18 Burst results for "Drogba"

The Tennis.com Podcast
"drogba" Discussed on The Tennis.com Podcast
"So let me ask you this. I'm going to ask you one player on the men's side, one player on the women's side that excites you. Not necessarily that they have won a slam or even a top 20, but as a coach, you see potential, right? And it's somebody that's played the best player in the world, right? And beat the number one player. So that has potential? Yeah, potential and or is like right on the cusp of doing something historic. One man, one woman that excites you. I'll tell you, man, you know, there's a couple people that come to mind on the men's side, but I actually like Ben Shelton. I like his attitude. I like his game. He goes for it. He looks like he's playing things that he can control. He looks like he doesn't get too far ahead of himself. I like the direction he's going. And I know his dad very well. So I know his dad has got him well grounded. I like his game. I mean, of course, I love Tia Fuell. I love all of them, right? I love where Chris Eubanks have gone. I just like American tennis, right? But I really think Ben Shelton is something to tell you the truth. On the women's side, you know, I mean, how can you not respect Coco? Of course, you know, I see that push in her. You know, she was right there for a few years and couldn't quite, let's say, push over the hump to get the slam. And obviously she got, you know, some things going, this US Open man, and was able to manage it. And I think that was the big difference. She always had the talent. She always could run. She always could hit. Something got her to push these things, you know, to stay in the battle and not feel, get ahead of herself, feel like she had to play better or whatever. She just pushed what she had. And she's learning. And I think she's gonna be around for a long time. Oh, yeah, she's gonna be a problem for a long time. If she keeps, and I'm going to go to what Kobe Bryant said when he saw her, it's going to be her ability to sustain this, right? Because, you know, we can get ahead of ourselves sometimes and we can get out of it. And like Drogba said, it's how quick you can get back on path. So it's gonna happen. It's how quick you get back on the field. That's what she has her team for. But I think she's gonna be around for a long time. I love her game. But more importantly, I love her push. I just love the way she competes, man. And that's, to me, I'm a big fan of that. Oh, you compete. I mean, the level that she competes at, and she's not probably the best, she'll be, she's not the best version of herself now. She still has, is improving, can improve if she maintains that fight while slowly improving different skill sets. I mean, she's, you know, obviously 20 something slams is, you know, that's some Serena stuff that may or may not ever happen. But the girl can like run tennis for a long You know what Richard Williams told me before, man, he said, look, he said, I said, man, if my player could ever do anything that Venus and Serena is doing, man, I'd be happy. He says, look, man. And he was very serious about it. He said, look, they can do it and they can do more. I was like, huh? I said, these are the greatest, man. He's like, because seeing it gives you every Advantage that it can be happened. He said, when we did it, we didn't see it, you know, with, with us. And he says, but when you see it, you can do it. And I'm a firm believer in that. So as long as they keep the path, it can be done, you know what I mean? And she doesn't have to think 24, right? She got to think one ball at a time. Right. And for a certain amount of years, and hopefully she'll get it. Yeah. Right. And I think she can do that. I mean, she's shown that she can do it. So let me ask you, because, you know, you, you know, a lot of coaches are great coaches and their kids go play something different, right? You know, like, you know, it doesn't mean, just because you're a great coach doesn't mean your kid's going to be a great player. But Arrow, your son is a great player, right? And is now coaching Boise State. Yes. I've seen you on the court and you like me. It gets rough. It gets rough out there, right? Of course. Tell me about, tell me how it was coaching your son and having to go home and sit across from the dinner table. Because I know, if it was me, sometimes I sit across from my player at a restaurant and I'd be like, you don't even deserve that Indian food you're about to put in your mouth right now. I should slap the fork out your mouth, right? So I can imagine, right? My daughter never was like serious enough for me to be that upset about practice, right? You know what I'm saying? But I can see you having some long car rides. Oh yeah. My comfortable dinner table conversations after a bad practice. Tell me about raising a tennis player. Well, I'll tell you, he was an exceptional kid because when he, he's been around tennis since he was born. Like when I played the Pete Sanders match, he was three months old and he was there, right? I remember he was three years old watching me play at the US Open and people in the stands next to him were talking very loud and he turned around and said, shh, my dad's playing, shh, right? This is a three year old. They're like, okay, okay, that's your dad? Okay, we're so sorry. So, Arrow was a little special kid. He's, you know, he understood the game. He loved the game. I didn't force him to play. He loved the game. I mean, there were two, three o'clock in the morning, he would walk out of the room, sleeping out of his room, turn on the television, he'd be sitting down watching tennis.

ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"drogba" Discussed on ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"Um, I want your opinion of the disc list. We already talked about it, uh, which may cause the death of physical media in the future. It will not, that is a complete, it, admittedly, I like that people want physical media, but Microsoft is not even the leader in destroying physical media. That is like some kind of weird reductionist thought process. There are a lot of these companies are going to digital. It's not one company. It's quite literally the world. Yeah. Yeah. I just like it's the way the technology is moving. It just doesn't make any sense to stick to physical. Yeah. Well, not only that, but like we were talking about prior, I think it was a prior. It could have been during this podcast, but I believe it might've been prior where I was saying that there, there probably will always be a limited run. They'll probably always be that kind of stuff. But when you look at it, it's switched now to where it's physical is barely there. Digital's there. The consumer has shown that that works. The people who want to archive stuff, that is something that I fully support in whatever way they want to, but you don't have a right to buy a game that is no longer buyable. There, there isn't currently any right that says you can get something that isn't there. You don't, you don't, that's not a right. It doesn't matter if you think it should be right. All the games selling for like millions of dollars. Right. Right. Yeah. And by the way, I don't like that either. Trust me. Do you guys, I bitched about this on Twitter. The big one, collector game guides and stuff. The big one is game guides, but what they do, no lie. They print like 500 and then they sell them themselves on eBay. One of the major companies does that right now. And I'm trying to do an investigate. I'm trying to get people to help me investigate this, but nobody really wants to jump into it because it's a small story. Do you remember the, the, the Mario, um, not remakes, like the remasters or ports to switch that they did for the anniversary that was limited. Did they gain, like, are they rare now? Like, you sell them for, for a lot of money. I think anything Nintendo is, if Nintendo is rare, it's expensive. Does that make, am I saying that right? Anything that's Nintendo will probably be expensive if it's in any way rare. It's not the same as other companies. It's Nintendo. Cause they're a hundred years, right? They started doing playing cards. Like that's how they started doing game on the still Nintendo. Right. And those, like, did you see some dude, got like, Oh no, that was magic. The gathering where some dude unboxed the fucking $2 million card. Uh, the third turd says a shame that most people seemingly don't care about owning anything anymore. I own a bunch of physical stuff. See, that's another thing is I think that people are like folk, admittedly games are changing to digital, but, um, I don't care about owning anything. You don't, I have a lot of physical stuff, but I don't seek it out hardware. I don't have like physical stuff that I just put into my hardware to get something digital. Yeah. Well, I see a lot of people who hate streaming, even though you buy the game and own it. And they have no issue with steam. For some reason, I'll have the same discussion with somebody about G-force now. And I'll be like, are you understanding what you're saying? You're you've already bought it on steam and you weren't complaining about steam and it's digital, but you're complaining that it's available for streaming. Like what are we talking about? Like you can still download it on steam. What are we talking about? Like it's, it's the same thing, but it's companies that people have a real issue with a lot of people have a bone with the companies. I have a somewhat slightly different perspective, maybe because I live in, um, on the physical, like digital transition, because I live in quite possibly the most digital country in the world in Denmark. Um, like we began the transition really, I think maybe even like 20 years ago where we really started to move away from any sort of like physical archive or databases, um, to completely digital and completely digital sort of infrastructure and our, and economy. So like any contact that the government makes with you happen is digitally. Now, uh, there's, there is no physical, like mails being sent out or anything anymore. Um, it's all going into like government databases. Um, and it's, it's like that transitions. Is that Orwellian to you? It's not, it's not really Orwellian in that sense. It's just been incredibly cumbersome in a lot of really unpredictable ways. Like I remember I was even, I've, I've worked in the transition as well. So I've, I've worked like putting, putting like physical archives into the digital database and like the amount of paper we used to go paperless with three times the amount of the actual archives. Yeah. Like it was just such a colossal waste. It seemed like at the time, and then you get into these databases that just are like, and it software that constantly breaks down, breaks down and has to be updated into new versions. And then, then they have to be out, the databases have transitioned to the new systems and there are constant issues there that just constantly incur new costs on, on like taxpayer money and stuff, um, in ways that I don't think people really accounted for when they went, Oh, we'll just go digital. Cause it's so much easier than, than, than the physical media. Uh, and I don't think that's really been the case, uh, for, certainly for us. And we are quite possibly the most digital, digital country in the world. I think another thing to remember though, is that a shit ton of games are still like playable. If the servers go off and stuff like that, some aren't and we'll go to more that aren't, but there is the sort of the, the worry of the future is supposed, supposed to be there a sort of a checks and balances of we want to go to the future, but at the same time, let's not go too far future. But I can tell you as somebody who is physical, I like physical stuff. I like it in the mail. It sounds weird, but I like, it's like a gift every day, like writing actual letters. Like I still do. And here's the weird thing though. I don't like digital books, but anyways, dude, no way. Me, me either. But what I was going to say is I would also get mail way late and lose payments or so there were issues with both, right? Like there's cumbersome with both and humans are physical and we have to use physical computer to dial into the digital to get the fucking digital readout. That was paper at one time that maybe is updated now and updated more often than the physical one, but the physical one you sort of got accustomed to and systems were built to do. It's going to take 40 years for all this to happen and there will always be a vinyl version of video games. It won't be every game won't be every game, but