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Walmart mulling plan to price-match online competitors

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 31 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

Walmart is looking to knock Jeff Bezos down a peg.

The discounter is weighing a plan to match the prices at big online competitors, including Bezos' Amazon.

Walmart has long had a policy of letting store managers match prices of local brick-and-mortar competitors, company spokesman John Forrest Ales noted.

This summer, Walmart rolled out its "Savings Catcher" app, which automates the process for shoppers, allowing them to scan their receipts to find lower advertised prices nearby.

This holiday season, those programs may begin taking prices at online retailers into account as well, according to people close to the situation.

"We're listening to our customers, and they can count on us to remain the everyday low price leader," Ales told The Post.

Such a move would follow similar strategies already in place at Target and Best Buy, which have looked to block the practice of "showrooming," in which shoppers inspect merchandise at stores, only to head online to buy it at a lower price.

Indeed, some reports raised worries that matching Amazon's prices could cut into margins this holiday season, which analysts expect will be brutally competitive.

Nevertheless, that worry may be overblown, according to Kantar Retail.

An August survey by the research firm found that Amazon's prices were 12 percent higher than those at a Walmart Supercenter, and 17 percent higher than Walmart.com.


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Gyllenhaal stuns as a sociopathic TV cameraman in ‘Nightcrawler’

If Sidney Lumet's "Network" and Billy Wilder' s "Ace in the Hole'' had a mutant baby, it would probably look like Dan Gilroy's "Nightcrawler," a pitch-black satire of local TV news in Los Angeles with an eye-popping performance by Jake Gyllenhaal as the paparazzo from Hell.

Kirk Douglas' ruthless "Ace'' reporter — exploiting a man trapped in a collapsed mine for all it's worth — is a model of ethics compared with Gyllenhaal's Lou Bloom.

In his own twisted way, Lou is just as much a bloodsucker as Dracula, in a horror story that this tabloid veteran can attest is not as far removed from reality as you might assume.

Jake Gyllenhaal in "Nightcrawler."Photo: Open Road Films

A flat-out sociopath who makes Robert De Niro's loner in "Taxi Driver'' seem positively social, Lou shoves his way into the news business as a freelance cameraman simply because it's potentially more profitable than swiping and reselling fencing from construction sites or fancy bikes at Venice Beach.

Gyllenhaal's cameraman receives valuable mentoring from Nina (Rene Russo) — a seen-it-all, bargain-basement variation on Faye Dunaway's "Network'' character. She'll show practically any kind of outrageous audience-bait on the 6 a.m. news to secure her tenuous hold on her job as news director on the vampire shift.

"Think of our newscast as a screaming woman running down the street with her throat cut,'' is Nina's updated version of the old adage, "If it bleeds, it leads.''

Lou, who has a great eye for images, is tutored by Nina that suburban crime with white victims and "urban'' perps is a sure ratings-getter.

He quickly learns how to race veteran rival cameraman Bill Paxton to breaking crime scenes with the help of his mercilessly bullied, barely paid — and often terrified — "intern'' driver (British actor Ahmed Riz, who is simply terrific).

It's a bravura, career-changing tour-de-force from a newly gaunt Gyllenhaal, who reportedly lost 30 pounds for the role. His eyes pop out of his head as he spouts a nonstop stream of managerial jargon picked up from the Internet to rationalize his stunningly insensitive behavior.

Jake Gyllenhaal and Rene Russo in "Nightcrawler."Photo: Open Road Films

Lou's blood-spattered crime-scene-gets are extremely compelling — he isn't above rearranging personal belongings or even bodies for effect. Even a hard case like Nina is forced to accede to her protégé's escalating demands for more money, more credit and maybe even some nookie from Nina, who's twice as old as Lou.

"Nightcrawler" climaxes with our sleazy hero illegally withholding evidence from the cops in a major crime to milk the story for all it's worth. What he finally ends up capturing on tape is truly jaw dropping — and utterly appalling.

It's not easy to make a journalism movie even more cynical than 1951's "Ace in the Hole,'' which has only been seriously challenged by the super-prescient "Network" (which predicted the horrors of reality TV), from 1976.

Making a stunning directing debut, Dan Gilroy (who also wrote the take-no-prisoners script and is married to Renee Russo) basically turns the audience into rubberneckers at an automobile accident — you want to look away, but it's very tough.

Part of the fascination is wondering just how far down the sewer Gilroy will let his feral antihero descend in "Nightcrawler.'' And will the cameraman will be punished for it? The answer is exhilarating, at least if you have the stomach for it.


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Kohl’s to open 6 pm on Thanksgiving Day

Another retailer is hoping shoppers will be more tempted to gobble up savings instead of turkey this Thanksgiving.

Kohl's on Thursday said it would join Macy's and other stores in opening their doors at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day — two hours earlier than last year.

Retailers have been opening their doors earlier each year on to cash in on the Black Friday shopping hysteria.

Kohl's, in its quest to tempt more customers, is also testing Google Express, the internet-search giant's fast-delivery service, in select delivery areas. It will stay open until midnight on Black Friday.

Amazon.com is also geting a head start on the action by starting its Black Friday sales Nov. 1, instead of Nov. 28, the actual Black Friday.

Kohl's shares closed Thursday at $54.80, up 0.7 percent.


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Pyott’s torpedo misses Valeant

Video clips of Allergan CEO David Pyott, played in a California court this week, show him admitting he tried to torpedo the stock of his spurned merger partner Valeant Pharmaceuticals.

Pyott's admission, made in a deposition as part of Allergan's insider trading case against Bill Ackman and Valeant, was in stark contrast to what one of Allergan's top independent directors said in a separate deposition.

"I don't think it would be appropriate for Allergan to take affirmative steps to drive down Valeant's stock price," said director Timothy Proctor, a former executive of spirits maker Diego.

The clips were shown in a hearing on Allergan's motion for a preliminary injunction to throw out Ackman's votes at an upcoming shareholder meeting.

Ackman, who owns 9.7 percent of Allergan, is working with Valeant in a $55 billion takeover of the botox maker. The activist investor corralled other shareholders to call a special meeting to unseat Allergan directors in hopes a new board will negotiate with Valeant.

In August, Allergan sued Ackman and Valeant, alleging they engaged in insider trading. The duo denied the charge and countersued, contending that Allergan has led a smear campaign against Valeant.

Judge David Carter's ruling is expected this week.


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Winston, Florida State rebound from slow start to top Louisville

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jameis Winston threw three touchdowns to offset a three-interception start and Dalvin Cook had two long scoring runs to help second-ranked Florida State rally for a 42-31 victory over Louisville on Thursday night.

Florida State overcame a 21-0 deficit for its 24th straight victory, with Cook giving the Seminoles the lead with a 38-yard run with 3:46 remaining.

Out of sorts and on the verge of having its College Football Playoff prospects damaged, the Seminoles (8-0, 5-0 Atlantic Coast Conference, No. 2 CFP) recovered behind their Heisman Trophy quarterback and Cook, who had a 40-yard touchdown run in the third quarterback.

All of Winston's TD passes were big. He hit Travis Rudolph for 68 yards, Ermon Lane for 47, and Freddie Stevenson for the 35-yard clincher with 26 seconds.

Winston was 25-of-48 for 401 yards to beat Louisville (6-3, 4-3, No. 25 CFP).


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Man found dead in hotel developer’s home

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 30 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

A 23-year-old man was found dead in the bathtub of the Central Park South home of a trendy hotel developer, sources said.

The man had an apparent drug overdose at the home of Ian Reisner, who is known for developing the Out NYC hotel in Hell's Kitchen, according to law enforcement sources.

He was taken to St.Luke's hospital, where he died.

Police do not believe any criminality was involved.

Reisner was arrested in East Hampton in May for allegedly fleeing the scene of an accident while on Ambien, sources said.

He was charged with DWAI for that incident and released on $500 bail.


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Bumgarner’s heroics lift Giants to World Series title

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Giants have Madison Bumgarner to thank for their third World Series title in five years and being identified as baseball's latest dynasty.

With a pair of Series victories and working on two days' rest, the lefty entered Wednesday night's Game 7 against the Royals at Kauffman Stadium to start the fifth inning holding a one-run lead.

The skinny advantage was enough for Bumgarner to protect as the Giants beat the Royals, 3-2, in front of 40,535 fans at Kauffman Stadium who waited since 1985 for their beloved team to reach another World Series.

In a Series that had just one close game in the first six, Game 7 was a classic with each manager removing his starter early to make sure the game didn't get away from them.

That might have happened if Bumgarner showed he was not only the best starter in the Series but a very qualified reliever and a deserving MVP.

Pablo Sandoval throws up his arms after catching the final out to seal the Giants' title.Photo: AP

After giving up a leadoff single to Omar Infante in the fifth, Bumgarner retired the next 14 Royals before a single and fielding error by center fielder Gregor Blanco allowed Alex Gordon to reach third with two outs in the ninth.

Blanco let Gordon's single to get by him and roll all the way to the wall. Bumgarner responded by getting Salvador Perez on a foul pop to Pablo Sandoval to seal the victory and start a celebration as the crowd watched in silence.

Sacrifice flies by Michael Morse and Brandon Crawford in the second inning staked Giants starter Tim Hudson to a 2-0 lead, but the Royals tied the score in the home half when Giants manager Bruce Bochy replaced Hudson with Jeremy Affeldt.

The move was a good one. Affeldt provided 2 1/3 innings of scoreless relief and was in the game when Morse drove home Sandoval with a run in the fourth that put the Giants ahead 3-2.

"He is available, he's set to go, he feels great,'' Bochy said before Game 7 of Bumgarner, who threw a complete-game shutout Sunday in Game 5. "I don't how much we will use him. I think we have to read him and see how he is doing out there. But he should be good for 50 to 60 pitches at least.''

Bumgarner needed 15 pitches to get through the fifth when Infante, the No. 9 batter, opened with a single, was bunted to second but never got further. Eleven pitches was all he needed for a perfect sixth and he required 10 to get three outs in the seventh. Then it was 16 pitches for three straight outs in the eighth.

When Bumgarner started the ninth he was at 52 pitches and there was no action in the Giants' bullpen.


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Midtown coffee shop rips B grade for open door

They've got a latte nerve!

