Monday, November 26, 2007

heather mitts

With his staff was busy reaching out to his gay supporters, Mitt Romney went to work alienating what must be a much larger constituency: his extended family.

At a campaign stop in South Carolina yesterday, Romney ran into a woman whom he misidentified as his "niece" (she's his second cousin) who works as a "teacher" (she's a pediatrician) and whose name he did not know.

Despite her cousin's warm affections, Heather Krueger (whom Romney called "Heather Glenn") remains undecided in the Republican primary.

To be fair, Romney's five sons and ten grandchildren would suggest that his family tree might be a little hard to keep up with. And when was the last time you talked to your South Carolina relatives?

The good news? As far as we can tell, Romney kept his mitts off Krueger, distinguishing him from his second cousin espousing opponent, Rudy Giuliani.

Romney's second cousin didn't come from Mypos, so they weren't Perfect
6) @ NY Giants (7-3): The Vikings didn't miss Adrian Peterson last week with Chester Taylor rolling up 164 yards rushing and another 38 receiving during their 29-22 win over Oakland. Now they have to do it on the road against a good team. The last time facing such a predicament they lost 34-0 in Green Bay. Taylor will be in charge of the #1 rushing offense as it takes on perhaps a deceivingly #7 ranked run defense for the Giants. Only three teams have faced fewer rushes per game (22.9) which is the result of a few games where teams were chasing them. Their 4.0 average rush against puts them in the bottom half of the NFL. When teams pass against New York it is at their own peril against a unit leading the league with 34 sacks. They took a hit when Kiwanuka's broken leg took his 4 ½ sacks out of the equation, but Tuck, Strahan and Umenyiora all have at least 7. Tarvaris Jackson is probably already having nightmares. He has suffered only 8 sacks this year over six appearances and will need to stay upright if the Vikings want to contend. His turnovers have stayed within reason at 7 as well, but with 12 interceptions this defense will challenge him. Other than their losses to Dallas (twice) and Green Bay this defense has played extremely well. In their seven wins they allow just 12.7 points per game. They should put the pressure on Jackson to beat them and for a team being led in receiving by Bobby Wade that's not going to happen. As much as teams don't run on New York, they pass a ton against Minnesota to avoid their top ranked run defense. Opposing quarterbacks have an average day of 27/41 for 288 yards with a QB rating of 89.3 against the Vikings. Eli Manning would take that and it mirrors his showing last week in Detroit (28/39, 283). Brandon Jacobs is back running hard, but his job this week will be to wear down the defense while keeping them honest. This is going to be an ugly contest. New York will work the field position while waiting for Jackson to melt down. Fantasy numbers should be at a minimum unless you are talking about the Giant defense: NY Giants 20, Minnesota 9

Houston (5-5) @ Cleveland (6-4): The Texans have clawed into the wild card chase with wins over Oakland and New Orleans even if they still sit in the AFC South cellar. The defensive turnaround has been the key as they went from allowing 37, 38 and 35 during three straight losses to giving up just 27 combined in the pair of victories. The Browns are also very much in the mix although it took a fortuitous bounce on a field goal and subsequent referee discussion for them to eventually beat Baltimore last week. Amazingly, this could be their biggest test remaining. They also host the Bills (5-5) and 49ers (2-8) while hitting the road for the Cardinals (5-5) Jets (2-8) and Bengals (3-7). It is a deceiving slate because Arizona is tough at home while Cincinnati certainly has some fight remaining. If Houston wants into the playoffs they have to win this game. They visit Tennessee next week and later travel to Indianapolis while hosting Tampa Bay, Denver and Jacksonville. All of those teams are at least 5-5. Their win over the Saints illustrated just how important receiver Andre Johnson is to the offense. Schaub was an efficient passer and Ron Dayne found some holes with 21 carries for 89 yards. This week Schaub looks to terrorize a secondary that has allowed an NFL high 23 touchdown passes with opposing quarterbacks piling up a 91.0 QB rating (#28). Overall this is the league's worst defense in scoring and total yards. Seven times they have given up 30+ points already this season and amazingly have gone 4-3 in those games because they have also scored 27+ points on seven occasions (6-1 record). Odds are we will see some scoring in this game. Houston's defense has allowed opposing passers to complete 64.2% of their passes (#24) while compiling a rating of 85.9 (#19) so Derek Anderson could continue his magical season. Other than the Pittsburgh games, one of which he didn't start, he has thrown for 200+ yards every time out with six multiple touchdown efforts. Neither team can stop the run either with Cleveland allowing 4.6 yards per carry (#30) and Houston at 4.4 (#26). It comes down to heart, and that could be a coin flip. The Texans have momentum with the wins, but the Browns are emotionally high from "stealing" their game last week. Home field seems to be the edge with Cleveland at 4-1 while Houston is 2-3 on the road including blowout losses to Jacksonville and San Diego: Cleveland 31, Houston 27

