-
When Liverpool finished the campaign without a trophy, his earlier remarks that his side stood "10 games from greatness" appeared somewhat injudicious.
BBC: Profile: Gerard Houllier
-
The rushed and injudicious siding of Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah with Ahmadinejad has wedded the fate of the Lebanese group with that of the discredited Iranian president.
CNN: Commentary: Middle East is changed forever
-
Dr Watson continued as head of the Cold Spring Harbour genetics laboratory until 2007, when he made some injudicious remarks about genetics and black people and found himself suddenly retired.
ECONOMIST: The big beasts of genomics
-
Spending more money to protect Australia from another world recession would threaten the government's promise to return the budget to surplus in 2012-13, an injudicious boast on which much of its political capital hinges.
ECONOMIST: Why Australia��s success is a mixed blessing
-
It's that easy to derail your entire career if your employer learns you tweeted an injudicious comment, posted one on LinkedIn or Facebook, put it in an e-mail, or had a questionable exchange via Craigslist.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
Eugene Braunwald of Harvard University, who chaired the panel, and Wilson S. Colucci of Boston University, who served on it, say they would support tightening the FDA's labeling of Natrecor to prevent injudicious use of the drug.
FORBES: Cardiologist Calls For Limits On J&J Drug
-
From 106-0, when an injudicious reverse sweep cost Strauss his wicket, England slumped to 141-5 and although they reached their target with 10 overs to spare, it was somehow fitting that they should finally stumble over the line courtesy of a no-ball.
BBC: England escape one-day whitewash
-
The left-hander seemed to show no lingering discomfort from the hairline fracture which kept him out for three weeks, although he had his bowlers - as well as some injudicious batting from the tourists - to thank for a swift return to the crease.
BBC: Cook shines as Windies struggle