The owner of Manhattan Espresso, a tiny Midtown coffee shop, says he got a "B" grade from inspectors because his front door was open on a busy summer day.

"In July, I want the door closed, because I don't want to air-condition 49th Street," a frustrated Brad Bonewell told The Post. "But they [customers] can't form a line when the door is closed."

When fruit flies snuck in the open door and hovered over bananas on the counter, Bonewell was cited for conditions "conducive to pest life."

He also was cited for the fruit flies and for his server's failure to use "effective hair restraint" — all adding up to the "B" grade.

In August, Bonewell told a hearing officer his shop door has a self-closing hinge, but was being held open by customers. When the officer sustained the "B," Bonewell appealed and lost again last week.

"That's ludicrous," said customer Lea Gross, 29, of Murray Hill. "Every store on the block has their door open . . . they were looking for problems that aren't there."


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De Blasio says coaching Little League helped him prep for mayorship

Before he had to contend with the City Council, Mayor de Blasio had extensive training in how to deal with people who can be stubborn and difficult: his three-year stint as a Little League baseball coach.

The mayor said calling the shots for son Dante's team of 8-year-olds was solid preparation for running the city.

"It was a real leadership and management lesson that I still think about," the mayor in an interview with The Associated Press that focused on baseball.

"Trying to get a bunch of 8-year-olds to do something is an amazing challenge."


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K-9 cop helps track down suspect in rape case

A heroic K-9 cop tracked down an accused rapist on the run upstate, helping sheriff's deputies make the collar.

Nass, a lion-hearted pure-bred black lab, was dispatched Tuesday night after suspect Gregory Lewis drove a Jeep Cherokee into the Hudson River in Fort Edward Village north of Albany as he fled from cops, police said.

Lewis escaped the sinking Jeep and ran into nearby woods, where Nass tracked him down.

Lewis, of Southbridge, Mass., had been arraigned in August in the statutory rape of a teen girl.

He posted $1,000 bail and was at home under house arrest wearing a GPS ankle bracelet when he removed it and fled on Sept. 16.

He returned to his parents' home 10 days later, assaulting a relative and fleeing with a gun and the Cherokee.

After Lewis allegedly drove across the country and back committing further sexual assaults, a New York state trooper Tuesday night saw a Jeep with no front license plate and tried to pull over the driver, who sped off.

Soon after the cop radioed in the encounter, someone called 911 reporting that a vehicle had gone into the Hudson.

"[Lewis] actually drove to the end of a dead-end street and didn't realize it was a dead end and drove down an embankment and into the water," Fort Edward Police Chief Justin Durway told WBZ Radio in Boston.

People dining at a nearby restaurant heard the splash and witnessed a man exiting the sinking Jeep with a gun.

Cue the top county sheriff's crime dog, Nass. The pooch, a K-9 cop for more than five years, tracked down Lewis with no shots fired.

"The canine members of the Washington County Sheriff's Office always get the last bark apprehending criminals," spokesman Nick Spiezio told The Post.

"I would imagine once he got home in the morning, he got some good treats," Spiezio said, adding that Nass' handler, Sheriff's Deputy Scott Stark, was proud of his crime-fighting partner.

Lewis now faces charges for suspected sexual assaults and other crimes in Massachusetts, Ohio, North Carolina, Colorado and Oregon.

He also faced fugitive charges in New York Wednesday.


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One power conference dominates first college playoff rankings

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 29 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

The inaugural four-team College Football Playoff could end up merely extending the Southeastern Conference's regular season by two weeks.

The 12-member committee released its first top-25 rankings, and — surprise, surprise — the powerhouse conference that has produced seven of the last eight national champions placed three teams in the top four and four in the top six.

Undefeated Mississippi State was picked first, one-loss Auburn at No. 3 and Ole Miss, coming off a disappointing loss at No. 19 LSU, fourth. Undefeated defending national champion Florida State, with a number of close calls, was ranked second.

"We don't analyze it by conference," playoff selection committee chairman Jeff Long said during ESPN's telecast. "We look at teams, and evaluate the teams they played, the success they had and the failure they had.

"We're still early in this process," cautioned Long, the athletic director at SEC West doormat Arkansas.

Oregon was ranked fifth and Alabama — the fourth of the SEC West title contenders — sixth. Long told reporters after the announcement the difference between Ole Miss and Oregon and Alabama — the two teams on the outside looking in for the moment — is "paper thin." TCU of the Big 12 was ranked seventh, the Big Ten's Michigan State was eighth, Kansas State ninth and, in a surprise, Notre Dame 10th.

Long emphasized the committee will start anew after this weekend's games, and will not merely pick up the rankings where the first one left off.

"One week's rankings won't influence the next week's rankings," he said.

The rankings will be released each Tuesday for the next six weeks, with a final ranking on Dec. 7 to determine the four teams that will play in the initial playoff as well as selections for other bowls. Semifinal games will be played Jan. 1 in the Sugar Bowl and Rose Bowl, with the championship game set for Jan. 12 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The committee placed significant value on strength of schedule and quality wins. Auburn was rewarded for not only playing in the rugged SEC West, but winning on the road at Kansas State. Likewise, Notre Dame lacks a quality victory — Stanford's recent struggles have hurt the Irish.

Although No. 12 Arizona has defeated Oregon and No. 13 Baylor has beaten TCU, they were ranked lower because of weak schedules, Long said, while Ole Miss was rewarded for its head-to-head home victory over Alabama despite its loss last Saturday.

"As you would expect there was a lot of discussion about head-to-head, but head-to-head was only one criteria," Long said.

The top four figures to change frequently over the next six weeks. Florida State has the easiest road, with Thursday's visit to No. 25 Louisville likely its toughest remaining game. Mississippi State still has to travel to Alabama Nov. 15 and face in-state rival Ole Miss Nov. 29 in the Egg Bowl, not to mention a possible SEC title game against SEC East leader Georgia, ranked 11th.

Ole Miss has a pivotal contest against Auburn Saturday night — the loser almost certainly will fall out of the top four — while Auburn still meets Georgia and Alabama on the road.

Meanwhile, the Big Ten, Pac-12 and Big 12 all find themselves potentially on the outside looking in.

Long singled out Oregon's quality wins over No. 8 Michigan State and UCLA and said the committee has taken into account their injury problems on the offensive line, though the only ranked opponent left on the Ducks' schedule is No. 17 Utah on Nov. 8, so it could prove difficult for them to finish in the top four.

For eighth-ranked Michigan State, a win over No. 16 Ohio State at home on Nov. 8 may not carry enough weight unless the entire SEC West falls all over itself. But a Big Ten title game victory against No. 15 Nebraska could prove significant, if added on to a win over the Buckeyes.

The Big 12 needs one among No. 7 TCU, No. 9 Kansas State or No. 13 Baylor to run the table. The TCU-Kansas State showdown Nov. 8 may not only decide the conference's champion, but could lead to a spot in the top four, depending how the other top-ranked teams fare.


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Split MSG business would be a garden of delight for investors

Jim Dolan's sports and entertainment empire — tucked neatly under the roof of Madison Square Garden and other noted venues — could double in value with the proposed split of the company, several analysts said Tuesday.

MSG, which is exploring a possible separation into two publicly traded entities — one for its Knicks, Rangers and MSG Network and the other for the venues — could be worth as much at $9.7 billion after the separation, the Wall Street pros said.

The company closed Tuesday with a market capitalization of $5.1 billion.

"We are very pleased that MSG's board of directors and management have committed to pursue a plan to enhance value for all MSG shareholders," JAT Capital Management, which owns a 9 percent stake in MSG and has been pushing for a way to enhance shareholder value, said in a statement.

MSG has been considering the split — in large part to unlock the value of its sports teams — since Steve Ballmer agreed this summer to buy the NBA's LA Clippers for a staggering $2 billion — four times the previous record sales-price for an NBA team.

While it is clear the true value of the Knicks will be realized by Wall Street after the split — some analysts pegged the New York hoops team alone being worth $2 billion — what is less apparent is which piece of the split company will get the famed Garden arena, itself valued at $2 billion-plus.

That's the question bouncing around Wall Street.

MSG, in announcing that it is weighing a split in the company, was vague about who would get the arena. A company spokesperson refused to comment beyond the announcement.

Without knowing which entity would get the Midtown Manhattan complex — the busiest arena in the nation — it is tough to ascribe a valuation on either unit, according to MSG shareholder Mario Gabelli.

"How much cash and borrowing will go to each side of the equation?" he said. "What's the rent on the arena and then on the live entertainment side, what's the cash flow and overhead and the five-year outlook?"

Gabelli, who also holds positions in Cablevision and AMC Networks, believes the plan is being considered partly because of negative reaction to Dolan's recent diversification into smaller entertainment assets. Shareholders want to know which side his heart lies on, the investor said.

Richard Tullo, an analyst with Albert Fried & Co., puts the value of the split company at as much as $8 billion.

Gabelli, however, thinks the assets, once split, would be worth more — with MSG Network, which broadcasts the Knicks and Rangers games, worth $4 billion.

The Knicks could be worth $2.5 billion and the Rangers $1 billion, sports bankers told The Post.
Investors loved Dolan's proposed split, rushing in to buy MSG shares and pushing the stock up 11 percent on Tuesday, to $72.99 a share.

Separately, former AEG Chief Executive Tim Leiweke told Bloomberg Tuesday that he has had talks about a possible role in the company.

"Clearly, I know Jim [Dolan]," Leiweke said. "What he did yesterday was extremely smart. We have talked about doing things together. Nothing is locked down yet."


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Top Democrats plead for campaign cash from party members

WASHINGTON — Facing dangerous Republican headwinds, House Democratic leaders are feverishly shaking the money tree – and leaning on their own members to pony up huge campaign checks to salvage the party's position.

House minority leader Nancy Pelosi and campaign chief Rep. Steve Israel (D-LI) pleaded for colleagues to cough up the campaign cash on a conference call Tuesday – a week before Election Day, and successfully shook down nearly $500,000 more, according to a source on the call.

Every Democrat must pay party "dues" running as high as $800,000 based on their rank and influence. Some, like Queens Rep. Joe Crowley, have donated $500,000 – beyond what's assessed by party bosses, according to a Democratic Congressional Campaign Comittee dues sheet obtained by The Post.

