Monday, 17 November 2014

Colombian president halts talks with Farc rebels after general kidnapped


Ruben Dario Alzate was captured after disembarking from a boat.


Colombia’s president, Juan Manuel Santos, has suspended peace talks with leftist Farc rebels following the kidnapping of a general in a remote jungle region, putting the future of the process to end the country’s 50-year-old war in jeopardy.
Gen Rubén Darío Alzate, who heads the Titan task force in the Pacific department of Chocó, was taken on Sunday afternoon by members of the Farc, along with another military official and a civilian, in a small village close to the provincial capital of Quibdó.
Santos ordered a massive search and rescue operation to locate and free the hostages while at the same time suspending peace talks with the Farc, which were scheduled to being a new round in Havana on Tuesday. “The talks are suspended until these people are released,” he said in a statement early on Monday morning.
“This kidnapping is completely unacceptable,” the president said. “The Farc is responsible for the life and the security of these three people.” The defence ministry said it had contacted the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to ask it to intercede with the Farc to ensure the safety of the hostages and try to secure their release.
Alzate was abducted by men armed with rifles after disembarking from a boat in the village of Las Mercedes, according to Juan Carlos Pinzon, the defence minister. An army corporal, Jorge Rodriguez Contreras, and a civilian lawyer, Gloria Urrego were taken along with the general, but a soldier who piloted the vessel escaped and alerted authorities, the minister said.
Alzate was travelling as a civilian and was unaccompanied by his customary bodyguards despite going into an area with a known guerrilla presence. Santos asked his defence minister to explain the reasons behind the apparent breach of security protocol.
Senator Roy Barreras, a member of the congressional peace commission, told W Radio that the general’s excursion “not only put the general’s life in danger but put the life of the peace process in danger”.
Despite two years of talks, and agreements on three of the five negotiating points, no ceasefire has been declared and combat between the two forces, ambushes and guerrilla attacks are frequent. Last week two soldiers were abducted in eastern Arauca province and Santos had warned the Farc that such actions put the peace process at risk.
“If the Farc do not free the general and his companions unconditionally but rather try to negotiate, the process could go into crisis that could lead to a definitive break,” said Jorge Restrepo, director of the Conflict Analysis Resource Centre, a Bogotá thinktank.
Santos has made achieving peace with the Farc the main priority of his presidency but faces criticism from conservative sectors of Colombian society who feel the 8,000 strong guerrilla force should be defeated militarily.
“The abduction will be used by those who criticise the negotiation process to galvanise opposition to the process,” said Restrepo.
Former rightwing president Álvaro Uribe, who leads opposition to the peace process from the seat he now holds in the Senate, tweeted: “Santos has allowed the Farc to feel they are equal to the armed forces, that’s why terrorists kidnap.”
The Farc had not made any public statements about the general’s abduction nor the suspension of talks. The only other time talks have been suspended since beginning in November 2012 was in August of last year when the Farc balked at a government plan to put any peace deal to a referendum. Negotiations resumed several days later.
A public opinion poll published at the weekend showed that 55% of Colombians support the peace process but 53% are pessimistic about the outcome.

Will Rajini's film 'Lingaa' work some magic for BJP in Tamil Nadu?


Rajinikanth with Narendra Modi. Agencies.

