Thursday, November 3, 2016

Zombies, Hollywood invade Mexico"s Day of the Dead


Day Of The Dead (1985) George A Romero

MEXICO CITY - Hollywood movies, zombie shows, Halloween and even politics are fast changing Mexicos Day of the Dead celebrations, which traditionally consisted of quiet family gatherings at the graves of their departed loved ones bringing them music, drink and conversation.

Mexicos capital held its first Day of the Dead parade Saturday, complete with floats, giant skeleton marionettes and more than 1,000 actors, dancers and acrobats in costumes.

Tens of thousands turned out to watch the procession, which included routines like a phalanx of Aztec warriors with large headdresses doing tricks on rollerblade skates.

It would be hard to conserve these traditions without any changes, said Juan Robles, a 32-year-old carpenter who led the skating Aztecs. This way, people can come and participate, the young and old.

Such a spectacle has never been a part of traditional Day of the Dead celebrations.

The idea for the parade was born out of the imagination of a scriptwriter for last years James Bond movie Spectre. In the film, whose opening scenes were shot in Mexico City, Bond chases a villain through crowds of revelers in what resembled a parade of people in skeleton outfits and floats.

Its a bit of a feedback loop: Just as Hollywood dreamed up a Mexican spectacle to open the film, once millions had seen the movie, Mexico had to dream up a celebration to match it.

When this movie hit the big screen and was seen by millions and millions of people in 67 countries, that started to create expectations that we would have something, said Lourdes Berho, CEO of the governments Mexico Tourism Board. We knew that this was going to generate a desire on the part of people here, among Mexicans and among tourists, to come and participate in a celebration, a big parade.

Mexico City authorities even promised that some of the props used in the movie would appear in the parade. The government board sponsoring the march called it part of a new, multi-faceted campaign to bring tourists to Mexico during the annual Day of the Dead holiday.

Women with faces painted to look like the popular Mexican figure called Catrina are seen in Zapopan, Mexico, on October 30, 2014.

REUTERS

Add to this the increasing popularity of Zombie Walks around the Day of the Dead, and the scads of Halloween witches, ghouls, ghosts and cobweb decorations sold in Mexico City street markets, and some see a fundamental change in the traditional Mexican holiday.

Johanna Angel, an arts and communication professor at Mexicos IberoAmerican University, said the influences flow both north and south. She noted U.S. Halloween celebrations now include more Mexican-inspired candy skull costumes and people dressed up as Catrinas, modeled on a satirical 19th century Mexican engraving of a skeleton in a fancy dress and a big hat.

I think there has been a change, influenced by Hollywood, Angel said. The foreign imports are what most influence the ways we celebrate the Day of the Dead here.

Traditionally, on the Nov. 1-2 holiday, Mexicans set up altars with photographs of the dead and plates of their favorite foods in their homes. They gather at their loved ones gravesides to drink, sing and talk to the dead.

In some towns, families leave a trail of orange marigold petals in a path to their doorway so the spirits of the dead can find their way home. Some light bonfires for the same purpose, sitting around the fire and warming themselves with cups of boiled-fruit punch to ward off the autumn chill.

These days, many cities set up huge, flower-strewn altars to the dead and hold public events like parades, mass bicycle events and fashion shows in which people dress up in Catrina disguises.

Some say the changes dont conflict with the roots of the holiday, which they say will continue.

Samuel Soriano, a 35-year-old insurance executive, decorates his Mexico City home Halloween-style (think giant spider webs and inflatable tombstones) and each year hands out candy to about 100 trick-or-treaters. But in his dining room, he has a more traditional Dia de los Muertos shrine with portraits of departed loved ones, candles, decorative skulls and marigolds.

We decorate for the sheer pleasure of it, and to see the smiles on childrens faces, Soriano said. We also celebrate Day of the Dead ... Theres no reason to see it as a contradiction.

People dressed as zombies participate in a Zombie Walk procession in Mexico City, Mexico, October 22, 2016, a week ahead of the countrys Day of the Dead celebrations.

REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

On a recent Zombie Walk, in which hundreds paraded through Mexico City in corpse disguises one week before the Day of the Dead, most participants said it was just good, clean fun.

We are not fighting against our cultural traditions, Jesus Rodriguez, one of the organizers, said as he waved a fake plastic arm he was gnawing on. On the contrary, if you take off the zombie*s flesh, there are skeletons, there are Catrinas.