Others, like Rep. Nita Lowey of Westchester, are lagging. Despite representing a wealthy district and serving as the top Democrat on the powerful Appropriations Committee, Lowey has contributed only $380,000 out of her $500,000 assessed "dues."

"The fact is, the climate is incredibly challenging and only getting harder," Israel wrote colleagues in a memo Tuesday.

Although the House Democratic campaign arm actually has outspent Republicans, Israel lamented an influx of outside political spending, noting that former Rep. Nan Hayworth "is putting in another million dollars of her own money" against Democratic Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney upstate.

The plea comes as Democrats craft increasingly desperate pleas for their national list of small donors. The latest subject line fretted: "All Hope is Lost."

But the party's financial straits aren't all that bad. The Democratic campaign arm raised $17 million in September, compared to $11 million for their Republican counterpart. House Democrats had $34 million in the bank at the start of October, about the same as the $33 million Republicans had.

Leaders of the DCCC outlined in a stark spreadsheet how much each member still owes compared to how much cash they have in their accounts — in a not-so-veiled-hint that many can afford to pony up. Some Dems privately grumbled about the public call-out believing they've done enough.

The stars of the bunch are 77 members who have already paid in full including eight from New York: Reps. Israel, Crowley, Eliot Engel ($255,000), Carolyn Maloney ($250,000), Paul Tonko ($250,000), Nydia Velázquez ($250,000), Jerry Nadler ($165,000) and Hakeem Jeffries ($125,000). Nadler chipped in another $15,000 on the call, according to a source, and retiring Rep. Carolyn McCarthy pledged another $20,000.

The clear slacker of the New York delegation is Rep. Charles Rangel who owes his entire $250,000 tab. The problem is he's the only member of the House with a negative balance in his bank account, as The Post first reported.

Reps. Gregory Meeks and Jose Serrano also have a long way to go toward their $250,000 tabs, paying just $30,000 and $27,500, respectively.

Other members are being shamed for coming up short when they are sitting on lots of cash. Rep. Louise Slaughter, the top Dem on the Rules Committee, paid $136,000 of her $500,000 dues, according to the memo, but had $513,000 available in cash as of Sept. 30.

Lowey's $380,000 contribution comes despite having $790,000 in the bank, according to the memo.

Lowey's campaign manager points to more than $1 million she's brought in fundraising for the DCCC beyond her individual dues as evidence she's done her part.

Lowey "has given and raised over $1.64 million to elect House Democrats and will continue working to do so until Election Day," said Matt LaFortune.


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Jose Canseco accidentally shoots himself in the hand

LAS VEGAS — Former major league slugger Jose Canseco is recovering after shooting himself in the hand at his Las Vegas home.

Metro police Lt. Mark Reddon says officers responded to a call of an accidental shooting shortly after 2:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Reddon says the former Oakland Athletics outfielder told police he was cleaning his gun in the kitchen when it fired, shooting a finger on his left hand. He was taken to University Medical Center of Southern Nevada.

Canseco is a right-handed batter who hit 462 career home runs and was a six-time All-Star. He also played for Texas, Boston, Toronto, Tampa Bay, the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox during a career that spanned from 1985 to 2001.

An email sent to a representative of Canseco on Tuesday night was not immediately returned.


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Cop in NYPD ax attack takes his first steps in a week

The rookie cop hacked in the head by a hatchet-swinging terrorist took a triumphant step to recovery Tuesday — walking on his own for the first time since the attack, ­police sources told The Post.

Kenneth Healey, 25, of Oceanside, LI, bravely left behind the walker he had been using and "took a few steps" around his room in Jamaica Hospital's intensive care unit, the sources said.

"He's progressing nicely. He's getting stronger and better. Every day he has a better frame of mind — and his spirits are getting higher," a police source said.

"He wants to get better so he can go back to being a police officer like his dad," who is a Nassau County Police detective, the source said.

Healey — the officer most seriously injured by Muslim extremist Zale Thompson, 32, last Thursday — may soon transfer to a rehabilitation center, the source said.

The devoted cop is in critical but stable condition, and to avoid infection, will remain at the hospital until his wounds heal, the police source said.

Despite the serious head injury, he remembers the attack, the source said.

Officer Kenneth Healey moments before the ax attack.Photo: Dominick Williams/MotionViewPictures

Fellow cops shot Thompson — a Navy veteran — on the street in Jamaica, Queens, after he lunged at Healey and three fellow rookie cops.

The ax-wielding attacker missed two of the officers but also sliced officer Joseph Meeker's arm.

Meeker, 24, has been ­released from the hospital.

Bystander LaToya James, 29, who was struck by a stray police bullet during the shootout, is also at Jamaica Hospital.

Over the last several years, Thompson developed a fixation with Islamic propaganda and ­became radically anti-government, police have said.

Thompson was not connected with a terror group or any mosque, and had no criminal rec­ord in New York, police sources have said.

— Additional reporting by Natalie O'Neill


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Why cops actually fixed chokehold victim mom’s car

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 28 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

A Staten Island police boss said Monday his cops fixed a broken headlight for the mother of police chokehold victim Eric Garner for "good community relations" — but sources said he gave the order to prevent a new wave of fury from the Rev. Al Sharpton.

Assistant Chief Edward Delatorre sat down with angry union delegates hours after The Post exposed the preferential treatment Gwen Carr got following her routine traffic stop.

"He says he's sympathetic to the mom because she lost her son and he's calling it 'good community relations,' " one law-enforcement source said.

Sources said that Delatorre "wanted to appease her and not make it look like the cops were targeting her" — and short-circuit "the Sharpton factor."

"We don't need him disrespecting cops with another rally," a source said of the firebrand preacher and Garner family adviser, who in August led thousands of protesters on an anti-cop march in Staten Island.

In other developments related to the "Stop and Fix" scandal:

  • Photographers found this October 2nd edition of the Post in the back of Carr's minivan.Photo: Dennis A. Clark

    Sources said the NYPD's Internal Affairs Bureau was probing Delatorre, who could face a departmental charge of "engaging in conduct prejudicial to good order, efficiency or discipline of the department."

The NYPD Patrol Guide also prohibits "rendering any service for private interest, which interferes with proper performance of duty.

  • Outrage mounted among the department's rank-and-file, with one Staten Island cop calling the situation "totally nuts" and saying it makes it look like the NYPD "bent over backwards for this woman whose son died in police custody."

"That's a no-no. Makes us look bad," the cop added.

  • A peek inside Carr's 2006 Kia Sedona minivan revealed a copy of The Post from Oct. 2 with the front page headline "POPE AL" — referring to Sharpton's 60th birthday party on the same night as the Catholic Church's annual Al Smith Dinner.

A photo of Sharpton shaking hands with Gov. Cuomo also was visible on a back seat.

  • Mayor de Blasio's office refused to weigh in on the controversy, ducking questions about whether the fixed headlight was an appropriate use of NYPD resources.
  • A Staten Island grand jury is still reviewing evidence in Garner's July 17 death, which the Medical Examiner's Office ruled a homicide caused by "chokehold" during his arrest for illegally selling loose cigarettes.

Cops fixed a broken headlight on Carr's minivan to allegedly avoid Al Sharpton's wrath.Photo: Dennis A. Clark

In a statement issued through Sharpton's National Action Network, Carr — who has a pending $75 million suit against the city over her son's death — claims the help was unsolicited.

"I have never made any special requests of the NYPD," said Carr, who didn't stop the officers who came to her house from changing a front headlight to help her avoid a $150 ticket.

She also was given the necessary paperwork to prove it was repaired within the required 24 hours.

A lieutenant and sergeant were given the order from a captain, whom Delatorre instructed to help the woman after she was issued the ticket on Oct. 21.

Carr denied having Delatorre's number, but sources confirmed Monday he gave it to her following her son's death.

During Monday's meeting inside the 122nd Precinct headquarters on Staten Island, Delatorre admitted that he contacted Capt. Alan Larson of the Staten Island Task Force upon learning about Carr's run-in with the law, sources said.

That set off a chain reaction that ended with Lt. Anthony Longobardi and the sergeant buying a $25 bulb, then heading over to Carr's home and installing it.

Delatorre insisted during the meeting that he didn't get involved with the details — and that Carr's situation was relayed to him via a community board member, sources said.

But Louis Turco, president of the Lieutenants Benevolent Association, said Longobardi "was emphatically given the order by Capt. Larson to go fix that light bulb."

"That was an order that came down from Chief Delatorre. He was given the order, and he did it," Turco said.

He added: "I believe this is an improper use of manpower to go fix light bulbs. You're taking resources off the street to go fix light bulbs."

Delatorre wouldn't comment.


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Rex won’t say it, but the Geno Smith era is finished

Rex Ryan had no choice.

He had to make the switch from Geno Smith to Michael Vick at quarterback this week. If he did not, he would have lost the locker room. Jets players who have been supportive of Smith through 24 games of inconsistent play were done after Sunday's three-interception first quarter. They had seen enough of Smith and believed Vick was the only option to save some face this season.

Ryan knows his locker room and knew it was finally time to quit sticking with Smith. Ryan had been fiercely loyal to Smith since he arrived, defending him at his worst moments and being quick to say after terrible games that Smith was his starting quarterback.

That's over now.

Ryan gave some spin about Smith being able to catch his breath and watch from the sidelines, but Smith's time as the Jets starter is over.

"Geno [can] take a step back for the first time in his career and maybe get a different perspective of it," Ryan said Monday. "This is not looking long-term, this is about the immediate. My focus is just on that … that's why this decision was made."

Unless Vick gets hurt, Smith should not see the field again. Even if Vick gets hurt, there is a case to be made for Matt Simms, currently on the practice squad.

We've seen this movie before with Ryan and the quarterback. He stuck with Mark Sanchez too long in 2012. Sunday's game for Smith was reminiscent of Sanchez's five-turnover performance in Nashville on that Monday night in 2012. After it, you knew it was over. There was no going back to Sanchez. It feels the same way now with Smith. How can Ryan ever sell his locker room on Smith giving this team the best chance to win?

Ryan did his best Monday to keep selling Smith as a future franchise quarterback, but the evidence against him is just too great to believe it at this point.

"Of course you hope a young quarterback could be that guy," Ryan said. "He had a poor game, that's no doubt. Have there been guys that have taken a step back and taken a leap forward? There have been guys like that. Hopefully, that's what happens to Geno. I don't think anybody in this organization is looking at him differently now."