“Will he, won’t he?” has been the million dollar question associated with Tamil superstar Rajinikanth for more than 25 years. The question obviously is about his entry in politics. All these years, it’s been part of the Rajini legend.
The question resurfaces as a statewide obsession yet again. And the occasion is the release of a new movie titled Lingaa, the first feature that he appears in a full length role after his illness in 2011. At the audio launch of the movie, speakers from the industry repeated their plea to him to join politics.
In response, he didn’t rule out the possibility. Neither did he show any inkling that he would take the plunge. "Politics is dangerous and deep. I am not afraid of politics, but hesitant. In politics, you need strong roots," Times of India quoted him as saying.
“I am a product of circumstances. So, if a situation arises, I could enter politics. I am only hesitant because I know the depth of politics. I have to step on so many shoulders,” reported The Hindu.
We have heard this on many occasions before. In his films, he would be more explicit to the point of his fans expecting a decision soon. But when the film’s vanity wears off, the expectations also die down. The actor would go back to his usual elusive self until he makes another larger than life film.
The expectations of him joining politics are also high this time because the BJP leaders have been making noises to own him. They say that he is close to the national leaders of the party including Narendra Modi, and his sympathies are with the party. Modi had made a point to visit him at his Poes Garden residencThis is not the first time that BJP is eyeing for the superstar. In 2004, speculation was rife that he would join the the party and would support its alliance with the AIADMK. Inan interview with Rediff political commentator Cho Ramaswamy, who is close to both Rajini and Jayalalithaa, had said that the actor is “spiritually minded and is a firm believer in Hindutva”. Rajini, however, refused to endorse the AIADMK-BJP front, but did say that personally he would vote for the BJP. That was the first time he came out openly in support of the party.
Since then, he has not been explicit about his affiliation and was hardly a political factor in 2009 and 2011.
The last and only time that he played a real politically influential role was in 1996 when he openly spoke against Jayalalitha, who was facing the elections after her first and unpopular tenure in office, and supported the DMK-TMC (Tamil Maanila Congress) alliance. In fact Rajini was a critical factor for the success of the DMK-TMC front. His film images, particularly from a movie titled “Annamalai” in which he was riding a bicycle, were widely used in the campaign - the election symbol of the TMC was bicycle. His support to the alliance continued for the Lok Sabha elections as well. Since then, he has been playing hard to get.
The main reason for the expectations of his political entry are his “punch dialogues”. In Muthu, which was released in 1995, when there was enormous pressure on him to join politics because of the unpopular regime of Jayalalithaa, he said: “No one can tell when or how I'll arrive; but I always do, when the time is right”. It was the closest to his entering politics.
Two years later, in Arunachalam, he continued the enigma by saying, “God commands and I obey”. In another two years, he said in Padayappa, “My way is my own”. And one of his most popular “punch dialogues” to date, which apparently is a personal favourite of Rajini is this: “If I say something once, it’s like saying a 100 times”. Read in the context of Tamil Nadu politics and the expectations from him, they drive his fans crazy.
Apparently, his Lingaa, which is currently in post-production, also has a lot of such one liners. His fans and others will certainly watch them with a lot of expectation. With hardly any anti-incumbency sentiment against Jayalalithaa, there is no political compulsion on him to join politics, but BJP wants him to build the party in the state.Lingaa is likely to generate a new round of expectations, which incidentally will be good for the business of the movie.e during the Lok Sabha elections. Last month, the state president of the BJP Tamilisai Soundararajan also visited him. A few months ago, she had told reporters that Rajini is in the good books of the BJP and he was welcome to join the party.

Arpita Khan’s wedding gift from ‘bhai’ Salman Khan : A terrace flat worth Rs 16 crore


The venue of the wedding - the Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad - is also said to be costing around a crore or two per day and the family is reported to have booked it for 5 days.

alman Khan is the ‘dabangg’ of Bollywood; he has his own ways, own relations and his own peculiar ways to deal with the world. And if you wonder what gives the superstar the power to continue his conquests at the box office even after being embroiled in a lot of legal battles, it’s his family! Salman, himself, doesn’t leave a chance to reciprocate the love and affection. His youngest sister Arpita is going to get married soon and thereby, he is not leaving any stone unturned to make this the most memorable occasion of her life. The list of the most affluent personalities from all over the nation adds to this ‘expenses-no-bar’ wedding .

The latest we hear is Salman has planned to give a 3 BHK terrace flat to his darling sister as her wedding gift. The flat is said to be costing around Rs 16 Cr and is situated in one of the poshest areas of Mumbai – Carter Road. It’s also touted to be very close to Galaxy Apartments – just 5 mins drive – where Salman stays with his family. The apartment also falls near the late Rajesh Khanna’s prized bungalow ‘Aashirwaad’. 


The venue of the wedding – the Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad – is also said to be costing around a crore or two per day and the family is reported to have booked it for 5 days. With the expenses not being bothered upon and the who’s who of the country, including Shah Rukh Khan, attending the celebrations, the wedding certainly goes to be one of the most grand marriages of the nation. 

