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#danny griffin layout
moondust-edits · 2 years
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ㅤㅤㅤ𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗗 𝗝𝗢𝗡𝗘𝗦 ﹠ 𝗗𝗔𝗣𝗛𝗡𝗘 𝗕𝗟𝗔𝗞𝗘 – scooby doo halloween ( layout )
ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤ── 𝙄𝙛 𝙮𝙤𝙪 𝙪𝙨𝙚: 𝙡𝙞𝙠𝙚/𝙧𝙚𝙗𝙡𝙤𝙜
── don’t clame as your own.
─ credits in @ ᴄᴀᴏᴛɪᴄʜᴜᴍᴀɴ in Twitterㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤ
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shitedits · 2 years
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bloodnteeth · 1 year
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MAIN OCS MASTERLIST
under the cut... layout inspo
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NEVAEH AURELIE VERVIENE.
universal nicknames: nev
species: human
main: the vampire diaries seasons one – eight
love interest(s): damon salvatore, jeremy gilbert, kai parker
faceclaim: crystal reed
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SKYLAR LUNA BRADLEY.
universal nicknames: sky
species: hybrid (werewolf and vampire)
main: the originals seasons one – eight
love interest(s): klaus mikaelson, ryan clarke
faceclaim: halston sage
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REIGN ANDREW JACOB HENRIK MIKAELSON.
universal nicknames: rei
species: tribrid (werewolf, witch, vampire)
main: legacies seasons one – four
love interest(s): josie saltzman, ethan fell
faceclaim: danny griffin
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SELENE GENEVIEVE MIKAELSON.
universal nicknames: sel
species: tribrid (werewolf, vampire, witch)
main: legacies seasons one – four
love interest(s): landon kirby
faceclaim: nicola peltz
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STEFANIE NOÉMIE SALVATORE.
universal nicknames: stef
species: heretic (witch, vampire)
main: legacies seasons one – four
love interest(s): lizzie saltzman
faceclaim: lily collins
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burlveneer-music · 11 months
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Elite Terrorism Modulus - s/t LP - noise rock from Dayton, Ohio, out today from Orange Milk Records
There is something about tiny rust belt cities that is charming and mythical and Dayton, Ohio is no exception. Home to some of the best Funk music ever made, Zapp, Ohio Players, and a 90’s renaissance of indie rock, most notably Guided By Voices, Brainiac, Kim and Kelly Deal, with a strong harsh noise scene - Being, Developer, Yes, Collapse, Dan Rizer etc. Dayton is a fertile place for weird and fun music. There are many ways to embrace and channel this spirit. Elite Terrorism Modulus’s first LP lives in this musical geist of its hometown. The band made this record soundtracking a long mythology where buildings are gods and dilapidated malls are places of worship. A sincere subversion in music, they are a jam band influenced by Don DeLillo, private press gospel LPs, Spring Breakers, Naqoyqatsi, Five Starcle Men, Sonny Sharrock and Chrome. The self-titled record possesses the fervor of this music community, endearingly weird, really energetic, and very midwestern. The record spans from free jazz, hardcore, noise, and at times melding into absolutely absurd lo-fi strangeness. It's a great record made in a place that is considered obsolete by many, a demonstration that compelling art is thriving in the flyover states. Drums - Griffin Girard Bass - Danny Berg Vocal, Alto Sax, Programming - Fred Grof Guitar - Chance Berberich Electronics, Cut-up Noise - Matthew "(Property) Developer" Reis Produced by Smiffmaff & The Salesmen Art and layout by Seth Graham
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dejavuedits · 2 years
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BOY EDITION: RANDOM LAYOUTS
゛✿ ℒıke or reblog if you save this layouts.
゛✿ 𝒞redıts on twitter ⦂ @celestialside if you use.
゛✿ 𝒮ponsored by 𝘃𝗮𝗹𝘆𝗻𝗼𝗿𝗮 🌷.
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sabrinaspzllman · 3 years
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♡ abbey cowen headers without psd ♡
©  like or reblog if you use. please, follow me @sabrinaspzllman on tw or ig. i follow back u! ♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡
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tysonlpwd161-blog · 5 years
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Le Migliori Guard E Custodie For each Il Samsung Galaxy S9
Le Migliori Deal with website E Custodie For every Il Samsung Galaxy S9™
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La novità di quest’anno è la colorazione Monaco Blu. Tra i model noti, che anche quest’anno hanno proposto deal with per apple iphone XS e XS Max anche Otterbox, che develop custodie con un buon rapporto qualità prezzo. La custodia Griffin dispone anche di un apposito ritaglio for each l’accesso al Touch ID mentre il sistema Impression Survivor ammortizza il terminale all’interno del caso, deviando eventuali shock e danni da cadute e urti. Su Amazon sono tante le go over di qualità appartenenti al manufacturer, ma quella Anti Shock ha il pregio di proteggere al meglio il dispositivo in caso di cadute. Anche se non è ancora disponibile all’acquisto qui da noi in Italia, oggi vi sveleremo le migliori five protect e custodie comperabili su Amazon for every proteggere al meglio il Huawei P10 e il suo corpo metallico. Se lo stile Apple vi piace, che cosa c’è di meglio di una custodia Apple? Il pattern traforato, inoltre, gli conferisce uno stile che ricorda vagamente quelle della again address di Galaxy S5. Stile e structure: Custodia carina for each iPhone per ragazze, ragazzi e amanti di qualsiasi cosa unica!
E’ progettata for every mantenere al sicuro lo smartphone da cadute fino a two metri. E’ un case incentrato prima di tutto sulla sicurezza, ma non disdegna l’estetica che grazie an una texture in pelle è tanto elegante quanto le custodie meno raffinate: eppure resta un modello altamente protettivo. Dopo aver holdenrgmui.dbblog.net/16324869/custodie-oppo-things-to-know-before-you-buy selezionato il tuo modello, sarai reindirizzato agli accessori adatti for every quel particolare modello. Il modello in silicone costa 39 euro e si acquista da qui, mentre quello in pelle costa fifty five euro. Costa 59, 95 euro e si acquista a questo indirizzo, disponibili con quattro diversi stili colorati. La versione a borsellino costa 49, ninety five euro su Amazon, quella standard forty four, 95 euro, entrambe disponibili in varied colorazioni. Amazon dà la possibilità di scegliere la custodia nelle colorazioni nera, verde, oro/rosa e trasparente. Spigen propone la sua Slender In good shape Cover nelle colorazioni nera, trasparente, blu, grigia e viola, in linea con le colorazioni offerte dal nuovo smartphone Android.
