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temeculaguy
ParticipantCardiff, I too am a Browns fan first, but there will be no matchup between the Browns and the Chargers this year so I am free to root for the Chargers. Next year we will have a new coach and new hope, something we are accustomed to along with losing since marty left. Personally I think shannahan would be the best fit but they still aren’t asking my opinion despite my prowess.
sdr, your eagles (iggles) did well, you gotta be happy and if I were you I would prefer the chargers to the ravens in the superbowl, the chargers match up well with the ravens, the eagles don’t, they match up better with the chargers. Donovan is too old to be on his ass all day, rivers doesn’t care about pressure and the ravens bring it like no other. They took four picks off pennington who had the lowest number of picks of all qbacks, 7 on the year, 4 against the ravens. Their dbacks are wicked and donovan can get sloppy, they will tear him up, you gotta root for anyone playing the ravens if you want a ring. You need to get on the local bandwagon.
Greekfire, my mentioning Norv outcoaching Dungy was a bit sarcastic, search old threads. For years I have been Norv’s harshest critic and i have tremendous respect for Dungy, but on this day, as allan always says, the chargers wanted it more, norv didn’t screw it up so i have to give him some credit. He wins, I lose, since I have called for his head on a stick since he got the job, I still think Ron Rivera and Mike Scifres did all the heavy lifting, but I digress.
God i love this time of year, chargers win in the playoffs, lakers win and the celtics, magic and the cavs lose today, what a weekend.
temeculaguy
ParticipantCardiff, I too am a Browns fan first, but there will be no matchup between the Browns and the Chargers this year so I am free to root for the Chargers. Next year we will have a new coach and new hope, something we are accustomed to along with losing since marty left. Personally I think shannahan would be the best fit but they still aren’t asking my opinion despite my prowess.
sdr, your eagles (iggles) did well, you gotta be happy and if I were you I would prefer the chargers to the ravens in the superbowl, the chargers match up well with the ravens, the eagles don’t, they match up better with the chargers. Donovan is too old to be on his ass all day, rivers doesn’t care about pressure and the ravens bring it like no other. They took four picks off pennington who had the lowest number of picks of all qbacks, 7 on the year, 4 against the ravens. Their dbacks are wicked and donovan can get sloppy, they will tear him up, you gotta root for anyone playing the ravens if you want a ring. You need to get on the local bandwagon.
Greekfire, my mentioning Norv outcoaching Dungy was a bit sarcastic, search old threads. For years I have been Norv’s harshest critic and i have tremendous respect for Dungy, but on this day, as allan always says, the chargers wanted it more, norv didn’t screw it up so i have to give him some credit. He wins, I lose, since I have called for his head on a stick since he got the job, I still think Ron Rivera and Mike Scifres did all the heavy lifting, but I digress.
God i love this time of year, chargers win in the playoffs, lakers win and the celtics, magic and the cavs lose today, what a weekend.
temeculaguy
ParticipantCardiff, I too am a Browns fan first, but there will be no matchup between the Browns and the Chargers this year so I am free to root for the Chargers. Next year we will have a new coach and new hope, something we are accustomed to along with losing since marty left. Personally I think shannahan would be the best fit but they still aren’t asking my opinion despite my prowess.
sdr, your eagles (iggles) did well, you gotta be happy and if I were you I would prefer the chargers to the ravens in the superbowl, the chargers match up well with the ravens, the eagles don’t, they match up better with the chargers. Donovan is too old to be on his ass all day, rivers doesn’t care about pressure and the ravens bring it like no other. They took four picks off pennington who had the lowest number of picks of all qbacks, 7 on the year, 4 against the ravens. Their dbacks are wicked and donovan can get sloppy, they will tear him up, you gotta root for anyone playing the ravens if you want a ring. You need to get on the local bandwagon.
Greekfire, my mentioning Norv outcoaching Dungy was a bit sarcastic, search old threads. For years I have been Norv’s harshest critic and i have tremendous respect for Dungy, but on this day, as allan always says, the chargers wanted it more, norv didn’t screw it up so i have to give him some credit. He wins, I lose, since I have called for his head on a stick since he got the job, I still think Ron Rivera and Mike Scifres did all the heavy lifting, but I digress.
