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Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 7, 2016

Buckeyes banking on J.T. Barrett to lead them in 2016

ANN ARBOR, MI - NOVEMBER 28: Quarterback J.T. Barrett #16 of the Ohio State Buckeyes after the game against the Michigan Wolverines at Michigan Stadium on November 28, 2015 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ohio State defeated Michigan 42-13. (Photo by Andrew Weber/Getty Images)
ANN ARBOR, MI - NOVEMBER 28: Quarterback J.T. Barrett #16 of the Ohio State Buckeyes after the game against the Michigan Wolverines at Michigan Stadium on November 28, 2015 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ohio State defeated Michigan 42-13. (Photo by Andrew Weber/Getty Images)
CHICAGO -- Remember Ohio State's never-ending quarterback controversy a year ago? The one that started before the Buckeyes even completed their 2014 national championship run and continued through the first two-thirds of the '15 regular season?Many believed at the time that Urban Meyer got it wrong when he initially chose Cardale Jones over J.T. Barrett to start the season. Barrett, who by his own admission had a poor fall camp, was not among them.
"Cardale at the time was playing better than me," Barrett recalled at this week's Big Ten Media Days. "He deserved to start."


Nearly a year later, the fourth-year junior enters Ohio State's preseason as not only its undisputed starter but also the most familiar face by far on a roster gutted by early NFL defections. "It's his team," Meyer said. "He runs the show."
Looking back, though, it's been quite the two-year roller coaster for the Wichita Falls, Texas native.
As a redshirt freshman unexpectedly promoted to starter following standout Braxton Miller's preseason shoulder injury, Barrett racked up 3,772 total yards and 45 combined touchdowns while guiding the Buckeyes to the Big Ten title game. But after breaking his ankle against Michigan, the top-five Heisman finisher could only watch from the sideline as unheralded replacement Jones led Ohio State to the last three wins of a national championship season.
After missing subsequent spring practices, Barrett returned in August, but he was not himself. "I was thinking too much," he said. "It slowed me down." After playing sparingly in relief of an often-struggling Jones the first seven games, Barrett finally regained the starting job for a late October game at Rutgers, only to get suspended a week later for operating a vehicle while intoxicated.
Two games after that, 10-0 Ohio State suffered its season-crushing defeat to Michigan State. At which point Meyer shuffled his play-callers. At which point Barrett finally returned to 2014 form, shredding Michigan and, in the Fiesta Bowl, Notre Dame.
"He was at full force those two games," Meyer said. "I see him going back to being J.T. like he was in the middle of his freshman year. He's going to have a great fall."
What would be nice is if he finally has some fun.
Listening to the quarterback recount some of his career experiences Tuesday was a bit of a downer. Whereas Jones became widely known for his free-spirited, sometimes reckless personality, Barrett is an introvert who, by his own admission, often "thinks too much." The burden of responsibility that comes with being the Ohio State quarterback seems to weigh on him.
"I feel like you don't really enjoy it until the work is over," he said. "You're talking about sometime in January."
What about his seemingly euphoric ride as a redshirt freshman? "It was a relief when we won," Barrett said. "I was just like, 'Phew, I was nervous about that one.'"
And from the sounds of it, many of the 2015 Buckeyes of Bosa/Elliott/Lee et al., felt bogged down by the expectation that they would become an all-time great team.
"We had so many great players, we knew there was so much we could have done," Barrett said. "There were times where we won a game and we didn't enjoy it."
For once, expectations are at least slightly tempered around Columbus, what with the Buckeyes having to replace 12 NFL draft picks. Barrett and center Pat Elflein are the lone remaining starters from that '14 national championship team. Ohio State plays what Meyer calls "the toughest road schedule in college football," with games at Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Penn State and Michigan State.
Even still, in Cleveland.com's unofficial preseason poll, Big Ten media picked the Buckeyes to win the conference.
"Do you want us to tell the fans, 'Hey, we lost some guys so don't worry about the Big Ten championship. Sorry,'" Barrett said. "That's not fair to them."
It will be interesting to watch how Barrett's role in the offense evolves given the mass turnover on his surrounding depth chart.
In the past he was very much a de facto point guard, making sure all of the Buckeyes' various playmakers -- Ezekiel Elliott, Curtis Samuel, Michael Thomas, Jalin Marshall -- got their touches. But he also could do no shortage of damage with his own feet, running 19 times for 139 yards in last year's Michigan game and 23 times for 96 yards in the bowl game.
And this year, he may need to do it all.
Talent-wise, Ohio State is fully expected to reload at the skill positions, but the next wave -- redshirt freshman tailback Mike Weber, redshirt freshman receiver Torrance Gibson, sophomore receiver Noah Brown -- lack experience. Meyer even expects a true freshman, Michael Jordan (yes, that's his name), to be the starting right guard.
If the 2016 Buckeyes get to Indianapolis, Barrett may have to run 20-25 times a game, a la predecessor Miller circa 2012. He'll also need to improve his accuracy after slipping from 64.6 percent to 63.3 percent completions last season.
Most of all, the soft-spoken, introspective thinker must become the Buckeyes' most vocal leader.
"He's very humble, he's very quiet around the team, but he's a leader behind the scenes," Meyer said. "He's a guy who when he speaks, 90 heads are going to turn around and listen to what he has to say."
Barrett had plenty to say to reporters this week, though he found his place in that scene to be more than a little surreal.
"I'm just a little kid from Wichita Falls, Texas, trying to make the Buckeyes better," he said.
It's his turn this time, from start to finish.