Except everyone looks at him differently now. Two months ago, there was hope he was the future. Now, he's just another quarterback of the past.

You can argue Ryan should have made this move sooner to save the season. At 1-7, it's too late. But the Jets wanted to find out what they had in Smith. The jury was still out until Sunday afternoon. It is not even two weeks ago that he played his best game of the season in New England.

But Sunday's three-interception mess was too much to take. There was no coming back from that for Smith or the Jets.
Ryan took a while to get here, but he made the right call.

"It is a tough decision," Ryan said. "It's one that I feel comfortable with. Clearly, you don't want to make those decisions, but if it's in the best interest of your team then you need to make them. I feel right now that this is the right move."


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BP oil spill left big ‘bathtub ring’ on sea floor

The BP oil spill left an oily "bathub ring" on the sea floor that's about the size of Rhode Island, new research shows.

The study by David Valentine, the chief scientist on the federal damage assessment research ships, estimates that about 10 million gallons of oil coagulated on the floor of the Gulf of Mexico around the damaged Deepwater Horizons oil rig.

Valentine, a geochemistry professor at the University of California Santa Barbara, said the spill from the Macondo well left other splotches containing even more oil. He said it is obvious where the oil is from, even though there were no chemical signature tests because over time the oil has degraded.

"There's this sort of ring where you see around the Macondo well where the concentrations are elevated," Valentine said. The study, published in Monday's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, calls it a "bathtub ring."

Oil levels inside the ring were as much as 10,000 times higher than outside the 1,200-square-mile ring, Valentine said. A chemical component of the oil was found on the sea floor, anywhere from two-thirds of a mile to a mile below the surface.

The rig blew on April 20, 2010, and spewed 172 million gallons of oil into the Gulf through the summer. Scientists are still trying to figure where all the oil went and what effects it had.

BP questions the conclusions of the study. In an email, spokesman Jason Ryan said, "the authors failed to identify the source of the oil, leading them to grossly overstate the amount of residual Macondo oil on the sea floor and the geographic area in which it is found."

It's impossible at this point to do such chemical analysis, said Valentine and study co-author Christopher Reddy, a marine chemist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, but all other evidence, including the depth of the oil, the way it laid out, the distance from the well, directly point to the BP rig.

Outside marine scientists, Ed Overton at Louisiana State University and Ian MacDonald at Florida State University, both praised the study and its conclusions.

The study does validate earlier research that long-lived deep water coral was coated and likely damaged by the spill, Reddy said. But Reddy and Valentine said there are still questions about other ecological issues that deep.


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4 big questions the NCAA football playoff rankings will answer

On Tuesday, the first college football rankings will be released by the now 12-person playoff committee and the new four-team playoff will become immediately infuriating — until Jan. 1, when four teams begin battling for a national title and all the nonsense that preceded it will be disregarded, just as every BCS title game accomplished.

But until the four teams are determined Dec. 7, the nonsense will overwhelm, occupying every day but Saturday.

With no precedent for the way teams will be measured, how the cluster(bleep) of one-loss teams are slotted should give some insight into what criteria are being used to separate the great from the just as great, the difference between two teams that haven't played each other and have no common opponents.

With 16 one-loss teams from power conferences all attempting to make arguments for playoff spots, here are the most important questions about the first rankings:

How much does strength of schedule really matter?

Teams such as Alabama are going to be rewarded for playing in a strong conference, while teams such as Florida State are going to be hurt by playing in a weaker conference, even though those teams have no control over how the programs around them perform. Non-conference scheduling is more reflective of a team's willingness to improve its résumé by playing a tough schedule.

Will Michigan State be rewarded for traveling to Oregon? Will Baylor be punished for loading up against Buffalo, Northwestern State and SMU? And how will intent to schedule strong be weighed, i.e., Notre Dame, which has wins against Michigan and Stanford that don't look nearly as impressive as those wins normally would appear?

Will previous polls subconsciously come into play?

The AP Poll and Coaches Poll have been in place for decades, but have no official bearing on the committee's rankings. Still, there is something to seeing a number next to a name. In the AP Poll, Alabama is No. 3 and Ole Miss (which beat Alabama) is No. 7, while Oregon is No. 5, Arizona (which beat Oregon on the road) is 14th, TCU is 10th and Nebraska is 17th. See a number next to a name long enough and it can become ingrained in a person's mind, like a brand. How many committee members will be willing to break away from already established determinations?

Does the perception of SEC power permeate the rankings?

The perception is the SEC is the most incredible assemblage of anything since Noah loaded up his ark, but just because it's perception doesn't mean it's not true. The strength of the conference changes each year, though, and it's unclear if this group is similarly superior up top or just extraordinarily deep. Alabama, Auburn, Ole Miss and Georgia all suffered their only losses in-conference. Will those losses be less hurtful since the SEC seems so powerful? Two playoff spots for the conference could happen, with a sure sign coming if two-loss LSU ranks ahead of other one-loss teams.

Which power conference — Big 12, Pac-12 or Big Ten — is most likely to miss the playoff?

One is guaranteed to miss out. Two could be fuming if Notre Dame takes another spot, with a third in play if the SEC steals a second bid (assuming Florida State wins out). Which conference will get the least love and will the hole be too deep to climb into the top four?

… And since the committee has to face the public scorn and scrutiny, I'll open myself up to the same criticism with my own picks: Mississippi State, Florida State, Auburn, Notre Dame.

To clarify (since the committee might not do the same by explaining its own rankings), these are not the four best teams at the moment (which would include Alabama), but the four most deserving teams at the moment.

So many questions will sort themselves out because of the multitude of head-to-head matchups between contending teams still remaining, but what matters is a model will be set on how to separate teams with the same record.

Most importantly, don't get upset — yet. Each Tuesday until Dec. 7 is just a TV event, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing but a great way to make advertising money.


Prediction

The teams Howie Kussoy thinks should be in the top four Tuesday:
1. Mississippi State
2. Florida State
3. Auburn
4. Notre Dame

The teams Howie thinks will be in the top four Tuesday:
1. Mississippi State
2. Florida State
3. Alabama
4. Auburn


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Obama will avoid red states on campaign trail

WASHINGTON — President Obama is finally hitting the campaign trail this week, but he's not straying far from his base.

With just a week until the midterm elections, the unpopular president won't dare tread in red states where Senate Democratic candidates are in trouble. He's also steering clear of key House contests, opting instead for a New England-heavy tour that could be confused with leaf-peeping rather than campaigning.

Obama heads to Milwaukee on Tuesday for a DNC fund-raiser and an event with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mary Burke. He'll visit a high school in a mostly African-American ward that he won with 99 percent of the vote.

On Thursday, the president will raise cash for Democrats in Maine and campaign for former Rep. Mike Michaud in his gubernatorial bid.

He will later a speech on the economy in Rhode Island. Not until Saturday in Detroit will Obama engage in a Senate contest, when he campaigns for Democratic Rep. Gary Peters in his bid to keep an open seat in Democratic hands. He'll also stump for Mark Schauer, a candidate for governor.

Obama will also campaign in Philadelphia and on Sunday in Connecticut with Gov. Dan Malloy.

The president's average winning percentage from 2012 in the states he's visiting is a healthy 14 points. His carefully calculated campaigning in blue states comes as a host of new polls show a fierce battle for the Senate and movement toward Republicans.

The latest Marist / NBC polls show North Carolina Sen. Kay Hagan in a dead heat with Republican state House speaker Tom Tillis. Democratic Sen. Mark Udall trails challenger Cory Gardner by a single point in Colorado, and Sen. Mark Pryor trails Republican Tom Cotton 45-43 percent in Arkansas.

Obama is passing on those contests, along with the one in Georgia, where Democrat Michelle Nunn is in a tight race — and where big African-American turnout could make a difference.

The political calculus is obvious: Obama's approval rating was 40 percent or less in each of the states surveyed in the latest Marist poll.


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Bills trash Geno after rout: ‘We were bummed’ he was pulled

Written By Unknown on Senin, 27 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

The more film the Bills defensive players watched in the week leading up to Sunday's 43-23 annihilation of the Jets at MetLife Stadium, the more they salivated. By the time the game started, they were itching with anticipation they were going to feast on Jets second-year quarterback Geno Smith.

And so they did.

The scouting report on Smith for two years has been he is a one-read quarterback and if the first read isn't there, he is in trouble.

On Sunday, Smith was not even effective on his first reads, overthrowing wide-open receivers and, in the end, turning the ball over three times on interceptions in the first 10:20 of the game.

Smith (2-of-8 for 5 yards and a quarterback rating of 0.0) lasted four offensive possessions before being yanked in favor of veteran Michael Vick.

Smith was so bad the Bills were hoping the Jets would not bench him. One member of the Bills organization told The Post: "We were bummed out when they took Geno out,'' because the pickings were becoming too easy.

"He was just eyeing down receivers,'' said Bills linebacker Preston Brown, who got Smith's second interception. "We saw it on film that he was just staring guys down. When we know if you do that we're going to jump on guys' routes, and we got some picks in the back-end with just reading his eyes.

"We had Geno rattled and we tried to stay after him.''

Bills defensive tackle Corbin Bryant, who forced a fumble recovered by Buffalo, said Smith "from the first snap didn't seem like he was in rhythm.

"When we see that, we're going to be in a feeding frenzy, causing as many turnovers as we can … and we did that,'' Bryant said.

"You could see from the very first snap [Smith] wasn't connecting with any of his receivers and our DBs took advantage of that,'' said Bills defensive tackle Stefan Charles, who recovered the fumble Bryant forced.

"Our main thing was to get our D-line in Geno's face and get him rattled, make him have hot feet in the pocket so he can't be comfortable back there,'' said Bills linebacker Nigel Bradham, who had a forced fumble. "Fortunately, we came out hot and caused a bunch of turnovers. Vick came into the game and gave us some different looks and scrambled and we had to make some adjustments.

"When he got in there he was just running around … like the old Vick, almost.''

The key word there was almost. After Smith threw his three interceptions, Vick also threw one and lost two fumbles.

"They came out right at the bat and got some turnovers,'' Bills coach Doug Marrone said. "We were playing well. They made the switch at quarterback and I thought we had them at times.''

