«Today's is our best estimate but given the current volatility, it may
change over the course of the season,» Mr Wilson said.
That may prove to
change over the course of the Season but for right now it seems like all 4 Teams can beat anyone on any given Sunday..
CB Pairing will
change over the course of the season 4.
Just as hard to predict, though, is which other clubs are going to be the strongest, as we saw last season that there are some very strong contenders and that things can soon
change over the course of the season.
At that point the Kings were barely alive at +10,000 to win the Stanley Cup, and you can see how the future odds have
changed over the course of the season.
And that gradients
change over the course of the seasons.
Not exact matches
Over the
course of the current
season the opinion on whether Wenger will stay or go has
changed and I think that's largely because he himself isn't too sure if his future lies with Arsenal beyond the summer
of 2017.
Very few
of them seem to have
changed their minds much, as we keep hearing such doubts like, «have Arsenal got the leaders we need to get through the tough times» and «can the Gunners keep it up
over the
course of the
season rather than just a few patches
of good performances»?
This is an incredibly difficult question to answer for a variety
of reasons, most importantly because
over the years our once vaunted «beautiful» style
of play has become a shadow
of it's former self, only to be replaced by a less than stellar «plug and play» mentality where players play out
of position and adjustments / substitutions are rarely forthcoming before the 75th minute... if you look at our current players, very few would make sense in the traditional Wengerian system... at present, we don't have the personnel to move the ball quickly from deep - lying position, efficient one touch midfielders that can make the necessary through balls or the disciplined and pacey forwards to stretch defences into wide positions, without the aid
of the backs coming up into the final 3rd, so that we can attack the defensive lanes in the same clinical fashion we did years ago... on this current squad, we have only 1 central defender on staf, Mustafi, who seems to have any prowess in the offensive zone or who can even pass two zones through so that we can advance play quickly out
of our own end (I have seen some inklings that suggest Holding might have some offensive qualities but too early to tell)... unfortunately Mustafi has a tendency to get himself in trouble when he gets overly aggressive on the ball... from our backs out wide, we've seen pace from the likes
of Bellerin and Gibbs and the spirited albeit offensively stunted play
of Monreal, but none
of these players possess the skill - set required in the offensive zone for the new Wenger scheme which requires deft touches, timely runs to the baseline and consistent crossing, especially when Giroud was playing and his ratio
of scored goals per clear chances was relatively low (better last year though)... obviously I like Bellerin's future prospects, as you can't teach pace, but I do worry that he regressed last
season, which was obvious to Wenger because there was no way he would have used Ox as the right side wing - back so often knowing that Barcelona could come calling in the off -
season, if he thought otherwise... as for our midfielders, not a single one, minus the more confident Xhaka I watched played for the Swiss national team a couple years ago, who truly makes sense under the traditional Wenger model... Ramsey holds onto the ball too long, gives the ball away cheaply far too often and abandons his defensive responsibilities on a regular basis (doesn't score enough recently to justify): that being said, I've always thought he does possess a little something special, unfortunately he thinks so too... Xhaka is a little too slow to ever boss the midfield and he tends to telegraph his one true strength, his long ball play: although I must admit he did get a bit better during some points in the latter part
of last
season... it always made me wonder why whenever he played with Coq Wenger always seemed to play Francis in a more advanced role on the pitch... as for Coq, he is way too reckless at the wrong times and has exhibited little offensive prowess yet finds himself in and around the box far too often... let's face it Wenger was ready to throw him in the trash heap when injuries forced him to use Francis and then he had the nerve to act like this was all part
of a bigger Wenger constructed plan... he like Ramsey, Xhaka and Elneny don't offer the skills necessary to satisfy the quick transitory nature
of our old offensive scheme or the stout defensive mindset needed to protect the defensive zone so that our offensive players can remain aggressive in the final third... on the front end, we have Ozil, a player
of immense skill but stunted by his physical demeanor that tends to offend, the fact that he's been played out
of position far too many times since arriving and that the players in front
of him, minus Sanchez, make little to no sense considering what he has to offer (especially Giroud); just think about the quick counter-attack offence in Real or the space and protection he receives in the German National team's midfield, where teams couldn't afford to focus too heavily on one individual... this player was a passing «specialist» long before he arrived in North London, so only an arrogant or ignorant individual would try to reinvent the wheel and / or not surround such a talent with the necessary components... in regards to Ox, Walcott and Welbeck, although they all possess serious talents I see them in large part as headless chickens who are on the injury table too much, lack the necessary first - touch and / or lack the finishing flair to warrant their inclusion in a regular starting eleven; I would say that,
of the 3, Ox showed the most upside once we went to a back 3, but even he became a bit too consumed by his pending contract talks before the
season ended and that concerned me a bit... if I had to choose one
of those 3 players to stay on it would be Ox due to his potential as a plausible alternative to Bellerin in that wing - back position should we continue to use that formation... in Sanchez, we get one
of the most committed skill players we've seen on this squad for some years but that could all
change soon, if it hasn't already
of course... strangely enough, even he doesn't make sense given the constructs
of the original Wenger offensive model because he holds onto the ball too long and he will give the ball up a little too often in the offensive zone... a fact that is largely forgotten due to his infectious energy and the fact that the numbers he has achieved seem to justify the means... finally, and in many ways most crucially, Giroud, there is nothing about this team or the offensive system that Wenger has traditionally employed that would even suggest such a player would make sense as a starter... too slow, too inefficient and way too easily dispossessed... once again, I think he has some special skills and, at times, has showed some world - class qualities but he's lack
of mobility is an albatross around the necks
of our offence... so when you ask who would be our best starting 11, I don't have a clue because
of the 5 or 6 players that truly deserve a place in this side, 1 just arrived, 3 aren't under contract beyond 2018 and the other was just sold to Juve... man, this is theraputic because following this team is like an addiction to heroin without the benefits
A lot can still happen
over the
course of the current
season, as we are still some way off the halfway stage and we have seen many times in the pst that things can
change quickly in football.
