X-X-X-Corner Game CXCV-X-X-X-
CXCV 
984 - S2020

811 - KenS2K

716 - 2k3yellows2k

595.5 - AP1Sean

591 - johnny

403 - cap1
365.5 - O-turn
341 - zdave87
316 - GTFCTIM
, 274 - NikePenguin ('o') :mia:
namilkcarton:
,236 - Mocky

234.5 - s2ko

226 - Raven628

181.5 - MzS2k

169.5 - MrMophandle

169 - blue03s2k
146.5 - clawhammer
140 - shareall
127 - Tokyo James
, 114 - RichUK
, 103.5 - PopTarts
, 87 - bahula03,
72 - 3AFL S2K

69 - S2K1,
66 - George,
65.5 - JustAyoungRectum,
63 - Sweetj
, 59.5 - alexf20c aka keeper of the red hot-ass ,
56 - ACLR8 :S:
, WestSideBilly
, 54 - revhi,
50 - C-Bass (aka Zoe) ,
46 - Cubic Inch,
40.5 - Skuz
36 - BBY2KS2K,
34 - 720 rocks,
33 - Solless,
32 - AndyP,
27.5 - wicky,
26 - Roku_F20C,
23.5 - jasonw,
23 - DaveOnLI, S20006906,
22 - S2KGary, Dark_Sub_Rosa, jadyn, MunkyGirl
, 21 - jedwards, Hooooonda!,
18 - gomarlins3

16 - AVXs2000,
15.5 - RACER
, 15 - PB02, 01NFRs2k, 14 - beanolo
, 12 - MrForgetable

11.5 - Ratgirl, ipimpgarland, AP1CHICKA
11 - Unabageler, TSX,
10 - PeaceLuv&S2K,
9 - S2ktonV, Spapdx,
8.5 - wildcardtrd
8 - problem_child ,
7 - Racer Chick, VTECnology, feistyS2K

6.5 - Nsxnext1
6 - Martin, Carlson, CrazyCracker82,
5.5 - Punisher
5 - Kathy, Saud2k,Scorpioxi, ruexp67, nakdboardr,

4 - aka s2k, p0pe, Luke, Essogirl, moparacker, Mikey, hapa, SoCaliS2k, Slow ap1
3 - adidaSPOON, AquilaEagle, 'smyroad, mikes2k, wupike, S2kTarga, CaptKirk
2 - Guedo512, Mom, DVDoughboy, MrWizard, CrazyPhuD,wtbs2k, zgirl, dreamcation, CaptainMike, aplus_2000, YeloS2000ShowGrl, geoff2005, Uppitychick
, s2ktarga1 - Kyras, Quik S2K, PortugueseS2K, eniety, ccarnel, Meeyatch1, duff0000, billman250
, GOGOGO
, B1TSA :fruitcake:0 - Superbabe
RULES:
1. You get a corner every 50th reply post (not 25).
2. The person who gets the corner must update the scoreboard.
3. Superbonus round: the person to get the 2000th reply post in a thread gets two corners.
4. No exploitation of the Flood Control flaw.
5.
Originally Posted by blue03s2k,Jul 20 2006, 10:16 AM
it's easier then that... just tell them they can shop online and have it delivered to the door...
Originally Posted by O-turn,Jul 20 2006, 10:14 AM
how mucho?
I would like to raise it to $30, so we can make the prizes more lucrative and be able to do more stuff - we got a championship trophy made last year.
It'd be cool if we could start engraving the yearly winners on it.Gotta run to a meeting, hopefully I can still access the site when I get back... it seems to always go out around 11-noon...

we'll finally win it again...

