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Hangman

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Posts posted by Hangman

  1. Ryan Adams – Prisoner

    Sampha – Process

    The xx – I See You

    Waxahatchee – Out In The Storm

    White Reaper – The World’s Best American Band

    Fleet Foxes – Crack Up

    Childish Gambino – Awaken, My Love

    JD McPherson – Undivided Heart & Soul

    Phoenix – Ti Amo

    Tinariwen – Elwan

     

    I missed the boat a little earlier in the year when @Hangman and @Science Friction were mentioning him, but I bought Tyler Childers' record Purgatory on the recommendation of a friend. It's great. Apparently other folks agree, because the album was produced by Sturgill Simpson, and Simpson actually played and sang backup in various places in the album. Purgatory definitely makes for one of the best albums of the year, in my book.

     

    Glad you gave him a shot and liked what you heard. Doesn't matter how you got there as long as you got there.

  2. I'm a male who supervises 8 female direct reports and 0 males. My department as a whole has 4 men (including myself) and approximately 50 women. With this, I have always taken sexual harassment very seriously and take every step to ensure nothing I do or say can be misconstrued.

     

    I don't directly address female dress code violations. I get a second opinion of a female supervisor and ask that they handle it on my behalf.

     

    I make sure to never be alone in a room with a female employee. I always request a female supervisor sit in on private coaching sessions so we can have a third party record of what happened. I want to avoid any he said/she said. I offer to do the same for them when they have to coach their male employees.

     

    Not hiring women would just never be an option for me. And given that my company has a female Chairman/CEO, I don't think it's an option for anyone in the company, fortunately.

  3. Seahawks had Russell Wilson, Jimmy Graham, Earl Thomas, and Bobby Wagner... Little surprised about Graham (though he's scored a lot of TDs), but I guess the NFC is not that great at TE. Kyle Rudolph was probably his closest competition outside of Ertz who also made it. The other three Seahawks, though... Very deserving.

  4. As everyone knows, I'm a Seahawks fan and have been for the last 20 years. They were the team I randomly adopted as my own when NFL Gameday 98 was bundled with my PlayStation console. As I grew and became obsessed with Pearl Jam and other "grunge" bands from Seattle, it only further cemented them as my team.

     

    I was able to attend my first game this year on my first visit to the city, and it just felt like the perfect match. My wife and I are already planning our next trip to the Pacific Northwest.

     

    Go 'Hawks!

  5. I dont :lol2:

     

    I flew 2,500 miles to watch the Seahawks play the Texans in the game of the year, and with two minutes left and the 'Hawks down, I was okay with that because it was such a good game. Thankfully they won and I didn't go all that way to watch a loss, but I just want to see a good football game.

     

    And hopefully Seattle wins. :lol2:

  6. Wentz has had a great year, and should be on the shortlist of possible MVP's, especially if the Eagles can finish strong. I was really disappointed last night with the Eagles last night though. They played very conservative and the coaching staff seemed very tight, which goes against everything they've done this year.

     

    Right now, though, Russell Wilson would be my MVP. He simply carries the Hawks offensively. Wentz has a great running game that takes a lot of pressure off of him.

     

    Bias aside, I agree on Wilson. He runs around and makes plays he has no business making with almost no protection. Any other QB would have a hard time not getting sacked on almost every dropback with the small window of protection Russell is given. He's responsible for almost every yard the team has gotten this year, with no run game to support him. His career will be shorter than it should've been because of the work he has to do on almost every single dropback to get away from the defender who goes untouched to hit him.

  7. What exactly with the college product would improve? The play? I don't see the play being better with less talented players. People already complain about how college basketball is not as good as NBA and how good the play is. I don't see that being better with less talented players.

     

    So much has changed since the last time players could leave out of High school. With all the technology there is today, and so many ways to communicate and all the social media. Agents will have a field day with high school athletes. Plus were in the self entitlement era. Every kid is going to think they can go and make it, because of all the people in their ear telling them how great they are. Plus probably will make it even harder for college teams to police who truly would be eligible because of the access agents could have with players basically in high school still.

     

    My angle here isn't necessarily for the improvement of college basketball, because it's ultimately a NBA rule and it's their call what happens. And as I've said, anything that happens to impact the college game as a result is circumstantial at best.

     

    However, their remains talent at the mid-major level because they aren't recruiting the one and done talent. They are recruiting four year players who can play all phases of the game. The players have time to gel and grow together and it makes the teams better. The playing field would be leveled, and it could lead to more excitement.

     

    Would it for sure? I have no idea. But as an advocate for the players, I'd much rather they be able to go straight out of high school than forced into having to attend college even longer than the current mandatory year.

  8. There would be more players willing to declare out of High school because of the G league being around now. If the one and done rule goes away, I think we will see 15 to 20 every year declare out of High school. There will be no fear of it not working out because they have the g league to fall back on now to develop rather than college.

     

    That may be true. But the guys that come to school may be more likely to stay longer, and that may help the college product. Teams starting over every year is tough for sure.

  9. There have been 44 total players that have skipped college and went to the NBA. 2004 and 2005 were the only years more than a handful went (8 in 2004 and 9 in 2005).

     

    To piggyback off of this, the vast majority of those guys in 2004 and 2005 are either still in the league or hung around the league a while. The biggest bust of the bunch may be Robert Swift from my memory... Telfair was up there as well, probably.

     

    Go back and re-visit those classes and you'll see guys like Hakim Warrick, Ronny Turiaf, Sean May, Rashad McCants, etc. that stayed in school and had similar NBA careers than the high school guys who supposedly didn't belong.

     

    Guys like Gerald Green and Shaun Livingston have have their struggles but they've established themselves as solid bench options. And if Livingston had suffered that freak leg injury as a college senior? Likely never heard from again.

     

    Andrew Bynum played 9 years in the league before his knees did him in at 27. I'm sure he's glad to have those 3 years of NBA salary that he may have lost if he'd had to wait until following his junior year.

     

    I love college basketball. Not as much as I once did, but I still love it. But it's too self-serving to want these guys to have to spend time in college if the NBA scouts believe they are talented enough to go on to the league. Some will boom, some will bust, and some will be mediocre. And that's exactly what will happen if they all go to college.

  10. I don't see anything wrong with the NCAA saying "if you want to play in our league, we require you to start for "x" years. If an athlete decides that is not the route they want to go, by all means try your hand at the Euro leagues for a year until the NBA lifts their rule. It may not be apples to apples with the accounting degree example, but I think it is pretty close to apples to apples with academic requirements to clear the NCAA clearinghouse. If you want to play in the NCAA you must follow these rules...

     

    How would the NCAA enforce such a rule? If you get an academic scholarship and quit after your freshman year, oh well. But if you're on athletic scholarship you have to stay whether you want to or not? Do you only hold those accountable who have the decision to go to the NBA? What if college life just isn't for them and they'd rather try a trade? Come on.

     

    Only the NBA can change the rules here. The NCAA impact is just circumstantial.

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