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Photo Of The Bathroom Where Olympian Oscar Pistorius Killed His Girlfriend

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The “Blade Runner” will be back in South African court next week. Warning: Graphic image.

Source: Sky News  /  via: news.sky.com

In February, double-amputee Olympian Oscar Pistorius shot and killed his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, in the middle of the night at their home in Pretoria, South Africa. Pistorius told authorities he thought she was an intruder.

The dramatic photo above, obtained by Sky News, shows bullet hole markers and a panel missing from the bathroom door — it appears consistent with Pistorius' version of events.

"I'm accutely aware of people gaining entries to homes to commit crime," the sprinter later said in a court affidavit:

I sleep with my 9mm under my bed. I woke up to close the sliding door and heard a noise in the bathroom.

I was scared and didn't switch on the light. I got my gun and moved towards the bathroom. I screamed at the intruder because I did not have my legs on I felt vulnerable. I fired shots through the bathroom door and told Reeva to call police.

I walked back to the bed and realised Reeva was not in bed. Its then it dawned on me it could be her in there.

I rushed back into the bedroom and opened the sliding door onto the balcony and screamed for help.

I put on my prosthetic legs, ran back to the bathroom and tried to kick open the toilet door.

I think I must have then turned on the lights.

I went back into my bedroom and grabbed my cricket bat to bash open the toilet door.

I called paramedics and complex security. I tried to carry her down stairs for help.

I tried to help her but she died in my arms. I am mortified.

Pistorius faces his first major court hearing in months on Tuesday. His trial will focus on whether Steenkamp's death was intentional or accidental. Prosecutors believe Steenkamp was in the bathroom because she was hiding from Pistorius after a fight.


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The 11 Drunkest People To Ever Play Sports

An Ode To The Hidden Ball Trick

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Little league tricks should be more common in the big leagues.

One of the rarest things you'll ever see on a baseball diamond isn't a grand slam, an unassisted triple-play or a perfect game. It's a juvenile trick designed to fool and absolutely humiliate your opponent. The hidden ball trick is a lost art, a gimmick rarely utilized beyond Little League. It's a play that's considered uncouth on the major league level, met nearly the same amount of scorn as corking your bat or doctoring the ball.

However, to be frank, this stigma is bullshit. Baseball is a game where paying attention and being aware of situations are paramount. The hidden ball trick is not used because players simply don't wan to be embarrassed by being caught napping. The hidden ball trick should never work. However tell that to controversial manager, and easily fooled base-runner, Ozzie Guillen.


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The 11 Hottest Male Athletes As Ranked By A Straight Man

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And reviewed by a gay man.

All right, I feel like I should set this up by stating that for me, a straight male, Brad Pitt in Fight Club is the epitome of man hotness. Followed closely by Tyrese Gibson and Hugh Jackman — both of whom are living proof that we are not all created equal.

Also, Tom Daley is a child and Ryan Lochte is goofy looking. And that's all I have to say about that. So let's get started. — Logan

David Beckham

David Beckham

Logan: Beckham is so good looking it hurts and he can style his hair in any way imaginable, which makes me very jealous.

Matt: Beckham is the obvious number one male sports hottie. Mostly 'cause he's British. Also 'cause he's an underwear model. And he always wears really tight pants. And he's a dad. So this one's too easy.

Via: Issac Baldizon / Getty Images

Tom Brady

Tom Brady

L: Tom Brady is just a well-put-together man. I'm sure his bathroom is filled with many expensive gels and creams.

M: Tom Brady is a God among men, so this is 1000% accurate. I'm even willing to overlook his sloppy oversized bow-tie because his face is literally the perfect face.

Via: Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images

Matt Kemp

Matt Kemp

L: Kemp's smile makes me smile. He also has really nice skin, and I'm a big fan of his facial hair. He knows what he's doing and I like that.

M: I don't know who this is, but he looks perfectly nice, I guess, and his face is pretty and fuzzy.

Via: Jeff Gross / Getty Images


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24 Sports Fans That Desperately Need A Hug

Professional Soccer Player Forgets How To Soccer

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There are own goals and then there’s whatever the hell this is.

