Category Archives: Current Events

Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 5

I got to hear Willie Roaf speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday Oct 1, 2012 and he did a great job.

Roaf: It’s good refs are back

By Jeff Halpern

Posted: October 2, 2012 at 3:32 a.m.

Stephen B. Thornton Pro Football Hall of Famer and Pine Bluff native Willie Roaf (left) is glad the NFL could work out a deal with the officials, saying Monday “the replacements were going to cost some teams some games.”

LITTLE ROCK — Pro Football Hall of Famer Willie Roaf says he always appreciated the way NFL officials maintained control of the game.

“Year in and year out, you see the same crews over and over again and you have a lot of respect for them,” said Roaf, 42, who played 13 years as an offensive tackle for the New Orleans Saints and Kansas City Chiefs before retiring after the 2005 season.

But things got out of control when league officials were locked out for the season’s first three weeks and replacement officials filled in, Roaf told members of the Little Rock Touchdown Club at the Embassy Suites hotel Monday,

“You don’t see guys bumping and shoving refs,” said Roaf, who grew up in Pine Bluff and played for Pine Bluff High School before attending Louisiana Tech. “That doesn’t happen.”

The low point occurred Sept. 24 when the Seattle Seahawks defeated the Green Bay Packers 14-12 on a “Hail Mary” touchdown pass from Russell Wilson to Golden Tate and replays showed the Green Bay defensive back M.D. Jennings (Arkansas State) grabbed the ball first before Tate got his hands on it. After a mandatory replay review, officials did not have indisputable evidence to overturn the call.

Two night later, the NFL and its officials agreed on a new eight-year agreement.

“It’s good to have them back because the replacements were going to cost some teams some games,” Roaf said. “Look at Green Bay, there were in a tough spot after that game Monday night.

“The big thing was the refs got to keep their pension and the NFL can hire some younger guys to replace some of the older officials.”

Roaf said he was honored to go into the Hall of Fame two months ago as part of a “blue-collar class” that included a second Arkansas-born inductee, former Seattle Seahawks defensive tackle Cortez Kennedy, who was born in Osceola, grew up in Wilson and played at Rivercrest before attending the University of Miami.

“It was great to go in with Cortez, and it was a class in which none of us were stars and I was very happy to go in with them,” Roaf said.

When asked about the plight of the 0-4 New Orleans Saints and the 1-4 Arkansas Razorbacks, Roaf, who played at Louisiana Tech, discussed the similarities of the Saints playing without Coach Sean Payton, who is suspended for the season for his role in the bounty scandal, while the Razorbacks are playing the season with John L. Smith, who is on a 10-month contract after he was hired in April after Bobby Petrino was fired.

“It’s a tough situation because you know Sean makes a difference and provides a lot of leadership and when you look at Arkansas, you saw how much Bobby Petrino made a difference, especially on offense,” Roaf said. “I predicted the Saints would win 10 games and they played hard in Green Bay, but they’re in a tough situation.”

Roaf, who lives in Newport, Calif., came back to Arkansas after stopping off in Kansas City, Mo., over the weekend where his former teammate Will Shields was inducted into the Chiefs Ring of Honor. He also plans on spending a couple of weeks in the state, visiting friends and family members.

Sports, Pages 15 on 10/02/2012

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Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

I really enjoyed the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday Oct 1, 2012. He was passed over by the Razorbacks and other big time schools because of his size but he turned out to be a very special player. Jim Harris: Willie Roaf Stands Tall For Pine Bluff, State As NFL Hall Of Famer by […]

Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

I enjoyed hearing Willie speak today at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. He actually played with the New Orleans Saints the same time that Wayne Martin did. He got block some NFL greats like Reggie White, Kevin Green and Tim Harris. Here is a great story about Willie below: Willie Roaf’s road to greatness Wright […]

John L. Smith speaks to Little Rock Touchdown Club (part1)

I enjoyed the speech today. It was extremely short then he took questions. Here is a rundown from Arkansas Sports 360. John L. Smith Was Apparently John L. Smith Today At The Little Rock Touchdown Club <!– 51 –> by ArkansasSports360.com Staff 9/24/2012 at 1:04pm Image by Trent Ogle John L. Smith is apparently being […]

John L. Smith to speak today at Little Rock Touchdown Club

John L. Smith is to speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday Sept 24, 2011. I am proud of him for showing up. Bill Vickery had some comments on the debacle on Saturday. Vickery said it totally removed the earlier nightmare he had since he was 7 years old when he witnessed his […]

Randy White speaks to Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

Randy White spoke at the Little Rock Touchdown Club yesterday. He did a great job. I have always been a big Dallas Cowboy fan. Here is a story from Arkansas Sports 360: HOW ‘BOUT THEM COWBOYS: The Touchdown Club welcomed Randy White to town this Monday. The former Dallas Cowboy defensive tackle is one of […]

Randy White speaks to Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

I have written a lot about the Dallas Cowboys in the past. One of my favorite stories is getting to ask Pat Summerall a question about Tom Landry and his answer was a classic one.  I simply asked him if he had a chance to interact with any Christian Coaches like Tony Dungy or Tom […]

Matt Jones speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

I got to see Matt Jones speak on 9-10-12 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club and I was proud of him for opening up concerning what brought his career to an end. Drugs can derail a great career. Take a look at what happened to Matt Jones: Taken in the first round by the Jacksonville […]

Matt Jones speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

My son Hunter and I got to hear Matt Jones speak on 9-10-12 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. When asked about what to do when you are up against a wall like this team is, he responded that he remembers how it felt to lose in the 6 overtime game in Knoxville and to […]

Howard Schnellenberger speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4

I got to hear Howard Schnellenberger speak on Sept 4, 2012 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. I did not know that he played football for the University of Kentucky. In fact, just last year Kentucky ended a long losing streak to Tennessee by winning in Lexington. Schnellenberger was responsible for catching the winning touchdown […]

Howard Schnellenberger speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

I got to hear Howard Schnellenberger speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Tuesday Sept 4, 2012. Schnellenberger was good at building programs. Ex-coach enjoyed building programs By Jeff Halpern Posted: September 5, 2012 at 5:10 a.m. Staton Breidenthal Howard Schnellenberger speaks Tuesday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. LITTLE ROCK — Howard Schnellenberger […]

 

Heritage Foundation Videos and Interviews are displayed on www.thedailyhatch.org

Sen. Mitch McConnell: Americans Don’t Approve of Anything Obama Has Done

Uploaded by on Dec 8, 2011

In an exclusive interview at The Heritage Foundation, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) sharply criticized President Obama for engaging in class warfare and accused him of shifting the focus away from his own failed policies in advance of next year’s election.

“My view is he’ll have a hard time convincing Americans he deserves four more years of this,” McConnell said. “There’s nothing he’s done the American people approve of, so of course, he’s trying to change the subject.”

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I love these videos from the Heritage Foundation. They include great interviews and very good illustrations. Below are some links.

What is School Choice?

Uploaded by on Aug 2, 2011

School choice offers families the opportunity to select schools that meet their child’s needs. Watch the video from Heritage Foundation explaining school choice, how it benefits parents and children and why school choice is needed.

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HERITAGE FOUNDATION VIDEO:What is School Choice?

What is School Choice? Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Aug 2, 2011 School choice offers families the opportunity to select schools that meet their child’s needs. Watch the video from Heritage Foundation explaining school choice, how it benefits parents and children and why school choice is needed.