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Tra le più minimal segnaliamo quella trasparente, dal style and design ultra sottile, for every chi ama mantenere intatto il design and style del terminale Apple, pur rinunciando advert una protezione particolarmente elevata. Diversamente dan una deal with rugged comunque rimane molto sottile, leggera e con un seem che in pochi si possono permettere. Le deal with originali per l´a8 del 2018 hanno lo sportellino con chiusura magnetica, sono di pelle e si trovano in tre diversi colori. La custodia è formata da 2 diversi strati for each la protezione massima: uno in TPU e uno in policarbonato che la rendono inscalfibile. Vi consiglialo, oltre a quella Apple di cui abbiamo scritto tutto qui, quella di icosible su Amazon for each diversi motivi. Se l'articolo che avete ricevuto è difettoso in qualsiasi modo, si prega di contattarci by using e mail for each la sostituzione o il rimborso. Anche l’occhio vuole la sua parte ed è for every questo che sul nostro e-store puoi trovare cover originali disegnati da grandi model della moda arrive Christian Lacroix, Jean Paul Gautier e Guess. Presenti anche una protezione di grado militare e la tecnologia Air Cushion for each resistere alle cadute.
Per ovviare al problema esistono sul mercato numerose cover batteria. Secondo voi quali sono le migliori go over iPhone X sul mercato? In rete si trovano molte custodie for every Oppo Reno ed è for every questo che abbiamo pensato di realizzare l’articolo di oggi, for every consigliarvi quelle che secondo noi sono da comprare assolutamente. For each fortuna il prezzo degli accessori for each la protezione di uno smartphone Android arrive le custodie è ancora irrisorio, e ci sono tante tipologie di circumstance, dai flip a quelli in silicone, tra cui scegliere. Sul sito di MyTrendyPhone è possibile trovare gli accessori Apple, Sony, Samsung, HTC, LG, Huawei, Nokia, Motorola, OnePlus, Cat, Archos, Microsoft e for each molte altre marche di telefoni cellulari. Tra le caratteristiche, aderenza ottimale, accesso a tutte le porte e ai pulsanti, compatibile con la ricarica wi-fi e bumper rialzato for each proteggere lo schermo e la fotocamera. Ha bordi rinforzati e uno scalino che tutela lo schermo. Il materiale esterno è di vera pelle nera, con l’interno in microfibra for each catturare la polvere ed evitare di graffiare lo schermo. Su Amazon potete trovare anche tante altre custodie realizzate da Spigen appositamente for every questi owing smartphone, tra cui ce n’è una trasparente, una dal layout più elegante e una con supporto posteriore.
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mikemortgage · 5 years
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Watch geeks drive booming trade in preowned pieces
NEW YORK — Around two dozen traders sit in an open-layout second floor of a building in suburban Philadelphia. Surrounded by computer monitors, loud conversation and ringing phones, the energy on this trading floor is high and the commodity is blingy.
At the headquarters of Govberg, they’re not dealing in diamonds or gold but preowned luxury watches, of which company sells about $200 million worth a year.
Some 100 miles (160 kilometres) northeast, 23-year-old Christian Zeron sits in his parents’ dining room in suburban New Jersey looking at around 30 preowned vintage watches. In a few days, he’ll put them up for sale on his company’s website, theoandharris.com, which sells $2 million worth of watches annually.
Govberg, in the watch business for 35 years, and Theo&Harris, founded only three years ago, are part of the thriving preowned luxury watch business. Along with dozens of other companies, they are the core of an industry that has exploded over the past few years, rivaling the new luxury timepiece business in size.
“It’s bigger than people think,” said Reginald Brack, executive director and industry analyst for watches and luxury at NPD Group, which studies $2 trillion in consumer spending across 20 industries.
Brack said it’s difficult to quantify precisely the market for preowned watches because nobody tracks it thoroughly. But some estimates put it at three times the new luxury watch market, itself estimated to be worth up to $10 billion just in the U.S.
“I wouldn’t disagree with that statement,” Brack said. “And it’s only getting bigger.”
Even though watches have been disappearing from people’s wrists with the spread of mobile phones, luxury watches remain a popular status symbol. In fact, sales have slightly crept up in the last two years.
The preowned business allows shoppers to get a good deal on modern watches like Rolex Submariner, while also offering a large selection of vintage pieces like an early 20th Century Cartier Tank.
Danny Govberg, the founder of Govberg’s global watch operation WatchBox, compared the rise of preowned watches to the “quartz revolution” nearly five decades ago.
The introduction of battery-operated quartz movements in wristwatches took a big bite out of the market share from major automatic or mechanical watch brands such as Rolex, Omega, Patek Philippe, Jaeger-LeCoultre, and Audemars Piguet. Those brands, which have since recovered, are now the bread and butter of today’s preowned watch traders.
“Preowned watches are coming out of drawers so fast and furious now that I’ve never seen anything like it,” Govberg said in an interview in the company’s headquarters in Bala Cynwyd, just outside Philadelphia. “It’s a real disruption coming to our industry.”
Luxury brands have taken note. In June, Richemont, the owner of such brands as Cartier and IWC, bought Watchfinder, a British online platform for trading preowned watches.
“The preowned market has taken some business from the new market, there’s no question,” said Steven Kaiser, a veteran watch industry executive and founder of Kaiser Time, a New York-based luxury industry consulting firm.
Govberg entered the preowned watch business in 1983 when he introduced watches to his family’s jewelry store on Jewelers’ Row on Philadelphia’s Sansom Street.
“People weren’t collecting vintage watches back then,” he said, recalling that he would travel to Europe to buy used Rolexes and Patek Philippes from watch shows. “Little shows that you would go to, almost like trading card shows. Like wristwatch swap shows.”
At the turn of the millennium, new platforms such as eBay drove Govberg to adopt his own online strategy. Ultimately, he founded WatchBox, a digital platform and app that includes video reviews and a trading market for valuable timepieces. The company recently launched a second season of “The Classroom,” a YouTube series that aims to educate watch enthusiasts about the intricacies of owning a watch that could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Zeron, of Theo&Harris, also uses video to offer his thoughts on the industry. He regularly gets hundreds of thousands of views for his four weekly YouTube posts.
“Social media is where it took off,” he said, sitting in his parents’ living room with Anna Griffin who was his first employee and a fellow student at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. “We don’t have a retail store — there was no actual foot traffic. It was all social buzz.”
The young entrepreneur, who founded the company with $10,000 in saved up birthday money when he was a college sophomore, has a larger-than-life persona on social media, with a no-holds-barred approach to roasting iconic brands such as Breitling. Some of his viewers comment that he needs to lay off the caffeine or sugar.
The internet has democratized horological knowledge, much like other niche areas of expertise like aviation.
A watch enthusiast can spend hours on web forums, debating the differences between the various iterations of a $4,500 Tudor Black Bay (“I love the domed crystal but I’d be interested to see it 1mm thicker,” says one member on RolexForums.com of the latest “Fifty-Eight” release.)
The explosive growth of preowned watch sales has deeper roots than social media, however. There’s an emotional and intellectual appeal to owning a mechanical device that could have three hundred small pieces inside.
“Nothing that anyone consumes is very interesting anymore,” said Zeron, sporting a 1980s 18-karat gold Rolex Oyster Perpetual Day-Date.
Take the ubiquitous iPhone — easily replaceable, Zeron notes.
“If your vintage Omega breaks, that’s it. It’s over. You will never get another one like it,” he said. “You are going to remember the drinks and the dates and the arguments you had in it. You are going to be sad that you lost it.”