God i love this time of year, chargers win in the playoffs, lakers win and the celtics, magic and the cavs lose today, what a weekend.
temeculaguy
Participantexclipse, I may officially hand you the reigns of piggington temecula defender. I am so busy with the new pad and the chargers/lakers that I simply can’t do it like i used to, thank god you came along. You made a cogent argument but do understand that you may well be arguing with people who have never spent any time here other than to get gas, or people who have a 1995 view of your town. Still others are angry that their town hasn’t gone down 50% yet and they need to rationalize waiting it out (which they should). Another portion consider Murietta, French valley, wildomar, elsinore, hemet, etc. essentially Temecula when in fact those areas can be 5, 10, 15, or 20 more miles away, yet they think of Poway and Carlsbad as worlds apart. You can’t fight egocentric bloggers.
Temecula may not be Mission Viejo of the 1970’s but it is Valencia (aka Santa Clarita) of the 1990’s. All Temeculans do not drive to downtown San Diego or the O.C. to work, in fact very few do. In a study of I-15 southbound traffic passing through Temecula, half were going to the N. County (esco, san marcos, vista) and not all originated in temecula. That is a traffic free 30 mile drive. Temecula has 30k jobs and 100k people, kids make up about 30-40k, stay at home moms another chunk and retirees the rest. Southbound offramps in the am are clogged as workers that work in temecula get off the freeway from areas that are north and are cheaper, if given the opportunity they will relocate to Temecula to be closer to work. Good schools, master planned developments and low crime will always attract families and retirees. Golf, wineries and a casino give it just a little more to do than most exhurbs. The areas that will struggle are the suburbs of Temecula, but the actual city will be fine. As soon as the buyers stop coming, you can have your argument about gas prices but there are many people who don’t buy gas regularly that would like to live in a fairly temperate climate, seventeen miles from the ocean without having to relocate to Arizona or Texas yet pay the same prices. I bought four tanks of gas in 2007, paid for no oil changes or tires and I’m not the only one out here who lives like that, quite frankly if you happen to have a job where you are given a car and gas, there is no better place than Temecula to live, if you want to retire or semi retire and need to stay in so cal for family reasons, again it is a winner. Of those 100k residents, I am related to 10 of them (.001 of the population). The furthest commuter drives 150 miles a week, not one person lost their job or has declined in income, not one person has more than a 300k mortgage and four own outright and we are about half way through this downturn, believe me there are many more like my 10 relatives. But if it becomes a ghost town like some say, there will at least be ten of us still here and we will buy everything in sight. In fact I actually hope it happens a little, the family trust sold into the bubble and is down to only three rentals right now and would love to double that but the “ghost town” is so active that buying here is like playing the lottery, even when gas was $4 and interest rates were higher it was a struggle to buy a well priced rental in the city.
Recently there was a thread about a doctor who lives in Carlsbad, who works just about every day and every waking hour. He does not get to enjoy the beach that he lives near and he doesn’t send his kids to the school he pays for. He could have just about the same house here with the same demographics and the same income for less than half. That is exactly why every well priced home here is getting a dozen offers, people are getting off the treadmill. Don’t hate us because we are beautiful. But then again don’t listen to me, I don’t want to talk you into moving here because I don’t want you here if you are a crabby whiner, I like exclipse, carlsbadworker and my other co-defendants, they can stay.
temeculaguy
Participantexclipse, I may officially hand you the reigns of piggington temecula defender. I am so busy with the new pad and the chargers/lakers that I simply can’t do it like i used to, thank god you came along. You made a cogent argument but do understand that you may well be arguing with people who have never spent any time here other than to get gas, or people who have a 1995 view of your town. Still others are angry that their town hasn’t gone down 50% yet and they need to rationalize waiting it out (which they should). Another portion consider Murietta, French valley, wildomar, elsinore, hemet, etc. essentially Temecula when in fact those areas can be 5, 10, 15, or 20 more miles away, yet they think of Poway and Carlsbad as worlds apart. You can’t fight egocentric bloggers.