Yet Mexicos traditional view of the dead was never ghoulish or frightful. The dead were seen as the dear departed, people who remained close even after death. Could the outside influences threaten that?

I dont think that will change, Angel said. I think Mexico maintains the sense of remembering the dead with closeness, not fright.

Indeed, Mexicans still enjoy the graveside celebrations. Some cemeteries grow so packed and rowdy that authorities have been forced to ban alcohol sales at nearby stores.

And Mexicans have changed the holiday themselves, without outside influences, making it a time to express social protest and social causes.

Many have erected public shrines for the nearly 30,000 disappeared in Mexicos drug war. In downtown Mexico City in recent years, prostitutes have put on skull masks and erected a shrine to murdered prostitutes.

Day of the Dead - itself an amalgam of Spanish and pre-Hispanic beliefs - seems likely to survive, despite the rapid changes, in a festival-loving country that has long managed to successfully absorb many outside influences.

Any opportunity for a festival is welcome, Angel noted, and with any influences from at home or abroad, and in all possible combinations.

As the arm-gnawing zombie Rodriguez put it, We love these days, Day of the Dead, Halloween, and Zombies, that is the reason why this crowd is here year after year.

Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/zombies-hollywood-mexico-day-of-the-dead/

Continue Reading ..

Jeff Jacobs: Ray Allen"s Silky-Smooth Jump Shot? Absolutely Beautiful


ESPN First Take - Ray Allen Announces His Retirement From The NBA

I had to get there. I just had to get there.

The UConn women had ended Tennessee"s NCAA record 69-game home winning streak on a Saturday in early January 1996, and now I was stranded in Knoxville. A blizzard had crushed the Northeast coast with more than 2 feet of snow and a flight home was not to be found.

Bradley? Logan? Nothing. LaGuardia, Kennedy, Newark? Not a chance. No flights early Sunday. No flights late Sunday. The UConn men were scheduled to play Villanova on Monday night at Gampel Pavilion in one of the most anticipated matchups of the college season. Ray Allen was going against Kerry Kittles. I just had to be there.

On Monday, Scott Gray and Meghan Pattyson, who had broadcast the game, and I finally finagled a flight to Albany. The snow wasn"t as bad farther north and inland. We rented a car at the airport to get back as quick as we could. The closer we drew to Connecticut the higher the snowbanks grew and somewhere amid those snowbanks in the Berkshires we found out the game had been postponed 24 hours.

I would get to Gampel after all. A few years later, Ray Allen, who officially retired from basketball Tuesday at age 41 with an inspired letter to his 13-year-old self, would take on the nickname of the character he played in Spike Lee"s 1998 movie. Allen wasn"t Jesus Shuttlesworth of "He Got Game" yet, but there was a growing, almost mystical draw to this military man"s kid out of South Carolina.

That jump shot, man, it was beautiful. That jump shot was a magnet, a magnet great enough to first draw fans from all over Connecticut and eventually great enough draw the awe of the basketball world.

Allen"s 2,973 regular-season three-pointers stand as the most in NBA history. The three-pointer he so dramatically hit to force overtime in Game 6 of the NBA Finals and preserve the path to the Miami Heat"s 2013 title will go down in history as his grandest.

Among the appropriate tributes Tuesday from Jim Calhoun, Geno Auriemma, Kevin Ollie and NBA commissioner Adam Silver, Stephen Curry, one of two or three others who could challenge for such a lofty title, called Allen, "The greatest shooter to play the game."

This is Rembrandt talking about Michelangelo, folks.

Yet the greatest shooter to play the game missed his first three shots against Villanova that night in 1996. Calhoun took him out for a minute, reminding him he couldn"t win the game in the first 30 seconds. Allen had spent the previous day watching the snow fall outside his apartment window and watching a VCR tape of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. He was over-revved. When he re-entered the game, he was spectacular. He hit nine of the next 10 shots. He hit four threes in a row. My jaw dropped again and again and again. Allen was unstoppable in scoring 22 points in the final 16 minutes of the first half.

There may have been better halves by a UConn player over the decades, but only Caron Butler"s second half in the NCAA Elite Eight against Maryland in 2002 comes to mind. After UConn had beaten Villanova, Calhoun called Allen the best player in the country. He called Allen the best player he had ever coached.

There were times when I wrote something that demonstrated basketball acumen short of, oh, James Naismith, that Calhoun was known to refer to me as "a hockey guy." He was right. I had covered the NHL for two decades before becoming The Courant"s sports columnist late in 1995. I had fallen away from the game, missed important chunks of basketball while chasing pucks in Winnipeg and Quebec.