Updated: July 20, 2006
England remain set on bid to host 2018 World Cup
England has a 'very good chance' of bidding for the 2018 World Cup and lessons have been learned from the failure to land the 2006 event, according to Sports Minister Richard Caborn.
A feasibility study into the possibility of hosting the event is currently being carried out, and any final bid submission would not be lodged until 2009.
However, Caborn, having sampled the atmosphere in Germany during the World Cup, is certain England has the know-how and facilities to table a more convincing bid than the one that failed ahead of 2006.
Caborn told PA Sport's Football Insider: 'I think the way we're approaching this, I think that we obviously think there would be a very good chance of bidding for the World Cup.
'Obviously as a Sports Minister I'd be disappointed if we didn't because I'd be at the forefront of pushing it, as I was with the Olympics.
'Like we did with the Olympics, we want to be absolutely sure what we are doing is based on robust figures, and our approach is right.
'I think we made many mistakes in (bidding for) 2006 - the way we handled the (Millennium) Dome, the way we handled Wembley and the way we handled Pickett's Lock.
'There were some tough lessons, and if you don't learn from tough lessons then you're a bit of an idiot.
'We've gone around the world and looked at cities who have been successful in bidding for the Olympics and World Cups as well.'
Caborn believes England's strength lies in its stadia, and if a bid is made to bring the competition to England for the first time since 1966, he thinks the 2012 Olympics will provide a solid test of the country's infrastructure.
'In the Olympics themselves, football will be one of the sports to actually go around the country,' he added.
'It will be at Hampden Park (in Glasgow) and in Cardiff and at Aston Villa's stadium and will finish at the great Wembley.
'Wembley will be the greatest stadium in the world, and will be a real credit to the nation.
'You look at places like the Emirates Stadium and football grounds up and down the country and we have some of the best stadia in the world - I have no doubts at all.
'The 2012 Games will be a great showcase. I have no doubts at all that if we really want to make a bid for 2018 then we have the stadia and indeed the organisation that can more than manage.'
Caborn, who was in Hull to promote the possibilities on offer for towns and cities outside of London to benefit from the 2012 Olympics, is now waiting for the feasibility report to land in his lap before the next step can be made.
'There's no doubt it's doable,' he added. 'It would be 2009 for the actual bid itself, but the feasibility report will come out in the next few weeks or months and will tell us what the cost-benefit analysis would be and so on, and we will build on that information.
'We will be looking at what our strengths and weaknesses are and will look to address those issues before we make a formal bid.
'If we're going to do it, we've got to do it right, and it's got to be well thought out.'
England remain set on bid to host 2018 World Cup
England has a 'very good chance' of bidding for the 2018 World Cup and lessons have been learned from the failure to land the 2006 event, according to Sports Minister Richard Caborn.
A feasibility study into the possibility of hosting the event is currently being carried out, and any final bid submission would not be lodged until 2009.
However, Caborn, having sampled the atmosphere in Germany during the World Cup, is certain England has the know-how and facilities to table a more convincing bid than the one that failed ahead of 2006.
Caborn told PA Sport's Football Insider: 'I think the way we're approaching this, I think that we obviously think there would be a very good chance of bidding for the World Cup.
'Obviously as a Sports Minister I'd be disappointed if we didn't because I'd be at the forefront of pushing it, as I was with the Olympics.
'Like we did with the Olympics, we want to be absolutely sure what we are doing is based on robust figures, and our approach is right.
'I think we made many mistakes in (bidding for) 2006 - the way we handled the (Millennium) Dome, the way we handled Wembley and the way we handled Pickett's Lock.
'There were some tough lessons, and if you don't learn from tough lessons then you're a bit of an idiot.
'We've gone around the world and looked at cities who have been successful in bidding for the Olympics and World Cups as well.'
Caborn believes England's strength lies in its stadia, and if a bid is made to bring the competition to England for the first time since 1966, he thinks the 2012 Olympics will provide a solid test of the country's infrastructure.
'In the Olympics themselves, football will be one of the sports to actually go around the country,' he added.
'It will be at Hampden Park (in Glasgow) and in Cardiff and at Aston Villa's stadium and will finish at the great Wembley.
'Wembley will be the greatest stadium in the world, and will be a real credit to the nation.
'You look at places like the Emirates Stadium and football grounds up and down the country and we have some of the best stadia in the world - I have no doubts at all.
'The 2012 Games will be a great showcase. I have no doubts at all that if we really want to make a bid for 2018 then we have the stadia and indeed the organisation that can more than manage.'
Caborn, who was in Hull to promote the possibilities on offer for towns and cities outside of London to benefit from the 2012 Olympics, is now waiting for the feasibility report to land in his lap before the next step can be made.
'There's no doubt it's doable,' he added. 'It would be 2009 for the actual bid itself, but the feasibility report will come out in the next few weeks or months and will tell us what the cost-benefit analysis would be and so on, and we will build on that information.
'We will be looking at what our strengths and weaknesses are and will look to address those issues before we make a formal bid.
'If we're going to do it, we've got to do it right, and it's got to be well thought out.'



