5/7/2023 0 Comments Captin chin![]() ![]() This references the TNG episode “Descent Part 2,” where Data himself did deactivate his brother following a violent incident in which Lore tried to brainwash Data and lead a bunch of rogue Borg on missions of mayhem. Picard assumes that Lore must have been deactivated at some point in the past. This version of Data’s memories stops at that point, in 2379, about 22 years before this point in 2401. This was the name of Shinzon’s warship in Nemesis. When Data is reawakened on the Titan, he wonders why he’s not on the Scimitar. Seven mentions her games of Kal-Toh with Tuvok on the USS Voyager, which references the Vulcan game from that show, as well as the life-saving mind-meld that Tuvok performed in the episode “Infinite Regress.” Seven also mentions “anti-Kolinahr demonstrations,” which reference the Vulcan practice of shedding all emotions, called Kolinahr, first shown in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. In the alternate future that Captain Janeway experienced, in the Voyager finale “Endgame,” Tuvok suffered from a degenerative neurological disease, which doesn’t appear to be a problem in this timeline, even though this isn’t really Tuvok, but instead, a Changeling pretending to be him. ![]() (Although Russ has done many Trek fan films since then and Tuvok appeared briefly in an episode of Lower Decks). This is Tim Russ’ first live action appearance in Star Trek canon since the conclusion of Voyager in 1999. We’re definitely looking forward to that,” he said.Seven grills a person who she hopes is Tuvok at the top of the episode. They were disappointing against Limerick, so no doubt they’re going to come hammer and tongs to Wexford Park and it should be a good tussle. We were very disappointed with our performance in the second-half against Galway at home, so we have a chance now to right that wrong and get used to a daylight fixture in Wexford Park. “It’s great to get off the mark and we’re now looking ahead to Clare. With Cork beating Galway and Limerick overcoming Clare at the weekend, it means four teams are deadlocked on two points in the table, behind leaders Cork, who have the maximum four, so a win over the Banner would certainly have Wexford very much in the mix at the right end of the ladder and Egan is certainly relishing the challenge ahead. I’d be much more worried if we weren’t taking the shots,” he said. “They might not be going over the bar like we’d want them to at the moment, but that’s something we can most definitely keep working on in the next few weeks in training. We had 51 scoring chances against Westmeath and that’s the sign of a team that’s moving in the right direction. “I was much more worried after the second-half against Galway when we hardly had a shot on goal for 25 minutes. Those attempts undoubtedly didn’t yield as many scores as Wexford would have liked, but Egan was certainly putting a positive spin on it, saying that it would be far more concerning if his side weren’t creating the chances. The main thing is we have two points on the board in the league table and we’re having plenty of attempts at goal,” he said. “Mark Fanning was very good in goal and I thought our puck-outs worked well. Simon Donohoe is really coming back into a good bit of form and he has been excellent the last two days. “We got a full league game into Davy Clarke for his debut, Conor Foley has his second league game under the belt and was very good again. Liam Óg McGovern, and Conor Hearne and Charlie McGuckin either side of him, were absolutely outstanding. “Our half-forward line was the main positive. Reflecting on the victory over the midlanders, Egan was particularly satisfied with the performance of the half-forward line, while he was also fulsome in his praise for several other players, although picking up two points was the most pleasing aspect. We had eleven lads unavailable for the Westmeath game so we can get some of them back doing a good bit of proper training, and we’re looking forward to the coming days when we’ll get loads of work into lads,” he said. “We’ve a good bit of work to get in this week and there’s lots of bodies coming back. However, the game may come a week too soon for star forward Rory O’Connor, who is making good progress, while Richie Lawlor and Liam Ryan will remain absent due to recent injuries.Īlthough supporters may be rubbing their hands in anticipation of the visit of Clare, Egan said the Wexford management will be making good use of the two-week gap between games to put the players through their paces before the tough battles ahead. A weekly update on the top stories from County Wexford in news and sport, direct to your inboxĮnter email address This field is required Sign Up ![]()
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