there's always going to be a vinyl something. There's always going to be somebody that wants people cracking and ripping and doing all sorts of things to preserve. Yeah, but currently there just isn't any right. And what's even more interesting is I think some people you know how it's like if you have a friend who finds out something's wrong in the world, they go out and try to save the whales. And then there's other people who are like that sucks about the whales. I'll send some money. What happens is you get this dive. You get this divergent thought process that some people are like, oh, well, if you didn't come save the whales with me, you don't care. It's like I send $100. I care. There's different ways in which you can support it in different ways in which you can fight it. And a lot of people get very angry and are like, nobody cares. And it's like, no, there's a lot of people who care. They're just carrying in a different way than you are. And maybe they're also not as open as you are about your purchase or not as visibly super chat from Drogba. Holy abandoning physical media is a huge mistake on a human social level. Media preservation is one of the biggest cultural artistic crises of our generation. Our archivists are begging us to stop. I don't agree with any of that. It's very dramatic. I can tell you that is pretty dramatic. But I do get where he's coming from. I just don't. As someone who has a lot of friends, nothing is happening, I guess in like the activist environment. I get things like and people working for like NGOs. They don't post on social media. They don't go to like wherever, like the homeless shelter or where they help dish out food or like the Salvation Army store where they help sell clothes or whatever it is they do. They volunteer for it and like post Instagram photos with a hashtag. They don't have time for it because it takes up all their time. It takes up all their time. They don't do it for like the visibility of it. Yeah, I get where drug was coming from and I think that it it is important. It's also ignoring that some people many people are working for it, but I also think that in a weird way. So bear with me because I don't know if this is true. I haven't thought this through, but I usually try to look at like a weird overarching thing. Worrying about it and talking about it is in a way also preserving it even if it's just in story base. Oh for sure. So yeah, we may become human. Mental storytelling like remember this game and by the way, I grew up old enough that a lot of the games that came out aren't even available online. There's no source code. They lost the source code. They lost, you know, there's no digital copies or there's floppy disks out there, but I have become an archivist myself like I tell you guys about a game that we can't get. You can't play and I think culturally I don't think it's a replacement, but I think that it is still occurring in that way and one of the nice things also and this is going to I want to make sure people understand where I'm coming from. I think YouTube. Is an amazing place for archiving that as long as it doesn't go away, right? We worry about that data hoarders on Reddit will explain that to you if you ever go there, but I do think that when we upload a video of the gameplay and a let's play in a weird way, I think that's a very cool side way of doing it. It's a side story of the actual. Yes, you can't interact with it, but you guys have told me about books. I'll never read like the recording of a song almost, right? Yeah, right. Yeah, with or a remix almost in a weird way. It's like a remix of but yeah, it's it not wholly removing it and it's not a replacement. I want to make sure people are saying that I'm just saying that don't be so. It's important, but there is other stuff occurring and I do like that we as a culture change it, but you know what we were bitching about prior to this podcast and so I gotta sort of argue with myself. We were bitching about something where I said I want people to know bad people existed like Hitler and we're removing that so I can sort of argue that and say I can sort of argue and say we do need to know the good and the bad and we need to have those not erased. That's the worry is erasure, right? Erasure is the big worry. I think people have where it just goes like and then at some point have you ever heard the story ability to something right? And it's up to they don't like the idea of being up to a company. But anyways, yeah, you mean up to? Yeah, right where it's just seem to just take the game away from you for some reason, but I don't think it's realistic, but it's still the possibility of that is still there versus I get you. Yeah, I get where he's coming from. I was going to say there's a real quick. I just want to say there's a there's a comment that's you die to deaths when you die and when you're when your name is spoken the last time. So there will be a time where I won't ever mention Conan on the Apple 2 again.

Men In Blazers
"drogba" Discussed on Men In Blazers
"Rubbish striker that now when you have a striker who doesn't store roles, people assume they are a false 9 when in fact they're just a bad 9, but spalletti invented that system in its purest form. But he's also got this great track record with turning strikers into goal machines and we've seen that with Ottoman as well that he's taken a forward who had an ample talent who had all the raw ingredients. And spalletti has tunneled them and fine tune them and turned him into this almost complete center forward. His idol as a kid, I guess, fairly predictably was did a Drogba. And although they are stylistically, I think, quite different, their strengths are different. They have that same sense of complete package about them. And simply having a player like that if, as you say, our cement can make sure that there are no more ill timed injury issues in the next sort of three months. Having a player like that in the Champions League with a fair wind gives you a chance because I'm not sure there is an outstanding team this season among the traditional elite PSG obviously lost to buy in last week. But by and look a bit shady domestically. Manchester City are the favorites with good reason. But they're not flawless this season and there are times when you look at city and think they look obviously they've got their own striker who's quite good. But they looked at a defensively vulnerable. I think it's not impossible, I think it will depend a little bit on the draw in the quarterfinals if they make it through. They've got to be on track for first. But Napoli could certainly be looking at the semifinals as a realistic ambition. And there's a Champions League win in manager who I know who always said that his job was to get a team to the semifinals of the competition. Does once you're in the semifinals, anything can happen. As long as you get there, that's the manager. That's the manager's task. And I think it's not unreasonable to think that Napoli might make it to the semifinals.

