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2025-01-25
j&t express sm megamall
j&t express sm megamall ATLANTA (AP) — Even the woeful NFC South, where no team has a winning record, can't hide the Atlanta Falcons' offensive shortcomings. Three straight setbacks, including an ugly 17-13 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers, has left the Falcons 6-6 and feeling the pressure. Only a tiebreaker advantage over Tampa Bay has kept the Falcons atop the division. Now the Falcons must prepare to visit streaking Minnesota, which has won five straight . Veteran defensive tackle Grady Jarrett knows the Falcons must solve the flaws which have been exposed in the losing streak. “It’s now or never,” Jarrett said. “You have to flip the mindset fast.” Kirk Cousins threw four interceptions in the loss, matching his career high. Coach Raheem Morris said he didn't consider playing rookie Michael Penix Jr. against the Chargers and won't think about benching Cousins this week. Morris acknowledged the Falcons can't expect to win when turning the ball over four times. It was the latest example of Atlanta's offensive decline. In the three-game losing streak, Cousins has thrown six interceptions with no touchdowns. The Falcons were held under 20 points in each loss. What’s working If not for the rash of interceptions which has contributed to the scoring problems, more attention would be devoted to the surge of big plays on defense. The defense forced two fumbles and set a season high with five sacks, including two by Arnold Ebiketie. The Falcons ranked last in the league with only 10 sacks before finding success with their pass rush against Justin Herbert. Herbert was forced to hold the ball while looking for an open receiver, so some credit for the pass-rush success belongs to Atlanta's secondary. The Falcons gave up only two first downs in the second half and 187 yards for the game. What needs help Cousins, 36, was expected to be the reliable leader on offense after he signed a four-year, $180 million contract. The four interceptions were his most since 2014 with Washington. Cousins now will be in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons as he returns to Minnesota, his NFL home from 2018-23. Cousins has thrown 13 interceptions, one shy of his career high set in 2022. His passer rating of 90.8 is his lowest since his 86.4 mark as a part-time starter in 2014 with Washington. “Certainly when you haven’t played at the standard you want to a few weeks in a row, you know, you do want to change that, turn it around,” Cousins said. Stock up Running back Bijan Robinson had his busiest day of the season, perhaps in an attempt to take heat off Cousins. Robinson's 26 carries set a career high. He ran for 102 yards with a touchdown, his third 100-yard game of the season. He also was heavily involved as a receiver with six catches for 33 yards. With 135 yards from scrimmage, Robinson has eight games this season with more than 100 yards combined as a rusher and receiver, the second-most in the league. Stock down Tight end Kyle Pitts had no catches on only two targets. He has only six catches in the last four games after appearing to establish momentum for a big season with two seven-catch games in a span of three weeks in October. Morris noted the Falcons have “so many people that we've got to get the ball to” but noted he'd like to see Pitts more involved. Injuries Younghoe Koo's hip issues were such a concern that kicker Riley Patterson was signed to the practice squad on Friday and added to the active roster Saturday. Patterson was on the inactive list as Koo was good on two of three field goals, missing from 35 yards. Koo has made 21 of 29 attempts this season. He did not have more than five misses in any of his first five seasons with Atlanta. Key number 70 — WR Drake London had nine receptions for 86 yards, giving him 70 catches for the season. London, a 2022 first-round draft pick, is the first player in team history with at least 65 receptions in each of his first three seasons. While Ray-Ray McCloud III led the team with a career-best 95 yards on four catches against the Chargers and Darnell Mooney has had some big games, London has been the most consistent receiver. Next steps The Falcons face a difficult test Sunday in their visit to Minnesota (10-2), which has five straight wins and is 5-1 at home. AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nflEven by the standards of a litigious business, Drake’s recent legal actions against Universal Music Group and other companies look like odd filings. On Nov. 25, Drake filed an action accusing UMG and Spotify of acting to “artificially inflate” the popularity of