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Posted
13 minutes ago, Frank Pembleton said:

Ne bih ništa dodavao da ne zapetljavam oko Packersa.

 

Kad zaglibite u mulj na 15-20 godina kao Tampa, Billsi, Lionsi ili Brownsi, pa tad zatreba lova za stadion a niko ne bude zagrejan da ga šišaju za parče papira, onda će neki šupak da vas kupi sve i preseli u Orlando :D

  • +1 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, Frank Pembleton said:

Alexandra Carey was born in 1988 and is the product of a lengthy relationship between her mother and Bowlen, who was 44 and married at the time. Her parents were said to be together for years prior to her birth and many years after, and Bowlen was a fixture in their life.

Carey has hardly lived her life in secret – some older members of the Bowlen clan even knew he had an eighth child somewhere – but most of Pat’s youngest children in Denver were blindsided by the revelation.

Upon learning of her, some relatives scrambled to meet her and welcome her to the family. But they also wanted to know if she planned to join one of the NFL’s most contentious battles: the fight over which of Bowlen’s heirs will gain control of the Broncos.
Last November, she filed an entry of appearance in the ongoing court case, and it was granted. Carey is now privy to the details and related documents of the lawsuit. She is not expected to pursue a controlling ownership interest or even a one-eighth share of the Broncos. But her standing in the ownership dispute could be dictated by the revelations to come, and in this saga, it would be foolish to predict anything.

.... Shiit has hit the fan!
 

Gde si ovo nasao? Ovo bukvalno prvi put cujem. Dal je moguce da ga u Koloradu toliko vole da niko ovo nije stavio u novine? Na milehighreport se stalno prica o Bowlenovoj deci i niko ne spominje da postoji i vanbracni naslednik.

Posted
2 minutes ago, ObiW said:

Gde si ovo nasao? Ovo bukvalno prvi put cujem. Dal je moguce da ga u Koloradu toliko vole da niko ovo nije stavio u novine? Na milehighreport se stalno prica o Bowlenovoj deci i niko ne spominje da postoji i vanbracni naslednik.


Ovo skoro pa zvuči kao scenario iz Knives Out filma :lolol:

 

PS: još da dodam, ako Brejdi sa 43 gosine može da igra SB, onda još ima nade za nas matorce u nekim sportovima!

Posted

Velja mu ga dao 5 minuta po istraživačkom novinarstvu i odmah počeli ispadati kosturi iz ormara. Sve su to reptili na koje pristojan čovek ni biciklo ne bi prislonio.

Samo Raiders i Bears bakutanerke i gospoda Woody i Chris zaslužuju poštovanje. :nobles:

 

Posted

Čekaj, Medved bakica je i dalje živa? (živa bila). Pa ona ima oko stotke, mislim da nema par godina kada je imala preko 90 kako je išla i na gostovanja. Svaka čast gospođo:thumbsup:

Posted
Gde si ovo nasao? Ovo bukvalno prvi put cujem. Dal je moguce da ga u Koloradu toliko vole da niko ovo nije stavio u novine? Na milehighreport se stalno prica o Bowlenovoj deci i niko ne spominje da postoji i vanbracni naslednik.
Članak je februar 2020,


The afternoon of June 24, a line of black SUVs made its way to downtown Denver and wrapped around a two-block stretch of the North Capitol Hill neighborhood. Traffic stalled along the main thoroughfare as curious drivers slowed to watch dozens of former NFL players, coaches and team owners, most clad in dark suits and sunglasses, exit the cars and gather on the steps of the century-old Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.

Sometimes called “The Pinnacled Glory of the West,” the Gothic cathedral has a grandeur fitting of its history, with 210-foot twin bell spires that tower over Colfax Avenue, an interior blanketed in white marble and 75 elaborate stained-glass windows that cast colored beams onto its wooden pews.

There was perhaps no place more suitable to honor Pat Bowlen, the longtime owner of the Denver Broncos who died 11 days earlier at age 75. Bowlen owned the Broncos for 35 years and transformed a once-floundering franchise into one of the league’s most successful teams. During his tenure, the Broncos had as many Super Bowl appearances (seven) as losing seasons, won three championships and sold out every home game.