Eskimos win but it doesn’t help the CFL much



It was a five-word quote that succinctly — yet perfectly — described the Edmonton Eskimos 18-10 win in this clumsy Canadian Football League semifinal.
“We won. So, good enough.”
The speaker was “backup” quarterback Mike Reilly. The question: “Could you critique your performance?”
Reilly came off the bench midway through the third quarter in aid of an Eskimos offence that had turned four first-half interceptions into a measly four points. Reilly didn’t exactly pitch Madison Bumgarner relief (6-for-8 for 53 yards), but in the end he was standing outside the winning locker room doing interviews, not the losing one. And truly, in the playoffs, only the result matters.
Down the hall, this two-word quote said it all for Kerry Joseph’s day: “I sucked.”
“Bottom line: I just sucked,” the 41-year-old said, after what was very likely the last start of a very productive CFL career. “They brought a lot of pressure early, I didn’t see the field well, I didn’t make good throws. At the end of the day, the only way I can sum it up is, I sucked.”
Joseph was not, however, alone. Eskimo starter Matt Nichols’ numbers (12-for-23 for 59 yards) were worse than Joseph’s (7-for-17, 120 yards), with one exception: Joseph threw five interceptions on the day, while Nichols threw only one — and that was in the Riders end zone.
“The dressing room was good at halftime because we knew despite the turnovers we were still in the ball game (down 17-7),” said Joseph. “But it was horrible on my part. I let these guys down. I let this organization down. I let the province of Saskatchewan down and it was horrible, plain and simple.”
Nichols was handed every opportunity to make this a first-half rout, but between his ineffective work and some iffy kicking by bearded gnome Hugh O’Neill, the Riders were left to hang around, hang around… And with two minutes to play in the fourth quarter, and Joseph long since replaced by Tino Sunseri, Saskatchewan was only a touchdown with a two-point conversion behind, scrimmaging first-and-10 at the Edmonton 44.
But Edmonton’s strong suit is defence, and Sunseri wasn’t enough quarterback to crack it. The Esks defence has allowed one TD over the course of its last four home games. Edmonton now travels to Calgary next Sunday for the Western Final in which Reilly expects to start.
“I think it is pretty likely,” said Edmonton head coach Chris Jones. His club posted a 12-6 season, but went into the huddle on Sunday without its No. 1 in Reilly (foot injury) and No. 3 Pat White (concussion).
Fittingly, it was the Eskimos special teams that was responsible for the winning points, an 84-yard punt return by Kendial Lawrence that extended the score to 17-0. “It would have been a lot easier on me if we could have stuffed those ones in,” Jones said.
It was a worrisome day for the CFL, starting with a Commonwealth Stadium playoff crowd of just 26,237 in one of its stalwart cities. It was pretty cold in Edmonton, with a temperature of -10C at kickoff. But in Montreal, another anchor town for this league, they announced a crowd of 15,107 for the Eastern semi. Not good.
It must be said though, on a day when the CFL traditionally goes up against the National Football League, the quality of football on display in Canada was not at a level required to keep Canadians from reaching for the clicker and switching over to four-down football.
The rash of injuries to first-string QBs across the league is out of the CFL’s control, but the work by three of four starting QBs on Sunday (including B.C.’s Kevin Glenn in Montreal) was amateurish, and had absolutely zero chance of showing the CFL in a professional, competent light.
As the old cliché goes however, “They don’t ask how, just how many.” There are four teams left and they aren’t critiquing wins. Meanwhile, these Green Riders, last year’s Grey Cup champs, will now have all winter to lament an opportunity that was there for the taking.
“We didn’t do enough things to win,” said Saskatchewan defensive end John Chick. “You can’t give up points, big points, on special teams. That’s tough to come back from. There’s no secret to the game, you can look throughout the year the turnover battle usually wins the game.”
“We won it last year. We just weren’t good enough this year,” said Saskatchewan coach Corey Chamblin. “We weren’t ready to be champs this year.”