HERITAGE FOUNDATION VIDEO:1,000 Days Without A Budget

1,000 Days Without A Budget Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Jan 24, 2012 http://blog.heritage.org | Today marks the 1,000th day since the United States Senate has passed a budget. While the House has put forth (and passed) its own budget, the Senate has failed to do the same. To help illustrate how extraordinary this failure has […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION INTERVIEW:Sen. Mitch McConnell: Americans Don’t Approve of Anything Obama Has Done

Sen. Mitch McConnell: Americans Don’t Approve of Anything Obama Has Done Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Dec 8, 2011 In an exclusive interview at The Heritage Foundation, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) sharply criticized President Obama for engaging in class warfare and accused him of shifting the focus away from his own failed policies in […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION INTERVIEW:Senator Blunt Vows to Keep Pressure on President Obama Over Contraceptive Mandate

Senator Blunt Vows to Keep Pressure on President Obama Over Contraceptive Mandate Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Feb 13, 2012 http://blog.heritage.org/2012/02/13/sen-blunt-vows-to-keep-pressure-on-obama-… | Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO) introduced legislation to protect religious organizations from Obamacare’s overreach last summer. Now, as President Obama presses forward with his anti-conscience mandate, Blunt is prepared to keep the pressure on the […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION INTERVIEW:Senator Lee Fights Back Against Obama’s Unconstitutional “Recess” Appointments

Senator Lee Fights Back Against Obama’s Unconstitutional “Recess” Appointments Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Feb 13, 2012 Few lawmakers have expressed as much outrage over President Obama’s unconstitutional “recess” appointments as Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT). He was among the first to warn about the consequences of the president’s unilateral action on Jan. 4. More than a […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION INTERVIEW:Senator John Barrasso On the Fight Against Obamacare

Senator John Barrasso On the Fight Against Obamacare Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Mar 26, 2012 Sen. John Barrasso earned the nickname “Wyoming’s Doctor” after working for 24 years as an orthopedic surgeon in Casper. Today he represents the state in the U.S. Senate and is one of the leading critics of Obamacare. More than two […]

Historian David Barton’s videos and articles are displayed here on the www.thedailyhatch.org

David Barton on Glenn Beck – Part 3 of 5 Uploaded by ToRenewAmerica on Apr 9, 2010 Wallbuilders’ Founder and President David Barton joins Glenn Beck on the Fox News Channel for the full hour to discuss our Godly heritage and how faith was the foundational principle upon which America was built. _____________ David Barton is a historian  […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION INTERVIEW:Rep. Paul Ryan Blames Obama for Dividing America

Rep. Paul Ryan Blames Obama for Dividing America Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Oct 28, 2011 Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) is mighty disappointed with President Obama. The chairman of the House Budget Committee, who has bested Obama in head-to-head policy showdowns, blames the president for failing to outline a solution to the debt crisis while dividing […]

HERITAGE FOUNDATION VIDEO:The Role of Economic Freedom

The Role of Economic Freedom Uploaded by HeritageFoundation on Jan 6, 2012 According to the 2012 Index of Economic Freedom, a joint publication of The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal, global economic freedom has declined over the past year. But what does this mean for America and the world? Economic freedom empowers ordinary […]

 

Heritage Foundation Scholars on First presidential debate: tax increases are not the answer!!!

Here is what the Heritage Foundation Scholars had to say:

Stop the Spending

Both President Obama and Governor Romney discussed spending and budget deficits. Washington is currently spending around 23 percent of the economy (GDP), well above the historical average of about 20 percent of GDP. While revenues are temporarily low due to the recession and the sluggish recovery that has ensued, they will return to and indeed surpass their historical level of 18.1 percent once the economy recovers and Americans are back to work. Washington clearly has a spending problem. What the country needs is leadership that demands an end to the current irresponsible spending. This will curb budget deficits and rising debt that are threatening the economy. Americans are eager for solutions that get at the root of the problem: spending.

Emily Goff

Spending and Debt

The President’s response to the spending and debt crisis is revealed by what he does, not by what he says. In the fourth consecutive year of deficits exceeding $1 trillion, the President’s budget for fiscal year (FY) 2013 continued a practice of relentlessly higher spending. As analyzed by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), spending in the President’s budget was $1.15 trillion higher over 2013-2022. Roughly half of the increase came from policy changes, and the other half from increased interest payments due to chronic deficit spending. The President’s record total spending would remain higher than 22 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) throughout the decade, “well above the 21.0 percent average seen over the past 40 years,” CBO says.

The combination of policies in the President’s budget produces cumulative deficits of $6.4 trillion through 2022, $3.5 trillion more than CBO’s baseline – sharply different from the more than $5 trillion in deficit reduction the President’s budget claimed. Yet the President’s sole response to this crisis is to raise taxes. He ignored the recommendations of his own deficit reduction panel, the Bowles-Simpson Commission, and has offered no plan to reverse the devastating across the board spending cuts scheduled to start in January—instead insisting that Congress must find an answer. Congress does indeed need to respond—but so does the President.

Patrick Louis Knudsen

 

Key Tax Points and Obama Falsehoods

President Obama and Governor Romney had a long back-and-forth on taxes to open the debate. They touched on two important tax topics vital to the future of the economy.

Most of the time was spent on Governor Romney’s tax plan. Romney’s plan, like most tax reform plans, would lower tax rates and make other changes to the tax code to encourage growth. The economy will not recover fully until we have tax reform.

President Obama repeated the falsehood that Romney’s plan would raise taxes on the middle class. This incorrect assertion was spread by a biased report from the Tax Policy Center. Romney’s plan can make pro-growth changes to the tax code and doesn’t have to raise taxes on the middle class.

Less time was spent on another important topic: the corporate income tax. The U.S. now has the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world, and we remain one of the only countries that taxes our businesses on the income they earn in foreign countries. We will continue to lose jobs to more competitive countries until we bring that high rate down from 35 percent to meet or fall below the 25 percent average in countries we compete with for new investment.

Some time was also spent on President Obama’s plan to raise the top marginal tax rate over 40 percent. It is important to keep in mind that raising the top rate would fall heavily on job creators and hurt job creation.

President Obama falsely claimed businesses can take a deduction for moving jobs overseas. No such deduction exists.

Curtis Dubay

What Is Obama’s Tax Reform Plan?

President Obama has roundly criticized Governor Romney’s tax reform plan, but where’s the President’s plan? All President Obama has proposed is to raise taxes on those who run small businesses and hire workers, who are highly productive citizens and good investors.  Otherwise, Obama’s proposals as detailed in his budget are little more than a cattlecall of housecleaning tweaks.  This is especially astounding when one recalls that Governor Romney has no mighty engine of tax expertise at his beck and call, whereas the President has the Treasury Department, the National Economic Counsel, the Council of Economic Advisors, and many more able bodies on the government’s payroll eager to do his bidding.

With so much talent available to him, and yet no proposal for fundamental tax reform whatsoever, one can only presume President Obama is fundamentally content with the current individual income tax system.

J.D. Foster

Tax Cuts vs. Tax Increases

President Obama mentioned how the middle class has benefited from his tax policies, for example from the extension of the Bush-era tax rates. How ironic, then, that the President’s own budget proposal for FY 2013 would raise taxes by $2 trillion. Oh, and then there’s Taxmageddon, which Congress and this President have yet to solve, despite warnings far and wide. All of that hardly adds up to responsible tax policy.

Emily Goff

Obama on Romney’s Tax Reform

President Obama has utterly and consistently dissembled regarding Governor Romney’s tax reform plan. Contrary to Obama’s assertions, repeated unquestioningly in the mainstream media, the Romney plan is to cut individual income tax rates 20 percent, for tax reform to be revenue neutral, neither raising nor lower revenues in the aggregate, and for tax reform to be distributionally neutral, neither raising taxes on the middle class nor cutting them for upper earners. Analysis to the contrary by some outlets is simple misinformation, intentional or otherwise.

To be sure, it will be difficult to cut individual income tax rates the full 20 percent as Governor Romney proposes and still meet the criteria of revenue and distributional neutrality. Guess what? Tax reform will be terribly difficult no matter how it is pursued.  Setting an ambitious goal is an essential step even to start the effort. Perhaps once the debate is fully underway, the nation will find cutting rates 20 percent is just too much, or perhaps the nation will find the exercise so liberating, and the prospects of a simpler tax system and a stronger economy so enticing, that 20 percent reductions are seen as too cautious. The point is, the current tax system needs replacing, and Romney has proposed a strong start. In contrast, President Obama has proposed higher tax rates.

J.D. Foster

Tax Increases and the Economy

President Obama has long insisted on higher taxes for small businesses, investors, and upper-income earners.  Apparently, it does not matter to him that this can only harm the economy, which has sputtered badly under his management. Apparently, it does not matter to the President that these individuals already pay a stunning share of the federal income tax burden.  Apparently, it does not matter to Obama that these tax hikes would at most be a drop in the bucket toward reducing the budget deficit.  All that matters to him, apparently, is that these taxpayers be punished with higher taxes for the transgression of earning a higher income.  It should surprise no one, then, that a President so antagonistic to the forces of economic growth has managed to achieve so little of it.

J.D. Foster

Government Spending

Time and time again, Americans have heard from President Obama and others in Washington that government investments—read: massive amounts of spending—will create the jobs Americans need. Time and time again they have been wrong. President Obama tonight dusted off that claim and called for even more government spending. It’s exactly the wrong prescription.

Government stimulus spending does not help the economy grow or “create” jobs, beyond perhaps a localized effect here and there. To make matters worse, Americans should be concerned about the fact that this spending has to be paid for, either through higher taxes or increased borrowing or both, which threaten to harm the economy further.