Terrible teams always seem to produce one spectacularly bad play that serves as a microcosm for the season. Chivas USA, in last place in MLS's Western Conference, can claim Mario de Luna's impressively boneheaded own goal as their own epic low-light.

Let's take another look at this. A Seattle Sounders forward makes a seemingly innocuous cross that wasn't within ten yards of a teammate. Thankfully for the Sounders, Mario de Luna decides to test his own goalie with a beautiful header to the back of his own net.


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Cubs Grand Slam Results In Pantslessness And Dancing

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Wrigley Field hosts a bacchanalia.

In the third inning of Friday's Cubs-Diamondbacks game, Scott Hairston went yard for the QUADBOMB, my new nickname for grand slams. The QUADBOMB put Chicago up 6-2 in a game they'd ultimately win 7-2.

In the third inning of Friday's Cubs-Diamondbacks game, Scott Hairston went yard for the QUADBOMB, my new nickname for grand slams. The QUADBOMB put Chicago up 6-2 in a game they'd ultimately win 7-2.

It also resulted in as close to a bacchanalia as you'll get in the bleachers at Wrigley Field. First, half a dozen men go scrambling over each other to get the ball, with one dude's shorts falling below the place his shorts should be.

It also resulted in as close to a bacchanalia as you'll get in the bleachers at Wrigley Field. First, half a dozen men go scrambling over each other to get the ball, with one dude's shorts falling below the place his shorts should be.

And then: these two guys. Look at those moves. It's like if they filmed a biopic on Beyonce in which she was played by a John Travolta on meth. MOVE THOSE HIPS.

And then: these two guys. Look at those moves. It's like if they filmed a biopic on Beyonce in which she was played by a John Travolta on meth. MOVE THOSE HIPS.


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Breaking Down The Greatest Derp Photo On The Internet

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A rich mosaic of people being scared by a foul ball.

One of the greatest photos on the internet is this foul ball hitting the stands during a Red Sox vs. Mariners game last fall.

One of the greatest photos on the internet is this foul ball hitting the stands during a Red Sox vs. Mariners game last fall.

Reddit user Narhen originally submitted it.

Via: reddit.com

Here is a breakdown of why it is so great.

Here is a breakdown of why it is so great.

Middle-aged, scared bros.

Middle-aged, scared bros.

The steely, bearded mountain man who has seen much worse.

The steely, bearded mountain man who has seen much worse.


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Marv Albert, Please Stop Calling Dunks "Facials"

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Also: everyone else should stop doing it too.

In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals on Saturday, Paul George dunked on Chris Bosh. Marv Albert called it a "facial."

Almost every time Kobe Bryant dunks, Marv Albert screams "facial!"

He loves moaning "facial" so much that he often interrupts other commentators to do so.


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The Weirdest Batting Stance You'll Ever See This Week

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Coastal Carolina’s Alex Buccilli is unorthodox, to say the least.

Over the weekend, ESPN aired regional action from college baseball's NCAA tournament. Each year this is usually the first time a national audience gets a glimpse of the college crop, like Coastal Carolina's quirky Alex Buccilli.

The Chanticleers senior outfielder has arguably the most bizarre batting stance you'll ever encounter. Buccilli hit .274 this season and finished tied for third on the team with 27 RBIs, but his inane hitting ritual is what makes him one of the most memorable players of the tournament's opening weekend.


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NBA Fines Breakout Star $75,000 For Saying "No Homo"

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No homo has no home no mo’.

During a press conference following the Pacers' victory over the Heat in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals, Roy Hibbert ended a response to a question about his defense with "no homo."

One of the playoffs' breakout stars, Hibbert was subsequently fined $75,000 for using the gay slur in one answer and the word "motherfuckers" in another. After receiving the fine, he said:

"I am apologizing for insensitive remarks made during the postgame press conference after our victory over Miami Saturday night...They were disrespectful and offensive and not a reflection of my personal views. I used a slang term that is not appropriate in any setting, private or public, and the language I used definitely has no place in a public forum, especially over live television. I apologize to those who I have offended, to our fans and to the Pacers' organization."

