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misssf

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Everything posted by misssf

  1. That explains the Pink Panther theme song playing all night-lol! I think there's always Jacket drama at SF. Oh well! It was FUN anyway. I didn't think the music was anything to talk about but w/everyone there it made for a good night!
  2. Yeap he was literally a guy who wasn't trying very hard but he did use the LADIES room at South Park. Too funny! I actually felt bad for him.
  3. OK- Twilo back in the day! Arc no doubt! And since SF has upgraded it's pretty damm good! and I personally love Tempt's!!!!!
  4. Hee...hee.....you'd be right by my side missy if you weren't all grown up! Umm.......I think about 7ish we'll leave. I'll send your love to the b-day boys!
  5. Who will be attending the big birthday extravaganza this w/e??? :bday: :dj: :party:
  6. 6:00 p.m. Bally's in Saddle Brook- don't miss all the HOT TUB action! LOL!!
  7. SOMEGIRL-WHERE YA BEEN HIDING BABY????????
  8. That was amazing.....I guess miracles do happen!
  9. Applause to you all----it's been almost all fall/winter w/out the GREAT Denny vs. any other DJ debate---gotta love it. Why can't everyone just like who they like- don't like the DJ and club guess what- DON'T GO. p.s Denny @ Tempts is SICK....hee...hee..... :tongue:
  10. Well he wasn't the thinnest of people and it was def not healthy! Good guy though. :(
  11. This can't be! He really is dead--whaaa-whaaa!!!!! What did he die from- heart attack?
  12. Anyone know if Limelight/Estate is open tonight---hello??
  13. Is it open Sunday night?????????????
  14. ohh ohhh am I childish like Kermzy too b/c of my icon.....hee...hee.. Anyway back to business: Is Richie going to t be spinning at Saci soon to be Show..........I can be totally talking out of my ass but that's my guess.......
  15. Cold comfort: NFL admits officials blew Giants call Tuesday, January 07, 2003 By TARA SULLIVAN Staff Writer Trey Junkin, who had two bad snaps during the Giants'loss to the 49'ers, leaving with his belongings after cleaning out his locker. (CARMINE GALASSO/THE RECORD) Add the National Football League officials to the list of those who messed up on the final play of the Giants-San Francisco 49ers playoff game Sunday. The NFL released a statement Monday that its crew of officials erred by not calling a pass-interference penalty on the 49ers on the game's final play, and that the Giants should have been awarded another down of football. The Giants, who lost the game, 39-38, would have earned a second chance to attempt the 41-yard field goal they had botched with six seconds remaining. The game-ending play began with Trey Junkin's second consecutive bad snap, which led holder Matt Allen to abort the field-goal attempt and look for a receiver downfield. He targeted guard Rich Seubert, an offensive lineman who normally would not be a viable receiver but who on field-goal attempts routinely reports to officials and lines up as an eligible receiver. Before having a chance to catch the ball, Seubert was tackled by 49ers defensive end Chike Okeafor. When reviewing videotape of the play Monday, NFL Director of Officials Mike Pereira said Okeafor had indeed "interfered with Seubert downfield when he was attempting to catch Giants' holder Matt Allen's pass." The NFL also admitted Monday that "if defensive pass interference had been called, there would have been offsetting penalties [ineligible receiver against the Giants and pass interference against the 49ers] with the down replayed at the original line of scrimmage, the San Francisco 23-yard line. Although time had expired, a game cannot end with offsetting penalties. Thus, the game would have been extended by one untimed down. "It doesn't do us a damn bit of good," Giants head coach Jim Fassel said Monday afternoon at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford. "It is water under the bridge. It was clearly pass interference. How they missed that, I do not know." Referee Ron Winter said after the game that "there was no pass interference [because] the receiver was ineligible." He was speaking of Seubert, whom the crew mistakenly believed to be ineligible to catch a pass. Winter indicated that call was not made because it would not have mattered anyway. Asked by two reporters on the field about 60 minutes after the game about the penalty, Pereira said the Giants had as many as three ineligible players downfield, all of whom negated any pass-interference call. "It's hard for them to make calls like that at the end of the game," said one Giants player who did not want his name used. "It's one thing if they don't want to call it, but it's another thing if they don't know who's eligible. "It's not a missed call. These guys are human. But you're talking about an instance of management of the game. They should get it right at the right time." Fassel heard from the league office early Monday afternoon about the mistake, but chose not to share the information with his players because he did not want to offer up any excuses for a game the Giants led by 24 points late in the third quarter. Word spread anyway, with general manager Ernie Accorsi taking a call in California from a league official explaining what happened. Accorsi, who stayed on the West Coast to scout a college football