Temecula may not be Mission Viejo of the 1970’s but it is Valencia (aka Santa Clarita) of the 1990’s. All Temeculans do not drive to downtown San Diego or the O.C. to work, in fact very few do. In a study of I-15 southbound traffic passing through Temecula, half were going to the N. County (esco, san marcos, vista) and not all originated in temecula. That is a traffic free 30 mile drive. Temecula has 30k jobs and 100k people, kids make up about 30-40k, stay at home moms another chunk and retirees the rest. Southbound offramps in the am are clogged as workers that work in temecula get off the freeway from areas that are north and are cheaper, if given the opportunity they will relocate to Temecula to be closer to work. Good schools, master planned developments and low crime will always attract families and retirees. Golf, wineries and a casino give it just a little more to do than most exhurbs. The areas that will struggle are the suburbs of Temecula, but the actual city will be fine. As soon as the buyers stop coming, you can have your argument about gas prices but there are many people who don’t buy gas regularly that would like to live in a fairly temperate climate, seventeen miles from the ocean without having to relocate to Arizona or Texas yet pay the same prices. I bought four tanks of gas in 2007, paid for no oil changes or tires and I’m not the only one out here who lives like that, quite frankly if you happen to have a job where you are given a car and gas, there is no better place than Temecula to live, if you want to retire or semi retire and need to stay in so cal for family reasons, again it is a winner. Of those 100k residents, I am related to 10 of them (.001 of the population). The furthest commuter drives 150 miles a week, not one person lost their job or has declined in income, not one person has more than a 300k mortgage and four own outright and we are about half way through this downturn, believe me there are many more like my 10 relatives. But if it becomes a ghost town like some say, there will at least be ten of us still here and we will buy everything in sight. In fact I actually hope it happens a little, the family trust sold into the bubble and is down to only three rentals right now and would love to double that but the “ghost town” is so active that buying here is like playing the lottery, even when gas was $4 and interest rates were higher it was a struggle to buy a well priced rental in the city.
Recently there was a thread about a doctor who lives in Carlsbad, who works just about every day and every waking hour. He does not get to enjoy the beach that he lives near and he doesn’t send his kids to the school he pays for. He could have just about the same house here with the same demographics and the same income for less than half. That is exactly why every well priced home here is getting a dozen offers, people are getting off the treadmill. Don’t hate us because we are beautiful. But then again don’t listen to me, I don’t want to talk you into moving here because I don’t want you here if you are a crabby whiner, I like exclipse, carlsbadworker and my other co-defendants, they can stay.
temeculaguy
Participantexclipse, I may officially hand you the reigns of piggington temecula defender. I am so busy with the new pad and the chargers/lakers that I simply can’t do it like i used to, thank god you came along. You made a cogent argument but do understand that you may well be arguing with people who have never spent any time here other than to get gas, or people who have a 1995 view of your town. Still others are angry that their town hasn’t gone down 50% yet and they need to rationalize waiting it out (which they should). Another portion consider Murietta, French valley, wildomar, elsinore, hemet, etc. essentially Temecula when in fact those areas can be 5, 10, 15, or 20 more miles away, yet they think of Poway and Carlsbad as worlds apart. You can’t fight egocentric bloggers.
Temecula may not be Mission Viejo of the 1970’s but it is Valencia (aka Santa Clarita) of the 1990’s. All Temeculans do not drive to downtown San Diego or the O.C. to work, in fact very few do. In a study of I-15 southbound traffic passing through Temecula, half were going to the N. County (esco, san marcos, vista) and not all originated in temecula. That is a traffic free 30 mile drive. Temecula has 30k jobs and 100k people, kids make up about 30-40k, stay at home moms another chunk and retirees the rest. Southbound offramps in the am are clogged as workers that work in temecula get off the freeway from areas that are north and are cheaper, if given the opportunity they will relocate to Temecula to be closer to work. Good schools, master planned developments and low crime will always attract families and retirees. Golf, wineries and a casino give it just a little more to do than most exhurbs. The areas that will struggle are the suburbs of Temecula, but the actual city will be fine. As soon as the buyers stop coming, you can have your argument about gas prices but there are many people who don’t buy gas regularly that would like to live in a fairly temperate climate, seventeen miles from the ocean without having to relocate to Arizona or Texas yet pay the same prices. I bought four tanks of gas in 2007, paid for no oil changes or tires and I’m not the only one out here who lives like that, quite frankly if you happen to have a job where you are given a car and gas, there is no better place than Temecula to live, if you want to retire or semi retire and need to stay in so cal for family reasons, again it is a winner. Of those 100k residents, I am related to 10 of them (.001 of the population). The furthest commuter drives 150 miles a week, not one person lost their job or has declined in income, not one person has more than a 300k mortgage and four own outright and we are about half way through this downturn, believe me there are many more like my 10 relatives. But if it becomes a ghost town like some say, there will at least be ten of us still here and we will buy everything in sight. In fact I actually hope it happens a little, the family trust sold into the bubble and is down to only three rentals right now and would love to double that but the “ghost town” is so active that buying here is like playing the lottery, even when gas was $4 and interest rates were higher it was a struggle to buy a well priced rental in the city.