The private sector does a much better job than the federal government at creating jobs when and where there is demand for them. Try laying off on the anti-business regulatory onslaught from the National Labor Relations Board, the EPA, and others that is costing businesses millions of dollars. Try fixing Taxmageddon now to give businesses the certainty about their tax rates next year that they need to make hiring decisions today. Do those things and you just might see the economy take off.

Emily Goff

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Heritage Foundation Scholars on First presidential debate: tax increases are not the answer!!!

Here is what the Heritage Foundation Scholars had to say: Stop the Spending Both President Obama and Governor Romney discussed spending and budget deficits. Washington is currently spending around 23 percent of the economy (GDP), well above the historical average of about 20 percent of GDP. While revenues are temporarily low due to the recession […]

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10 questions the Heritage Foundation would ask in the Presidential Debate

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Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 4

I enjoyed hearing Willie speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday Oct 1, 2012. He talked about Mike Rucker, Reggie White, Tim Harris, Chuck Smith, Sean Jones and many other great defensive players that he had to block during his NFL career and sure enough when I checked the list of great defensive players below many of them are listed.

Reggie White is probably the most famous person he had to block. I have included a biography on Reggie.

Rank Player (age), + – HOFer, Bold – Active Sk Year Teams
1. Michael Strahan (30) 22.5 2001 NYG
2. Jared Allen (29) 22.0 2011 MIN
  Mark Gastineau (28) 22.0 1984 NYJ
4. Chris Doleman+ (28) 21.0 1989 MIN
  Reggie White+ (26) 21.0 1987 PHI
6. Lawrence Taylor+ (27) 20.5 1986 NYG
7. DeMarcus Ware (26) 20.0 2008 DAL
  Derrick Thomas+ (23) 20.0 1990 KAN
9. Tim Harris (25) 19.5 1989 GNB
  DeMarcus Ware (29) 19.5 2011 DAL
11. Clyde Simmons (28) 19.0 1992 PHI
  Bruce Smith+ (27) 19.0 1990 BUF
  Mark Gastineau (27) 19.0 1983 NYJ
14. Jason Taylor (28) 18.5 2002 MIA
  Andre Tippett+ (25) 18.5 1984 NWE
  Dexter Manley (27) 18.5 1986 WAS
  Michael Strahan (32) 18.5 2003 NYG
18. Keith Millard (27) 18.0 1989 MIN
  Reggie White+ (27) 18.0 1988 PHI
  Jason Babin (31) 18.0 2011 PHI
  Reggie White+ (25) 18.0 1986 PHI
22. Fred Dean+ (31) 17.5 1983 SFO
  Richard Dent+ (24) 17.5 1984 CHI
  Bryce Paup (27) 17.5 1995 BUF
  Joey Porter (31) 17.5 2008 MIA
26. Shawne Merriman (22) 17.0 2006 SDG
  La’Roi Glover (26) 17.0 2000 NOR
  Kevin Carter (26) 17.0 1999 STL
  Richard Dent+ (25) 17.0 1985 CHI
  Elvis Dumervil (25) 17.0 2009 DEN
  Leslie O’Neal (28) 17.0 1992 SDG
  Tim Harris (28) 17.0 1992 SFO
  Pat Swilling (27) 17.0 1991 NOR
34. Pat Swilling (25) 16.5 1989 NOR
  Kevin Greene (27) 16.5 1989 RAM
  Trace Armstrong (35) 16.5 2000 MIA
  Warren Sapp (28) 16.5 2000 TAM
  Simeon Rice (25) 16.5 1999 ARI
  Michael Sinclair (30) 16.5 1998 SEA
  Andre Tippett+ (26) 16.5 1985 NWE
  Kevin Greene (26) 16.5 1988 RAM
  Jason Pierre-Paul (22) 16.5 2011 NYG
  John Abraham (30) 16.5 2008 ATL
44. Doug Betters (27) 16.0 1983 MIA
  Curtis Greer (26) 16.0 1983 STL
  Jacob Green (26) 16.0 1983 SEA
  Derrick Burgess (27) 16.0 2005 OAK
  Reggie White+ (37) 16.0 1998 GNB
  Charles Haley (26) 16.0 1990 SFO
  Greg Brown (27) 16.0 1984 PHI
  Dwight Freeney (24) 16.0 2004 IND
  James Harrison (30) 16.0 2008 PIT
  Simon Fletcher (30) 16.0 1992 DEN
54. Clyde Simmons (25) 15.5 1989 PHI
  Aaron Kampman (27) 15.5 2006 GNB
  Simeon Rice (28) 15.5 2002 TAM
  Jared Allen (25) 15.5 2007 KAN
  Leonard Marshall (24) 15.5 1985 NYG
  John Randle+ (30) 15.5 1997 MIN
  Lawrence Taylor+ (29) 15.5 1988 NYG
  DeMarcus Ware (28) 15.5 2010 DAL
  Sean Jones (24) 15.5 1986 RAI
  Wayne Martin (27) 15.5 1992 NOR
64. Chris Doleman+ (37) 15.0 1998 SFO
  Kevin Greene (36) 15.0 1998 CAR
  Michael Strahan (27) 15.0 1998 NYG
  Robert Porcher (30) 15.0 1999 DET
  Hugh Douglas (29) 15.0 2000 PHI
  Lawrence Taylor+ (30) 15.0 1989 NYG
  Peter Boulware (27) 15.0 2001 BAL
  Dexter Manley (26) 15.0 1985 WAS
  Mike Merriweather (24) 15.0 1984 PIT
  Dana Stubblefield (27) 15.0 1997 SFO
  William Fuller (29) 15.0 1991 HOU
  Reggie White+ (30) 15.0 1991 PHI
  Adewale Ogunleye (26) 15.0 2003 MIA
  Simeon Rice (29) 15.0 2003 TAM
  Neil Smith (27) 15.0 1993 KAN
  Bruce Smith+ (23) 15.0 1986 BUF
  Lee Williams (24) 15.0 1986 SDG
81. Charles Mann (24) 14.5 1985 WAS
  Michael McCrary (28) 14.5 1998 BAL
  Jevon Kearse (23) 14.5 1999 TEN
  Jason Taylor (26) 14.5 2000 MIA
  Ezra Johnson (28) 14.5 1983 GNB
  Leonard Little (27) 14.5 2001 STL
  Osi Umenyiora (24) 14.5 2005 NYG
  Patrick Kerney (31) 14.5 2007 SEA
  Art Still (29) 14.5 1984 KAN
  Jeff Bryant (24) 14.5 1984 SEA
  Bertrand Berry (29) 14.5 2004 ARI
  Chris Doleman+ (31) 14.5 1992 MIN
  Neil Smith (26) 14.5 1992 KAN
  Derrick Thomas+ (25) 14.5 1992 KAN
  Jared Allen (26) 14.5 2008 MIN
  Julius Peppers (28) 14.5 2008 CAR
  Kevin Greene (34) 14.5 1996 CAR
  Jared Allen (27) 14.5 2009 MIN
  Tamba Hali (27) 14.5 2010 KAN
100. Doug Betters (28) 14.0 1984 MIA
  Reggie Camp (23) 14.0 1984 CLE
  Curtis Greer (27) 14.0 1984 STL
  Reggie White+ (29) 14.0 1990 PHI
  Eric Hicks (24) 14.0 2000 KAN
  Lee Williams (27) 14.0 1989 SDG
  Keith Willis (24) 14.0 1983 PIT
  Aaron Schobel (29) 14.0 2006 BUF
  Simeon Rice (31) 14.0 2005 TAM
  DeMarcus Ware (25) 14.0 2007 DAL
  Mario Williams (22) 14.0 2007 HOU
  Michael Strahan (26) 14.0 1997 NYG
  Bruce Smith+ (34) 14.0 1997 BUF
  Bryan Cox (24) 14.0 1992 MIA
  Cortez Kennedy+ (24) 14.0 1992 SEA
  Bruce Smith+ (29) 14.0 1992 BUF
  Reggie White+ (31) 14.0 1992 PHI
  Bruce Smith+ (30) 14.0 1993 BUF