Russell Martin, Blue Jays agree



Veteran catcher Russell Martin has agreed to a five-year, $82 million deal with the Toronto Blue Jays, sources confirmed to ESPN's Buster Olney.
The deal, which had been earlier reported by Fox Sports, is pending a physical exam.
In 2014, the 31-year-old Martin had an offensive season reminiscent of those at the beginning of his career, batting .290 with 11 home runs and 67 RBIs for the Pittsburgh Pirates, while also setting a career best in on-base percentage (.402).
Martin, who was born in Toronto, also led the majors by throwing out 37 attempted base stealers and finished fourth overall with a caught-stealing percentage of 38.5 as he threw out 37 of the 59 baserunners attempting to steal with him behind the plate.
In nine seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees and Pirates, Martin has hit .259 with 119 homers and 540 RBIs.
He was paid $8.5 million in 2014.
The Pirates made a one-year qualifying offer of $15.3 million to Martin for 2015, which he rejected, ensuring them draft-pick compensation. The Pirates traded for Yankees backup catcherFrancisco Cervelli last week.
The Blue Jays used four catchers in 2014. Dioner Navarro, Josh Thole, Erik Kratz and George Kottaras (who had three at-bats as a Jay) combined to rank 11th among MLB catching contingents with a .659 OPS.
Navarro, who hit .274 and logged 2.1 wins above replacement in 139 games, will make $5 million in 2015 in the final season of a two-year, $8 million contract.

Jonas Gray made history in Patriots' victory over Colts



On October 16, running back Jonas Gray was languishing on the New England Patriots' practice squad, freely available to the other 31 teams in the league. On November 16, Gray accomplished a feat unmatched by any NFL player going back 75 years.

Gray authored the best performance by any running back this season, pounding out 199 yards and four touchdowns on a whopping 38 carries in Sunday's win over the Indianapolis Colts.
According to NFL Media's research department, Gray currently stands as the first player since at least 1940 to rush for as many touchdowns as the rest of the NFL combined in a given week.
Jamaal Charles (2), Knile Davis and Eddie Lacy were the only other players to run for a score in Week 11.
Even if the Pittsburgh Steelers and Tennessee Titans steal Gray's thunder on Monday night, his performance remains notable for its rarity. If we raise the minimum to 10 league games in a week, no single player has even managed more than 25 percent of the NFL's rushing touchdowns.
The four-touchdown outing was the first by a player without a previous NFL touchdown since 1921.
The former Notre Dame star's manifold accolades beg a follow-up question: Is this a sign of things to come or a one-game aberration?
Gray was at the eye of a perfect storm Sunday, offering a power-back skill set ideally suited for thegame plan specific to an Indianapolis defense that rolled over for 234 rushing yards and six touchdowns at New England last January.
Patriots owner Robert Kraft even pulled Gray aside last week to tell him he would have a "big game" as the offensive focal point, per NFL Media's Judy Battista.
No coaching staff is better at tailoring game plans and personnel groupings to each opponent, while fully exploiting the niche skill sets of late-round draft picks and street free agents.
"We've got a lot of weapons," Gray said, via Battista. "Younever know when guys will have a big game."
Coach Bill Belichick and offensive coordinator Josh McDanielshave already begun preparing for a Detroit Lions defense allowing the fewest yards per carry (3.0) and rushing yards per game (68.8) in the league.
In other words, it's a good bet the game plan will feature more of passing-down specialist Shane Vereen and fewer six-lineman sets paving the way for Gray between the tackles.
The latest Around The NFL Podcast recaps every Sunday game from an action-packed Week 11. Find more Around The NFL content on NFL NOW.

