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  • Leeds fan here. Just joined as I wanted to reach out today, the 40th anniversary of a dreadful day in football when 56 fans died at Valley Parade and this 15 year old lad died at St Andrews…

Houston Texans

Breaking news: After strong rookie year, Houston Texans cornerback Kamari Lassiter gives back to alma mater Georgia..

March 18, 2025 emmysport7@gmail.com 0

  After an impressive rookie season with the Houston Texans, cornerback Kamari Lassiter is making headlines for his generosity and commitment to his roots. The […]

News now: Kamari Lassiter Shines in Impressive Rookie Season with Houston Texans..

March 18, 2025 emmysport7@gmail.com 0

Kamari Lassiter, selected by the Houston Texans in the second round (42nd overall) of the 2024 NFL Draft, made an immediate impact in his rookie […]

News now: The Houston Texans are trading offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil to the Washington Commanders for a

March 18, 2025 emmysport7@gmail.com 0

The Houston Texans have traded five-time Pro Bowl left tackle Laremy Tunsil and a fourth-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft to the Washington Commanders. […]

Recent Posts

  • Class of 92 legends, Ronnie O’Sullivan and John Higgins both crash out the World Championship on the same night, as Stuart Bingham and Kyren Wilson advance to the Semi Finals.….
  • Alongside Leah Williamson, Chloe Kelly, and Keira Walsh, Ashleigh Plumptre represented England at the Women’s U17 Euros twelve years ago. On the same weekend that her former colleagues won the Euros, she lifted the WAFCON trophy with Nigeria.
  • ON THIS DAY IN METAL 🗓️ Mötley Crüe released their second studio album, Shout at the Devil. 👹 Their platinum-selling breakthrough was an all-out attack on America’s self-appointed moral majority. With its faux-Satanic imagery, a mischievous warning of “masked backwards messages” and a knowingly controversial cover of The Beatles’ Helter Skelter (a song inextricably linked to the 1969 Manson Family murders), Shout At The Devil was an affront to decency…..
  • Alex Higgins once said: “I played snooker the way I lived my life — fast, reckless, and without regret.” For some, those words sound like a confession. For others, they sound like freedom. Higgins was never the neat technician, never the polished gentleman of the green baize. He was fire in human form. He smoked between frames, argued with referees, lived as though tomorrow wasn’t promised — because for him, it never truly was. But here’s the lesson: greatness doesn’t always arrive dressed in discipline. Sometimes it bursts in like a storm, chaotic yet unforgettable. Higgins gave snooker something statistics can’t measure — raw emotion. He cried after victories, lashed out after defeats, and carried his demons into the spotlight. And in doing so, he made the game feel alive. He was adored because he wasn’t perfect. Because he reminded us that behind every cue and every pot is a human heart — fragile, flawed, and fighting to be seen. When Higgins left us in 2010, the world lost more than a champion. It lost a reminder that life is short, messy, and beautiful precisely because it refuses to be tidy.
  • Ronnie O’Sullivan once said: “The table is the only place I feel truly safe.” For a man who has won everything and faced unthinkable turmoil, this isn’t just a line—it’s a philosophy born from a life of chaos. For years, Ronnie battled the shadows: a father jailed for murder, a mother imprisoned for tax evasion, and his own demons of addiction and depression. In the midst of all this, the snooker table wasn’t just a playing surface. It was his sanctuary. It was where he found rhythm and control when the rest of his world was spinning out of control. He didn’t just play to win; he played for peace. The meticulous, almost meditative process of a break was his way of silencing the noise. The precise calculations, the gentle spin, the soft sound of a ball sinking—these were the small, perfect moments that grounded him. His greatest enemy wasn’t an opponent, but himself, and the table became the mirror where he confronted his fears and found his way back. Even as he became a superstar, the lesson remained: the true victory isn’t in the trophies or the headlines. It’s in the quiet discipline of facing yourself, shot by shot, frame by frame. When the world is watching, who are you? And when no one is watching, who do you become?

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