Seattle (6-4) @ St. Louis (2-8): The last time these teams met the Seahawks started finding their groove offensively. Their 33-6 win started a four game stretch where they scored 29.3 points per game and went 3-1. The Rams were then mired in a scoring slump that ended there, having scored no more than 7 points in four of five games. As players have gotten healthy, the team has started scoring to the tune of 23.3 points per game in their last three. A key cog is of course Steven Jackson with 22 and 23 carries in their first two victories of the season. His 54 touches for 212 yards kept the chains moving. The Seahawks have a middle of the pack run defense, but have contained opposing rushers over their past four games. They have also done a solid job in the secondary with the fifth lowest opposing QB rating (73.7) and NFL low 5 touchdown passes allowed. Throw in 31 sacks, second only to the Giants, and this defense can cause problems for the Rams. Maybe their only weakness is playing on the road where they have gone 1-3 including losses to Arizona and Cleveland, two teams who really haven't been in their class in recent seasons. Then again the Rams are even worse at home with an 0-4 record. This will be their return to the dome after a bye and two road wins. The record is a bit deceiving considering the last three losses were by a combined 11 points. Seattle needs to get it done passing the football where they rank #6 in QB rating (90.7). Maurice Morris has done a nice job filling in for Alexander with 46 carries for 174 yards over the past two games, but he can't take a contest over. Hasselbeck is resting sore ribs, but only six teams have fewer sacks than St. Louis (17) so that shouldn't be a problem. I expect a tight back and forth affair. Bulger's two best games have come in this dome and his biggest challenge is not taking too many sacks. Three times he has gone down 6+ times. Those are drive killers and Steven Jackson will be called on to keep them out of down and distance where sacks become a problem. Mix it all up and I have to take the better team over the hot one: Seattle 27, St. Louis 23

New Orleans (4-6) @ Carolina (4-6): At some point the Panthers have to win at home right? Perhaps the more troubling fact is that they have been beaten soundly on their home field by 13, 13, 24 and 7 points. This could be the week because the Saints are 2-3 on the road with losses by 31, 17 and 13 points. Their Vinny Testaverde side show opened with a victory at Arizona, but he has lost the last three. In those games he completed just 51.8% of his passes. They have run the ball a lot and while the average (4.2) ranks them #8 the issue is punching in touchdowns. Only two teams are behind their 3 TD runs over 285 carries. The flip side of that coin is their solid run defense in yards per rush (3.7) with a #5 rank yet they have given up 10 TD runs, fifth most in the NFL. I guess you could say the killer instinct isn't there on either side of the ball where running the ball is concerned. New Orleans is #24 in rushing yards per carry (3.6) and obviously Reggie Bush can't wear down a team the way Deuce McAllister does. In 10 games he has failed to average more than 3.2 yards per rush seven times with only 4 touchdown runs. His damage comes in the catching passes. Last week he hauled in 12. That leaves him at 165 in 28 career games including the playoffs. The team really turns on Brees though. In six losses he has 4 touchdowns and 15 turnovers. In two wins he has 7 touchdowns and 1 turnover. The Panthers have been mediocre in pass defense and this team has the weapons to hurt them. On the other hand New Orleans has the worst secondary in the NFL. Opposing quarterbacks have an NFL high 101.6 rating against them. They have allowed 19 TD passes, third most in the NFL, and have a league low 6 interceptions. Testaverde needs 1,014 yards passing to eclipse Fran Tarkenton for fifth all-time. This outing won't hurt that effort. With both defenses able to stop the run, I find it hard to pick the old man over Brees: New Orleans 24, Carolina 20