  Jim Jeffcoat (25) 14.0 1986 DAL
  Kevin Greene (32) 14.0 1994 PIT
  Aldon Smith (22) 14.0 2011 SFO
  Terrell Suggs (29) 14.0 2011 BAL
  Cameron Wake (28) 14.0 2010 MIA
  Freddie Joe Nunn (26) 14.0 1988 PHO
124. Leslie O’Neal (26) 13.5 1990 SDG
  Dexter Manley (25) 13.5 1984 WAS
  Mike Bell (27) 13.5 1984 KAN
  Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila (27) 13.5 2004 GNB
  Tim Harris (24) 13.5 1988 GNB
  Mark Gastineau (29) 13.5 1985 NYJ
  Jacob Green (28) 13.5 1985 SEA
  Jason Gildon (28) 13.5 2000 PIT
  William Gay (28) 13.5 1983 DET
  Charlie Clemons (29) 13.5 2001 NOR
  Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila (24) 13.5 2001 GNB
  Jason Taylor (32) 13.5 2006 MIA
  Clay Matthews (24) 13.5 2010 GNB
  LaMarr Woodley (25) 13.5 2009 PIT
  Simon Fletcher (29) 13.5 1991 DEN
  Derrick Thomas+ (24) 13.5 1991 KAN
  Tony Bennett (25) 13.5 1992 GNB
  Rickey Jackson+ (34) 13.5 1992 NOR
  Simon Fletcher (31) 13.5 1993 DEN
  Rulon Jones (28) 13.5 1986 DEN
  Ken Harvey (29) 13.5 1994 WAS
  Dwight Freeney (29) 13.5 2009 IND
  Lamar Lathon (29) 13.5 1996 CAR
  Michael McCrary (26) 13.5 1996 SEA
  Bruce Smith+ (33) 13.5 1996 BUF
  John Randle+ (27) 13.5 1994 MIN
150. Dwaine Board (27) 13.0 1983 SFO
  Al Baker (27) 13.0 1983 STL
  Bruce Smith+ (26) 13.0 1989 BUF
  Marcus Jones (27) 13.0 2000 TAM
  Trevor Pryce (24) 13.0 1999 DEN
  Reggie White+ (24) 13.0 1985 PHI
  Lawrence Taylor+ (26) 13.0 1985 NYG
  Karl Mecklenburg (25) 13.0 1985 DEN
  Too Tall Jones (34) 13.0 1985 DAL
  Greg Brown (28) 13.0 1985 PHI
  Eddie Edwards (29) 13.0 1983 CIN
  Doug English (30) 13.0 1983 DET
  Osi Umenyiora (26) 13.0 2007 NYG
  Dwight Freeney (22) 13.0 2002 IND
  Trevor Pryce (31) 13.0 2006 BAL
  Julius Peppers (26) 13.0 2006 CAR
  Leonard Little (32) 13.0 2006 STL
  Marcellus Wiley (27) 13.0 2001 SDG
  Jamir Miller (28) 13.0 2001 CLE
  John Abraham (23) 13.0 2001 NYJ
  Doug Martin (26) 13.0 1983 MIN
  Howie Long+ (23) 13.0 1983 RAI
  Kevin Greene (28) 13.0 1990 RAM
  Tony Bennett (24) 13.0 1991 GNB
  William Fuller (33) 13.0 1995 PHI
  Sean Jones (31) 13.0 1993 HOU
  Renaldo Turnbull (27) 13.0 1993 NOR
  Reggie White+ (32) 13.0 1993 GNB
  Anthony Smith (25) 13.0 1992 RAI
  Ray Childress (30) 13.0 1992 HOU
  Jason Taylor (29) 13.0 2003 MIA
  Greg Townsend (30) 13.0 1991 RAI
  Clyde Simmons (27) 13.0 1991 PHI
  Wayne Martin (30) 13.0 1995 NOR
  Pat Swilling (31) 13.0 1995 OAK
  Alfred Williams (28) 13.0 1996 DEN
  Dennis Byrd (24) 13.0 1990 NYJ
  Jacob Green (27) 13.0 1984 SEA
  Patrick Kerney (28) 13.0 2004 ATL
  John Abraham (32) 13.0 2010 ATL
  Chris Long (26) 13.0 2011 STL
  Will Smith (28) 13.0 2009 NOR
  Chad Brown (26) 13.0 1996 PIT
  William Fuller (34) 13.0 1996 PHI
  Michael Sinclair (28) 13.0 1996 SEA
  Derrick Thomas+ (29) 13.0 1996 KAN
196. Randy White+ (30) 12.5 1983 DAL
  Leslie O’Neal (25) 12.5 1989 SDG
  Warren Sapp (27) 12.5 1999 TAM
  Hugh Douglas (27) 12.5 1998 PHI
  Mike Wilcher (25) 12.5 1985 RAM
  Bill Pickel (26) 12.5 1985 RAI
  Greg Townsend (29) 12.5 1990 RAI
  Kyle Vanden Bosch (27) 12.5 2005 TEN
  Andre Carter (23) 12.5 2002 SFO
  Hugh Douglas (31) 12.5 2002 PHI
  Trent Cole (25) 12.5 2007 PHI
  Elvis Dumervil (23) 12.5 2007 DEN
  Greg Ellis (32) 12.5 2007 DAL
  Shawne Merriman (23) 12.5 2007 SDG
  Mike Vrabel (32) 12.5 2007 NWE
  Richard Dent+ (27) 12.5 1987 CHI
  Andre Tippett+ (28) 12.5 1987 NWE
  Sean Jones (28) 12.5 1990 HOU
  Jacob Green (33) 12.5 1990 SEA
  Randy White+ (31) 12.5 1984 DAL
  Shaun Ellis (26) 12.5 2003 NYJ
  Leonard Little (29) 12.5 2003 STL
  Anthony Smith (26) 12.5 1993 RAI
  John Randle+ (26) 12.5 1993 MIN
  Kevin Greene (31) 12.5 1993 PIT
  Chris Doleman+ (32) 12.5 1993 MIN
  Richard Dent+ (33) 12.5 1993 CHI
  Leslie O’Neal (22) 12.5 1986 SDG
  Charles Haley (30) 12.5 1994 DAL
  Leslie O’Neal (30) 12.5 1994 SDG
  Bill Pickel (25) 12.5 1984 RAI
  Robert Porcher (28) 12.5 1997 DET
  Jason Babin (30) 12.5 2010 TEN
  Trent Cole (27) 12.5 2009 PHI
  Roy Barker (27) 12.5 1996 SFO
  Simeon Rice (22) 12.5 1996 ARI
  Leslie O’Neal (31) 12.5 1995 SDG
233. David Galloway (24) 12.0 1983 STL
  Simon Fletcher (27) 12.0 1989 DEN
  Marco Coleman (31) 12.0 2000 WAS
  Joe Johnson (28) 12.0 2000 NOR
  Trevor Pryce (25) 12.0 2000 DEN
  Kevin Greene (37) 12.0 1999 CAR
  Chad Bratzke (28) 12.0 1999 IND
  Tony Brackens (25) 12.0 1999 JAX
  Derrick Thomas+ (31) 12.0 1998 KAN
  Kevin Carter (25) 12.0 1998 STL
  Roy Barker (29) 12.0 1998 SFO
  Mike Hartenstine (30) 12.0 1983 CHI
  Rickey Jackson+ (25) 12.0 1983 NOR
  Jason Gildon (29) 12.0 2001 PIT
  Bruce Smith+ (24) 12.0 1987 BUF
  Kyle Vanden Bosch (29) 12.0 2007 TEN
  Aaron Kampman (28) 12.0 2007 GNB
  Julius Peppers (22) 12.0 2002 CAR
  Leonard Little (28) 12.0 2002 STL
  Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila (25) 12.0 2002 GNB
  Jason Taylor (31) 12.0 2005 MIA
  Aaron Schobel (28) 12.0 2005 BUF
  Mark Anderson (23) 12.0 2006 CHI
  Patrick Kerney (25) 12.0 2001 ATL
  Lawrence Taylor+ (28) 12.0 1987 NYG
  Jim Jeffcoat (24) 12.0 1985 DAL
  Reggie White+ (34) 12.0 1995 GNB
  Neil Smith (29) 12.0 1995 KAN
  Keith Willis (27) 12.0 1986 PIT
  Leonard Marshall (25) 12.0 1986 NYG
  Charles Haley (22) 12.0 1986 SFO
  Jacob Green (29) 12.0 1986 SEA
  Leslie O’Neal (29) 12.0 1993 SDG
  Mario Williams (23) 12.0 2008 HOU
  Justin Tuck (25) 12.0 2008 NYG
  Terrell Suggs (21) 12.0 2003 BAL
  Tony Tolbert (29) 12.0 1996 DAL
  Trace Armstrong (31) 12.0 1996 MIA
  Tamba Hali (28) 12.0 2011 KAN
  Richard Dent+ (30) 12.0 1990 CHI
  Clay Matthews (28) 12.0 1984 CLE
  Howie Long+ (24) 12.0 1984 RAI
  Rickey Jackson+ (26) 12.0 1984 NOR
  Dennis Harrison (28) 12.0 1984 PHI
  Chuck Smith (28) 12.0 1997 ATL
  Michael Sinclair (29) 12.0 1997 SEA
  Chris Doleman+ (36) 12.0 1997 SFO
  Simeon Rice (30) 12.0 2004 TAM
  Mike L. Cofer (28) 12.0 1988 DET
  Mike Rucker (28) 12.0 2003 CAR

