LOS ANGELES, Calif. - John Strong has agreed to an exclusive deal with Fox Sports and will broadcast Major League Soccer games and this years Womens World Cup.Strong has been the lead MLS announcer on NBC since the middle of the 2013 season, when Arlo White moved to England for the networks Premier League coverage.Strong, 29, has called Europa League, CONCACAF Champions League and Womens World Cup qualifying for Fox, which has U.S. rights to FIFA events through the 2022 World Cup. He also has broadcast Portland Timbers matches.Fox made the announcement Thursday. It recently added analysts Alexi Lalas and Brad Friedel, both former players for the U.S. national team.Fox had intended to use Gus Johnson as its lead soccer announcer but said in September he was stepping down. Johnson was criticized by many soccer fans for a lack of knowledge of the sport. Fake Vans Slip-on .Lets go back to the Avs, who have become one of the funnest teams to watch in this years playoffs. Fake Vans Outlet . This should be celebrated because it will not always be this way. With the amount of money given to players by their clubs these days, it is a wonder that so many of those teams allow the sport to continue to take away many of their assets so they can play for a different team in the middle of their season. http://www.fakevans.com/. -- The way Ted Ligety carved into turns looked so easy. Fake Vans Store . -- Claudio Bieler hadnt scored since early September, and not from the run of play since mid-July. Cheap Fake Vans .85 million contract with the two-time Gold Glove outfielder. Parra earned his second Gold Glove last season when he set a club record with 17 outfield assists.FALL RIVER, Mass. - Bullets found in an apartment rented by ex-New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez and a magazine found in his Hummer were thrown out as evidence in his murder case Thursday by a judge who said state police didnt demonstrate probable cause for the searches.Judge E. Susan Garsh said there were absolutely no facts linking Hernandez in any way at all to the crime under investigation in an affidavit supporting the warrant application to search his Franklin apartment. That warrant was for a cellphone belonging to co-defendant Carlos Ortiz, who was with Hernandez when Odin Lloyd was killed.Police applied for additional warrants after that first search, including one to look for ammunition. But the judge ruled that evidence gathered during the subsequent searches had to be thrown out because authorities hadnt demonstrated probable cause for the first one.Authorities have said they never recovered the weapon used in Lloyds killing but believe it was a .45-calibre pistol. The items tossed out Thursday include .45-calibre bullets and a .45-calibre magazine.Hernandez, 24, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the June 2013 killing of Lloyd, a semi-professional football player who was dating Hernandezs fiancees sister. Hes being held without bail.Bristol County prosecutors had previously indicated they wouldnt oppose the defences effort to keep the items out. But, in court filings, they provided no explanation other than to say it was in the interests of justice, and to avoid any delay.In her ruling from the bench in Superior Court, Garsh said police might have satisfied the probable caause requirement a€” showing Ortizs phone was of value to the investigation a€” simply by attaching a copy of an existing affidavit supporting a search warrant for Hernandezs home.ddddddddddddMeanwhile, the judge heard a third day of testimony on separate defence motions to suppress additional evidence, including from Hernandezs BlackBerry and home surveillance system.The defence maintains Hernandez was unlawfully questioned when state police executed search warrants at his North Attleborough home. Trooper Michael Bates testified he knew Hernandez had previously referred questions in the investigation to his attorney but asked the ex-Patriot for the phones passcode to facilitate investigators work.Hernandez at first said he couldnt remember the passcode, then provided one, he said. Bates said the phone was ultimately found not to be password protected.Prosecutors have said that Hernandez and Lloyd texted about meeting within hours of his killing and that the BlackBerry contained communications between Hernandez and another co-defendant, Ernest Wallace.Witnesses also testified Thursday about the seizure of a rifle from a Toyota that was parked in Hernandezs garage. Hernandez faces weapons charges stemming from the guns seizure. The defence says the warrant didnt cover a search of the car, which wasnt owned by Hernandez.Prosecutors say the search was within the scope of the warrant.Garsh didnt immediately rule on any of the other defence motions to suppress evidence.Hernandez has also pleaded not guilty in a separate case to the murder of two men after a brief encounter at a nightclub in Boston. ' ' '