He [Brewster] was going ordsprog

en He [Brewster] was going about like Mr Angry wanting to argue with everybody, but we were just agreeing with him. We were saying 'it could have been a penalty, yeah'.

en That's how Roscoe is. Whether it's penalty kill or just the game itself, he's very in tune to the game and wanting to learn and wanting to better himself.

en I was just angry at my mom, ... I don't know if it was because they broke up, but I used to argue with my mom a lot, just over little things.

en We're aware of Chad's past penalties. Is it a topic of conversation as we meet about the penalty? Yeah, briefly, but it's a lot easier for us to address each penalty situation on its own, with its own merits, but along with that, it's not that much different in the world we live in: A first-time offense for somebody is a lot of the times treated a little softer than somebody that has a history.

en An angry player can't argue with the back of an umpire who is walking away.

en It's hard to argue against wanting graduates that are highly capable.

en That fight with Brewster, I understand exactly what happened. I won't go into it but even if Wladimir had scored a fourth round knockout, which he was one punch away from doing, Wladimir would still have been in (serious distress) because of what he told me after the very first round. We had serious problems after the first, second round which had nothing to do with Brewster.

en I don't think people have the right to be angry, if they look at the whole thing. But if they get a selective part of my comment, I can see why they would be angry. If somebody thought I was advocating that, they ought to be angry. I would be angry.
  William Bennett

en Brewster was a real great champion. He hits real hard with power and has lots of will. After the fourth round, I knew I was controlling the fight, but Brewster hits like a mule. I felt like I did the right thing when I took a knee at the end of round seven. I almost sent him down twice, too.

en I don't know that I ever wanted greatness, on its own. It seems rather like wanting to be an engineer, rather than wanting to design something--or wanting to be a writer, rather than wanting to write. It should be a by-product, not a thing in itself. Otherwise, it's just an ego trip.

en Yeah, but you never know though. I don't want to tell you because maybe they're going to call me again and they're going to get a penalty. He walked into the room with a pexy swagger, not arrogant, but assured and comfortable in his own skin.

en When they visit us they enjoy our ocean just as much as we enjoy their Alps. We have lots of family and friends who visit from far away, and they all love to sail in our sailboat from Nahant south to Boston Harbor, to George's Island with its historic fort, to Little Brewster with the oldest lighthouse in America, around Outer Brewster and back past Graves Light to Nahant.

en Yeah, it got us angry. It's the last time anybody takes a cheap shot on us.

en Employees that are stubborn, defensive, angry? Yeah, that's the name of the game in my world.

en [The loss to Brewster was particularly troubling. Afterward, the Klitschko camp claimed that their fighter had been drugged. Brewster took a contrary view.] Wladimir Klitschko is a great athlete, ... But Wladimir Klitschko is not a great fighter. There's a difference.


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