all-star game, was reminded of an infamous college football game involving an illegal fifth down. "Unlike the 1940 Cornell-Dartmouth game, they're not giving it back," Accorsi said. "They [the officials] didn't build a 24-point lead, and they didn't lose a 24-point lead. I don't think we feel it was taken from us. This doesn't make us feel any better, and it's a bitter pill. If they said we could get back on a plane I'd go, but I don't think you can turn it around and say it's why we lost the game." NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said back judge Scott Green, who had responsibility for the call, would not be reprimanded by the league. Green was the back judge in last year's Super Bowl because he was the highest-rated official at his position during the season. For Fassel, the words do little to assuage his disappointment. "I expected them to [admit it]," he said. "I saw it on tape [Monday] morning. It was pass interference, clearly. So them confirming it is, 'OK, at least you are honest.' It is not going to change anything." *** UPON FURTHER REVIEW NFL Director of Officiating Mike Pereira looked at the videotape of Sunday's Giants-San Francisco 49ers game and determined the Giants should have had another shot at a field goal to win. His explanation: Officials were correct to flag Giants left guard Tam Hopkins (No. 65) as an ineligible receiver downfield after the Giants blew a field-goal attempt on the final play. But on the same play, officials overlooked interference by the 49ers against Giants guard Rich Seubert (No. 69). Seubert, who had lined up as an eligible receiver, was the target of a last-second desperation pass. If defensive pass interference had been called, that penalty would have offset the ineligible-receiver penalty. A game cannot end on offsetting penalties. So the down should have been replayed from the original line of scrimmage, the San Francisco 23-yard line. Game officials will never be perfect. Here are some of the most infamous instances of officiating in history: •1972 USA-USSR Olympic basketball final. After time expired, the officials reset the clock twice and the Soviets hit a basket to win, 51-50. •Don Denkinger's call. He called the Royals' Jorge Orta safe at first in the ninth inning of Game 6 against the Cardinals, and KC won the 1985 Series in Game 7. •Trent Tucker's three-pointer. The Knicks' guard caught an inbounds pass and hit a trey - all with two-tenths of a second remaining - against the Bulls in 1990, prompting a tip-in rule for plays with three-tenths or less to play. •The Pine Tar Game. Royals' George Brett used a bat covered to the logo in pine tar to hit a homer against the Yanks in 1983. He was ruled out but the homer was later allowed to stand and the game was resumed at a later date. •Fiesta Bowl flag. A disputed pass interference call against Miami's Glenn Sharpe on fourth down gives Ohio State life in the first overtime, and the Buckeyes win the 2003 Fiesta Bowl in double OT for the national championship. •Vinny Testaverde's helmet TD. The Jets' QB was awarded a TD even though the Seahawks stopped him a yard short of the end zone in 1998. Tara Sullivan's e-mail address is sullivan@northjersey.com
  16. Cold comfort: NFL admits officials blew Giants call Tuesday, January 07, 2003 By TARA SULLIVAN Staff Writer Trey Junkin, who had two bad snaps during the Giants'loss to the 49'ers, leaving with his belongings after cleaning out his locker. (CARMINE GALASSO/THE RECORD) Add the National Football League officials to the list of those who messed up on the final play of the Giants-San Francisco 49ers playoff game Sunday. The NFL released a statement Monday that its crew of officials erred by not calling a pass-interference penalty on the 49ers on the game's final play, and that the Giants should have been awarded another down of football. The Giants, who lost the game, 39-38, would have earned a second chance to attempt the 41-yard field goal they had botched with six seconds remaining. The game-ending play began with Trey Junkin's second consecutive bad snap, which led holder Matt Allen to abort the field-goal attempt and look for a receiver downfield. He targeted guard Rich Seubert, an offensive lineman who normally would not be a viable receiver but who on field-goal attempts routinely reports to officials and lines up as an eligible receiver. Before having a chance to catch the ball, Seubert was tackled by 49ers defensive end Chike Okeafor. When reviewing videotape of the play Monday, NFL Director of Officials Mike Pereira said Okeafor had indeed "interfered with Seubert downfield when he was attempting to catch Giants' holder Matt Allen's pass." The NFL also admitted Monday that "if defensive pass interference had been called, there would have been offsetting penalties [ineligible receiver against the Giants and pass interference against the 49ers] with the down replayed at the original line of scrimmage, the San Francisco 23-yard line. Although time had expired, a game cannot end with offsetting penalties. Thus, the game would have been extended by one untimed down. "It doesn't do us a damn bit of good," Giants head coach Jim Fassel said Monday afternoon at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford. "It is water under the bridge. It was clearly pass interference. How they missed that, I do