Sentences with phrase «about hockey from»

Not exact matches

But apart from banter about recent hockey trades, there wasn't much to say.
The upcoming «Friday the 13th» game isn't about an unlucky Friday as much as it is about surviving an encounter with Jason Vorhees, the infamous hockey mask - wearing serial murderer from the film series of the same name.
«You can equate it to a gold medal hockey game: Canada and the United States are playing, but all of the referees are from the U.S.,» said Andrea van Vugt, vice president for North American affairs at the Business Council of Canada, a group representing about 150 companies.
To the surprise of everyone who knew about the strong evidence for the little ice age and the medieval climate optimum, the graph showed a nearly constant temperature from the year 1000 until about 150 years ago, when the temperature began to rise abruptly like the blade of a hockey stick.
It was particularly useful politically, given Hockey was about to knock back a bid for GrainCorp from US giant Archer Daniels Midland.
My family loves tilapia, too, though I have to laugh — my spouse was reading some article that mentioned the fun thing about being a dad was «being able to eat fish sticks again», so guess what was in the oven when I returned from a weekend - long sled hockey tournament in Grand Rapids?
It took a death ata hockey game in 2002 to bring about more protection from the puck for NHLfans.
It'll be pretty weird to think that we'll be hearing analysts and hockey fans nationwide talk about the «Arizona» Coyotes, but at least the 40 minute drive from Phoenix to Glendale will seem a little shorter now.
Bill Clement made noises about how it got Raffl up front to play «playoff hockey»... like that is somehow different from «winning regular season hockey»...
Being able to compare it to other sports helps, and I like that we can all talk about ice hockey on here from time to time lol
It provide incisive articles and opinions about different genres of sports, ranging from soccer, basketball, hockey and a host of others
That's true, and this is coming from a guy who once led his hockey league in penalty minutes, so I know what I'm talking about, but between Rüdiger and Kostas Manolas, Roma has two extremely physical centerbacks, which has tremendous advantages and drawbacks.
From math to reading to teamwork, kids can learn about more than hockey on a Chicago Wolves game.
In the end, it all comes back to education: In the ideal world, a parent's decision about whether to allow a child to start playing or continue playing collision sports before high school under current rules of play (which are evolving in the direction of safety, fortunately, as seen, for instance, in USA Hockey's ban on body checking at the Pee Wee hockey level and below, and limits on full - contact practices instituted at every level of football, from Pop Warner, to high school, college, and the NFL), will be a conscious one; a decision in which the risks of participating in a particular sport - provided it is based on the most up - to - date information about those risks and a consideration of other risk factors that might come into play for their child, such as pre-existing learning disabilities (e.g. ADHD), chronic health conditions (e.g., a history of history of multiple concussions or seizures, history of migraines), or a reckless and overly aggressive style of play - are balanced against the benefits to the child of participHockey's ban on body checking at the Pee Wee hockey level and below, and limits on full - contact practices instituted at every level of football, from Pop Warner, to high school, college, and the NFL), will be a conscious one; a decision in which the risks of participating in a particular sport - provided it is based on the most up - to - date information about those risks and a consideration of other risk factors that might come into play for their child, such as pre-existing learning disabilities (e.g. ADHD), chronic health conditions (e.g., a history of history of multiple concussions or seizures, history of migraines), or a reckless and overly aggressive style of play - are balanced against the benefits to the child of participhockey level and below, and limits on full - contact practices instituted at every level of football, from Pop Warner, to high school, college, and the NFL), will be a conscious one; a decision in which the risks of participating in a particular sport - provided it is based on the most up - to - date information about those risks and a consideration of other risk factors that might come into play for their child, such as pre-existing learning disabilities (e.g. ADHD), chronic health conditions (e.g., a history of history of multiple concussions or seizures, history of migraines), or a reckless and overly aggressive style of play - are balanced against the benefits to the child of participating.
A youth hockey league in Leominster (MA)(about a half hour from where I live) is left with less than $ 4 in its account after a
«My dad wouldn't talk about hockey on the way back from a practice or a game,» Parise says.
Contrary to what my brother had been told by doctors who treated him that it would take about 2 weeks to heal from a concussion, I found it was taking the hockey players an average of 3 - 6 months to be symptom - free and several players were still having symptoms after a year.
Many readers will be aware that three scientists (two of which are contributors to this site, Michael Mann and Ray Bradley) have received letters from Representative Joe Barton (Texas), Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee specifically requesting information about their work on the «hockey stick» papers (Mann et al (1998) and Mann et al (1999)-RRB- as well as an enormous amount of irrelevant material not connected to these studies.
For comparison, sports like ice hockey, football, soccer, and rugby have injury rates ranging from 6 to 260 per 1,000 hours, and long - distance runners can expect about 10 injuries per 1,000 hours of pavement pounding.
About Blog The Undisputed Leader in Hockey News from Las Vegas Frequency about 28 posts per About Blog The Undisputed Leader in Hockey News from Las Vegas Frequency about 28 posts per about 28 posts per week.
Stories We Tell, a doc from Toronto, unfolds as a procedural home movie, investigating the filmmaker's family secrets; and Goon, shot largely in Winnipeg and set across the country, is a viciously funny comedy about hockey violence.»
With Cop Out less than a week away from hitting theatres, Kevin Smith is starting to get asked a lot of questions about his next project, and it is looking more and more likely that his next project will be Hit Somebody, the hockey movie that he has been talking up for the past year.
About Blog Comprehensive up - to - date coverage for field hockey, aggregated from news sources all over the world by Google News.