Then, there is the sheer volume and variety on offer, with supply constantly flowing out of people’s drawers.
“If you went into an IWC boutique, they may have 50, 60, 70, 80 watches to choose from,” Govberg said. “But in the preowned space of IWC, you may have 900 watches to choose from.”
But the bottom line is that a preowned luxury watch in great condition is usually a third of the price of a new one.
“For someone that is collecting, for someone that’s trying various pieces, is a natural fit,” said Paul Bragan, a watch collector and senior partner at market research firm Wakefield Research, based in Arlington, Virginia.
Bragan spent hours quizzing Zeron online before taking the plunge with his first vintage watch purchase: a 1978 Rolex Datejust, which the Theo&Harris founder personally delivered during a trip to the Washington, D.C., area. It was the start of a friendship, and many more purchases for Bragan.
“There’s a trade-in value proposition with preowned watches much like the car industry,” said Brack, of NDP.
Watch executives often say their business is like the car industry — only better.
“In the car business, you have about 15 years on a car,” Govberg said. “Watches are meant to last 100 years.”
——
Follow Amir Bibawy on Twitter @AmirBibawy
from Financial Post https://ift.tt/2qQBrcG via IFTTT Blogger Mortgage Tumblr Mortgage Evernote Mortgage Wordpress Mortgage href="https://www.diigo.com/user/gelsi11">Diigo Mortgage
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itsworn · 6 years
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Optima Ultimate Street Car Hits Barber Motorsports Park
If there is any bucket list of racetracks that does not include Barber Motorsports Park in Leeds, Alabama, it cannot be considered a valid list. Although originally designed with motorcycles in mind, Barber Motorsports Park can also easily accept cars, and the rolling terrain outside of Birmingham, Alabama, makes for a very exciting and technically challenging track with lots of elevation changes. Optima’s 2018 Search for the Ultimate Street Car, presented by Advance Auto Parts, made its way to this incredible facility in early August, and while forecasts called for rain, competitors were met by sweltering heat all weekend. Competitors and cooling systems were put to the test all weekend long.
Fortunately, the track facilities included an air-conditioned observation deck that offered great views of the Falken Tire Road Course time trial and a place to cool off. The incredibly manicured grounds and accommodating staff has already made Barber an instant favorite in a series that has visited some of the country’s most iconic racing facilities. Cars competed in six different classes, all vying for invitations to the 2018 SEMA Show and the Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational (OUSCI) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and as is typically the case, the margins of victory were often measured in decimal places.
West Coast competitor Jake Rozelle hitched a ride eastward on the Falken Tires big rig, allowing his 2003 Z06 to capture the win in the Recaro GTS class and an invitation to Vegas. Rozelle’s win also moved him into the class lead in points for the season. However, Second-place competitor Eric Fleming’s C7 is only 13 points back and with Vipers and GT-Rs lurking in the standings, this points battle looks like it won’t be settled until the final event of the year.
Efrain Diaz’s 1969 Camaro also made it onto the same truck as Rozelle’s Z06, which worked out well for him when Dusty Nixon’s 1979 Camaro grabbed the win in the QA1 GTV class. Nixon, who holds the class lead in the season-long points championship, already earned an invitation to Las Vegas, which meant Diaz’s runner-up finish netted him the invite. Larry Woo’s 1968 Camaro finished Third, giving Camaros a clean sweep of the QA1 GTV podium.
As is often the case in this series, the heavy hitters were found in the Holley EFI GTL class, which on this weekend included two former OUSCI champions. However, it was Mike Dusold’s 1967 Camaro that topped the lightweights. Since Dusold had already punched his ticket, as had runner-up and defending OUSCI champion Ken Thwaits, that meant four-time OUSCI champion Danny Popp would earn a return trip to Vegas. While Popp’s Z06 battled issues on Sunday, he did manage to lay down the fastest lap of the weekend (1:36.388) on the road course, earning an $800 gift certificate from Whiteline Performance.
Dusold’s class win also moved him past Thwaits in the season-long points chase, and with Thwaits eyeing a move to a Corvette for the final two events of the regular season, there may be no catching Dusold’s Camaro. With just two OUSCI qualifying events remaining, many competitors are now eyeing up their point totals and trying to determine if they’ll have enough accumulated to earn an OUSCI invitation at the end of the season.
The top three, non-qualified vehicles in each class at the end of the regular season will each receive an invitation to the Vegas finale, as well as the next 10 competitors with the highest point totals, regardless of class affiliation. While that is a bit of a moving target and won’t be finalized until the regular season ends, the bubble at this point seems to be somewhere around 1,100 points for those 10 at-large invitations.
The next stop for the series will be at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, on September 15th and 16th. While these events are all sold out with waiting lists for competitors, spectator admission is free and Fontana offers one of the best venues for checking out the Detroit Speed Autocross and PowerStop Speed Stop Challenge. Whether you want to spectate or compete, you can get more information on the series at DriveOptima.com.
Barber Motorsports Park Results
QA1 GTV Class (pre-1990, 3,200+ pounds) 1. Dusty Nixon, 1979 Camaro 2. Efrain Diaz, 1969 Camaro 3. Larry Woo, 1968 Camaro
Recaro GTS Class (post-1989, 3,200+ pounds, two-seaters and AWD vehicles) 1. Jake Rozelle, 2003 Corvette 2. Steve Kepler, 2013 Nissan GT-R 3. Eric Fleming, 2016 Corvette
Holley EFI GTL Class (non-compacts under 3,200 pounds) 1. Mike Dusold, 1967 Camaro 2. Ken Thwaits, 2006 Mitsubishi Evo 3. Danny Popp, 2003 Corvette
GTE Class (BEV electric vehicles) 1. Karen Thomas, 2018 Tesla X P100D
GTC Class (two-wheel drive compacts, 107-inch wheelbase or less) 1. Brian Johns, 1993 Mazda RX-7 2. Douglas Wind, 2004 Dodge SRT-4 3. Jordan Pierce, 2013 Dodge Dart
Franklin Road Apparel GT Class (post-1989, 3,200+ pounds, 2wd sedans, four-seater coupes, trucks, etc.) 1. Jonathan Blevins, 2008 Ford Mustang 2. John Laughlin, 2016 Ford Mustang 3. Cliff Elliott, 2016 Ford Mustang
Spectre Performance Spirit of the Event Award: David Griffin, 2006 Ford Mustang
Remaining 2018 Optima Search for the Ultimate Street Car Schedule
Auto Club Speedway: September 15-16 Road America: October 6-7 Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational: November 3-4
Byron Burnham’s Pro Touring 1976 Cosworth Vega is more than just a fan favorite, it’s a favorite among his fellow competitors. When asked which car they’d most like to take home with them from Barber Motorsports Park, Byron’s Vega was the top choice, winning the Anderson Composites Competitor’s Choice award.