Heyward, Miller in Braves-Cards swap


Jason Heyward

ATLANTA -- Jason Heyward stirred up enormous expectations when he joined the Atlanta Braves at age 20. He homered in his first big league at-bat. He was voted to the All-Star Game as a rookie. He was hailed as the future of the game by Hank Aaron.
Heyward never quite lived up to the hype, and now he's heading to a team looking to bounce back from tragedy.Concerned that Heyward would leave as a free agent after next season and rebuilding with an eye toward their new stadium, the Braves dealt their right fielder and reliever Jordan Walden to the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday for promising pitcher Shelby Miller and a minor-leaguer.
"It's very difficult to trade Jason Heyward," said John Hart, the Braves' new general manager. "But the deal was made to help us not only in the short term but the long term."
The NL Central champion Cardinals felt compelled to pursue Heyward after top prospectOscar Taveras was killed in a car crash last month in the Dominican Republic. The team hopes to sign Heyward to a long-term extension but didn't want to go into next season without adding to the offense.
"The reality is we have to move on," St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said.
Heyward said he was not surprised by the trade, especially since there were never any serious talks on a new deal with the Braves. He is due to make $7.8 million in the final season of a two-year contract.
"This is a business," said the 25-year-old Heyward, who grew up in the Atlanta area and was one of the team's most popular players. "I was definitely open to long term, but that conversation never took place."
The deal signals a long-term strategy for rebuilding the roster by the time the Braves move into their new suburban ballpark in 2017.
By trading Heyward and Walden, the team shed what could have been as much as $10 million from next season's payroll while acquiring a 24-year-old pitcher who is not yet eligible for arbitration and can't become a free agent until after the 2018 season.
"We want to build something that's going to sustain," Hart said.
After his promising rookie year, Heyward was plagued by injuries and struggled to put up the sort of power numbers that the Braves expected. He's had only one season with at least 20 homers and 80 RBIs; this past year, he batted .271 with 11 homers, 58 RBIs and 20 stolen bases, though he did win his second Gold Glove.
Heyward frequently batted leadoff for the Braves, which the Cardinals believe hurt his power production.
After the Braves slumped to their first losing season since 2008, general manager Frank Wren was fired. Hart took over and is looking to build depth throughout the organization, with a focus on starting pitching.
Atlanta is hampered by bad contracts, which will limit Hart's flexibility in the short term. B.J. Upton is owed more than $46 million over the next three years, and the Braves are still responsible for the final $13 million of Dan Uggla's deal, even though he was released this past season.

Zayn Malik Misses One Direction's Four Debut


Zayn Malik Misses One Direction's Four Debut


Monday was a very important day for One Direction

At the crack of dawn, the band arrived at Universal CityWalk at Universal Orlando Resort to perform several of their biggest hits. The concert, broadcast by the Today show, was their first gig to promote their latest album, Four

As PEOPLE watched from backstage, the band cruised up to the waterside stage in a motorboat. The crowd of more than 15,000 people reacted with deafening screams. 

But when the boy band took the stage, one member was missing: Zayn Malik hadn't made the trek from London on Sunday night. 


Today host Matt Lauer addressed the question directly during the show. 


"I'm counting chairs here and I see four," he said. "Normally, we're used to seeing five. Where's Zayn?" 

"He's got a tummy bug so he's not very well at the moment, so he couldn't make it over," bandmate Liam Payne answered. "We only found out this morning, so we're very sad and he is, as well, that he can't be here for our album release day. It's still going to be a really great day." 

Lauer pressed on. "There's been a lot of action on social media about him," he said. "Is it something more serious than just a minor illness? There have been rumors of substance abuse. What's going on?" 

"No, he's just got a stomach bug," Payne responded. "He's okay. He's just at home; he needs to rest. He's okay." 

As for when Malik will join the band, "We're not sure yet," Payne said. "We're just waiting for a phone call from him." 

During one of the breaks, Horan addressed the crowd about Malik. 

"We really miss him," he said. "We can't wait for him to get better. We really want to have him here." 

Despite Malik's absence, the stars of Today were still happy with the concert. 

"Their new album is called Four," weatherman Al Roker quipped to PEOPLE backstage. "Maybe they knew that Zayn would be missing all along. No, seriously, we hope he gets better soon." 

"I took an obligatory selfie with the band to show my kids," Lauer told PEOPLE. "I don't think they'll be too fazed by the fact that there were only four of them today. They still put on a fantastic show." 