Tampa Bay Lightning single game tickets on sale Aug. 8

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING PRESS RELEASE
TAMPA BAY -- Single game tickets for Tampa Bay Lightning games at AMALIE Arena during the 2016-17 regular season will go on sale at 10 a.m. on Monday August 8, the team announced. Single game tickets can be purchased exclusively online at www.TampaBayLightning.com/tickets, not at the McDonald's Ticket Office.
Season Ticket Members, as well as those in the Lightning Insider Text Club, will have exclusive pre-sale opportunities. They will be notified of the dates and times via email and text. Interested fans can join the Lightning Insider Text Club by texting BOLTS to 61873 to receive their single-game ticket pre-sale code on August 5.
Tampa Bay will play each of its Atlantic Division opponents four times, two at home and two on the road, with the exception of the Boston Bruins (two home, three away) and the Detroit Red Wings (three home, two away). It will have a rematch of the 2016 Eastern Conference Final against the Stanley Cup Champion Pittsburgh Penguins on December 10 at AMALIE Arena.
The Lightning will again play each of their Metropolitan Division opponents within the Eastern Conference three times. Tampa Bay will host the Washington Capitals, New Jersey Devils, Carolina Hurricanes and Columbus Blue Jacks twice, while playing host to the Penguins, New York Rangers, New York Islanders and Philadelphia Flyers once each, along with each Western Conference team.
The Lightning will play nine home games during the month of March, more than any other month. With the exception of April (just six games total), Tampa Bay will play their least number of home games in October, with just four of nine contests being held at AMALIE Arena. The Bolts will host their longest home stand of the season with five games from December 28 through January 5. They will also play four strings of four home contests in a row.