CB Ramey’s 1984 Corvette may have a C4 skin, but everything underneath is C6. He already has an invitation to the OUSCI, but posted another strong finish at Barber Motorsports Park, putting him in contention for the QA1 GTV class championship if he can find a way to run one more event this season.
Danny Popp will be the first to say his 2003 Z06 was not running right on Sunday. Still, the four-time OUSCI champion found a way to lay down the fastest lap time of the weekend on the Falken Tire Road Course Time Trial and earn an invitation back to Las Vegas in November.
Efrain Diaz’s 1969 Camaro has emerged over the past few years to become one of the top contenders in the QA1 GTV class. It was a long trip from California but worth the effort, as Efrain earned an invitation to the SEMA show and OUSCI.
Jake Rozelle parked his GTV class-winning 1969 Camaro, opting to enter into the ultra-competitive Recaro GTS class for late-model sports cars. It’s been a big step up in competition, but Jake has answered the call. He emerged from Alabama with a class win, a Vegas invite, and the class points lead with two events to go.
It’s been a long layoff for Larry Woo’s 1968 Camaro, making its first appearance of the season at Barber Motorsports Park. However, the car has undergone some major changes in that time and came close to the top overall spot in the Lingenfelter Design & Engineering Challenge. Woo is also a capable driver and likely to be in contention for a Vegas invite and the QA1 GTV class points chase as the season moves on.
Matt Bacon’s work schedule curtailed his plan to enter a Corvette at Barber Motorsports Park, so he brought a diesel Cruze instead and had a great weekend running in the GTC Class for compacts.
This series is well known for its non-traditional autocross layouts, which often take 50 seconds or longer for most of the field to complete. The course at Barber Motorsports Park was unique in that it integrated a 20-degree banked turn. More than a few competitors gained an all-new appreciation for how banking can impact suspension and handling.
Dusty Nixon’s 1979 Camaro led an F-body sweep of the QA1 GTV class podium at Barber Motorsports Park and opened up a significant lead in the season-long points chase over second-place CB Ramey. This one isn’t over yet, though, and we expect the championship won’t be decided until the final event.
The post Optima Ultimate Street Car Hits Barber Motorsports Park appeared first on Hot Rod Network.
from Hot Rod Network https://www.hotrod.com/articles/optima-ultimate-street-car-hits-barber-motorsports-park/ via IFTTT
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williamsefton · 6 years
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Which Podcasts Should Web Designers And Developers Be Listening To?
Which Podcasts Should Web Designers And Developers Be Listening To?
Ricky Onsman
2018-04-18T13:45:00+02:002018-04-18T11:56:08+00:00
We asked the Smashing community what podcasts they listened to, aiming to compile a shortlist of current podcasts for web designers and developers. We had what can only be called a very strong response — both in number and in passion.
First, we winnowed out the podcasts that were on a broader theme (e.g. creativity, mentoring, leadership), on a narrower theme (e.g. on one specific WordPress theme) or on a completely different theme (e.g. car maintenance — I’m sure it was well-intentioned).
When we filtered out those that had produced no new content in the last three months or more (although then we did have to make some exceptions, as you’ll see), and ordered the rest according to how many times they were nominated, we had a graded shortlist of 55.
Agreed, that’s not a very short shortlist.
So, we broke it down into five more reasonably sized shortlists:
Podcasts for web developers
Podcasts for web designers
Podcasts on the web, the Internet and technology
Business podcasts for web professionals
Podcasts that don’t have recent episodes (but do have great archives)
Obviously, it’s highly unlikely anyone could — or would want to — listen to every episode of every one of these podcasts. Still, we’re pretty sure that any web designer or developer will find a few podcasts in this lot that will suit their particular listening tastes.
Getting workflow just right ain't an easy task. So are proper estimates. Or alignment among different departments. That's why we've set up 'this-is-how-I-work'-sessions — with smart cookies sharing what works well for them. A part of the Smashing Membership, of course.
Explore features →
A couple of caveats before we begin:
We don’t claim to be comprehensive. These lists are drawn from suggestions from readers (not all of which were included) plus our own recommendations.
The descriptions are drawn from reader comments, summaries provided by the podcast provider and our own comments. Podcast running times and frequency are, by and large, approximate. The reality is podcasts tend to vary in length, and rarely stick to their stated schedule.
We’ve listed each podcast once only, even though several could qualify for more than one list.
We’ve excluded most videocasts. This is just for listening (videos probably deserve their own article).
Podcasts For Web Developers
Syntax
Wes Bos and Scott Tolinski dive deep into web development topics, explaining how they work and talking about their own experiences. They cover from JavaScript frameworks like React, to the latest advancements in CSS to simplifying web tooling. 30-70 minutes. Weekly.
Developer Tea
A podcast for developers designed to fit inside your tea break, a highly-concentrated, short, frequent podcast specifically for developers who like to learn on their tea (and coffee) break. The Spec Network also produces Design Details. 10-30 minutes. Every two days.
Web Platform Podcast
Covers the latest in browser features, standards, and the tools developers use to build for the web of today and beyond. Founded in 2014 by Erik Isaksen. Hosts Danny, Amal, Leon, and Justin are joined by a special guest to discuss the latest developments. 60 minutes. Weekly.
Devchat Podcasts
Fourteen podcasts with a range of hosts that each explore developments in a specific aspect of development or programming including Ruby, iOS, Angular, JavaScript, React, Rails, security, conference talks, and freelancing. 30-60 minutes. Weekly.
The Bike Shed
Hosts Derek Prior, Sean Griffin, Amanda Hill and guests discuss their development experience and challenges with Ruby, Rails, JavaScript, and whatever else is drawing their attention, admiration, or ire at any particular moment. 30-45 minutes. Weekly.
NodeUp
Hosted by Rod Vagg and a series of occasional co-hosts, this podcast features lengthy discussions with guests and panels about Node.js and Node-related topics. 30-90 minutes. Weekly / Monthly.
.NET Rocks
Carl Franklin and Richard Campbell host an internet audio talk show for anyone interested in programming on the Microsoft .NET platform, including basic information, tutorials, product developments, guests, tips and tricks. 60 minutes. Twice a week.
Three Devs and a Maybe
Join Michael Budd, Fraser Hart, Lewis Cains, and Edd Mann as they discuss software development, frequently joined by a guest on the show’s topic, ranging from daily developer life, PHP, frameworks, testing, good software design and programming languages. 45-60 minutes. Weekly.
Weekly Dev Tips
Hosted by experienced software architect, trainer, and entrepreneur Steve Smith, Weekly Dev Tips offers a variety of technical and career tips for software developers. Each tip is quick and to the point, describing a problem and one or more ways to solve that problem. 5-10 minutes. Weekly.
devMode.fm
Dedicated to the tools, techniques, and technologies used in modern web development. Each episode, Andrew Welch and Patrick Harrington lead a cadre of hosts discussing the latest hotness, pet peeves, and the frontend development technologies we use. 60-90 minutes. Twice a week.
CodeNewbie
Stories from people on their coding journey. New episodes published every Monday. The most supportive community of programmers and people learning to code. Founded by Saron Yitbarek. 30-60 minutes. Weekly.