Washington (5-5) @ Tampa Bay (6-4): I'm not sure I understand how the Bucs are leading the NFC South by two games, but the standings don't lie. They face a familiar foe here. Each of the previous four seasons they have met the Redskins, splitting 2-2 including a playoff loss following 2005. The last three were all close including Tampa Bay's 20-17 win last year. This should be another hard fought, low scoring game. Tampa Bay will keep running the ball with Earnest Graham and now has a healthy Michael Pittman at their disposal. Washington seems determined not to run Ladell Betts even in situations like last week when Clinton Portis stalled. It wasn't surprising to me with Portis coming off games with 36 and 30 carries respectively. Both teams will face top 10 run defenses in yards per carry allowed. The difference is what happens when each quarterback airs it out when the team can't run. Campbell is coming off his statistically best game as a pro with 348 yards passing, his first trip past 250. In his 17 games he has a respectable 3,380 yards passing with 21 touchdowns and 20 turnovers. He isn't dominating, but his play is solid and consistent. It will be difficult for him to take over this game against the NFL's toughest pass defense. Tampa Bay has allowed opposing quarterbacks a 70.2 rating with 5.98 yards per attempt (#3). Washington is close in yards per attempt against (6.39, #5) but the difference is touchdown passes. The Bucs have given up 7, behind only Seattle while the Redskins are at 17, fifth most in the NFL. Garcia will test that secondary. He has returned to his turnover free ways the past two weeks with none in a pair of victories. In 8 of 10 games he has not turned it over. At home the Bucs are 4-1 with only a 24-23 loss to Jacksonville. Washington has played generally well on the road going 2-3. All of those games were close with the exception of a visit to New England. Let's throw that out for obvious reasons. I like what the Bucs do on defense at home. In the four wins they have allowed 14, 3, 10 and 10. It takes pressure off their offense: Tampa Bay 17, Washington 13

Buffalo (5-5) @ Jacksonville (7-3): The difference between these teams right now might be a little luck more than anything. The Bills had two late field goals beat them and otherwise have been blown out by New England (twice) and Pittsburgh. The Jaguars scored their third win by a touchdown or less last week and have lost a pair of games by 17+. This is almost an early playoff game in the sense that Jacksonville can push Buffalo out of the wild card race with a handful of other teams lurking from 4-6 to 6-4. Right off the bat a concerning statistic is the Bills giving up 17 passing touchdowns, fifth most in the NFL. David Garrard is healthy and this young secondary is vulnerable. Where they really want to hurt the Bills is running the football. The Bills allow 4.3 yards per carry, eighth highest in the NFL. The Jags are ninth in run offense at 4.2 yards per carry. Only two teams have run it more than them and you can expect them to be around their season average (33.4) with Taylor and Jones-Drew going strong. They average 117.3 yards rushing per game and have 7 touchdowns. Buffalo counters with Anthony Thomas assuming Marshawn Lynch remains sidelined. The "A-Train" has had only 4 productive games since 2004, spending much of that time as a backup. He will be up against a better run defense and has to go it alone. That's a big edge to the home team. Losman will face an early deficit and hasn't been as good on the road over his brief career. His glimpses of greatness are few and far between. At home Jacksonville has allowed 16.6 points per game while the Bills have scored a mere 9.0 points on the road. This won't be a pretty game. The Jags will simply body blow Buffalo until they give up: Jacksonville 23, Buffalo 10

Tennessee (6-4) @ Cincinnati (3-7): The Bengals were picked by many to be a playoff contender while the Titans were expected to stumble as their offensive threats left in free agency. It hasn't turned out that way. Tennessee is riding a punishing ground attack and stout defense. Neither showed up last week in Denver as they allowed 34 points and their running backs had 17 carries for 60 yards in a 34-20 loss. The Bengals had a different problem. Palmer kept throwing it to the wrong team. Four times he was intercepted with three to Antrel Rolle and two of those going straight to the house. It was the difference in a 35-27 loss against Arizona. Their season is over if they don't run the table from here. Already they trail 8 teams in the wild card race including these Titans. In this game one question is how healthy Vince Young is. His quad supposedly isn't a problem and he is coming off his two most productive games as a pro. After throwing for a high of 257 yards two weeks ago, he had 305 against Denver. He also rushed for 52 and 74 yards respectively, but the team lost both games by two touchdowns. Their success hinges on playing defense. They are 5-1 when holding opponents to no more than 14 points, 1-3 when they don't. The win was with Kerry Collins playing quarterback. Tennessee can get a lead by running the ball against a defense allowing 4.5 yards per carry, fourth most in the NFL. The Bengals are also generous in the air with their pass defense ranked #26. They have allowed 22 touchdown passes and opposing quarterbacks have piled up a 97.3 rating, both second worst in the NFL. Vince Young is hot right now and could do some damage. Then there is the suddenly interception prone Palmer against a tough Titan secondary. Only one defense has allowed an opposing QB rating lower than Tennessee (71.3). Quarterbacks complete just 59.0% of their passes against them, fourth lowest in the NFL. Pac-Man who? However, Chris Henry's return to the Bengals has opened up the deep throw. He has 12 receptions for 180 yards in two games including a pair of bombs. They find a way to make enough plays with Young too tired or hurt to respond: Cincinnati 33, Tennessee 27