Kendrick Lamar ’s “Not Like Us”; the next day, he made a similar filing against UMG and iHeartRadio , alleging that UMG’s release of the song could also constitute defamation. The basic idea seems to be that “Not Like Us,” Lamar’s diss track against Drake, became so successful because it was rigged. “UMG did not rely on chance, or even ordinary business practices,” Drake’s lawyers wrote in the first filing. “It instead launched a campaign to manipulate and saturate the streaming services and airwaves.” The filings accuse UMG and its partners of acting in ways that are fraudulent, including using “bots” and payola, but little proof is provided — a “whistleblower,” an “inside source known to petitioner” and an assertion that Drake “learned of at least one UMG employee making payments to an independent radio promoter” who had agreed to pay stations. (The company has said in a statement to Billboard that “the suggestion that UMG would do anything to undermine any of its artists is offensive and untrue.”) These filings aren’t lawsuits, but rather legal attempts to get information that might provide the basis for them. And since Lamar’s success doesn’t really come at the expense of Drake’s — at least any more than any artist becomes popular at the expense of any other — it’s hard not to wonder if Drake is just upset that, with “Not Like Us,” Lamar seems to have won the long-running feud between them. That’s a long story — well-summarized here — but Drake and Lamar basically traded diss tracks for hip-hop fans until Lamar’s scathing “Not Like Us” topped the Billboard Hot 100. Drake is essentially claiming that UMG — for which both rappers record under different labels — cheated on Lamar’s behalf. It was rigged. Quick: What other famous person does this remind you of? Hints: When he wins, he revels in his success; when he loses, he blames it on unfairness and litigates. Yes, I’m going there: Drake has become Trumpian . Before Team Drizzy throws bottles of Virginia Black Whiskey by Drake, Drake is a skilled rapper, a compelling performer, and a fantastic Drake — it’s hard to compare him to other artists, both because he doesn’t fit neatly into a genre and because his greatest talent is being Drake. (Drake the artist seems to be an exaggerated version of Drake the person, with the soap operatic conflict amped up and the more mundane parts edited out.) Both Drake and Trump thrive on success and fandom — their fans root for them because they win and they win because their fans root for them. (Trump the politician seems to be an exaggerated version of Trump the person, with the cultural conflict amped up and the boring parts edited out.) Neither gets a ton of respect from critics, but they are both popular beyond belief, and they love to win and then show off that they did. Drake’s feud with Lamar became so compelling because each was a champion in his own way — Drake the unmatched entertainer, Lamar the iconic old-school lyricist. By scoring a No. 1 single with a diss track, an unusual achievement, Lamar essentially beat Drake at his own game. Is this why Drake is filing legal actions? Most people file litigation for financial restitution, to get an injunction to stop something, or to win negotiating leverage. In this case, the first would be hard to calculate, the second involves practices that would be hard to prove and the third seems unlikely — why would Drake want out of the UMG deal he signed in 2021 , which includes publishing and merchandise rights and was described as “Lebron sized.” The only thing we know about Drake’s motive is that his second filing says he “brings this action for a discrete and specific purpose: to understand whether, and how, UMG funneled payments to iHeartRadio and its radio stations as part of a pay-to-play scheme.” Perhaps, like Trump, he simply can’t imagine the possibility that he would lose a fair fight. Does Drake have a case? If UMG really had the power to make any song a hit, wouldn’t it do so more frequently? If anyone thinks Drake hasn’t received enough marketing or promotion — and I have yet to meet such a person — it’s worth considering that some Spotify subscribers found the service’s promotion of Scorpion so extensive that they asked for a refund . This, too, has political echoes: If U.S. elections are as unfair as Trump claims, how can he trust the one in November? Like Trump, Drake loves the one-upmanship drama of competition — but only, apparently, when he wins. Trump ran several campaigns based partly on the politics of insult comedy — his dog-whistle racism was obviously far worse — but he doesn’t like to be on the receiving end of it. (The kind of thin skin that would be a personal fault