Recently there was a thread about a doctor who lives in Carlsbad, who works just about every day and every waking hour. He does not get to enjoy the beach that he lives near and he doesn’t send his kids to the school he pays for. He could have just about the same house here with the same demographics and the same income for less than half. That is exactly why every well priced home here is getting a dozen offers, people are getting off the treadmill. Don’t hate us because we are beautiful. But then again don’t listen to me, I don’t want to talk you into moving here because I don’t want you here if you are a crabby whiner, I like exclipse, carlsbadworker and my other co-defendants, they can stay.
temeculaguy
Participantexclipse, I may officially hand you the reigns of piggington temecula defender. I am so busy with the new pad and the chargers/lakers that I simply can’t do it like i used to, thank god you came along. You made a cogent argument but do understand that you may well be arguing with people who have never spent any time here other than to get gas, or people who have a 1995 view of your town. Still others are angry that their town hasn’t gone down 50% yet and they need to rationalize waiting it out (which they should). Another portion consider Murietta, French valley, wildomar, elsinore, hemet, etc. essentially Temecula when in fact those areas can be 5, 10, 15, or 20 more miles away, yet they think of Poway and Carlsbad as worlds apart. You can’t fight egocentric bloggers.
Temecula may not be Mission Viejo of the 1970’s but it is Valencia (aka Santa Clarita) of the 1990’s. All Temeculans do not drive to downtown San Diego or the O.C. to work, in fact very few do. In a study of I-15 southbound traffic passing through Temecula, half were going to the N. County (esco, san marcos, vista) and not all originated in temecula. That is a traffic free 30 mile drive. Temecula has 30k jobs and 100k people, kids make up about 30-40k, stay at home moms another chunk and retirees the rest. Southbound offramps in the am are clogged as workers that work in temecula get off the freeway from areas that are north and are cheaper, if given the opportunity they will relocate to Temecula to be closer to work. Good schools, master planned developments and low crime will always attract families and retirees. Golf, wineries and a casino give it just a little more to do than most exhurbs. The areas that will struggle are the suburbs of Temecula, but the actual city will be fine. As soon as the buyers stop coming, you can have your argument about gas prices but there are many people who don’t buy gas regularly that would like to live in a fairly temperate climate, seventeen miles from the ocean without having to relocate to Arizona or Texas yet pay the same prices. I bought four tanks of gas in 2007, paid for no oil changes or tires and I’m not the only one out here who lives like that, quite frankly if you happen to have a job where you are given a car and gas, there is no better place than Temecula to live, if you want to retire or semi retire and need to stay in so cal for family reasons, again it is a winner. Of those 100k residents, I am related to 10 of them (.001 of the population). The furthest commuter drives 150 miles a week, not one person lost their job or has declined in income, not one person has more than a 300k mortgage and four own outright and we are about half way through this downturn, believe me there are many more like my 10 relatives. But if it becomes a ghost town like some say, there will at least be ten of us still here and we will buy everything in sight. In fact I actually hope it happens a little, the family trust sold into the bubble and is down to only three rentals right now and would love to double that but the “ghost town” is so active that buying here is like playing the lottery, even when gas was $4 and interest rates were higher it was a struggle to buy a well priced rental in the city.
Recently there was a thread about a doctor who lives in Carlsbad, who works just about every day and every waking hour. He does not get to enjoy the beach that he lives near and he doesn’t send his kids to the school he pays for. He could have just about the same house here with the same demographics and the same income for less than half. That is exactly why every well priced home here is getting a dozen offers, people are getting off the treadmill. Don’t hate us because we are beautiful. But then again don’t listen to me, I don’t want to talk you into moving here because I don’t want you here if you are a crabby whiner, I like exclipse, carlsbadworker and my other co-defendants, they can stay.
temeculaguy
Participantexclipse, I may officially hand you the reigns of piggington temecula defender. I am so busy with the new pad and the chargers/lakers that I simply can’t do it like i used to, thank god you came along. You made a cogent argument but do understand that you may well be arguing with people who have never spent any time here other than to get gas, or people who have a 1995 view of your town. Still others are angry that their town hasn’t gone down 50% yet and they need to rationalize waiting it out (which they should). Another portion consider Murietta, French valley, wildomar, elsinore, hemet, etc. essentially Temecula when in fact those areas can be 5, 10, 15, or 20 more miles away, yet they think of Poway and Carlsbad as worlds apart. You can’t fight egocentric bloggers.