An estimated 500 guests attended his memorial service that day, including John Elway and fellow Hall of Famers Terrell Davis, Shannon Sharpe and Floyd Little. Former coach Mike Shanahan was there, along with Falcons owner Arthur Blank and Colts owner Jim Irsay. Peyton Manning was a guest too and, fittingly, sat in the 18th pew. And at the front of the cathedral sat Bowlen’s widow and children, all dressed in black and wearing traditional Hawaiian leis, a nod to the fact that Bowlen split his time between Denver and Oahu.

Some of Bowlen’s children read scripture during the ceremony, and his longtime friend John Finney delivered a eulogy with stories of them canoe surfing in Hawaii and jetting to and from Broncos games. When the service concluded, Johnny Bowlen carried the gold urn with his father’s ashes and led the procession of Bowlen children toward the back of the church.

As they made their way down the aisle, it is unlikely they took note of a 30-year-old woman in the last row. She had the same blonde hair as her mother, seated next to her, but the eyes and chiseled visage of her father.

She was born in Los Angeles and has lived there for much of her life, but she’s a Broncos fan. Her childhood home – an estate in one of L.A.’s most affluent neighborhoods – had a John Lynch jersey hanging on the wall and Broncos memorabilia scattered throughout. Over the years, she followed the team during her undergraduate studies in anthropology, and as she earned master’s degrees in both public health and business. She attended Broncos games in Denver and Los Angeles last season.

It wasn’t until two months after Bowlen’s children walked past her that day that they learned who she was – when her name and the words “daughter” and “heir” appeared on Arapahoe County District Court documents.

Alexandra Carey was born in 1988 and is the product of a lengthy relationship between her mother and Bowlen, who was 44 and married at the time. Her parents were said to be together for years prior to her birth and many years after, and Bowlen was a fixture in their life.

Carey has hardly lived her life in secret – some older members of the Bowlen clan even knew he had an eighth child somewhere – but most of Pat’s youngest children in Denver were blindsided by the revelation.

Upon learning of her, some relatives scrambled to meet her and welcome her to the family. But they also wanted to know if she planned to join one of the NFL’s most contentious battles: the fight over which of Bowlen’s heirs will gain control of the Broncos.

Over the last two years, as Bowlen’s health deteriorated because of Alzheimer’s, disputes over his estate and the future of his team led to multiple lawsuits, the airing of once-private family details and a hostility between some family members and the trustees empowered to pick his successor. All the while, the NFL franchise Bowlen built to “be No. 1 in everything” has tumbled, and few deny that the ownership turmoil has negatively affected the on-field product.

The saga has become a 21st century “Game of Thrones,” with numerous subplots and an expanding cast of characters. Carey’s emergence was, in context, less of a bombshell and more like the latest twist in a drama that might be only just beginning. She was another piece on the board, another spoke on the wheel.

When Jerry Jones steps down as owner of the Dallas Cowboys, it’s clear who will take his place. Stephen Jones has worked alongside his father for three decades, already runs much of the operation and has been groomed for controlling ownership.

When Robert Kraft steps down as owner of the New England Patriots, his son Jonathan, who has worked with him since the day the family bought the team in 1994 and now oversees the management of every department, will run the team.

Long before Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt died in 2006, he had transferred almost all of his interests into trusts for his four children. Clark Hunt, a son from Lamar’s second marriage, was heavily involved in the family’s pro sports empire and was selected to succeed his father as controlling owner and chairman of Hunt Sports Group LLC. But he and his three siblings have equal shares of the team, and all have played significant roles in overseeing the family’s multiple sports holdings.

“My siblings don’t work for me,” Clark once told The Dallas Morning News. “We work together.”

In contrast, there was no agreed-upon transition plan for the Broncos. None of the Bowlen children were groomed to run the team. Pat never declared a successor.

Instead, when he stepped down in the fall of 2013, his interest in the Broncos (approximately 77 percent now) was placed in a trust overseen by three non-family members: team president/CEO Joe Ellis, team counsel Rich Slivka and Denver attorney Mary Kelly. When Bowlen’s widow Annabel dies – she announced her diagnosis of Alzheimer’s in 2018 — his interest will be passed to his seven children from marriage in equal shares. (The remaining non-voting stake in the team is owned by Pat’s brother, John Bowlen.)

