Jashy

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Jashy

Jashy

@jhadas

#fttb #HookEm #DubNation #BLM #UnionStrong

NYC Katılım Aralık 2010
1K Takip Edilen165 Takipçiler
Zach Dimmitt
Zach Dimmitt@ZachDimmitt7·
A few notes on new Texas LB Darius Snow - entering his 7th season of college football - Frisco TX native - played DB his first two years at MSU - his father, Eric Snow, played in the NBA for 13 years and was teammates with Raja Bell, father of Dia Bell (shoutout @chrisgb002000)
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@LanceZierlein This is why the conversation about Arch Manning to the draft last year was so comical. The Manning family knows the data. Two years of college starting experience is a minimum at QB.
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Lance Zierlein
Lance Zierlein@LanceZierlein·
Here is a list of QBs with one-year of starting experienced drafted inside the top 100 since 1999: Mark Sanchez Mitchell Trubisky Ryan Tannehill Kyler Murray Dwayne Haskins Trey Lance Mac Jones Davis Mills Anthony Richardson Akili Smith --------- Aaron Rodgers/Cam Newon started in JUCO. Count them if you want.
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@Graham_SFN @CoachLup Very very hard to win at Cal but this guy definitely gives them a shot
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@Robert_E_Kelly Can we all just pretend he won? Make him a fake newspaper like zohran did.
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James Trotter
James Trotter@JamesTr39114525·
@Janetakins13 @WolfofX Jesus Christ is the ultimate scientist and the great physician. He gives all other scientists and physicians their abilities. I'm thankful for doctors and scientists, but I'm even more thankful to God who enables them to do their work.
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Wolf of X
Wolf of X@WolfofX·
Beautiful moment when, 2-yr-old Nicolly, who was blind since birth, sees for the first time..
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Maria Martin
Maria Martin@Ria_Martin·
Full expanded quote from Tua Tagovailoa on him being vocal last year on what was happening w/#Dolphins "Yeah I don't want to get too much in depth with things that were going on. More so in terms of players to coaches than it was players to players, but it was unique in a sense. It was unique." Q: "Unique in what way?" Tua answer: "In a lot of ways." #Falcons
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@EvanVieth 98 is wild for Manny. Would be a bargain.
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Evan Vieth
Evan Vieth@EvanVieth·
As Texas Pro Day continues, just a reminder on the consensus draft stock of Texas' top prospects: LB Anthony Hill: No. 47 overall, LB4 CB Malik Muhammad: No. 98 overall, CB15 TE Jack Endries: No. 142 overall, TE8 S Michael Taaffe: No. 164 overall, S13 ED Trey Moore: No. 205 overall, ED24 OG DJ Cambpell: No. 207 overall, IOL20 CB Jaylon Guilbeau: No. 299 overall, CB35 ED Ethan Burke: No. 333 overall, ED35 DL Cole Brevard, No. 406 overall, DL38 A 2nd rounder, a 3rd rounder, two 5th rounders, two 6th rounders and three UDFA options. I'd wager guys like Endries, Campbell, Burke and Brevard go higher than this, at a bare minimum. Numbers via @_mockdrafts
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@CJVogel_OTF I think he's got to be done with football. Which sucks but the smart move is to focus on the safer sport. And he is an elite talent with a real shot at MLB and even all star level play some day.
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CJ Vogel
CJ Vogel@CJVogel_OTF·
Jonah Williams’ last four semesters of athletics have been shortened due to injury. • Senior Football 2024 - collarbone • Freshman Baseball 2025 - hamstring • Freshman Football 2025 - hamstring • Sophomore Baseball 2026 - shoulder Williams is an elite prospect in both sports, but it’s probably time to pick one. Before four years pass and we’ve see him full time in neither.
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Al Sacco
Al Sacco@AlSacco49·
#49ers have had a good offseason to this point as far as improving the team for 2026, but there’s still a glaring need at edge. Whether that’s Joey Bosa or someone else, they have to bring in a vet and use a high draft pick there.
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@miles_commodore Yeah the first $30 million (for a couple) isn't taxed. Cry me a river.
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Miles Commodore
Miles Commodore@miles_commodore·
Taxing someone’s inheritance is morally wrong. The amount is irrelevant.