Front End Happy Hour
A podcast featuring panels of engineers from @Netflix, @Evernote, @Atlassian and @LinkedIn talking over drinks about all things Front End development. 45-60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Under the Radar
From development and design to marketing and support, Under the Radar is all about independent app development. Hosted by David Smith and Marco Arment. 30 minutes. Weekly.
Hanselminutes
Scott Hanselman interviews movers and shakers in technology in this commute-time show. From Michio Kaku to Paul Lutus, Ward Cunningham to Kimberly Bryant, Hanselminutes is talk radio guaranteed not to waste your time. 30 minutes. Weekly.
Fixate on Code
Since October 2017, Larry Botha from South African design agency Fixate has been interviewing well known achievers in web design and development on how to help front end developers write better code. 30 minutes. Weekly.
Podcasts For Web Designers
99% Invisible
Design is everywhere in our lives, perhaps most importantly in the places where we’ve just stopped noticing. 99% Invisible is a weekly exploration of the process and power of design and architecture, from award winning producer Roman Mars. 20-45 minutes. Weekly.
Design Details
A show about the people who design our favorite products, hosted by Bryn Jackson and Brian Lovin. The Spec Network also produces Developer Tea. 60-90 minutes. Weekly.
Presentable
Host Jeffrey Veen brings over two decades of experience as a designer, developer, entrepreneur, and investor as he chats with guests about how we design and build the products that are shaping our digital future and how design is changing the world. 45-60 minutes. Weekly.
Responsive Web Design
In each episode, Karen McGrane and Ethan Marcotte (who coined the term “responsive web design”) interview the people who make responsive redesigns happen. 15-30 minutes. Weekly. (STOP PRESS: Karen and Ethan issued their final episode of this podcast on 26 March 2018.)
RWD Podcast
Host Justin Avery explores new and emerging web technologies, chats with web industry leaders and digs into all aspects of responsive web design. 10-60 minutes. Weekly / Monthly.
UXPodcast
Business, technology and people in digital media. Moving the conversation beyond the traditional realm of User Experience. Hosted by Per Axbom and James Royal-Lawson from Sweden. 30-45 minutes. Every two weeks.
UXpod
A free-ranging set of discussions on matters of interest to people involved in user experience design, website design, and usability in general. Gerry Gaffney set this up to provide a platform for discussing topics of interest to UX practitioners. 30-45 minutes. Weekly / Monthly.
UX-radio
A podcast about IA, UX and Design that features collaborative discussions with industry experts to inspire, educate and share resources with the community. Created by Lara Fedoroff and co-hosted with Chris Chandler. 30-45 minutes. Weekly / Monthly.
User Defenders
Host Jason Ogle aims to highlight inspirational UX Designers leading the way in their craft, by diving deeper into who they are, and what makes them tick/successful, in order to inspire and equip those aspiring to do the same. 30-90 minutes. Weekly.
The Drunken UX Podcast
Our hosts Michael Fienen and Aaron Hill look at issues facing websites and developers that impact the way we all use the web. “In the process, we’ll drink drinks, share thoughts, and hopefully make you laugh a little.” 60 minutes. Twice a week.
UI Breakfast Podcast
Join Jane Portman for conversations about UI/UX design, products, marketing, and so much more, with awesome guests who are industry experts ready to share actionable knowledge. 30-60 minutes. Weekly.
Efficiently Effective
Saskia Videler keeps us up to date with what’s happening in the field of UX and content strategy, aiming to help content experts, UX professionals and others create better digital experiences. 25-40 minutes. Monthly.
The Honest Designers Show
Hosts Tom Ross, Ian Barnard, Dustin Lee and Lisa Glanz have each found success in their creative fields and are here to give struggling designers a completely honest, under the hood look at what it takes to flourish in the modern world. 30-60 minutes. Weekly.
Design Life
A podcast about design and side projects for motivated creators. Femke von Schoonhoven and Charli Prangley (serial side project addicts) saw a gap in the market for a conversational show hosted by two females about design and issues young creatives face. 30-45 minutes. Weekly.
Layout FM
A weekly podcast about design, technology, programming and everything else hosted by Kevin Clark and Rafael Conde. 60-90 minutes. Weekly.
Bread Time
Gabriel Valdivia and Charlie Deets host this micro-podcast about design and technology, the impact of each on the other, and the impact of them both on all of us. 10-30 minutes. Weekly.
The Deeply Graphic DesignCast
Every episode covers a new graphic design-related topic, and a few relevant tangents along the way. Wes McDowell and his co-hosts also answer listener-submitted questions in every episode. 60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Podcasts On The Web, The Internet, And Technology
The Big Web Show
Veteran web designer and industry standards champion Jeffrey Zeldman is joined by special guests to address topics like web publishing, art direction, content strategy, typography, web technology, and more. 60 minutes. Weekly.
ShopTalk
A podcast about front end web design, development and UX. Each week Chris Coyier and Dave Rupert are joined by a special guest to talk shop and answer listener submitted questions. 60 minutes. Weekly.
Boagworld
Paul Boag and Marcus Lillington are joined by a variety of guests to discuss a range of web design related topics. Fun, informative and quintessentially British, with content for designers, developers and website owners, something for everybody. 60 minutes. Weekly.
The Changelog
Conversations with the hackers, leaders, and innovators of open source. Hosts Adam Stacoviak and Jerod Santo do in-depth interviews with the best and brightest software engineers, hackers, leaders, and innovators. 60-90 minutes. Weekly.
Back to Front Show
Topics under discussion hosted by Keir Whitaker and Kieran Masterton include remote working, working in the web industry, productivity, hipster beards and much more. Released irregularly but always produced with passion. 30-60 minutes. Weekly / Monthly.
The Next Billion Seconds
The coming “next billion seconds” are the most important in human history, as technology transforms the way we live and work. Mark Pesce talks to some of the brightest minds shaping our world. 30-60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Toolsday
Hosted by Una Kravets and Chris Dhanaraj, Toolsday is about the latest in tech tools, tips, and tricks. 30 minutes. Weekly.
Reply All
A podcast about the internet, often delving deeper into modern life. Hosted by PJ Vogt and Alex Goldman from US narrative podcasting company Gimlet Media. 30-60 minutes. Weekly.
CTRL+CLICK CAST
Diverse voices from industry leaders and innovators, who tackle everything from design, code and CMS, to culture and business challenges. Focused, topical discussions hosted by Lea Alcantara and Emily Lewis. 60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Modern Web
Explores next generation frameworks, standards, and techniques. Hosted by Tracy Lee. Topics include EmberJS, ReactJS, AngularJS, ES2015, RxJS, functional reactive programming. 60 minutes. Weekly.
Relative Paths
A UK based podcast on “web development and stuff like that” for web industry types. Hosted by Mark Phoenix and Ben Hutchings. 60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Business Podcasts For Web Professionals
The Businessology Show
The Businessology Show is a podcast about the business of design and the design of business, hosted by CPA/coach Jason Blumer. 30 minutes. Monthly.