File that as the understatement of the day. The Bills had the Jets before they left Buffalo, when they were watching tape of Smith.


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The Jets were favored — think the Bills knew that?

Bills coach Doug Marrone, in his pregame talk with his players before they routed the Jets 43-23, did not make a big deal out of the fact that his 4-3 team was an underdog to the 1-6 Jets on Sunday.

But he did mention it, pointing out that it marked the first time since point spreads were made for NFL games that a team with a winning record was an underdog to one that was 1-6.

"That's crazy,'' Bills defensive tackle Stefan Charles said. "For a team to be 1-6 and we're still the underdog at 4-3 is disrespectful.''

Bills tight end Lee Smith, who caught a touchdown, said, "We don't care about point spread, but it's kind of like somebody calling your wife ugly. You know she's pretty, but it still pisses you off.

"So yeah, of course, as a team that has worked as hard as we've worked, won games against good teams, and to come in here after winning four games and being a underdog, of course we take it a little personal. But that's what has fueled this team so far, so hopefully they keep making us underdogs so we keep getting that fuel.

"Right now, we've won five games, and if we want to be respected we need to keep winning. We need to turn that five into 10 or 11 wins and people will have no choice but to talk about the Buffalo Bills.''

Bills cornerback Stephon Gilmore, who had an interception, said: "They think we're just the same old Bills. We love being the underdog. I'd rather be the underdog, because we like to prove people wrong. It's motivation for us. Keep doubting us.''

Las Vegas handicapper and former oddsmaker Joel Staniszewski told the Buffalo News before the game: "You look at any analytical site with power rankings and all those things, the Bills should be favored in this game. There's no reason why the Bills are a three-point dog.

At minimum, it should be a pick 'em. I think the line is wrong. The Bills plus-three probably is the smartest bet on the board.

"The reason the Jets are favored is because oddsmakers and bettors don't have the same thought process as Bills fans. That's a good thing for business. It's mostly just the thinking that the Jets are a better team than their record shows.''

How did that theory turn out?

"You're like a guy that's in my neighborhood not too far from here, The Bronx, [where] they're like, 'Hey, the line's moving. You guys are in trouble, one way or another,' '' Marrone said when asked about being the underdog. "Yes, we brought it up. I'll do whatever it takes to get this team ready and motivated. If I can find a piece of information to get it, I'll use it.''

Charles said Marrone "just put that in our minds'' about the point spread.

"But, we already knew,'' he said. "A lot of guys in this locker room have been underdogs, so we feed off that stuff. We're going to make all the naysayers eat their words at the end of the year, because I don't think we've gotten any respect that we've deserved. We're going to stay grounded and keep proving these people wrong.''


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San Fran has no need to Panik

SAN FRANCISCO — Frank Bodner situated himself at Jack Kaier Stadium in the spring of 2009, he set his sights on the St. John's middle infield, and he wondered: Who is that upperclassmen?

"I thought he was a junior or senior, the way he carried himself," Bodner, then a Dodgers associate scout, said Sunday of Joe Panik. "He seemed to automatically get the respect of his teammates."

Five-and-a-half years later, Panik is once again a freshman, this time at baseball's highest level. And once again, it's his composure that most impresses folks around him, as he tries to end his rookie season with a World Series ring.

"He's got that calmness about him that you love," said Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who also uttered the memorable phrase, "Once he got two or three games under his belt, you could see Panik relax."

"He doesn't take failure [well]," San Francisco center fielder Gregor Blanco said of his clubhouse locker next-door neighbor here at AT&T Park. "He doesn't like to lose."

The soon-to-be 24-year-old (his birthday is Thursday), a native of Yonkers, played a crucial role Saturday in ensuring his team wouldn't lose. Panik came up to bat in three straight innings — the fifth, sixth and seventh. In the fifth, his leadoff double sparked a game-tying, two-run rally. In the sixth, his sacrifice bunt set in motion Pablo Sandoval's two-run, game-winning single. And in the seventh, his two-run double helped turn the game into a blowout, as the Giants eventually prevailed by an 11-4 score.

Joe PanikPhoto: Getty Images

"When the moment gets big, I just tell myself to breathe," Panik, who attended John Jay High School in Hopewell Junction, said late Saturday night. "I can't really let the game get too big. Sometimes, you can try to do too much, but when that happens, you have to tell yourself get back to the basics of what makes you you. I feel like I was able to do that tonight."

Bodner, who lives in Long Island and now works as a consultant for high school baseball players — his venture is called The College Ball Game — filed a positive report on Panik for the 2011 amateur draft. The Dodgers used their first-round pick, 16th overall, on Stanford left-hander Chris Reed, who is already 24 and has yet to pitch in the major leagues. Thirteen picks later, the Giants selected Panik with their first pick.

But Bodner wasn't sore that the Dodgers didn't pop Panik so early. Actually, Bodner admitted, "I was surprised he went that high." John DiCarlo, the Giants scout who knew Panik the best, recently admitted to The Post's Joel Sherman that San Francisco received much grief from other organization about this pick.

Joe Panik (left) and Brandon Crawford high five after Game 4 of the World Series.Photo: AP

When the Giants' other second-base options — a list of names including 2012 postseason hero Marco Scutaro (back injury) and former Marlin and Brave Dan Uggla (released) — fizzled in 2014, however, the club turned to Panik, who had tallied a .321/.382/.447 slash line in 74 games with Triple-A Fresno. And Panik put up a .305/.343/.368 line in 73 major-league games while playing mediocre defense.

It isn't All-Star vintage, and a team couldn't make the World Series by copy-and-pasting Panik eight times and placing him around the diamond and up and down the lineup. On a deep Giants roster, though, a minimum-waged Panik brings considerable value.

"He's a great defender, but he gives you a good at-‑bat, lefty or righty [pitcher]," Bochy said of the lefty hitter. "It's a simple swing, but he doesn't try to do too much up there. He can do little things. You can bunt him. But he's, I think, a tough guy to pitch to because of the short swing."

Bodner said that watching Panik in college reminded him of another St. John's product who eventually played for the Giants — Rich Aurilia. They have similarly quiet demeanors, Bodner said.

Aurilia played shortstop for the pennant-winning 2002 Giants, and he bounced around before ending his career with the 2009 Giants. The next season, San Francisco won its first World Series title since 1954, when the Giants played in New York.

This time, the Giants hope they can reward St. John's for its contribution by going all the way, thanks in no small part to the contributions from their top freshman.


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Oprah horrified after her driver runs over woman’s foot

Oprah Winfrey was horrified when the driver of her huge SUV ran over a woman's foot, narrowly avoiding crushing her ankle.

The concerned talk show queen jumped into action when the driver of her Escalade accidentally rolled over the toes of Lori Geller Bender, an attractive, blond mother of two, who was arriving at hot Miami restaurant Prime 112.

Bender, 44, tells us that her husband, Kevin, banged on the window of the SUV and screamed at the driver to reverse off her toes, which became trapped under one of the vehicle's wheels.

Bender, who lives in Parkland, Fla., told Page Six of Saturday night's incident, "We were crossing the street to arrive at the restaurant, and there were a lot of cameras. I could see a big crowd of security guards, and as soon as Oprah got into the car, it pulled out from the curb, and a wheel went over my foot. I was wearing heels, my toe was trapped under the wheel and I fell to the ground, hitting my coccyx and my head.

"My husband was banging on the window, shouting for the driver to pull back. I am lucky because if the SUV had gone slightly further forward it would have crushed my whole ankle.

"The driver reversed off my foot and Oprah jumped out. She couldn't have been nicer and more gracious. She looked really shocked and asked me if I was OK, and took a good look at my foot. I wasn't hurt, and I told her I was fine. Oprah said, "Well, that's worth a picture,' and she put her arm around me and we took some photos."

She added, "It has always been on my bucket list to meet Oprah, but I could never have imagined it would be because her driver ran over my toe. Its a crazy story."

Oprah had earlier dined at Prime 112 with best friend Gayle King, to celebrate the end of her "The Life You Want Weekend" in Miami. Witnesses said Oprah ordered a Kobe burger, before bringing out her own truffle and asking the chef to shave it over her meal. One onlooker joked, "Oprah not only rolls deep in a huge toe-crunching SUV and more security than the president, she also rolls with her own personal truffle."


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From Super Bowl champ to this — how does Harvin like the Jets?

It only took one game for Percy Harvin to find out what it means to be a Jet.

Less than nine months ago, Harvin was racing down the field at MetLife Stadium, opening the second half of Seattle's Super Bowl stampede with a kick return for a touchdown, but Sunday he learned what it's like to be on the other end of embarrassment as the Jets were humiliated in a 43-23 loss to the Bills in his debut.

Harvin was a member of the defending champions just two weeks ago. On Monday, he'll wake up with a seven-game losing streak, two untrustworthy quarterbacks and no real reason to believe things are going to get any better.

But after being traded, reportedly because of trouble in the Seattle locker room, the 26-year-old said he is still happy to be in his new surroundings.

"I love being here in New York, I love the fan base, I love my teammates," Harvin said. "I'm just looking forward to turning this thing around and I think we're gonna have fun when we do."

With Harvin having practiced with the Jets for less than a week, it was unclear how much playing time he would get in his first game, but Rex Ryan opted to make the receiver a focal point immediately.

In addition to returning six kickoffs — for an average of 24 yards — Harvin was targeted nine times as a receiver, making three catches for 22 yards, while adding 28 rushing yards on four carries.

While the team hoped Harvin's addition would benefit the development of Geno Smith, the second-year quarterback had a career-worst game, throwing three interceptions and only two completions. Playing primarily as an outside receiver for the first time since high school, Harvin wasn't able to help, but Jerry Rice likely would have been equally ineffective with the Jets' quarterback play.

"All things considered, I thought Percy really played well," Ryan said. "That's not an easy task. We were going to play him more obviously than we had let on. It's a huge challenge to a guy to come into a new team. I thought he did a great job. Obviously, this guy is a big-time playmaker. I'm happy he's on our team."

Ryan acknowledged, though, that other elements of the offense may have been disrupted by the team's insistence to get Harvin involved, most evident on Smith's first interception in the first quarter, when he forced a deep throw to the blanketed receiver down the field.

"I guess, maybe, but we were trying to get our best players on the field and he's certainly one of them," Ryan said.