Pat Bowlen had two daughters – Amie Klemmer, 50, and Beth Bowlen Wallace, 49 – with his first wife, Sally Parker. With Annabel, Bowlen had five children: Patrick Dennis III, 35; John Michael, 34; Brittany Alexandra, 30; Annabel Victoria, 27; and Christianna Elizabeth, 22.

“If something were to happen to me, I’ve already made this clear: This team is going to stay in the Bowlen family no matter what,” Pat told The Denver Post in 2013.

But his trust – which was signed in March 2009 along with his will and general power of attorney – does not include a detailed model for succession. There is no mention of what the children must do to prove themselves worthy or how the trustees must decide or when.

Bowlen’s hope was that one of the children would emerge as the best candidate for principal ownership, but he left it to the trustees to determine if and when one should be given the reins to a team valued at $3 billion – or if they should sell it.

Their search for a successor has entered Year 7, and that they still haven’t appointed the next controlling owner – or appear close to doing so – has led to speculation they are dragging out the process to keep themselves in power, a charge they deny.

“It looks messy and I understand that,” said Ellis, 62, who is also controlling owner delegee. “… We’re not going to follow anyone else’s plan; we’re going to follow Pat’s plan. That’s what I’m here to do, that’s what I’m here to carry out and I know exactly what he told me.”


Patrick Bowlen III (left) and Johnny Bowlen. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
Although there are six women who are sole principal owners of an NFL franchise, most teams land in the hands of male heirs. Bowlen had two sons, both with Annabel, but neither is a contender for the Broncos’ throne.

Patrick III, the oldest son who is married and has a young daughter, has been a facilities coordinator at Empower Field at Mile High for more than a decade. But he has never expressed interest in becoming the controlling owner.

Then there’s Johnny.

A former defensive back recruited by Jim Harbaugh at the University of San Diego, Johnny returned to Colorado when his football career came to a quick end. He earned a degree in management from the University of Denver and then an MBA from the University of Colorado Denver. He last worked in what the Broncos said was a marketing position at the stadium (he was never listed in any of the team’s media guides), but in 2015 he was placed on indefinite leave.

Johnny was arrested that year on domestic violence charges and infamously told the 911 dispatcher that he owned the Broncos and was “the blood of the city.” He was later found guilty of harassment and sentenced to probation and ordered to undergo drug and mental health treatment.

Johnny’s public appearances with the rest of the family have been limited over the years, all while he has used his Instagram account @superbowlen to publish rants about the Broncos’ coaching staff, his desire to move the team to Canada, how he “was left for dead by my own fucking bitch sisters” and how his father wanted him and not one of his sisters to take over the team.

“He told me I’d be the one. That shit really burns,” Johnny wrote last year. “I go bananas at times thinking about it. I do. It makes a ton of sense. I’m the most qualified. The best trained. I’ve got all the credentials, other (than) this silly senior management job. It kills me to not get to do what my dad wanted me to. I sure as hell hope someone let’s me at least try …”

Johnny has since moved to California.

So that leaves Bowlen’s five daughters, three of whom can probably be ruled out.

In February 2015, the trustees sent the seven children and Annabel what they labeled “requirements and qualifications” for controlling ownership. The list included a bachelor’s degree in business or economics; or a degree paired with an advanced business-related degree or law degree; at least five years of “senior management” experience with the team, stadium or NFL (the trustees didn’t specify which titles qualified); and a number of subjective traits, such as the ability to “influence and motivate others” and “earn respect.”

The requirements eliminated from consideration the two youngest daughters, Annabel Victoria and Christianna Elizabeth, who are both in their 20s and don’t meet the educational or work requirements. The oldest, Amie, doesn’t have an advanced degree or the work experience, and she has no desire to run the Broncos on her own. She lives in Hawaii, where her husband is a prominent surgeon.

That left Beth and Brittany, two daughters born nearly 20 years apart to different mothers. Both have declared a desire to run the Broncos, and the Bowlen clan is now split, each side angling to get their preferred choice in power.