About Blog The official YouTube channel of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) and the best place to get all your global hockey action.Subscribe and stay tuned for live coverage, games highlights and updates from all across the Hockey Federation (FIH) and the best place to get all your global hockey action.Subscribe and stay tuned for live coverage, games highlights and updates from all across the hockey action.Subscribe and stay tuned for live coverage, games highlights and updates from all across the world.
The first thing you need to know about NHL 16 is that the EA Sports Hockey League, which was noticeably absent from NHL 15, will see its return in this year's game.
Candice Breitz recounts pressures to make work about her nationality in a 2001 interview: «While German artists are not expected to make work about würst and Canadian artists are not expected to make art about ice - hockey, there is often a silent rule when it comes to the inclusion of artists from less mainstream art countries: «make art about where you're from, and about what makes you different... Or stay at home.»
And what about the hockey stick that Oerlemans derived from glacier retreat since 1600?
I still haven't heard a comment about this «hockey» stick from your part, I believe the reconstruction graph is robust by current all time high temperatures extending back in time since about 1998.
From the beginning, many of the complaints about Mann's work were more about how it was appropriated by others than the research itself; the first paper of his identifying a «hockey stick» pattern to temperatures over the last millennium, in 1999, was laced with caveats in describing the distinct sharp recent warming trend.
For comparison, in the MM convention, the «Hockey Stick» pattern corresponds to PC # 4, and the variance carried by that pattern (red «+» at x = 4: y = 0.07) is about 2 times what would be expected from chance alone (red curve at x = 4: y = 0.035), and still clearly significant (the first 5 PCs are statistically significant at the 95 % level in this case).
It's a leap to go from global warming to taxes but the Left has been getting away with your money using that kind of logic for years and whether they're sporting a fraudulent «hockey stick» or worrying about the demise of polar bears or Rhode Island - sized glacier named Aunt Bee calving off Antarctica, Western academia just winks and counts the cash.
They also threw mud at the Mann hockey stick from AR3, but AR4 had already replaced that in 2007, and they mostly didn't care about the little detail that those emails were 10 years old, from 1999, because it spoiled their narrative of implying ongoing issues.
George Bush, whose White House in 2003 deleted Mann's hockey stick graph from an environmental report, began talking about the need for biofuels.
The Climategate emails have everything to do with the Hockey Stick: They were about insulating Mann's «science» from dissenting scientists through corruption of peer review, and from the broader community via their subversion of Freedom of Information laws.
Apart from my own concerns about the hockey stick (Hiding the Decline), I am greatly concerned about Mann's bullying behavior inserting itself into the scientific process (collaboration, peer review, public communication).
You'd never know from all the constant bleating about «the 97 per cent consensus» that Michael E Mann and his hockey stick are, in fact, held in very low regard by many of the world's most eminent scientists.
From A.D. 1,000 to about 1915, the graph depicts a gradual decline in Northern Hemisphere temperatures (the hockey stick handle) followed by an abrupt upturn in hemispheric temperatures during the remainder of the 20th century (the blade).
Re: My previous post — that email / data from Tim Osbourn (939154709) is the one to which Phil Jones boasts about adding the real temp - data to (942777075), to create the nice hockey - stick effect....
The committee apparently made no effort to obtain, much less consider, the volumes of available news reports, analyses (including from Congress) and commentary about Mann, the hockey stick and / or Climategate.
You have spent a great deal of time describing why you believe that the science behind the hockey stick phenomenon is more uncertain than how it was portrayed, and you have spent a lot of time analyzing the tribalism behind what you characterized as a «dishonest» approach to representing data, but from what I've seen, you have spent remarkably little time talking about the volumes of unsound data which were deliberately fabricated, or at the very least twisted, by those with a vested interest in proving theories of AGW incorrect.
Among them, an email from one of Dr Mann's fellow scientists complaining about being «hit on the head with a hockey stick».
I'd like to comment on the RE statistic because, like Dave Dardinger, I recently learned about it from the «Hockey Stick Illusion», in which SM is credited with most of the analysis, and because I'd like to understand it better.
There's some pretty damning stuff in there, particularly about the «Mike's Nature trick» of chery - picking data (switching back and forth from one proxy to another) to fit the desired result of showing a «hockey stick» temperature chart.
We discussed his new book, «The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches from the Front Lines,» his experiences — good and bad — of being one of the leading paleoclimatologists and dealing with deniers of climate change, as well as talking about the science being done by Mann and his colleagues.
(Mind you, this was something that I also thought was odd about the Wegman report: they showed these hockey stick PCs with tiny absolute magnitudes from «red noise» and compared them to an order - of - magnitude larger hockey stick PCs from Mann et al., as in Figure 4.1)
It is conclusive that the claims about the ability to produce a «hockey stick» from noise were «aided» by cherry picking From the link about the Wegman report: --------from noise were «aided» by cherry picking From the link about the Wegman report: --------From the link about the Wegman report: ------------
But from what I read about his demolition of Mann et al's Hockey Stick method, he is certainly a better statistician than Mike Mann.
Judging from other comments, you don't have any problem with people accusing others of malfeasance (see the post immediately following mine, which you didn't see fit to comment on), and I can not see how on earth talking about the hockey stick graph is off topic on a post... about the hockey stick graph.
I'm sure you've read all the appropriate papers and have made your educated judgement about climate sensitivity to CO2 and about hockey sticks from proxies.
Without the black line from an entirely different data set grafted on, the data would not form a hockey stick, or show anything particularly anomalous about the 20th century.
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