Oakland (2-8) @ Kansas City (4-6): One of the greatest rivalries in football hasn't mean much lately and this is no different. The Chiefs have won 9 in a row over the Raiders. They haven't lost to them since Oakland closed the regular season prior to their appearance in Super Bowl XXXVII. Or a few head coaches ago. Their first meeting was a 12-10 slugfest. Neither team was able to move the ball. This could be a repeat of that performance. Both teams are in the top 11 for QB rating allowed, yards passing and touchdown passes given up. Culpepper was pretty good the first time around (18/29, 228 yards) but Croyle gets his first look at the Raiders. In his first career start last week he went 19/27 for 169 yards and a touchdown with a fumble lost during a 13-10 loss at Indianapolis. The home crowd will be behind him this week after they called for him incessantly during their 27-11 defeat to Denver two weeks ago prior to Huard going down with an injury. Speaking of injuries, who will run the ball for the Chiefs? Priest Holmes is now retired. Larry Johnson has already been ruled out. Now it's down to rookie Kolby Smith who backed up Raider rookie Michael Bush at Louisville. Oakland clearly has the better backfield now, a deep enough group to keep Jordan on the sideline. The edge is offset by the Chiefs allowing just 3.8 yards per carry, ninth lowest in the NFL while Oakland has given up an NFL high 5.0 and the most touchdown runs at 16. The Chiefs haven't been great defensively at home having allowed 27, 33, 20, and 17 in their past four games but this is the Raiders who they always play a step better against. Oakland's offense left them during the bye week. In their six game losing streak since they have scored 13.0 points per game. If not for Janikowski's leg the numbers would be much worse. He has kicked 12 field goals over that stretch. A couple more in this one, but not much else: Kansas City 17, Oakland 9

San Francisco (2-8) @ Arizona (5-5): It isn't even news anymore when two quarterbacks in their mid-30's face off. Kurt Warner, 36, has the Cardinals in the NFC West hunt and they will play four of their final six in the desert. Trent Dilfer, 35, is just trying to help the 49ers score. They have averaged 11.3 points per game and haven't scored more than 17 since opening the season with a 20-17 victory over these Cardinals. It has been a few years since this pair led the Rams and Ravens respectively to Super Bowl titles in consecutive seasons. Dilfer has never been considered a top level player while Warner is still putting up decent numbers after posting astounding numbers early in his late blooming career. One issue for Warner has been turnovers, but he has just 10 this season and the 49ers have an NFL low 6 interceptions. Dilfer has been hurt by receiver drops on a team averaging just 136.8 yards passing per game, last in the NFL by over 25 yards. Arnaz Battle has really been their only reliable threat. Reporters are even asking if the team would sign last year's top threat Antonio Bryant off the street. Their last receiver with over 900 yards was Terrell Owens in 2003. People nowadays don't even remember he once played for this team. If the 49ers want to contend they have to get Gore involved now that he is healthy. While Arizona has a much higher ranking in run defense (#11 to #24) they are tied with San Francisco at #9 in yards per carry allowed (3.8). Teams simply run more on the 49ers because the team is always behind. They have the third most rushes against (32.6 per game). Arizona has the third lowest average per rush (3.4) as Edgerrin James has failed to run for over 88 yards in his past eight games. Which former Hurricane runner will set the pace? I think it will be James because the Cardinal receivers will be all over the 49er secondary: Arizona 27, San Francisco 12

