With information flowing across the pages of current websites, and archive files running as long as the fingers can type, this classification of information is quite irreplaceable. Biographies of players, current events relating to them, historical players of interest, and local sporting heroes can be found here. The quality of the information will vary greatly depending on the source you use, but the selection will give you a broad array of choices. Some excellent websites to obtain this information are football-almanac, profootballhof, and pro-football-reference. These websites will give you great information on the legends of the game such as Fred Biletnikoff, who scored 77 regular season touchdowns between the years of 1965-1978 while playing in the wide receiver position for Florida; Troy Aikman, who won over 90 regular season games in the 1990's; and Jerry Rice, who for all intents and purposes was the best receiver in the NFL during his time playing for San Francisco. With all of the information that is provided on these and other players, it is nearly impossible to research every player.
Osborne grew up in Brookfield, Wisconsin and attended Catholic Memorial High School in Waukesha, Wisconsin. She went on play college soccer at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California. As a freshman, she was a key member of the Santa Clara team that won the 2001 NCAA Women's Soccer Championship. As a senior in 2004, she was a semifinalist for the Hermann Trophy and won the Honda Sports Award as the nation's outstanding collegiate female player. Osborne was an assistant coach for the Santa Clara women's team for several years. In 2009, she played for the Women's Professional Soccer FC Gold Pride, in their inaugural season, but was made a free agent following the season and signed with the Boston Breakers. Mitts is known as much for her looks as her athletic ability and as a result, has delved into the world of modeling. In 2001, Mitts was voted as the sexiest player in the WUSA on Playboy Online.
The character was originally depicted as a mad scientist who, in the vein of pulp novels, wreaks havoc on the world with his futuristic weaponry. In his earliest appearances, Luthor is shown with a full head of red hair; despite this, the character later became hairless as the result of an artist's mistake. A 1960 story by Jerry Siegel expanded upon Luthor's origin and motivations, revealing him to be a childhood friend of Superboy's who lost his hair when Superboy accidentally destroyed his laboratory; Luthor vowed revenge. The character is frequently depicted as an enemy of Spider-Man. In 2009, Carnage was ranked as IGN's 90th Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time. The alien symbiote endows Cletus Kasady with enhanced physical strength greater than that of Spider-Man and Venom combined and shapeshifting abilities, allows him to project a web-like substance from any part of his body including the formation of weapons, and enables him to plant thoughts into a person's head using a symbiote tendril.