Yet growing up in Rhode Island, dating from the 1960s, there also was no bigger college basketball fan. I"d score every Providence College game off the radio. For years from Lenny Wilkens to Ernie D. and Marvin Barnes, I followed PC religiously. Later at college, I carried my love of the sport to covering Missouri during a period when the Tigers advanced to the Elite Eight. Heck, even had a girlfriend dump me for one of the starters.

Jimmy Walker was my guy, my idol. The top pick of the 1967 NBA draft, ahead of other legendary guards like Earl Monroe and Walt Frazier, he was the only New England college player ever to go No. 1.

Jimmy Walker made me love the game as a kid. Ray Allen made me fall in love with the game again as a man. He turned me from a hockey guy into a basketball guy. That night against Villanova, the love was sealed.

Precious few things in life are perfect.

Ray Allen"s jump shot was one of them.

In 2011, when Allen was about to break Reggie Miller"s record for NBA three-pointers, I asked Kemba Walker what he saw in Allen"s jumper.

"What do I see?" said Walker, who has gone from UConn to become one of the NBA"s top guards. "He don"t miss. That"s what I see."

I love that answer.

Over the years, I asked Calhoun, Howie Dickenman, Tom Moore, Scott Burrell and a few others about Allen"s shot. They talk about how he was able to quickly find his balance. How he keeps his shot pocket so tight. How he is so shot-ready with his body square to the hoop. How he has such great legs that help him elevate effortlessly. How, as a high school player his shot had too flat of a trajectory, but his mechanics from his toes to his fingertips had become flawless.

You listened and you felt like you were standing at a museum with them as they were dissecting the nuances of a great portrait hanging on the wall.

Yet each of them would always return to the process that so relentlessly drove Allen. Compulsion for perfection. Pursuit of perfection. Chase of perfection. Obsession for perfection. Those were the words they used and it always ended with perfection. From his summer training, to shooting at specific spots on the floor, to the pregame nap, to the pregame meal of chicken and white rice, to shaving his head, the relentless routine, the inexorable drive to leave nothing to chance.

He may have been Jesus Shuttlesworth, but the jealous ones who viewed him only as the lucky recipient of G*d-given talent did not please him.

"An insult," Allen told Jackie McMullen, then of the Boston Globe, in 2008 when he helped lead the Celtics to the NBA championship. "G*d could care less whether I can shoot a jump shot."

Auriemma, whose 11 NCAA national championships are more than any coach in the men"s or women"s game, says he brings up Allen to his players. His message is nobody worked harder at practice. Nobody got up more shots when no one else was around. In his retirement letter to himself in The Players" Tribune, Allen repeated that G*d will give you a lot in life but he won"t give you your jump shot.

"The secret is there is no secret," Allen wrote.

Twenty years have passed since Ray Allen made me fall in love with college basketball again. I have passed on that love. I have a son who plays at prep school and will play small college basketball. He needed only two words to describe Ray Allen: "Great man." I need only two words to send him a reminder to work hard, to shoot more, to prepare endlessly.

Ray Allen.

As a dad, I can use no more powerful words.

That"s why I hoped that after sitting out since 2014, Allen would come back to play a final season. Burrell, as close to Allen as anybody, was convinced he"d still light it up. If he had signed with one of the contenders, nobody"s going to convince me Ray Allen, at 41, wouldn"t have hit the three to win the 2017 NBA Finals.

He wasn"t Jesus. He was the most-prepared man in the room. That was enough for miracles to happen.

Source: http://www.courant.com/sports/uconn-mens-basketball/hc-jacobs-column-ray-allen-1103-20161102-story.html

Continue Reading ..

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Bad news for Chiefs: Lingering knee issues will sideline Jamaal Charles vs. Indianapolis Colts


Jamaal Charles - The Comeback ᴴᴰ

Just two weeks after logging a season-high in touches and snaps, Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles will miss Sundays game against the Indianapolis Colts because of lingering problems in his surgically repaired right knee.

The knee, it was up and down, Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. Well just back him off here and see if we cant get that thing to settle down.

Charles, 29, logged a single touch and two snaps in Sundays win over the New Orleans Saints. The reduced workload came after he recorded 11 touches in 15 snaps in the Chiefs 26-10 win over Oakland on Oct. 16, his second game of the season. He also played briefly at Pittsburgh.