In May 2018, Beth announced she was ready to become controlling owner of the Broncos and that she had proposed to the trustees a long-term succession plan that included her younger siblings.

“I have completed the criteria laid out by the trustees, so I felt it was a good time to come out and express my interest and desire to be a part of the organization again,” she told The Athletic.

“Since it is my dad’s wishes, I’m hoping they’ll respond favorably, especially since it includes all of the children as having an opportunity at some point in time.”

When the trustees clapped back that Beth was “not capable or qualified,” fireworks went off.

First, Bill Bowlen, Pat’s brother, issued his support of Beth. John Elway then tweeted his support of Ellis, who is theoretically his boss. Then Beth and Ellis began a hostile battle via media and court documents.

Beth told The Athletic she is “a very capable and qualified woman and that can be very threatening to some men.” In a court filing months later, the trustees stated she “lacked the business experience and acumen, knowledge, leadership skills, integrity, and character necessary” to run a $3 billion franchise.

An avid equestrian who often competes in show jumping in California, Beth spent much of her childhood in Hawaii after her parents’ divorce. Her mother, Sally, settled in Honolulu and married an heir to the shopping cart inventor who was worth $400 million. Beth and her sister Amie grew up in the Kaiser Estate, a sprawling compound in Honolulu.

Beth moved to Colorado after high school and earned a degree in sociology from CU in 1994. She said she began law school at the University of Denver’s Sturm College of Law in 1996, but she didn’t stay long. She stepped away from her studies following the deaths of her former stepfather and a close friend.

Beth returned to Honolulu and stayed for nearly 10 years, marrying her first husband, having two sons, starting an event-planning business and later divorcing. She said she moved back to Colorado in 2009 because her father urged her to return and learn the family business. She remarried a year later, to oilman John R. Wallace, and began working for the Broncos in 2012.

Ellis appointed Beth director of special projects and events, and she contributed to the creation of the Ring of Fame Plaza outside the stadium, was a regular figure at charitable events hosted by the team and was on the board of multiple nonprofits. She also returned to law school and, in the spring of 2016, received her J.D. from DU.

But a year before she earned her law degree, Beth was abruptly fired by the Broncos. She had worked for the team for approximately three years when Ellis told her that her position was no longer of value to the organization.

She contends that after informing the trustees she was back in law school to fulfill their criteria, Ellis fired her to purposely sabotage her candidacy for controlling ownership. The trustees have refused to publicly provide specifics of the ordeal, other than to say Beth was “fully informed” as to why she was let go.

Beth’s dismissal cleared a path for Brittany, who the trustees signaled was their preferred choice. Ahead of training camp in 2018, Ellis spoke at length about her education and her job at McKinsey & Company consulting. They weren’t “anointing anybody,” Ellis assured, but Brittany was interested and expected to return to the Broncos at some point.

The middle child from Bowlen’s second marriage, Brittany earned a degree in finance from Notre Dame and an MBA from Duke. She spent a season with the Broncos as a business analyst before working a year as an associate with McKinsey in Denver. Brittany returned to the Broncos in December as vice president of strategic initiatives, a newly created role that has her reporting to chief commercial officer Mac Freeman and CFO Justin Webster.

During the team’s end-of-year news conference, Ellis spoke glowingly of her first month on the job and said she has “distinguished herself as the one child that we’re looking at to possibly take over her father’s role.”

“She’s very comfortable in her own skin, very confident, very intelligent and hardworking, unassuming and not trying to have the Bowlen name get her anything in particular,” he added. “As I said, she’s really integrated herself well here in the first month and I’ve had a lot of people come up to me and tell me that.”

As the trustees extolled Brittany and denounced Beth, they also couched those “requirements and qualifications” they had previously conveyed to the heirs. “Those are just suggestions,” Ellis said. “Not a checklist.” Beth’s side took note of this moving of the goalposts. It meant that Brittany didn’t need five years of senior management experience to land the job.

Although the seven children will inherit an equal split of their father’s shares of the Broncos, those shares will stay in a trust and only the principal owner will have full decision-making power, which means the six others will not be able to sell their interest out of spite or for a cash-grab. Though limited in what they can do, they could try and undermine Brittany’s reign.

