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Below are the 8 most recent journal entries recorded in baylorncaa's LiveJournal:

    Wednesday, January 24th, 2007
    5:53 pm
    An interesting little discovery in the lower right hand corner of ...
    An interesting little discovery in the lower right hand corner of the WBCA's website. Debbie Williamson writes about the discoveries she's made in her new job. Recently appointed as the NCAA's Women's Basketball Secretary Rules Editor, Williamson will be the national rules interpreter for women’s basketball and serve as co-editor of the Men’s and Women’s Basketball Rules and Interpretations book.
    As a former Louisiana Tech women’s basketball player, I was on the fast track to a collegiate coaching career. I had been a part of four Women’s Final Four teams with two National Championships on my resume’, spent three summers playing basketball overseas, coached junior high and high school teams while I finished my Master’s Degree, was working camps and networking to land that perfect coaching job.

    I jumped right in as a Division I assistant coach and stayed there for five years. I traveled, recruited, scheduled, tracked grades, organized summer camps, exchanged film, watched film and coached when I could get off the road in time to make a game.

    Rules? Who had time to read the rules? Besides, I had played the game at a high level, spent hours evaluating game film and was in the gym year round. I knew the rules or, at least, I thought I did. And then I became a referee and read the rules book for the first time. I thought I knew the rules only to find out that “I didn’t know what I didn’t know.” What follows is a series of classic "coach cries out to the referee about an infraction" quotes, followed by the "Belief" and clarified by the "Fact" and underscored by the actual "Rule."

    Be warned, though it is worth the read, the link downloads a word document. Too bad they didn't make it a pdf.
    Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
    6:21 pm
    Scapegoating

    Richard Brodhead’s recent denial of “scapegoating” the lacrosse team seems unsustainable. In the Duke president’s public response to Friends of Duke University, the sole evidence that he cited to substantiate his claim that he hasn't scaegoated the team was the existence of the Coleman Committee report. But he had described this document to the University community as favorable to the lacrosse team only in that it did not “confirm the worst allegations against this team”—which, of course, were that three players committed gang rape and dozens of others covered it up. Many people would consider Brodhead’s failure to mention that the report detailed the players’ positive academic performance, excellent relations with Duke staff, and extensive record of community service confirmation of the charge of his scapegoating the team.

    More important, the Coleman Committee report conclusively showed how Brodhead already had scapegoated the team when he forced the resignation of lacrosse coach Mike Pressler. As William Gerrish, whose son captained the 2005 Duke lacrosse team, recently noted, Pressler “is perhaps the only one who did nothing wrong during this incident, and yet he ended up paying for it.”

    Pressler coached lacrosse at Duke for 16 years; in 2005, he led the team to the NCAA finals, and was named national coach of the year. That former Hofstra (and current Duke) lacrosse coach John Danowski sent his son to play for Pressler testified to his peers’ high regard for him. Parents of his former players have lavished him with praise. Nina Zash, whose son co-captained the 2006 team, affirmed that “my son went to college a boy and came out a man, and I am not naive enough to think it's all because of his parents. Coach Pressler, from the first day he stepped foot into my house, let us and my son know that he would be tough but fair, and would never demand more than he gave. He 'walked the walk' every single day my son was under his watch. He was the guardian you want your child to have when you can't be there, [and] it was an honor and a privilege to watch him work his magic with my son these past four years.”

    Pressler developed a reputation as a tough but fair disciplinarian, as Duke’s own investigation subsequently confirmed. To illustrate Pressler’s approach, a lacrosse player who graduated in 2006 recalled:

    During my sophomore year I was involved in an off the field incident stemming from underage drinking. Coach Pressler’s policy from the day I arrived on campus was no matter what kind of troubling situation came up he wanted to know about it before it was brought to his attention by others. I failed to follow this rule and hoped that he would not find out. When he did find out his punishment was decisive and fair. We were scheduled to travel to West Point that weekend to play the Army. I had made the travel team and was excited about the trip. My family was also coming and my father was especially looking forward to seeing West Point. Upon learning of my incident Coach Pressler pulled me aside after practice and told me to come to his office after I showered. There, he informed me that I was suspended for the Army game and that I would not be making the trip with the team. He asked me to call my dad and tell him to cancel his trip. Coach Pressler was disappointed that I had violated his trust and for weeks I could not look him in the eye without feeling ashamed of what I had done. He was upset about the incident but made more of an issue regarding my violation of his trust. I learned a valuable lesson from him.