On Monday, Reid said Charles drop in snaps against the Saints had more to do with his injury hes still working his way back to normal after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament last October than the effectiveness of his 24-year-old replacement, Spencer Ware, who is enjoying a very strong season.

Reid added that Charles knee acted up during last weekends game, and the Chiefs want to handle that accordingly.

Yeah, you have to be smart with it, Reid said. He might take a step back and come forward with something better. Thats what you try to do. Were never going to put him out there if its not right. Thats just not going to happen. It doesnt matter who the player is thats how we roll.

Ware has logged 95 carries for 492 yards an average of 5.2 yards per carry and two touchdowns. He has also emerged as a factor in the passing game, catching 15 passes for 285 yards and a touchdown.

Charles absence Sunday means the only other healthy tailback, aside from Ware, on the Chiefs 53-man roster will be Charcandrick West, who battled ankle and elbow problems earlier this season. West was actually the Chiefs leading rusher last year, with 634 yards and four touchdowns in 160 carries, though Ware boasted a superior yards-per-carry average (5.6 to Wests 4.0).

The Chiefs have the option of calling up one of their two running backs from the practice squad, as Darrin Reaves, 23, impressed during the preseason, while the club signed 23-year old rookie Zac Brooks, a former seventh-round pick of the Seattle Seahawks, on Thursday.

On Friday, Reid said thats unlikely to happen.

We wont do that, Reid said. Were alright with it. Some of the young guys can play there.

Reid is referring to the Chiefs pair of smallish but dynamic skill-position threats: fifth-round rookie Tyreek Hill and three-year veteran DeAnthony Thomas.

Hill, who is listed at 5 feet, 10 inches and 185 pounds, has logged five carries for 17 yards this season. Most of those carries have come on jet sweeps, but he occasionally lines up at running back, a position he played some in college.

Thomas, a fourth-round pick in 2014 who sat out the first four games of this season, has seen his workload increase the last two weeks, when he has logged a total of 23 offensive snaps. He hasnt recorded a carry this season, but the 5-foot-9, 176-pound Thomas has rushed 23 times for 147 yards a sterling average of 6.4 yards per carry over the course of his career.

Yeah, Im playing everywhere thats what I do, said Thomas. Ive been doing it all my life. I dont even have a certain position I play. I could play wherever they need me to go.

Thomas added that people neednt worry about his size, or Hills, for that matter. They may be small for running backs, but they can do the job.

Size doesnt matter at all, Thomas said. The game matters, knowing whats going on. Making people miss.

Source: http://www.kansascity.com/sports/nfl/kansas-city-chiefs/article111105227.html

Continue Reading ..

FBI releases documents on probe of Marc Rich pardon


The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich

The FBI has released 129 pages of documents from a decade-old investigation into the Clinton Foundation and Bill Clinton"s 11th-hour pardon of financier Marc Rich.

"This initial release consists of material from the FBI"s files related to the William J. Clinton Foundation, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization," the FBI wrote on its website Tuesday.

"The bulk of these records come from a 2001 FBI investigation into the pardon of Marc Rich (1934-2013) ... by President Clinton in 2001; it was closed in 2005," the bureau said.

Rich and his ex-wife were generous donors to the Clintons and gave heavily to the construction of Clinton"s presidential library in Arkansas.

Stay abreast of the latest developments from nation"s capital and beyond with curated News Alerts from the Washington Examiner news desk and delivered to your inbox.

Sorry, there was a problem processing your email signup. Please try again later.

Processing...

Thank you for signing up for Washington Examiner News Alerts. You should receive your first alert soon!

It was not immediately clear what prompted the FBI to publish the files Tuesday. However, the bureau posted the documents on the section of its website dedicated to records released through the Freedom of Information Act.

According to the files, Eric Holder, then a former deputy attorney general, was "the only person at DOJ notified of the pardon sought by Rich." Clinton did not follow the proper procedures when pardoning Rich on the final day of his presidency.

The FBI"s public corruptions unit handled the case, which ultimately yielded no criminal charges for anyone involved.

James Comey, then a U.S. attorney, reportedly took over the investigation from Mary Jo White. Comey was critical of Holder"s involvement in the pardoning controversy, which he called a "huge misjudgement" on the part of Holder.

Rich and his business partner, Pincus Green, had fled to Switzerland in 1983 after he was indicted on multiple counts that included wire fraud and racketeering. Some of Rich"s charges stemmed from his decision in 1980 to pursue business in Iran despite restrictions on doing so that were related to the hostage crisis in Tehran.