Harvin, who briefly left the game to be tested for a concussion but was cleared to return, said he felt comfortable with the playbook and was pleased with his performance.

Harvin said he believes his performance — and his new team's — will improve, even if Sunday showed him Seattle is a lot farther than just 2,853 miles.

"I fit in pretty well," Harvin said. "There's just little things we got to clean up. Only thing you can do now is keep working. … A lot of it is just gonna come from effort, not wanting to quit."

Who could blame him if he wanted to already?


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Jagr’s OT strike ends Devils’ winless streak

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 26 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

Jaromir Jagr scored a power-play goal 3:39 into overtime, and the Devils beat the Senators, 3-2, on an emotional Saturday night in Canada's capital.

It was the Senators' first game since the shooting death of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial on Wednesday. A touching tribute took place prior to puck drop as players and fans united to commemorate the loss of Cirillo and Warrant

Officer Patrice Vincent, who was killed in a hit-and-run attack Monday near Montreal.

Marek Zidlicky and Damon Severson also scored for the Devils, who snapped a four-game winless streak. Cory Schneider had 33 saves.

Alex Chiasson and Bobby Ryan scored for the Senators, who had won four in a row.


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Frans Nielsen nets hat trick as Islanders outgun Stars

This is supposed to be a new Islanders team, thanks to a slew of offseason acquisitions and money spent by the notoriously stingy organization.

For the most part during the early part of this season, the Islanders have looked the part and that continued on Saturday, when they won their second straight game, beating the Stars, 7-5, at Nassau Coliseum.

Though the Islanders (6-2) coughed up a two-goal lead and trailed late in the second, they were able to right themselves.

The comeback was capped by three Frans Nielsen goals in the third period as he notched his first career hat trick.

It was a solid victory over a Dallas team (4-2-2) that was coming off a win over the Devils in Newark on Friday night.

It also was another sign the Islanders have been able to shake off their two-game slide, following a 4-0 start.

"We know we're a good team," Nielsen said. "We wanted to make a statement here in the beginning, and I think we have so far. But we can't get too confident. We have to keep working."

Especially given what lies ahead of them over the next two weeks.

After another home game on Tuesday against Winnipeg, the Islanders head out on a five-game trip that includes stops at Colorado, San Jose, Los Angeles, Anaheim and Arizona. Then they return to the Coliseum for a game against the Avalanche before going to Florida to face the Panthers and Lightning.

"We're going to be tested," coach Jack Capuano said before the game.

That was the case Saturday.

The Islanders took a 3-1 lead when Brock Nelson put a rebound by Dallas goalie Anders Lindback 1:25 into the second period.

But the advantage was short-lived, as Chad Johnson surrendered three goals in the second to allow the Stars to grab a 4-3 lead.

When it seemed the Islanders were falling apart, Lubomir Visnovsky tied it again, ripping a shot by Lindback.

Then Nielsen took over. He scored on a feed from Nikolay Kulemin at 9:39 and then again off a pass from Mikhail Grabovski at 15:09. Nielsen finished the scoring with an empty-netter before time expired.

"I didn't really celebrate," Nielsen said. "I wasn't sure if it counted."

It did and ended a back-and-forth game. One Capuano admitted the Isles may have lost in the past.

"Last year, we outplayed teams and lost games," Capuano said. "I give our team credit. We made some blunders with the puck, no question… But we're focusing on winning games, no matter how we have to do it."

Johnson, who made just his second start of the season Thursday in Boston, wasn't as sharp Saturday. Nevertheless, he recovered from a shaky second period to deliver several key saves in the third.

"I want to be as strong as I can be regardless of the score," Johnson said. "It was kind of a shootout there for a while. But I don't think we want to be in games like that all the time."


Josh Bailey was placed on injured reserve with a broken hand before the game. Capuano said Bailey would be reevaluated, and the team should have more information on Monday. He remained hopeful Bailey only would miss "a couple of weeks."

Grabovski took his spot, returning from a concussion suffered on Oct. 16, when he was leveled by San Jose's John Scott. … Travis Hamonic sat out again, and Capuano said he is still day-to-day with an upper body injury.


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‘Family hour’ extinct as sitcoms get more vulgar

Next week, a new season of the sitcom "Mom" will premiere on CBS and Allison Janney will proclaim to her daughter, Anna Faris: "I can't wait to bang your father. . . . All I can think of is driving to Chico and draining him like a dirty pool."

Yuck. "Mom" has its humorous moments, but this is one "family" sitcom you'd never watch with your family. And it's hardly alone. The premiere of "The Millers" last year included an extended conversation about masturbating in the shower. Last week on "Black-ish," which has been billed as the next "Cosby Show," the mom suggested that the dad "ride the underground railroad" while she pointed emphatically at her private parts. I have a hard time imagining Clair Huxtable saying that to Cliff.

We have gotten used to a new level of vulgarity in our TV shows and movies. And that has in turn made us less concerned about the sex and violence we are letting our kids watch, at least according to a new study in the Journal of Pediatrics.

Researchers led by a scholar at the Annenberg Public Policy Center showed 1,000 parents with children between the ages of 6 and 17 a series of video clips that included explicit sex or violence and then asked them how old kids should be before they see such scenes. The more scenes the parents watched, the lower the age was that the parents suggested.

Bonnie (Allison Janney) and Christy (Anna Faris) in "Mom."Photo: CBS

So you have had a at least two generations of kids who have grown up with declining standards of what's appropriate. And they are now raising kids with almost no standards at all when it comes to media consumption.

The Family Hour, already endangered, is now well and truly dead.

If you want to know where to place the blame for this, you could do a lot worse than Normal Lear. In his new memoir, "Even This I Get to Experience," Lear, who produced sitcoms like "All in the Family," "Sanford and Son" and "Maude," recounts many of the battles he had with network executives over the content of the programs.

"One of our biggest [confrontations] occurred over a story concerning Mike's temporary inability to make love to Gloria. . . . CBS wanted no part of anything to do with impotence."

One of the higher-ups flew out to intervene. "You're doing a show, a family show on television, about he can't get it up?"

After winning this particular battle, Lear concludes smugly, "Loud and clear came the message" from mainline clergy, mental-health groups and family counseling services: "The subjects you are touching on are extremely helpful."

Indeed, Lear says that "we heard that sentiment more and more over time from organizations and institutions dealing with everything from rape to drugs, from parenthood to cancer, religion, science, etc."

By pushing back against the network scolds, Lear wasn't just fighting for artistic freedom. He was performing a public service.

The Family Hour, already endangered, is now well and truly dead.

But it turned out that the suits in corner offices weren't the only ones objecting to some of Lear's efforts to be cutting edge. When Lear proposed a script for "Good Times" that revolved around the family's teenage daughter being pressured to have sex, Esther Rolle, who played the mother, told Lear, "No point in even reading it. The last thing we want this family to deal with on our show is teenage sex. There's enough that's morally wrong on TV. Not on my show."

While Lear says he was plenty willing to listen to Rolle on the matter of what black people would and wouldn't say, he had little interest in her concerns about "the way their race should be represented on TV" and so Lear went ahead with the episode. The problem, he concluded, was that Rolle "was not sufficiently flexible to open up to another point of view."

It's been 30 years since "Good Times" was on the air, but Lear and his legacy live on. There are no limits to the "flexibility" of the actors, not to mention the producers and even the network executives today. And we're all the worse for it.


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In playoff rematch, Canadiens snap Rangers’ 3-game win streak

MONTREAL — OK might have been good enough in Newark on Tuesday, but it sure wasn't good enough here Saturday night against the Canadiens.

Because for nearly all of the first two periods in which the story of this 3-1 Montreal victory was written by perhaps the hungrier team, the Rangers were neither quick enough to and with the puck nor strong enough on it.

They therefore spent a noticeable majority of the time chasing at both ends of the ice, more often than not in their own zone against a horde of Canadiens who spent the night creating havoc in front of Henrik Lundqvist's crease.

"We have to find a way to play better under pressure," said Martin St. Louis, who started the night with Mats Zuccarello and Derick Brassard before completing it with Rick Nash and Chris Mueller (or alternately, Lee Stempniak). "We have to play through people.

"Every team forechecks hard. We have to find a way."

The Rangers, 4-4 with the Wild coming up on Monday, have to find the way to play consistent hockey. The three-game win streak that ended here featured only one complete 60-minute performance, that the 4-0 victory over San Jose last Sunday. The Blueshirts just haven't been able to dictate. They didn't come close against the Canadiens, who, according to coach Alain Vigneault, "were the better team in front of both nets."

Lundqvist, under siege all night, was very good while Carey Price, who didn't have to contend with much traffic at all, was equally as good.

"He's always good," Dan Girardi, the Blueshirts' best defenseman by a mile, said of the Montreal goaltender. "Really."

The Blueshirts committed way too many turnovers all over the ice while unable to force the Canadiens into coughing up the puck. Montreal was off to the races. The Rangers were on a slow track until the third, when the Habs backed off a bit after taking a 3-1 lead at 6:35 when Marc Staal, who had a dreadful night, lost Max Pacioretty in front after a Montreal rush seemingly had been negated. But no.
"We have to be very careful with the puck because [if we're not] it feeds their transition," said Lundqvist, beaten twice from right in front and once on a two-on- … uh … zero, shorthanded rush, which began when Ryan McDonagh couldn't get to the puck on a left wall pinch. "It's important to try and get the puck in deep and try to keep the game in front of you.

"It was tough in the second period."

Once again struggling on faceoffs, the Rangers generated little through the first two periods, during which the Carl Hagelin-Dominic Moore-Anthony Duclair unit was the club's best line. The Chris Kreider-Kevin Hayes-Rick Nash combination struggled to gain possession of the puck, with Nash on the ice for just four even-strength attempted shots through the first 40 minutes. The St. Louis-Brassard-Zuccarello unit showed just intermittent flashes but was unable to control the puck down low.

And so in the third, Vigneault switched it up, elevating Mueller or Stempniak, shifting Kreider to the left with Brassard and Zuccarello to thus add some size and muscle to the combination, and sending Hayes — who struggled big time against Montreal's speed — to the fourth line.

Eight games in, the Rangers haven't developed chemistry. Eight games in, Staal and McDonagh have been as much liabilities as assets. Eight games in, Zuccarello has yet to score while St. Louis has only one goal.