Baltimore (4-6) @ San Diego (5-5): Last year they were juggernauts finishing 26-4 against the rest of the NFL not including their battle won by the Ravens 16-13. Both were dumped in their opening playoff game and haven't been the same since. Baltimore has seen the steadying presence of veteran quarterback Steve McNair fade into six games where he looked more like a rookie. He has averaged 64.8% completions, but with a pedestrian 185 yards passing with 1.83 turnovers against 0.33 touchdowns. Boller had a good day passing last week going 22/41 with 279 yards and a touchdown. He also turned it over 3 times after entering with 4. Is anyone calling for Troy Smith yet? Maybe they should. This team has never been built on winning with their quarterback, just not losing with him. When ready he could be a surprise savior of sorts. This week hit the road where they are 1-4. In those losses they have allowed 27.8 points per game with the win coming over offensively challenged San Francisco. The Chargers for all their problems are still leading the AFC West. This is a pivotal turning point with road trips to Kansas City and Tennessee on tap next. They are 4-1 at home with their defense giving up 15.6 points per game compared to the 26.2 they allow on the road. Perhaps the most surprising statistic in this game is that Baltimore has thrown for more yards per game (200.3, #21) than San Diego (196.2, #23). However, Rivers is only averaging 6.6 yards fewer than 2006. The difference is that he is on pace to turn it over 27 times compared to 11 last year. Tomlinson is no longer playing out of his mind either. The reigning MVP has just two rushing games over 90 yards and 4 of his 10 total touchdowns game in one game against Oakland. Last season he had 104+ yards rushing in 10 of his last 11 games including the playoff loss. Eleven times he scored multiple touchdowns, a feat he has totaled once this year. The Chargers should win this with defense. They have an NFL leading 17 interceptions. At some point their porous run defense that has allowed 4.3 yards per rush, eighth highest in the NFL, will tighten up. Conversely, Tomlinson is the kind of runner who can find ways to hurt a Raven defense leading the NFL with a 2.8 yard rushing average against: San Diego 20, Baltimore 12

Denver (5-5) @ Chicago (4-6): The Broncos will not be winning any tiebreakers based on point differential. They have already lost games by 18, 38 and 37 points. One of those was a shellacking at the hands of San Diego that stands in their way of leading the AFC West. Another was a 44-7 beat down at Detroit that woke them up. The past two weeks they have walked over Kansas City and Tennessee to gain a ton of momentum. Now they have to thrive on the road in four of their next five games. The Bears haven't had much of a home field advantage this season. They are 1-3 and haven't won at Soldier Field since their home opener against Kansas City on September 16. For them to have a playoff run it will take better than that as they finish with four of six on their turf. When the weather turns cold teams love to run. Can either of these defenses make a stop? Both are in the bottom five for yards per carry allowed and bottom 10 for touchdowns rushing allowed. The question then becomes which team has the running back more capable of exposing that weakness. Benson has plodded along all year although he did ramble 43 yards for a touchdown last week. Against another poor run defense in Oakland he needed 28 carries to muster up 72 yards. The Broncos are staring at a thinning depth chart as they turn to Andre Hall. He also had a long scoring run last week sprinting 62 yards to pay dirt. Both defenses are also struggling against the pass. Even though Denver has Bly and Bailey they join the Bears in the bottom 6 for QB rating allowed and bottom 10 for completion percentage allowed. Denver has given up 16 touchdown passes, eighth most in the NFL. Quarterback play has been a sore spot for Chicago who leads the NFL with 16 interceptions. They will hope to run their way into a lead so INT-Rex doesn't rear his ugly head. He hasn't thrown a pick since September 23, but has only 51 passes since then. Cutler is playing at a high level. He faces a defense leading the NFL with 16 interceptions so I suppose that has offset the aforementioned picks by their quarterbacks. They also rank in the top 8 for completion percentage and QB rating allowed. As the weather turns I like their defense to show some pride. They will figure out a way to scrape by in this one: Chicago 19, Denver 17

