Grey Antique Area Rug -

Designers are increasingly turning to a palette inspired by the earth's tones, from rich browns reminiscent of fertile soil to soothing greens echoing lush landscapes and warm terracottas mirroring the hues of the setting sun.• chief officers desk area in pilothouse • security monitor.

Exterior • hull sandblasted, prepped.Set a pretty tone for any room with our floral grey/pink area rug.In 2024, area rugs with earth tones remain highly favoured.

Part of having a comfortable house involves showing off colors that.Textured rugs texture is playing a significant role in rug trends for 2024.

An area rug is the biggest weapon in your home décor arsenal.Set the tone for your space using our cream/gray patterned area rug as your focal point.Sustainability is a key focus in 2024, and this extends to rug materials.

Rugs featuring earth tones are one of the latest rug trends of 2024.In 2024, the trend of bold vibrant.

• chief officers desk area in pilothouse • security monitor.Set an inviting and stylish tone for just about any room in your home with our modern farmhouse diamond jute grey area rug.

Last update images today Grey Antique Area Rug

grey antique area rug        <h3 class=Webb Enjoys More Atlanta Success As Giants Ride Chapman's Big Hits To 4-2 Win Over Braves

ONE AFTERNOON IN June, after a minicamp practice in the smothering Florida heat, Miami Dolphins defensive tackle Zach Sieler and his teammates received welcome news: Practice the following day was canceled.

But for Sieler, the good news wouldn't end there.

As the six-year veteran finished answering questions from the media, a Dolphins' team staffer mentioned gyros were being served for lunch -- one of Sieler's favorites.

"It's gyro day today?" he asked with a wide grin on his face. "Let's go!"

What players put in their bodies continues to be an important part of improving their health and availability. Now, more teams are trying to account for both nutrition and player preferences when selecting menus.

Los Angeles Rams center Steve Avila said he noticed his team putting an emphasis on serving higher-quality and better-tasting food this offseason, a change from last year.

"If you don't like the food, not a lot of people will eat here," Avila said. "So I've been a part of teams [in college] where people, if they don't like the food, they'll just go to McDonald's or something."

And while some players can invest in their bodies year-round using personal chefs and nutritionists, not all players can afford it and rely on teams to provide those services, especially during the season.

ESPN spoke with several teams about the best -- and worst -- NFL food programs based on the NFLPA report cards released in February. The report, based on a survey of 1,706 players across the league, includes grades on everything from head coach to the weight room and cafeteria. The goal, the NFLPA writes, is to improve working conditions for players.

Some teams are feeding players at an elite level, and others are struggling, in their players' eyes. And while there will likely always be a difference between teams in this area, some teams are trying to balance healthy choices with player preferences.

The lowest scores in relation to food on the survey went to the Cincinnati Bengals, who received an F- in the dietician and the food and cafeteria categories.

In 2022, there were multiple microwaves for Cincinnati players to reheat food brought from home. The Gatorade coolers doubled as a fridge, where players would store their lunch bags. They received an F- in nutrition for that year, too.

And that might have been one of the team's best years in terms of food options, according to a veteran player granted anonymity to speak freely on the subject. When asked what was the difference between his Power 5 college food program and the Bengals', he said there was no comparison.

"Just diversity of what we had [in college]," the player said. "Diversity of what you can eat that was catered to you. Diversity from a standpoint of having a nutritionist that really could set a certain plan up for you in essence of what your goals were and what catered to you. I mean, that's really the biggest thing when you get here. It's a little more basic. Some guys don't eat at the stadium."

RAMS WIDE RECEIVER Puka Nacua knows he's a picky eater. When he wanted to improve his eating habits this offseason, he went to team nutritionist Sebastian Zorn for help -- but had some restrictions.

Nacua doesn't like any vegetables, listing green onions and asparagus before saying, "I don't do any of those." And so instead, he replaces the nutrients from vegetables with watermelon and pineapple in the morning to go with his eggs and bacon.

"Those are how I get some of my fiber and stuff like that because like, hey, you got to poop somehow," Nacua said. "And I'm like, I'm not getting it from any veggies."

Unlike Nacua, who is entering his second NFL season, Rams right tackle Rob Havenstein is entering his 10th -- long enough to know how important nutrition can be to lengthening a career.

"You just realize you want to do everything you can to play as long as you can," Havenstein said. "When you're young, you've got a little bit of the never-going-to-die type thing, and all of a sudden things just don't turn over as easy. So you're doing everything you can to go ahead and make sure that you're in alignment with turning your body over, with recovering.

