FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- A Massachusetts police chief says his officers are cracking down on people who fraudulently use parking spaces for the disabled at Gillette Stadium.Foxborough Chief Ed OLeary tells The Sun Chronicle (http://bit.ly/2aX3G2h ) that with the New England Patriots season approaching, officers will check to make sure vehicles with placards or license plates for the disabled have an occupant with a disability.Violators caught misusing a placard face a fine of $500 and license suspension. The penalty for parking in a handicapped spot without a placard is $200.Police began the compliance checks at the behest of stadium officials.OLeary says sometimes people use placards belonging to a relative not in attendance.The stadium has 301 spaces for the disabled, more than the 239 required by the state.---Information from: The (Attleboro, Mass.) Sun Chronicle, http://www.thesunchronicle.comStan Smith Schuhe Günstig . As the crowd erupted, Davis knocked the ball off the glass and back into his hands. With 1:14 to go in overtime, Davis sixth block also became his 17th rebound. That, along with his 32 points -- which tied a career high -- proved too much for Denver to overcome, and the Pelicans held on for their third straight victory, 111-107 on Sunday night. Yeezy Boost 350 Billig Kaufen . -- Vincent Lecavalier got everything but the desired result in his return to Tampa Bay. http://www.yeezyschweizkaufen.com/ .Y. -- Paul Byron and Matt Stajan scored as the Calgary Flames started a five-game road trip with a 2-1 overtime win over the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday afternoon. Stan Smith Schuhe Kaufen . Jane Virtanen scored two, and Alex Roach and Elliott Peterson rounded out the offence for the Hitmen (40-15-6). Brady Brassart chipped in with three assists. Colton McCarthy scored twice, Brayden Point had a goal and two assists, and Jack Rodewald also scored for the Warriors (15-35-9), who were 2 for 5 on the power play. Adidas Superstar Schweiz .Y. - Rob Manfred was promoted Monday to Major League Baseballs chief operating officer, which may make him a candidate to succeed Bud Selig as commissioner. YAS MARINA, Abu Dhabi -- Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton are like chalk and cheese. From their very different childhoods and backgrounds, the two men have grown up into two very different people.Hamilton is the F1 driver as rock star, with his private jets, pop-star and model girlfriends, and a life that makes for excellent tabloid fodder. In contrast, Rosberg features in the papers for his work at race weekends, and in the times between can be found focussing on either his training or his family.But where the two men really differ is in their public approaches to the title fight, from Hamiltons heart-on-sleeve burning passion that used to manifest itself in the odd bit of win or wall behaviour, to Rosbergs one race at a time approach to the title.Both men will line up on the grid for Sundays #DuelInTheDesert 2016 season finale with nine wins apiece under their belts, and both have delivered some exceptional performances -- and some rather less stellar -- over the course of the past nine months.Even after Hamilton claimed the final pole position of the 2016 season on Saturday night at Yas Marina, Rosbergs approach (with the media, at least) was to persist in taking the last round of the title fight as one more racing weekend.Speaking at the official FIA post-qualifying press conference in Abu Dhabi, Rosberg continued to be measured in his responses to the questions posed by both the media as a whole and the conference moderator, telling the world that he would go for the win on Sunday.I came here to try and be on pole and try and win the race tomorrow, thats what I want to do, Rosberg said. So I cant be satisfied by today, Lewis just did a good job and was a couple of tenths quicker. It just wasnt possible for me to do that time today, even though we gave it everything. But as you know there will still be possibilities tomorrow, and for sure Ill try and go for the win.Adrenaline is always there in qualifying, but thats what is great about it. To go on the edge and push flat out. I was feeling good out there I had a really good balance and I was quite pleased. As qualifying went on it felt better and better, I got a good lap in in the end in Q3, but not enough.It is hard to argue with the efficcacy of Rosbergs approach, as the German driver has spent more time leading the championship standings this season than Hamilton.dddddddddddd But among certain corners of the media -- German and British alike, lest you think nationality play a part in press room criticism -- there is a clear lack of appetite for Nico as world champion. His calm approach and carefully managed statements to the press are perceived by many as a lack of passion for what should be the ultimate goal of any F1 driver.Cool, calm, and collected are fantastic attributes for a racing driver to possess on track, but from a media perspective all that balance tends to read as dull once the helmet is off and the dictaphones are out. Whatever pride, delight, excitement, and/or enthusiasm Rosberg does or doesnt feel when he secures pole position or takes the chequered flag is a challenge to communicate to the watching or reading fan. Balance can often come across as banal.Hamilton, on the other hand, is human Marmite. People either love him or hate him, and those who fall into the latter category appear -- based on their vociferous feedback below the line or on social media -- to love to hate him. It means that Hamilton can never win, but nor can he ever really lose: as a racing driver, he incites passion both positive and negative among the sports fans.As for banal? Hamilton doesnt know the meaning of the word. Buoyed by success, he is effusive and bubbly, and can sometimes read as cocky. Deflated by a sub-par weekend, the Briton can revert to monosyllabic replies that would put Kimi Raikkonen to shame, or to petulant dramatics.Whatever accusations one might want to level at Hamilton for his behaviour in the press and in public, the three-time champion is pure passion. If he secures a fourth title on Sunday, you can expect tears of joy, heart-on-sleeve speechifying, and an awful lot of human drama. And if the trophy goes to Rosberg? The paddocks TV crews will all be aiming their cameras at Hamilton with a view to getting the emotional response everyone is looking for after a long year on the road. ' ' '