Kevin Harvick's crew chief suspended after lug nut violation at Indy

FONTANA, CA - MARCH 18: Kevin Harvick, driver of the #4 Jimmy John's Chevrolet, talks to his crew chief, Rodney Childers, during practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway on March 18, 2016 in Fontana, California. (Photo by Jonathan Moore/Getty Images)
FONTANA, CA - MARCH 18: Kevin Harvick, driver of the #4 Jimmy John's Chevrolet, talks to his crew chief, Rodney Childers, during practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway on March 18, 2016 in Fontana, California. (Photo by Jonathan Moore/Getty Images)
Rodney Childers, crew chief for Kevin Harvick and the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet, has been suspended for one race after NASCAR handed down penalties Wednesday morning.Childers will miss this weekend's race at Pocono Raceway following a lug nut violation after the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Along with the suspension, Childers was also fined $20,000 and placed on probation for the rest of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season for the P3 infraction.
According to the NASCAR rule book, the No. 4 team violated Section 12.1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing) and Section 10.11.3.4 (pit-road equipment) for lug nuts not being properly installed during post-race inspection.
Childers is the fifth crew chief suspended for a lug nut violation so far this season.
After NASCAR announced the penalties, Childers shared his thoughts on Twitter while sitting at the dentist's office.
👍🏼👍🏼
Guess I should have failed post race instead of having one lugnut loose.. Looking fwd to some 🎣🏌⛳️ https://t.co/OQz577IlQR
— Rodney Childers (@RodneyChilders4) July 27, 2016
— Rodney Childers (@RodneyChilders4) July 27, 2016
Sitting at the dentist, mouth numb.. Mom in the hospital.. Dermatologist this morning.. Suspended.. Anything else?? pic.twitter.com/Huu09DQJxZ
— Rodney Childers (@RodneyChilders4) July 27, 2016
Teams of Kasey Kahne, Paul Menard and Matt DiBenedetto received written warnings after failing NASCAR's pre-race laser inspection twice.
The No. 41 Stewart Haas Racing Chevrolet team of Kurt Busch and Aric Almirola's No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford squad also received written warnings for failing pre-qualifying template inspection twice.

Lightning re-sign Vladislav Namestnikov to a two-year contract

Nov 3, 2015; Detroit, MI, USA; Tampa Bay Lightning center Vladislav Namestnikov (90) skates with the puck defended by Detroit Red Wings center Gustav Nyquist (14) in the second period at Joe Louis Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 3, 2015; Detroit, MI, USA; Tampa Bay Lightning center Vladislav Namestnikov (90) skates with the puck defended by Detroit Red Wings center Gustav Nyquist (14) in the second period at Joe Louis Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING PRESS RELEASE
TAMPA BAY -- The Tampa Bay Lightning have re-signed forward Vladislav Namestnikov to a two-year contract worth an annual average of $1,937,500-million per season, vice president and general manager Steve Yzerman announced Wednesday.
Namestnikov, 23, skated in 80 games with the Lightning during the 2015-16 season, collecting 14 goals and 35 points to go along with 45 penalty minutes. The Zhukovskiy, Russia native set career highs this past season for games played, goals, assists, points and plus/minus (plus-17). Namestnikov ranked second on the Bolts for plus/minus, was tied for fourth for goals and seventh for points. He registered his first career NHL hat trick on January 15 this past season against the Pittsburgh Penguins.The 5-foot-11, 180-pound forward has appeared in 127 career NHL games, posting 23 goals and 51 points to go along with 62 penalty minutes. Namestnikov has also played in 29 career Stanley Cup Playoff games with the Lightning, recording a goal and four points. He skated in 17 playoff games with the Lightning in 2016, collecting a goal and three points.
Namestnikov was originally drafted by the Lightning in the first round, 27th overall, at the 2011 NHL Draft.

Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 7, 2016

Two men who drink gravy by the pint

HULL OF A TIME TO DO ONE

Sport has seen a good number of dream teams. There was the USA! USA!! USA!!! basketball team at the 1992 Big Sports Day. There was Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona of the early 1990s. There was Harchester United, circa 1998. Are we about to see another? Could England be led by the ultimate dream team of the proper football man? Could this be the age of Big Sam and Still Bernard Cribbins? Sam Allardyce is the new England manager, confirmed just as the Fiver types these words, but earlier in the day we were perhaps given a glimpse of who could be at his side. ForCribbins has bought himself a ticket for the Do One Express, having left Hull just three weeks before the start of the season. Cribbins has been talking about leaving Humberside for some time now, so to do so now is ostensibly the work of a scoundrel, but it’s been in the post.
Bruce, who’s had a slightly testy relationship with Hull of late, seems to have scarpered because his employers won’t buy him any players, which is a setback and no mistake, particularly as most of his current ones are broken. Michael Dawson (knee-knack), Alex Bruce (sniffles, but you’ll be all right when you get to school son, don’t be soft), Allan McGregor (nits-gah!), Tom Huddlestone (after-effects of a vicious Chinese burn from Jake Livermore) and Harry Maguire (pins and needles-ouch!) are all out for varying lengths of time, meaning Cribbins only had 12 fit, proper players available to him at the time he departed. And you do sort of need football players who can stand up to put out a proper team. So you can understand why he’s off.
But the timing! Oh the timing! The timing set The Fiver’s heart a flutter: could it be … could Cribbins be Big Sam’s right-hand man? Could he be the yin to Sam’s yang, the horse to his carriage, the mayo to his chips (if you’re Dutch)? Will the national team be guided by two men who drink gravy by the pint and hark back to a time when men were men? Who won’t be caught sheltering themselves from the rain with an umbrella or allow their players to listen to music on those big headphones the kids are wearing? Is this the England managerial dream team?
Well, no, probably not. It’s almost certainly just a coincidence that Cribbins quit on the day Big Sam was given the big chair, and Cribbins will be off on his own hustle. But in a world of awfulness and uncertainty, we have to grab at these moments of hope. So with Sam gone, there’s an opening at Sunderland, and the word is they couldn’t possibly have chose a more perfect replacement. Sunderland has often found itself to be a refuge for those considered not quite good enough for Manchester United: Wes Brown, John O’Shea, Liam Miller, David Bellion, and what have you. So it seems rather perfect and enormously appropriate that their new manager is the absolute pinnacle of the genre. David Moyes is the new man there, apparently, fulfilling not just his own destiny but the world in general. It fits so perfectly that it simply couldn’t not happen.
Which is what you could also have said about a team of Sam and Cribbins. But it is not to be. In a year of such relentless bad news, this is just another kick in the teeth.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I hope the fans really enjoy the kit as much as we have enjoyed designing it” – Norwich City’s head of retail Steve Balmer-Walters will be glad to hear that there has been universal enjoyment for anyone setting eyes on the club’s new third kit that was released today.
Norwich
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 They really should have wheeled Jeremy Goss out for this one. Photograph: Publicity

FIVER LETTERS


“My favourite cereal story (Fiver letters passim) is from a police report in the local paper in the Cayman Islands a few years ago. A chap was pulled over for DUI at 9am and his excuse was that he ran out of milk so put white rum on his cornflakes! A distant relative of the Fiver no doubt” – William Jones.“Daniel Agger’s experiences at Liverpool are pretty much the standard for any work place. A couple of people actually doing any real graft and everyone else just faffing about. Reading the Fiver demonstrates the lengths some people will go to faff about instead of working” – Mick Ward.
“Leicester City don’t do pedants, so I am probably the only person who will point out that Steve Walsh was our director of recruitment, not our director of football (yesterday’s Fiver). Our director of football is Jon Rudkin, and along with most other City fans, I would be perfectly happy for him to be poached by Everton. Or anyone else come to that. But I shall miss Steve Walsh, who is talented, modest, and can spot talent at a distance of several hundred miles. Lucky Everton” – Martyn Wilson .
“Hurray! It’s the annual Raising of Arsenal Fans’ Expectations and a month earlier than usual. Does this mean that the usual March collapse in the league and BNig Cup happens a month early or do we get four extra weeks? Am just trying to plan my diary for 2017” – Noble Francis.
 Send your letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. And if you’ve nothing better to do you can also tweet The FiverToday’s winner of our letter o’the day is … Noble Francis, who receives a copy of The Unbelievables, by David BevanWe’ve got more to give away all week, so get typing.

JOIN GUARDIAN SOULMATES

Chances are that if you’re reading this tea-timely football email, you’re almost certainly single. But fear not – if you’d like to find companionship or love, sign up here to view profiles of the kind of erudite, sociable and friendly folk who would never normally dream of going out with you. And don’t forget, it’s not the rejection that kills you, it’s the hope.

BITS AND BOBS

Perhaps while out looking for fossils, Liverpool have unearthed Alex Manninger, 87, and given him a one-year contract as a back-up goalkeeper
Alex Manninger
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 How Alex Manninger looked last century. Photograph: PA
Stop us if you think you’ve heard this one before: Arsenal chief suit Ivan Gazidis reckons the club can win the league without throwing loads of dosh about. You stopped us, didn’t you?