"And what I've learned is that food and the way you fuel your body is probably the No. 1 [way], other than ice tubs and actual recovery stuff."

Dolphins tight end Durham Smythe, who has spent all six of his NFL seasons in Miami, said while the food has always been "pretty good," it got even better when the team opened its new facility in 2021.

That buy-in from what teammate Sieler calls "the top down," starting with team owner Stephen Ross, led to the team's A rankings in dietician and the food and cafeteria categories. Miami's dietician, John Parenti, earned the second-highest individual grade of any dietician in the league.

"I try not to take it for granted," Smythe said. "Like I said, I've only been here, but you get used to it almost. And then I have to remind myself like, 'Holy s---, we have everything we need here.'"

When Avila is ready for lunch at the Rams' facility in Thousand Oaks, California, he uses an app called Notemeal to see what is being served in the cafeteria that day and the options' macros and calories. His daily macro -- macronutrients, or grams of protein, carbohydrates and fats -- goals were set in a meeting with Zorn, the team nutritionist, this spring.

"We'll sit down one-on-one with him, and he'll try to find a goal for us," Avila said. "People's body types are different. For me, I have a lot of muscle, so obviously I'm going to weigh more, but my body fat percentage isn't going to be as high as someone who weighs the same as me, so he definitely makes a point for that. So, right now, we're building muscle for me, and right now we're in the phase of trying to get that body fat percentage down."

Those goals aren't stagnant. Once Zorn and his staff have talked to players about their goals, they calculate their nutritional needs. They have software to do that, factoring players' muscle mass, what type of practice it is and how long they'll be on the field.

When the NFLPA survey results were released in February, the Rams received a C-plus in the nutritionist category, with a score that ranked 26th among the 32 teams. They hired Zorn in April.

"I didn't realize how much better it could have been until he ended up getting here," Rams coach Sean McVay said.

In Miami, dietician Parenti makes sure the meal plans are "very personalized," Smythe said. At the beginning of OTAs, players meet with Parenti to "tell him exactly" what their goals are "and he'll tell you where you need to be."

The nutrition staff "definitely bend over backwards to make sure that everyone is getting treated to maximize their potential each day," Sieler said.

"They'll cook [the meals] for you, they'll prep them before and they'll have them in the refrigerator," Smythe said. "I've even seen John [Parenti] walk into the cafeteria with guys and say, pick this, pick this amount of this, this amount of that.

"And then you really can't fail when that's happening."

UNLIKE NEARLY EVERY other team, the Bengals do not have a full-time dietician on staff.

"We've never really had the true nutritionist," the anonymous Bengals player told ESPN. "It was one of those things where it was like [food staff] just made stuff and kind of [put it] out there."

This was reflected in the NFLPA survey. 19% of Bengals players reported having an individualized nutrition plan -- the lowest rate in the NFL.

Another area in which the Bengals struggle? Food options. According to the NFLPA survey, they are one of two teams that don't provide three meals a day throughout the week. The only day they do is on Wednesdays. Cincinnati also does not open its cafeteria on the players' off day, even when they come in to do extra work. Players have noted that the food offerings have improved in recent years. 

The Rams were one of six teams to get below a C in the food and cafeteria category, ranking 31st overall in food taste and 28th overall in food freshness. According to Zorn, part of that is because of the Rams' setup: trailers on the campus of California Lutheran University. While that was intended to be a temporary facility, it has lasted eight years.

In their current setup, Los Angeles has to cook all of its food offsite and assemble it at the facility. The Rams are moving to a new facility in Woodland Hills in August and, although they will be in trailers while the permanent buildings are built, Zorn said the plan is for the food to be cooked onsite.

In Miami, the kitchen has no fryers and everything is cooked in-house.

"You go in the cafeteria in the morning and there's five different stations," Smythe said. "There's a buffet. You can go get an omelet. Same thing for lunch -- there's a sandwich station buffet. And you go into the weight room and it's every protein snack you could ever imagine.

"They're actually great about if someone loves something, too, it'll be in the next week, they'll bring it in. So, it's really almost endless possibilities."

The list of favorite meals runs the gamut for league players: Korean short ribs (Nacua), mango habanero salmon (Sieler), crawfish (Washington Commanders safety Jeremy Reaves) lamb chops and steak (Houston Texans defensive end Will Anderson Jr.).

Avila says he doesn't like a lot of foods, admitting he's a "basic vegetable guy." But he said the thought of the new soups in the cafeteria made his stomach growl.

Some players try to stay away from certain foods, such as Commanders right tackle Andrew Wylie, who said he tries to "cognitively avoid" the pizza station.

