Bad Luck or no Luck @all
3 posters
Page 1 of 1
Bad Luck or no Luck @all
Linebacker C. Gocong will miss the 2012 season after tearing his Achilles tendon at Saturday's morning practice. Gocong held his head in his hands as he was carted off the field, seemingly aware that his season was over.
"It's an Achilles for Gocong, so he'll have surgery," Shurmur said via The Associated Press. "There's no point in trying to conceal anything. It's an Achilles."
Guest- Guest
Re: Bad Luck or no Luck @all
Browns are thin at OLB and I hate seeing any get an injury like that but it could be good for the younger LB's that are quicker then Gocong, Gocong is a step and a half too slow for that position however he is a good backup and as the Browns need backups in many spots they need to address the OLB spot big time, that is the biggest problem on this D and has been for a long time, they need OLB's that can go sideling to sideline and Gocong isnt that kind of player, the Browns may not have that at LB anyplace but the only way to find out is allow the young guys to step in and get experience, the Browns D is hurting big time on the line and LB right now so its going to be interesting to see how the D-coordinator adjust's to these holes, better now then in the regular season.
wyckedheart8- 3rd Round Pick
- Posts : 1712
Join date : 2012-01-24
Age : 61
Location : The Heart of it all
Re: Bad Luck or no Luck @all
The Period
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
Use a period ] . ] at the end of a sentence
that makes a statement. There is no space between the last letter and
the period. Use one space between the period and the first letter of the
next sentence. This goes against the grain for people using the
typography instilled by generations of old-fashioned typewriter users,
but modern word-processors nicely accommodate the spacing after a
period, and double-spacing after a period can only serve to
discombobulate the good intentions of one's software.
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
See [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] and [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] for special placement considerations with those marks.
Use a period at the end of a command.
Use a period at the end of an indirect question.
Use a period with abbreviations:
Notice that when the period ending the abbreviation comes at the end
of a sentence, it will also suffice to end the sentence. On the other
hand, when an abbreviation ends a question or exclamation, it is
appropriate to add a question mark or exclamation mark after the
abbreviation-ending period:
Occasionally, a statement will end with a question. When that happens, it is appropriate to end the sentence with a [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.].
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
Use a period ] . ] at the end of a sentence
that makes a statement. There is no space between the last letter and
the period. Use one space between the period and the first letter of the
next sentence. This goes against the grain for people using the
typography instilled by generations of old-fashioned typewriter users,
but modern word-processors nicely accommodate the spacing after a
period, and double-spacing after a period can only serve to
discombobulate the good intentions of one's software.
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
See [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] and [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] for special placement considerations with those marks.
Use a period at the end of a command.
- Hand in the poster essays no later than noon on Friday.
- In case of tremors, leave the building immediately.
Use a period at the end of an indirect question.
- The teacher asked why Maria had left out the easy exercises.
- My father used to wonder why Egbert's ears were so big.
Use a period with abbreviations:
- Dr. Espinoza arrived from Washington, D.C., at 6 p.m.
Notice that when the period ending the abbreviation comes at the end
of a sentence, it will also suffice to end the sentence. On the other
hand, when an abbreviation ends a question or exclamation, it is
appropriate to add a question mark or exclamation mark after the
abbreviation-ending period:
- Did you enjoy living in Washington, D.C.?
Occasionally, a statement will end with a question. When that happens, it is appropriate to end the sentence with a [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.].
- We can get to Boston quicker, can't we, if we take the interstate?
- His question was, can we end this statement with a question mark?
- She ended her remarks with a resounding why not? Sorry... just being an ass... only for a laugh!!
foghorn- 7th Round Pick
- Posts : 777
Join date : 2012-01-22
Location : west by god freaking virginia!
Re: Bad Luck or no Luck @all
Commas are helpful also to get ones point accross in proper context....
EXAMPLE: I helped my Uncle Jack off the horse....or
I helped my Uncle Jack, off the horse...........LOL
Randell60- 3rd Round Pick
- Posts : 1499
Join date : 2012-01-26
Re: Bad Luck or no Luck @all
Who say you cannot get edumacated on a message board. LOLRandell60 wrote:
Commas are helpful also to get ones point accross in proper context....
EXAMPLE: I helped my Uncle Jack off the horse....or
I helped my Uncle Jack, off the horse...........LOL
foghorn- 7th Round Pick
- Posts : 777
Join date : 2012-01-22
Location : west by god freaking virginia!
Re: Bad Luck or no Luck @all
Thanks I try.... real hard. LOL More Tomlins Until training camps breaks!captnbrojangles wrote:BJyouresuchasmartassthatswhyIlikeyou!LOL:cheers:
foghorn- 7th Round Pick
- Posts : 777
Join date : 2012-01-22
Location : west by god freaking virginia!
Similar topics
» Luck better than Ben
» Good luck...
» WOW, BIG HIT BY BROWN ON LUCK!!!
» General Luck
» Best of Luck to all Pat fans
» Good luck...
» WOW, BIG HIT BY BROWN ON LUCK!!!
» General Luck
» Best of Luck to all Pat fans
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|