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Anatomy of a play: How the 49ers denied the Rams their favorite passing concept and generated sacks – Niners Nation

The 49ers finished the sweep of the Rams this season last Sunday largely on the back of their defense, who intercepted quarterback Jared Goff twice, including one pick-six to open the second half, recorded two sacks, and forced two fumbles, which the defense both recovered. It was the most complete defensive performance in a season full of injuries and uncertainty surrounding the teams fate as they enter the final quarter of the season.

While the pick-six and interceptions are noteworthy plays, todays Anatomy of a Play series is going to focus on how the 49ers shut down the Rams favorite passing concept: the weakside choice route to Cooper Kupp.

The Rams favorite passing concept to Cooper Kupp this season is a simple choice route. The choice route gives the receiver a 3-way go with the option to sit in the zone at a depth of six yards or cut across the field or cut to the outside in the flat depending on whether the defense plays man coverage and what leverage they have on the receiver. The most important aspect for the quarterback is being in sync with the receiver and seeing the same coverage post-snap as the receiver.

For the Rams, the choice route on a passing concept called choice stucko is the preferred call to Kupp in high leverage situations on 2nd or 3rd and short. The Rams have called the play for several big plays this season.

Choice stucko is a passing concept where the choice route is primarily run from the slot or from the outside receiver in a stack formation.

The receiver to the same side runs a comeback if the choice is in the slot and runs a corner route if the choice is the outside stack receiver. The choice is the first read, with the corner/comeback being the second read. The other side has a stick china route from the tight end, or slot and a widen scout route as the alert with the option of converting that into a go route. The stick china is the third read in the progression.

Cooper Kupp has had two big plays running the choice route on this play from both the slot and the outside number one in the stack.

In both plays in the clips above, Kupp cuts to the inside off defenders with outside leverage. In the clip against the Eagles, the corner is playing off slightly as Kupp takes an outside track at the defenders outside shoulder, getting him to widen. He slow rolls his release and cuts inside, where Goff finds him for a gain of 24 yards. In the clips against the Giants, The Giants send a snake blitz (slot corner blitz), so the safety rolls over to cover Kupp. He takes away the outside as Kupp widens him, but Kupp cuts inside, catches the pass, and sprints to the end zone for the touchdown.

In week six, in their first meeting, the 49ers denied the Rams opportunities to run this route effectively, and the Rams offense suffered; as a result, being forced into unwanted third-and-long situations or punts.

In week 12, the Rams tried throw to Kupp twice on the choice route on choice stucko, and both times Goff was sacked by Kerry Hyder because he held onto the ball too long after coming off his initial read. It helped that no one was open too, but Goff has enough veteran presence to know that he shouldve thrown the ball away.

1st sack, 2nd quarter 1:43, 1st and 10 at LAR 20

The Rams are running choice stucko this time with Kupp in the slot. But the Rams designed this with a wrinkle. The tight end Gerald Everett (No. 81) is flexed out wide left, making this the strong side of the formation.

The 49ers are playing cover-1 with a low hole dropper to the strong linebacker Dre Greenlaw (No. 57), with Jimmie Ward (No. 20) in the slot covering Kupp. The Rams figure it might be easier to complete the choice route over the middle with Greenlaw rather than Warner as the hole dropper.

Ward follows Kupp on the motion across before the snap. As Goff drops back and looks for Kupp running the choice from the slot, Greenlaw flies to the route as the low hole defender.

Goff has nowhere to throw as Kupp cuts inside so he scans his other progressions and takes a sack from Kerry Hyder.

2nd sack, 4th quarter 9:38, 3rd and 4 at LAR 36

The play call is the same except this time Kupp is the number one receiver in the stack to the left running the choice underneath Van Jefferson on the corner route.

This time the 49ers send Warner to the weak side because the tight end is over to the opposite of the stack bunch. Theyre still playing cover-1 with Warner as the low hole dropper.

Verrett is in coverage over Kupp to the outside this time, with Ward covering the tight end to the opposite side. Goff drops back and looks for Kupp, but Warner sinks under the route and takes away Goffs primary read. Goff has nowhere to go and Hyder cleans up with his second sack of the game.