A year ago, Zuccarello didn't score until his eighth game, one match after sitting as a healthy scratch. He scored once in his first 15 games and twice in his first 23 before finishing the season with 19 goals after meshing with Brassard and the since-departed Benoit Pouliot.

"It's hard not to think about," Zuccarello said. "You have to stay positive because nothing gets better if you're negative. It's a little harder to sleep at night, I'm not going to lie."

It's been a little bit harder than expected so far for the Rangers.


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Pro-jihadi ax attacker ‘wanted white people to pay for slavery’

The self-radicalized madman who attacked four rookie Queens cops with a hatchet had more than just ­jihad on his mind — he also wanted to kill white people.

"He wanted white people to pay for all that slavery and all that racism," the father of slain hatchet loon Zale Thompson, 32, told The Post Saturday. "I think he committed suicide — and he was taking one of y'all with him," his father, Ralph Thompson, said, speaking through the screen door of the two-story Queens Village house where his unhinged son also once lived.

Zale ThompsonPhoto: NYPD

Asked if "one of y'all" meant white people," the father said, "Yeah."

"He just said, 'They have to pay for all their unfairness,' " the father added. "Unfairness for the way they treat black people."

Zale Thompson, 32, was shot dead on a Jamaica, Queens, sidewalk Thursday after he lunged with a blue-handled hatchet at four rookie cops, striking Officer Joseph Meeker, 24, in the arm and Officer Kenneth Healey, 25, in the back of the head. Both those officers are white, as is the third cop. The fourth cop is a light-skinned Hispanic.

"I didn't know it would get that serious," the father said wearily of his son, a Navy veteran described by former friends as "bright" but radically pro-"black power" in his youth and a Muslim convert in recent years.

"I didn't know he was going to carry on a mission on his own," added the father.

Unconnected to any terror group or even any mosque, and with no criminal record in New York, Zale Thompson was unknown to law enforcement as a potential threat, police sources said.

But over the last several years, he was quietly becoming an ardent devourer of violent Islamic propaganda, police said.

Video: Devon McCarthy

"This guy spent every waking moment on the Internet," said one law-enforcement source. Police are looking back as far as five years to see whether anyone else Thompson communicated with is a threat.

"He Googled the words 'jihad against police,' " the source said of Thompson's more recent activity. "He also looked up [news stories on] the two Canadian attacks" last week, the source added, referring to so-called "lone wolf" jihadist shooting of a ceremonial guard in Ottawa and a fatal attack on a soldier in Quebec.

Zale Thomson's father Ralph speaks to reporters at his home.Photo: Brigitte Stelzer

ISIS extremists have been urging lone-wolf attacks on police and soldiers in Europe and the United States.

Following the attack, police brass on Friday ordered that foot patrols citywide be conducted in pairs.

"Strike their police, security and intelligence members, as well as their treacherous agents," ISIS spokesman Aub Mohammad al-Adnani posted on Sept. 21. "If you are not able to find an IED or a bullet, then single out the disbelieving American, Frenchman, or any of their allies. Smash his head with a rock, or slaughter him with a knife, or run him over with your car, or throw him down from a high place, or choke him or poison him."

Another extremist essay — titled, "To 2.6M Muslims in USA: A Call to Arms to Defend Islam and Avenge the Slaughter of Muslims" and published Sept. 16 — directly encouraged jihadi wannabes to attack cops.

"Knocking off a police, military or any other law-enforcement officer sends a chilling message to the so-called 'civilians' and fills their hearts with consternation," it reads.

Zale Thompson's own rants mirrored the hate-mongers' rhetoric. "America's military is strong abroad, but they have never faced an internal mass revolt," he wrote on Facebook, where his page featured a photo of a Muslim warrior with a turban and sword. "They are weaker at home. We are scattered and decentralized, we can use this as an advantage."

ISIS especially knows how to "hit a lot of different kinds of people's buttons," noted David Schanzer, director of the Triangle Center of Terrorism and Homeland Security at Duke University.

"It can be about violence or adventure," he said. "It can be about the politics."

Thompson's downward spiral may have begun in the Navy. He enlisted in early 2001 and spent nearly two years stationed on California's Ventura County naval base as a "Seabee," a nickname for a construction-worker soldier.

A Navy source described Thompson as a "troublemaker" who "wasn't a good sailor." Suspected drug use and numerous unauthorized absences got him booted from the Navy in August 2003, the source said.

The ax used by the suspect to attack the NYPD officers

Thompson would be arrested in Oxnard, Calif., near his old base, five times between mid-2003 and early 2004 — twice for assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm and once for domestic violence, rec­ords reveal.

On another five occasions between 2003 and 2004, he was accused of ­domestic violence. The outcomes of those cases were unclear.

Neighbors said Thompson continued to claim he was "on leave" as recently as this summer. When neighbors would ask him how he was spending his time at home, "He said, 'I'm reading the Koran. I converted to Islam,' " said one neighbor, asking his name not be revealed.

Meanwhile Saturday, Healey, the officer most seriously injured, continued his recovery in Jamaica Hospital.

"He wants to get strong, and is concerned whether he's going to ever be a cop again," said one source.

Bystander LaToya James, 29, struck in the back by a stray police bullet during the melee, remains at Jamaica Hospital. Her condition is unknown.


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Nets’ ‘big’ question: Will Brook Lopez be ready for the opener?

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 25 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

Brook Lopez still hasn't returned to practice, but Nets coach Lionel Hollins said he believes the injured center will be ready to play by the regular-season opener Wednesday in Boston.

"He was on the weightless … treadmill, but he's doing fine. I think he'll be ready by opening day. But that's my opinion, talking to him,'' said Hollins, who acknowledged the doctors still haven't cleared Lopez to practice or even given him a date of when that might be.

Lopez — who sat next to general manager Billy King for much of the portion of Friday's practice that was open to the media — suffered a mild sprain in his foot Oct. 16, and initially was expected to miss 10-to-14 days. The 7-foot center has fractured that same foot not once but twice, including last season, limiting him to just 17 games.

When Hollins was asked if he'd need to see more to feel comfortable in playing Lopez, he replied: "That he's healthy, that's all. If he's healthy, he's going to play.''

Hollins added he'd rather see Lopez — who averaged 20.7 points and six boards last season — practice before playing him, but said that wasn't a prerequisite.

"I'd prefer," Hollins said. "But if he doesn't, it doesn't matter.''


The Nets finally made the Marquis Teague trade official, dealing the guard — and a 2019 second-round pick acquired from the Bucks — to the Sixers for point guard Casper Ware.

Ware — whose contract is not guaranteed — averaged 5.3 points in 12.9 minutes over nine games for the 76ers last season. Teague logged 40 games last season between the Nets and Bulls, averaging 2.7 points and 1.5 assists in 11.1 minutes.


The Nets also exercised third-year options on center Mason Plumlee and forward Sergey Karasev, both taken in the 2013 draft.

Plumlee will back up both Lopez and Kevin Garnett, making $1.36 million this season and $1.42 million the next. Karasev is making $1.53 million this year, followed by $1.6 million.


Deron Williams was wearing tape on his right thumb and wrist, but bristled when asked about it.

"Any questions about the upcoming season? Anything like that of that nature, that's important?'' said Williams, who had surgery on that wrist two years ago.


Garnett — who has been out with a stomach virus since the Nets returned from China — practiced Friday, but didn't address the media. …


Joe Johnson confirmed The Post's report he had gone apartment-hunting in DUMBO, but said he hadn't found anything … yet. "I've heard something about that. I looked at a place a while ago. Obviously I didn't find nothing, but I'm just looking just in case,'' said Johnson, who would become been the first Net to actually live in Brooklyn.


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Surprise! Devils lose another shootout

Once the Stars got the shootout, it was all over for the Devils.

Jason Spezza and Jamie Benn scored in the tiebreaker, and Dallas beat New Jersey 3-2 on Friday night, extending the Devils' NHL record for shootout losses to 18 straight.

The Devils' shootout woes date to March 15, 2013, and it didn't appear as if either shootout attempt went on net: Mike Cammalleri's shot sailed over the net on the first and Jaromir Jagr lost control of the puck on the second.

Stars goaltender Kari Lehtonen finished with 25 saves.

"You have to score," Devils coach Pete DeBoer said "You've got Benn and Spezza coming down for them the first two shooters. That's tough with the two shots those two guys made. We'll just pick up and move on. I'm not concerned about it. I know we're going to win some shootouts, so we'll take the point and move on."

Spezza scored after Cammalleri missed with a dancing backhander in front. Benn beat Cory Schneider skating across the crease from right to left.

Eric Gelinas and Damien Brunner scored for the Devils, who have lost four in a row since starting the season 3-0. Schneider made 35 saves, including a breakaway stop on Erik Cole late in the third period.

The Devils tied it at 2 at 8:18 of the third period on a controversial goal by Brunner. A prone Patrik Elias used his glove to slide the puck from the right corner of the net to the other side, where Brunner tapped it in for his first goal of the season.

Dallas was outshot 7-3 in the opening nine minutes and fell behind 1-0 on Gelinas' first goal of the season. Jacob Josefson, playing for the first time this season, collected a turnover by defenseman Jamie Oleksiak and found Gelinas for a shot from the left point at 5:21.

Dallas, which outshot New Jersey 11-2 in the final 11 minutes of a fruitless first period, took the lead with two goals in the second.

Benn went top shelf from in close one second before a tripping penalty on Gelinas expired. Spezza and Tyler Sequin outworked Andy Greene behind the net, with Seguin finding Benn for his fifth goal.

The Devils nearly re-took the lead midway through the period when Michael Ryder hit the post.

Eaves put Dallas in front with 4:12 left in the period with a goal that Schneider probably should have prevented. Eaves got the puck in the right circle and his unscreened shot found its way between the goaltender and the post. It was Eaves' first goal since signing with the Stars in free agency in the offseason.


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Jimmy Takter’s chance for odd Triple Crown

Trainer Jimmy Takter has a chance to win the trotting Triple Crown, albeit in an unconventional way.