Wikipedia notes:

Reggie White

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

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Reggie White

White during his tenure with the Green Bay Packers.
No. 92
Defensive end
Personal information
Date of birth: (1961-12-19)December 19, 1961
Place of birth: Chattanooga, Tennessee
Date of death: December 26, 2004(2004-12-26) (aged 43)
Place of death: Cornelius, North Carolina
Height: 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Weight: 300 lb (136 kg)
Career information
College: Tennessee
Supplemental Draft: 1985 / Round: 1
Debuted in 1984 for the Memphis Showboats
Last played in 2000 for the Carolina Panthers
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Tackles 1,112
Sacks 198
Interceptions 3
Stats at NFL.com
Pro Football Hall of Fame
College Football Hall of Fame

Reginald Howard “Reggie” White (December 19, 1961 – December 26, 2004) was an American college and professional football player who was a defensive end in the National Football League (NFL) for fifteen seasons during the 1980s and 1990s. He played college football for the University of Tennessee, and was recognized as an All-American. After initially playing two professional seasons for the Memphis Showboats of the United States Football League (USFL), he was selected in the first round of the 1985 Supplemental Draft, and then played for the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles, Green Bay Packers and Carolina Panthers, becoming one of the most decorated players in NFL history. The two-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, 13-time Pro Bowl and 12-time All-Pro selection holds 2nd place all-time amongst career sack leaders with 198.5 (behind Bruce Smith‘s 200 career sacks) and was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team, NFL 1990s All-Decade Team and the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team. During his professional career, he was also known for his Christian ministry as an ordained Evangelical minister, leading to his nickname, “The Minister of Defense.” White is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Contents

 [hide

[edit] Early years

White was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He attended Howard School of Academics and Technology[1] during high school, and from there was recruited to play for the Tennessee Volunteers.

[edit] College career

White played college football at Tennessee from 1980 to 1983, where he set school records for most sacks in a career, season and game. He still holds these records. While playing for the Volunteers, White was named an All-American. He was the SEC Player of the Year in his Senior season of 1983.

He finished his college career with 32 Sacks and 51 TFL.[2]

[edit] Professional career

[edit] USFL

[edit] Memphis Showboats

After college, White signed with the Memphis Showboats of the USFL. He played for Memphis for two seasons, starting in 36 games. As a member of the Showboats, he racked up 23.5 sacks, 198 tackles, and seven forced fumbles.

[edit] NFL

[edit] Philadelphia Eagles

When the USFL collapsed, White was signed by the Philadelphia Eagles, who held his NFL rights. He played with the Eagles for eight seasons, during which time he picked up 124 sacks, becoming the Eagles’ all-time sack leader. He also set the Eagles regular-season record with 21 sacks in a single season (1987). White also became the only player to ever accumulate twenty or more sacks in just twelve games. He also set an NFL regular-season record during 1987 by averaging the most sacks per game, with 1.75 sacks per game. Over the course of his tenure with the Eagles, White actually accumulated more sacks than the number of games that he played. He was voted by ESPN Sportsnation as the greatest player in Eagles’ franchise history.[3]

[edit] Green Bay Packers

Reggie White with teammate Brett Favre (behind) presenting President Bill Clinton with a Packers team jacket at a 1997 ceremony following the Packers’ win in Super Bowl XXXI.

In 1993, White became a free agent. He was signed by the Green Bay Packers, where he played for six seasons. White notched up another 68.5 sacks to become, at the time, the Packers’ all-time leader in that category (second now to Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila who has 74.5 registered sacks). White was also just as valued for his role as a team leader. He helped the Packers to two Super Bowls, including a victory in Super Bowl XXXI. That victory was the only championship White ever shared in at any level. In 1998, White was named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

[edit] Carolina Panthers

In 2000, he came out of a 1-year retirement and started all 16 games for the Panthers. White had 5.5 sacks and 1 forced fumble while with the team. He again retired at the end of the 2000 season.

[edit] Retirements

After the 1998 season, White retired from professional football. However, in 2000, White was wooed back to the league by the Carolina Panthers. He played for one season as a Panther, then retired again.

At the time of his retirement, White was the NFL’s all-time sacks leader with 198. (He has since been surpassed by Bruce Smith who has 200.) Counting his time in the USFL, White has 221.5 sacks in top-level professional football, making him professional football’s all-time sacks leader. White also recorded three interceptions, which he returned for 79 yards. He recovered nineteen fumbles, which he returned for 137 yards and three touchdowns. His nine consecutive seasons (1985–1993) with at least ten sacks remain an NFL record. He was named an All-Pro for thirteen of his fifteen seasons, including eight as a first-team selection.

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10 questions the Heritage Foundation would ask in the Presidential Debate

Excellent questions!!!

Amy Payne

October 3, 2012 at 9:05 am

Tonight’s debate between President Barack Obama and former Governor Mitt Romney is supposed to focus on domestic policy, with a major concentration on the economy. Health care, the role of government, and philosophy of governing are also on the agenda. The Heritage Foundation’s policy experts have submitted 10 questions they would like to see asked in the debate.

1. In 2008, then-candidate Obama said, “Under my plan, no family making less than $250,000 a year will see any form of tax increase.” In reality, President Obama’s signature health care law contains 18 new or increased taxes and penalties that will cost taxpayers $836.3 billion over the next 10 years, many of which fall heavily on the middle class. In fact, almost 70 percent of those responsible for paying the fiercely debated individual mandate are below 400 percent of the federal poverty level. Should these tax increases be stopped to protect middle-class Americans from their damage? If yes, where would the money needed to help pay for Obamacare come from?

2. Millions of baby boomers are starting to retire, and spending on Social Security and Medicare as these programs are currently structured is simply unsustainable. What is your plan to solve the looming entitlement program spending crisis?

3. Medicare as we know it today is facing severe financing problems that are unsustainable and putting future generations’ Medicare benefits in jeopardy. Over the long term, Medicare has made $37 trillion worth of promises to seniors that it cannot keep and the hospital insurance trust fund will be empty by 2024. Worse, the President’s health care law will cut Medicare by $716 billion over the next 10 years to pay for new spending in Obamacare. As Medicare’s solvency hangs in the balance, what structural reforms, if any, are you willing to make to preserve Medicare for future generations?

4. Everyone talks about shoring up our battered American Dream. How would you define the American Dream and what do you think are the most serious threats to it?

5. The Health and Human Services Department recently rewrote the law governing welfare to weaken its work requirements. Meanwhile, the number of people relying on food stamps has doubled under the current Administration. Should all able-bodied recipients be required to work or prepare for work as a condition of receiving aid in public housing, food stamps, and cash assistance?

6. The federal government is currently spending much more than it has, and annual budget deficits over $1 trillion have become the norm. What is your plan to stem the tide of deficits and rising debt?

7. One of the few bright spots in America’s economy has been energy production, particularly on state and private lands.  According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), energy production decreased 13 percent on federal lands in fiscal year (FY) 2011 when compared to FY 2010.  What would you do to reverse course on energy production on federal lands?

8. Congress—most notably the Senate, which hasn’t produced a budget in over three years—is sorely lacking in its basic responsibility of budgeting. What would you do to ensure the fundamental process of budgeting is restored?

9. President Obama has previously stated that, in the most important 5 percent of cases before the courts, it matters more what is in a judge’s heart (what has come to be known as his empathy standard) than what the rule of law requires. Is this the correct standard by which to evaluate judicial nominees? If not, what standard would you apply?

10. Former Attorney General of Mexico Victor Humberto Benítez Treviño estimated that approximately 300 Mexican citizens have been killed using Fast and Furious weapons in addition to U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry. Should Eric Holder resign as Attorney General because of his failures related to Operation Fast and Furious, including his failure to properly supervise the operation? If not, why not?

