Friday, September 9, 2011

Diaz rejoining the UFC and skips yet another press conference; The leopard won?t change his spots

Nick Diaz was on the outside looking in for the last four years. One of the world's best welterweights wasn't facing the top 170-pounders in the world because he was essentially sent into exile by the UFC, for being too difficult to manage.

Diaz put together a big win streak with Strikeforce and several other promotions. Dana White took the bait. The UFC president wants the best fights possible, so he welcomed Diaz back into the fold. But after Diaz pulled another press conference no-show today in Canada, White is probably regretting his decision to pit the California fighter against Georges St-Pierre at UFC 137.

Diaz was due to attend a Canadian press conference to promote UFC 137 in October, but was nowhere to be found. This is just another chapter in the ridiculous book of Diaz's erratic behavior.

The 28-year-old has often shirked his media responsibilities and had several run ins with state commissions over his marijuana use. Tuesday's no-show shouldn't be a surprise and yet it still is. This is a second lease on life for Diaz, who complained about lousy competition in Strikeforce. White rewarded him with the opportunity to come back to the UFC and here's his payoff.

The reason for missing the Canadian trip? As always it was weak.

"Nick is extremely happy about the opportunity to fight GSP, but old habits die hard," Diaz manager Cesar Gracie today told MMAjunkie.com. "Nick doesn't really do the conference calls with a guy he's fighting; he just never has. It's just not in his psyche. He's too busy training right now to answer any questions."

GSP and Diaz are due to hit Las Vegas tomorrow for another big press conference. Fans are invited to attend at the Mandalay Bay Events Center (1 p.m. PT). Should they even bother? Makes it tough to sell a fight when you constantly burn the messenger (the media) and some of the fans.

You'd have to think Diaz just ruined any potential that he'll ever get to fight on network television. After this, can you imagine the UFC trusting Diaz enough to place him on a gigantic card with Fox?

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Diaz-rejoining-the-UFC-and-skips-yet-another-pre?urn=mma-wp6605

dolly parton hamilton apollo 18 trailer blood pressure keanu reeves holland maria sharapova

Private developers are now worried about over-supply


SINGAPORE: The Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore (REDAS) has raised concerns over a potential oversupply of private homes in the near term, especially with the uncertain global outlook.

It is urging the government to review its land sales programme to ensure that new supply is introduced only when the market is confident of absorbing it.

With the possibility of demand for private homes dropping due to an economic downturn, developers are pointing to the need to rein in supply.

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporebusinessnews/view/1152072/1/.html

Complex challenge facing world economy

MARSEILLE, France - G7 rich nations vowed tough measures Friday to get the global economy back on track but were short on detail and admitted the problems were so complex that a unified response was impossible.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world_business/view/1152211/1/.html

Conclusion - the world has to go through a very hard time. The US is trying a new stimulus package, but the American Jobs Act may not get the support of divided Congress. The European countries are not implementing any stimulus package.


FDA delivers blow to experimental stroke drug

Drug regulators said an experimental stroke preventer from Bayer and Johnson & Johnson is not ready for approval and raised questions about its effectiveness, sending Bayer shares down more than 7 percent.

  1. Don't miss these Health stories

    1. Take off years with the perfect arch

      Resist the urge to overpluck your eyebrows, especially as you age. Click for TODAY's do-it-yourself tip on maintaining a beautiful arch.

    2. Bad batteries in AEDs tied to cardiac deaths
    3. Purple potatoes may help lower blood pressure
    4. Narcissists know they're annoying, study suggests
    5. Storm outages endanger those on home oxygen

"There is a lack of substantial evidence that rivaroxaban will have its desired effect when used as recommended in labeling," said Food and Drug Administration staff in documents released on Tuesday.

The FDA staff recommended the agency issue a so-called complete response letter for the drug, also known by its proposed trade name Xarelto, which means it cannot be approved without more data from the companies.

Even if approved, the agency staff said the drug should be used as a third option behind other treatments, unless the companies submit more data on effectiveness and safety.

"The wording is quite critical," said Karl-Heinz Scheunemann, an analyst with LBBW. "Should the committee agree with the recommendation ? which is not always the case ? it's safe to assume that there will be a delay in the market approval."

The FDA will make its final decision after taking into account the views of an advisory panel, which considers Xarelto on Thursday.

Trying to replace risky warfarin
Xarelto is one of several promising entrants angling to replace risky clot preventer warfarin for people with dangerously irregular heart rhythms, called atrial fibrillation

AF patients' irregular heartbeats can cause blood to pool, increasing their risk of blood clots and strokes. But many are unwilling to take warfarin, which requires regular blood tests, or are unable to tolerate the decades-old medicine.

Xarelto is approved in the United States and Europe for anti-clotting in patients after knee and hip surgery, a much smaller market than stroke prevention for AF patients.

Atlantic Equities analyst Richard Purkiss said Xarelto's prospects have now significantly dimmed. Even if approved, Purkiss said, the drug will now likely only be used if patients do not benefit from warfarin and Pradaxa, a newly approved stroke medicine from privately held Boehringer Ingelheim.

The FDA review appeared to be good news for a rival treatment called Eliquis being developed by Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer Inc in an anti-clotting market that could top $10 billion a year.

Eliquis, also called apixaban, showed superiority over warfarin in effectiveness, safety and saving lives in a clinical trial presented last month at a scientific meeting in Paris, affirming its place as the potential leader of the pack.

"The prospects for apixaban and Pradaxa just got better," Purkiss said after the Xarelto review.

Third-line status?
FDA reviewers questioned whether Xarelto was as effective as warfarin, saying that in a trial comparing the two, warfarin was not given in the proper dosing.

They said for conditions such as stroke, which can cause irreversible harm, new drugs must be shown to be at least as effective as older treatments.

They also focused on risks for patients when they come off the drug. When patients stopped taking Xarelto and resumed warfarin at the end of the main clinical trial, higher risk of stroke was seen, a so-called "rebound" effect.

However, bleeding risk was the only significant issue with Xarelto on its own, the FDA staff said.

They asked the companies to conduct further trials to show Xarelto was as safe and effective as warfarin, or as compared to Pradaxa.

"It seems advisable to make rivaroxaban a third-line agent, behind both warfarin and dabigatran (Pradaxa)," FDA staff said in the documents, until the companies submit more data on Xarelto.

Johnson & Johnson said the FDA staff documents did not represent the agency's final recommendation.

"We're confident in the effectiveness of rivaroxaban for stroke prevention in patients with AF," said Ernie Knewitz, a spokesman for J&J.

Analysts from Sanford Bernstein forecast Xarelto sales of $948 million for J&J in 2015, and 800 million euros ($1.1 billion) for Bayer, which has much greater sales outside the United States.

The two companies co-developed the drug, and J&J has marketing rights in the United States.

Analysts said the market overreacted in its initial sharp drop, especially as European regulators often reach different conclusions than the FDA.

"(But) all is not lost for Xarelto in the advisory committee on Thursday," Bernstein analysts said in a note. "Panels do not always follow the recommendations of the FDA reviewers."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44417304/ns/health-health_care/

prc prc gat gat arsenal vs liverpool fast five fast five