Over the
course of this
season, Seattle has bolstered its lineup in many ways —
changes that have gelled at the right time and are paying dividends when it matters most.
His superb late header in the Emirates win was not the first time Giroud has made the difference for Arsenal in close encounters this
season, having scored a late equaliser against Manchester United at Old Trafford and
changed the
course of the game when he emerged as a substitute in an October win
over Sunderland.
Over the
course of the year children experience the
changing seasons and begin to develop a sensitivity to the subtle transformations in the landscapes around them.
All
of us involved in youth sports - from parents, to coaches, from athletic trainers to school athletic directors to the athletes themselves - have a responsibility to do what we can to make contact and collision sports safer, whether it by reducing the number
of hits to the head a player receives
over the
course of a
season (such as N.F.L. and the Ivy League are doing in limiting full - contact practices, and the Sports Legacy Institute recently proposed be considered at the youth and high school level in its Hit Count program), teaching football players how to tackle without using their head (as former pro football player Bobby Hosea has long advocated),
changing the rules (as the governing body for high school hockey in Minnesota did in the aftermath
of the Jack Jablonski injury or USA Hockey did in banning body checks at the Pee Wee level), or giving serious consideration to whether athletes below a certain age should be playing tackle football at all (as the American Academy
of Pediatrics recommend).
Publication
of the Purdue study sent shock - waves reverberating through the football world, with the findings cited by concussion experts calling on youth sports organizations to take more aggressive action to minimize exposure to RHI, including sub-concussive blows, by
changing the way contact and collision sports are played and practiced, and reducing the amount
of brain trauma a child incurs by limiting the number
of hits they sustain in a sports
season,
over the
course of a year, and during a career.
«We had performed multiple imaging studies on contact sports athletes in the past where we found
changes in white matter diffusion
over the
course of a single
season of sport (and exposure to repetitive head impacts),» explained study author Inga Katharina Koerte
of the University
of Munich and Harvard Medical School.
Saturn's long orbit around the Sun means its
seasons change slowly
over the
course of 29.5 Earth years.
Each planet therefore possesses
seasons;
changes to the climate
over the
course of its year.
-LSB-...] don't depict Seal Point but rather are meditations on the ineffable qualities
of a place as Walker has experienced it — color, light, motion, shape, texture — recording the narrative
of how the artist feels about this special location
over the
course of changing seasons, months and years.
Installed in an oblong island
of plants growing between pathways on the High Line just south
of The Standard, High Line, the sculpture will
change over the
course of its installation, the empty rectilinear vessel becoming a horticultural container as the
seasons pass.
Crosman writes that these paintings «don't depict Seal Point but rather are meditations on the ineffable qualities
of a place as Walker has experienced it — color, light, motion, shape, texture — recording the narrative
of how the artist feels about this special location
over the
course of changing seasons, months and years.»
They will be exhibited in a monthly timeline, displaying how perceptions
of each presidential candidate shift and
change over the
course of primary
season — just like the content, positions, and tones presented by the campaigns themselves.
But theirs is actually a digital doppelgänger, and the images
of farmers planting, sowing and harvesting their crops as the
seasons change will slowly unfold in real time
over the
course of the next 1,000 years — positing that life, and nature, will continue as it has before, or, at least, in digital form.
13 Temperate Zones Sit between the polar zones and the tropics Temperate zones are more affected by the
changing angle
of the sun
over the
course of a year The climate in these zones ranges from hot to cold, depending on the
season.
The amount
of CO2 measured at ML for example waxes and wanes
over the
course of one year primarily due to the
changes of the
seasons lets assume this CO2 is a natural occurence but the overall total (PPM) rise is due to an addition
of CO2 to the system.
Depending on the cause
of the shading, this may cause
changes in the bias
over the
course of a day and
over the
seasons, but as a multi-year bias, this would remain constant.
Note that
changes in axial tilt and eccentricity do not, in and
of themselves,
change by one iota the amount
of insolation at the top
of the atmosphere
over the
course of year it merely
changes how the insolation is delivered across the surface and across the
seasons in a year.