10 notes
  

Ana’s Top Athlete Crushes | in no particular order

David Wright (New York Mets), Victor Cruz (New York Giants), Matt Kemp (Los Angeles Dodgers), Jose Reyes (New York Mets Miami Marlins), Chris Paul (Los Angeles Clippers), Aaron Hernandez (New England Patriots), David Beckham (Los Angeles Galaxy),Al Horford (Atlanta Hawks), Allen Iverson (no team cuz he never wanted to practice) <3

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Boston turns on Tom Brady&#8230;.
Not so safety call: Blame Brady for this one

February 05, 2012|Eric Wilbur, Boston.com Staff, Globe Staff




The legend is dead, the prince has turned back into a frog, and&#8230;well, use whatever other cliché you want.
A performance as bad as Tom Brady&#8217;s tonight in Super Bowl XLVI deserves a lead just as lame.
Sorry, Tommy Boy, this one&#8217;s on you. Your hideous performance led to the Giants&#8217; 21-17 Super Bowl title win. How embarrassing for your coach, your teammates, and your fans.
But especially for you, boy wonder. It was one thing when you led the game off with a safety, which surely put plenty of faith into the heart of Patriot Nation, but just when you have the game, just when you might be able to run off the clock, you huck the thing downfield. Yes, if Wes Welker catches that thing, you&#8217;re in the clear, and fans will place the blame either way, but what happened to being safe in that situation? What happened to the Patriot Way and clock management?
What happened to you?
What an embarrassment for the Patriots organization and Bob Kraft. So now the Giants have taken Lombardi from you twice, and you haven&#8217;t looked this bad in a playoff game since&#8230;well, two weeks ago against the Ravens. Maybe that moment will actually hit you as you&#8217;re whittling down water slides in South America looking like Prince Valiant this spring. The Patriots haven&#8217;t won a title in seven years, but even worse, they&#8217;re now turning into the Buffalo Bills, with the Giants being their Cowboy daddy. That&#8217;s not easy to swallow in a region where New York is regarded as highly as the menu at Beacon Hill Pub.
But, there you are, Tom. That&#8217;s what you have become. Your legacy has been stamped, but you&#8217;re turning your Joe Montana status into one of Jim Kelly. But, hey what you worry? There&#8217;s that new mansion in the &#8220;Names&#8221; pages to deal with.
Yes, there were plenty of dropped passes to go around. Granted. But when you begin the game with such a boneheaded play, then proceed to make random mistakes, sorry, Tom, game is on you.
There was no fourth and 13 to blame Belichick for.
Welker was the closest thing to Asante, and the eeriness compared to the Tyree play will be discussed for decades to come.
Thanks for that too. Can&#8217;t wait. Oh, look, another text coming in from 212&#8230;
Tom, it&#8217;s not all your fault, but you&#8217;re the poster boy, you had opportunities, and you failed to make them. Add to that your blunders, and it all becomes about you. You blew this Super Bowl. You denied your coach No. 4. You let down your teammates.
Eli and Peyton now have as many rings as you combined over the past five years. You haven&#8217;t sniffed one in seven. How&#8217;s that hit you?
Maybe it doesn&#8217;t hit you as hard anymore, and maybe that&#8217;s the problem.
The safety killed the Patriots. Killed them.
And there&#8217;s nobody to blame but Tom Brady.
However hard it might be to swallow, the glory days are gone. Even Montana handed off to Mallett at some point, right?

Boston turns on Tom Brady….

Not so safety call: Blame Brady for this one

February 05, 2012|Eric Wilbur, Boston.com StaffGlobe Staff

The legend is dead, the prince has turned back into a frog, and…well, use whatever other cliché you want.

A performance as bad as Tom Brady’s tonight in Super Bowl XLVI deserves a lead just as lame.

Sorry, Tommy Boy, this one’s on you. Your hideous performance led to the Giants’ 21-17 Super Bowl title win. How embarrassing for your coach, your teammates, and your fans.

But especially for you, boy wonder. It was one thing when you led the game off with a safety, which surely put plenty of faith into the heart of Patriot Nation, but just when you have the game, just when you might be able to run off the clock, you huck the thing downfield. Yes, if Wes Welker catches that thing, you’re in the clear, and fans will place the blame either way, but what happened to being safe in that situation? What happened to the Patriot Way and clock management?