Men In Blazers
"drogba" Discussed on Men In Blazers
"Victor Osman, who's netted 9 goals in his last 7 games, league leading 18 goals on the season. Click to the back post for Victor osimo on his strike. No wasted movement from the league's top score. Cavara and osterman. Oh, they've combined for 6 goals together in Syria already. And while cavares emergence in Italy is felt dazzling and instantaneous, awesome and story, wine slightly longer, three year senior to cavara, Osman, kington, Napoli from Lil, signed back then for a club record €80 million in July 2020. But long before he became Napoli's number 9 and the most expensive African player ever, or someone's life, was one of struggle. He grew up in the town of ojota in the outskirts of Lagos, the defining feature of that area is the old association landfill nestled in the pocket of the interchange of two of the city's busiest expressways is the continent's largest waste dumping area sprawling across a hundred acres creeping closer and closer to the settlements around it as Lagos undergoes a exponential growth, 10,000 pounds of waste arrive at ola sushi daily, piling into pyramids of refuse where over a thousand negotiations come to salvage and recyclable waste. These were Victor Ottoman stomping grounds, an area in his words, they don't promise you anything. No one wants to give you anything. You have to work for everything. And he was the youngest of 7 siblings. Victor said he worked tirelessly after the passing of his mother when he wasn't running alongside cars selling water on the nearby expressway. He lived on the nearby football pitch. That of a community club peric FC, a humble dirt pitch for which you can see the teetering mounds of old ocean, lurking in the distance. So football from the very beginning was the make or break for vector. It was mentored by an academy ultimate strikers, made the life altering decision to take the 9 hour car trip to capital city Abuja for the Nigerian team's 2015 under 70 World Cup open trials. He joined that team with which he'd eventually win the tournament in Chile, break the under 70 World Cup goals scoring record along the way. And Rory, in this moment, a 17 year old player with immense talent, but absolutely no safety net. No institutional knowledge, no support resources. How much of a small miracle is it that he didn't slip through the cracks? What, what are the structures that can locate identify and process an individual like Victor Osman? Well, I mean, it is a miracle to be honest. I guess that there would have been some support from the Nigerian federation to help him because he wouldn't have had an agent necessarily and you'd hope that united strikers that would have some kind of safeguard in measures in place to allow their players to take chances to join European clubs. There's ultimately that's what all of those academies are there for. That's what they're trying to find. They're trying to find the next player. They can they can export. They're trying to give those kids a chance. And there's a couple of them that are quite famous now generously on foot in central that I think plays like sadio Manet came through. They seem to have a kind of connection to mets, the French team, as the place that they know they can place their best players. Whether that's the case with every academy in Africa, I'm not sure. And as you say, our cement stories almost so extreme that it's remarkable that he's basically made really good choices throughout his career. You know, he that will cut. 2017 world trip. Those games are attended, I guess you'll get some local fans who go to watch, you'll get interested observers, you'll get family members of the players taking part, but mainly the people there are scouts. There are loads and loads of scouts and agents at those games. Because they are all looking for the next big thing. I think we've just had the South American under 20 championship, and that'll be similar that there are people there just watching for clubs for agencies for kit manufacturers for Adidas and Nike and puma and the rest of them. They are looking for talent. They're looking to see who is coming next. An awesome end will have had, as you say, because you saw so many goals, he will have had countless offers, not just from clubs, but from agents as well, some legitimate, some not. To look after him, clubs wanting to sign in. And he chose Walt's bird and I think, although it never really happened for him at valspar, that probably was a really sensible choice to mate, that you go into that German system, you know, you'll get you're going to get that modern footballing education. But also I don't think it's quite as rapacious. It's not quite as quick turnaround as it can be in other countries, and that I suspect really helped us women's development. Yeah, the folks experience is fascinating. You can look online and see video of a teenage Osman. Soft spoken, humble, long fulfilling out his worry frame, really left the pitch for the place to do his talking. As a striker, who is your role model? Did he drop? Was he? Well, you're not as big as him. Of course. He's the kind of player who just I would like to be as a player and as a person. Any young strike is in their youth before really an academic reading of the game is matured their rural attributes. You can see the silhouette of the players that they might become. I think early on, awesome and was identifiably a student of Drogba, leaping early and high to drive downwards on head as flying off the last man shooting so hard. He often twisted himself backwards. And at Wolfsburg, yes, he got some playing time, but knee and shoulder issues, about a malaria, really a struggle to adapt to Germany, 16

ChelseaWiki Football News
"drogba" Discussed on ChelseaWiki Football News
"Shevchenko at Chelsea isn't the worst transfer in Chelsea history in 2006, Shevchenko signed a play for Chelsea, making a club record fee at that time with a bit of 30.8 million pounds. But the transfer was considered a disaster a failed deal by Roman Abramovich what happened to a talented Ukraine striker together with Chelsea wiki looked back at the time Shevchenko at Chelsea to understand more. About Shevchenko Andre Michael levitt Shevchenko was born on September 29th, 1976, in Virginia, Kyiv. Shevchenko was a former striker playing for dynamo Kyiv, A.C. Milan, Chelsea, and the Ukraine national team. He is a true legend of European football why do people call him a true legend? With 67 goals, he holds the 7th highest scoring position in all European competitions. In every game he joined, he was always considered one of the most lethal strikers. In his career, Andre Shevchenko achieved many awards, including the Ballon duo in 2004, and being the last player from Eastern Europe to win the coveted prize. Shevchenko is one of the most prolific players in Milan history who won Serie A capo di Talia, super coppa Italiana, UFO Champions League, and UEFA Super Cup with the team. The time he played for Milan is the best time with the best form in his career. A golden player at A.C. Milan. Shevchenko was at the peak of his career with the ra sanri before transferring to Chelsea on his debut during the 1999 to 2000 season, Shevchenko had 32 appearances, but he scored 24 goals in the Siri a triumph. Yes, he became the first foreign player who won the scoring award in his first debut. In the third season, under the A.C. Milan Jersey, Shevchenko proudly lifted the Champions League up with his team and one other awards as you have known above. Shevchenko, who replaced Gabriel body studa as the world's most lethal striker in the early to mid 2000s, scored an astounding 175 goals in 322 appearances across all competitions during his 7 year stay in Milan. Shevchenko at Chelsea with physical burnout. He officially joined the blues in 2006 under the Roman Abramovich era after two failed deals. In the summer of 2003, the team made an offer to buy him, but Milan flatly refused. The Russian oligarch was not deterred by this, though a