Lack of options is an issue for the Commanders, who received a D-plus in the food/cafeteria category in the survey. While the food is good, it has also gotten repetitive and players have gotten bored, a Commanders player told ESPN. The quality of the food also needs to improve, a player, who was granted anonymity, said.

"You could tell it's just something that was just thrown together just to make it seem like it's healthy or anything like that versus you could tell that it was something that somebody took time and put effort into," the Commanders player said.

The Los Angeles Chargers received an F in the food and cafeteria category but are moving to a new facility in July, where they have a new food program through a partnership with Wolfgang Puck catering.

Chargers outside linebacker Joey Bosa, who has worked with a chef for the past seven years, said he may not need to do so with the new facility. Despite the bad grade, Bosa said he didn't think it accurately represented the Chargers' setup and staff.

"I'll eat here sometimes," Bosa said. "It may not be the best setup, but they'll prepare you food that's plenty good. ... They work harder than literally anybody in the entire facility. So they may not have the best means back there, but they freaking work their butts off, and that survey is not cool, man."

WHEN ZORN WAS hired in Los Angeles, he gave presentations to the players once a week for the first seven weeks of OTAs. He wanted to teach them about the fundamentals of eating right and what he was changing in the cafeteria.

"It starts with the food," Zorn said. "So improving the food service first is really important because if the food is not good, I can recommend this and that, but if they're not going to eat it at the end of the day, then I've lost them and they're going to go outside. So improving that was kind of square one."

The Rams aren't the only team making a change.

The Saints are moving their training camp to Irvine, California and will refurbish the cafeteria at their facility in Metairie, Louisiana during that period.

New Orleans received an F-minus on the NFLPA report card in 2023 for their food services/nutrition, which was tied for last place.

"It's nothing against their survey, but we had it on the books for a while to improve the cafeteria, improve the cooking area," Saints president Dennis Lauscha said. "That cooking area and that cafeteria, although we still think it's new for some of the folks that have been there, it's over 20 years old. It had to be changed, it had to be upgraded. ... We want to have the best facilities. We want to be able to recruit and attract players."

For the Commanders, the change came when owner Josh Harris bought the team.

"It was very selective in what we were eating [before], obviously," Reaves said. "And new ownership and new coaches came in and they changed all of that stuff. They made an emphasis on that. When we came in, when new ownership came in, they took the time personally to come talk to some of the leaders that've been here for a while and ask us what we want to exchange and what we wanted different. And we are seeing it."

Enhancing onsite accommodations is something teams have put an emphasis on in recent years, as is clear with moves made by the Chargers, Rams and Commanders. The goal of the NFLPA survey, according to the association, was to "not only help [players] make important career decisions, but also help raise standards across the league." It has become increasingly clear nutrition is something teams will continue to enhance as they not only try to recruit players but push for them to play at the highest level.

"[Zorn] made that a point when he first got here that we're high-level athletes, so we should have some high-level food," Avila said.

Ben Baby, Marcel Louis-Jacques, D.J. Bien-Aime, Kris Rhim, John Keim and Katherine Terrell contributed to this story.

