- Early career production - Dynamic threat downfield & after the catch - Elite speed & start-stop ability - Fluid mover w/ good route running chops - Ball tracking is A+
Not entirely sure why the vibe isn't higher when talking about him in the WR class. pic.twitter.com/dv3JjdyZgh
I'll write something fresh about Worthy tomorrow morning now that he's a Chief to lay out how he's more than speed, but for now here's an excerpt from article linked in the below tweet... https://t.co/EcW7QtUrFFpic.twitter.com/811ahCEfMS
Originally Posted by Kiimo:
And you sound like an idiot.
OK. You just sound like some entitled white girl. When I took my kids on public transport and a bum brought his ****ed pit on board (unleashed) I positioned them behind a crowd of fufu white women with starbucks cups. They thought that street pitt was adorable. That's what you remind me of. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
How do people even get their vehicle stolen? I don't even know how you would steal my car. It wouldn't drive. I don't know how it would even be possible. And then I would get an immediate notification to my app.
A couple things -
Your key fob is constantly sending out a signal, looking for the car. That signal can be boosted with a simple machine bought on the internet. It then clones that signal and can send it back out (without the key). It's like a wifi booster.
Additionally, there are even more sophisticated machines that don't need the key fob nearby to clone the signal.
Kia and Hyundai use a particular key fob technology that is easy to clone. there are youtube videos on how to do it. There's a reason Kia and Hyundai have six vehicles on the top 10 most stolen list. [Reply]
Originally Posted by saphojunkie:
A couple things -
Your key fob is constantly sending out a signal, looking for the car. That signal can be boosted with a simple machine bought on the internet. It then clones that signal and can send it back out (without the key). It's like a wifi booster.
Additionally, there are even more sophisticated machines that don't need the key fob nearby to clone the signal.
Kia and Hyundai use a particular key fob technology that is easy to clone. there are youtube videos on how to do it. There's a reason Kia and Hyundai have six vehicles on the top 10 most stolen list.
Originally Posted by Titty Meat:
It was a scat pack they steal them all the time
I'm going from 1-10 on a scoring curve: green hoodie guy gets a -1 for not wearing sunglasses so a 9. The guy looking in window that didn't look right at the camera for a full mug shot when someone said something along the lines of "holy shit, there's a camera" recieves a 6 and the two other numb nuts fail and have to go to summer school.Zero point zero Mr. Blutoski. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
How do people even get their vehicle stolen? I don't even know how you would steal my car. It wouldn't drive. I don't know how it would even be possible. And then I would get an immediate notification to my app.
Pretty much any car can be stolen. Immobilizer or not. Don't fool yourself. If it ain't in the garage, it's possible. Even "The Club" devices can be removed in little time if you know how. [Reply]
Originally Posted by xztop123:
I think a lot of guys lose their speed once they make it to pro ball. Cushy nice mansions and luxurious life combined with aging.
Running hill sprints like Jerry rice is not fun. It’s particularly brutal compared to just regular weight lifting and practicing football.
Luckily Xavier’s gf is also a track star. So it’s likely they’ll push each other to perform and stay fast.