Terri Blackstock’s testimony

Uploaded by on Sep 29, 2009

This bestselling author writes from the heart when her latest novel details a drug-addicted daughter and a mother who never lets go…

____________

Today I was listening to American Family Radio and I heard Terri Blackstock give her testimony. She said her decision to write Christian Suspense Novels was made after her husband listened to Adrian Rogers on American Family Radio and put his faith in Christ. That affected her and caused her to grow spiritually. Here  is her story below:

Testimony

In many ways, I could be described as a Prodigal Daughter, even though I never openly rebelled against God.

I was raised in the church and saved at 14. I walked closely with Christ through my teen years. However, as I reached college age, I grew lukewarm in my faith. Though I attended church, I stopped praying and reading the Bible, and I focused more on things of the world than on spiritual things.

When I began writing romance novels in 1982, I struggled briefly over whether to write books that dealt openly with sex. I managed to rationalize it, however, and when my work became popular, I told myself that God was making it all happen.

When my 13-year marriage ended in 1990, it was a terrible tragedy for me, but I now believe God used it to help me turn back to Him. I moved back to my hometown, where I found a church that offered a divorce recovery ministry and an active singles program. Through that ministry, I began getting my life back on track. I met my husband Ken through the church and we married in 1992.

But I still wasn’t able to give up my romance writing. I told myself I was reaching more people that way than I could writing Christian fiction. I disregarded the fact that what I was writing was helping no one — in fact, my work was full of lies that pointed people away from God instead of to Him.

In 1994, Ken realized he had never had more than an intellectual knowledge of Jesus. He came to know Christ as his Lord and Savior, and became the spiritual leader that I had yearned for all my life.

Ken’s example rekindled my own fire for Christ. I finally saw that my work was an obstacle between Christ and me, and a stumbling block for others. It didn’t matter how many people read my work; if I couldn’t tell them what I knew — what would solve their problems and change their lives — it was of no good.

Since I’ve made my commitment to write books that glorify God, He has opened door after door for me. I am excited about using my gift to challenge other Christians and point unbelievers to Him.

_______

Uploaded by on May 5, 2009

A short video about the life of perhaps the greatest preacher of our modern era.

__________

Dr. Adrian Rogers’ Salvation Story

Uploaded by on Mar 16, 2010

A touching story about when Adrian Rogers accepted Jesus Christ as his Savior.

Adrian Rogers – How to Know God Personally

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“Woody Wednesday” Pictures from Woody Allen’s latest movie “To Rome with Love” Part 2

Penelope Cruz, Woody Allen “To Rome With Love” Premiere ARRIVALS LA Film Fest

Below is a picture from Woody Allen’s latest movie and then below are some Italian films that influenced him over the years. Woody Allen is my favorite director and he is even getting better.

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<!–By Todd Plitt, USA TODAY
  • 6/4/2012
After more than 40 films in just less than 50 years, director Woody Allen has turned to Italy as the location for his latest film, To Rome with Love, opening in the USA on June 22. Allen talks with USA TODAY’sSusan Wloszczyna about the movie, and he also discusses films by some of his favorite Italian directors.
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 By Andrew Medichini, AP

  • 7/14/2011
Ever since he switched to European settings, Allen, seen here filming in Rome last year, has allowed the mood of each city to dictate the tone of the movie.
“There are such strong personalities to these cities,” he says. “Rome is chaotic, hilarious, joyfully alive and full of farce… In Italy, you don’t think back to the earlier eras so much. It really came into its own post-World War II, and that is when Italian filmmakers began to define their country for Americans. It is very energetic and lusty.”
 
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  • The Criterion Collection
  •  
For movie lovers who need to brush up on their Italian films, Allen suggests these five must-see titles.
Bicycle Thieves (also known as The Bicycle Thief, 1948). In this neo-realist classic directed by Vittorio De Sica, a poor man and his young son search the streets of Rome for his stolen bicycle that he needs for his job.
Allen’s observation: “It is as great a film as has been ever made, an out-and-out piece of artistic perfection.’’
 
 

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 Shoeshine (1946). A rarely seen film, also directed by De Sica. A pair of shoeshine boys in Rome get into trouble when they try to save money to buy a horse.
Allen’s observation: “De Sica was a very simple filmmaker but a great storyteller, and these films are profoundly moving and beautifully told.”
 

Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

Willie Roaf did a great job on Oct 1, 2012 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. His father asked him to tell the story about the 1992 Bama game. Here it is below:

 
photo

Willie Roaf vs. Alabama, 1992

Louisiana Tech offensive guard Willie Roaf tears the helmet off of all-time Alabama right defensive end Eric Curry (80), while blocking for QB Sam Hughes on a play during Tech’s Sept. 26, 1992 game with the Crimson Tide at Legion Field in Birmingham, Ala. Alabama won the game 13-0, but NFL scouts said his performance in this game solidified Roaf’s reputation as a potential high NFL draftee after going head to head with Curry, a all-America player himself. Roaf was drafted the next spring, 1993, by the New Orleans Saints. He ended his playing career with the Kansas City Chiefs. He was inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame, Class of 2012 on Aug. 4, 2012.

Photo (c)1992 by Tom Morris/www.tommorrisphotos.com
(This photo appeared in Sports Illustrated year-end double issue December, 1993)

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Willie Roaf at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

I really enjoyed the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Monday Oct 1, 2012. He was passed over by the Razorbacks and other big time schools because of his size but he turned out to be a very special player.

10/1/2012 at 3:14pm

Willie Roaf, the former Pine Bluff Zebra and a recent inductee into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, offered an interesting theory Monday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club as to why he might have been passed over by the Arkansas Razorbacks and other bigger powers and was left to sign with Louisiana Tech back in 1988.

“The Arkansas Razorbacks were still mad about [quarterback] Eric Mitchel going to Oklahoma,” he said, also adding that another Pine Bluff Zebra, defensive tackle Curtice Williams, had chosen OU, as had Little Rock Parkview star tight end Keith Jackson.

So, when the 1987-88 football and basketball seasons rolled around at Pine Bluff, nobody from Arkansas took a look at the 6-foot-5, 220-pounder. Arkansas State tried to recruit him, but Louisiana Tech won out.

More importantly, big-time college recruiters didn’t take a look at Roaf’s dad, Clifton Roaf, a dentist who had played football at Michigan State before a knee injury wrecked his career. One glance at Clifton would have told most college scouts that Will, as his dad called him, had yet to fill out and would likely be mammoth-sized in college, perfect for a tackle with footwork that allowed him to play basketball and rebound well.

His Louisiana Tech coaches kept encouraging Roaf to work hard on the field and in the weight room, and he’d eventually be playing on Sundays, he told the club Monday. Roaf admitted he found that hard to believe early on.

Roaf’s coming out party as a great college offensive lineman came when NFL scouts were looking at Alabama’s dominant defensive linemen Eric Curry and John Copeland, leaders on that great Crimson Tide defense in 1992.

Roaf dominated those linemen that day and was the top offensive linemen taken in the 1993 NFL Draft.

He parlayed that into a lengthy career with the New Orleans Saints and the Kansas City Chiefs, retiring in 2006.

“I was blessed to be able to play so long,” Roaf said. “I wanted to keep playing football as long as I could.”

His late mother was an Arkansas Supreme Court judge, and his sisters achieved great post-graduate success. Roaf admittedly wasn’t keen on the books for a time in high school, but his parents got his attention when they pulled him off the basketball court during his sophomore season when he let his grades slip.

“I had a lot to live up to in my family, so my Ph.D. was in football,” he said.

The overlooking of Roaf by college scouts points to college recruiting not always being a science and how “one stars” turn into NFL superstars while “five stars” get benched in college.

Marion Glover, Roaf’s high school coach, said at the time that big-time schools should be taking a flyer on Roaf, that he was still a work in progress. Roaf showed great quickness in his feet on Joe Ball’s Zebra basketball team, too. He helped the Zebras to a big upset of a California-based prep powerhouse in the King Cotton Classic that senior year.

Roaf said of scouts, “They should have looked at my hands and feet, and looked at my dad’s too.”

But he also believes signing with Louisiana Tech was a blessing. Tech was running a pro-style attack with coaches who had professional experience, and it prepared him for the NFL game.

RELATING TO SAINTS: Roaf is well aware of the New Orleans Saints’ and Arkansas Razorbacks’ struggles. Both, he said, can be attributed to changes at the head coaching position.

The NFL suspended Saints Coach Sean Payton for the season, a result of the bounty award investigation into the team. And, at Arkansas, Bobby Petrino drove his career and motorcyle into a ditch last April.

Roaf, who had predicted the Saints to win 10 games and make the playoffs, says the Saints would more than likely be 2-2 with Payton in charge instead of being in an interim situation. And Petrino would have made a difference for the Hogs, he said.