    This discipline paid dividends, on and off the field. During Pressler’s 16 years at Duke, his players had a 100% graduation rate; between 2001 and 2005, more than half of Duke’s lacrosse players made the ACC academic honor roll—more than double the percentage of any other team in the league. The 2006 squad included a former walk-on, Edward Douglas, who graduated with distinction from the Duke Pratt School of Engineering in Biomedical Engineering. Douglas’ father believes that “Edward could not have excelled in such a rigorous major without the support and understanding that, as Mike Pressler says, ‘you are students first’,” since he “knows how to work with academically gifted students and players.”

    If college coaches are to be held accountable for their players’ holding spring break parties at which lots of alcohol is consumed, there would be few, if any, college coaches left (outside of Liberty and BYU). Regardless, in the early days of D.A. Mike Nifong’s pre-primary publicity barrage, Pressler and his family were subjected to death threats. Protesters taped signs to his house with such messages as “DO YOUR DUTY. TURN THEM IN.” Several days later, when the Group of 88 issued their “listening” statement, the professors offered a message for such protesters: “Thank you for not waiting and for making yourselves heard.”

    Pressler’s de facto dismissal occurred immediately after the Ryan McFayden e-mail was publicly released, on April 5. (The emergence of this e-mail remains a mystery; it seems increasingly likely that the e-mail was not turned over by an anonymous lacrosse player, as initially alleged, but simply released by local authorities. The team captains had voluntarily given authorities access to their e-mail accounts even as Nifong misleadingly charged that the players had “not been fully cooperative.”) Brodhead announced Pressler’s forced departure and the cancellation of the team’s season in a public statement to the University community. The remarks strongly implied—without stating so directly—that a rape occurred, although, he added, all players were innocent until proven guilty.

    In an interview with the Duke Chronicle about his decision, Brodhead deemed the coach’s departure “highly appropriate." (He did not say why.) That same story contained the following puzzling paragraph from the president:

    Brodhead condemned the actions of the team, if they turn out to be true. "It seems to me there might be some part of Duke education that is not yet fully successful," he said. "It's not in the statistics, it's not in the writing, but it's in a life skill."

    Generally, administrators act once they’ve discovered the facts, not on the supposition that “actions” might “turn out to be true.” In Pressler’s case, Brodhead’s move came at a time when no players had been indicted, and just before the release of DNA tests, which Nifong had promised would identify the guilty, instead showed no matches to any of the players. (Nifong had also affirmed to the court that negative tests would exonerate the innocent.) Brodhead’s move sent an unmistakable message to people off campus: the players’ actions (true or not, apparently) were beyond the pale, and Pressler was either in some way directly responsible or had bailed out on his team anticipating that the guilty would soon be brought to justice. Unconfirmed reports circulated on the internet and on cable TV shows that the administration had repeatedly told Pressler to rein in his team’s behavior, but he had refused to do so.

    As one current lacrosse parent recognized, however, “The real reason Brodhead did what he did was because he was afraid to stand up to Professor Houston Baker and the other rabble rousing protesting professors on Duke's campus. [Baker’s letter demanding the “immediate dismissals” of “the team and its players” had been released the previous week; the Group of 88 was just about to publish its so-called “listening” statement.] Brodhead’s actions sent a clear message to every student, parent, and prospective parent that he cares more about protesting, politically-correct professors than he does about his own students.”