The 49ers swept the Rams again this season, and 4-0 over the last two seasons with Kyle Shanahan improving to 5-3 over his former colleague Sean McVay. This time, the win came on the back of a superior defensive performance by Robert Saleh.

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Anatomy of a play: How the 49ers denied the Rams their favorite passing concept and generated sacks - Niners Nation

90 Day Fianc: The Anatomy of TVs Most Addictive Reality Show – Vanity Fair

The opening moments of 90 Day Fiancs eighth season, which premiered Sunday evening, are a brain-melting series of smash cuts, shock reveals, and, some might argue, assaults to more refined viewing senses. Audiences are introduced to Brandon, a 27-year-old farmer who lives with his parents and never really had a girlfriend growing up. After a few atmospheric cutaway shots showing Brandon tending to sheep in rural Virginia, Brandons unlikely love interest appears: Julia, a brunette go-go dancer from metropolitan Russia. After a slick montage of Julia sliding down a stripper pole, gyrating in a bra, and posing in a thong, Brandon solemnly explains, I fell in love immediately.

In a flashback, we learn that Brandon decided to propose to Julia after five months of dating and only one in-person meetingwhich, in the 90 Day-verse, feels like a reasonable courtship. And now that Julia has been granted her K-1 visa, the couple has 90 days, once Julia lands, to marry, or else Julia will have to return to Russia.

As if that time constraint is not intimidating enough, Julia will also have to acclimate to life on a farm in a foreign country with her fiancs controlling mother who, at the start of the episode, questions Julias motives, and by the end of the episode, will call a doctor to inquire about getting Julia on birth control. Brandon and Julia are just one of seven couples that the roller-coaster eighth season follows.

At a time when most television audiences have seemingly jumped the linear-programming ship in favor of the deep, bingeable-content seas of streaming services, 90 Day Fiancs numbers continue to grow. Since the series was introduced in 2014, TLC has spun the show off into over 10 franchise legsand in the process, has become the years leading cable channel for women, as well as the top television destination on Sunday and Monday nights for adults this summer. This year alone, according to TLC, viewers have consumed a staggering 73 billion minutes of 90 Day and its children. This week, the network announced its new streaming service, Discovery+, will contain four additional spin-offs and more than 200 total hours of bingeable 90 Day content when it debuts January 4the closest TLC can get to injecting its tried-and-true variety of vrit into viewers veins.

The genius of the series, created by Matt Sharp, is that beneath its slick editing are real-life couples who were already struggling to obtain K-1 visas when his production team found them. While reality series like The Bachelor or The Real Housewives ply their stars with wine and manipulate social setups to breed petty drama, 90 Days couples were living out their highest-stakes romantic lives before being cast on the show. By the time TLC turns on its cameras, the couples are usually emotionally drained by the parameters of their long-distance relationships, financially drained by expensive K-1 paperwork, and, in some cases, worn down by critical friends and family members. No priming for drama is necessary.

These people arent just doing this for a television show, Sharp told Vanity Fair. This is their life. They put it on the line for this other person, and this is very real to them.

This seasons returning cast member Tarik Meyers explained that, when he was first cast on the series with his partner Hazel Cagalitan, he had been through such a grueling gauntlet that he didnt have the energy to put on a show for the cameras.

When you have two different embassies breathing down your neck, basically going over your life with a fine-tooth comb, and then the camera crew gets there, its like, Oh, you again? said Meyers.

The 90 Day team said that primarily, theyre looking for cast members who can be totally transparent about their journey.

Were really looking for people to open up and be comfortable letting us in, said Sharp, explaining that his producers aim for each confessional-style interview to feel like youre sitting on the end of the bed with your best friend, and that best friend is really opening up and telling you what the deal is with their relationship.

Added TLC president Howard Lee, A really good cast member can articulate their thoughts powerfully, quickly, directlyand they wear their hearts on their sleeves. They do not hold back. They want to process everything thats on their mind.

Meyersa rapper and single father who describes himself as a cross between Carlton Banks from the Fresh Prince and Ice Cubesaid that he definitely fits that archetype.

With me, what you see is what you get, said Meyers. I just let people see it, good or bad.