BIG MAN: Roaf, whose playing weight was 315 pounds at left tackle and who played in 11 Pro Bowls, says he stays active with an hour to ninety minutes of cardio work. He’s had an issue with gout and takes blood pressure medication, and lately has felt some twinges in his back after all the years in the NFL.

He was healthy for all but about half of two seasons in the league.

This week, he’ll stay in Arkansas and visit his family, as well as planning a stop at Pine Bluff High to visit with the current Zebras and coaches.

Though he lives in Orange County, Calif., he keeps up with his high school alma mater, and he knew the Zebras were 4-1 coming off a 24-21 comeback victory over Bryant.

“They’ve got a big game with Lake Hamilton this week,” he added.

Roaf has three teenaged daughters and a son, Dillon, who isn’t interested in football. “He’s into academics,” Roaf said. Roaf’s mother would have been very proud — she had said he wanted Willie to grow up to be a nuclear physicist or a brain surgeon.

FOUR HALL-OF FAMERS: Roaf is one of four native Arkansans in the Hall of Fame. He joined Wilson native Cortez Kennedy in the recent class. Jacksonville product Dan Hampton is another Hall of Fame member, while a second Hall of Famer from Pine Bluff, receiver Don Hutson, was an original inductee in 1963.

Tagged: Don Hutson, Willie Roaf, Dan Hampton, Cortez Kennedy, Little Rock Touchdown Club, Louisiana Tech Bulldogs, New Orleans Saints, Kansas City Chiefs

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“Tennis Tuesday” David Wheaton (Part 3)

Andre Agassi – 1991 Post-Match Interview

Uploaded by on Jan 25, 2008

This is a post-match interview after a tough loss to fellow American David Wheaton at the 1991 Wimbledon Championships. Andre had the opportunity to close out the match early in the fourth set, but allowed Wheaton to break back forcing them into a tie-breaker. David won the tie-breaker and had momentum going into the fifth which he won with little difficulty. The final score was 3-6, 6-0, 6-2, 6-7, 2-6.

___________________

July 5, 1991 | BILL DWYRE, TIMES SPORTS EDITOR
It was late on the Fourth of July, approaching the twilight’s last gleaming, when David Wheaton of the United States flagged down the last of Andre Agassi’s offerings. Wheaton stepped perfectly into the backhand volley, right shoulder pointed toward his target area in the deep forehand corner of Agassi’s court, and flicked the ball beyond Agassi’s final lunge.

Testimony David Wheaton Tennis

Uploaded by on Sep 23, 2011

Testimony David Wheaton Tennis

_______________

David Wheaton has an excellent show and website at www.Christianworldview.org Below is some material from his website:

How To Be Right With God

Posted by David Wheaton | Wednesday, June 9, 2010 | 3:00 am CT

We consider this page to be the most important page on our site, for there is nothing, absolutely nothing, more important than being right with God.  That is what the first section of this page details.

Further down in the second section, you can read the short story of how David Wheaton (the host and editor of The Christian Worldview) became right with God.

“What must I do to be saved?” This question was asked to one of the followers of Jesus Christ nearly 2000 years ago and is still just as important and relevant of a question for you today.  Have you ever thought about this question?  Do you know the answer to the question?

I would like you to seriously consider this question today because your response will determine how you will live your life and where you will spend eternity after you die.  So please, read this column carefully in its entirety.

“What must I do to be saved?”  Here is how the follower of Jesus answered the question:  “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved” (Acts 16:31).

It is a simple response, but what exactly does it mean to “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ”?  And from what do you need to be “saved”?  Let’s answer the latter question first.

SAVED FROM WHAT?

The Bible, which claims to be the inspired word of God (2 Timothy 3:16) and entirely truthful (John 17:17; Psalm 119:160), gives a straightforward answer to what you need to be saved from:  you need to saved from God Himself.

The Bible says that God created and sustains everything in the universe (Genesis 1:1; Job 38:1-41) … including you (Psalm 139:13-16).  It is He who established the unchanging laws of nature and morality.  It is He who has ultimate authority over His creation.  It is He who desires for you to be in a right relationship with Him (1 Timothy 2:3-4).

In addition to being the Creator, God has another title — Judge.  He has established good and righteous laws for our benefit, but sadly you (and I and everyone else) have disobeyed His laws in one way or another: by lying, lusting, gossiping, slandering, envying, coveting, stealing, cheating, using God’s or Jesus’ name as a curse word, or loving someone or something more than God.  Some of God’s laws that we’ve broken are listed in Exodus 20:1-17 (The 10 Commandments) or in Matthew 5 (Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount).  If your violations of God’s laws aren’t resolved on His terms, you will stand before Him as Judge someday.

There will be no injustice in God’s court; no one will get away with any crime against Him; God has seen and recorded in His “books” every single sin ever committed and He will be completely just in pronouncing His sentence.

That is what you need to be saved from: God’s judgment and wrath.  Or to put it the terrifying way one of the final chapters of the Bible does, you need to be saved from God “throwing” you into the “lake of fire” (Revelation 20:15).

While it is certainly true that God is loving, forgiving, merciful, and gracious — as will be shown in the following sections — the Bible also presents God as being full of wrath against those who break His laws and reject His offer of reconciliation.

While many people wrongly conclude that hell isn’t an actual place, “and if it is, a loving God certainly wouldn’t send anyone there,” the Bible states clearly that God, the just Judge of the universe, has the authority, the power, and the intention of sending all those who reject His Son Jesus Christ there.  Consider the following passages from the Bible:

“He who believes in the Son [Jesus Christ] has eternal life; but he who does not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him” (John 3:36).

“Then I saw a great white throne and Him [God] who sat upon it, from whose presence earth and heaven fled away, and no place was found for them.  And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged from the things which were written in the books, according to their deeds.  And the sea gave up the dead which were in it, and death and Hades gave up the dead which were in them; and they were judged, every one of them according to their deeds.  Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire.  This is the second death, the lake of fire.  And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire” (Revelation 20:11-15).

“God is now declaring to men that all people everywhere should repent, because He has fixed a day in which He will judge the world in righteousness through a Man [Jesus Christ] whom He has appointed, having furnished proof to all men by raising Him from the dead” (Acts 17:30-31).

The concept of God sending those who reject His Son to a literal hell may seem unlikely, unfair, or even crazy to you.  Yet the Bible plainly and consistently speaks of its reality (Luke 16:19-31; 2 Thessalonians 1:8-10) which leaves two options: either hell is real or hell is not real.  Since nothing else in the Bible has ever been proven false — historical events, places, people, prophecies — it would be wise to take the Bible at its word — hell is real.

Being separated from God and punished in hell for eternity should cause everyone to ask, “What can I do to be saved from God sending me there?  The answer is clear: “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ.”

What does that mean though?  Does that simply mean that you believe Jesus existed like some other historical figure, like Plato, Napolean, George Washington, or Alexander the Great, or is there something more to belief than that?

To “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ” is much more than intellectual assent to the fact that He existed; it means that you place your trust, your faith, your expectant hope for being saved in who Jesus is and what He did for you.

WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Jesus Christ is without question the most significant person in the history of the world.  The Bible says much about Jesus — that He was born of a virgin woman, that He performed supernatural acts like healing people of diseases and turning water into wine, that He was crucified on a cross and rose from the dead.  Here are a few more things the Bible says about Jesus:

Jesus is the Son of God:

“And the Word [Jesus] became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14).

Jesus is equal with God:

“In the beginning was the Word [Jesus], and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.  He was in the beginning with God” (John 1:1-2).  “I and the Father are one” – Jesus (John 10:30).

Jesus is the only way to God:

“I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me” – Jesus (John 14:6).

“And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).

“For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5).

WHAT DID JESUS DO FOR YOU?

Jesus is all of the above and much more.  So what did He do for you that He is calling you to believe in?

Jesus lived a perfect life so that He could offer Himself on the cross in your place as the only sacrifice that would satisfy God’s justice for your sin:

“He [God] made Him [Jesus] who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Corinthians 5:21).

“The next day he [John the Baptist] saw Jesus coming to him and said, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29)

Jesus died so that God could demonstrate His love for sinners and so that God’s just punishment for sin could be placed on Jesus and not on you:

“For while we were still helpless, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.  For one will hardly die for a righteous man; though perhaps for the good man someone would dare even to die.  But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.  Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him.  (Romans 5:8-9).

“In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation [i.e. satisfying God’s justice] for our sins” (1 John 4:10).