The final leg of the Crown is the $500,000 Yonkers Trot, a 3-year-old open, on Saturday night at Yonkers Raceway. By virtue of his half-length loss in the Hambletonian, Takter trainee Nuncio has no chance to be a Triple Crown champion, but since that Hambletonian defeat was delivered by stablemate Trixton, there's still a chance for a Takter Triple Crown.

Nuncio, driven by Hall of Famer John Campbell, heads into the Trot having won three straight, including the $435,000 Kentucky Futurity, the second leg of the Crown, on Oct. 5. He also easily won his Trot elimination by 3 ½ lengths last Saturday.

"He was very strong in the stretch," said Takter about Nuncio's Trot elimination win. "He's in great form. The horse is sharp."

Nuncio has never been worse than second in 24 lifetime starts and has nine wins in 14 outings this season.

"He's got a fantastic resume. He's a really hard worker," Takter said.

A victory in Yonkers' signature race would be Campbell's third and Takter's fourth.

The stakes-filled card also includes the $500,000 Messenger for 3-year-old open pacers, the $150,874 Hudson Filly for 3-year-old filly trotters, the $124,590 Lady Maud for 3-year-old filly pacers and the $250,000 International Trot Preview, an invitational featuring the top-ranked horse in training, Sebastian K.

The Yonkers Trot has an approximate post time of 8:50 p.m.


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After ‘personal’ attack and 3-year ban, boxing judge returns

On July 9, 2011, Al Bennett served as a judge for a non-title bout between Paul Williams and Erislandy Lara in a ballroom at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City. Since then, the only scoring he has done has been while watching boxing on television.

That will change Saturday night when Bennett, 66, returns to ringside to serve as a judge for a seven-bout card at Schuetzen Park in North Bergen, N.J. It ends a lengthy indefinite suspension imposed by then-New Jersey boxing commissioner Aaron Davis after controversy erupted following the Williams-Lara bout. Davis was replaced by Larry Hazzard last month, a restructuring that likely benefited Bennett's reinstatement.

"I'm glad to be back," Bennett told The Post this week. "Larry is working me back in slow. Anything he offers me, I'm going to take it so I can get back in the groove."

A judge since 1986, Bennett had worked 25 title fights when he was assigned to Williams-Lara, the main event of an HBO After Dark telecast. Williams was awarded a majority decision that night, causing a public outcry by media and fans who thought Lara had won. Bennett scored the bout a 114-114 draw, while Donald Givens and Hilton Whitaker III had Williams winning 116-114 and 115-114.

Four days later in an unprecedented move, Davis placed all three judges on indefinite suspension, saying he was "unsatisfied with the scoring of the contest." Davis required all three judges to undergo additional training before consideration for reinstatement. Givens, age 77 at the time, retired. Whitaker was reinstated in October 2012, and has been active scoring bouts in New Jersey and North Carolina, according to boxrec.com.

Bennett, the most seasoned of the three judges, made several attempts to get reinstated after attending two seminars and passing the standardized test administered by the Association of Boxing Commissions. But he remained on indefinite suspension until two weeks ago, when he re-applied, paid his $75 fee and received his reinstatement by mail.

"I never thought I'd be out this long," Bennett said. "I was initially told I'd be off television fights for a while and then things got personal."

Bennett, of Avenel, N.J., said he believes he was being blackballed by Davis because he did an exclusive interview with The Post in May 2012, where he called the length of the suspension "unfair" and criticized Davis for crumbling under public pressure.

"I think it was personal because I was the only one really fighting back," Bennett said.

He has tried to maintain his skills by scoring fights off the television and comparing his results with the official judges at ringside. He's hoping the suspension won't keep him from getting future work.

"My only concern is that because I was suspended for three years, I still might not get picked for much," Bennett said. "I'm still kind of straddling the fence. But I'll take what I can get. I'm just glad to be back and involved in a sport that I love."

Judges have continued to face scrutiny since that night. Nevada judge C.J. Ross took a leave of absence after scoring a draw in Floyd Mayweather's victory over Canelo Alvarez in September 2013. More recently, Chris Algieri captured the WBO junior welterweight title last June at Barclays Center with a majority decision, where one judge had it one-sided for Ruslan Provodnikov, 117-109, while the other two judges saw it 114-112 for Algieri. HBO's unofficial scorer and long-time judge Steve Weisfeld had hit 117-109 for Provodnikov.

Scoring always will be subjective which is why Bennett never felt he should have been suspended, especially for three years.

"You've got three judges that are in different positions around the ring," he said. "So I might see something that you might not see, and you might see something that I don't see. But if we're within one or two points apart that's not bad."


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Daily Blotter

The Bronx

■ A man is suspected of stabbing a straphanger on a No. 6 train elevated-station platform in Soundview, cops said.

The 18-year-old victim was at the Elder Avenue station Thursday at about 2:40 p.m. when he got into an argument with the suspect, who pulled a knife and stabbed him several times in the torso, cops said.

The suspect was last seen wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt and jeans and was sporting a close-cropped beard, cops said.

The victim was in stable condition, authorities said.


Brooklyn

■ A tech-savvy man in Park Slope took crime fighting into his own hands, using an iPad app to track down the burglar who broke into his car and took the tablet, cops said.

The thief swiped a Lenovo laptop and the iPad from the victim's car, which had been left unlocked at Fifth Avenue and Carroll Street on Oct. 11 at about 10:30 a.m., and took the license plates off the car before fleeing, cops said.

The victim used the Find My iPad app to go after his stolen goods, cops said.

When the victim caught up with the crook and approached him on the street, the burglar threw the laptop at him and fled, cops said.

The suspect is described as being in his 20s.

■ This tidy thief made a real mess.

The brute shattered a glass window at an Orthodox Jewish school in East Williamsburg — and all he stole was a roll of garbage bags, police sources said.

The suspect flung a brick through a window on a door at the Bais Rochel School for Girls on Marcy Avenue last Saturday at about 1:30 a.m., according to the sources.

He stuck his hand through the broken window and unlocked the door, cops said.

He then grabbed a roll of garbage bags and fled, the sources said. Police said the man is believed to be in his 30s.

■ Police are on the hunt for three men who attempted to rob a Sheepshead Bay jewelry store at gunpoint, cops said.

The men entered the shop on Kings Highway near East 13th Street Wednesday at about 3:15 p.m., cops said.

One of the thugs then flashed a black revolver at the armed security guard, cops said.

The guard swatted the suspect's hand and a round went off, cops said.

The men fled the store without any property, sources said.

There were no reported injuries.

■ A drunken night out with some new "pals" left a Williamsburg man broke and lonely, police sources said.

The 23-year-old victim befriended a woman and two men at the LP & Harmony bar on Graham and Manhattan avenues early last Saturday and told the trio they could crash at his place, according to police sources.

While the victim was sleeping, the thieves snatched a debit card out of his wallet and left him high and dry, the sources said.

The crooks then went to four different ATM machines in Brooklyn and extracted at least $200 in cash, police sources said.

When the victim awoke, he noticed his guests were gone and so was his debit card, cops said.


Manhattan

■ Police said they caught a creep masturbating in a Village subway station.

James Hunt, 37, was standing near the turnstiles at the West 14th Street station on Sixth Avenue with his pants down when he began masturbating, cops said.

When they arrested him just after midnight on Oct. 17, cops said they found marijuana and a bent MetroCard in his pocket. Bent cards are typically used for illegal swipes at the turnstile, cops said.

He was charged with unlawful possession of marijuana, lewdness, public lewdness, and criminal possession of a forged instrument.

■ Three burglars stole thousands of dollars worth of cash, lottery tickets and cigarettes from a Midtown store, cops said.

The suspects cut the lock and walked in the front door of the the New Golden Apple Store at 666 Fifth Ave. on Oct. 19 at about 4:30 a.m., cops said.

They removed $4,000 in cash, $20,000 worth of scratch-off lottery tickets and $5,200 in cigarettes, said police officials.

The pictures of the suspects were obtained from surveillance video inside a Brooklyn deli, cops said.


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Why Luck and the Colts are the pick

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 24 Oktober 2014 | 10.46

Football expert Phil Steele is the owner and publisher of Phil Steele's College Football Preview, regarded as the college football bible. Get in-depth coverage of college and pro football 24/7/365 at PhilSteele.com.

Colts (-3) over STEELERS: Indianapolis is the dominant team comparing year-to-date statistics, and even more so by using stats from the last four games. The Colts are No. 1 in both offense and defense and are plus-219 yards per game vs. the 11th-toughest schedule, while the Steelers are 14th and 13th, respectively, and are plus-24 ypg vs. the No. 31 schedule. Indianapolis also has the situational edge with a comfortable 27-0 win last Sunday, while Pittsburgh had a potential season-saving comeback win on Monday night and has rival Baltimore on deck. The capper is my exclusive special teams rankings where the Colts also have a significant edge (No. 2 vs. No. 20). Weather forecast is a Colts-friendly sunny and 60s.

Seahawks (-5) over PANTHERS: The Super Bowl champs have a bull's-eyes on their backs this season, and already have three losses, including their last two games. While a cross-country trip facing an unfamiliar foe can be a clear disadvantage, this is quite different as the Seahawks are visiting the Panthers for a third straight season, having won and covered the last two. Seattle is No. 1 in the NFL rushing for 5.4 yards per carry, while the Panthers defense is last, allowing 5.3 yards per carry. On the flip side, while not best vs. worst, Carolina is 29th rushing for 3.5 yards per carry, while Seattle's defense is No. 2 allowing 3.2 yards per carry. When I believe a team will control the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball, you usually will see them here on these pages.

LAST WEEK (NFL): 1-1

SEASON: 8-6


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O/U Rico — Week 8

O/U Rico — Week 8 | New York Post
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October 23, 2014 | 10:55pm

Rico went 7-8 (1-2 Best Bets) last week on the over/unders. The season record is 48-58 (10-11). The selections for Week 8 are:

Over: Broncos / Chargers; Jets / Bills; Patriots / Bears; Seahawks / Panthers; Dolphins / Jaguars; Colts / Steelers; Browns / Raiders; Saints / Packers; Cowboys / Redskins.

Under: Lions / Falcons; Bucs / Vikings; Chiefs / Rams; Texans / Titans; Bengals / Ravens; Cardinals / Eagles.

Best Bets: Jets (Over); Texans (Under); Cowboys (Over).

League (Overs listed first):
Last Week: 6-9; Overall: 52-54

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