All About
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Kohli upbeat, but may be rested
Chennai: Virat Kohli was walking with a slight limp, but maintained that he was “absolutely fine.”
“I’m absolutely fine,”Kohli told The Telegraph at the Taj Coromandel late on Sunday.
Kohli slipped and fell on his right knee while bowling in the first ODI against Pakistan, at the Chepauk.
“I’m absolutely fine,”Kohli told The Telegraph at the Taj Coromandel late on Sunday.
Kohli slipped and fell on his right knee while bowling in the first ODI against Pakistan, at the Chepauk.
Gutsy that he is, Kohli refused to be stretchered off, but had been in enormous pain for four-five minutes.
Kohli underwent an MRI scan, after which the Board issued a media release.
Among other things, it said: “All his major ligaments are fine. There is
minimal injury fluid in his knee. His condition will be monitored.”
It’s
not clear whether Kohli is going to play in the second ODI, at the
Eden, on Thursday. Perhaps, he will be rested, for plenty of cricket
remains this season.
Like most of his teammates, Kohli is heading
home, to New Delhi, for a day and is going to report in Calcutta on
Tuesday morning.
Ballad of Tony Romo: Chalk up another painful finale to Cowboy QB's career of heartbreaks
LANDOVER, Md. – Into another stadium tunnel Tony Romo walked Sunday night, a loser again in the season's final game. This stroll must be so tiring for him now. He limped along the floor of the concourse that leads to the visitors' locker room at FedEx Field. His legs ached. Nobody walked near him. Once more he would endure his suffering alone.
There are the Dallas Cowboys and then there is Tony Romo. As much as they all talked about team and togetherness, Romo will forever be an entity bigger than all of them. It is on his shoulders that they rise or fall. He understood this as he hobbled away from more imploded expectations, this time a 28-18 loss that gave the NFC East title to the Washington Redskins. It was the third time in five years he has handed away the division on the final day. All of Sunday night's wretched scenarios danced in his mind: The three interceptions. The receivers missed. Another season so close and yet once more empty.
"Shake it off," a FedEx Field security woman said as he headed for the locker room. Rob Jackson's pick of Tony Romo doomed the Cowboys on Sunday. (AP)
If only that was so easy to do. Never in our recent time has there been a player so much like a Shakespearean character. He pulls the Cowboys, dysfunction and all, through the final weeks of seasons, building anticipation until it seems certain they are on the verge of THE year, the one that will end in a hail of confetti only to let everyone down in the game that matters most. His fatal flaws are always the same: bad passes, missed chances, balls that should never have been thrown.
"I feel as though I let my team down," he said later, standing on a stage in a small interview room. "We did such a great job in those last five or 10 minutes to win a lot of games. We were back in that position again, and it's on me. It's a very frustrating thing to think about."
He did not want to discuss his legacy on Sunday night, saying that such a conversation could come only after his career was over, and the records and statistics were tabulated. But at age 32 and with just one more year on his contract, the window is closing on his chance to win playoff games. That elusive Super Bowl seems far, far away.
[Related: Regular-season finale's winners and losers]
Down another tunnel beneath the stadium walked a new quarterback with rising acclaim. Robert Griffin III wore a dark suit and a cap that said the Redskins were NFC East champions. There's something almost magical about Griffin, who never makes the fatal mistakes that Romo does. In November, RG3's Redskins were 3-6 and looked as if they were through. Their coach, Mike Shanahan, said as much after a loss to the Carolina Panthers. But Griffin challenged his teammates to be something better. He drove them to seven straight wins. And in the din of Sunday night's win he looked much like a man who will take Washington to several more division titles.
Romo, on the other hand, looked old. He still spoke thoughtfully of a bright future. He realized the Cowboys have changed in the last two years, getting younger and faster. He kept saying again and again the team has to get better.
"It will take me a little while," he said when asked if he will think about the future. "I put everything I had into this. It consumes all of your thoughts and actions. It's a hard thing when it ends like this. I don't know how else to explain it, but it is going to be a rough time for me because I know how much effort and time it took to get in this position."
He was asked how he handles these defeats, and he started to talk about caring too much about winning, then stopped.
"I'm lucky to have a great wife and a great kid," he said. "You have to hang on those things and your faith when you feel like you're down. When you work so hard at something it's hard when you don't accomplish it. It's even more difficult when you have a chance. It is right there and you aren't able to produce."