Everton will not be able to nab any Leicester players due to an agreement signed in the contract that allowed them to nab new director of football Steve Walsh from the King Power Stadium.Paul Pogba’s Mr 15%, Mino Raiola, has said he is focused solely on his client’s interests and not trousering bucketloads of cash. “I don’t care about record-breaking transfers … I want what’s best for my players,” he trilled, as a ding! ding! ding! sound accompanied three golden treasure chests lining up next to each other on a fruit machine behind him.
And the mayor of Padova has apologised to Lazio striker Keita Baldé after he was racially abused by some absolute pieces of work in attendance at a pre-season friendly. “Some people last night embarrassed the whole city,” said Massimo Bitonci.

STILL WANT MORE?

Unlike José Holebas’s unfinished tattoo and Chesterfield’s raffle shambles, Portugal star and new hotelier, Him, shows success demands total commitment, writes Simon Burnton.
Ronaldo
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 His large head. Illustration: Cameron Law
Like goals? Like Roberto Baggio? Ah good. Rob Smyth recalls a golden one scored by the brilliant Italian against Inter for Juve in 1992.
And Big Sam won’t copy Spain or France. His message is: stay true to yourself,writes Phil Brown. Yes, that Phil Brown.
Oh, and if it’s your thing … you can follow Big Website on Big Social FaceSpace.AND INSTACHAT TOO!

Two men who drink gravy by the pint

HULL OF A TIME TO DO ONE

Sport has seen a good number of dream teams. There was the USA! USA!! USA!!! basketball team at the 1992 Big Sports Day. There was Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona of the early 1990s. There was Harchester United, circa 1998. Are we about to see another? Could England be led by the ultimate dream team of the proper football man? Could this be the age of Big Sam and Still Bernard Cribbins? Sam Allardyce is the new England manager, confirmed just as the Fiver types these words, but earlier in the day we were perhaps given a glimpse of who could be at his side. ForCribbins has bought himself a ticket for the Do One Express, having left Hull just three weeks before the start of the season. Cribbins has been talking about leaving Humberside for some time now, so to do so now is ostensibly the work of a scoundrel, but it’s been in the post.
Bruce, who’s had a slightly testy relationship with Hull of late, seems to have scarpered because his employers won’t buy him any players, which is a setback and no mistake, particularly as most of his current ones are broken. Michael Dawson (knee-knack), Alex Bruce (sniffles, but you’ll be all right when you get to school son, don’t be soft), Allan McGregor (nits-gah!), Tom Huddlestone (after-effects of a vicious Chinese burn from Jake Livermore) and Harry Maguire (pins and needles-ouch!) are all out for varying lengths of time, meaning Cribbins only had 12 fit, proper players available to him at the time he departed. And you do sort of need football players who can stand up to put out a proper team. So you can understand why he’s off.
But the timing! Oh the timing! The timing set The Fiver’s heart a flutter: could it be … could Cribbins be Big Sam’s right-hand man? Could he be the yin to Sam’s yang, the horse to his carriage, the mayo to his chips (if you’re Dutch)? Will the national team be guided by two men who drink gravy by the pint and hark back to a time when men were men? Who won’t be caught sheltering themselves from the rain with an umbrella or allow their players to listen to music on those big headphones the kids are wearing? Is this the England managerial dream team?
Well, no, probably not. It’s almost certainly just a coincidence that Cribbins quit on the day Big Sam was given the big chair, and Cribbins will be off on his own hustle. But in a world of awfulness and uncertainty, we have to grab at these moments of hope. So with Sam gone, there’s an opening at Sunderland, and the word is they couldn’t possibly have chose a more perfect replacement. Sunderland has often found itself to be a refuge for those considered not quite good enough for Manchester United: Wes Brown, John O’Shea, Liam Miller, David Bellion, and what have you. So it seems rather perfect and enormously appropriate that their new manager is the absolute pinnacle of the genre. David Moyes is the new man there, apparently, fulfilling not just his own destiny but the world in general. It fits so perfectly that it simply couldn’t not happen.
Which is what you could also have said about a team of Sam and Cribbins. But it is not to be. In a year of such relentless bad news, this is just another kick in the teeth.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I hope the fans really enjoy the kit as much as we have enjoyed designing it” – Norwich City’s head of retail Steve Balmer-Walters will be glad to hear that there has been universal enjoyment for anyone setting eyes on the club’s new third kit that was released today.
Norwich
FacebookTwitterPinterest
 They really should have wheeled Jeremy Goss out for this one. Photograph: Publicity