    Despite Brodhead’s move, Pressler stood by the team, at a time when few were doing so. He addressed a private meeting of the lacrosse parents shortly after his dismissal, encouraging them, as one parent recalled, “to hold our heads high. ‘Hang in there,’ he said. ‘Be strong for your sons. The truth will prevail in the end.’” One of the team’s 2006 graduates recently admitted, “Throughout the ongoing Duke Lacrosse ordeal I cried only once. That was when I had to say goodbye to Coach Pressler after learning our season was over and having to face the reality that I would never suit up to play for him again.”

    In the groupthink atmosphere that pervades Duke’s faculty and administration, only one voice publicly challenged Brodhead’s decision. In an April 17 letter to the campus newspaper in which he admitted fears of “arousing the wrath of the righteous,” Chemistry professor Steven Baldwin lamented that Pressler “was hung out to dry by an athletics administration that neither understood the issues nor appreciated Mike Pressler the man. Long before we learn the truth about what happened that night, and long before we learn the conclusions and recommendations of the several committees formed by President Brodhead to address the situation, the athletic department convulsed and threw the baby out with the bath water.” Baldwin described the coach as “humble, reserved, thoughtful and honest to a fault,” a man with “great integrity” who “wanted to win the right way, with players who were students first and athletes second-players who would be a credit to Duke University.” At the very least, Baldwin noted, Pressler deserved basic principles of due process, to have his tenure considered once the administration had access to all relevant facts.

    Brodhead should have heeded Baldwin’s advice. The Coleman Committee, in considerable detail, established that (a) in the sentiments of one administrator, there was a “documented history that lacrosse players liked to hang out as a group and drink beer. When they were caught three or four times a year, they were disciplined, but . . . the sanctions imposed were not sufficiently severe to act as a deterrent”; (b) the Duke administration never communicated to Pressler, either orally or in writing, that it considered his players’ behavior a serious problem (a student affairs administrator, for instance, described the lacrosse players’ hangout at the Tailgate event as “one of the most 'energetic' and . . . quite entertaining”); (c) when members of the administration asked Pressler to try to modify his players’ alcohol-related behavior, he unfailingly did so, and unfailingly got results.

    Even more important, the committee discovered that far from being overly loose with his team, Pressler was one of two Duke officials who did the most regarding the team’s alcohol-related offenses. According to the report, besides the “Dean for Judicial Affairs and Coach Pressler, after he was made aware of specific incidents of misconduct, no other administrator appears to have treated the lacrosse team's disciplinary record as a matter of serious concern.” This approach shouldn’t come as much surprise: in the days before Duke’s current neo-prohibitionist revival, it hardly seemed scandalous when students on campus decided “to hang out as a group and drink beer.”

    (The full text of the Coleman Committee report can be found on the “Duke and Men’s Lacrosse” homepage, for those willing to look hard enough and wade past the promotions for the Robert Bliwise, A.M., speak-only-to-lacrosse-critics, alumni magazine article. Or, I have excerpted all parts of the report relating to Pressler’s performance here.)

    The Coleman Committee’s findings showed that no justification existed for Brodhead’s decision to scapegoat Pressler. Despite the committee’s recommendation to restore the team, however, the president did nothing for several weeks—almost as if he hoped a reason would emerge to override the committee’s judgment. He finally acted on June 5, in the remarks mentioned above, which did not mention the committee’s positive findings about the players. But Brodhead imposed one condition on his decision: Pressler would not return as coach. The president’s only comment regarding the Coleman Committee’s exoneration of Pressler was cryptic: “I would be happy for the world to take note of that fact.” (He, of course, has done nothing to further that goal.) At Alumni Weekend, when a group of Duke graduates complained about his rush to judgment. Brodhead cited public relations as his motive. According to the Durham Herald-Sun, he said, "Pressler's presence would have been a big story." It’s not entirely clear why Pressler’s presence would have been any bigger story than the continued presence of the faculty members who taught the lacrosse players (only to publicly denounce them); or of the admissions staff who recommended their admission to Duke; or of the athletic director who supervised Duke college sports; or, indeed, of Brodhead himself.