second attempt by Chelsea to acquire Milan's top striker failed miserably in the summer of 2005. What happened to Shevchenko at Chelsea? The first few days of the Ukrainian player at Chelsea were very promising. His debut goal against Liverpool served as a signal that things would continue as it was expected. However, it became clear rather quickly that Shevchenko wasn't quite right he had a lethargic, noticeably unfit appearance. Before the 2006 World Cup, Shevchenko, unfortunately, had an injury that didn't recover in time. He only played in half form in Ukraine's first ever big international competition when they went to the quarterfinals. Before the age of 30, Shevchenko had to face a health problem a physical burnout. At that point in his career he had played more than 600 games it might be what both Chelsea and other people forgot before deciding to sign with Shevchenko at that time, the declination of Shevchenko gave a chance for Drogba the Ivorian player to shine at Stamford Bridge. Drogba surpassed Shevchenko to score 33 goals in the 2006 O 7 season Shevchenko at Chelsea was known as a quiet one. His talking and sharing with other team members on the pitch was rare. But Shevchenko never means that he has come to the throne it might just be the language barrier to relive the glory days he left Stamford Bridge on loan to Milan in the summer of 2008. Seemingly Shevchenko prepared carefully for his leaving. On the day he left Chelsea, shively played for the club for 77 matches. Shevchenko Chelsea goals were 22 in total. The 2007 League Cup final was his last for the blues. Conclusion. Actually, Shiva didn't come to Chelsea as a player. He is like a friend coming to where a friend's team shirt because he loves it more than trying to conquer a certain career peak at the age of 30. Not everyone knows that Shevchenko and Roman Abramovich become friends before. They get closer and respect each other. For all the good things, Shevchenko left them in Italy. Let us know your thoughts about Shevchenko at Chelsea. Do you think it is the worst time for him? For Chelsea wiki, it's not. Because we know that at that time problem of Shevchenko Shevchenko is still a friend of Chelsea, and maybe become a coach in the future. He regularly visits Stanford bridge to watch their matches. Some young players at the club also learn from his play style, attitude, and hard work. Like and follow Chelsea wiki to enjoy more stories about Chelsea players.

egoliDemo
"drogba" Discussed on egoliDemo
"The packed holiday football calendar in 2010, included one of the season's plum fixtures. Arsenal versus Chelsea, a London Derby, but a match of much wider significance. Defending champions Chelsea were languishing down in fourth position with no wins in their last 5 league matches and arsenal were only a point in a place better off. So it was a great opportunity for Carlo Ancelotti's men to get their season back on track, but arsenal were looking to take advantage of an equilibrium that seemed to have been disturbed at Stanford bridge by the unceremonious sacking a popular assistant manager ray Wilkins. Meanwhile, Austin benger admitted halting a barren run of 11 games in all competition without a victory over their closest rivals, Manchester United and Chelsea would prove a massive psychological lift as they bid to secure their first silverware since 2005. Well from the side that lost one mil to united last time out, wenger made 5 changes. Captain says fabregas returned after a succession of hamstring problems had kept him out. Lucas fabianski resumed in goal, joam juro was prepared to Sebastian's skill at defense. While an attack Theo wolcott and Robin Van Persie replaced marrow and schmack and Andre a shavin. The visitors finished strongly against spurs the last time they played, so it was very much the core of that team. In midfield, Ramirez dropped out to accommodate the return of Frank Lampard who started his first match following a four month absence with a groin problem. Former gunner Nicholas andelko was ruled out with a sore knee. His replacement Didier Drogba had never lost to arsenal and in 13 appearances and scored 13 goals. So with the big freeze having relented, which manager would go home with that warm sense of relief. Paul Walsh and Martin Tyler, we are commentators. Arsenal capable of such exhilarating football and determined to show their qualities in a match. With a massive profile such as this one. The Chelsea have won the last four Premier League. Matches against the Gunners. Here's Katie on there. He has kept his place. It's a skeleton who's lost out to duro. That's maybe a bit more physique to deal with the dropper factor. As Roman Van Persie just caught the Chelsea striker. Just to get involved. His return to the starting lineup. Fantastic. Certainly feel that's a side down the left with Nazi. When I can get out for error. Really failed tonight, the first goal was important. Because the name for booster confidence that might be coming here for Robin Van Persie will in the end of it. Good enough to put him off really. Well, there's that little pull of I'm talking about Van Persie is a great rice a fantastic pass is onsite. I just think that it's just gets a foot out and pushing off and it's just enough in the end. Just clips him off seeing it onto his foot. Considerable relief for better check in the Chelsea goal at hand press he didn't make anything of that. Lampard is the. Top 5 Ferreira SEM. Clip by Terry. Ashley Cole in, but he didn't get the angle for the left back. Not even close. That's why he's just trying to stand it up now, she Carly times has runs to perfection off that left hand side in the back of the defense very hard to pick up. I mean his first season here, of course. It's got that forward to good effect. And drop that. Really, probably shoots against arsenal and expects to score every time. He hasn't scored this time. A four pointer first place comes out to drop back and straight away you thinking this is a danger, Kalu on the outside just takes your attention of the defender, jiro and drug that decides to pull the trigger, but just pulls it past the far post. There is jury. Disaster three has been sent off twice. He scored a goal. Putting himself to the regular birth in the side. Faber gas. Some drifting it bending it out to Sami nazare. This season so far. Lovely flavor between vampires and nazare. They're starting to climb some style. Well, that's fantastic imagination arsenal. Just you can just see it here. Little give it a setback. He's on cypher. And he goes for tremendously hard won on an angle going for tower and there's nowhere near it. Walk up. On the outside. The chest of Terry's giving it straight to walk up. And trying to check was suddenly having to deal with the situation. So might have taken him by surprise because John turret at the ball got away from him here. He knows he can't dive in on more fun. I think check does very well getting out and making himself big and getting the block. Right by George Sanya. Is there again he's never shy of getting his share of defending. The chance maybe for Chelsea to break. This has been like this for some time. They've had a lot of defending to do in the last 15 minutes or so. That's it. That's his crossing. She's still limping, taking down by Van Persie. One of those who came charging back aware that Chelsea might be about to hit as well on the break. NASA. I'm perfect. World Cup can come back out to Sanya here. Also looking dangerous again. Sonya, again. Wonderful side. Really pretty improvised effort. Meant by an inspired piece of goalkeeping. Absolutely fantastic attempt just trying to think over the top a great, one handed save just got back in time and made the ground I'm just got his fingers onto it. Great attempt at a very good save. SEO. Hunted down by sorry, so I had to give her a free kit trying to get the ball back. I seem to have one again. He's been quite quiet. I'm proud to understandably feeling his way back into his first start for four months..

