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Around the AFC North: Is Ben Roethlisberger Tipping-Off Opponents
Baltimore Ravens
Ryan Mink
Pittsburgh Steelers: Does Ben Roethlisberger Have a Tell?
The Steelers offense was one of the best in the league during its 11-0 start to last season. Its struggles down the stretch, however, led to a 1-5 record finish and early playoff exit.
So what changed? Pittsburgh media is buzzing about the possibility that veteran quarterback Ben Roethlisberger had a tell last season.
This apparently has been talked about for a while in Pittsburgh, but it picked up steam Friday when a TikTok user posted a video looking at Roethlisberger s feet. The premise is that when Roethlisberger hands the ball off, he s flat-footed. When he s going to pass, he raises his left heel just before the snap.
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On Dec. 23, The Press Club of Western Pennsylvania opened applications for its 15th annual Bob Fryer Memorial Scholarship.
Named after Bob Fryer, long-time editor of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review who passed away in 2011, the purpose of the scholarship is to encourage students who are as passionate about journalism as he was. For Bob, journalism was his life, Luis Fabregas, an investigative reporter, said when asked about Fryer by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The newsroom was his life.
In order to qualify for the scholarship, students must be residents of one of the 29 counties of Western Pennsylvania; however, they do not have to attend college in the area. When Ellie Hartleb was awarded the scholarship in 2017, she attended the American University in Washington D.C. However, she was still eligible due to her primary residence being in Erie.
As he is skewered by the conservative politicians and pundits who helped elect him, Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Brian Hagedorn insists he remains true to his campaign promise: to read the law as plainly written and interpret it as the writers intended.
Those legal principles, known as âtextualismâ and âoriginalism,â are hallmarks of the conservative judicial approach â one that Hagedorn ostensibly shares with three others on the stateâs highest court: Chief Justice Pat Roggensack, Justice Annette Ziegler and Justice Rebecca Bradley, who were also elected with the help of Republicans.
âAs best I can Iâm trying to follow the law,â said Hagedorn, who legal observers say has become the courtâs most powerful swing vote. He says his restrained approach aligns with the judicial philosophy he has always had.