What happened to you?

What an embarrassment for the Patriots organization and Bob Kraft. So now the Giants have taken Lombardi from you twice, and you haven’t looked this bad in a playoff game since…well, two weeks ago against the Ravens. Maybe that moment will actually hit you as you’re whittling down water slides in South America looking like Prince Valiant this spring. The Patriots haven’t won a title in seven years, but even worse, they’re now turning into the Buffalo Bills, with the Giants being their Cowboy daddy. That’s not easy to swallow in a region where New York is regarded as highly as the menu at Beacon Hill Pub.

But, there you are, Tom. That’s what you have become. Your legacy has been stamped, but you’re turning your Joe Montana status into one of Jim Kelly. But, hey what you worry? There’s that new mansion in the “Names” pages to deal with.

Yes, there were plenty of dropped passes to go around. Granted. But when you begin the game with such a boneheaded play, then proceed to make random mistakes, sorry, Tom, game is on you.

There was no fourth and 13 to blame Belichick for.

Welker was the closest thing to Asante, and the eeriness compared to the Tyree play will be discussed for decades to come.

Thanks for that too. Can’t wait. Oh, look, another text coming in from 212…

Tom, it’s not all your fault, but you’re the poster boy, you had opportunities, and you failed to make them. Add to that your blunders, and it all becomes about you. You blew this Super Bowl. You denied your coach No. 4. You let down your teammates.

Eli and Peyton now have as many rings as you combined over the past five years. You haven’t sniffed one in seven. How’s that hit you?

Maybe it doesn’t hit you as hard anymore, and maybe that’s the problem.

The safety killed the Patriots. Killed them.

And there’s nobody to blame but Tom Brady.

However hard it might be to swallow, the glory days are gone. Even Montana handed off to Mallett at some point, right?

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My husband can not f––ing throw the ball and catch the ball at the same time,” she said, taking a dig at Brady’s receivers. “I can’t believe they dropped the ball so many times.
-

Supermodel, Gisele caught on camera defending her husband, Tom Brady, after being heckled by fans. - People

(via sportsnetny)

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The New England Patriots after Super Bowl XLVI

The New England Patriots after Super Bowl XLVI

276 notes
  
Tom Brady and his Patriots fall to the New York Giants in the Super Bowl for the second time in less than five years.

Tom Brady and his Patriots fall to the New York Giants in the Super Bowl for the second time in less than five years.

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The Patriots advance to Super Bowl XLVI after a 23-20 victory over the Ravens in the AFC Championship Game.

21 notes
  
SIS:Girl Moment  → Rodney Harrison ( From: Markham, Illinois | Age: 38 | Team: Retired; formerly New England Patriots )

SIS:Girl Moment  → Rodney Harrison ( From: Markham, Illinois | Age: 38 | Team: Retired; formerly New England Patriots )

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NEW YORK SPORTS AFTER 9/11:

NEW YORK JETS WIN ONE FOR THE CITY THEY LOVE

The rivalry between the New York Jets and the New England Patriots was a long running one, which came to a sharp turn when the New York Jets had the hearts of the people of New York in their hands when they took the field in Massachusetts.

The Jets, who refused to play any games immediately following the tragic day, were the spear headers for the break taken by the NFL. On the 23rd, they were ready to play, ready to win for the people that loved and supported them.

The game was preceded by a remembrance ceremony, which included the introduction of Jimmy, Billy, and Marc Andruzzi — all members of the New York Fire Department and all brothers of then Patriots guard, Joe Andruzzi — as honorary team captains. This ceremony also had cheerleaders holding an American flag that stretched from one 35-yard line to the other, while fans held their own flags and signs.
Both teams brought their A game, but in the end, the team that needed the win for reasons outside of football was triumphant. Like the other pro teams in NY, they had spent days helping out the victims in whatever way they could — offering their parking lot and muscle to load supplies on to trucks, visiting families and the disaster site and donating money. This time they gave something that nobody else could.
The game marked Herman Edwards first win as an NFL head coach. He didn’t keep the game ball though, instead donating it to the people of New York. Giving the ball to Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Edwards said, “To all the people that worked and tried to save people’s lives, its only fitting that this belongs to them.”

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