Meyers said that he found the process of appearing on the show therapeutic. Until seeing the series, he didnt know of anyone else who flew overseas to date: I thought I was like a unicorn. When he heard about the series, he said, I was like, Really, theyve got a show about crazy people like me? Meyers laughed. I started watching it and I was like, WowI didnt know we had a home.

Brutal, unguarded honesty is critical to the messiness quotient of the series as well. Were not looking to tell a puppies and rainbows story, confirmed Sharp, and were not looking to tell something thats entirely negative. Were just looking to tell an honest story.

Interestingly enough, criminal backgrounds are not enough to disqualify a candidate, as long as that criminal background is neither violent nor boring. Many times we embrace that as part of our storytelling, said Sharp of the franchise, which has cast people charged with second-degree arson, theft and forgery, and felony possession of marijuana. We know everyone has a past, and not everyone is proud of everything theyve done in the past. Sometimes that enriches their story.

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90 Day Fianc: The Anatomy of TVs Most Addictive Reality Show - Vanity Fair

Anatomy of a vaccine: What it takes to create a safe, effective COVID shot – University of California

Shawn stepped into the UCLA Vine Street Clinic in Hollywood with confidence. He offered up his arm. The UCLA doctor injected him. It took seconds; there was barely a sting.

Twenty-four hours after the first of two shots, given 28 days apart, he suffered the headaches and fatigue associated with a milder case of COVID-19. But Shawn remained calm, resolved to honor the memory of his mother, a nurse who had died in May 2020 from an unrelated cause.

The 57-year-old nonprofit worker had been thinking about the challenges of COVID-19 for a long time, and he decided to go through the lengthy consent process for the medical trial. It gave me something to do with my anger that was so much better than yelling at someone for not wearing a mask, he says. And [at UCLA] I felt I was in good hands.

Shawn is one of many volunteers who have stepped up to participate in medical trials at UCLA, which is part of a global network thats determined to help find a vaccine against the novel coronavirus.

The stakes are huge. More than 250,000 Americans have already died, and there have been more than 1 million deaths around the world. Economies have been brought to their knees, social tensions have disrupted communities and emotional maladies are on the rise.

In response, doctors and scientists have been challenged to be resilient and ingenious. Theyre taking an array of different approaches, knowing that public confidence in vaccines hangs in the balance.

In addition, it has been a challenge to create a vaccine in such a short amount of time similar efforts have taken five to 10 years. Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and biotech firm Moderna have both reported remarkable progress, announcing in November that their vaccine candidates were more than 90% effective. All of which has raised questions about the next steps, such as how the vaccines will be distributed.

I dont want to make a vaccine to protect against mild disease, says Dr. Marcus Horwitz, distinguished professor of medicine and microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. I want to protect people who are going to get severe disease.

Horwitz has already developed vaccines against the bacteria behind tuberculosis, anthrax and the tick-borne disease tularemia, but he has never tried to create a vaccine against a virus. When faced with a worldwide pandemic, we thought we might be able to make a contribution, he says.

Vaccines work by training the immune system to recognize and fight disease-causing pathogens, such as viruses or bacteria. Doctors introduce the bodys immune system to antigens, which are molecules from the virus or bacteria, and the immune system responds by making proteins called antibodies and immunity-building T cells, which both neutralize the pathogen.

The delivery of these antigens requires a delicate calculus: It must provoke the immune system, but not go so far as to make the patient ill. You need a vector that will wake up the immune system of the host, but not cause any further harm, Horwitz says.

The vaccine approach by Horwitz and his team, including lead investigator Qingmei Jia, is a medical outlier: They adapted an existing antibacterial platform to build protection against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. The team has shown that their vaccine candidate protects hamsters, which develop severe disease in a way similar to humans.

Some of the potential vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 use a weakened form of an adenovirus, which causes the common cold, to deliver the S protein that is found on the surface of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Horwitzs vaccine stands out from the pack because it uses a weakened bacterium to deliver two SARS-CoV-2 proteins, the M and N proteins.

That difference could have a tremendous impact. Billions of COVID-19 vaccine doses are needed, and bacteria, unlike viruses, are easy and cheap to produce and transportable.