in most is terrifying in the U.S. president.) If rappers could pursue defamation claims for diss tracks, much less against the labels that release them, hip-hop never would have made it out of the Bronx. Lamar called Drake a certified pedophile, which is an ugly accusation, and a pun on Drake’s Certified Lover Boy , but not an actual thing; the reason Drake looks bad isn’t because people believe it but because “Not Like Us” is catchier and wittier than his own diss tracks. Drake certainly has the right to ask about music promotion practices — even in a legal filing. If no evidence of this emerges, though, he will need to seek satisfaction the old-fashioned way — by releasing a more compelling single.Mexican authorities find 11 clandestine graves with 15 bodies near border with Guatemala

Letter: Religion column not a place for diatribe

New coach Chris Holtmann has been tasked with rebuilding DePaul to the point where it can return to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2004. Northern Illinois coach Rashon Burno knows what it takes to steer DePaul to the NCAAs because he was the starting point guard on the 2000 team that made the tournament -- the Blue Demons' only other NCAA appearance since 1992. Perhaps they can compare notes Saturday afternoon when Burno leads the Huskies (2-3) back to his alma mater as DePaul (5-0) hosts its sixth straight home game in Chicago. Last season, Burno's NIU squad helped accelerate DePaul's need for a new coach -- as the Huskies waltzed into Wintrust Arena and owned Tony Stubblefield's Blue Demons by an 89-79 score on Nov. 25. The Huskies built a 24-point second-half lead before coasting to the finish line. Can history repeat for NIU? There's just one problem with using last year's game as a potential barometer for Saturday's rematch: Almost no players on this year's teams were part of last year's squads. At DePaul, only assistant coach Paris Parham remains as Holtmann had the green light to bring in an all-new roster. UIC graduate transfer Isaiah Rivera (16.0 ppg, .485 3-point rate) and Coastal Carolina transfer Jacob Meyer (15.4 ppg, .406 on 3s) lead a balanced attack that focuses on getting half its shots from beyond the arc. At NIU, Burno retained only two players who competed against DePaul last year -- Ethan Butler and Oluwasegun Durosinmi -- and they combined for three points in 26 minutes in that game. The Huskies' main players used the transfer portal to join such programs as Kansas, Wisconsin, Penn State, Colorado State, James Madison, Georgia State and Niagara. With every starting job open, Butler has jumped into the lineup and produced 11.6 points, 4.8 rebounds, 1.8 blocks and 1.4 steals per game. Transfers Quentin Jones (Cal Poly) and James Dent (Western Illinois) pace the Huskies with 14.4 and 14.0 points per game. NIU is on a two-game losing streak, most recently a 75-48 home defeat at the hands of Elon on Wednesday. Holtmann hopes to have Arkansas transfer Layden Blocker for Saturday's game. Blocker missed Tuesday's 78-69 win over Eastern Illinois with a quad injury. With the combo guard unavailable, point guard Conor Enright handed out a career-high 11 assists in a season-high 38 minutes. "We need (Blocker)," Holtmann said. "I don't want to play Conor 38 minutes." --Field Level MediaWelcome to Thanksgiving with the Bells. One thing is for sure, when this family gets together, there is a much fun to be had: relay races, talent contests, and basketball – always basketball. And on Thanksgiving, there used to be an annual Turkey Bowl touch football game – but that got kind of out of hand. A little too competitive. Christian Bell probably put it best when summing up what it means to be a part of the Bell family. “Absolutely the standards were high for all the Bells,” said Christian, who was a star defensive tackle, a soccer goalie and a track athlete during his Highland High School days. “I can’t think of a branch of our family that has a low standard as far as athletics. If you’re not very good, you better be comfortable being uncomfortable until you’re good.” Starting with Veryl and Beulah Bell and their six Baby Boomer generation kids up through today, there probably has not been any family that has had more impact on athletics in southeastern Idaho than the Bells. Nothing better illustrates the ubiquity of the Bells than a recent typical weekend in the life of Troy and Jamie Bell. It started with their daughter-in-law Marci’s Idaho State volleyball game at Reed Gym. That was followed by watching their daughter Tambree’s Boise State soccer game on video, followed by daughter Devree’s soccer game at Highland High School. The weekend came to an appropriate conclusion