Hibbert's misstep is the latest in what's becoming a long line of NBA players using, and then being punished for, slurs like this. In April 2011, Kobe Bryant called a ref a "faggot" and was fined $100,000; a month later, Joakim Noah did the same and was fined $50,000. Hibbert's punishment falls between the two and shows that, in the wake of basketball player Jason Collins becoming the first active professional athlete in any of the major American sports to come out as gay, the NBA continues to have zero patience for any anti-gay language on the part of its players.

15 Of The Most Deformed Fingers In Sports

What Happens If The Heat Lose Tonight?

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The Pacers are poised to shoot a nuclear missile into the alien mothership that is the Miami Heat.

Via: Charles Trainor Jr./Miami Herald/MCT

Let's say that tonight's Eastern Conference Finals Game 7 doesn't end the way that Vegas, basketball experts, and everyone else expects it to. Let's say that LeBron James, the best basketball player in the world, can't overcome the faltering form of supposed Big 3 accomplices Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh and, on the other side of the court, the Pacers' rising triumvirate of Paul George, David West, and Roy Hibbert proves to be enough. Let's say that, even though they're in Miami, the Heat just don't have their act together. Let's say that the Indiana Pacers go to the NBA Finals.

Before anything else, this would mean that the 2012-13 season had transpired in the most unexpected way, with the three most popular pre-season title picks, the Heat, the Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder, missing out on even making the Finals. (Sports!) While the Thunder have Russell Westbrook's injury to blame, the Heat — who went 45-3 over their last 48 games before the Pacers series — will probably half-assedly attribute their failure to Wade and Bosh being hobbled, Birdman missing a game, and, most notably, getting dominated in the paint by Hibbert and West. But this is a team that won 45 of 47 games it played with LeBron before facing the Pacers — it'll be hard to float any narrative to the public that replaces the idea that the Heat just choked.

Let's cut to the offseason. With LeBron, Bosh, and Wade all locked in to another year, it's unlikely that the Heat will have much room to move around personnel-wise. They can try and re-sign Chris Andersen. They can consider amnestying Mike Miller. Otherwise, the top eight guys — the Big 3 plus Udonis Haslem, Mario Chalmers, Ray Allen, Norris Cole, and Shane Battier — should all be back.

When the 2013-14 season begins, the Heat will not be defending a title. You still can't say they're underdogs, but they obviously won't feel as inevitable as they did this year, like their name was already written on the Larry O'Brien Trophy. Meanwhile, LeBron's legacy will have undeniably taken a hit. Even if you'd have to be a Stephen A. Smith-style perpetual-scream-machine to suggest that LeBron would no longer be the greatest player in the universe by a margin of miles, he would have taken a tangible dip in comparison to his closest historical peers, Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan: he'd miss out on a three-peat. Both MJ and Kobe followed up their first championships by winning two more consecutively, and by losing this year, LeBron will have found a milestone that he couldn't match.

All of a sudden, next season will be as important as any's ever been for a franchise. If the Heat miss out on a championship for the second year in a row, they'll be going into an offseason where the Big 3 all have player options they can choose to accept or decline. All of them could walk. LeBron could go to Los Angeles. LeBron could go to Cleveland. LeBron could go to MARS. (The Mars Rovers! David Stern will not be cowed by travel considerations.) Even if all of them don't walk, the Heat won't be able to afford to pay the three of them because of the repeat-offender clause in the luxury tax, meaning that somebody's gone — if Miami has its way, not LeBron. Human sense suggests suggests that a player aiming to defend a three-peat will not run from the opportunity. Miami's best chance of keeping the wandering-eyed King around is be to win this year, then the next.

