Watch the Eagles game Sunday? Notice Terrell Owens talking major shit on the sideline? It’s the same shit I was hearing from Billy The Crystal who went 12-0 during the afternoon, that is until the San Diego-Pittsburgh game where the Crystal took a bath. But at the end of the day it was Sean from www.pornlegends.com who emerged with a perfect 13-0 record and a shot at his second perfect weekend, having done it last year. Sean’s march to perfection now gives him sole possession of first with a 55-18 overall record and a three-game lead in the Adultfyi pool.
Not to take away from Sean’s glittering afternoon, however, a 12-1 record was pretty much the norm in the Adultfyi pool. Four players were nearly perfect and that includes the Crystal, Harry Weiss, Karl the Birdman with his best afternoon to date and Mike Dickinson.
I came in at 11-2 and was joined by Steve Volponi who also had his best weekend so far.
Ryan from Jerry’s Deli, Brian Wallace, John Gray, Dan Davis and Brian, aka Plus One, were all 10-3
Shannon from Adult DVD Empire and Michael Fattorosi were 9-4. Wankus, www.tylerfaith.com, was 8-5; Steve Lane, Big Ty and Sandy, www.sandybunz.com came in at 7-6; and Serenity had a 6-7 mark.
From the NY Times: PHILADELPHIA- The next quarterback Terrell Owens feuds with could be Drew Bledsoe.
With Bledsoe throwing three interceptions, and Owens catching just three passes for 45 yards, the Dallas Cowboys lost to the Eagles, 38-24, in Owens’s much-anticipated return to Philadelphia.
The quarterback Owens once feuded with, Donovan McNabb of the Eagles, enjoyed another huge game, completing 18 of 33 passes for 354 yards and 2 touchdowns. But the on-field chemistry between Bledsoe and Owens has yet to click, and Bledsoe’s untimely mistakes played a huge part in Dallas’s defeat. The Eagles also kept pressure on Bledsoe, sacking him seven times.
Bledsoe’s last interception was his most costly, coming with 31 seconds to play and the Cowboys (2-2) trailing, 31-24. On second-and-goal from the 6-yard line, Bledsoe’s pass was intercepted by Lito Sheppard, who returned the ball 102 yards for the final touchdown, as the Lincoln Financial Center field crowd erupted in joy.
That play clinched the victory for Philadelphia (4-1), but that was hardly Bledsoe’s lone miscue. Midway through the fourth quarter, with Philadelphia protecting a 7-point lead, Bledsoe badly underthrew Owens, who had gotten behind Philadelphia’s defense and was open inside the Eagles’ 10. Sheppard intercepted that fluttering pass as well, indicative of a frustrating day for Owens, who wanted to beat his former teammates in front of a hostile crowd that booed him at every opportunity.
After the game, Owens refused to criticize Bledsoe directly, but his disappointment was obvious when he was asked if he was open on the play when Bledsoe underthrew him.
“You guys saw the game; that was an opportunity,” Owens said during his postgame press conference.
Asked if Bledsoe was letting him down, Owens said: “I think as an offensive unit, we’re letting ourselves down.
“You watched the game, didn’t you? Who’s pulling the trigger? I’m not trying to point any fingers at anybody. We win together, we lose together. I’m not going to sit up here and try to point a finger, so you guys can create a story. It’s not about that. We played a good team. They did what they did with the turnovers we gave them. With the number of turnovers we had, that’s the result you get.”
Bledsoe’s final interception squandered an opportunity for the Cowboys to steal a victory. On fourth-and-18 from Dallas’s 37, the Eagles’ defenders allowed Terry Glenn to get behind them. Michael Lewis of the Eagles committed a pass-interference penalty to prevent Glenn from making the catch, but the penalty gave Dallas first-and-goal at the 6. But two plays later, Bledsoe threw the ball into Sheppard’s chest, and the Eagles escaped with first place in the National Football Conference East.
Bledsoe’s final interception was intended for tight end Jason Witten, and Bledsoe indicated that Witten ran a different route than he expected.
When asked if Owens was becoming frustrated on the sideline, Bledsoe said: “We were all frustrated. We felt like we were missing some plays that we shouldn’t have missed. Terrell’s been good all year and he was good in this game. He was frustrated like the rest of us were that we weren’t making enough plays. None of us were happy.”
Owens did not catch a pass in the first half as the Eagles double-covered him and rolled many of their zone coverages toward him. After the game, Owens ran off the field without congratulating his former teammates. “We lost,” Owens said. “I’m a competitor. I do not like to lose. I was frustrated.”
McNabb no longer has to worry about Owens, who was released by the Eagles, then signed by the Cowboys during the off-season. McNabb said it was not difficult to block out the hoopla surrounding Owens’s return.
“I don’t talk about it,” McNabb said. “It’s not T. O. versus Donovan. It’s the Dallas Cowboys versus the Philadelphia Eagles. If I wasn’t playing in this game, I definitely would have been watching. This is a game you love to see.”
Philadelphia is called the City of Brotherly Love, but outside the stadium before the game, it was the city of brotherly loathe. Old and young, black and white, they came united in their hatred for Owens. Though Owens had plenty of supporters during his time with the Eagles, his departure to Dallas turned opinion in this city against him.
Many fans had signs or banners in the parking lot, some of them obscene. Some of them made references to Owens’s being rushed to the hospital last month, an incident that was first reported as a suicide attempt, but that was later classified by the police as an accidental overdose of pain medicine.
Owens looked more than ready for this challenge, but Bledsoe could not get him the ball nearly enough times for Owens to make an impact. Dallas and Philadelphia will meet again on Dec. 25 in Dallas. But in the first meeting between McNabb and Owens since their parting, McNabb had the last laugh.