at ISU’s ICCU Dome for son Jayden’s Bengal football game. “I said this is kind of like a life that doesn’t exist,” said Troy, who, along with his wife, are both former ISU and Highland star athletes themselves. “All these kids playing sports. How did we get here?” It is a fair question to ask of all the Bells, their progeny and the in-laws who have married into the athletic dynasty. Because of both the sheer number of outstanding athletes in the Bell family, and the magnitude of their achievements, it’s nearly impossible to accurately quantify their impact. But with the help of Robyn Bell, Troy’s mother, we can give it a shot, with apologies to any of the Bells we are leaving out. The Bell dominion all starts at Highland High School, where Veryl and Beulah’s kids went to school in the 1960s. There the boys first came under the influence of Jim Koetter, the aspiring young coach who may have been the only person in Pocatello more competitive than the Bell boys. By Robyn Bell’s count, there have been 30 Bells or progeny who have participated in athletics at Highland, beginning with twin brothers Ned and Ted in 1966. Of those 30, 11 Bells or progeny have earned the Highland All-Around Athlete Award, including Ted and his brothers Leonard and David. Nine went on to compete in athletics at Idaho State. And nine won at least one – and in some cases multiple – state championships as Rams. Swing across town and Leonard’s four children all competed at Pocatello High School, winning state titles of their own. And there have been Bells achieving athletic success in Boise and Northern Utah as the family has expanded as well. Veryl and Beulah ran a tight ship, Veryl operating a trucking company and, later, an ice cream store, and Beulah was in charge of an A&W Restaurant the Bells purchased out on Highway 30 west of Pocatello. Veryl was a good athlete and very competitive in his own right, and he engaged his kids in various games at neighbor Wally Kelly’s house on the corner, or he’d rent the gym at Almeda Junior High School for pickup basketball on Tuesday and Thursday evenings with his peers that the kids would attend. “He was just as much into athletics as we were,” Ted said of his father. “That’s why we loved it, I guess.” While all Veryl and Beulah’s kids were competitive, none were more so than their twins, Ted and Ned. “It was a blessing and a curse,” said Ted, who was born a few minutes before Ned. “We were so competitive, because Ned and I were twins and everything we did was a competition. We had to win. We both got so competitive, it wasn’t just between each other. Any sport we played, if we didn’t win, it was like the world ended. I mean, we were over the top. I’m still today overly-competitive.” Ted met Robyn in high school, and they were married after he returned from an LDS mission to Scotland. She gave birth to Travis, their oldest child, ten months later, and thus began a steady procession of future Bell athletes. Robyn recalls standing in center field while playing for the Bells A&W softball team and pronouncing the contractions were two minutes apart and the softball game best come to a conclusion soon. Travis said those early A&W Root Beer softball games were the beginning of his introduction to the world of competitive athletics, Bell style. “Watching my dad and my uncles play fastpitch – and watching my dad play racquetball,” said Travis of when he first realized the Bell family was different. “I was probably 3, 4, 5 years old, watching them all compete in fastpitch... Watching my dad play racquetball on weekends in big tournaments and come home with a black eye and broken teeth, from diving. Just watching them compete at all levels.” As the family expanded and the children grew, the Bell family home became the center for every kind of contest you can imagine. “We were very competitive,” said Travis. “We were wrestling. My dad would carpet the wall halfway up – he was a carpet installer, and we’d be pitching the ball against the wall. We had no idea we were busting the sheet rock. Dad would take us out in the cul de sac and we would play catch. We’d play home run derby, wiffle ball, football. I don’t know how many couches we broke playing football. Troy being the youngest, we’d give him the ball and tackle him.” Travis came of age first and his reckoning came when he moved up to varsity to wrestle in the state tournament as a ninth-grader. “My very first match was against Poky,” Travis said. “I was wrestling against a senior, and back then the Poky-Highland match was a huge deal. I was a 98-pounder and I was sent out there and I think I pinned him. I finished third in the state – it taught me what you had to do to get