Eskimos win but it doesn’t help the CFL much




t was a five-word quote that succinctly — yet perfectly — described the Edmonton Eskimos 18-10 win in this clumsy Canadian Football League semifinal.
“We won. So, good enough.”
The speaker was “backup” quarterback Mike Reilly. The question: “Could you critique your performance?”
Reilly came off the bench midway through the third quarter in aid of an Eskimos offence that had turned four first-half interceptions into a measly four points. Reilly didn’t exactly pitch Madison Bumgarner relief (6-for-8 for 53 yards), but in the end he was standing outside the winning locker room doing interviews, not the losing one. And truly, in the playoffs, only the result matters.
Down the hall, this two-word quote said it all for Kerry Joseph’s day: “I sucked.”
“Bottom line: I just sucked,” the 41-year-old said, after what was very likely the last start of a very productive CFL career. “They brought a lot of pressure early, I didn’t see the field well, I didn’t make good throws. At the end of the day, the only way I can sum it up is, I sucked.”
Joseph was not, however, alone. Eskimo starter Matt Nichols’ numbers (12-for-23 for 59 yards) were worse than Joseph’s (7-for-17, 120 yards), with one exception: Joseph threw five interceptions on the day, while Nichols threw only one — and that was in the Riders end zone.
“The dressing room was good at halftime because we knew despite the turnovers we were still in the ball game (down 17-7),” said Joseph. “But it was horrible on my part. I let these guys down. I let this organization down. I let the province of Saskatchewan down and it was horrible, plain and simple.”
Nichols was handed every opportunity to make this a first-half rout, but between his ineffective work and some iffy kicking by bearded gnome Hugh O’Neill, the Riders were left to hang around, hang around… And with two minutes to play in the fourth quarter, and Joseph long since replaced by Tino Sunseri, Saskatchewan was only a touchdown with a two-point conversion behind, scrimmaging first-and-10 at the Edmonton 44.
But Edmonton’s strong suit is defence, and Sunseri wasn’t enough quarterback to crack it. The Esks defence has allowed one TD over the course of its last four home games. Edmonton now travels to Calgary next Sunday for the Western Final in which Reilly expects to start.
“I think it is pretty likely,” said Edmonton head coach Chris Jones. His club posted a 12-6 season, but went into the huddle on Sunday without its No. 1 in Reilly (foot injury) and No. 3 Pat White (concussion).
Fittingly, it was the Eskimos special teams that was responsible for the winning points, an 84-yard punt return by Kendial Lawrence that extended the score to 17-0. “It would have been a lot easier on me if we could have stuffed those ones in,” Jones said.
It was a worrisome day for the CFL, starting with a Commonwealth Stadium playoff crowd of just 26,237 in one of its stalwart cities. It was pretty cold in Edmonton, with a temperature of -10C at kickoff. But in Montreal, another anchor town for this league, they announced a crowd of 15,107 for the Eastern semi. Not good.
It must be said though, on a day when the CFL traditionally goes up against the National Football League, the quality of football on display in Canada was not at a level required to keep Canadians from reaching for the clicker and switching over to four-down football.
The rash of injuries to first-string QBs across the league is out of the CFL’s control, but the work by three of four starting QBs on Sunday (including B.C.’s Kevin Glenn in Montreal) was amateurish, and had absolutely zero chance of showing the CFL in a professional, competent light.
As the old cliché goes however, “They don’t ask how, just how many.” There are four teams left and they aren’t critiquing wins. Meanwhile, these Green Riders, last year’s Grey Cup champs, will now have all winter to lament an opportunity that was there for the taking.
“We didn’t do enough things to win,” said Saskatchewan defensive end John Chick. “You can’t give up points, big points, on special teams. That’s tough to come back from. There’s no secret to the game, you can look throughout the year the turnover battle usually wins the game.”
“We won it last year. We just weren’t good enough this year,” said Saskatchewan coach Corey Chamblin. “We weren’t ready to be champs this year.”

Australia's hottest ex-pop star Sophie Monk could very well be stripping down to appear in world famous men's mag Playboy.




Australia's hottest ex-pop star Sophie Monk could very well be stripping down to appear in world famous men's mag Playboy. 

Apparently Sophie was offered a whopping 1 million dollars to undress for the cover of the famously raunchy publication... but she hasn't decided if she'll be taking the deal.

Speaking on radio recently, Sophie revealed that she mightn't have to get 100% naked for the shoot, but did confirm that the offer was for a mil: "Yes the offer is one million, and it's negotiable how much (of my body) they show,"

What do you guys think? Will Sophie strip for the cameras? Should she say not the money and decline the shoot?