FIVER LETTERS

Advertisement
“Daniel Agger’s experiences at Liverpool are pretty much the standard for any work place. A couple of people actually doing any real graft and everyone else just faffing about. Reading the Fiver demonstrates the lengths some people will go to faff about instead of working” – Mick Ward.
“My favourite cereal story (Fiver letters passim) is from a police report in the local paper in the Cayman Islands a few years ago. A chap was pulled over for DUI at 9am and his excuse was that he ran out of milk so put white rum on his cornflakes! A distant relative of the Fiver no doubt” – William Jones.
“Leicester City don’t do pedants, so I am probably the only person who will point out that Steve Walsh was our director of recruitment, not our director of football (yesterday’s Fiver). Our director of football is Jon Rudkin, and along with most other City fans, I would be perfectly happy for him to be poached by Everton. Or anyone else come to that. But I shall miss Steve Walsh, who is talented, modest, and can spot talent at a distance of several hundred miles. Lucky Everton” – Martyn Wilson .
“Hurray! It’s the annual Raising of Arsenal Fans’ Expectations and a month earlier than usual. Does this mean that the usual March collapse in the league and BNig Cup happens a month early or do we get four extra weeks? Am just trying to plan my diary for 2017” – Noble Francis.
 Send your letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. And if you’ve nothing better to do you can also tweet The FiverToday’s winner of our letter o’the day is … Noble Francis, who receives a copy of The Unbelievables, by David BevanWe’ve got more to give away all week, so get typing.

JOIN GUARDIAN SOULMATES

Chances are that if you’re reading this tea-timely football email, you’re almost certainly single. But fear not – if you’d like to find companionship or love, sign up here to view profiles of the kind of erudite, sociable and friendly folk who would never normally dream of going out with you. And don’t forget, it’s not the rejection that kills you, it’s the hope.

BITS AND BOBS

Perhaps while out looking for fossils, Liverpool have unearthed Alex Manninger, 87, and given him a one-year contract as a back-up goalkeeper
Alex Manninger
FacebookTwitterPinterest
 How Alex Manninger looked last century. Photograph: PA
Stop us if you think you’ve heard this one before: Arsenal chief suit Ivan Gazidis reckons the club can win the league without throwing loads of dosh about. You stopped us, didn’t you?
Advertisement
Paul Pogba’s Mr 15%, Mino Raiola, has said he is focused solely on his client’s interests and not trousering bucketloads of cash. “I don’t care about record-breaking transfers … I want what’s best for my players,” he trilled, as a ding! ding! ding! sound accompanied three golden treasure chests lining up next to each other on a fruit machine behind him.
Everton will not be able to nab any Leicester players due to an agreement signed in the contract that allowed them to nab new director of football Steve Walsh from the King Power Stadium.
And the mayor of Padova has apologised to Lazio striker Keita Baldé after he was racially abused by some absolute pieces of work in attendance at a pre-season friendly. “Some people last night embarrassed the whole city,” said Massimo Bitonci.

STILL WANT MORE?

Unlike José Holebas’s unfinished tattoo and Chesterfield’s raffle shambles, Portugal star and new hotelier, Him, shows success demands total commitment, writes Simon Burnton.
Ronaldo
FacebookTwitterPinterest
 His large head. Illustration: Cameron Law
Like goals? Like Roberto Baggio? Ah good. Rob Smyth recalls a golden one scored by the brilliant Italian against Inter for Juve in 1992.
And Big Sam won’t copy Spain or France. His message is: stay true to yourself,writes Phil Brown. Yes, that Phil Brown.
Oh, and if it’s your thing … you can follow Big Website on Big Social FaceSpace.AND INSTACHAT TOO!