Men In Blazers
"drogba" Discussed on Men In Blazers
"Kalemie impress. Tweet us shouldn't it be loudly erica. It is yeah. Congratulations david thank you. Thank you. I had so much to do with it. Leads still makes me such a better person that we one leads. Neil liverpool three yorgen plop and co become the third premier league side to go undefeated through four game seeing off the team perpetually. At the top of the lung capacity table the first and incisive move that ended with most saleh tallying his one hundred primarily goal for beano and saudi added a second and a third though the latter could have had about eight with better finishing while the victory was comprehensive liverpool fans will be concerned about harvey elliott who suffered a gruesome second half injury after a pascal. Strout tackle from behind. Which the dutchman was i think correctly sent off be elsa versus klopp book it versus latex murder versus heavy now and a rural cass rural ellen road hammering tongs from the off game of hide. Temporal intensity rodriguez blue in an opportunity. one end jota agonizingly missing another and you fell tweeted this the more leads pressed and created but blue that sean says the borough realize that would come back to bite them and liverpool with just suddenly step up and take and so it came to pass twentieth minute leads so good in possession but so bloody wide open. Our dave elite funds did not see the dog this coming year. Just the shy kyle walk. And they bellowed at trend. Alexandra old and needed bull on the right. Donald plays it in. And who's there most saleh he'd been screaming to get the ball earlier in the move was kind of disappointed and then he finally received at one nil. We gotta give credit to matter. He was brilliant in the builder. What number ten forty was only against leads and then the egyptian keg hundred co from any one hundred and sixty. Two appearances with six assists lit along the way he becomes just a barrage of stats thirtieth player to school. Hundred premier league goals. But he's the fastest to the second from africa. After did a drogba only allen share hurricane. Sergio at gweru interior have done it faster. And what's incredible. Is that three of these players straight up number nine's anterior rays oversee teary on rate. But why one eight magnificent fee for me when that was written off and then at liverpool. We said they'd be yeah. One night season may be too nice seasons but prolific consistently prolific lethal clinical. Wonderful coming off that flank day. Very incredible achievement. Does it from the inside right position. Sometimes inside left just brilliant night go spoke to period of liverpool domination. You'll fellow you're watching. Two teams could just bring superlative levels of intensity but liverpool's quality for player was just superior for beanie such a powerful shield. A weapon tr. Okay also strong in this one. Thirty shots they peppered at leeds goal. Indeed they look the team moshe lately score every time leads blood the attack. The second came. After half-time trend alexander korda down by big mitch for being a step in the bull. I know i know for being should not have been playing. I'm a big supporter at the pavilion. Faa in this one as are all evident fans but then there was an sob heartbreaking moment. Harvey elliott young. Harvey aaliyah fell by pascal. Stroke don't think maliciously but it caused. They gruesome dislocated ankle injury. Dak prescott sit g. for an eighteen year old david. What's your name stretch. It off was a human. I can eat. Just when we should remind you the crew unpredictability of life. Yeah look it was not a malicious tackle. Didn't look like a malicious tackle over. This is why these kind of tackles from behind that used to be routine in english. Football and continental football have been outlawed. That's why they don't allow them and just so hard to watch I watched it again this morning before. The paldon is just just awful. And i feel terrible for the eighteen year old who started the season so brightly. You know these are tough injuries to get over And just wishing you know god speed and dealing with it. I mean the brutal parv it other than having to what jilin television need to watch it again. Yes no how teammates and opponents react when some exerience has happened on the failed and we day we can only hope for the best and wish harvey well but he just broken through. We just asserted himself here. I prefer to. Tr gave for the chelsea game which shows just how much trust even eighteen club has at him and he is a massive loss. Phillip or squad an injury which men even in victory did. This was a weekend of mixed emotions for liverpool fans. Ten men leads. I mean it could have been a blowout then. Amana essentially kept leads in it with his hilariously woeful. Finishing of course dude only goes and gets one deep into injury time liverpool joint top alongside manchester united chelsea. Everything david buzzing for the big team so far this season and the liverpool fans finished off the day by chanting deliriously the reds of no money but will still win the lee. That's another contender crystal palace. Three not them. I wish taught no mill talking about them after three straight one nil win start the season. Top of the table spurs catch a saf london beat down the turning point in this one came with palace piling on the pressure in the fifty. Eight th minute. When jaffa tanga received his second yellow reducing spurs to ten men from there. It was all super. Eagles will school the penalty in the seventy six minutes after coming on as a sub deadline day signing from celtic odds-on etewa scored twice on his debut to give. Patrick vieira is first winners palace manager. Yeah top of the table. perfect swaggered into this could go wrong now. Hsun of hung out for an indefinite time with a calf knock picked up on international duty. None of their argentinian. Newsies cell say romero who want to cause a whole crap show brazil in the first place. Q emerson royale. Debut flat back four tweeted this and missing riyal. Sounds like it'd be friends with jewels. Winfield vincent vega. Yes eat drink. Creech one said in america..