Also from the Washington Examiner

The suit is aimed at shutting down a network of major national debt collectors it described as illegal and abusive.

11/02/16 1:17 PM

Clinton"s decision to pardon both Rich and Green sparked a firestorm at the time given the donations Rich"s family had made to Democratic causes, including $450,000 to the Clinton library, and the fact that Rich had hired Jack Quinn, Clinton"s former White House counsel, to represent him.

Brian Fallon, a Clinton campaign spokesman, quickly lashed out at the FBI for releasing the mostly-redacted files from the Rich pardon probe.

The Clinton campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the release.

Also from the Washington Examiner

Emails made public earlier by WikiLeaks indicated Peter Kadzik and John Podesta have a close relationship.

11/02/16 1:07 PM

Top Story

Media reports were much more focused on how the announcement might change the outcome of the election.

11/02/16 12:01 AM

Source: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/article/2606187%23!

Continue Reading ..

Dos hombres amenazan con matar a un beb� durante un robo en Miami [+Video]


Desfile de dia de muertos EN CDMX. Asi lo vivimos

La polica busca a dos sujetos que asaltaron una tienda en Miami a punta de pistola y en el acto,amenazaron con matar a un beb.

El robo fue reportado el martes a la 1 pm en la tienda Christiana Grocery, localizada en 4322 NW Second Ave.

Segn Local 10, los hombres armados esperaron a la encargada para comprar una bolsa de papas fritas, pero cuando sta les fue a entregar la mercanca, uno de los sujetos sac un arma y apunt a la mujer y a su hijo.

La polica dijo que el hombre amenazaba con disparar al beb si la mujer no obedeca las instrucciones.

Cualquiera con informacin con relacin a este caso, puede comunicarse con el Miami-Dade Crime Stoppers al nmero 305-471-TIPS.

Le presentamos un video publicado en miami.cbslocal.com.

Quizs le pueda interesar:

Trump promete mano dura contra la inmigracin irregular durante acto en Florida

Trump recibe duras crticas por los episodios violentos de su campaa

Nio palestino muere en Gaza en bombardeo israel tras lanzamiento cohetes

Source: http://www.miamidiario.com/sucesos/miami/florida/dos-hombres-/locales/sucesos/robo/armado/sucesos-locales/amenazan-con-matar-un-bebe/tienda-en-miami/christiana-grocery/356002

Continue Reading ..

Addison Russell: From Cubs afterthought to October legend


Addison Russell"s World Series Grand Slam | 2016 World Series | November 1, 2016

CLEVELAND On this ultra-talented Cubs team, he can be an afterthought.

If the Cubs finish off the Indians in Wednesday nights World Series Game 7, though? Addison Russell will receive the promotion of a lifetime:

From afterthought to October legend.

Everyone ready? This heavily hyped Fall Classic officially has reached its high bar, courtesy of the Cubs 9-3 thrashing of the Indians in Tuesday nights Game 6 at Progressive Field. The Cubs have won two straight to tie this at 3-3, and theyre looking to become the first team to successfully climb out of a 3-1 hole and win the last two games on the road since the 1979 Pirates accomplished that feat against the Orioles.

Russell, whose offensive production has swayed to and fro in this postseason, put together the night of a lifetime with some help from the Indians defense, to be fair. His six RBIs tied the Yankees Hideki Matsui (2009) and Bobby Richardson (1960) and the Cardinals Albert Pujols (2011) for the World Series one-game record, and he hit the first Fall Classic grand slam since the White Soxs Paul Konerko did so in 2005.

This is just me figuring it out right now, Russell said of his RBI record. Thats pretty cool, you know? Tomorrow there is obviously an opportunity to break that record.

If you were to lay odds on who in this Cubs lineup would put together such a night, be it in Game 6 or Game 7, Russell would be what? Your fifth choice, at best?

Yet that serves far more as a testament to the depth of this Cubs group than to any of Russells shortcomings. Remember the excitement surrounding Russell when the Cubs got him from Oakland in the July 2014 trade for pitchers Jason Hammel and Jeff Samardzija? Russell has done nothing since then to alleviate the excitement; to the contrary, he has produced two very good big league seasons out of the chute, playing strong defense at the hardest position and providing solid offense.

In those two years, however, Kris Bryant won the 2015 National League Rookie of Year award and is arguably the favorite for this years NL Most Valuable Player honor. Anthony Rizzo continued to produce at an MVP level. Kyle Schwarber became a folk hero thanks to his power and his perseverance. And highly respected veteran Ben Zobrist came aboard, too. Its easy to get lost in that crowd.