The success of a COVID-19 vaccine also depends on the immune system, which can be less robust in older people.

This is a problem that has driven Song Li, chair of the bioengineering department at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, who has focused his career on cell and tissue engineering. Adapting a concept from cancer immunotherapy, Li is developing a biomaterial vaccine booster using artificial cells that could improve the immune systems ability to generate long-term protection.

When the immune system encounters a destructive pathogen, it produces cells that are designed to attack the invader. A small number of those cells, called T memory stem cells, can stay in the system for years ready for a future invasion. Unfortunately, our ability to produce T memory stem cells declines as we get older. Li hopes his booster, in combination with a vaccine, can help fragile immune systems effectively fight against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

My goal at the outset was to help the elderly population, Li says. But it could be useful for any person whose immune system needs help generating protection from the virus.

Another UCLA team led by Bogdan Pasaniuc, Dr. Manish Butte and Dr. Daniel Geschwind, the Gordon and Virginia MacDonald Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics at the Geffen School of Medicine is trying to find out why the virus significantly impacts some, but leaves others relatively unscathed.

We know age is a major factor, but we see older people who get infected and do quite well, Geschwind says. We have a limited ability to predict how sick someone will get. His team hopes that studying whole-genome sequences from thousands of COVID-19 patients will reveal hidden factors that make some more vulnerable than others. The research could help identify people who are at higher risk for infection as well as develop new treatment and prevention strategies.

Dr. Brigitte Gomperts, professor of pediatrics and pulmonary medicine and a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center, is studying how COVID-19 affects lung tissue. By using stem cellderived clusters of lung cells, known as organoids, she can rapidly screen thousands of prospective treatments. Because the organoids are grown from human cells and reflect the cell types and architecture of the lungs, they can offer insights into how the virus infects and damages the organ.

At UCLA medical centers around Los Angeles County, physicians are ensuring that their medical trials include diverse groups of people and women of all ages.

COVID-19 has hit the African American and Latino communities particularly hard, says Dr. Jesse Clark, associate professor-in-residence in the department of medicine at the Geffen School of Medicine. We have to make sure that any vaccine has been determined to be safe and effective in all populations that will receive it.

COVID-19 has hit the African American and Latino communities particularly hard. We have to make sure that any vaccine has been determined to be safe and effective in all populations that will receive it.

Dr. Jesse Clark, associate professor-in-residence in the department of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA

Clark is medical director of the UCLA Vine Street Clinic, which is involved in the Moderna clinical trial. Notably, Modernas vaccine works differently from a typical vaccine, because it doesnt contain the virus at all. Instead, it uses messenger RNA, or mRNA, which uses the bodys genetic code to produce antibodies against the virus.

CNN mentioned that the vaccine trials were having trouble finding minorities to participate, says Roderick, a 37-year-old IT manager and father of two, who is participating in the Moderna trial. Being Black and Mexican, and knowing how hard my demographic has been hit, I just went ahead and signed up online. Its worth doing to help out.

Meanwhile, Dr. Katya Corado, an infectious disease specialist at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, has been enrolling patients in a phase 3 clinical trial of an adenovirus vector vaccine thats under development by the University of Oxford and the biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca.

All vaccines undergo three phases of clinical trials, according to rules set by the Food and Drug Administration. Phase 1, which involves 20 to 100 volunteers, tests the safety and dosage of the vaccine. Phase 2 tests the drugs efficacy and side effects among several hundred participants, and phase 3 gathers more information about a vaccines safety and effectiveness by studying thousands of volunteers.

In the phase 3 trial, we focus on studying how effective the vaccine is in populations that need it most, Corado says.

Clark and Corado are both hopeful that their work can protect the most vulnerable, which includes people over 65, patients with chronic conditions, those facing economic disadvantages and essential workers.

Inoculations have eradicated past epidemics, such as smallpox. But public faith in vaccines has wavered, especially when a now-disproven report in 1998 suggested that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine was linked to autism spectrum disorder. That has led to U.S. outbreaks of measles, which had been previously eliminated. So scientists recognize the importance of getting the COVID-19 vaccine right.

