officers in question argue that they leaked a true account of an incident to the press. Who are we to judge?
Both houses of the Arizona legislature have passed a 'religious freedom' bill, enabling businesses to decline serving or doing business with people based on the business owner's religious beliefs.
So for example, businesses could decline to serve gays, lesbians etc based on their religious beliefs.
Gov. Jan Brewer has until Saturday to either sign or veto it.
Quite a few legislators who voted for the bill are now hearing big time from their constituents, and have decided they made a mistake in supporting it.
The elephant in the room is the NFL, as the Superbowl (and probably the Pro-Bowl also) are due to be played in Arizona next year.
The NFL is doubtless putting subtle pressure on Gov. Brewer to veto the bill.
There is a precedent here. In 1990 Arizona had refused to recognize the Martin Luther King holiday, and as a result the NFL moved the 1993 Superbowl (XXVII) from Arizona to Pasadena. The game was won by the Dallas Cowboys.
So if Brewer does not veto the bill, her state stands to lose the hundreds of millions of dollars a Superbowl brings to an area.
Speaking of the Cowboys, let me enlarge on my comment last night stating that the Cowboys, at $2.3 billion, are the world's most valuable sports franchise, to which SeanT took such exception, saying it was risible. By way of illustration he named several teams and said they are 'global brands'. He is perfectly correct.
Every year a couple of business publications rate the 50 most valuable sports franchises, based on business measurements, not on-the-field product. So revenue, profit, ROI, assets, net worth etc.
For the last few years 3 franchises have owned the top 3, swapping positions between them.
Manchester United, the Dallas Cowboys, and the New York Yankees.
Real Madrid has been climbing the ranks to joust with them of late.
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/22514hearingwitnesstestimonymoore.pdf
Good night.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbespr/2013/07/15/forbes-announces-the-worlds-50-most-valuable-sports-team/
http://www.brandfinance.com/images/upload/brand_finance_sporting_brands_2012.pdf
http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mli45ikdf/1-manchester-united-2/
The net worth figures vary somewhat - ESPN lists the Cowboys as worth $2.3 billion, Forbes puts it at $1.85 bilion. I'm sure the same goes for the others.
For example it lists Dallas' "brand value" at $510 million. That has little to do with the net worth of the franchise.
Overall, I'd say that if you look at the last two Forbes reports it would be fair to say that the NFL is by far the most valuable sporting competition in the world, but that because of football's global reach its biggest clubs will increasingly be the biggest individual franchises. A proper European league might compete with the NFL, but would probably kill football.
The big surprise for me in all the lists is that the Red Sox aren't the number 2 baseball team.
Think that would fly in the Home Counties? No but it flies in Northern Ireland.
Here are some useful facts for you happy people in England who don't have such fuckers paid a salary by the taxpayer to be part time community workers whilst still be able to state that ' i could get you sorted out'.
-I can't vouch for Peter Robinson but other senior unionists didn't know anything about the deal.
-Of the 180-odd who got the nice letters, at least 14 are currently suspected of freelancing for dissident republicans in some shape or form. An additional unspecified number are involved in ordinary decent crime.
Theres more about senior republicans involved in their 'war' that I couldn't state on here but it'll be interesting to see whether they ever appear in court charged with non-political crimes that no amount of wheeling and dealing should allow anyone to be let off for.
The business of Baseball is fascinating. For all the hoopla, like the NHL,it is essentially a regional sport. The Yankees transcend that somewhat, but World Series ratings vary hugely depending on who is playing, and as the years roll by, they are declining.
Regular season NFL games regularly outdraw World Series games. Their marketing and presentation is superb.
There was a situation a couple of years back when a west coast team was in the World Series. The game started at 9.35pm Eastern time, and ended after 2.30am - on a week day!
3/4 of the US population live in the eastern and central time zones.
When I realized the ramifications I hoped Gov Brewer would see sense and she has.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/arizona-governor-held-meetings-rights-bill-22688951
Interesting today that the Guardian reports Russian military exercises a few days after i remarked on here that there had been Russian troop movements of note on Ukraines borders, something with had other regional neighbours on heioghtened watch status.
The Russians have perhaps been busy in other ways too though:
-LukOil shipments going to Odessa have been halted.
-Whilst Russian officials suggested government to government loans to Ukraine might get the go ahead at some point, 2 major Russian bank decided not to extend loans to Ukrainian interests. In normal circumstances this is not surprising, the situation in Ukraine is unsettled but you'd not want to bet on that decision having been discussed beforehand with Kremlin officials.
Perhaps the most obvious sign of tensions over the Crimea is not the street trouble or the bolstering of Russian forces but a suggestion by Ukrainian a senior Ukrainian security official that the UN might like to come in and monitor the situation down by the sea. Such a suggestion is an attempt to internationalise the situation in the hope that it might dissuade Russian action.
I do wonder what happens to United's value should they not qualify for a Champion's League spot as looks likely. I note Liverpool are not in the top 50, which surprises me slightly given the number of supporters around the world.
If Liverpool start getting into the Champion's league and United don't I think their value rapidly changes relative to each other.
The gap between Man U, Spurs, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea and Man City, and the rest would go out even further as sadly I think > 50% of the population probably supports one of the big 6.
You need a salary cap - this year it looks like about $135 million per team - and the league negotiates all the TV contracts, distributing TV revenue equally to all 32 teams. Ticket revenue is also split equally. Ths means that prior to the season every team's fans can feel like it has a chance. The NFLPA and the league have an agreement that 54% (I think) of revenues go to players salaries.
Compare that to the Premier League, where only 4 teams have ever won.
On a Sunday afternoon, I sit down and can watch any one of 14 games live (except one on Thursday and one on Monday), or by watching Red Zone Channel can watch real time highlights of all of them. It costs me $300 per season. What a deal.
The NFL is expert at extracting the last dollar for its TV contracts. Soccer in general is terrible at this. TV contracts are where the real money is.
NFL teams are well run businesses - many Premier League teams (and other European teams) are money sinks for incredibly rich people wanting a toy with which to massage their egos..
The great appeal used to be that any team, if they won enough matches could get to the very top. no barriers to entry. Manchester United could get relegated to the 2nd division without going bust..
now as you say, they money at the top has distorted everything so much that it is nearly impossible for things to change at the top (unless someone (Glazers for example) does something reckless with the business)
I suppose eventually what you suggest will happen and a closed (european?) league with collective bargaining and salary cap will be introduced and there may be competition again. but something will have been lost (even if its only my proustian memories of cigar smoke and ford cortinas at the Victoria ground in 1977...)
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/douglascarswellmp/100261001/when-did-the-left-ditch-democracy/
For me the poster child is Leeds United, the club I supported as a kid - they came so close and then disaster ensued.
Then you have the total insanity of deducting league points for a club's parlous financial state.
In the NFL there is no relegation - the league is the league. No matter how badly you do there is always next year.
I guess that will only matter to those like myself who remember when it wasn't a TV sport and standing on terraces was where it was at (with all the good and bad that went with it)..
I don't know about the states, but there's a lot of High school sports televised in Japan (which I think doesn't happen in the UK). I find these more entertaining in many ways than the pro versions. And of course watching my own lads playing Rugby is also highly entertaining
Yes, the High School and college football games are much more emotional than the pro game.
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/feb/26/scotlands-new-away-kit-beckham-glory-days