In the grand scheme of basketball, this season isn't as important as next for the Heat in terms of making LeBron a Miami lifer. But a loss would prove the juggernaut's less juggernaut-y than surmised, and a lot of teams in an increasingly talent-rich league — the Rose-renewed Bulls and ascendant Pacers in the East, the rebuilt Thunder, possibly Dwight Howard-enhanced Rockets, angry Grizzlies, and Stephen Curry's Warriors (at least) in the West — will feel like they've been given a second life. A win by the Pacers tonight will turn the tide of basketball history.

Do Heat Fans Get A Bad Rap, Or Are They Even Worse Than We Think?

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A photographic investigation.

Over the years, Miami Heat fans have certainly received their fair share of criticism — they're front-runners, they don't know the game, they show up too late and leave too early. But have we perhaps been too tough on them? Might there actually be some legit diehards in South Beach? Let's find out by doing an image search for "Miami Heat fan."

Are Heat fans awful phonies who wear the wrong jersey with their "King" costume...

Are Heat fans awful phonies who wear the wrong jersey with their "King" costume...

Via: Sun Sentinel / Getty Images

...or awesome spaced-out clubbers from the future?

...or awesome spaced-out clubbers from the future?

Via: J. Meric / Getty Images

Awful LeBron bandwagoneers...

Awful LeBron bandwagoneers...

Via: Mike Ehrmann / Getty Images


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German U.S. Soccer Coach Defeats Own Homeland In Flagrant Act Of Soccerfreude

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For the USMNT players, a win over Germany’s “B” team was an encouraging next step. For coach Jürgen Klinsmann, it meant a bit more.

Via: Chuck Myers/MCT

The soccer bro behind me in Row 15 just couldn't possibly contain his excitement. On a plane full of quiet, sleep-deprived passengers headed east on a Sunday morning, coach Jürgen Klinsmann and the U.S. Men's National Team had him yipping, clapping, and writhing in his cramped middle seat as the squad outplayed Germany for an impressive 4-3 win. It's the smallest of small sample sizes, but let's concede that this isn't something that might've occurred even a decade ago — be it the match result or the effusive fandom in a random place. As Walter Bahr, who played on the USMNT that memorably defeated England, 1-0, in the 1950 World Cup, told ESPN during the pre-match coverage, "U.S. soccer has made more progress in the last 10 years than the previous 90 years combined."

It's hard to see where he's wrong on that point, as the clear majority of America's best football outings have come in the (not to quibble too much with Bahr's assertion) last 15 years or so. There was Bruce Arena's arrival in 1998 as head coach, which gave the squad a certain measure of swagger and cachet that had clearly been missing in the Steve Sampson era. The highlight was a 2-0 win over Mexico in the 2002 World Cup Round of 16, a result so stunning that it's commonly known only by the match score. (Just say "dos a cero" and fans both north and south of the Rio Grande will know precisely what you're talking about, for better or worse.)

Arena gave way to Bob Bradley in 2006, whose turn culminated with the dramatic win over Algeria in the group stage of the 2010 World Cup. But Bradley's tenure, much like Arena's before his, crumbled under the buildup of unrealized expectations. So when the opportunity to bring in Klinsmann, a World Cup-winner with an elite soccer pedigree as well as a budding eagerness to prove his coaching bona fides, came along in 2011, after the U.S. again failed to gain any prolonged traction on the international stage, the combination proved irresistible.

Via: Matt Sullivan / Getty Images

Klinsmann's run to the 2006 World Cup semifinals as Germany's head coach would be, on its own, a résumé which would eclipse most other international managers. For that reason, the expectations regarding his U.S. gig couldn't have been clearer: There must be clear gains in competition against elite nations, regardless of setting and opposition. It doesn't matter if it's on the friendliest turf imaginable (DC's RFK Stadium) or against a second-tier squad (Germany's "B+" side, in the words of ESPN's Bob Ley). International friendlies, World Cup qualifying, and everything in between is fair game.

So it was yesterday in front of a rabid DC crowd of 47,000-plus that Jozy Altidore played what amounted to the game of his life, giving the U.S. attack space in the German end and getting the team off to an excellent start with his goal in the 13th minute. An own-goal caused by German goalkeeper Marc-André ter Stegen's temporary insanity netted another one three minutes later, and Clint Dempsey's two second-half strikes gave the U.S. all the cushion they'd need, though two late German goals kept tensions high to the end. My flight had deplaned by the time it went final, but the soccer bro was surely making some NYC cabbie's life a loud, rousing hell as he headed wherever he was going.