Beth’s camp has floated the notion that because Bowlen included age provisions throughout his estate plan (though not in regards to Broncos ownership), it can be inferred he viewed 40 as the “age of financial maturity” and that he would not have wanted an heir younger than that running the team.

“If they all are not going to agree to Brittany running the team it seems to me that we’re just headed for more battles,” Ellis said. “At that point, I know Pat would have preferred that the team be sold.”


Broncos president Joe Ellis. (Harry How / Getty Images)
On Sept. 14, Brittany married corporate attorney Alex Kim at a tony resort in Beaver Creek, Colo. An estimated 75 guests attended including Annabel, her two youngest daughters, son Patrick III and his wife and daughter. The three trustees were there, along with John Elway.

Beth attended too.

Few things bring a family together like a wedding, but this was no salve for the Bowlens. The day before the nuptials, Beth and Amie filed a petition in Arapahoe County District Court challenging the validity of their father’s trust on the grounds that he lacked the capacity to fully understand what he was signing. The sisters claim their father was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s around 2006, was deep in the throes of the disease by ’09 and was improperly influenced to sign the trust.

Two months after his trust was created, Bowlen admitted to Denver Post columnist Woody Paige that he had begun to experience “short-term memory loss” and had delegated more front-office responsibilities to Ellis. Yet Bowlen didn’t resign from the Broncos until 2013.

“The people that knew Pat, that know Pat or knew him at that time and were around him a lot and did not have an agenda or motive, know full well that Pat had his capabilities and was able to make decisions in 2009,” Ellis said.

The sisters’ lawsuit wasn’t the first one filed in this ordeal. Bill Bowlen, Pat’s brother and a former minority owner who publicly supported Beth, filed a 21-page petition in October 2018 to have the trustees removed from power and an independent conservator appointed in their place. Bill alleged, among other things, that the trustees refused to implement a long-term succession plan to keep the Broncos in the family, and that their conflicting roles allowed them to act “without any accountability.”

He filed only five days after Brittany announced publicly that she wanted to become controlling owner, but Bill claimed it was because he had just learned his brother’s original trust had been revoked and replaced.

That case was dismissed in August, in part because some of Bill’s requests became moot after Pat’s death.

As for the timing of Beth and Amie’s lawsuit – right before Brittany tied the knot – the sisters and their attorney claimed it was because of a pending deadline for NFL arbitration, but anyone who understands the Bowlen family dynamic knows it couldn’t have been purely a coincidence. (Arbitration, meanwhile, has been put on hold while the court battle plays out.)

At the heart of all the lawsuits is Bowlen’s original trust, which was created in 1998 and amended or restated multiple times over the years, lastly in 2005. It wasn’t until recently, because of a court mandate, that the trustees shared the previous estate documents, and those who have seen them say Bowlen appointed himself as the sole trustee and named three successor trustees: Bill Britton, his closest confidant and attorney; Jim Schafer, Bowlen’s long-time assistant with the Broncos; and Slivka, the lone holdover on the current trust.

But in 2009, that original trust was revoked and replaced. The trustees’ camp argues that revoking a trust is akin to buying a new car instead of rebuilding the old engine. But revoking a trust eliminates the history of changes through amendments, since the new document supersedes the old one. The original trust also empowered its trustees to sell the team. But in the ’09 trust, Ellis and Kelly were added as new successor trustees with Slivka, and all three hold multiple levels of power with the team and Bowlen’s estate.

Ellis is president/CEO of the Broncos and controlling owner delegee. Slivka is executive vice president and the team’s lead counsel. Both are directors of the holding company with Bowlen’s interest. Kelly, a family attorney who consulted with Bowlen on personal matters, is married to the trustees’ attorney, Dan Reilly. All the trustees are co-agents on Bowlen’s power of attorney.

The lawyer who drafted Bowlen’s 2009 estate-planning documents signed an affidavit stating that Bowlen was fully aware of the trustees’ roles and believed the setup, even with the perceived conflicts, was in the best interest of the team and his family.

Beth and Amie’s lawsuit has been combined with two others – one pertaining to probate matters and another over an irrevocable life insurance trust – and discovery is ongoing. Witness testimony from those who worked with Bowlen and knew him well will weigh heavily in the case.