there.” Travis followed that up with three state wrestling championships. He also played on Highland’s 1987 state championship football team, then placed in the national junior college wrestling tournament at Ricks College for two years. He coached wrestling at Highland for many years, and now is the assistant principal and athletic director at Highland. Then came Shane, who won state wrestling titles as a sophomore and a senior, and played on that 1987 state title football team. Followed by Trevor, who was a three-time second-place finisher in wrestling at state, was a late bloomer physically, returned from his mission and became an all-American safety at Idaho State, an ISU Hall of Famer and he is still the all-time interception leader at ISU. The last boy in the group was Troy, who eschewed the family wrestling legacy after going undefeated during his junior wrestling career. He simply set the record for most rushing yards in a state championship game in football, and played on Highland’s boys’ basketball state title team. “Ever since I was a young man, I noticed and recognized with my dad, all my aunts and my uncles, and even my grandfather and my grandmother that winning and excelling was very, very important,” said Troy, now the co-owner of TanaBell Health Services. “I’m named after my grandfather Veryl, he was a military, Air Force guy, he was an entrepreneur and he was extremely competitive. And I could see in both my dad and my uncles that competition was something they thrived on. They loved it. It was just a part of the family mentality to compete and to strive to excel and to push yourself to the limits that some other people may not be willing to push to.” Ted Bell’s sister Janet was an outstanding runner, but back in her days there weren’t varsity sports for girls in high school. Female athletes had to satisfy themselves with club competition. But Ted and Robyn’s girls got the opportunity to compete in high school that their mother and aunt were denied. The Bells had three girls, Mandy, Heidi and Camie, and they spent a lot of their early years following their brothers around southern Idaho watching them compete in baseball, wrestling and football. They were excellent cheerleaders, proud of their brothers. But they had their own competitive drive. “I did dance and cheer, all the sports – basketball, softball, track,” said Heidi Bringhurst, the middle daughter of Ted and Robyn. “It was just instilled in us from the time we were little. We were always going to games.” When it was time for the girls to compete, though, the Bells were there for their daughters as well. “My mom and dad were really good examples,” said Heidi. “Like my senior year I was cut from the volleyball team. To play from the time I was in seventh grade clear up to my senior year to get cut was really hard. My parents were adamant about just pushing through those hard times. My basketball season was a little rough and I had some senior girls quit. I chose to keep going. I think they just taught me to always work hard, they instilled that work ethic in me and all my siblings, and to just not quit when things get hard.” Heidi still holds several weight-lifting records at Highland. Her daughter Lauryn is similarly built, competes in basketball and track, and was invited to a combine in Salt Lake City to train for the skeleton bobsled U.S. Olympic team. She was the youngest competitor there, and finished in the top three in every testing category. Meanwhile Mandy, Heidi’s older sister, was a sprint star at Highland, running on three state championship relay teams for her Uncle Ned’s Ram track teams. “None of our boys had speed like Mandy,” said Robyn. “She had her dad’s speed.” “When she was a senior, she said, ‘Dad, I can outrun you,’” said Ted. “I just started laughing. I said, ‘Mandy, don’t even go there.’ We went out in the street, somebody said go, we ran down the street, we had 100 yards marked off, and she beat me by about five yards.” Ned Bell was not a great athlete – after graduating from Highland, he walked on to the ISU football team, where his biggest claim to fame was being “salt” to Bengal all-American wide receiver Eddie “The Flea” Bell’s “pepper.” But Ned, who was a middle-distance runner in his track days, found his niche in coaching sprinters. First at Pocatello High School, then at ISU, and finally back at Highland, Bell developed a reputation as one of the finest sprint coaches in the state. “I read a ton, I really did,” said Ned, who led Highland to three state titles, Pocatello one as head track coach. “One of the things I did, one reason I had so much success with sprinters, with just in my own mind, I thought, ‘we ought to work out one day a week running nothing but hills.’ I mean steep. We did that every Wednesday, and I think the kids ate it up. Going up hill, then when you finally run on the flat, you’re just so much faster.” Ned joined ISU head track Coach Jerry Quiller’s staff in the 1980s. He coached numerous Big Sky championship indoor and outdoor relay teams, as well as 400 and 500-meter champions. Twice, he coached four-by-four relay teams that qualified for nationals. After leaving ISU, Ned returned to high school coaching at Highland, where he built a power house. “I spent some time with Ned at Highland and he did a phenomenal job of preparation,” said Brent Koetter, who coached Wade Bell at Pocatello and Troy Bell at Highland in football. “His preparation in track was meticulous. Their work ethic was unbelievable, the attention to detail – they just did things right.” Ned and his wife Michele Pond-Bell had only one future athlete to lend to the Rams’ cause – Christian. He was an excellent defensive tackle during his days with the Rams, and was recruited to play football at Idaho State. But a funny thing happened on the way to the locker-room: Christian fell in love with a local girl who was part of the cheerleading squad at ISU and he was recruited to the squad as well. “He showed me the mark on his arm, and I said, ‘What’s that?’ ” Michele said. “He said, ‘I tried out for cheerleader today and I made it.’ And I said, ‘You tell your dad.’” “That year and a half I cheered at ISU was pretty intense,” Christian said. “I got in the best shape of my life, we ran and lifted, it kept us in great shape.” And the Bell drive continues in Christian’s family, where he’s raising his four children to appreciate the joy of competition. “In my house, we hate losing more than we love winning,” Christian said. “My kids take sports more seriously than most 9- and 6-year-olds. They care when they lose, they care when they win.” In case you hadn’t noticed by now, if you are a Bell, you are expected to compete at Highland High School. “We moved twice in our life just to be in the Highland area,” said Christian. “If you’re a Bell, you’re a Highland family... My mom went to Poky. Whenever we played Pocatello, my mom would say, ‘A little part of me will cheer for them.’ How dare you!” But things didn’t work out quite out that way for Leonard Bell’s kids. “Growing up, I planned on going to Highland,” said Wade, the oldest of Leonard’s four children who all competed at Pocatello High School. “The summer before high school started, my family ran into some financial situations and I was living in the Pocatello boundary. At first it was a shock, all my friends were at Highland. I was kind of bummed for that. But it ended up being really good for me. I had great coaches, great friends and teammates, and we had a lot of success in all three sports.” Wade, now an insurance manager in northern Utah, played football and baseball and wrestled at Pocatello. His brothers Trent and David also played football and wrestled for what was then known as the Indians, and his sister Michelle participated in volleyball, basketball and softball. Despite their deep Highland roots, Wade said none of the Ram cousins ever gave him a hard time about being a West-Sider. “No, not to my face,” he said. “I think I felt a little awkward at first, but it is what it is. I tried to make the best of it. I know Highland and Poky are big rivals and sometimes it got a little heated. We both wanted to do well against each other. It wasn’t an ugly situation, it was friendly.” Ironically, both Jim and Brent Koetter were coaching at Pocatello High School at that time. Wade’s cousin Trevor, meanwhile, was competing for the Rams while Wade was wrestling and playing football for Pocatello. “I was very fortunate,” Wade noted, “during my time at Pocatello both my wrestling team and my football team won state my junior and senior years.” Probably Wade’s best sport was baseball, where he played third base and pitched. He played college baseball at Snow and Ricks Colleges, and was set to continue his career at Wyoming when that school shut down its baseball program. He and his wife have enjoyed watching their blended family compete in a similar rivalry involving the Ridgeline and Mountain Crest high schools in the Logan area. “I just enjoyed growing up with all the aunts and uncles and cousins,” said Wade. “When we got together it was a lot of fun, and we were able to build those memories and support each other in whatever we did. I wouldn’t change it.” Jayden Bell was the only boy in Troy and Jamie Bell’s family, and as the older brother, he felt the obligation to set the example for his three sisters. “I think