Archive for October, 2014

Ukraine U21 vs Germany U21 Live Stream Free Watch Online – Video


Ukraine U21 vs Germany U21 Live Stream Free Watch Online
Click here: http://sportonpc.twomini.com/tv/ Watch Ukraine U21 vs Germany U21 Live Stream Free 2014 Football Soccer Basketball Online Basketball All Channel Live, Ukraine U21 vs Germany U21...

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Ukraine U21 vs Germany U21 Live Stream Free Watch Online - Video

Ukraine: Svoboda protesters WHIP police outside Kiev parliament – Video


Ukraine: Svoboda protesters WHIP police outside Kiev parliament
Video ID: 20141014-040 Supporters of the Ukrainian Union Svoboda party clashed with police officers outside the Verkhovna Rada in Kiev on Tuesday, with some protesters using metal chains to...

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Ukraine: Svoboda protesters WHIP police outside Kiev parliament - Video

The Knockout Game: Erik Kochs Perfect Punches

TIME Ideas The Knockout Game: Erik Kochs Perfect Punches

Kerry Howley is the author of Thrown.

The ref checked his hands. Duke vaselined Eriks cheeks, and for a moment Erik stood perfectly still, eyes closed, as Duke rubbed two greased thumbs over his cheekbones. Brown-orange complected, head shaved, Erik was a completely different creature than he had been in Vegas. Instead of looking ill in a recognizable way, he looked simply other, glowing brown-orange under the lights, shadows over his sunken eyes, under his pecs and neck, under each tiny ripple of stomach. He accepted a hug from Duke, a hug from Pettis, and stepped through the cage door to a bright, white, sterile cage. He had never fought first before, never seen a cage so clean.

Raphael Assuno walked out, singing along to his entrance music. He was four inches shorter than Erik, with broad muscles unlike anything on Eriks body. He had a flat brown fighters nose, a wide brow, dark stubble about his mouth.

Are you ready? the ref shouted to Erik. Erik, looking grim, gave a thumbs up. Are you ready? the ref shouted to Assuno, and he nodded. Lets fight, said the ref, clapped, backed himself toward the cage.

Here we go! said the TV color man.

Erik runs in and leans low on his legs, almost squattingthe stance of a man preparing to be pulled down, afraid to be knocked off balance by an opponent five inches shorter than himself. And yet even in this awkward fearful hunch Erik moves so fast he is hard to see, arms up and down, hands fisted then palms open, a step here and a step thereto Assunos every motion, three in response. Erik kicks high with the kick that had downed Cisco but Assuno just throws an arm in front of his face, blocks it. The TV color man compares Erik to Anthony Pettislong and lean, that reachas Erik carefully hops toward Assuno, and Assuno carefully hops away. Assuno stops his slow backward walk, swings, misses, and backs away more. They are falling into a partnered pattern, rarely touching, forward and back. Hes got that right hand loaded, the color man says of Assuno, and its true, Assuno is just waiting for the moment to lunge that right hand into Eriks face, knock him to the ground. Assuno throws a high kick, and Erik pops away with a single deft jump, so smooth it seems Erik knew where Assuno was headed long before he threw. Assuno swings, misses, and Erik does not retaliate.

Come on guys, shouts someone from the crowd, this is a contact sport!

Just throw! shouts Duke from behind the cage.

Erik is afraid of losing focus; the fight is a minute and a half in; he feels that he must end the fight or hell simply fall. But he hasnt yet found a range, and there is that loaded right hand. A normal fight for Erik is a moment of total absorption, but with the newfound cloudiness, the way it throws him off, he must somehow keep track of his own body in addition to Assunos. It is as if Erik is standing outside himself, reminding his body to do what it is told. Its all so unstable, the bodys obedience so subject to chance, that Erik is desperate for a way out.

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The Knockout Game: Erik Kochs Perfect Punches

Dozens of teens trash Crown Heights store

CROWN HEIGHTS, Brooklyn (PIX11) It wasnt long ago that the knockout game was front and center here in Crown Heights.

A local politician even wrote an open letter blaming the violent spike on a tense relationship between black and Jewish people living here in the neighborhood.

Now there are reports that the latest melee at this gourmet deli here on Caroll Street may have also stemmed from racial tension and the whole incident was captured on video.

The violent mob gathered outside the deli late Saturday night.

Just moments later dozens of teens stormed inside, stealing some items and destroying the store.

Owner Yanki Klein told the Jewish Press that the teens regularly steal from his store and yell heil Hitler. And witnesses say the damage wasnt limited to the store.

The mob also broke into two school buses and vandalized several cars.

Klein says he has made repeated requests to have a police officer placed on the corner, but says those requests have gone unanswered.

Borough President Eric Adams blames the violence on a lack of resources for teens in the community.

So far police have not made any arrests stemming from this incident.

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Dozens of teens trash Crown Heights store

'Point 'em out, knock 'em out' game played in Kroger attack

MEMPHIS, TN (WMC) -

According to a witness, point 'em out, knock 'em out is the so-called "game" behind the infamous Kroger parking lot attack. WMC Action News 5 found another teen who's participated in the past.

"I'm not even going to lie, yeah, when I was younger," said the 11th grader, who we agreed not to identify.

She said that "point 'em out, knock 'em out" is exactly what it sounds like.

"When you're with a group of people, you point somebody out, and then somebody runs and punches them until they fall," said the teen.

It's apparently what prompted the violent September attack outside the Poplar Plaza Kroger during which several innocent bystanders were injured. Nineteen-year-old Raheem Richardson is among a number of suspects.

A 17-year-old witness testified during Richardson's preliminary hearing Monday that someone yelled "point 'em out, knock 'em out" before the teen mob's relentlessly, unrestrained actions that night.

"It's going to provoke somebody to hurt someone's child," said one victim of a similar, yet unrelated, attack following a football game at Crump Stadium.

Memphis police say they are aware of "point 'em out, knock 'em out," and the so-called "knockout game," which has been blamed for fatal attacks on unsuspecting victims elsewhere. It's something that finally gives pause to the one-time teen participant we interviewed.

"Grow up," she said when asked about her advice to other teens who may want to play the game.

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'Point 'em out, knock 'em out' game played in Kroger attack