Depositions are being scheduled and the trial is set for Sept. 1 – if it makes it that far – and will essentially task a probate judge with determining if Bowlen had his faculties more than a decade ago when he signed his trust.

If the court rules he lacked capacity, the old trust (as last amended in 2005) would likely go into effect, but that could create an even more uncertain future for the Broncos since two of the trustees aren’t around anymore. Bill Britton died three years ago, and Jim Schafer lives in Hawaii.

The lawsuit also comes with considerable risk for Beth and Amie. Unlike the original trust, the 2009 trust has a no-contest clause, and if they can’t prove they had “probable cause” to challenge it, they could be disinherited. They would still reap tremendous financial benefits thanks to disbursements from the life insurance trusts and their cut of the stadium in Denver, but their ownership interest would go to their children.

But they are willing to take that risk because of a belief that the trustees are acting in their own self-interest. The longer Brittany is controlling owner in training, the longer Ellis remains team president, despite presiding over three consecutive losing seasons. If she gets the job, presumably she’d remember who coronated her.


(Frank Jansky / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Throughout Bowlen’s final months and even for a short period after his death, the family maintained a public show of unity. When he was selected as a finalist for the Hall of Fame last year, six of the children (no Johnny, and obviously no Alexandra Carey) represented him.

When Bowlen was posthumously inducted in August, those same six were there on his behalf. They addressed the media together, attended a community outing together, and decided, together, who would be on stage at the various events with the Hall’s Class of 2019.

“I don’t think anyone should have to worry about anything,” Patrick III said that week in Canton, Ohio. “We’re all going to follow the same rules that my dad followed and we’re going to all follow his same dreams, and we’re going to bring several more Super Bowls to the city of Denver. We’re going to make everyone happy.”

After Bowlen’s death, the children teamed up to plan memorial services in Colorado and Hawaii and had a frank discussion about the succession. They talked about how they all want to feel “valued” and “validated.” One of them had to be appointed controlling owner, they knew, but perhaps there was a way for all to be involved in meaningful roles with the franchise. Like the Hunt family that owns the Chiefs.

But that unity was short-lived, and when the discord resumed, the number of people involved in the fighting multiplied.

Bill’s daughter Julie Bowlen, 45, used Facebook as a megaphone to support Beth and her father’s campaign against the trustees. She posted lengthy tirades about the “goons” running the Broncos who are “a sick bunch of bastards robbing a family of their right to celebrate Pat’s life and legacy.”

Julie, who lives in Australia, also wrote that “the Broncos are in shambles” and “Pat would be disgusted.” She usually ended her posts with an array of colorful hashtags, such as #bustthetrust, #joemustgo and #rightfulowners.

Pat’s youngest child, 22-year-old Christianna, responded to Julie on Facebook: “I think my father would be disappointed in people like you…Who are Fairweather fans that are related to him by blood. If dad was around he would tell you this is not our only losing season and you need be (sic) supportive of the family business, instead of posting personal matters on Facebook. Please respect my father and the franchise he worked to make what it is today.”

As the battles drag on, in the courts and out, as Beth and Amie (and John, the minority owner) continue to insist they will never be on board with Brittany running the team, one has to wonder if a majority (24) of NFL owners would approve Brittany (or Beth) as controlling owner knowing all the dysfunction that would come along with it.

It was roughly 15 years ago when Sally Parker, Pat’s first wife, learned about Alexandra Carey while at a cocktail party. An attendee believed he and Sally had a mutual acquaintance and, for small talk, mentioned this other woman’s name.

Sally knew nothing of her.

“Weren’t you married to Pat Bowlen?” the man asked quizzically.

Of course, Sally replied.

“Well, that’s his other child,” the man told her.

Sally felt nauseous and had to leave the party.

As the years went on, she never mentioned it to Bowlen, never tried to verify if Carey was indeed his daughter. Others in Bowlen’s family heard whispers that he had an eighth child. The current trustees knew about her. The previous trustees did too; Bill Britton was listed on the deed transfer of Carey’s previous home in L.A.