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@IAmSagzee @shanaka86 To sum: The world’s most expensive hammer has been asked to thread a needle.
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Sagzee
Sagzee@IAmSagzee·
👇📌TLDR: For those short on time: * The US Navy refused all daily requests to escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. * High risk of Iranian attack makes military escorts through the 33-kilometer strait unsafe. * Combined allied naval firepower exceeds the military capacity of most nations on Earth. * Naval assets like supercarriers and Aegis cruisers cannot detect or stop maritime mines. * One escort failure would cause a strategic humiliation and an insurance catastrophe. * The Strait of Hormuz remains functionally closed despite the presence of three carrier strike groups. * The Iranian Mosaic Doctrine creates a threat environment where escort costs exceed naval capabilities.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
JUST IN: The most powerful navy in human history just admitted it cannot safely escort a single oil tanker through a 33-kilometre strait. Reuters reported on 10 March that the US Navy has refused near-daily requests from the oil and shipping industries for military escorts through the Strait of Hormuz since Operation Epic Fury began on 28 February, citing the risk of Iranian attack as too high. Not once. Not occasionally. Near-daily. Every day for eleven days, the shipping industry has asked the US Navy for help, and every day the answer has been no. Consider what is deployed in the region. The USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group operates in the Arabian Sea. The USS Gerald R. Ford is in the Red Sea. The USS George H.W. Bush is en route or preparing for deployment. Three nuclear-powered supercarriers, each displacing 100,000 tons, carrying 75 aircraft, escorted by Aegis cruisers and guided-missile destroyers with the most advanced radar and missile defence systems ever built. France deployed the Charles de Gaulle carrier group to the Eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea. Britain sent HMS Dragon, a Type 45 air-defence destroyer, to defend RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus. Combined allied naval firepower in theatre exceeds the total military capacity of most nations on Earth. None of it can get a tanker through Hormuz. The strait is 33 kilometres wide at its narrowest point. Navigable shipping lanes compress to approximately 3 kilometres in each direction. Through this corridor, 138 tankers per day transited before the war. The corridor is now defended by 31 autonomous IRGC provincial commands with independent firing authority, pre-delegated orders from a dead Supreme Leader, coastal anti-ship cruise missiles, kamikaze drones, fast-attack boats, and a mine stockpile of 2,000 to 6,000 weapons, of which a few dozen are confirmed in the water with 80 to 90% of delivery platforms intact. The US Navy’s refusal is not cowardice. It is arithmetic. A carrier strike group is designed for blue-water power projection, not littoral escort through a corridor where a $500 contact mine can cripple a $4 billion destroyer. An Aegis cruiser’s radar can track hundreds of targets at 400 kilometres but cannot detect a mine sitting three metres below the surface. An F-35 can deliver precision strikes at Mach 1.6 but cannot sweep a shipping lane. The assets are wrong for the mission. The world’s most expensive hammer has been asked to thread a needle. Trump told CBS escorts would begin “as soon as possible” and “when reasonable.” His Energy Secretary posted that an escorted transit had already occurred, then deleted it when the White House confirmed none had. Iran’s Parliament Speaker mocked the claim as PlayStation. The IEA proposed the largest reserve release in history because the strait the Navy cannot escort through remains functionally closed. Ghalibaf was not wrong. The escorts do not exist. Not because America lacks the will. Because the Mosaic Doctrine created a threat environment where the cost of escort failure exceeds the cost of escort refusal. One mine striking one escorted tanker would produce a casualty event, an insurance catastrophe, and a strategic humiliation that three carrier strike groups cannot absorb. The Navy is not refusing to help. It is refusing to lose. Seven hundred tankers wait. Three carriers watch. And the 33-kilometre corridor between them remains the most expensive gap in the world. Full analysis here. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