    As has frequently occurred in this controversy, Duke women’s lacrosse coach Kerstin Kimel showed courage where Brodhead did not. Kimel invited Pressler to attend her team’s quarterfinal victory over James Madison, and then asked him to address her squad before they left campus to play in this year’s Women’s Final Four.

    Brodhead’s scapegoating has had its effect. One professor at Johns Hopkins, which edged Duke by a goal in the 2005 championship, recently wrote that he had “chatted to a number of people here about Pressler and his opportunities for securing another coaching job at the top level. I continue to be dismayed at the belief that he was somehow at fault. One well informed and extremely well connected individual said that he ran ‘too loose a ship’ to be considered for serious coaching positions.”

    Pressler’s players, however, have stood by him. Several have penned letters of support as he goes back on the job market. As one current player wrote:

    The past four months have been some of the most trying times not only for me and my teammates, but also for Coach P. I can only imagine how hard it must be to walk away from a program that you have personally built to greatness and from a group of young men that undyingly respect you. I have never seen anyone in my life deal with the kind of adversity that Coach P has dealt with, with the courage and resilience that he has displayed.

    Further, his loyalty towards every member of our team throughout this entire process has left an impression on me, something I will not soon forget. In a time of adversity, when many would have retreated in order to protect themselves and their family, he stood fast in support of our team. I have thought a lot about these events and how Coach P has handled them and only have one explanation to offer: Coach Mike Pressler is a man of character. He stood up for us not only because he knew the allegations were totally false, but also because he was and will always be our family, and we were and will always be family to him.

    Whether it be the friendly chatter in the locker room before practice, or at a team bowling trip, Coach P promotes a team friendliness and bond that I have never been a part of on any other team. I credit Coach Pressler with instilling this cohesive and familial bond that has allowed our team to stick together through this incredible time of adversity.

    With his professional attitude, Coach P holds each one of his players at an incredibly high standard on and off the field. I can distinctly remember a time when I received a poor grade in a class. That afternoon Coach Pressler knew and confronted me about it. He did not single me out, yet instead simply told me that I needed to pick it up. This simple interaction made me work twice as hard to get my grade up, because Coach P treats all his players like professionals and this therefore makes all the players want to return this respect and conduct themselves as professionals on and off the field.

    As an unrecruited walk-on my freshman year I came to Duke not only for the academics, but also with hopes of playing Division 1 lacrosse. Coach P, during preliminary meetings, informed me that tryouts would be on a day to day basis until he had made his final decision. Therefore, each day I came to tryout, I treated it as if it were my last (because it could have been). I can remember the excitement I felt when I came for a meeting in his office a couple weeks into my tryout. When he informed me that he was offering me a spot on the team, I can distinctly remember the feeling that came over me. It was a feeling of pure excitement, obviously, but more importantly a feeling that I was now part of something bigger than myself, something more important. I had an almost surreal feeling that I was now part of a lacrosse program with not only some of the best athletes in the country, but also the best coaches in the country. I felt I had been given an opportunity to join in the ranks of a very special group of men. Never since then have I regretted joining this team.

    Simply put, Mike Pressler is a winner. It is a quality that is part of his character and nature. He is a man who can't stand and will not except defeat in anything he does in life. More importantly he is a man of honor, integrity, and loyalty. This has been proven in the way he has conducted himself in the past four months.

    Chemistry’s Steven Baldwin concluded his April 17 letter by commenting, “Mike Pressler deserves better; so does Duke.” At the very least, Brodhead should stand down from his claim that neither he nor his actions have been complicit in “scapegoating” the team or its representatives.

    Friday, August 18th, 2006
    11:28 am
    Ground Rules
    During my vacation from blogging I spent some time considering the direction this blog would take and the content it would cover. A history tells us I started this blog focusing primarily on North Carolina basketball which has been a passion of mine since childhood. I have since expanded it to include any number of sports stories, opinions, and when necessary the occassional bashing of Duke basketball. I have reached a point where I am having difficult keeping up with it all. I also feel the need to redefine the kind of content I post. This leads me to some new rules for blog.