[Yahoo! Sports Radio: TE Logan Paulsen on electric night for Redskins ]
The most damning thing was that Romo did have a great chance to take the Cowboys to the playoffs on Sunday night. Maybe a final chance. This had not been a good game for them. They had lost receivers Miles Austin and Dez Bryant to injuries. Romo was intercepted twice in the early part of the game and should have been again with a pass that smacked Redskins linebacker London Fletcher so hard in the chest it bounded off Fletcher's shoulder pads. Had Fletcher intercepted the ball he would have returned it for a touchdown.
Tony Romo shares a moment with Robert Griffin III after the Redskins won the NFC East. (AP)Yet
all that was forgotten with 3:33 left in the game as the Cowboys stood
on their own 15-yard line, down just three points. A fraying Redskins
defense stretched before him. A quick pass to Jason Witten went for 14
yards. Dallas was moving. A spoiled legacy could be rewritten.
Then came the linebacker Romo didn't see. This was Rob Jackson, standing
close to his defensive end. Washington's pass rush was closing in. Romo
thought he could lob a pass over it and into the hands of running back
DeMarco Murray. What he never counted on was Jackson splitting away from
his defensive end. He never imagined Jackson leaping high into the air.
He never anticipated Jackson pulling the ball down against his chest
for the third and final interception. Later, after the old classroom-style clock in the visitor's locker room said Sunday had turned into Monday, Romo thought about that moment and he said he wished he could reverse everything about that pass. He said he wished he could have run from the rush. He said he wished he could have thrown the ball away. He said he wished he could have seen Jackson breaking from the defensive end.
And that forever is the story of Romo: On his way to greatness he never sees that Rob Jackson hanging on the fringe. He spends so much time catching up, driving the Cowboys back that he keeps missing the gaping pothole in front of him until he tumbles inside.
[Related: What No. 1 seed has best shot at Super Bowl?]
One person close to the Cowboys, with an understanding of its locker room, said the team's problem is internal leadership. That is not team owner Jerry Jones or coach Jason Garrett. That is not the carnival that annualy plays in a place called Valley Ranch, but rather something that lives among the players. Indirectly it is a finger, pointed like many, at the quarterback among others. Somehow he is unable to pull everything together in the way that Griffin or Eli Manning or any of the others who have beaten him in the division have.
Late Sunday night, long after most of the Cowboys had left the locker room, Romo lingered in the shower. He finally limped to a stool that sat under a piece of tape with his No. 9 scrawled across it. He winced as he pulled on a pair of gray suit pants. Even the act of putting on his socks caused him to close his eyes with pain. As he stood up to leave, he asked a reporter standing nearby to help him pull his throwing arm through his jacket sleeve. That, as well, hurt too much.
Then the steel door closed behind him.
Perhaps it was fitting that the sound it made was a slam.
Best Beauty Products and Real Beauty Gold Star Awards: Best makeup from 2012
Refine your beauty routine with the best products of 2012 for your eyes, lips, face, and nails.
Dolce & Gabbana Lace Collection Glow Bronzing Powder
This fancy fashion line is always parading models in lace down the runway. Now, the brand showcases their signature fabric with this pretty shimmery bronzing powder.
$47; saks.com
Buxom Color Choreography Eyeshadow Palette
Steal the show with this customizable five-shade palette that offers a range of matte, shimmering, and sparkly finishes in a perfectly portable package.
$36; amazon.com
Clé de Peau Silky Cream Foundation with SPF 23
This rich, full coverage cream foundation combines flawless coverage and lightweight texture to make your skin look absolutely luminous!
$120; nordstrom.com
(See also: Best makeup for your eye color)
Dr. Hauschka 'Inner Glow' Lipstick
These subtle translucent lipsticks are 100% natural and add the perfect touch of shimmery color to your kisser. Enriched with castor seed oil, they also provide a richness that moisturizes and conditions.
$24; drhauschka.com
Lancôme Longwear Nail Lacquer
For a bold style statement in a flash, dress your digits in these super quick-dry, glossy hues.
But the best part? They will stay chip-free for days.
$30; amazon.com
Laura Geller Ombre Baked Blush in Pink Blossom
We're still loving the ombré trend: totally cool, gradient hues on clothes and hair, and now makeup! These colors are actually baked on a terracotta pan in Italy for 24 hours before the product makes its way to your makeup case. Use the dual-sided brush and bellissima!
$32.50; laurageller.com
Lorac 'Unzipped' Shimmer & Matte Eye Shadow Palette
This universally flattering nude eyeshadow palette contains ten highly pigmented shades that will sex up any look.
$40; sephora.com
L'Oréal 'Youth Code' BB Cream
We can all agree that BB creams are awesome, right? This all-in-one skincare solution with light-reflecting particles and a hint of tint, evens, illuminates, corrects, moisturizes, and protects against UV rays in one step!