“And according to the Law, one may almost say, all things are cleansed with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness” (Hebrews 9:22).

Jesus rose from the grave and appeared to hundreds of people so that you would have a living Savior and Lord:

“For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared to Cephas [Peter], then to the twelve.  After that He appeared to more than five hundred brethren at one time, most of whom remain until now, but some have fallen asleep; then He appeared to James, then to all the apostles; and last of all, as to one untimely born, He appeared to me also” (1 Corinthians 15:3-8).

Therefore, to “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ” means to place your trust, your faith, your hope in the person and work of Jesus Christ, whose sinless life and sacrificial death are alone able to reconcile the broken relationship you have created with God as a result of your sins against Him.

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

So let’s go back to the very first question and put it all together: What must you do to be saved?

1. You must agree with God that you have sinned against Him and that you deserve judgment for it.  If your crimes against God aren’t settled on His terms, you will have to pay the awful penalty yourself — eternal separation from God in hell.

“For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).

“If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us” (1 John 1:10).

“For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23).

2. You must repent of your sin, which means that you turn in a new direction away from your sin and commit to following God, relying on Him for the strength to do so.

“Now after John had been taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel’ [literally, the good news about Jesus Christ] (Mark 1:14-15).

“God is now declaring to men that all people everywhere should repent, because He has fixed a day in which He will judge the world in righteousness through a Man [Jesus Christ] whom He has appointed, having furnished proof to all men by raising Him from the dead” (Acts 17:30-31).

3. You must respond to and receive God’s merciful and gracious offer to save you and place your faith, hope, trust, belief in Jesus Christ’s righteousness and His perfect sacrifice of Himself on the cross as the only payment God will accept for the sin debt you have accrued against Him and the only means of your being reconciled to Him.

“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.  For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.  He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.  This is the judgment, that the Light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the Light, for their deeds were evil.  For everyone who does evil hates the Light, and does not come to the Light for fear that his deeds will be exposed.  But he who practices the truth comes to the Light, so that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God” (John 3:16-21).

“The Word is near you, in your mouth and in your heart — that is, the word of faith which we are preaching, that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation.  For the Scripture says, “whoever believes on Him will not be disappointed.”  For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek [Gentile]; for the same Lord is Lord of all, abounding in riches for all who call on Him; for “whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Romans 10:8-13).

4. You must reject any and all of your own supposed good works as completely ineffective to save yourself and mend your separation from God — church attendance, religious activities like communion, baptism, or prayer, charitable giving, personal goodness and kindness, helping the poor and disadvantaged, good intentions, etc.

“Now to the one who works, his wage is not credited as a favor, but as what is due.  But to the one who does not work, but believes in Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is credited as righteousness” (Romans 4:4-5).

5. You must follow Jesus Christ as your Lord (master) by obeying Him and His Words — this is the evidence of one who is saved.

“My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin.  And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and He Himself is the propitiation [one who satisfies God’s justice] for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world.  By this we know that we have come to know Him, if we keep His commandments.  The one who says, “I have come to know Him,” and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him; but whoever keeps His word, in him the love of God has truly been perfected By this we know that we are in Him: the one who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked” (1 John 2:1-6).

“Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter.  Many will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?’  And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from me, you who practice lawlessness’” (Matthew 7:21-23).

David Wheaton
The Christian Worldview

Phone:  1-888-646-2233 toll-free
Email:  feedback@TheChristianWorldview.org

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Rebecca Marino Interview at Saguenay National Bank Challenger Uploaded by TCtenniscanada on Sep 22, 2010 Rebecca Marino speaks to media following her 2nd round win over fellow Canadian Gabriela Dabrowski at the $50,000 Saguenay National Bank Challenger. ___________________ Wikipedia notes: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Rebecca Marino Rebecca Marino at the […]

Marina Erakovic “Tennis Tuesday”

One on One With Marina Erakovic Uploaded by ASBClassicvideo on Jan 1, 2011 James McOnie talks with Marina Erakovic and gets some positive reinforcement. __________________________________ From Wikipedia: Jump to: navigation, search Marina Erakovic Erakovic at the 2009 ASB Classic Country  New Zealand Residence Auckland, New Zealand Born 6 March 1988 (1988-03-06) (age 23) Split, SFR Yugoslavia […]

Johanna Larsson “Tennis Tuesday”

From Wikipedia: Johanna Larsson Country  Sweden Residence Helsingborg, Sweden Born 17 August 1988 (1988-08-17) (age 23) Boden, Sweden Height 1.74m (5′ 9″) Weight 66 kg Turned pro 2006 Plays Right-handed (two-handed backhand) Career prize money $449.950 Singles Career record 220–124 Career titles 11 ITF Highest ranking No. 46 (July 11, 2011) Current ranking No. 58 (January […]

Nadia Petrova “Tennis Tuesday”

Petrova Interview Wimbledon 2008 Day 8 Uploaded by MZTennis on Jul 1, 2008 Download Match http://tinyurl.com/579jxq Petrova Wimbledon 2008 Interview Day 8 ________________________________ From Wikipedia: Nadia Petrova Надежда Петрова Country  Russia Residence Miami, USA Born June 8, 1982 (1982-06-08) (age 29) Moscow, Soviet Union Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) Weight 65 kg (140 lb; 10.2 st) Turned pro September 6, 1999 […]

Elena Baltacha “Tennis Tuesday”

Uploaded by HobartInternational on Jan 8, 2011 British star Elena Baltacha talks ahead of the Moorilla Hobart International. The Scotswoman, known as “Bally”, is one of many top international players competing at the WTA AO Series event in the Tasmanian capital. She faces Tamarine Tansugarn in Thailand. __________________________ From Wikipedia: Jump to: navigation, search Elena […]

Bethanie Mattek-Sands “Tennis Tuesday”

2011 Australian Open – Bethanie Mattek-Sands Uploaded by tennis on Jan 24, 2011 In an exclusive interview with USTA.com’s Craig Gabriel from the 2011 Australian Open in Melbourne, American Bethanie Mattek-Sands talks about finding doubles success down under, the atmosphere of the Aussie Open, maintaining a solid ranking, the mindset of trying to qualify, losing […]

“Tennis Tuesday” every week here on www.thedailyhatch.org

Every Tuesday you can find a great post like this one and below you can find some links to past posts. From Wikipedia: McEnroe won a total of 148 ATP titles (a record for a male professional) during his career — 77 in singles, 71 in men’s doubles, and 1 in mixed doubles (not counted […]

“Tennis Tuesday” Top Ten paid tennis players in the world

Here are the top ten paid tennis players in the world: Hey people, here we have this post about the top 10 highest paid tennis players of the world, for a little introduction let me tell you that a sum of $1.7 million is given to men’s and women’s US open champion for the title. […]

Andy Roddick has impressive stats “Tennis Tuesday”

Juan Carlos Ferrero vs Andy Roddick Final US Open 2003 Highlights Pt. 1 Andy has some impressive stats: Serve records: Fastest serve in Australian open: 148 mph . Fastest serve in Dubai: 150 mph. Fastest average in first serve: 134 mph. Fastest serve in Beijing: 148 mph. Fastest serve in San Jose: 150 mph. Fastest serve in Madrid: 151 mph. Fastest […]

James Blake “Tennis Tuesday”

ESPN on James Blake’s tennis career winding down From Wikipedia: James Riley Blake[1] (born December 28, 1979) is an American professional tennis player. Blake is known for his speed and powerful, flat forehand. As of August 2011, Blake is ranked no. 63 among active male players with 24 career finals appearances (10–14 record). His career […]

Lleyton Hewitt “Tennis Tuesday”

Uploaded by TennisAustralia on Sep 16, 2011 Lleyton Hewitt and Roger Federer speak to the media following Federer’s win in the second rubber. _________________________ Wikipedia noted: Lleyton Glynn Hewitt ( /ˈleɪtən ˈhjuːɨt/;[2] born 24 February 1981) is an Australian professional tennis player and former world no. 1. In 2000, Hewitt had won ATP titles on all […]

Radek Stepanek “Tennis Tuesday”

Uploaded by TennisPiu on Feb 23, 2009 Highlights of the final between Andy Roddick and Radek Stepanek of the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships 2009 in Memphis. ______________________________ From Wikipedia: Radek Štěpánek Country  Czech Republic Residence Monte Carlo, Monaco Born 27 November 1978 (1978-11-27) (age 33) Karviná, Czechoslovakia Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) Weight 76 kg (170 lb; 12.0 st) Turned pro […]

David Wheaton, editor