There are other factors to consider as well. Vaccine distribution will be high on the agenda of the incoming White House administration, but if supply is limited, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends prioritizing certain groups, such as medical workers.

Also, some vaccines currently in development need to be stored in ultra-cold conditions. For example, Pfizers vaccine must be stored at minus 70 degrees Celsius, while Modernas vaccine must be kept at minus 20 degrees Celsius the temperature of a regular freezer. These factors will affect how the vaccines are distributed.

Some lawmakers have advocated letting the virus run its course in the hopes of achieving herd immunity, which is when enough people have become immune to an infectious disease, either through being infected or vaccination. Since the COVID-19 vaccine is still pending, a majority of people will need to be infected in order to achieve herd immunity and that comes at a terrible cost.

According to Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, professor-in-residence of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, up to 2 million Americans would have to die before the country reached herd immunity.

He argues that vaccines work, even if they are not perfectly safe or perfectly effective, as proven by the near-eradication of polio. But approving vaccines prematurely to buckle under the pressure of politics or profit could cause a terrible backlash against being vaccinated, which could lead to future outbreaks.

We want to make sure we are not cutting corners, Kim-Farley says, that we are getting the best vaccine that has the highest efficacy, the longest duration, the fewest number of side effects [with] the fewest number of doses.

This is a very high-stakes game, and its important to get it right, without recalls or playing into the [anti-vaccination] narrative. What still concerns me is the equitable distribution of vaccines to make sure that countries that are not as wealthy as us have access to these life-saving vaccines. We are all members of one global community.

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Anatomy of a vaccine: What it takes to create a safe, effective COVID shot - University of California

Greys Anatomy: Another Beloved Character Returns – Deadline

SPOILER ALERT: The story includes a detail about the Dec. 3 episode of Greys Anatomy.

The promo for tonights fourth episode of this seasons ABC hit medical drama Greys Anatomy teased that another person returns from Merediths past.

As Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) continues to battle Covid-19, her dreams have been taking her to a beach where the love of her life, Derek (Patrick Dempsey), is waiting for her. Tonight, someone else Meredith was fond of who tragically died came back to see her. Leaning onto the railing of a lifeguard tower at the beach was George OMalley (T.R. Knight).

Both were surprised but happy to see each other.

It was the first of several dream meetings between Meredith and George, in which they strolled along the beach and his death and funeral.

Related Story'Grey's Anatomy' Shocker: Krista Vernoff, Ellen Pompeo & Patrick Dempsey On Season 17 Premiere's Dream Reunion & More

I was devastated when you died, Meredith said.

You were all cracking up at my funeral, George said in response.George spoke of what he misses about being alive (Dancing til you drop, laughing til you cry, food and textures, the crunch of cereal as you eat it out of the box, thefeel of clean sheets and good pillow at the end of a long day.)

Greys Anatomy And Its Latest Surprise Tops Thursday Ratings; Thursday Night Football On Sidelines

At their final conversation, Meredith told George how much he meant to her.

You changed my life George, she said in one of the episodes most emotional moments, which was soon followed by another, a reunion at the beach of four of Greys original characters, George (Knight), Meredith (Pompeo), Richard (James Pickens Jr.) and Bailey (Chandra Wilson).

Knights appearance is part of a beach motif throughout the pandemic-themed Season 17 of Greys Anatomy designed to bring joy to fans.

It kicked off in the season premiere with the jaw-dropping return of Greys original male lead Dempsey.

Asked after the opener what other beloved characters from Greys past may come back, series executive producer/showrunner Krista Vernoff said:You have to tune in and see who comes to the beach. Itll be a joyful discovery.

Both Dempsey and Knight were original Greys Anatomy cast members alongside Pompeo whose characters were fan favorites. Knight left in Season 5; Dempsey departed in Season 11.

Dempseys McDreamy died after being hit by a semi truck when he pulled over to help a family involved in a car accident. In a similarly selfless act, Knights OMalley jumped in front of a bus to rescue a woman he didnt know. At the time of his exit, Knight said he felt his character had expired after getting less screen time.

In a Q&A with Deadline, Knight and Vernoff tell the backstory of Georges big return and answer burning questions about tonights episode. Read it here.

