When the team you write about on a daily basis ends their season before half the league, content can sometimes be a bit hard to come by, and that is why I tremendously appreciate tweets like the one below. Shoutout, Michael Piff!
Who is the one pro athlete that you wish spent more time in Chicago? pic.twitter.com/U2A7vKPoc0
• From a Bulls’ perspective, I think there are a handful of ways to approach this question. We could easily throw Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen into the mix, either wishing Jordan never took a full season off or The Last Dance wasn’t exactly the last dance. However, I feel like we should remove anything from the 90s as an appropriate answer. The whole point of wishing a player stayed longer should probably be so that player achieved more success. Winning six championships is pretty damn good, and while the ending may not have been the smoothest, it still tied a memorable bow on things. So how about Derrick Rose and/or Joakim Noah? Considering ther
Byron Baes star Alex Reid moves into his new home outside of Byron Bay dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Share
Alex had his hands full as he made his way down the street with heavy-looking bags on each of his shoulders.
Meanwhile, his female friend was also loaded up with clothes and a recycled paper shopping bag on one arm.
Ready for action: In photos obtained by Daily Mail Australia, Alex - who famously used to be radio host Kyle Sandilands assistant - was seen walking to a filming location in Byron Bay
Find a friend: The photos, which were taken earlier this month, showed the talent manager strolling down a quiet street with a female companion
The two chatted as they walked alongside each other, with Alex stepping out in a plain black T-shirt and matching Adidas trackpants.
Willie Vogt
AGRONOMIC APPROACH: Corteva Agriscience has created a new carbon and ecosystems services portfolio but the focus is to work with farmers to choose practices that make sense for individual farms. Corteva Agriscience has a new program designed to help farmers benefit from climate-friendly practices.
Suggested Event
Jun 15, 2021 to Jun 17, 2021
There’s a growing list of companies and partnerships at work in 2021 focused on helping farmers benefit from growing attention to carbon sequestration and climate-smart farming. But what’s a farmer to do?
Corteva Agriscience is one of the latest businesses to enter the fray with what it calls a carbon and ecosystems services portfolio. But how is this new offering different from others that farmers may hear about? “I think the three big pieces are flexibility, simplicity and then the technology that we bring,” says Ben Gordon, carbon and ecosystem services global portfolio leader, Corteva Agr