cars and left again, missing the
He wheeled down a side street and stopped at a local club named Spivey's. It sat at the corner of Wentworth and Emancipation. The flashing cop lights were just a few blocks away. Inside, people still cheered the Astros, who'd pulled ahead, and another DJ gave Cal shout-outs. But something didn't feel right. He'd heard that the cops stopped a rival gang member coming into their streets, which concerned him, and now some guys in the club kept trying to stare him down. It was getting late and people have been smoking and drinking.
"It's getting heavy," he said. rumors since the 2016 offseason after he filled in for an injured Andy Dalton and almost led the Bengals to their firstow me your city on a
We got back in the cars and left again, missing the end of the game, both the Dodgers' ninth-inning comeback and the extra innings lunacy. Safety first, he said. By this time, we'd picked up a little convoy, and Cal varied the route on the drive home so as not to surprise any gangsters already on edge. He didn't want someone to see three cars passing by slow and start shooting.
Once he made it home, we all stood around in the street. The game was still going on, and Cal tried to figure out where to go next, worried about the simmering gang war, and hopeful about the Astros and, most of all, pleased with the people who'd heard his new song for the first time, nodding their heads and singing alongCINCINNATI -- The Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns failed to work out a trade that would have sent quarterback AJ McCarron to Cleveland, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter.
According to Schefter, the Bengals notified the league of the proposed trade at 3:55 p.m. ET, and the Browns notified the league shortly after 4 p.m. ET. Because the Browns were late, the league denied the trade. Cleveland protested with the league asking that the trade be approved. The NFL rejected the Browns' protest.
The propo