How Comfortable is the adidas NMD boost? (Review + On Feet)
Detailed images of the new adidas NMD XR1 Triple White are featured, as this pristine pair is set to make its official debut tomorrow.
Comprised of breathable primeknit across its upper, the component is reinforced with a matching cage overlay across its side panels for superb lockdown support. A distinctive heel badge with Japanese branded pull tabs further detail its clean design, as the model is topped off with a tonal white boost sole unit with the recognizable NMD plug inserts.
You can find this immaculate pair at select adidas retailers worldwide starting Thursday, August 18th.
Images: atmos
Authors Take
Since its introduction, Ive been a fan of the model. This colorway is timeless and stylish, so you cant go wrong with a pair.
Donald Trump Confronted By Mexican Man ‘Did You Read the Statue of Liberty?’
Welcome to The Lid, your afternoon dose of the 2016 ethosStatues of a n***d Donald Trump popped up in a handful of U.S. cities on Thursday in what was just the latest example of something we hope never happens again after this election.
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"16 from 30,000:
Here"s some good news for Republicans: Ticket splitting ain"t dead yet. Despite the increasingly polarized electorate, some Americans are still making voting decisions based on candidates and not simply casting ballots going by party affiliation, our colleague Dante Chinni writes. Chinni notes that in 2012, six states selected presidential and Senate candidates from different parties: Indiana, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota and West Virginia.
So why is this particularly helpful to Republicans? Well, the polls (Most of them. All of them?) have Donald Trump down in key states where GOP incumbent senators are facing tough re-election campaigns pivotal to Republicans maintaining control of the upper chamber. The most important races are shaping to be New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania -- each states where Hillary Clinton is currently leading. And the biggest issue each of the Republican senators are facing is how to navigate questions about their potential support for Trump. The fact split-ticket voters still exist is encouraging for the GOP, who will need support from voters who don"t back Trump if they want to win. And one thing to watch for, especially if Trump is unable to turn things around, will be Democrats ratcheting up their attempts to tie vulnerable Republicans to all things Trump. But because Trump is such a unique political figure, there is a chance some voters don"t even associate him with Republicans. For some, Trump is just Trump.
Programming Note: No Lid tomorrow. See ya back on Monday.
POPPING ON NBC POLITICS
FOR THE RECORD
"NYC Parks stands firmly against any unpermitted erection in city parks, no matter how small."
-- New York City Parks Department response a n**e Donald Trump statue placed in Union Square on Thursday.
Emma Coburn wins 3000m steeplechase final, clinches Rio bid
You"re probably not familiar with the steeplechase, but it"s an incredibly difficult event.
It involves running and jumping -- repeatedly and over long distances. Because of this, there are occasionally nasty falls or missed obstacles.
One such fall happened on Wednesday, when Uganda"s Jacob Araptany tripped and slammed his head into the barrier that the runners are supposed to jump over.
Araptany was OK after the scary fall, but was forced to withdraw from the race. Kenya"s Conseslus Kirupto wound up taking the gold, while American Evan Jager won silver. Another Kenyan, Ezekiel Kemboi finished with the bronze.
U.S." Coburn makes history with 3000m steeplechase bronze
In May, Glastonbury High graduate Donn Cabral shared a high school track in Glen Gardner, N.J., with a group of students making up a missed gym class.
Cabral, one of the all-time best American steeplechasers, was getting in an early afternoon workout and politely asked to use Lane 1.
His company will be a little different Wednesday in Brazil.
After four years spent training and preparing in relative obscurity, Cabral, who graduated from Glastonbury in 2008, will run in the Olympic 3,000-meter steeplechase final in Rio de Janeiro.
The final starts at about 10:55 a.m. at Olympic Stadium, where temperatures are expected to be in the 80s.
Cabral, 26, is trying to become the first American in 32 years to medal in the event, which includes running, hurdling and jumping over a water pit on the track. Brian Diemer won the bronze in 1984 in Los Angeles.
It is the second straight Olympic final for Cabral.
In 2012, he ran well, leading for portions of the race, but finished eighth with a time of 8:25.91.
On Monday, Cabral ran 8:21.96, the third-fastest time of qualifying rounds. He was the third automatic qualifier in the third and final heat, which was the fastest run.
All eyes will once again be on the Kenyans in the final. Kenya has won the last eight gold medals in the event and 10 of the last 12. In the qualifying rounds, Kenya"s Conseslus Kipruto had the fastest qualifying time of 8:21.40.
Ezekiel Kemboi, who won the gold medal in 2012 and 2004, qualified with the eighth-fastest time of 8:25.51.
Sport Illustrated predicted a sweep of the event by the Kenyans with Conseslus Kipruto winning gold, Kemboi taking silver and Brimin Kiprop Kipruto getting bronze. At the World Championships in Beijing last August, Kenya swept the medals with Kemboi going first and Conseslus Kipruto taking second. But the Americans enter the meet with their own piece of steeplechase history. It is the first time three Americans have advanced to the final in 80 years.