Philadelphia (5-5) @ New England (10-0): What more is there to say about the Patriots? They play again on NBC's Sunday Night Football in their quest for perfection. Just for fun let's peek at some of the numbers. They lead the NFL with at outlandish 131.6 QB rating that leaves Brady 10 points ahead of Peyton Manning's record. Only the Saints have taken fewer sacks (10) and only the Bucs have thrown fewer interceptions (5). Everyone assumes this is a pass happy offense that runs up the score, but they control the action too with 31.6 rushes per game, fourth most in the NFL. Despite having numerous injuries to their backfield they are #8 in yards per carry (4.2) and have the sixth most rushing touchdowns (10). Their assault on the records is going to be must see television, but with essentially a three game lead on Indianapolis for home field advantage with six to play how long with the regulars continue rolling it up? Last week they piled on Buffalo 56-10 and have started becoming a team onlookers love to hate. This week the Eagles might be coming in with journeyman backup A.J. Feeley starting at quarterback. He is best known for having hot soccer star Heather Mitts as his girlfriend. They split in March. He has thrown just 57 passes in two years with the team. They will be counting on Brian Westbrook to keep them within striking distance. He had 32 rushes last week against the Dolphins and has 331 total yards in their past two games, both wins. The Patriots are just #21 in yards per carry allowed (4.2) which could open the door for him to have a solid performance. If Philly has to throw it will be a long day against a defense with 29 sacks, fourth most in the NFL, and the sixth lowest QB rating allowed (74.0). They are also sixth in yards per attempt (6.43) and fourth in interceptions (13). Defensively the Eagles can put a lot of attention in their secondary because their run defense has been so stout with just 3.7 yards per carry allowed (#5). Their pass defense hasn't been great though and has an NFL low 6 interceptions. I see no shot at Philadelphia staying in this game with or without McNabb in the lineup. Brady's team is on a mission and until someone proves otherwise they are unstoppable: New England 37, Philadelphia 13

Miami (0-10) @ Pittsburgh (7-3): I'm almost impressed at how the Dolphins have hung pretty tough this season. Only three of their losses are by over 10 points and two of those were against New England and Dallas who are 9-1 teams. Their offense is a skeleton crew. Beck had a weak debut going 9/22 for 109 yards, but didn't turn it over and wasn't sacked in Philadelphia against a defense known for terrorizing quarterbacks. Their last three games have produced a total of 27 points, but the defense has kept them alive by giving up a total of 47. One thing the Steelers won't do in this game is overlook a weaker opponent though after losing to the 1-8 Jets last week. Their defense can't be blamed for the loss giving up just one touchdown and this will be a similar situation. Pittsburgh is allowing just 10.8 points per game at home where they are 5-0. New York is playing on the road for the first time since October 14 and has given up 27.5 points a contest while going 0-4. That's bad news because the Steelers average 30.6 points scored at home. Their pass defense is #1 with 5.47 yards per attempt allowed and #3 in QB rating (71.5). A slightly more experienced Clemens didn't exactly work them over last week going 14/31 for 162 yards and I expect Beck to suffer his first few sacks and turnovers here. Pittsburgh has allowed an NFL low 2 touchdown runs and ranks #9 in yards per carry allowed (3. Heather Mitts
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Heather Mitts
Personal information
Full name Heather Blaine Mitts
Date of birth June 9, 1978 (1978-06-09) (age 29)
Place of birth Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
Height 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m)
Playing position Defender
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
2001-2003 Philadelphia Charge 51 (0)
National team2
1999-present United States 63 (2)
1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of August 28, 2007.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of August 28, 2007.
* Appearances (Goals)

Heather Blaine Mitts (born June 9, 1978 in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American soccer player. Mitts is a defender for the United States Women's National Soccer Team.

She played soccer in high school for St. Ursula Academy in Cincinnati, Ohio and in college for the University of Florida, becoming an All-American, and led the team to a national title in her junior year (1998). Mitts played for the Philadelphia Charge, a team in the Women's United Soccer Association. She was also part of the gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic soccer team in 2004 and the U.S. team that finished 2nd in the 2006 Algarve Cup.

In 2004, Mitts was voted as "Hottest Female Athlete" by the users of ESPN.com. She is also a sideline reporter for ESPN2 and ABC's coverage of Major League Soccer, and is a columnist for ESPN Soccernet.

On May 12, 2007 Mitts tore her ACL in an international friendly with Canada. This injury puts Mitts out of contention for the Women's World Cup in the fall of 2007.


[edit] Personal
Olympic medal record
Competitor for United States
Women's Football (soccer)
Gold 2004 Athens Team Competition
Heather Mitts dated Philadelphia Eagles and Miami Dolphins quarterback A.J. Feeley for a four-year period, from 2002 to 2007.[1] They broke up in March of 2007.[2] Until recently she was dating tennis player James Blake.[3]Heather dated Philadelphia Phillies slugger Pat Burrell prior to A.J. Feeley in 2001 and 2002.

stard - Hot Clicks: Brady ready to get married?]. Sports Illustrated (August 21, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-30.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home