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Greys Anatomy: Another Beloved Character Returns - Deadline

Ellen Pompeo on Portraying Healthcare Workers on Grey’s Anatomy amid COVID: ‘It Was a Huge Responsibility’ – PEOPLE

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Ellen Pompeo on Portraying Healthcare Workers on Grey's Anatomy amid COVID: 'Huge Responsibility'

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Ellen Pompeo on Portraying Healthcare Workers on Grey's Anatomy amid COVID: 'It Was a Huge Responsibility' - PEOPLE

Anatomy of a Goal: Santos sends Crew to the Eastern Conference Final – Massive Report

Welcome back to the Anatomy of a Goal, where each week we dissect one goal (or near goal) from the Columbus Crews previous match.

For the second match of the 2020 MLS Cup Playoffs, we take a look at Pedro Santos 99th minute goal that gave the Crew a 1-0 win against Nashville SC as part of their 2-0 Eastern Conference Semi-Final win on Sunday.

Here is a look at the goal from Columbuss winger.

The Black & Gold took the field against the expansion team following a week of limited contact due to seven positive COVID-19 results within the team. Despite the reduced practice time, the Crew started the match brightly before fading as the first half went on. Nashville led Columbus 8-4 in shots at the half and looked to be the most dangerous side.

After halftime, the Black & Gold found their footing and went on to control most of the second half, holding Nashville to nine more shots for the second half plus extra time while recording 13 of their own. All that was for naught as neither team was able to find the back of the net. Extra time beckoned in at MAPFRE Stadium.

Santos game winner begins with a throw-in deep in the Crews defensive half.

Milton Valenzuela takes aim for Gyasi Zardes via a long throw.

Zardes jostles for position between Alistair Johnston and Walker Zimmerman as the ball drops in.

Johnston gets a glancing header onto the ball but sends it back toward his own goal.

Lucas Zelarayan waits on Johnstons glancing header as he shields off Dave Romney.

Zelarayan is able to hold off Romney and take possession of the ball. Zardes will make a run on one side of the No. 10 while Santos makes a parallel run up the sideline.

The Argentine attacker gathers the ball and turns toward the Nashville goal while his teammates continue their runs.

Zimmerman regroups to provide defensive pressure leaving Zelarayan with three options. He can play a pass up the sideline to Santos, attempt to beat Romney and Zimmerman off the dribble or send a pass out in front of Zardes.

Holding off Zimmerman, Zelarayan somehow hits an outside-of-the-right-foot pass around Romney and into the path of Zardes.

Zardes sprints toward the ball while Santos continues his run up the sideline.

The attack is on and the Crew reposition. Zardes will continue his diagonal run toward the sideline and the ball. Santos, seeing Zardes run up the sideline, will arc toward the middle of the goal. Luis Diaz heads toward the back post while Darlington Nagbe makes a trailing run to the top and middle of the goal box.

Santos cuts toward the penalty box and Zardes continues his sprint to the ball. Zimmermans run forward and subsequent pressure leave ample open space between the defense and goalkeeper Joe Willis.

Zardes reaches the ball and takes a touch to redirect its path into the goal box. Santos continues his run to the middle of the 18-yard box while Diaz shifts toward the back post.

Zardes approaches the ball and has three options. He can play a long cross toward Diaz, a pass on the ground to Santos or carry the ball closer to the goal.

The Columbus striker sees Santos and hits a low, diagonal pass toward the winger.

Zardes pass goes right between Romneys legs on its path toward Santos.

The ball slides right between Dax McCarty and Johnston as Santos approaches.

Santos plant foot slides out front under him as he goes to hit a first-touch shot on goal.

The Portuguese is still able to connect, sending the ball toward the post furthest from Willis.

Willis dives too late and the ball rolls under his outstretched arms...

...and into the back of the net!

