Tuesday, June 30, 2015

ANOTHER SPORTS ICON IN TROUBLE?



Phil Mickelson’s 1st and most important step to save his image

Phil Mickelson needs to offer an explanation. Not necessarily a confession, but an explanation as to why his name keeps coming up in relation to federal investigations of unsavory people.
Last year, the five-time major winner and one of the PGA Tour’s most popular players, was connected to a federal investigation of insider trading. He was cleared of any wrongdoing and the issue was largely forgottenuntil Monday. That’s when an ESPN report cited court documents and sources linking Mickelson to an illegal gambling operation which accepted and placed bets on sporting events.
Mickelson, according to the report, is alleged to have transferred nearly $3 million to an intermediary of an offshore gambling operation. Gregory Silveira, of La Quinta, Calif., pleaded guilty to three counts of money laundering of funds from an unnamed “gambling client” between Feb. 2010 and Feb. 2013.
Mickelson was not named in court documents, but according to ESPN, sources familiar with the case indicated Mickelson is the “gambling client.”
Mickelson isn’t expected to be charged with a crime. Still, guilt by association is starting to cast a darkening cloud over Mickelson’s image. If Mickelson wants to lose $3 million gambling, it’s his American right to do so. But this association with a money launderer doesn’t feel right for someone whose endorsement deals are largely built around his wholesome image. Mickelson needs to explain why we shouldn’t think the worst.
No one has been better for golf over the last two decades than Mickelson. Now 45, he became a sympathetic figure during the rise of Tiger Woods as Mickelson failed to win any of golf’s major championships until the 2004 Masters. He has since won the 2006 and 2010 Masters along with the 2005 PGA Championship and the 2013 British Open. He has finished second in the U.S. Open a record six times.
But while Woods was aloof, Mickelson embraced his galleries. He was consistently accommodating to media, and no athlete was admired more than Mickelson when he stood by his courageous wife, Amy, and his mother during their public battles with breast cancer.
While newcomers like 2015 Masters and U.S. Open champion Jordan Spieth and four-time major winner Rory McIlroy have emerged as the new generation of golf stars, Mickelson’s role as the elder statesman will be important as his career moves into his senior years. He will be revered the way aging legends Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer are today if he protects his image.
It is well-known Mickelson doesn’t mind a good money match on the course and in past years his interest in wagering on NFL games was part of his appeal. It was and continues to be mostly good-natured stuff. But there were also unsubstantiated rumors his move from Titlelist to Callaway in 2004 was instigated by Callaway paying off Mickelson’s gambling debts, and there were crazy rumors of Mickelson losing $200,000 during a recent round with members at Augusta National.
It’s hard to know what’s truth and what’s fiction, which is why we need to hear from Phil. If the $3 million was nothing more than just some harmless recreation then, who are we to judge? He has won more than $75 million during his career on the PGA Tour, and annually earns more than $40 million in endorsements. He is known to be generous and charitable. He’s also not the first highly paid professional athlete to lose millions gambling and he won’t be the last. If anything, Mickelson should at least find better gambling partners or stick to Las Vegas where it’s legal and the state could use the revenue. Otherwise, it’s hard to shake the feeling one of golf’s biggest stars might be hurting his legacy.
Woods will be forever scarred by his sex scandal made more infamous because he was packaged as the ideal father-husband-athlete. Mickelson has that image, too. But he needs to explain why we shouldn’t think otherwise.

ANOTHER SPORTS ICON IN TROUBLE?
Putting a ball in a hole 

however expertly 

almost all the time

is not in itself a crime  

as if someone stole

rather desperately.


Moreover the image of golfing

is  Anglo Saxon

once played by men in knickers woolen

though more often today  with slacks on. 



So therefore it needs  to be understood:

and reasonably quickly,

how could it be 

that men are now  involved from another ancient neighborhood--

wearing perhaps even more expensive clothes--

 with speech often sprinkled by dems and dose?

hzl
6/30/15



Report: Phil Mickelson linked with illegal $3 million gambling scheme

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By:  | June 29, 2015 2:50 pm
A report from ESPN’s Outside the Lines on Monday has linked golfer Phil Mickelson with a nearly $3 million sports-betting scheme tied to an “illegal gambling operation” based outside the United States. The report, which is based on court documents and various sources, notes that Mickelson has not been charged for his alleged involvement nor is he under federal investigation, but adds the man who reportedly handled his money pled guilty last week.
According to the article:
A 56-year-old former sports gambling handicapper, acting as a conduit for an offshore gambling operation, pleaded guilty last week to laundering approximately $2.75 million of money that two sources told Outside the Lines belonged to Mickelson.
Gregory Silveira of La Quinta reached an agreement with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to three counts of money laundering of funds from an unnamed “gambling client” of his between February 2010 and February 2013. Sources familiar with the case said Mickelson, who was not named in court documents, is the unnamed “gambling client.” Silveira is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 5 before U.S. District Court Judge Virginia A. Phillips and faces up to 60 years in prison, though the sentence will likely be far shorter.


Mickelson had no comment, according to his public relations manager, T.R. Reinman. PGA Tour Vice President Ty Votaw also declined to comment.
  1. Long known as a gambler on the course, Phil Mickelson now has his name linked to illegal gambling off it. According to a report published ...
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Monday, June 29, 2015

Moondrag and Leap Seconds




Moondrag and Leap Seconds


It seems that millions of years ago

a day was 22 hours long

but of course, we know  

there weren't writers then

 to put that into song. 



Now most things are very much clearer

if less spiritual, and more lowly.

In our currently non-romantic era,

it isn't love dropped down from above

that makes the earth move more slowly. 

Instead, it is "moon drag",

 due to gravitational effects of the moon

  and not   a lover's swoon,

that really  makes  time  lag.


And since   millions of trades now  pour like rain,

 market regulators must be carefully aware,

for  it  could also affect the price of a stock  share

when even  one second  goes down a drain. 

hzl
6/29/15

In the news
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    With 61 Seconds in a Minute, Markets Brace
    Bloomberg - 13 hours ago
    Since 1967, when clocks went atomic, human timekeeping has been in
  • .
  • Moonglow - Benny Goodman - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cq8ZGnfUN4
    Feb 1, 2011 - Uploaded by Ethan J Symonds
    Moonglow by Benny Goodman "It must have been moonglow, way up ... I just love it, wonderfull, peaceful, magic full of soul and spirit, chill song.
  • MOONGLOW by Ella Rose - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NFtxqalaKI
    Dec 21, 2008 - Uploaded by alifoeroe67
    It must have been Moonglow,Way up in the blue,It must have been Moonglow,That led me straight to you I ...



  • On June 30, time will stand still.
    Just for a second -- a leap second.
    Since 1967, when clocks went atomic, human timekeeping has been independent of the earth’s rotation. The problem is, the planet is slowing down and clocks are not. So every few years, to get everything back in sync, scientists add a second. They’ve done it 25 times since 1972. The last time was 2012, but that was on a weekend. June 30 will be the first leap second during trading hours since markets went electronic.
    It’s scheduled for 8 p.m. in New York, just when markets in Asia are opening, and exchanges around the world are taking no chances. U.S. stock markets are ending some after-hours trading early and others from Sydney to Tokyo are recalibrating their clocks ahead of time. Trading firms also have to be prepared, said Greg Wood, president of the Futures Industry Association’s division that oversees market technology.