Hillary Bor and Evan Jager both made the final, each winning a heat Monday. Jager is considered a medal contender after finishing sixth at the World Championships last year. Bor ran 8:25.01 and Jager ran 8:25.86. Bor"s time was the sixth fastest and Jager"s was ninth in qualifying.
Mahiedine Mekhissi, who won the silver medal in 2012, will also be back after finishing 12th in qualifying in 8:26.32.
But Cabral enters the final with his own motivation and momentum.
He is coming off two of his best performances of the season.
After running 8:26.37 and finishing third in the final at the U.S. Olympic trials, Cabral returned to Eugene, Ore., about three weeks later and ran 8:20.72 to win the steeplechase at the Track Town summer series.
Cabral will be pulling on his experience from London in 2012.
In the final four years ago, Cabral mixed it up with the best, getting to the front of the pack early in the race. But on the closing lap, he wasn"t able to close the gap on the leaders. He enters Wednesday"s final more experienced and also healthy, coming off several weeks of training in Flagstaff, Ariz., where he ran at altitude.
Fightful.com Podcast (8/18): Vince Russo On Summerslam, UFC 202 Predictions.
What started as yet another odd news conference involving Conor McGregor ended in complete chaos Wednesday at the MGM Grand.
McGregor arrived more than 15 minutes late, after UFC president Dana White began the news conference without the typically tardy Irish superstar, who will fight Nate Diaz in a rematch at UFC 202 on Saturday at T-Mobile Arena. Once McGregor finally took his place on the dais, the situation quickly deteriorated.
Diaz, who appeared to be acting on the directions of his older brother and UFC star Nick Diaz, rose from his seat and walked off the stage in the David Copperfield Theater in the middle of McGregors response to a question just minutes after his arrival.
As Nate Diaz led his entourage toward the exit, he and some of his teammates held up their middle fingers and hurled expletives and threats at McGregor and his entourage, with McGregor firing back from the stage.
You will do (expletive) nothing, McGregor uttered several times. Get the (expletive) out of here.
Soon, more than words were flying through the air.
Water bottles were thrown in the direction of a group of McGregors friends and training partners, several of which were tossed directly back.
From the stage, McGregor grabbed an unopened can of an energy drink and lobbed it toward Diaz and his crew, which included UFC lightweight contender Gilbert Melendez and former UFC fighter Jake Shields.
UFC officials stopped McGregor from leaving the stage to physically confront Diaz, and hotel security and uniformed police officers kept the entourages separated.
An agitated White, who could be heard onstage instructing McGregor not to throw the can, quickly called an end to the news conference.
Sorry, guys. See you Saturday, said White, referring to the rematch between McGregor and Diaz, which will be contested at welterweight and tops a pay-per-view card that begins at 7 p.m.
Nobody appeared injured in the fracas, though several people were struck with projectiles, including rolls of tape.
Early on, it appeared the story of the day would be Whites decision to begin the news conference without the enigmatic headliner.
McGregor regularly shows up late for scheduled appearances, and his rematch against Diaz was removed from the UFC 200 card when McGregor decided not to fly to Las Vegas for a news conference, triggering a public spat between the featherweight champion and the organization.
He has to start respecting peoples time, man, White said of starting without McGregor. Yours, mine, (the other fighters), David Copperfields. Everybody.
Light heavyweights Anthony Johnson and Glover Teixeira, who will meet Saturday for the top contender spot, smiled through much of the drama onstage before they were whisked away by White.
It was not the first time there has been drama between the camps. Before the first meeting in March, a tense news conference in Los Angeles almost bubbled over into a physical altercation. During a staredown two days before the bout, McGregor took a swipe at Diazs hand and the two had to be separated.
Diazs camp also has a history of issues outside of competition, most notably a brawl on a 2010 Strikeforce card on CBS that was triggered when Jason Mayhem Miller entered the cage to challenge Shields to a fight and was violently beaten down by a group that included Nick and Nate Diaz.
The Diaz brothers also were involved in a skirmish with UFC fighter Khabib Nurmagomedov last year while attending a World Series of Fighting event at Planet Hollywood.
Contact reporter Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjournal.com or 702-224-5509. Follow @adamhilllvrj on Twitter.
John Cena vs. Alberto Del Rio: SmackDown Live, Aug. 16, 2016 (Photo: WWE)
WWEhas announced the 30-day suspension of Alberto Del Rio (real name: Jose Rodriguez). This is his first Wellness Policy violation of his second stint with the company that started back in October of last year where he was a surprise opponent for John Cena"s United States Championship. The suspension begins tomorrow August 18th.
This isn"t the first time the superstar has engaged in some sort of controversy. Upon his first release from the company back in 2014 when he got into a physical fight with a front desk employee after he made a racist joke at Del Rio"sexpense.
His second run with the company hasn"t been as lucrative as his first even though capturing the United States Championship twice and becoming a member of the League of Nations, he isn"t in the world title picture at all.