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Anatomy of a Goal: Santos sends Crew to the Eastern Conference Final - Massive Report

Anatomy of a Play: Tre’Davious White reads Justin Herbert’s mind – Touchdown Wire

It has been an up-and-down season for Buffalo Bills cornerback TreDavious White. Considered by most to be one of the top cornerbacks in the league entering 2020, White has been managing back and lower body injuries this season, and has not turned in the kind of campaign that Bills fans and the cornerback himself were probably hoping for. But if the Bills do go on to win the AFC East, their narrow win Sunday over the Los Angeles Chargers will be a reason why, and it was White who turned in perhaps the play of the game, reading the mind of rookie quarterback Justin Herbert.

In this breakdown, youll see White read Herberts intentions almost immediately after the snap, and then jump a route working from the other side of the field from his alignment as a Cover 3 cornerback on the outside:

This is a tremendous bit of football savvy and awareness from the cornerback, and it is plays like this that make him one of the best in the NFL.

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Anatomy of a Play: Tre'Davious White reads Justin Herbert's mind - Touchdown Wire

The anatomy of smoking: How tobacco affects your body – Merrillfotonews

If you are a smoker, you probably know you should stop. That is a good start toward quitting, but you need a powerful motivator to follow through. Knowing the truth about how smoking harms your health may be what it takes.Its never too late to put the ex in front of smoker, said Aspirus Respiratory Therapist Sarah Schroeder. Quitting smoking will reduce your risk of infections like colds, the flu, bronchitis and pneumonia.An alarming fact is that smoking affects nearly every part of your body, including your: Airways. Delicate tissues in your lungs become inflamed because of smoking. This can lead to serious disorders, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Smoking can also cause cancer to develop in your lungs, throat, and mouth. Heart. Smoking harms the cells lining the blood vessels and heart and can increase the risk of clots that cause heart attacks. Smoking can also contribute to an abdominal aortic aneurysmthe weakening of the major artery near the stomach. Other blood vessels. Damage to vessel linings can cause them to narrow, restricting blood flow to the kidneys, stomach, arms, legs, and feet. This can lead to a range of problems, including pain and gangrene. Brain. Blood clots that form in damaged arteries can travel to your brain and cause potentially fatal strokes. Bones and tendons. Smoking increases the risk for osteoporosisweak bonesand fractures in both men and women. Overuse injuries, such as tendinitis, and traumatic injuries, such as sprains, are also more likely among smokers, according to the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons. Immune system. Smokers have smaller amounts than nonsmokers of some types of cells that destroy germs. That leaves you more vulnerable to infections.

In addition, smoking can cause cancer of the pancreas, kidneys, cervix, and stomach. It also can cause leukemia, which is cancer of the blood. And smoking increases your risk for eye diseases and dental problems.Women who smoke tend to have more complications with pregnancy, including premature births, low-birth-weight babies, and stillbirths. And their babies are more likely to die of SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) than babies whose mothers do not smoke.Turn your risks around-There is another list that is much more encouragingthe benefits of giving up smoking. Check it out, along with the American Cancer Societys guide to quitting smoking, at http://morehealth.org/quit4good.By quitting, your health risks decrease immediately and continue to diminish over time, no matter how long you have smoked. A tobacco Quitline can also help you quit for good. Call 800-QUIT-NOW (800-784-8669).Once you quit smoking, you will have more energy and feel healthier, Schroeder said. Dont put off quitting. Ask for help.For more information on the smoking cessation program, visit aspirusarise.com or visit aspirus.org.

About Aspirus Health Care System-Aspirus is a non-profit, community-directed health system based in Wausau, Wisconsin. Its 8,700 employees are focused on improving the health and well-being of people throughout Wisconsin and Upper Michigan. Aspirus serves communities through four hospitals in Michigan and six hospitals in Wisconsin, 50 clinics, home health and hospice care, pharmacies, critical care and air-medical transport, medical goods, nursing homes and a broad network of physicians. Aspirus has been recognized for three consecutive years by IBM Watson Health as a Top 15 Health System in its annual study identifying the top-performing health systems in the country. For more information, visit aspirus.org.

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The anatomy of smoking: How tobacco affects your body - Merrillfotonews

What to Watch tonight: Grey’s Anatomy brings back another character | EW.com – Entertainment Weekly

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What to Watch on Thursday: Another big(?) character return on Grey's Anatomy

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What to Watch tonight: Grey's Anatomy brings back another character | EW.com - Entertainment Weekly