Sentences with phrase «more football brains»

Arsene surely have more football brains than most of us fans, if not all.

Not exact matches

Remember guys that Arsene Wenger knows more about football than football knows about football, so stop scrambling your brain with what he should be doing, what formation he should be playing, who he should be signing!
we are leading for christs sakes, bring on someone to stop crosses into the box, Ox came on and looked more tired that anyone else, Gibbs has zero football brain.
Per is very slow, I wish he was faster atimes but ppl under rate him a lot and please football is not all about pace; Per plays with his brains and we tend to applaud players who play with more aggression unfortunately he doesn't; I will use an eg, if it was Per marking Hazard instead of Koscielny in d build up to the chelsea penalty, he would have probably gone backwards trying to stay on d right side of hazard so he doesn't shoot and narrowing d angle so that our goalie easily picks up d ball, that's how Per plays and to me that's subtle but intelligent option in that scenario but that style of play doesn't get plenty credit.
Six years people with more than 3 football brain cells have been saying this but the krish s and nick s and buds of this world refuse to acknowledge the truth...
come on there are three men on him when he gets ball... which is how serious teams press... even so he is only one driving things forward from back need to bring on coquelin who can give him time and kosalinac who is more of a threat down right than bellerin... but this starting every game with iwobi is just pitiful management... he gives no outlet for wilshere has no football brain and cant defend... another walcott in the making
I don't support players I support the team... And I certainly don't support overpaid mediocrities just, coz they wear the arsenal kit but who can't deliver us more than third or fourth place... That said coquellin is a good player with potential to improve what we need now is an accomplished DM from whom he can learn... Missed kondogbia who is a better player and younger which might have been a problem... Same goes for Carvalho... Sven bender probably best around for us if not the pole... Both older more experienced more rounded footballers and wiser than coquellin... sadly wenger doesn't any longer have the brain or brawn to improve this team....
if walcott learnt to dribble if barcelona offered 60m for ramsey if xhaka learnt to tackle if giroud learnt positional play if iwobi acquired a football brain if perez played more... if donald trump became president of the united states... oh hang on a minute... yes its mathematically possible... so 4th place junkies can still knock on the french pushers door hoping for next year «s fix... pathetic
Ox has been here way before I even knew who Iwobi was, yet in such a shorter time Iwobi has shown he has more of a football brain than the Ox.
Ox has the «Theo sydrome» lack of a football brain, yes he has more ability then then the but both are clueless we they have time to think and that is something that can not be taught.
I feel Adama Traore is more explosive than Malcom, but their pace should be accompanied by excellent first touches and a good football brain, to make a good inverted winger.
I even forgot that Theo came on he's useless with no football brain, he'll never be a striker I'm still amazed some people on here say he's better than Pedro, the OX did more in 15 mins than both of Giroud and Theo combined
It is time we viewed football with more brains than emotion.
I know he as a better football brain and technique than Ramsey but Ramsey is fitter and more productive when he is available.
It's going in this tendency — more matches, more competitions, less time to work, even not enough time to have a real holiday for bodies and brains that top football players need.
Smart coaches react to this football brain drain by making their teams more collective and muscular, independent of genius and creativity.
When I finally had a chance to speak, we were already running over the 2 1/2 hours allotted for the roundtable, so I was only able to briefly touch on two of my many message points: one, that the game can be and is being made safer, and two, that, based on my experience following a high school football team in Oklahoma this past season - which will be the subject of a MomsTEAM documentary to be released in early 2013 called The Smartest Team - I saw the use of hit sensors in football helmets as offering an exciting technological «end around» the problem of chronic under - reporting of concussions that continues to plague the sport and remains a major impediment, in my view, to keeping kids safe (the reasons: if an athlete is allowed to keep playing with a concussion, studies show that their recovery is likely to take longer, and they are at increased risk of long - term problems (e.g. early dementia, depression, more rapid aging of the brain, and in rare cases, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and in extremely rare instances, catastrophic injury or death.)
Two of the Purdue studies [36,37] suggested that it might be possible to reduce risk of brain trauma by gradually increasing the amount of contact in the football pre-season to allow time for players» brains to adjust, and one, by finding that players who sustained more than 50 hits per game, were much more likely than those who sustained fewer hits to be «flagged» by ImPACT and / or fMRI results as having neurocognitive deficits or altered brain activity, suggested that players be limited to a certain number of plays per game (a hard rule to implement, given the prevalence of two - way players in the high school game).