CodePen Radio
Chris Coyier, Alex Vazquez, and Tim Sabat, the co-founders of CodePen, talk about the ins and outs of running a small web software business. The good, the bad, and the ugly. 30 minutes. Weekly.
BizCraft
Podcast about the business side of web design, recorded live almost every two weeks. Your hosts are Carl Smith of nGen Works and Gene Crawford of UnmatchedStyle. 45-60 minutes. Every two weeks.
Podcasts That Don’t Have Recent Episodes (But Do Have Great Archives)
Design Review Podcast
No chit-chat, just focused in-depth discussions about design topics that matter. Jonathan Shariat and Chris Liu are your hosts and bring to the table passion and years of experience. 30-60 minutes. Every two weeks. Last episode 26 November 2017.
Style Guide Podcast
A small batch series of interviews (20 in total) on Style Guides, hosted by Anna Debenham and Brad Frost, with high profile designer guests. 45 minutes. Weekly. Last episode 19 November 2017.
True North
Looks to uncover the stories of everyday people creating and designing, and highlight the research and testing that drives innovation. Produced by Loop11. 15-60 minutes. Every two weeks. Last episode 18 October 2017
UIE.fm Master Feed
Get all episodes from every show on the UIE network in this master feed: UIE Book Corner (with Adam Churchill) and The UIE Podcast (with Jared Spool) plus some archived older shows. 15-60 minutes. Weekly. Last episode 4 October 2017.
Let’s Make Mistakes
A podcast about design with your hosts, Mike Monteiro, Liam Campbell, Steph Monette, and Seven Morris, plus a range of guests who discuss good design, business and ethics. 45-60 minutes. Weekly / Monthly. Last episode 3 August 2017.
Motion and Meaning
A podcast about motion for digital designers brought to you by Val Head and Cennydd Bowles, covering everything from the basic principles of animation through to advanced tools and techniques. 30 minutes. Monthly. Last episode 13 December 2016.
The Web Ahead
Conversations with world experts on changing technologies and future of the web. The Web Ahead is your shortcut to keeping up. Hosted by Jen Simmons. 60-100 minutes. Monthly. Last episode 30 June 2016.
Unfinished Business
UK designer Andy Clarke and guests have plenty to talk about, mostly on and around web design, creative work and modern life. 60-90 minutes. Monthly. Last episode 28 June 2016. (STOP PRESS: A new episode was issued on 20 March 2018. Looks like it’s back in action.)
Dollars to Donuts
A podcast where Steve Portigal talks with the people who lead user research in their organizations. 50-75 minutes. Irregular. Last episode 10 May 2016.
Any Other Good Ones Missing?
As we noted, there are probably many other good podcasts out there for web designers and developers. If we’ve missed your favorite, let us know about it in the comments, or in the original threads on Twitter or Facebook.
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junker-town · 6 years
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Sony Open in Hawaii 2018: Schedule, tee times, TV/live stream info, and scores for Jan. 11-14
The Sony Open is one of the good low-key early-season events on the PGA Tour. Here are your nuts and bolts for the 2018 edition and some reasons why you should absolutely watch.
The PGA Tour hops from Maui to Oahu this week for the first full-field event of the year, the Sony Open. The annual stop at Waialae may tumble to the farthest recesses of your mind by the end of the season, but it has become a highlight of the early-season schedule for the hardcore golf fans. There are stops on the upcoming West Coast swing that will get much more love, but the Sony is a great combination of rookies and vets grinding for solidified PGA Tour card status on a course with a ton of history.
It’s also an opportunity for more primetime golf following up last week’s little 34-man party that was the Tournament of Champions. I thought the ToC fizzled a bit on the weekend, despite the fireworks from the eventual winner and world No. 1 Dustin Johnson. It was great to watch PGA Tour golf again and Kapalua was as beautiful as ever, but it ran out of juice in my very subjective opinion.
With a full field and a course that can yield some crazy low numbers, maybe we get a better show this week. Here are some reasons to watch as well as the nuts and bolts for the Sony. We’ll update this as a hub of sorts as the tournament progresses.
Why Watch
1) It’s pretty. This is simple. I won’t try to expound much beyond telling you that this Waialae Country Club layout is easy to look at. The media center is basically on the beach — not that I know from experience — one day, perhaps. The course runs right up and almost onto the beach -- so close that a couple certain pros going out for a kayak ride in the ocean were easily caught from the golf course cameras and documented in a suffocating barrage of content last year. And you mayyyy see a shot or two of the infamous “W” shaped palms lording over the 18th green.
Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
2) Raynor. I will never pretend to be a golf course architecture expert, although I appreciate those who are and love following the topic. It’s a topic that’s taken on increased interest and debate, thanks to a handful of intelligent voices in social and digital media shining new light.
Waialae is one of a too-small handful of PGA Tour courses with Golden Age roots as it was one of Seth Raynor’s last projects in the 1920s. Raynor has been a poster boy for the increased discussion and appreciation from the aforementioned group on social media. He’s a cult hero for many. Now, the Waialae of 2018 is very different from Raynor’s original intent but there are still elements that make this worth watching, especially with Tom Doak, a modern day architecture cult hero, slowly putting some restorative efforts into the historic course. The redan 17th hole should be the most noticeable change and throwback this year.
I think this is a fascinating topic worth diving into and for more, go to the actual experts. Andy Johnson at The Fried Egg, one of those ascendant golf architecture experts I mentioned, hosted Doak on his podcast this week. They went through some of the original Raynor intent, the restoration efforts, and how the course plays for the best pros in the world on a week like this.
3) #58Watch. Breaking 60 has become somewhat passé but it’s still an accomplishment that gets you to change the channel to golf once murmurs of a pro going super deep start rumbling on Twitter and elsewhere. Waialae is one of the better opportunities for a pro to break 60, and maybe even match Jim Furyk’s ridiculous 58 from the Travelers a few years ago.
It’s a par 70 and the present day big hitters are taking some ridiculous lines off the tees — nothing that Raynor could have imagined back when it was originally designed. We saw this from Justin Thomas last year, when he torched the place for a 59 en route to his second win in the first two weeks of the 2017 season. It’s likely we’re back on #59Watch or maybe even #58Watch again this week.
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4) Rookies. With this being our first full-field event of the new year, it’s also a great opportunity to get a good look at this year’s rookie class. Of course, those rookies get some much-needed starts during the wraparound schedule in the fall, but some of these early year events are major chances to make hay and solidify their status for the rest of the year, or at least before the priority rankings reshuffle. The Sony Open is one of their best chances to accrue some FedExCup points, with some of the upcoming West Coast swing events having smaller fields that don’t provide starts for rookies with lower priority.
We’ve seen a rookie win this event recently, with Russell Henley going low in 2013 to win the Sony in his PGA Tour debut. There’s a boatload of rookies playing this week -- they’re all worth watching but some of the bigger names that may get some love are Peter Uihlein, Tom Lovelady, Aaron Wise, Stephan Jaeger, and Austin Cook, who already won during the wraparound schedule.