Broncos banged up in St. Louis


Julius Thomas


ST. LOUIS -- The Denver Broncos' trip to this city has been a painful one. Tight end Julius Thomas, running back Montee Ball and wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders all suffered injuries in a 22-7 loss to the Rams.
Thomas played just two series for the Broncos before leaving the game with an ankle injury and did not return. He had X-rays on his ankle at the stadium and was diagnosed with a sprain.
Thomas spent most of his first two seasons in the NFL working through ankle troubles, including surgery on his right ankle in 2012, before his breakout season in 2013. The ankle he injured Sunday was not the same ankle he had surgically repaired. 
Sanders was hit by Rams safety Rodney McLeod early in the third quarter as Sanders dove for a Manning pass up the Broncos sideline. Sanders remained down on the field for a few moments and was later ruled out for the rest of the game after being taken to the locker room to be evaluated for a concussion.
Thomas currently leads the NFL with 12 touchdown catches, while Sanders left the game having already tallied 102 yards and a touchdown on five receptions.
Despite losing two of his top targets, quarterback Peyton Manning said he has confidence in their replacements even after Sunday's surprising defeat.
"[Andre Caldwell] and Jacob Tamme have made a lot of plays for this offense and I have a lot of confidence in them," Manning said. "I've got to give them the chance to make better plays ... I have all the confidence in the world, in both Bubba and Jacob, but I have to give them a chance to make plays. Certainly you hate to see Julius and Emmanuel injured, but I still don't think that's an excuse."
With Thomas and Sanders out, wide receiver Demaryius Thomas picked up some of the slack, finishing with seven catches for 103 yards.
"You don't want to see those guys out, but we can still move the ball and execute," Thomas said. "It's just up to the rest of us to make plays and move the ball."
Ball, who had missed five games with a right groin injury he suffered Oct. 5 against the Arizona Cardinals, limped off the field early in the second quarter after he tried to catch a pass from Manning. Ball did not return.
Julius Thomas' injury meant, with tight end Virgil Green and running back Ronnie Hillmanalready out with injuries going into the game, the Broncos had just one tight end -- Tamme -- in the lineup to go with just two running backs.
"It's never good to lose guy," Tamme said. "Bottom line is we have to play better. I got in there and felt ready to go make plays, we've got guys across the board who feel that way."
Tamme finished with four receptions for 31 yards while the Broncos gained just 28 total yards rushing.

Packers ride Aaron Rodgers, defense to runaway win over Eagles



GREEN BAY, Wis. -- Aaron Rodgers handed off to Eddie Lacy, turned and started jogging to the sideline before his running back had crossed the goal line for a 1-yard touchdown. It was as if the Green Bay quarterback knew what was going to happen.
Just another first-half score and big early lead for the Packers at Lambeau Field.
Rodgers passed for 341 yards and three touchdowns, Lacy accounted for two scores, and the Packers defense stuffed the high-octane Philadelphia Eagles for a 53-20 win Sunday.
"This is not easy," Rodgers said.
It sure looks that way, though. The Packers (7-3) blew out another opponent in the cold comfort of home after a fast start.
"There's a lot of preparation that goes into it," Rodgers added. "It takes 11 guys to win, to do the job to make something like that happen."
The matchup of NFC contenders quickly turned lopsided after Green Bay took a 30-6 halftime lead. Rodgers threw for two touchdowns in the first half, while Micah Hyde scored on a 75-yard punt return.
Julius Peppers finished off the Eagles by returning Mark Sanchez's pass 52 yards for a 39-6 lead in the third quarter, the second interception return for a score this season for the veteran.
"It's good to see that. He pretty much got a gift," linebacker Clay Matthews said with a smile.
Philadelphia (7-3) was held to 11 points below its NFC-leading scoring average by a Packers defense rejuvenated since Matthews started getting more time at inside linebacker. Matthews finished with five tackles and a sack after rushing from his traditional outside spot unabated to Sanchez.
Green Bay's offense was in good hands again with Rodgers, who broke Tom Brady's NFL record of 288 straight passes at home without an interception. Rodgers finished 22 of 36.
The Packers set another record by putting up at least 28 points in a first half for the fourth straight home game. They've outscored opponents 128-9 before halftime during that stretch.
"We felt strongly that this game was going to come down to big plays, the big-play opportunities," coach Mike McCarthy said, "and I thought our players did an excellent job in all three phases."
Playing with big leads allows the Packers defense to focus on the pass and hone in on opposing quarterbacks.
Sanchez flopped in his second start since taking over for the injured Nick Foles. He was 26 of 44 for 346 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions.
To make things worse, Sanchez couldn't corral a high snap out of the shotgun with an empty backfield in the fourth quarter. Cornerback Casey Hayward scooped up the loose ball and jogged 49 yards into the end zone with an escort of two blockers to make it 53-13.
The Packers also got to Sanchez early with sacks on Philadelphia's first three drives.
"They played outstanding and we played pretty poorly," Sanchez said.
It was the Eagles' worst loss under second-year coach Chip Kelly. The previous low was a 52-20 thrashing at Denver in Week 4 last season, and Kelly is now the only coach in team history to allow 50 points twice.
"None of us played where we needed to play against this team," Kelly said.
The Eagles finally reached the end zone after Sanchez hit receiver Jordan Matthews for a 10-yard touchdown pass to make it 39-13 with 2:21 left in the third quarter.
The Packers had no such problems.
Rodgers found Jordy Nelson streaking down the right sideline for a 64-yard completion on the game's third play from scrimmage -- the pass attempt that allowed Rodgers to break Brady's record.
Rodgers hit Davante Adams for a 6-yard touchdown catch late in the first quarter. Nelson hauled in a 27-yard scoring pass with 10:39 left in the second, making the grab while delicately navigating the sideline near the pylon to make it 24-3.