Maybe not to his teammates, though.

Just watching him, hes unbelievable, man, Bryant said. Hes 22 years old, Gold Glove, hitting homers in the World Series. Hes a pretty special player.

Russells historic night might never have been if not for a first-inning mishap in the Indians outfield. Center fielder Tyler Naquin and right fielder Lonnie Chisenhall couldnt collaborate on a very catchable flyball to right-center, and the ball fell in for a two-run double that extended the Cubs lead to 3-0.

They didnt put a glove on it, Russell noted. Therefore, it counts as a hit, which I was totally stoked. It pushed me for the next at-bat, as well.

In his next at-bat, with the bases jammed and Cleveland manager Terry Francona lifting starter Josh Tomlin for reliever Dan Otero, Russell connected on a 2-and-0 sinker, sending it 434 feet and over the center-field wall for his third homer of the postseason. He didnt just put the Cubs comfortably ahead, 7-0. He accomplished the rare feat of making a Francona move backfire.

They key to that at-bat was to not swing at the first two pitches, Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. Thats what weve been talking about the whole time. He was patient enough to get a pitch that he could work with.

When the Cubs flew from Chicago to Cleveland on Monday night, Russell celebrated his nerd holiday Halloween by dressing up as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle. On Tuesday, he provided more than enough heroics in his everyday costume.

This was not the work of an eternal afterthought. This was someone bound to break out, with exceptional timing.

Source: http://nypost.com/2016/11/02/addison-russell-from-cubs-afterthought-to-october-legend/

Continue Reading ..

Desperate Bills turn to Percy Harvin to fill void at receiver


Percy Harvin 2014 Highlights (Seahawks & Jets)

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -- It has been over a year since Percy Harvin participated in an NFL practice or played in a game, but the Buffalo Bills are hoping he can be a quick fix to a receiving corps that has been decimated by injuries this season.

Who"s out? Who"s good to go? Who"s questionable? We"ve got all the latest injury news from around the NFL. Injury Wire

The Bills have been without Sammy Watkins (foot) for the past six weeks, and he isn"t eligible to return from injured reserve until their Nov. 27 game against Jacksonville. No. 2 receiver Robert Woods has been dealing with a foot injury that kept him out of Buffalo"s Week 7 loss in Miami and limited him significantly in last Sunday"s blowout loss to New England. With depth options Greg Salas (injured reserve/groin), Marquise Goodwin (concussion) and Brandon Tate (concussion) also sidelined, the Bills needed help.

Enter Harvin, once a star talent who left a complicated legacy when he retired in April at 27.

The best-case scenario for the Bills is that Harvin is fresh after his time away from football, and he is able to use his knowledge of Greg Roman"s playbook -- the same terminology that Anthony Lynn has used since taking over as offensive coordinator in Week 3 -- to contribute immediately. In that case, Harvin would be among the Bills" top receiving options -- along with Woods, Justin Hunter and potentially Goodwin -- when Buffalo makes a cross-country trip to play Seattle next Monday night.

The more likely scenario, however, is that Harvin need time to get back into football shape. After playing in the first five games last season, Harvin"s body quickly broke down. A lingering knee injury and a hip injury that required an injection during training camp proved too much to overcome, and he was eventually placed on injured reserve. Both joints should be question marks as Harvin attempts to transition back into the rigors of an NFL schedule.

Given Harvin"s injury history and time away from the game, it"s easy to see this signing turning out to be a bust for Buffalo -- even though the Bills likely paid a small price to take a swing on him.

The signing indicates that the Bills won"t be active at Tuesday"s 4 p.m. trade deadline. Some fans have clamored for Chicago"s Alshon Jeffery or San Francisco"s Torrey Smith as potential targets, but neither seem realistic given the Bills" tightening cap situation this season and the long-term financial commitment either player would require. In an appearance on WGR 550 radio last week, Doug Whaley did not mention Jeffery by name but said acquiring a player with a $14 million cap hit would not be feasible; Jeffery"s cap number for the entire 2016 season is $14.599 million.

Instead of giving up draft assets, the Bills don"t have to relinquish any future selections to take a chance on Harvin.

Source: http://www.espn.com/blog/nflnation/post/_/id/219906/desperate-bills-turn-to-percy-harvin-to-fill-void-at-receiver

Continue Reading ..