You’re going to get plenty of chances to watch the top players in the world rankings in the coming months. This is a good chance to see some of the best young up-and-comers, the players who aren’t household names but are worth rooting for and could become one soon.
How to Watch
This is really the last opportunity to watch primetime PGA Tour golf until the fall, when the Asian swing returns during the wraparound portion of the schedule. The upcoming West Coast swing does allow for some golf to go past dinner time in the east coast, but not by much given the limited daylight hours this time of year.
The only real options for primetime golf would be a west coast venue at either U.S. Open or the PGA Championship. The USGA is fond of getting the national championship on the west coast often during the longest days of the year, allowing for finishes as late as 11 p.m. ET. But this year, we’re about as far away from the West Coast as possible with the 2018 U.S. Open being played at Shinnecock Hills. So this is it really, take it in because from here on out, your weekend finishes on the PGA Tour will all slot in during daylight hours.
Like last week on Maui, Golf Channel will have exclusive coverage of the entire tournament over the next four days. It’s that time of year when CBS is still occupied with football on the weekends, and these events aren’t necessarily big enough to get the bump up to NBC. And Golf Channel is plenty capable of just running with the coverage throughout, as we see during the fall series too.
They will, however, be down a man at times this week. Jim “Bones” Mackay (Phil Mickelson’s former longtime caddie, if you’re completely golf ignorant) has become one of the best parts of the Golf Channel/NBC coverage. But this week, he’s picking up the bag again and looping for Justin Thomas, whose regular caddie has to take a few weeks off due to plantar fasciitis. Bones is going to do double duty, putting on the headset and working as a walking reporter when Thomas is not playing. But given that the defending champ tore this course up last year and will likely play well again, Bones should be on the course as a caddie during the late weekend broadcast times.
Here’s your full media schedule for the week:
Thursday’s first-round coverage
Television:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel
Online streams:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel simulcast stream
Radio:
5 p.m. — PGA Tour Radio on Sirius-XM (Ch. 92/208 and streamed here)
Friday’s second-round coverage
Television:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel
Online streams:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel simulcast stream
Radio:
5 p.m. — PGA Tour Radio on Sirius-XM (Ch. 92/208 and streamed here)
Saturday’s third round coverage
Television:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel
Online streams:
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Golf Channel simulcast stream
Radio:
5 p.m. — PGA Tour Radio on Sirius-XM (Ch. 92/208 and streamed here)
Sunday’s final round coverage
Television:
6 to 10 p.m. — Golf Channel
Online streams:
6 to 10 p.m. — Golf Channel simulcast stream
Radio:
5 p.m. — PGA Tour Radio on Sirius-XM (Ch. 92/208 and streamed here)
Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images
Jordan Spieth is back for the second straight year at the Sony.
Tee Times
This is the first full field event of the year. That little party on Maui last week featured just 34 players and was obviously easy to schedule over four days with a ton of flexibility. Now we’re back to the grind of sending two waves off split tees for the first 36 holes.
They will start at 7 a.m. local time on Oahu and the last group will go at 1:30 p.m. local, which is five hours behind ET. So this is a full day from sun-up to sun-down with 144 players in the field. Here are your round 1 tee times.
Thursday’s tee sheet (all times ET!)
Morning wave off No. 1:
12 p.m. -- Danny Lee, Ryan Palmer, Colt Knost
12:10 p.m. -- Ted Potter, Jr., Michael Kim, Richy Werenski
12:20 p.m. -- Robert Streb, John Huh, Morgan Hoffmann
12:30 p.m. -- Jonas Blixt, D.A. Points, Vijay Singh
12:40 p.m. -- Wesley Bryan, Chris Kirk, K.J. Choi
12:50 p.m. -- Austin Cook, Cameron Smith, Luke Donald
1 p.m. -- Russell Henley, Fabian Gomez, Peter Malnati
1:10 p.m. -- Chad Campbell, Jason Kokrak, Tyrone Van Aswegen
1:20 p.m. -- Troy Merritt, Ben Martin, Cameron Tringale
1:30 p.m. -- Talor Gooch, Lanto Griffin, Daisuke Kataoka
1:40 p.m. -- Tyler Duncan, Andrew Yun, John Oda
1:50 p.m. -- Andrew Putnam, Stephan Jaeger, Sam Ryder
Morning wave off No. 10:
12 p.m. -- Bill Haas, Steve Wheatcroft, Blayne Barber
12:10 p.m. -- Mark Wilson, Harold Varner III, Ollie Schniederjans
12:20 p.m. -- Jonathan Byrd, J.J. Spaun, Kevin Tway
12:30 p.m. -- Vaughn Taylor, Emiliano Grillo, Charles Howell III
12:40 p.m. -- Kyle Stanley, Russell Knox, James Hahn
12:50 p.m. -- Marc Leishman, Si Woo Kim, Webb Simpson
1 p.m. -- Xander Schauffele, Jordan Spieth, Daniel Berger
1:10 p.m. -- Matt Jones, Ryan Blaum, Pete Uihlein
1:20 p.m. -- Omar Uresti, Bronson Burgoon, Brandon Harkins
1:30 p.m. -- Brett Stegmaier, Matt Akins, Tatsuya Kodai
1:40 p.m. -- Ben Silverman, Roberto Diaz, Eric Dugas
1:50 p.m. -- Nicholas Lindheim, Adam Schenk, Shugo Imahira
Afternoon wave off No. 1:
4:40 p.m. -- Scott Brown, Keegan Bradley, Sean O’Hair
4:50 p.m. -- Scott Piercy, Ricky Barnes, Steve Allan
5 p.m. -- Harris English, Jamie Lovemark, Patrick Rodgers
5:10 p.m. -- Brian Harman, Billy Hurley III, Smylie Kaufman
5:20 p.m. -- Mac Hughes, Greg Chalmers, Tony Finau
5:30 p.m. -- Patton Kizzire, Jimmy Walker, Zach Johnson
5:40 p.m. -- Justin Thomas, Jason Dufner, Kevin Kisner
5:50 p.m. -- J.J. Henry, Rory Sabbatini, Jerry Kelly
6 p.m. -- Joel Dahmen, Tom Lovelady, Zecheng Dou
6:10 p.m. -- Sam Saunders, Tom Hoge, Nate Lashley
6:20 p.m. -- Kyle Thompson, Xinjun Zhang, Ethan Tracy
6:30 p.m. -- Martin Piller, Aaron Wise, Abraham Ancer
Afternoon wave off No. 10:
4:40 p.m. -- Chez Reavie, Jon Curran, Dominic Bozzelli
4:50 p.m. -- Kevin Na, Whee Kim, Luke List
5 p.m. -- Michael Thompson, Kelly Kraft, Yusaku Miyazato
5:10 p.m. -- Aaron Baddeley, Gary Woodland, Brian Gay
5:20 p.m. -- Brian Stuard, Sangmoon Bae, Stewart Cink
5:30 p.m. -- Ryan Armour, Hudson Swafford, Jim Herman
5:40 p.m. -- Chris Stroud, Cody Gribble, William McGirt
5:50 p.m. -- Matt Every, John Peterson, Andrew Landry
6 p.m. -- Jonathan Randolph, Beau Hossler, Hyung-Sung Kim
6:10 p.m. -- Rob Oppenheim, Conrad Shindler, Satoshi Kodaira
6:20 p.m. -- Seamus Power, Corey Conners, Gunn Yang
6:30 p.m. -- Brice Garnett, Keith Mitchell, Tyler Ota
Scores
We’ll update scores here throughout the week and post final results come Sunday night.
