Fonda-Fultonville embracing daunting Week 0 matchup with Schuylerville

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Fonda-Fultonville embracing daunting Week 0 matchup with Schuylerville FONDA, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Fonda-Fultonville lost just one game in the 2022 high school football season: a one-point, overtime defeat against Schuylerville in the Class C playoff semi-finals. Now the two teams will ring in a new season Friday, and the Braves have a chance to make an early statement. Get the latest news, weather, sports and more delivered right to your inbox! "(We) just wanna prove that we're capable of being the best team in Class C," said senior guard and defensive end Logan Miller. "I mean, it's been them (Schuylerville) for a while, 'cause they're a great program…very good program. They've been to states and all that...So, we're the underdog, and I like it that way."Fonda-Fultonville was a force in the class last year, posting its' winningest season in 23 years with a nine-win campaign. Despite the Black Horses cutting the Braves' Super Bowl quest short, revenge is in the back of their minds for their week zero matchup."We kinda put last season in the past, 'cause...

ECO chases down, rescues injured bald eagle

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

ECO chases down, rescues injured bald eagle WESTPORT, N.Y. (NEWS10) - This month, New York State Environmental Conservation Officers (ECOs) helped out an avian in distress on the property of a family home in Essex County. What started in one yard became a three-property chase to rescue an injured bald eagle. Get the latest news, weather, sports and more delivered right to your inbox! On Thursday, Aug. 17, Property owners in Westport reported a downed bald eagle on their property, and were met by an ECO to investigate. The officer began working to catch the injured bird, but the eagle managed to avoid the attempts long enough to lead a chase across three properties along Lake Champlain.The eagle was eventually captured safely in a cluster of cedar trees by Lake Champlain. It was determined that the bird had suffered a severe injury to its right wing. The eagle was transported to an animal hospital and rehabilitation center to receive treatment.

How often did Europeans consult a doctor in 2021?

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

How often did Europeans consult a doctor in 2021? The COVID-19 pandemic placed medical professionals under intense pressure and impacted access to consultations in many other specialities not related to COVID-19. In 2021, the frequency of medical consultations varied widely among the EU members. The average number of doctor consultations per inhabitant ranged between 3.5 and 7.8 in most EU members (except for Malta, for which data were not available). Among the EU members, Slovakia presented the highest averages of medical doctor consultations, recording 11.0 consultations per inhabitant, followed by Germany (9.6), Hungary (9.5), the Netherlands (8.6) and Czechia (7.8). On the other hand, the lowest averages of medical doctor consultations were registered in Sweden (2.3 consultations per inhabitant), Greece (2.7), Portugal (3.5), Denmark (3.8), Finland and Estonia (both 4.1).Source dataset: hlth_hc_phys2Compared with the 2018-2020 annual average, the average number of doctor consultations decreased in 19 of the 24 EU members f...

Ask Amy: I can’t be happy about my friend’s baby

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Ask Amy: I can’t be happy about my friend’s baby Dear Amy: I am a grown woman, in my 60s, very happily married.I have always been infertile (that in itself is a long story) due to medical complications early in life, and I have never handled the situation of my infertility well at all.My husband has a grown son from his first marriage.I recently struck up a friendship with a lovely younger woman. We have many things in common, despite the difference in age. She is married and has a young child.She has always said she only wanted one child but recently has started talking about having a second.If she does, I will be unable to be happy for her because I have never been capable of being genuinely happy for any expectant mother (because it never happened for me).Please don’t recommend counseling. I have tried it in the past and it does not help.I want to be happy for her, but I can’t, and this is breaking my heart.– Can’t Get Past the HurtDear Can’t Get Past: I wonder if a counselor has ever told you that it is not necessa...

Harriette Cole: I hoped I was wrong about my son’s girlfriend. I wasn’t.

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Harriette Cole: I hoped I was wrong about my son’s girlfriend. I wasn’t. DEAR HARRIETTE: My 20-year-old son lives with me. He has been dating a disrespectful girl for two years now.Related ArticlesAdvice | Harriette Cole: My son needs discipline, and I’m thinking about the military Advice | Harriette Cole: Our marriage is just one long fight. How do I fix this? Advice | Harriette Cole: I let my college-age daughter fly by herself. Was I a bad mom? Advice | Harriette Cole: He ignored my warnings. Now the IRS wants to talk to him. Advice | Harriette Cole: I’m fuming over this anonymous note about my teen In the beginning, I made assumptions about her because most of her social media photos were of her making obscene gestures and such, but I tried to get to know her better in the hope that maybe I was wrong about her. I wasn’t.She is rude, disrespectful and selfish. She talks to my son like he’s nothing when she’s mad, and I see him spending the maj...

