Wednesday, June 20, 2012

When I was a child I dream is to be a baseball player, but has not been realized.

Breaking news coming from the Atlanta Braves front office. The team has announced that they have released relief pitcher Livan Hernandez.

Everyone a little time all have their own dreams. A lot of people like baseball.Prior to the 2012 season Livan signed a 1 year minor league contract with the Houston Astros on January 31st and the contract gave him  a innovation to spring training. But his time with the Astros would be short lived he was cut by the Astros on March 30th.



Hours after getting released by the Houston Astros Hernandez signed a 1 year Major League deal with the Atlanta Braves. Livan’s greatest highlight this season is that he recorded his 1st ever save in his career in his 17 year career in the Majors.Sport

Livan Hernandez so far this season has been struggling on the mound in 18 game appearances for the Atlanta Braves Hernandez has pitched in 31 innings and in the the 31 innings he has given up 40 hits and 5 of them being home runs. Livan was designated for an assignment by the Braves last week but declined making him a free agent. With the releasing of Livan Hernandez the Braves called up Kris Medlen from the the Braves Triple-A affiliate the Gwinnett Braves.

This is my favorite sushi.

I like sushi, because I am a greedy bad children.What’s Cooking BCN will be giving 2 sushi workshops over the next two weeks at the beautiful Tonka Bar restaurant. In these workshops we will make 3 kinds of sushi using fish, vegetables and other local Mediterranean ingredients.


You also want to try? Hey hey, oneself start work to do, I don't eat for you.This is a very fun workshop and is great opportunity to practice English and lean how to make healthy and creative Japanese cuisine. Of course, after making the sushi we will all enjoy the food at the dinner table with a nice glass of wine!

Send us a message soon if you are interested as the places for these courses are already filling up quickly!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Too many people are focusing on NFL football

I also is one of them. Because I am a football fanRight now, however, football’s popularity seems invulnerable. The highest rated show on TV last year was Sunday Night Football; it was so highly rated that it, combined with the Super Bowl, kept NBC—NBC!—from finishing last among the four major networks this season. This year’s BCS National Championship was watched by 24.2 million viewers, and that was the lowest rated championship of the BCS era. In a recent piece on football’s popularity for Grantland, Chuck Klosterman pointed out that 25 million people watched the NFL Draft, “a statistic that grows crazier the longer you dwell upon its magnitude.” And, if anything, the football’s popularity seems poised to grow as an influx of popular young stars like Cam Newton, Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III, and Tim Tebow enters the league.



All my friends and I like to focus on things like football.
In other words, football’s decline seems both inevitable and impossible. What would need to happen to convince people that something as popular as football is immoral? Some have suggested that it would take an on-field death, or some kind of “conclusive medical proof,” but I think both of these suggestions misunderstand how morals change. People can always find ways to dismiss “proof” when they don’t like the conclusions being proved. And an on-field death, while obviously tragic, could likely be written off as a fluke.

Instead, I think a gradual attrition in kids playing football will be what dooms the sport. Already parents are debating whether or not to let their children play; even an NFL veteran like Bart Scott won’t let his kids play football. I personally can’t imagine letting my kids do it. As parents become more familiar with the health risks, it’s only going to be more common for parents to ban kids from playing football.

I love watching football

Many friends and me. All like football.One important piece of information that I’ve learned is that it is not the concussions that destroy player’s brains.  It’s the hundreds or thousands of “car crash-like” collisions, or sub-concussions, every single player experiences over the course of their career.  Every time they tackle/are tackled their brains are shaken inside their skulls.  If every game has around 100ish plays (low-balling here), and a player is only in the game for 50% of those plays, that’s still 50 car crashes every.damn.game.  And that doesn’t even include practice, 4-5 days a week, sometimes twice a day.wholesale jerseys


I love watching football.  I enjoy seeing what the human body can achieve.  The amazing catches, the tricky plays that result in touchdown, and yes, the hits.  It makes me ill to think that I am being entertained while these amazing humans are destroying their brains.nfl jerseys wholesale

I'll to my favourite sport insist on.And I can’t do it anymore.  In my house, I am the football fan.  There are no obstacles to quitting, except my own love of the game.  It’s been a few weeks since I wrote this post, and I’ve studiously avoided checking up on NFL news, I deleted the app from my phone, I scroll past the Sports section on my news site.