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britishopen-blog1 · 7 years
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British Open
British Open The Royal Birkdale will host British Open 2017 Open Championship for the tenth time in July 2017 and will welcome the world’s greatest golfers to one of the sport’s most renowned. With elite players Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day struggling, this could be the tournament that sees a sleeper, underdog or unknown come to the forefront and dominate at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England. British Open 2017 Live Online HD Here British Open 2017 TV schedule Live streaming is available on the Golf Channel’s official site and the Golf Channel app. Thursday, July 20 1:35 a.m. — Mark O’Meara, Chris Wood, Ryan Moore 1:46 a.m. — Maverick McNealy, Phachara Khongwatmai, Stuart Manley 1:57 a.m. — Stewart Cink, Sandy Lyle, Jeunghung Wang 2:08 a.m. — Paul Broadhurst, Thongchai Jaidee, Roberto Castro 2:19 a.m. — Tom Lehman, Byeong Hun An, Darren Fichardt 2:30 a.m. — Soren Kjeldsen, Billy Horschel, Danny Willett 2:41 a.m. — Matthew Fitzpatrick, Steve Stricker, Emiliano Grillo 2:52 a.m. — Jason Dufner, Branden Grace, Bryson DeChambeau 3:03 a.m. — Alex Noren, Russell Knox, Ian Poulter 3:14 a.m. — David Duval, Prayad Marksaeng, KT Kim 3:25 a.m. — Younghan Song, David Horsey, Dylan Frittelli 3:36 a.m. — Mike Lorenzo-Vera, Charles Howell III, Shiv Kapur 3:47 a.m. — Russell Henley, Fabrizio Zanotti, Peter Uihlein 4:03 a.m. — Alexander Levy, Brendan Steele, Webb Simpson 4:14 a.m. — Wesley Bryan, Anirban Lahiri, Alfie Plant 4:25 a.m. — Darren Clarke, Gary Woodland, Harry Ellis 4:36 a.m. — Padraig Harrington, Pat Perez, Thomas Pieters 4:47 a.m. — Henrik Stenson, Si Woo Kim, Jordan Spieth 4:58 a.m. — Louis Oosthuizen, Justin Rose, Justin Thomas 5:09 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, Hideki Matsuyama, Tommy Fleetwood 5:20 a.m. — J.B. Holmes, Brandt Snedeker, Shane Lowry 5:31 a.m. — Richard Bland, Shaun Norris, Luca Cianchetti 5:42 a.m. — Yikeun Chang, Chan Kim, Mark Foster 5:53 a.m. — Sung-Hoon Kang, Tony Finau, Matthieu Pavon 6:04 a.m. — Alexander Bjork, Joe Dean, Robert Streb 6:15 a.m. — Robert Dinwiddie, Julian Suri, Adam Hodkinson 6:36 a.m. — Andrew Johnson, Adam Hadwin, Todd Hamilton 6:47 a.m. — John Daly, Adam Bland, Connor Syme 6:58 a.m. — William McGirt, Toby Tree, Jamie Lovemark 7:09 a.m. — Matthew Griffin, Austin Connelly, Matthew Southgate 7:20 a.m. — Cameron Smith, Bill Haas, Callum Shinkwin 7:31 a.m. — Michael Hendry, Brian Harman, Martin Laird 7:42 a.m. — Ernie Els, Ross Fisher, Bernd Wiesberger 7:53 a.m. — Tyrrell Hatton, Martin Kaymer, Aaron Baddeley 8:04 a.m. — Zach Johnson, Jason Day, Sergio Garcia 8:15 a.m. — Andy Sullivan, Joost Luiten, David Lipsky 8:26 a.m. — Rickie Fowler, Adam Scott, Paul Casey 8:37 a.m. — Matt Kuchar, Richie Ramsay, Ryan Fox 8:48 a.m. — Kevin Kisner, Charley Hoffman, David Drysdale 9:04 a.m. — Jimmy Walker, Hideto Tanihara, Thorbjorn Olesen 9:15 a.m. — Jhonattan Vegas, Brandon Stone, Sean O’Hair 9:26 a.m. — Daniel Berger, Pablo Larrazabal, Yuta Ikeda 9:37 a.m. — Paul Lawrie, Kevin Chappell, Yusaku Miyazato 9:48 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Charl Schwartzel 9:59 a.m. — Jon Rahm, Patrick Reed, Lee Westwood 10:10 a.m. — Phil Mickelson, Francesco Molinari, Marc Leishman 10:21 a.m. — Scott Hend, Rafael Cabrera-Bello, Bubba Watson 10:32 a.m. — Paul Waring, Kyle Stanley, Kevin Na 10:43 a.m. — Giwhan Kim, Xander Schauffele, Andrew Dodt 10:54 a.m. — Haotong Li, Kent Bulle, Haydn McCullen 11:05 a.m. — Jbe’ Kruger, Nick McCarthy, Ashley Hall 11:16 a.m. — Ryan McCarthy, Laurie Canter, Sebastian Munoz The Open Birkdale bills itself as “one of the truest tests of links golf,” and it lays out similarly to the other eight courses in the Open rota. Its narrow holes and deep bunkers, plus the potential for high winds, make it a typically challenging Open track. The course will play at around 7,156 yards and is a par-70, but the conditions and course layout make it brutally challenging anyway. In 2008, Harrington’s winning score was 3 over par, and only four players stayed within nine strokes of even over the full 72 holes. British Open 2017 Live World No. 1 Dustin Johnson is a slim favorite entering the event, with No. 3 Jordan Spieth and No. 7 Jon Rahm just behind him. Johnson has three wins in 12 starts this year, but he’s struggled through the first two majors. He withdrew from the Masters in April with a reported back injury, and he missed the cut at the U.S. Open in June. British Open 2017 Live Stream Rahm is the sport’s fastest-rising star, a first-year professional who ended 2016 ranked 125th in the world. He’s coming off an Irish Open win on the European Tour and also won the Farmers Insurance Open. Rahm hits a huge golf ball and has been stunningly consistent at 22 years old. In 15 starts this year, he’s got nine top-10 finishes against two missed cuts. It’s hard to imagine him not playing well at Birkdale. British Open 2017 https://british-open.net/
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sabrinaspzllman · 3 years
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sabrinaspzllman · 3 years
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♡ abbey cowen icons without psd ♡
©  like or reblog if you use. please, follow me @sabrinaspzllman on tw or ig. i follow back u! ♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡
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