Game notes


Nelson finished with four catches for 109 yards, while Randall Cobb had 10 receptions for 129 yards. ... Nelson appeared to reach down at his right hamstring after making the Lambeau Leap on his touchdown, but McCarthy said afterward his top receiver seemed fine. ... Lacy also turned a 32-yard catch into a touchdown. ... Eagles RB LeSean McCoy had 88 yards on 23 attempts.

Jonas Gray has franchise-record 4 rush TDs as Patriots blow out Colts



The third-string running back rushed for a career-high 199 yards and a franchise-record four touchdowns to lead the Patriots to a 42-20 victory over the Colts.
Tom Brady threw two touchdown passes in the second half of New England's sixth consecutive victory, the last to Rob Gronkowski with 6:46 left. He was 19-of-30 for 257 yards with two interceptions as the Patriots earned their fifth consecutive win in the series.
"It's kind of funny because on Saturday I walked into the building and Mr. [Robert] Kraft pulled me aside and said, 'You're going to have a big game this week, so be ready,'" said Gray, who played college football three hours away from Lucas Oil Stadium at Notre Dame. "Just hearing that from the owner and hearing that from the head coach, hearing that from the leader of the team, definitely gives you a positive outlook and definitely gives you the mindset to go out and do your best."
Gray began the day with 32 carries, 131 yards and no touchdowns in his first three NFL games this season.
He wound up with as many rushing TDs as the rest of the league combined Sunday -- shocking numbers from a player coach Bill Belichick acknowledged was on the verge of being cut in training camp.
Gray's performance overshadowed a somewhat shaky first half from Brady, who was picked off twice, including deep in his own territory with 1:16 left in the second quarter.
"Whatever it takes," Brady said. "There's games that you go into and we're not sure how well we're going to run it. But when it's going well, you just want to keep giving it to them. We try to stay balanced. But if they're not going to respect the running game, then you have to keep giving it to them."
The result could have major playoff implications for the Colts (6-4), who have now lost head-to-head matchups with Denver and AFC-best New England (8-2).
Andrew Luck was 23-of-39 for 303 yards and two TDs, running Colts' franchise record for consecutive 300-yard games to eight. He needs one more to match Drew Brees' NFL record.
Unlike Luck's previous two losses in the series, when he accounted for eight turnovers by himself, he minimized the mistakes Sunday. The third-year quarterback threw one interception -- costing the Colts a scoring chance when Darrelle Revis deflected a pass that was picked off byDevin McCourty.
It still wasn't enough.
Belichick followed the same tack he used in last season's 21-point playoff victory over Indy -- overpowering the Colts with the run. New England rushed for 244 yards, compared to 19 yards on 17 carries for the Colts.
"Very disappointed, not acceptable by any means," Colts coach Chuck Pagano said. "I felt like we played better than we did, but any time you give up the rushing yards we gave up and can't get off the field and they go 5 for 5 in the red area again, give them credit. They beat us soundly."
Primarily because Brady stuck to the plan.
He drove the Patriots 89 yards on their first possession, and Gray finished the drive with a 4-yard TD run. Brady and New England went 68 yards after Luck's interception for a 2-yard run by Gray that made it 14-3.