The USS Gerald R. Ford is not parked near Iran. It is parked off Israel. And nobody is asking the only question that matters: why. The $13.3 billion crown jewel of the US Navy, the largest warship ever constructed, just positioned itself off Haifa. Not in the Arabian Sea where the Lincoln sits 850 kilometers from Iranian shores loaded for offensive operations. Not in the Gulf where strike range is optimal. Off Israel. Defending Israel. This is not redundancy. This is architecture. Two carriers. Two missions. Two entirely different strategic functions. The Lincoln is the sword, positioned to launch strike packages into Iranian airspace within hours of an order. The Ford is the shield, its Aegis missile defense systems creating an umbrella over Israeli population centers against the retaliation that follows the first Tomahawk. America just split its carrier doctrine into offense and defense simultaneously. That has not happened since the Pacific theater in 1945. But the positioning reveals something deeper than tactics. When Iran retaliates, and every wargame says Iran retaliates, its missiles and drones fly toward Israel. They will fly through the same airspace where a US carrier strike group is now stationed. Every Iranian missile aimed at Tel Aviv or Haifa must traverse the Ford’s defensive envelope. Shooting at Israel means shooting at, around, and through an American carrier group. Iran cannot retaliate against Israel without engaging American naval assets. The Ford’s position makes that physically impossible. The carrier is not defending Israel as a favor. It is positioned so that any Iranian response to American strikes automatically becomes an attack on American forces, triggering the full unrestrained weight of US military response without a single additional political decision required. This is escalation insurance written in steel and seawater. If the campaign goes longer than planned, if munitions run thin in 7 to 10 days, if allies hesitate, the Ford’s position ensures that Iranian retaliation does the political work Washington cannot do alone: it transforms a limited American strike into an act of self-defense that no ally can refuse to support. You do not park a $13.3 billion carrier where the enemy’s return fire will hit it unless you want the enemy’s return fire to hit it. The Ford is not there to prevent escalation. The Ford is there to guarantee that if escalation comes, it comes on terms that make American restraint politically impossible and allied participation politically unavoidable.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Jim Tomsula's Ghost
Jim Tomsula's Ghost@tomjimsula49·
The reason the Niners keep botching drafts is multivariate, but the diagnosis isn’t complicated: 1. Start with Occam’s Razor: John Lynch isn’t a strong talent evaluator. He’s a polished spokesman for the franchise, but he entered the job with zero scouting experience and got the role because Kyle liked and trusted him him; he's mostly Kyle's "Yes!" man. That deficit really shows. 2. The scouts who actually drove the team’s early drafting success have been poached. The group responsible for the run that produced Kittle, Warner, Deebo, etc. has been picked apart by other organizations. These people at least produced manicured lists of talent coaches could then pick from. That creates a real void inside the personnel department. Combine that with Lynch’s limitations and you end up with an organization that lacks strong, credible voices in the personnel room. Contrast this with elite front offices like those led by John Schneider or Howie, where the GM clearly owns personnel decisions. There’s no endless “consensus-building.” The reason Lynch talks so much about the Niners’ "process" is precisely because there isn’t a single authoritative voice they trust to identify talent. Which all leads to the single, most important issue with the Niners drafting which is... 3. Kyle and the coaching staff are driving the draft. When coaches control talent evaluation, priorities inevitably shift. Coaches draft for immediate need over best player available, and scheme fit over raw upside, because they’re trying to solve this year’s roster problems; not project who becomes a star 2-3 years from now. That’s why the Niners’ board is often wildly out of step with league consensus. It isn’t built by scouts projecting long-term potential; it’s built by coaches imagining who can execute their system tomorrow. The result is a steady stream of baffling picks. It's how you get Jake Moody and Cam Latu in the 3rd round. Net net: the Niners lack a strong GM and credible personnel voices capable of pushing back on the coaching staff who, historically, are terrible at projecting talent across the league. The vacuum gets filled with “consensus processes,” which is precisely the wrong approach in a business where identifying outlier talent requires both outlier talent with deep conviction. @JedYork, I hope you're taking notes.
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Grant Cohn
Grant Cohn@grantcohn·
The 49ers’ first-round picks under Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch. 1. Solomon Thomas — reach, not on the team. 2. Reuben Foster — reach, out of the league. 3. Mike McGlinchey — reach, not on the team. 4. Nick Bosa — good pick, injured. 5. Javon Kinlaw — reach, not on the team. 6. Brandon Aiyuk — good pick, refuses to speak to the organization. 7. Trey Lance — reach, not on the team. 8. Ricky Pearsall — reach. 9. Mykel Williams — reach, injured.
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@orangebloods_ @AnwarRichardson I'd be surprised if he's faster than wingo. He wasn't in high school. Way better with ball tracking, deep balls, and contested catching though. 🤘
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Orangebloods.com
Orangebloods.com@orangebloods_·
Update: New Texas WR Cam Coleman continues to impress during winter workouts for the Longhorns "This week, I was told Coleman has been “killing it” in winter workouts. One attribute that continues to stand out is his speed." - @AnwarRichardson "We knew he had some speed, but the film doesn’t do him justice. This guy can absolutely fly. It’s ridiculous how fast he is. He adds a speed dimension to the receivers room that we didn’t have last year.” - A Source Told @AnwarRichardson More Strong Reviews of @CamColeman12: forums.orangebloods.com/index.php?thre…
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@CodyCarpentier Hills numbers are 1st round worthy. Styles' numbers are INSANE
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ᴄᴏᴅʏ ᴄᴀʀᴘᴇɴᴛɪᴇʀ
Anthony Hill Jr. 238 lbs 4.51o - 1.58split 37" vj 10' 5" bj Sonny Styles 244 lbs 4.46o - 1.56split 43.5" vj 11' 2" bj
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John Turntine JR
John Turntine JR@JohnTurntine·
My son @TurntineJohn been at UT for a month and two weeks. He is stacking days and learning the college system on and off the field. I’m so proud of him. Keep stacking days and believing in yourself. Stay strong and tune into GODplans for you. #TINE @NorthCro_FB
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William Turton
William Turton@WilliamTurton·
A source sent me this video of FBI Director Kash Patel partying with the US Men's Olympic Hockey team.
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Jashy
Jashy@jhadas·
@ScottHech Civil Judgements haven't appeared on credit reports since 2018.
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Scott Hechinger
Scott Hechinger@ScottHech·
One of most sinister things I saw as a public defender in Brooklyn: Any conviction- felony, misdemeanor, violation-has a mandatory fee, which nearly no one can afford. Options: pay full, ask for time to, get arrested for failure to, or be punished w/ bad credit for 7 years.
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