Technically, the friendly doesn't mean a whole lot, and some can try to downplay its significance once you factor in that Germany wasn't playing its most elite side, but on the day marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of American soccer, in a stadium situated near our nation's capital, it was our German ex-pat coach who guided the U.S. to a needed knockout of his former team. That the result came just a few days after America's listless loss to Belgium was everything Klinsmann could have hoped for. Despite a historic win in Mexico City last year, the "make or break" narrative had already started to creep up, zero World Cups and not two years after his hire.

But the US didn't break yesterday, even under a German onslaught in the waning moments, and Klinsmann, in a most German kind of way, was characteristically unemotional about the significance of beating his home country. He delivered the usual platitudes, but his team's play was anything but boring. The first goal from Altidore, who hadn't scored for the USMNT in 19 months, set the entire tone: aggressive, relentless, confident. It was, at least soccer-wise, un-American in the best possible way.


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Kate Upton's 5-Step Guide To Wearing A Baseball Hat

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Take notice everyone: she’s a professional.

Step 1: Make sure there are cameras watching.

Step 1: Make sure there are cameras watching.

Via: Anthony J. Causi / Splash News

Step 2: Adjust fit to optimal comfort level while maintaining sultry eye contact.

Step 2: Adjust fit to optimal comfort level while maintaining sultry eye contact.

Via: Anthony J. Causi / Splash News

Step 3: Continue adjusting until everyone forgets there's a baseball game.

Step 3: Continue adjusting until everyone forgets there's a baseball game.

Via: Anthony J. Causi / Splash News

Step 4: Stand up and squeal in delight, because you're wearing a hat goddammit.

Step 4: Stand up and squeal in delight, because you're wearing a hat goddammit.

Via: Anthony J. Causi / Splash News


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Justin Bieber Is The King Of Bandwagon Heat Fans

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He’s been a lifelong supporter of Miami’s basketball team since oh, this week.

This was Justin this week.

This was Justin this week.

Via: Joe Skipper / Reuters

And this was Justin three years ago.

And this was Justin three years ago.

Via: Jeff Gross / Getty Images

Very good, Justin.

Very good, Justin.

How To Be A Great Teammate When You're Benched

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Shane Battier gives that loving Extra Effort.

Aside from the star trio of LeBron James, Chris Bosh, and Dwyane Wade, Shane Battier's defense and corner 3s have been as essential to the Miami Heat's dominance as anyone else.

Aside from the star trio of LeBron James, Chris Bosh, and Dwyane Wade, Shane Battier's defense and corner 3s have been as essential to the Miami Heat's dominance as anyone else.

Via: David Santiago/El Nuevo Herald/MCT

But a weird thing happened during the Eastern Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers: Battier was overwhelmed by the Pacers' huge lineups. To the point that, last night, this happened:

But a weird thing happened during the Eastern Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers: Battier was overwhelmed by the Pacers' huge lineups. To the point that, last night, this happened:

That's right: after six games in which he shot 12.5% and averaged 2.8 points, Battier got a DNP-CD in Game 7. :(

That's right: after six games in which he shot 12.5% and averaged 2.8 points, Battier got a DNP-CD in Game 7. :(

But Battier's a team player — also, old and therefore less surprised by these sorts of things — and he figured out a new way to contribute if he couldn't be playing.

Source: youtube.com


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Dog, Family Of Ducks Traipse Through Ongoing Sporting Events

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Indy cars make way for ducklings.

It wasn't quite "rogue squirrel getting adopted as unofficial World Series mascot," but the past few days have seen some strong work in the field of animals landing hilariously in the middle of human competitions.

Friday, a mother duck and her five babies somehow found their way onto the track during a practice session for an IndyCar race in Detroit.

The session was halted and crew members herded the family to safety.


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