    1. More Narrowly Focused

    This means I will save the heaviest blogging for UNC related news and especially basketball season. I will delve into other sports if the news is big enough but for the most part I will stick to what I know and love the most and that is UNC sports and most particularly basketball. As a part of that focus I will offer opinions on college sports in general and give some attention to happenings at Duke and NC State as well as other ACC schools.

    2. Hating Your Rivals with Civility

    Part of being a UNC fan is possessing a certain degree of animosity for NC State and a high degree of disgust for Duke. That is the territory. That being said there are two routes you can with that. You can be civil, offer legitimate criticism, and bring some humorous quips to the forefront at the expense of your rivals or you can attack them at every turn and go for the cheap shot out of entertainment value. It is my personal opinion that my blog has been characterized by much of the former but sadly enough good chunks of the latter. It is easy, very easy, when you have your own personal soapbox on the internet and really no accountability to take a anything goes attitude of sorts as long as you can make people hit your site. It is easy to bludgeon your rival to a pulp in hopes that people will hit your site because you launch great zingers. In other words it is real easy to be Gregg Doyel at CBSSportsline(and if you do not know Doyel, he is a "columnist" on the CBS Sports website who does nothing but inflame people just to stir the pot without offering any real substance).

    One example of how this played out here was in my treatment of JJ Redick. Some UNC fans will tell you I was tame concerning Redick but I thought I was out of line with my treatment of him for DUI arrest especially considering the history of such arrests in UNC basketball. However I did not think my treatment of Duke or Redick in reference to the loss to UNC at Cameron in March or their upset loss to LSU was completely in context of the game and the rivalry. Basically what I am saying is anything on the court or within the context of the season is fair game was long as I am tasteful and using relevant data to back up my criticisms. Ridiculing Redick for his DUI was out of line on my part and does not reflect my belief that all people are fallen in one way or another which calls us to show grace.

    3. Thoughtful Analysis Backed Up With Substantive Data

    This should not really be a change. Among the things I dislike are people who use personal attacks in an argument and people who make arguments which are all emotions and noise but no real facts. I will do my level best to make sure that does not happen here. This may mean that I am a day late chiming in on something because I need enough time to research and make sure what I write is grounded in reality.

    4. Comments and Email Welcome But....

    I enjoy comments from readers and emails are fine too. I do reserve the right to do with those whatvever I want to on my blog. I will also not tolerate egregious personal attacks or profanity of any sort. If you do not like something I said then please do me and everyone else who reads this blog(because we know they are coming by the droves) the courtesy of making a decent argument which does not question my lineage or invite me to acts against my own body which are physically impossible to perform. I will delete comments I think are inappropriate or if I get a rash of them like I did when I allegedly insulted UCLA during the Final Four in April I will address them directly and make my best effort to expose any idiocy I find for what it is.

    5. I Will Post What I Can, When I Can

    I hope to keep this going regularly and in basketball season daily.

    And let me also express my gratitude to those who wander my way from other sites or at random. I hope you enjoy the postings here and feel free to offer up any suggestions for how I can make it better.
    Friday, August 11th, 2006
    10:43 am
    World Cupdate 1 July 2006
    We're down to the final four.

    Down goes Brazil
    France played out of their minds today and took down heavily-favored Brazil 1-0. This of couse makes me happy; as I've said from the beginning, anybody but Brazil! What was truly surprising was how poorly the Brazilians played. Averaging nine shots on goal per match going into this contest, Brazil managed one againt Les Bleus. Henry's goal was a beautiful one, and it was a dominating performance. See ya, Brazil.