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.
A decade later, he and Kevin Guskiewicz, now director of the Matthew Gfeller Sport - Related Traumatic Brain Injury Research Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, produced a study of more than 2,900 college football players that had a significant impact on return - to - play standards.
The risk of brain injuries in professional football has gotten enormous attention thanks to more than 4,200 former players suing the National Football League, alleging the league withheld information about the long - term dangers of concfootball has gotten enormous attention thanks to more than 4,200 former players suing the National Football League, alleging the league withheld information about the long - term dangers of concFootball League, alleging the league withheld information about the long - term dangers of concussions.
Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) have become more a part of the discussion of football related injuries in the past five years or so.
Their stance grows more untenable with each passing weekend, each damning report, each player that returns to football concussed, each former hero battling through middle - age with a brain that can not cope with simple, everyday tasks.
Clumps of a protein called tau (dark red) become more widely distributed in the brain as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) progresses from mild (top), as seen here in the brain from a former college football player, to severe (bottom), as seen in a brain of a former NFL player.
The finding provides more evidence that the repetitive injuries to the brain sustained while playing American football are associated with the disease, researchers say.
More recently the Brain Injury Research Institute (BIRI), which studies the impact of concussions, asked the family of the late National Football League star linebacker Junior Seau to donate his brain so it, too, could be studied for signs ofBrain Injury Research Institute (BIRI), which studies the impact of concussions, asked the family of the late National Football League star linebacker Junior Seau to donate his brain so it, too, could be studied for signs ofbrain so it, too, could be studied for signs of CTE.
Clumps of a protein called tau (dark red) become more widely distributed in the brain as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) progresses from mild (top), as seen here in the brain from a former college football player, to severe (bottom), as seen in a brain of an NFL player.
What's more, they added, the sample is heavily weighted to men who played football in college or professionally, exposing them to far more hits to their heads than those who played only on youth or high school teams: These younger players accounted for only 16 brains in the sample of 202.
Combining data recorded from football players with computer simulations of the brain, a team working with David Camarillo, an assistant professor of bioengineering, found that concussions and other mild traumatic brain injuries seem to arise when an area deep inside the brain shakes more rapidly and intensely than surrounding areas.
More research is needed to identify how athletes sustain brain injury from American football, and also to develop strategies to protect them, write experts in The BMJ today.
«Call for more research on brain damage in American football
He was discussing how the league could donate $ 1 million or more to the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy at Boston University, whose discoveries of brain damage commonly associated with boxers in the brains of deceased football players were regularly discredited by the N.F.L.
Neurologists estimate that every year more than a million people suffer brain injuries in the United States alone — not just from football mishaps, but also from car crashes, falls down stairs, and many other kinds of accidents.
Fall, football, school and cooler temps might be on the brain, but the calendar says we have more summer to go.
Football Players Online Dating More than a month after a Belt teenager suffered a life - threatening brain injury during a football game, efforts to support him and his family cFootball Players Online Dating More than a month after a Belt teenager suffered a life - threatening brain injury during a football game, efforts to support him and his family cfootball game, efforts to support him and his family continue.
More than a month after a Belt teenager suffered a life - threatening brain injury during a football game, efforts to support him and his family continue.
The study of traumatic brain injury in football players could ultimately help accident victims successfully sue for damages, says Hamilton personal injury lawyer Andrew... Read more
Traumatic brain injury is a term that has gotten a lot more recognition in recent years thanks to the National Football League and its players who have shed light on lasting effects of head trauma.
The Adidas miCoach Speed Cell has just been announced as a standalone product; it is the brains behind the latest Adidas Adizero f50 football boot as tested by Pocket - lint back in September.The Speed Cell allows you to measure your athletic performance... Read more
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