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. Spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine. Eleven settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn. Maloney my son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After you event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking. We went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. We were in new and the ocean. County medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Jane's uses drugs illegally. And he from his susan drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name on the james drogue nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered. And what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy help you spend five years trying to get jimmy. Help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat him and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged them obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's what saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as as greasy. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the war and peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn. Maloney my son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective was actually six hundred. Got home three months. After you event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking. We went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Fortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Change uses drugs illegally and he from his susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name on the james dragen nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered and what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy. Help spend five years trying to get jimmy. Help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat them and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's what saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as previously. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy to journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. My son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After you event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking. We went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. We were in new and the ocean. County medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Jane's uses drugs illegally. And he from his susan drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name On the james drogue nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered and what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy. Help friends five years. Trying to get jimmy help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat him and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged them obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's what saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for as previously. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After you event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking. We went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat you shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Unfortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Change uses drugs illegally and he from his susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name On the james drogue nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered. And what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy help you spend five years trying to get jimmy. Help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat him and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding take good care of them and then today's later they discharged obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration From the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. That's saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and Very frustrating and it took a toll on the family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as as greasy. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

THIS IS DEMOCRACY
"drogba" Discussed on THIS IS DEMOCRACY
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. My son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After the event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking we went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not gonna treat him and he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Fortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Change uses drugs illegally and he from his susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name On the james drogue nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered and what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy help really spend five years. Trying to get jimmy help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat him and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged them obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and Very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just Let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as previously. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. My son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After the event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking we went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Fortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Change uses drugs illegally and he from his susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name On the james drogue nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered and what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy. Help spend five years trying to get jimmy. Help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat them and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding take good care of them and then today's later they discharged obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration From the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and Very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as as greasy. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the war and peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. My son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective home three months. After you event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking we went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks well when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Fortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. Of course the city wouldn't admit to that. Bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one. So only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Jane's uses drugs illegally. And he from his. Susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name on the james dragen nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered and what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy. Help five years. Trying to get jimmy help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat him and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged them obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells. Let's go home and die. Well that's saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and Very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as as greasy. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Hunting we will go performed by the o'neill brothers. It was sung by michael williams in the wire well-known for that michael williams who has died at the age of fifty four in brooklyn. This is democracy now democracy now dot or the warren peace report. I'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. We spend the hour looking at the Raging film nine eleven and settled us the powerful documentary following the nine eleven responders and other survivors. Who had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and this clip. We hear joe's adr good discuss his son chains a nine eleven responder and then new york congresswoman carolyn maloney. My son. Jimmy was nypd. Detective got home three months. After the event. I said to him you know. Let's go to the colombian presbyterian hospital and you'll talk to the pulmonologist ahead pulmonologist and columbia-presbyterian and talking we went to the hospital to that with them for an hour so when examined them and told us back in two weeks when we came back in two weeks. The doctor brought us into his office with nice cushion chairs. And everything and saturday's down just said jimmy. I'm not gonna treat shocked. It was not gonna treat him now. I'm not going to treat him. And he got up and walked out and we were a little dumbfounded and we looked at each other. We understand why this doctor wanted to treat them as we were going down the elevator. I said jimmy jimmy. This is going to be a long process. I said tell you truth. You're screwed the not gonna take care of you diploma. Treating internal department refused to admit that he was sick and prosecuted them and they wouldn't give up they really. They wanted him to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure asian in house because they were hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline him polly firearm. That's how much they wanted to get rid of him to say that he wasn't sick. Jimmy johnson january six two thousand six found them up in his bedroom with this little daughter. Sleep on bed. He got up on the night to get her a bottle on monoploy with the bottle. Fan the baby sleep. Fortunately we were in new and the ocean county medical examiner to post on them and the post game back. The doctor stated on a medical report that jimmy died working at ground zero on nine one one that he had to dust particles in his loans. And that's what he passed away from. The city wouldn't admit to that bloomberg came on the air and said with his medical examiner that who is this new jersey medical examiner to say that this person call an officer that this person died from nine one one so only we went to medical examiners office. I brought a picture of jimmy. i said. Listen we're not talking about an object here. we're talking about my son. I want you to look at that picture when you talk about him. He turned around and said listen. I want you your family to drop that saying that he died from nine one one. If you don't draw that he died from nine one one. I will go to the press and i will say that. Jane's uses drugs illegally. And he from his. Susan is drugs. It became so nasty with so many headlines that were derogatory towards james. A drug that. Some people came to me and said carolyn. Change the title of the bill. it's too controversial. Everyone believes that the drug was a a dope addict. I said if i change to whoever the next name is say. Do the same thing to them. He wasn't a dope attic. He was a first responder. He served at nine eleven and we should stick with the drug name. We should stick with his drogue. A name that was congress. Member carolyn maloney of new york. In the documentary nine eleven unsettled thus which is premiering. This week we are joined. Now by joe's drogba you've just been watching or listening to the father of the nypd. Police detective james drago who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground. Zero joe. We didn't see your son in year after year either in a wheelchair or with oxygen or with crutches going to washington this parade of people who are victims of nine eleven of their own government Because he died in two thousand six but carol maloney stuck with your son being the name on the james dragen nine. Eleven and compensation act. Can you talk about what this means to you. And who is covered. And what you went through at the end trying to get jimmy help you spend five years trying to get jimmy. Help medically To the politicians to newspapers through the radio to tv stations. Everyone refuse to help us they would Denies access when he went to the hospital. The doctors would want to treat them. They treat them and they take good care of me as nine eleven responding to take good care of them and then today's later they discharged them obviously was from the it wasn't from the doctors from the administration from the hospitals Calendar to get them out and yells none go home and die. Well that's saying and we went on for five years trying to everyone to everybody and Very frustrating and it took a toll on a family toll. Obviously i jimmy. Jimmy felt that You know they just let him out to to die more or less. The police department wanted to do anything for them as previously. They want their there. Were trying to get rid of them. They wanted him to go out on donald disability. Just to to get rid of them. And i told jimmy routines journal disabilities. I would definitely a job connects an injury and To stay For the fight and we stay for the fight and eventually they let him out on a job related injury. They didn't tell you directly all nine. Eleven but i let him out and More or less they get there. Get rid of them and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"drogba" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"From new york this is democracy. Now once we saw the actual visual reports sort of realized there was benzine. There was led a. I was already getting warnings. Many more toxic exposures. When we heard kristy let me get on tv and say quality safety situations are such that. They're don't bosa health hazard to make sure everybody. Nine eleven's unsettled duff's this week marks the twentieth anniversary of the september eleventh attacks. We look enraging new documentary on the impact of the talk sick cancer causing smoke and dust that hungover ground zero sickening so many yet. How the environmental protection agency told people. The air was safe to breathe. Were they trying to save wall street. We'll speak with democracy. Now's one gonzales. Who helped expose the public health crisis despite intense pressure not to and we'll talk to a student who school stuyvesant high near the site reopened before the smoke had stopped burning. We'll also look at. How nine eleven responders had to fight for healthcare justice while they were sick and dying. We'll speak with. Joe's drove the father of police. Detective james drogba who died of respiratory illness after assisting in rescue efforts at ground zero about how he had to fight to get his illness. Recognized refused to admit that he was sick and they just prosecutor and they wouldn't give up. they really. They wanted to quit. They would send us into the house to make sure in the house. Is there a hoping to catch him outside the house where they could discipline them probably fire. That's how much they want to get rid of him to.

Mojo In The Morning
"drogba" Discussed on Mojo In The Morning
"I can't no. I can't do the boxer briefs that are shorter on me. Because i'm too fat in the problem is well my ass crack will show and they don't come all the way up on the back okay. Yeah 'cause they stop at a certain level. You know what i mean so i get it though. It's it's in. Mike's case he can't wear underwear though. Helen you have to understand bathing suit. Yes because otherwise your screen door. I was more concerned about. I say stop looking if people. Are there looking wise. You know what. I mean like you want to have sex with chelsea. I really hope she's listening right now and says no no. You told me to stop looking. Leave me she is not looking at mine telling you she's like i get it over with this is done. I don't wanna do this real quick. I wanted to To mentioned something. This is no different than when womens boobs pop out of things like y you you guys in all your best word drogba and everything. It still happens. Yeah it comes right out of the thing disagree. Well you don't think that you ever i know. Just cleveland you something. In general men like.

Rush Limbaugh
Bill Cosby Case Back In Court For Pretrial Hearing
"A message straight to the president's he's a guy that has supported the first responders and and veterans talks about how much he loves them it's it's a very simple thing i'm sure he can put a stop to it uh this afternoon if you wanted to hit they are fighting changes to this the drogba act strong words in a hearing this afternoon ahead of bill cosby's sexual assault trial here's abc's mark remillod he'll cosby back in court for a pretrial hearing in what would be his second trial on charges that he drunken sexually assaulted a woman in two thousand four the hearing growing contentious has the judge says he's putting cosby's defence team on notice after they falsely accused prosecutors of hiding or destroying evidence the judge calling the allegations serious but climbing to grant a prosecution request to throw cosby's new lawyers off the case cosby's lawyers are trying to limit the number of his accusers who will testify on wall street the dow is up two hundred ninety points you're listening to abc news there is a major problem that's affecting millions of people all over the world it's.