    Portugal in PKs
    England's poor play finally caught up with them as Portugal eliminated them today 0-0 (3-1 in PKs). The English played quite heroically in the second half, and they had to due to the idiocy of their striker Rooney; Rooney stepped on a Portugese player's groin and drew a red card, which left England down a man for the remainder of the game. Beckham had left earlier with an injury (or so it seemed), so England resorted to their lesser-knowns to finish the match. Despite England's mistakes, Portugal wasn't eager to take advantage; both sides looked sluggish and there wasn't much action through overtime. The story of the PKs was Portugal's keeper Ricardo: he guessed right on all of England's kicks, saving three and propelling the Portugese into the final four.

    Yesterday

    The Home Team Marches On
    I knew I was going to be sad about missing the Germany v. Argentina game, and I was right. It turned out to be an amazing match in which the Germans prevailed in penalties 1-1 (4-2). The Argentinians led most of the way, but Klose tied it up on an incredible cross and header to send it into OT. Once it got into the PKs, it was all Germany. The hosts went 4-4 in attempts and their keeper saved two to down Kyle's boys. Sorry, Kyle.

    The Ukraine was Weak
    Italy finally sent the Ukrainians and their ugly jerseys packing in a 3-0 blowout. I expected Italy to dominate because Ukraine never showed me anything and really should be grateful that they made it to the round of eight. The Italians move on in what should be a great game against Germany.

    So, it's Germany v. Italy on Tuesday and Portugal v. France on Wednesday. I'll pick Germany 3-1 and France 1-1 (they'll win in PKs), then Germany to take it all. I guess we'll see. Posts on other topics soon, since the move is OVER (for now), praise God!!!!
    Thursday, August 3rd, 2006
    5:50 pm
    WSB Update:
    As we come to the climax of this World Cup, there has been a veritable plethora of posts in the past few days. Just so no one misses any of these fascinating posts in all the excitement of the semifinals and finals, here are some links to make your World Soccer Blogger experience just a little easier. Enjoy!

    Semifinals Preview:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/final-four-preview-of-euro-2006.html

    Italy-Germany Recap:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/ciao-deutschland-but-good-to-see-that.html

    WSB's All-World Cup Team:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/all-world-cup-team.html

    France-Portugal Recap:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/game-for-galacticos.html

    Memo to FIFA on World Cup Rule Changes:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/memo-to-fifa.html

    WSB's All-Crap World Cup Team:

    http://worldsoccerblogger.blogspot.com/2006/07/all-crap-world-cup-team.html


    And for some additional reading pleasure, check back tomorrow for a World Cup Final Preview.
    Monday, July 31st, 2006
    9:46 pm
    Final Four, to Final Three!!!
    This challenge was a super quick one, and with Mother's Day, a harder one I know.

    It was set to be with NO immunity challenge. The person with the least amount of pages completed would be voted out.

    Pages Completed:
    Colleen 14
    Annette 7
    Courtney 4
    Jill 2

    Which means that we are so sorry to see Jill leave the island. You did a great job! Be proud that you accomplished all you did!!! Thanks for playing, and I hope to see you the next time around.

    That's right ladies-- we've come down to the last round of Survivor.

    I want to say thank you to EVERYONE who participated in the game. Without you it wouldn't have been the fun factor it was!

    Debbie, Daphne, Melissa, Michelle, Lesley, Jennifer, Cathy, Carolyn, Beth, Dedee, and Jill. You guys were all superb sports! Thank you for taking your time and energy to play!!! Great job to you all!!!

    Our final three are:

    Colleen: 341
    Annette: 153.33
    Courtney: 96.5

    That's a total of 590.83 pages-- just from 3 people!!!

    We are going to take 2 days to rest and relax. The next challenge will start up on Tuesday Late. Stay tuned for more details. This will be the toughest challenge you have EVERY had. I promise, you guys will have to fight and work super hard to get the fabulous title of SOLE SURVIVOR!!!