Carey, now a director for a private healthcare management company in Southern California, declined to talk to The Athletic, but sources close to her said she just wants to be validated as Bowlen’s daughter and to develop relationships with her half-siblings.

Beth and Amie, Bill and Julie, and Sally have traveled to L.A. to spend time with her. Carey and her husband also returned to Denver in December to attend the Broncos’ win over the Lions with Julie and her family. Carey wore an orange “Mr. B” pin to that game.

She has not had any communication with Annabel’s family so far.

Those who have reached out have an unspoken yet all-too-obvious motive: She could throw a wrench in the trustees’ plan.

Last November, she filed an entry of appearance in the ongoing court case, and it was granted. Carey is now privy to the details and related documents of the lawsuit. She is not expected to pursue a controlling ownership interest or even a one-eighth share of the Broncos. But her standing in the ownership dispute could be dictated by the revelations to come, and in this saga, it would be foolish to predict anything.

At Dove Valley, chaos isn’t a pit. Chaos is a ladder.





.... Shiit has hit the fan!

Posted
Velja mu ga dao 5 minuta po istraživačkom novinarstvu i odmah počeli ispadati kosturi iz ormara. Sve su to reptili na koje pristojan čovek ni biciklo ne bi prislonio.
Samo Raiders i Bears bakutanerke i gospoda Woody i Chris zaslužuju poštovanje. :nobles:
 
Ja ću članke, ti mrdalice!

.... Shiit has hit the fan!

Posted

onaj pokušaj da Elwayu proda deonice meni malo smrdi na plaćanje ispod žita da se zaobiđu jebade sa salary capom.

još nije kasno da se ode kod Oprah na kanabe i ispovede gresi. Ionako će neki brkati čika iz IRS to da raščivija kad tad.

ode sad da pravim mrdalicu, Elway podiže asterikTM i kaže: This one's for Pat!

Posted

Nego....



.... Shiit has hit the fan!

Posted
4 hours ago, omiljeni said:

ma to sve velika gospoda. ne zna se ko je veća žgadija. od njih 28 pošten čovek ni lešnik ne bi uzeo. :fantom:

jedini čist novac je kod Bearsa, Raidersa i naravno Jetsa. prva dva tima su kupljena fudbalskim novcem, a mi novcem od kompanije koja sad spašava celo čovečanstvo od pandemije. :hail:

 

bukvalno ne postoje odvratniji vlasnici od bubasvaba koje poseduju Djetsa. ali bukvalno. pored njih Kraft izgleda kao andjeosko otelotvorenje. 

 

a najveci car od vlasnika je Shahid Khan

  • +1 1
Posted
1 hour ago, freakns said:

bukvalno ne postoje odvratniji vlasnici od bubasvaba koje poseduju Djetsa. ali bukvalno. pored njih Kraft izgleda kao andjeosko otelotvorenje. 

 

a najveci car od vlasnika je Shahid Khan

Jel zbog brkova?

4 hours ago, dragance said:


Ovo skoro pa zvuči kao scenario iz Knives Out filma :lolol:

 

PS: još da dodam, ako Brejdi sa 43 gosine može da igra SB, onda još ima nade za nas matorce u nekim sportovima!

Jedan naš novinar je napisao za jednog našeg (srpskog) fudbalera koji je odigrao oproštajnu utakmicu u ranim četrdesetim: “u tim godinama, pristojna gospoda ne nose šorceve u javnosti”.

 

3 hours ago, Frank Pembleton said:

Ja ću članke, ti mrdalice!

.... Shiit has hit the fan!
 

Ovaj članak u detalje opisuje borbu Beth i Brittany za presto. Navodno je Ellis, kada je novog GMa upoznavao sa Brittany, rekao: “ako tim ostane u rukama Bowlen familije, ova gospodja će ti biti šefica”. 

Posted
Ovaj članak u detalje opisuje borbu Beth i Brittany za presto. Navodno je Ellis, kada je novog GMa upoznavao sa Brittany, rekao: “ako tim ostane u rukama Bowlen familije, ova gospodja će ti biti šefica”. 
Al da je zabavno to jeste...

.... Shiit has hit the fan!

Posted

izdržite. biće bolje kad vas kupi Bezos ili tako neki

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