Giant-slayer Japan faces a tough road at the Rugby World Cup

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Giant-slayer Japan faces a tough road at the Rugby World Cup Japan has been a fan favorite at the last two Rugby World Cups for its underdog victories over top-tier teams.Its win over the Springboks in 2015 has passed into lore (and a movie) as the Miracle of Brighton and its victories over Scotland and Ireland in 2019 caused jubilation in a World Cup hosted by Japan.As the Brave Blossoms head into the upcoming edition in France, they do so with opponents alerted. They no longer have the advantages of surprise or underestimation.At the same time, they come into the tournament on a run of poor form, having won only one of four tests this season and only four of 18 tests since hosting the last World Cup.Rugby in Japan has gone through foundational changes since 2019, designed in part to capitalize on the success of the World Cup which won over a broader domestic audience.The inauguration of Japan League One as successor to the former Japan Top League as the professional domestic competition has attracted some of the world’s best players a...

Slumping England heads to Rugby World Cup with big players suspended and as a title outsider

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Slumping England heads to Rugby World Cup with big players suspended and as a title outsider Rarely has England gone into a Rugby World Cup with so little external expectation.Three times a finalist — and once a winner — in the last five editions of the tournament, the English have long been Europe’s big hope on the global stage and the team that most concerned the big guns from the southern hemisphere.No more.Overtaken by Ireland, France and — whisper it — Scotland since the 2019 World Cup, England is run by the world’s richest rugby union but currently doesn’t have elite-level players or coach to show for it.Steve Borthwick is the man in charge following the departure late last year of Eddie Jones, the colorful Australian coach with whom the Rugby Football Union and seemingly England’s players ran out of patience.Borthwick was solid if unspectacular as a player, more of a workhorse than someone with a highlights reel on YouTube. Conservative can best describe his approach as a coach, too, and his kick-pressure game plan is hardly making England’s class of 2023 a must-watc...

Eddie Jones says slumping Australia can win the Rugby World Cup. He’s serious.

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Eddie Jones says slumping Australia can win the Rugby World Cup. He’s serious. BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — Never has any team heading into a Rugby World Cup been in such a “good place” without having won a game all year.Except — maybe — in the mischievous eyes of Australia coach Eddie Jones.On naming a youthful and inexperienced 33-man squad with three uncapped players, no Michael Hooper and one specialist flyhalf who was not named Quade Cooper, Jones said, “This squad is good enough to win this World Cup and possibly go on to win the next World Cup.” His tongue wasn’t firmly in his cheek. “That’s the advantage of picking young guys. The experts have written us off. No one believes we can do it, but we believe.”Those comments were made before the Wallabies lost their fifth in a row, 41-17 to World Cup host France at Stade de France, where Australia will open its World Cup campaign against Georgia on Sept. 9. Wales, Fiji and Portugal are also in the Wallabies’ pool.Jones was still upbeat, though, after being swept in the Rugby Champ...

Gatland faces big challenge to take Wales deep again at the Rugby World Cup

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Gatland faces big challenge to take Wales deep again at the Rugby World Cup Warren Gatland is convinced his Wales team will pull off “something special” at the Rugby World Cup.Finding any evidence to back up that bold assertion isn’t easy.The Welsh have won just five of their 20 games since the start of 2022. They’ve plunged to No. 10 in the world ranking, tied for their lowest all-time spot. Many of their stalwarts such as Alun Wyn Jones and Justin Tipuric are no longer around. Captain Ken Owens is out injured.Their last result before heading to France? A 52-16 drubbing by South Africa, marking the first time Wales has conceded more than fifty points in a game across Gatland’s two spells in charge.So, where is his optimism coming from?“I love Wales being written off,” Gatland said, “and people can keep doing that because it just makes us stronger.”Maybe it’s the inner belief Gatland has as one of the great coaching minds of his generation.Maybe it’s the fact that Wales under Gatland has reached the semifinals in two of the last three World Cups, and ...

Nothing stirs up rugby’s blood quite like New Zealand’s haka

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:41:23 GMT

Nothing stirs up rugby’s blood quite like New Zealand’s haka Silence fell on Cardiff Arms Park as the first New Zealand rugby team to be called the All Blacks faced Wales before their epic 1905 test.The South Wales Daily News reported the “Colonials” stood center-field and “sang their weird war-cry.”The haka, then as now, stirs up rugby’s blood.Eyes popping, tongues poking, body slapping and feet stamping to a rhythmic chant, the pre-kickoff ritual is performed by the All Blacks to reconnect with the core of New Zealand culture, strengthen the team bond, and challenge rivals.“It’s such a powerful tool. It’s a wonderful motivating way to start,” said Sean Fitzpatrick, who played 128 times for the All Blacks.England No. 8 Billy Vunipola agreed.“It lifts the All Blacks, but it also lifts the opposition,” Vunipola said. “They’re laying down the challenge and are asking you, ‘Are you ready to rock ’n’ roll?’ You can see how much it means to them in their facial expressions and by how hard they hit th...