    Good luck to you three, and to the rest of you- thanks for playing!
    Saturday, July 29th, 2006
    4:41 pm
    final eviction
    Currently listening to: Joyful Joyful (sister act 2)

    okay.. so this post is about the final eviction held last night. My bet for the final four were:




    But it turned out to be...




    parang okay.. si jam na sinasabing magiging big winner is out.. ngayon parang mahirap ng ipredict tuloy. pero it's either kim or clare.. ewan.. hehe..
    let's see on saturday na lang.. buti na lang in pa rin si gerald.. i never expected mikee. lakas talaga ng support ng Ateneo! kahit la siang province, unlike nung iba, in pa rin sia..

    nwei, it looks like i'm not gonna see MR.RBS for weeks ahh.. hayy.. sadd...

    hayy.. cge gotta go blog hop muna.. ciaO
    Thursday, July 27th, 2006
    10:32 am
    Idol Re-Cap: Final Four
    Elvis night.

    And we're down to four: Chris, Elliott, Katharine and Taylor.

    Hey - as a quick aside - David told me that Monday he was listening to one of his favorite local talk radio shows, and apparently word got out on the interweb that Taylor Hicks is sometimes a topic of discussion. I mean, it makes sense...this is, after all, his hometown. David got very tickled listening to callers from all parts of the US call in and "talk Taylor" - apparently he has a pretty loyal following. Whether or not his following can pull him through for another week remains to be seen.

    Anyway, two songs a piece - and bonus points, at least from me, to whomever sings "A Little Less Conversation." Best. Elvis. Song. Evir.

    Taylor Hicks -
    "Jailhouse Rock" - I think this song is probably an obvious choice for Taylor. TOTALLY in his element. And I ADORED that ending. It's a genre that suits him, don't you think?

    "In The Ghetto" - Before he even sings a note, I'm going to say this: EXCELLENT choice. And now that I've heard it - I love that Taylor gave a calm, controlled performance, and I thought the message of the song really came across. Loved it.

    Chris Daughtry -
    For what it's worth, I'm always a little bit goobed out when reality TV people talk about "their fans." But that's neither here nor there, I guess.

    "Suspicious Minds" - What's up with the glasses? Okay. I was just a little goobed out when he was talking about his fans. But the glasses have sent me straight over the goobed out edge. On top of that, this performance was sort of boring to me. It felt like a warm-up.

    "A Little Less Conversation" - BONUS POINTS! BONUS POINTS! I wish I could've seen Elvis perform this song live. That being said, I like how Chris sounded, but I feel like he missed the fun part of this song - because anyone from the South knows that this is a VERY fun song. I detect that maybe Chris was taking himself a little seriously this week. Am I the only one who feels that way? Here's what I think it is. Elvis was a great singer AND a strong personality. Chris is a great singer - but he's weak on the personality end, and that was painfully obvious in this song especially.

    Elliott Yamin -
    "I Can Dream" - A little bit of a rough start, but I think he found his groove about 30 seconds in. I know that he's probably the favorite to be voted off this week, but I think he did an awesome job. He made it sound like a contemporary song, and on top of that he's such a likeable guy (i.e., he doesn't talk about his "fans" and doesn't go all Bono on us with the sunglasses).

    "Trouble" - Did anybody see how much fun the band and the back-up singers were having? My favorite Elliott performance yet. He is really, really growing on David and me. I think the underdog just may make it to the final three.

    Katharine McPhee -
    "Hound Dog" / "All Shook Up" - I'm a Katharine fan - but this performance was a little hyper. It seemed like she was trying so hard to be fun! We're having fun! Everybody! Fun! Look what a fun! performer! I am! Hoping for better things in song #2.

    "Can't Help Falling In Love" - I'm afeared that this is going to be boring. Now I've listened. Yep, boring.

    Once again, the judges seemed mystified as to why the performances were so good. Here's the answer: THE SONGS WERE BETTER BACK THEN. It's so clear that the musicians have more to work with, the singers have more to work with - because these songs are more than just a clever hook. There's some meat to them, you know?

    Best of the night: Elliott
    Should go: Chris
    Will go: Katharine
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