not know." Referee Ron Winter said after the game that "there was no pass interference [because] the receiver was ineligible." He was speaking of Seubert, whom the crew mistakenly believed to be ineligible to catch a pass. Winter indicated that call was not made because it would not have mattered anyway. Asked by two reporters on the field about 60 minutes after the game about the penalty, Pereira said the Giants had as many as three ineligible players downfield, all of whom negated any pass-interference call. "It's hard for them to make calls like that at the end of the game," said one Giants player who did not want his name used. "It's one thing if they don't want to call it, but it's another thing if they don't know who's eligible. "It's not a missed call. These guys are human. But you're talking about an instance of management of the game. They should get it right at the right time." Fassel heard from the league office early Monday afternoon about the mistake, but chose not to share the information with his players because he did not want to offer up any excuses for a game the Giants led by 24 points late in the third quarter. Word spread anyway, with general manager Ernie Accorsi taking a call in California from a league official explaining what happened. Accorsi, who stayed on the West Coast to scout a college football all-star game, was reminded of an infamous college football game involving an illegal fifth down. "Unlike the 1940 Cornell-Dartmouth game, they're not giving it back," Accorsi said. "They [the officials] didn't build a 24-point lead, and they didn't lose a 24-point lead. I don't think we feel it was taken from us. This doesn't make us feel any better, and it's a bitter pill. If they said we could get back on a plane I'd go, but I don't think you can turn it around and say it's why we lost the game." NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said back judge Scott Green, who had responsibility for the call, would not be reprimanded by the league. Green was the back judge in last year's Super Bowl because he was the highest-rated official at his position during the season. For Fassel, the words do little to assuage his disappointment. "I expected them to [admit it]," he said. "I saw it on tape [Monday] morning. It was pass interference, clearly. So them confirming it is, 'OK, at least you are honest.' It is not going to change anything." *** UPON FURTHER REVIEW NFL Director of Officiating Mike Pereira looked at the videotape of Sunday's Giants-San Francisco 49ers game and determined the Giants should have had another shot at a field goal to win. His explanation: Officials were correct to flag Giants left guard Tam Hopkins (No. 65) as an ineligible receiver downfield after the Giants blew a field-goal attempt on the final play. But on the same play, officials overlooked interference by the 49ers against Giants guard Rich Seubert (No. 69). Seubert, who had lined up as an eligible receiver, was the target of a last-second desperation pass. If defensive pass interference had been called, that penalty would have offset the ineligible-receiver penalty. A game cannot end on offsetting penalties. So the down should have been replayed from the original line of scrimmage, the San Francisco 23-yard line. Game officials will never be perfect. Here are some of the most infamous instances of officiating in history: •1972 USA-USSR Olympic basketball final. After time expired, the officials reset the clock twice and the Soviets hit a basket to win, 51-50. •Don Denkinger's call. He called the Royals' Jorge Orta safe at first in the ninth inning of Game 6 against the Cardinals, and KC won the 1985 Series in Game 7. •Trent Tucker's three-pointer. The Knicks' guard caught an inbounds pass and hit a trey - all with two-tenths of a second remaining - against the Bulls in 1990, prompting a tip-in rule for plays with three-tenths or less to play. •The Pine Tar Game. Royals' George Brett used a bat covered to the logo in pine tar to hit a homer against the Yanks in 1983. He was ruled out but the homer was later allowed to stand and the game was resumed at a later date. •Fiesta Bowl flag. A disputed pass interference call against Miami's Glenn Sharpe on fourth down gives Ohio State life in the first overtime, and the Buckeyes win the 2003 Fiesta Bowl in double OT for the national championship. •Vinny Testaverde's helmet TD. The Jets' QB was awarded a TD even though the Seahawks stopped him a yard short of the end zone in 1998. Tara Sullivan's e-mail address is sullivan@northjersey.com
  17. Agreed!!!!!!! Countdown till his b-day!!!!
  18. Ut-oh........ Denny back at Exit.......memories!!!!!!!! "waiting for tonite...." with the snow falling~@!$
  19. Kerm, he played it about 1/2 hour after you left!! But it was really time to call it a night. Shit all the good tunes came on in the late morning---hello JP-ha!
  20. Sorry- Saci was good a couple wks ago but NYE is different! Went to Joey's and Metro which were both a really good time and nice and close to home! Gotta give props to the bartenders who worked that shift!!! p.s JP played Paula Cole, my SF favorite. But Richie also played it!!
  21. Yea any Sound Factory reviews I haven't heard a thing about it. Weird...... :confused:
  22. B-low opened in November, no? We went then!
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