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Follow him on Twitter , Facebook and LinkedIn. Posted by Anthony Mango Friday, August 5, Johnny Curtis is set to debut next week, Andy Leavine is debuting soon, and Brodus Clay and Sin Cara are getting back on television soon enough.
I know some may say there was no regime change, but it doesn't matter. HHH has gained some new influence with his role of COO, so it was only logical for him to say that some people needed to leave. His passenger and teammate, Kirill Tarasov, did not survive. The two were in a rush to return from Voskresensk to their Central Red Army hockey club.
Their trip covered just 50 miles or so, but along poor roads around Voskresensk funneling into snarling Moscow traffic; it could easily take up to two hours from the Kozlov home to the CSKA rink. Kozlov, an aggressive driver who learned the basics by driving rental cars when Wings executive Nick Polano came to court him, knew the shortcuts on the way back to the rink. That morning, though, his route took him into the path of a bus that had just turned a corner.
Both young men were ejected through the windshield. Tarasov, a defenseman with NHL potential, was pronounced dead at the scene with a broken neck. Kozlov somehow survived. Investigators surmised that his strong hands on the steering wheel helped to catapult him out of his seat before the wheel could crush his chest. One of the most talented young players the Wings had ever scouted, Kozlov became part of NHL history in June , when the Wings selected him with their third-round pick 45th overall in the NHL entry draft.
At that time, it was the highest a Soviet-born player had been drafted, breaking the record set the previous year when Detroit took Fedorov in the fourth round. The Wings were eager to get Kozlov in a uniform as soon as they could. He had a pretty good thing going in Russia, and he knew it. And cocky, too, he admitted. He acknowledged not getting along with his Khimik coach, which prompted his decision to play for the Red Army club, where discipline was the cornerstone of the program.
It was what he knew he needed. Except for one important thing: Slava Kozlov had no intention of leaving. In fact, at one point he felt like he was being kidnapped. They collected all the passports on arrival at their destination, and they were responsible for making sure all those players who made the trip returned home again. The agents were like talent bounty hunters, always with designs on delivering players to their NHL teams and signing them to big contracts that would allow them to collect staggering commissions.
They would always be around the hotel, whispering to players in the elevators, Kozlov said. This is a bit off topic but this seems the newest general thread. And this in an era where nothing much seems private. Not a word. That was not how she dealt with sacking Beltz last year. I wonder how much Scoop finds out, in doing his books, stuff people never talked about when it mattered, and now feel free to let the world know. I cannot recall ever hearing a coach OCC a player with actual tactics, set ups or a new strategic gameplan other than, Go to her forehand, or go to her backhand.
I think OCC is to give viewers more entertainment value to make up for the monotony of many of the matches were are identical baseline bashfests between two one dimensional players. Catherine I can say the media gets a bare minimum of the true stories of what really happens in tennis.
Just the surface but most happens beneath the surface as we know. The model works well as the public always is clamoring for more. I do know that in boxing and tennis there are some covered up blockbuster stories that would shock the world if they went public.
But this is the way it is with everything really, the public knows so very little about the truth. Like the saying says: The most hated man in the world is he who tells the truth. Just a good opportunity to mislead and cover up. Kerber is saying, this is my life, this is how I am, to get all the likes and nice comments on Twitter and IG when you only have to see her on court to know this is a false impression. The public is pretty gullible and the media are keen to keep their access.
So frustration all round. Better wait, as Julie has, until the important people are dead. We only ever get part of the story in any case. She probably told the truth as she saw it, but other people who were involved would have a different point of view. Regarding OCC, I dislike it for many reasons, and agree that often it is simply a pep talk. But sometimes the coaches try to give too much in the way of tactics. Catherine, this is one reason why I enjoy doing the Facing books and I think some people love them, is they show the player from a perspective of their peers and opponents and media.
Not sure if any of the players like the books about them, only heard from Marcelo Rios, he liked it. Kerber could be somewhat phony but most people in the public spotlight have to be to avoid controversy and trouble, to spout cliches means their media lives will be much more hassle free.
Her fans probably prefer that anyway. I think Julie has been pretty honest and even-handed, from what I knew of her and those times. Her book is certainly not the usual memoir. Catherine, what is your theory for the Kerber Fissette parting? Do you think there were romantic entanglements involved? Scoop — I hardly think so. I know Fissette dislikes interference which is one reason he left Simona. Konta had a bunch of people around her too.
And no personal comment from Angie herself. Never a dull moment with Aryna and Dmitry. Here, another gem. After winning rather uneventful first set, , she summons up the coach, for no apparent reason. Great pair, sitcom stuff. Get Scoop's New Book! Click here to order. Donate to Tennis Prose with Paypal
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