99aced29 Bd78 49d6 B5cd 286594c1203f.6272db1accec6191fc72a898db9cc9ff ?odnWidth=1000&odnHeight=1000&odnBg=ffffff
99aced29 Bd78 49d6 B5cd 286594c1203f.6272db1accec6191fc72a898db9cc9ff ?odnWidth=1000&odnHeight=1000&odnBg=ffffff
92414 1839107 Edd321ae
92414 1839107 Edd321ae
94842b63 B13b 45c6 9a42 4916ebbf95b9 1.ca6d64ecd989c1695572513b4c766e1d ?odnWidth=612&odnHeight=612&odnBg=ffffff
94842b63 B13b 45c6 9a42 4916ebbf95b9 1.ca6d64ecd989c1695572513b4c766e1d ?odnWidth=612&odnHeight=612&odnBg=ffffff
272355 Grey Polyester Rug Signature 02 ?w=1911&h=1288&mode=pad
272355 Grey Polyester Rug Signature 02 ?w=1911&h=1288&mode=pad
8db109b1eb5fff08f88e40ecf6d62245
8db109b1eb5fff08f88e40ecf6d62245
A1q8%2BQhJFkL. AC SL1500
A1q8%2BQhJFkL. AC SL1500
5ee8c6f4 B73f 4cb7 B1d0 Cec06a45809d 1.c28d300050d703afcd8a3fb8195705e7
5ee8c6f4 B73f 4cb7 B1d0 Cec06a45809d 1.c28d300050d703afcd8a3fb8195705e7
32deb4d4aa7bb45021f03c45112f10b8
32deb4d4aa7bb45021f03c45112f10b8
B901e708d5050ecab4e4640b0080478a  Grey Rugs Gray Area Rugs
B901e708d5050ecab4e4640b0080478a Grey Rugs Gray Area Rugs
D32a94e0b9030c2fb9e031d0ffc31a84
D32a94e0b9030c2fb9e031d0ffc31a84
Dark Gray Light Gray Safavieh Area Rugs Vtg442h 810 64 1000
Dark Gray Light Gray Safavieh Area Rugs Vtg442h 810 64 1000
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 291bd3a12e January Sales 2024 Category Banners Desktop 2 &w=640&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 291bd3a12e January Sales 2024 Category Banners Desktop 2 &w=640&q=75
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 2e1687bf32 January Sales 2024 Category Banners Mobile 4 &w=750&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 2e1687bf32 January Sales 2024 Category Banners Mobile 4 &w=750&q=75
422e774716e17e47e9a28a61183b50df
422e774716e17e47e9a28a61183b50df
3c354a19 6469 4dbf 98ee D3d666e25760 1.26f1a95460b6f0d7a89a65c90442c000
3c354a19 6469 4dbf 98ee D3d666e25760 1.26f1a95460b6f0d7a89a65c90442c000
Handmade Shag Wool Beige Carpet
Handmade Shag Wool Beige Carpet
Screenshot 2023 09 10 At 8.30.36 AM
Screenshot 2023 09 10 At 8.30.36 AM
B9971b75 1d15 4447 9afe F5eb20b2be43 1.0cfbd4f7ae12f0a351ec0be9fd0f0492 ?odnWidth=612&odnHeight=612&odnBg=ffffff
B9971b75 1d15 4447 9afe F5eb20b2be43 1.0cfbd4f7ae12f0a351ec0be9fd0f0492 ?odnWidth=612&odnHeight=612&odnBg=ffffff
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 E76e9c2c02 Black Friday 2023 Category Banners Mobile 3 &w=828&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 E76e9c2c02 Black Friday 2023 Category Banners Mobile 3 &w=828&q=75
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 Dcb5f7ff0d Christmas 2023 Category Banners Mobile 2 &w=828&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1080x400 Dcb5f7ff0d Christmas 2023 Category Banners Mobile 2 &w=828&q=75
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 56b4d67a2a Christmas 2023 Category Banners Desktop 3 &w=1080&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 56b4d67a2a Christmas 2023 Category Banners Desktop 3 &w=1080&q=75
Edc4d319 Cb2f 400f B95e 0923f05a09e6 1.1769859c33058f222ebe801d8aaffb2f ?odnWidth=1000&odnHeight=1000&odnBg=ffffff
Edc4d319 Cb2f 400f B95e 0923f05a09e6 1.1769859c33058f222ebe801d8aaffb2f ?odnWidth=1000&odnHeight=1000&odnBg=ffffff
Image?url=https   A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 A1152459be Black Friday 2023 Category Banners Desktop 4 &w=750&q=75
Image?url=https A.storyblok.com F 165582 1920x500 A1152459be Black Friday 2023 Category Banners Desktop 4 &w=750&q=75
334405 1 ?v=1694756772&width=360
334405 1 ?v=1694756772&width=360
1f143ef1be25b71c6e6ca12c66853dfb
1f143ef1be25b71c6e6ca12c66853dfb
C32f89b2 Abf2 4277 Be57 3686ff75389a.02ab0fc5f71f13f8575e4e092a0a0678
C32f89b2 Abf2 4277 Be57 3686ff75389a.02ab0fc5f71f13f8575e4e092a0a0678
5a7f4ef8c2d0dfaba56b57942a5dbd22
5a7f4ef8c2d0dfaba56b57942a5dbd22
332283 1 1f855cda D1a2 4a27 8654 96ae02c2abb5 ?v=1697301284&width=360
332283 1 1f855cda D1a2 4a27 8654 96ae02c2abb5 ?v=1697301284&width=360
168 168 1 0 Midq S 20 Prog 3129975 Image 1017
168 168 1 0 Midq S 20 Prog 3129975 Image 1017
B5eae59b5a3bf30e8d505cee94809db5
B5eae59b5a3bf30e8d505cee94809db5
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 3136162 Main
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 3136162 Main
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 2331728 Main
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 2331728 Main
4e52e78da5a00830fb228e8f41231963 Large ?1581721745
4e52e78da5a00830fb228e8f41231963 Large ?1581721745
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 2516735 Main
185 175 0 0 Midhigh S 20 2516735 Main