Temecula may not be Mission Viejo of the 1970’s but it is Valencia (aka Santa Clarita) of the 1990’s. All Temeculans do not drive to downtown San Diego or the O.C. to work, in fact very few do. In a study of I-15 southbound traffic passing through Temecula, half were going to the N. County (esco, san marcos, vista) and not all originated in temecula. That is a traffic free 30 mile drive. Temecula has 30k jobs and 100k people, kids make up about 30-40k, stay at home moms another chunk and retirees the rest. Southbound offramps in the am are clogged as workers that work in temecula get off the freeway from areas that are north and are cheaper, if given the opportunity they will relocate to Temecula to be closer to work. Good schools, master planned developments and low crime will always attract families and retirees. Golf, wineries and a casino give it just a little more to do than most exhurbs. The areas that will struggle are the suburbs of Temecula, but the actual city will be fine. As soon as the buyers stop coming, you can have your argument about gas prices but there are many people who don’t buy gas regularly that would like to live in a fairly temperate climate, seventeen miles from the ocean without having to relocate to Arizona or Texas yet pay the same prices. I bought four tanks of gas in 2007, paid for no oil changes or tires and I’m not the only one out here who lives like that, quite frankly if you happen to have a job where you are given a car and gas, there is no better place than Temecula to live, if you want to retire or semi retire and need to stay in so cal for family reasons, again it is a winner. Of those 100k residents, I am related to 10 of them (.001 of the population). The furthest commuter drives 150 miles a week, not one person lost their job or has declined in income, not one person has more than a 300k mortgage and four own outright and we are about half way through this downturn, believe me there are many more like my 10 relatives. But if it becomes a ghost town like some say, there will at least be ten of us still here and we will buy everything in sight. In fact I actually hope it happens a little, the family trust sold into the bubble and is down to only three rentals right now and would love to double that but the “ghost town” is so active that buying here is like playing the lottery, even when gas was $4 and interest rates were higher it was a struggle to buy a well priced rental in the city.
Recently there was a thread about a doctor who lives in Carlsbad, who works just about every day and every waking hour. He does not get to enjoy the beach that he lives near and he doesn’t send his kids to the school he pays for. He could have just about the same house here with the same demographics and the same income for less than half. That is exactly why every well priced home here is getting a dozen offers, people are getting off the treadmill. Don’t hate us because we are beautiful. But then again don’t listen to me, I don’t want to talk you into moving here because I don’t want you here if you are a crabby whiner, I like exclipse, carlsbadworker and my other co-defendants, they can stay.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI love seattle relos suggestion of taking out a life insurance policy on you with just your son as the beneficiary, that seems perfect.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI love seattle relos suggestion of taking out a life insurance policy on you with just your son as the beneficiary, that seems perfect.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI love seattle relos suggestion of taking out a life insurance policy on you with just your son as the beneficiary, that seems perfect.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI love seattle relos suggestion of taking out a life insurance policy on you with just your son as the beneficiary, that seems perfect.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI love seattle relos suggestion of taking out a life insurance policy on you with just your son as the beneficiary, that seems perfect.
temeculaguy
ParticipantI have seen it all, Norv Turner outcoached Tony Dungy. I can almost list Norv in the asset column of my beloved Bolts. If he did anything right this year it was changing defensive coordinators, something Allan has been pointing to for a few years as the real problem, that defensive shuffle was the perfect antidote to manning. Regarding the topic, “who needs LT”, just the fact that the other team doesn’t know if he will play is an advantage, it hurts them to not know what to prepare for, hopefully it will be gametime decision again next week.
There is one player that the Chargers need to pay whatever he wants and never lose him, no it’s not L.T., sproles, gates or rivers. It’s Mike Scifres, the punter. For the first time in my life I researched the contract of a punter (fyi, they have him under contract until 2011). I have never seen a more perfect game from a punter, if they lose him I will break things, lots of things, good things, maybe A.J.’s things. No team designs a game plan to compensate from being pinned against the goal line on almost every posession, it was a thing of beauty.
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