With the suspension starting within the week, Del Rio will miss SummerSlamdespite not being booked beforehand, there"s always the case of a surprise appearance to receive some sort of pay day, but that"s off the table now.
He wins gold medal for cuteness! 100m hurdler Nia Ali"s son steals the show in Rio
RIO DE JANEIRO - Brianna Rollins, Philadelphia"s Nia Ali, and Kristi Castlin finished 1-2-3 in the 100-meter hurdles Wednesday night in the Rio Games to give the United States its first sweep in the event and only its seventh in the history of Olympic track.
It was a not-all-unexpected result, though this might be an eye-opener: Both 2008 champion Dawn Harper-Nelson and the current world-record holder, Keni Harrison, were back home watching on TV after failing to crack the top three at the Olympic trials.
Rollins won the event in 12.48 seconds. Ali finished at second in 12.59, and Castlin in 12.61.
Ali, a former West Catholic and Pleasantville High athlete who won an NCAA championship at Southern California, clocked at 12.76 in her semifinal heat on Tuesday.
In a recent interview, Rollins, one of seven siblings, said her family didn"t have much money when she was growing up, so they spent a lot of time playing outside.
"We were not fortunate enough to have all the electronics and toys," she said. "I hung out with my cousins and brothers. We"d climb trees, play basketball and football, and challenge each other to races."
She wound up getting a scholarship to Clemson, where in 2013 she won the NCAA indoor and outdoor titles. It was during that summer that she won the world title, ahead of Australia"s Pearson and Great Britain"s Tiffany Porter. She was, at age 21, the youngest woman ever to win that world title.
Elsewhere in track and field on Wednesday, Usain Bolt easily advanced to the 200-meter final. Kenya won yet another steeplechase gold medal, and Ashton Eaton was leading in the decathlon.
As usual, Bolt blasted away opposition in the semifinals of his favorite event, where he is seeking a third a third Olympic gold medal in a row to match his three 100 titles. This time, he will not have to deal with Justin Gatlin, so often his main challenger. The 100 silver medalist finished third in his heat and is out of the hunt.
In a game of cat and mouse, Bolt let Andre De Grasse remain on his shoulder right up to the line. But as they were laughing at each other, Bolt pushed his chest just across the line for 19.78 while De Grasse set a Canadian record of 19.80.
With temperatures reaching 97 degrees on the sun-baked track, Kenya organized a very orderly changing of the guard, with 21-year-old Conseslus Kipruto running away from two-time Olympic champion Ezekiel Kemboi to set a games record and extend the country"s streak to nine straight titles in the 3,000-meter event.
Kipruto started celebrating coming into the home straight and, as he was flying over the last barrier, was looking behind to see if anyone was still coming. No one was, so he stretched out his arms and raised his fist in victory as he jogged across the line in a showboating extravaganza that would have made Usain Bolt proud.
"I watched the screen. I saw I was far from them, and nobody"s going to catch me, so I celebrated early," he said.
It was his first gold medal following silvers at the last two world championships.
The excitement behind him centered on Evan Jager of the United States clinching silver ahead of four-time world champion Kemboi, who was later disqualified for stepping off the track after a water jump. At 34, Kemboi immediately indicated it was his last Olympic race, swiping his hand in a quitting gesture.
"It"s my conclusion that today, this has been my last track [race] in my career," said Kemboi.
Mahiedine Mekhissi of France was later awarded the bronze medal.
Kipruto took the early lead and then settled behind Jager, surging back into the lead as the bell sounded and finishing in 8 minutes, 3.28 seconds. Jager was second in 8:04.28.
Despite Kenya"s dominance in the event, Jager didn"t want to over-state his best-of-the-rest status.
"It feels like silver, but I"m totally OK with silver," said Jager, the first American to medal was in the event since Brian Diemer in 1984.
Like Kenyans winning the steeplechase, the decathlon is equally predictable. But the quest to become the world"s greatest athlete has recently turned into a question of whether Eaton will keep setting records.
Early Wednesday, he wasn"t fastest out of the blocks, though. That honor went to Damian Warner of Canada, who beat Eaton in a 100-meter heat and set an Olympic decathlon best 10.30 seconds in the process.
Eaton immediately regained the lead with a mark of 7.94 meters in long jump, 27 centimeters more Warner. And he extended it in the shot put. After three events, he has 2,803 points and a sizable lead of 95 over Warner.
In the men"s 5,000, defending champion Mo Farah was just as unworried about the time in his heat. Staying upright was tougher.
The British runner was tripped in the 10,000-meter race on Saturday but still recovered to win his second Olympic gold over that distance. His bid for a second-straight long-distance double faced another scare on Wednesday.
He had a slight trip after being clipped by another runner on the last lap of the 5,000 heats as well, but was quickly back into stride and ran comfortably with the leading pack to finish third in 13:25.25. Bernard Lagat of the United States also advanced.
"I"ve got such a long stride ... I always get tripped up or tangled up with someone," Farah said. "But I managed to stay on my feet. It"s quite nerve-racking."