my three sisters are some of the most competitive women I know,” said Bell, who is a starting safety on the Idaho State football team as a redshirt freshman. “They’re pretty feisty.” One of his sisters, Saydree, is a forward on the ISU soccer team, where she transferred after starting her collegiate career at Weber State. Sister Tambree is a freshman reserve on Boise State’s Mountain West Conference championship team. And youngest sister Devree is a standout on the Highland soccer team. As if that’s not enough competitive juice in Jayden’s family, he’s married to the former Marci Richins, an attacker on the Bengal volleyball team. “I met my wife my freshman year, two weeks after she got into volleyball, and we instantly clicked,” Jayden said. “I knew she was right for my family – she’s super competitive as well. I met her family, her five siblings are all just as competitive. I knew she was the one.” Like many of the Bell athletes, both Jayden and Saydree are having to overcome injuries to continue their athletic careers. After returning from his LDS mission and joining the ISU football program as a true freshman, Jayden suffered a rare eye infection that caused him to sit out most of the season. Then, after a successful summer with new coach Cody Hawkins, he incurred a Lis Franc injury, a very complex foot injury that almost ended his career. He eventually underwent surgery that involved the injection of bone marrow from his back into his foot, which has healed enough to allow him to be one the leading tacklers on the ISU football team this fall. Meanwhile Saydree was the second-leading scorer on the ISU soccer team after her transfer for the 2023 season, but she has suffered an avulsion fracture and a hernia and was forced to sit out much of the 2024 season. “I’ve been experiencing this pain and I tried to push through it,” said Saydree. “That is one of my downfalls, pushing through injuries... I don’t know when to lay off the gas. When I’m hurt, I need to step back.” One of the challenges that comes with competing at high levels, like the Bells have, is the threat of injury. Ted Bell has had three knee replacements and multiple broken legs. Trevor lost part of a kidney as a senior at Highland, but still returned to play the final four games of his high school career. Troy had a bad ankle and didn’t practice the week before the state championship game his senior year – then carried 52 times for 278 yards. “They are a super family,” said Brent Koetter, “Just hard workers, great attitude.” “The bottom line in all of this,” said Ted Bell, “is that because they played sports, they’ve learned how to win and they’ve learned how to lose, and they’re going out in life now and they’re winning. All of them.”Nancy Pelosi was a leading figure in the ouster of Joe Biden from the US Presidential election race, according to reports, and has been blamed by many for the loss of Kamala Harris against Republican Party's Donald Trump . Meanwhile, if all of this was not enough, she is now planning a major cleanup drive within the Democratic Party bracket, and is initially targeting the top member of her party on the Judiciary Committee , Jerry Nadler, according to a Daily Beast report. Is Pelosi restructuring within her own party? The US Presidential elections 2024 race is now finally over and it is Donald Trump, who will become the President next, but Pelosi is still adamant in leading the political charge, and this time, within her own party. Meanwhile, reports suggest that her efforts are more like a move to bring in young guns into the Democratic fold, rather than aged politicians, who do not have the standing or strength to go after Donald Trump and other hotshot Republicans in the upcoming administration. Why is Pelosi bringing in fresh-blood Democrats into the fold? Trump will be adapting a combative approach towards law and order, and he has made that very clear since day one of winning the US Presidential elections. He has also appointed a federal department to look into excess government expenses, and if all of these are needed to be countered in the House or the Senate, it will need fierce Democrats, which Pelosi is claiming to be her motive for her latest political moves, if reports are to be believed. FAQs: Is Donald Trump the winner of the US elections? Yes, Donald Trump emerged as the winner of the US Presidential elections 2024, after beating Kamala Harris convincingly on November 5. Is Nancy Pelosi working against her own party? Nancy Pelosi appears to be restructuring within her own party, as a bid to bring in fierce Democrats to counter Trump and his upcoming administration. 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