Did anyone here Joe and Evan impersonating Francesa the otherday? It was pretty funny. I tried to find it on the you tube but it wasn't there
Cowboys got some good young playahs. Dez Bryant kid looks awl wuhld. Don't get me started on rodgiz tho. Rodgiz is supayumin
if anyone didn't notice, Tank has new graphics to open his show. they show the city. MSG, show some Met symbols, Yankee symbols, Rangers, Islanders...etc... The final graphic is MetLife Stadium. Guess what's on the field? All giant logo's. Giant endzones, Giants in the middle. It wasn't split in the end zones, one Jet graphic, and one Giants. It was all Giants. LMAO. Tank wasn't behind this?
Any one listen to Fatsessa today? Straight off the bat he starts kicking Jets fans to fu**- 'Jets fans can't fill the stadium- they are "ticket brokers" - always will be..... Rex is going too far blah blah blah. Jees he knows how to wind me up- which I suppose is the point of his sad little show.
Rex Ryan and da classless Jets are now threatening to kill Cowboy fans in da bawllpawk. And to say awllllll of dis on da eve of 911 when Americer was attacked... oh my god.
Haven't seen that but you know it kills him that it's not Giants Stadium anymore. He's never been the same since we closed that place out with a big, playoff-clinching party after the Giants shit the bed in their finale there. That was the week the whole ball got rolling with him, he had to sit there at WNBC and watch the whole thing, probably while stuffing down some food.
Rex Ryan bettah appologize to awwwwlll of Americer when he speaks today. Get me da NFL commishionah right away! Goodell do something!!
REX IS CAUSIN MAYHEM IN DA STADIUM WHEN DA OWNA IS SELLING DEM DA TICKETZ lol at this clown spending his whole show on this when the NFL kicks off tonight
Gawd fahbid sum one gets pushad ova da railin.....big blue travel.....big blue travel....ya know it waz 20 yeahs ago since me and da dog stahted big blue travel wit da league.
Rex is obviously not asking for fans to kill people, but ya gotta becareful about saying stupid shit in todays whacked out world
might as well arrest Rex right now. the guy is hiring a hitman. put him in jail for life. he's a murderer. and LOL at the stubhub nonsense. every game has thousands of tickets available on stubhub.
LMAO. Remember, this is a douchebag who barely said a thing when Lawrence Taylor RAPED a young girl. So Rex Ryan "incites" violence? DAT'S OUTRAGIS!!!!!!! Taylor rapes a young girl? A flashback - Again, I wuzzent dere. I don't have all da details. Da furst repahts were dat he had beat a woman. Dat's not da LT I know. He wuzzen't violent. He knows hiz own strenth. I neva sat down and had a lotta talk wit LT about dis. We had his atty. in one day, my understanding was DIS WAS A MISUNDERSTANDING!!
Giants ah da classy NY franchize Giant fans ah classy. Dey'd nevah do anythin' violent. A flashback from 1995 - The snowballs started early, even as the Giants built a 17-0 lead. At first, it was more playful than anything else, fans pelting one another. Then snowballs began to land on the field, even bouncing off players. It got serious in the second half. Booze was doing its thing. Disgust tinged with vitriol suffuses a cheerless season, and that was kicking in. Even though the Giants still led 17-10 early in the fourth quarter, snowballs were whipping down on the field from all directions. Mark Weinstein, a 20-year-old University of Michigan student from Long Island, was at the game with his father and two friends. “Everyone except my old man, who doesn’t do that, was throwing snowballs,” said Mr. Weinstein, now a book editor. “I threw a couple myself.” William Squires, the assistant general manager for stadium operations, was dumbstruck. “We saw videotape later where kids were throwing snowballs and their fathers were giving them the high-five,” Mr. Squires said. Jason Schuld, 26, a machine tool distributor from Connecticut, was in the upper deck with six friends and a lot of beer. “Man and alcohol become kids,” Mr. Schuld said. “So we were launching snowballs on the field.” Late in the third quarter, one of his friends beaned a security guard. The friend took off. Mr. Schuld and the others were hustled by security guards into an elevator, where Mr. Schuld said a brawl began. “The guards started kicking and kneeing us,” he said. “I hit several of the security guards pretty bad.” They were detained in a holding area on the ground level. “When we got out,” Mr. Schuld said, “there was only our car left in the parking lot.” He eventually paid a $650 fine. Ron Blum, the head referee, worried about safety. “When they were coming out of the upper deck, it was like missiles coming down,” he recalled from California, where he is retired. A few snowballs caromed off his legs. Early in the fourth quarter, Mr. Blum halted the game. He went to the Chargers’ sidelines to call up to the booth to have an announcement made warning the fans. As he bent over to get the phone, an ice ball he imagines was meant for him struck Sid Brooks, the Chargers’ equipment manager, known as Doc. He was knocked unconscious and had to be put on a stretcher. After the fans were warned, the game resumed. The snowballs did, too. Dan Reeves, the Giants’ head coach, looked around helplessly at one point for his cord man, responsible for keeping the coach from becoming entangled in his headset cord. He had fled. According to Mr. Reeves, when the coach found him later, the cord man told him, “Man, I knew they were throwing at you, and I knew that wasn’t a safe place to be.” With the score 17-17, the Giants were driving toward the end zone. No chance. Shaun Gayle, the Chargers safety, picked off a pass at the 1-yard line and began racing the other way. Fans heaved snowballs at him. He said they sounded like gunshots as they landed on the field, and he worried that one would dislodge the ball. Neither Giants nor snowballs stopped Shaun Gayle. The Chargers won 27-17. As players and officials filed off the field, more snowballs were fired at them. One field judge, after being hit, extended to the crowd the universal gesture of extreme disapproval. That got into the papers. That got him a fine from the league. All told, 15 fans were arrested and 175 were ejected, one of them a retired police chief. The Giants bought a full-page advertisement in a San Diego paper apologizing to the Chargers. One man became the public face of this unruly game. A picture snapped by an Associated Press photographer, showing him standing up in midhurl, was published everywhere. The Giants organization posted a $1,000 reward to find that man. Callers identified him as Jeffrey Lange, 26, and the police rounded him up. Mr. Lange fought the charge. He protested that he had lost his job as an administrative assistant at a computer company over nothing more than a snowball fight with fellow fans. He was convicted of improper behavior and fined $650. He tried, without success, to sue the Giants and the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, which ran the stadium. Some gamegoers felt bad that Mr. Lange was singled out among so many heavers. Last year, on the occasion of the Chargers’ revisiting the Meadowlands, Mr. Weinstein, the book editor, wrote an open letter to Mr. Lange on the Web. He commiserated that Mr. Lange had done only what everyone had done: “If you know someone who attended that game, be assured that that person chucked some snow. That means your mom, your dad, your uncle Lou. Father McGuigan. Your barber, your congressman, your nanna. Sheila from accounts receivable and her husband, Irv. Your fourth-grade teacher, your dry cleaner, the Harry M. Stevens guy. All the dudes in the wheelchair section.” Mr. Lange now works at a New Jersey company that stages meetings and events. He is on vacation and could not be reached.