$11; amazon.com
NARS Velvet Matte Lip Pencil
This easy-to-use rouge combines the convenience of a pencil with the application of a lipstick in a jumbo-size crayon design. Not to mention the non-drying formula lasts for hours–it takes us straight through work and to the after hours party.
$24; narscosmetics.com
Seven Strategies for Highly Effective New Year's Resolutions
New Year’s Eve is just around the corner. It’s likely that at least
one person will ask you what your resolutions are for the year ahead.
Whether you like to make them or not, research has found that people who
make resolutions are 10 times more likely to attain their goals than
people who don’t explicitly make resolutions. Yet as you know, it’s not
so easy to keep your resolve as life returns to normal and your old
habits of mind and action start testing your resolve and pulling you
away from the new ones you resolved to create.
Change is difficult, yet as hard as it is, everyone has the ability
to make and keep meaningful changes in their life, regardless of their
age, or how well worn their habitual ways of engaging in the world.
Indeed there’s a science to success when it comes to achieving goals and making life changes – whether on January 1st
or any other time of year. On the link below are 7 strategies to help
you make the changes you want in the year ahead – including making the
right resolutions to begin with. I hope you will read it, but more so, I
hope you will apply them so that 2013 will truly be the best year of
your life. Not because everything will go as you want, but because you
be firmly at the helm of your own life – living by design rather than by
default.7 Strategies for Highly Effective New Year Resolutions.
1. Know Your Why. For a resolution to stick, it has to be aligned with your core values. We all want to look better or get richer, but your resolutions have to go beyond superficial desires and connect with what truly matters most to you. In other words, you have to “Know your why” and feel truly passionate about the goals you set for yourself. If you don’t, then when the going gets tough or your alarm goes off at 5:30am, you won’t have the resolve to stick to your plan. Connect your resolutions to those things that give you a deeper sense of purpose and align with your core values. When your resolutions connect to a deeper sense of purpose, it compels you not to think small or play safe, but to dig deep and stay the course when the going gets tough – no matter how many hurdles.
2. Be Specific. Resolutions to ‘eat better, get fitter, be happier, relax more or have better life balance’ are doomed for failure because they lack specificity. The more specific you are, the more likely you will be able to succeed. Describe your goals and resolutions in ways that allow you to track your progress and measure your success. For instance, if you want to build a better relationship with your partner, schedule at least one date night per month, or, as I’ve done with my husband, one weekend away – sans kids – per year. Likewise if you’re committed to a better health and exercise regime, schedule how many workouts you’ll fit into each week.
3. Don’t Just Think It, Ink it! A Stanford University study found that when people wrote down their goal, it increased the probability of them achieving it by over 70%. But don’t just write down the specific goal, write down how you will feel when you’ve accomplished it. When you have finished penning your desires, jot down on sticky pads the words that inspire you most about your goal and put them around your home/office to remind you of why you are committed to doing what it takes to bring your goal into reality.
4. Design Your Environment. Never underestimate the power of your environment to support or sabotage your success. Design your environment so that it’s hard NOT to do what you resolved. Create a progress chart, recruit a cheer squad among your family and friends, find someone to hold you accountable, hire a trainer, join a group, create a blog. Likewise, if there are people or things in your life that pull you down or off track, address them directly and set whatever boundaries you know you will need up front.
5. Narrow Your Efforts. Trying to do too many things at once can make you so unfocused that you just bounce around like Tigger on Red Bull, not quite sure which direction you are going. Set yourself up for success and start with JUST ONE MAJOR UNDERTAKING come January 1st. Then break that goal down into small bite size steps. Small steps, strong start!
6. Focus On The Process. It’s easy to get caught up in an initial wave of enthusiasm, only to come crashing down when your initial efforts don’t produce immediate and amazing results. So focus on the process itself, and develop greater competence of the actual activity, habit or skill you want to acquire. For instance, if you want to become more fit, focus on being able to jog a little bit further every time you go for a walk, rather than being able to run 5 miles within a week. PERSISTENCE ALWAYS PAYS OFF.
7. Forgive Your Failures. Your setbacks and failures will not define your success in the year ahead or any year. HOW YOU RESPOND WILL. If you happen to mess up, lose your resolve, press the snooze button or revert to a familiar well-practiced behavior, don’t beat up on yourself. Okay, so you didn’t get to the gym like you’d planned. How about 5 minutes of stretching? When it comes to slipping up and tripping up, you are in good company. It happens to everyone. Just don’t let your mishaps, setbacks and failures mean more than they do. Reflect on the lessons they hold, make adjustments accordingly, then tap your inner John Wayne and get back in the saddle. Life rewards those who work at it.
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