Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed - Sports
Viewing all 6716 articles
Browse latest View live

Jason Kidd And The Hyperactive "Splash" Approach To Sports Management

$
0
0

Why hiring Jason Kidd as coach fits into Mikhail Prokhorov’s strategy of continuously making the biggest splash possible.

Via: Bebeto Matthews / AP

When the Brooklyn Nets signed Jason Kidd to be their new head coach, it looked like they took a risk. Kidd was playing professional basketball — albeit very badly — only weeks ago; he has as much (formal) coaching experience at 40 as he did when he was born. He's long been regarded as one of the league's most intelligent players, and, as a career point guard, he's always been at least to some extent involved with orchestrating a team, but that's not the same as coaching, which involves politics and ego-managing in addition to the old basketball strategery. Mark Jackson proved last year that basketball knowledge might be the least important part if you surround yourself with the right assistants; I'm not entirely sure Mark Jackson knows that you're allowed to design a gameplan, and the Warriors still won a playoff series.

And yet: this only focuses on a minor part of the situation. Of course the Nets would prefer that Jason Kidd turns out to be a good coach, and that he keeps their on-court product from resembling the tepid, sticky mess that was Brooklyn basketball in 2012-13. (Devin Khapertian elaborates a little more on this for his great Nets site The Brooklyn Game.) But for a franchise still trying to justify why anyone should care about them, owned by a mogul who craves pomp and extravagance, Kidd is the sexy hire, the big name, and he's consistent with the tactics the Nets have used throughout their first year of existence: Shock and Awe.

When the Nets announced their move to Brooklyn, they used Jay-Z, one of the borough's ambassadors, to give them glamour. They built a brand new stadium in a hub of downtown Brooklyn, a stadium that looks like it could come alive at any moment and start destroying major American landmarks. And they got Joe Johnson and Gerald Wallace more for their names than their potential to take the Nets to a championship. Those players will constrain the team's payroll for years and hamstring their ability to actually accrue the assets or the infrastructure to win; they prevented themselves from following either blueprint that winning NBA teams have developed in the last few years, which are on the one hand gathering a trio of max-contract superstars (the Heat, the Thunder), or on the other creating an almost baseball-like developmental system that results in a cohesive crew of homegrown talent (the Spurs, the Pacers.)

All of this happened for short-term reasons. The Nets seem to care less about winning a championship than creating a product that sells, and the way to do that is with immediate, splashy maneuvering. Kidd fits that bill, just like Joe Johnson did before him, just like Jay-Z did before him, just like the stadium did before him. With Kidd on the bench, Prokhorov creates an artificial reason to watch and follow the team even if they turn out to once again be mediocre; if the experiment fails, they'll ship him out of town and start again. This kind of inattention to long-term development is usually a bad strategy, but you can kind see what Prokhorov might be thinking if you squint: better to take big swings and bring in new fans and keep the new arena three-quarters full — on the expectation that one of those swings will eventually land — than to bottom out in a traditional "rebuilding" and leave the arena empty of fans and bereft of big names.

If Kidd bombs as a coach, the Nets are no worse off than they already are, no farther from being a franchise that anyone cares about, and they will have at least had eyeballs on them while they struggled. If he succeeds, then the franchise has its first killer app, and he's 100% Brooklyn Nets, connecting them back to New Jersey, where Kidd was the team's most famous player besides Dr. J. That's what Prokhorov wants, and that's why the Shock and Awe system is in place. If he can't win immediately, he at least wants people to watch him lose.


The Original WWE Superstar Finally Comes Home

$
0
0

Bruno Sammartino played a sold-out Madison Square Garden practically as many times as the Knicks. But for decades, the Old-World Italian and the ever-edgier WWE wanted nothing to do with each other. Here’s what happened the night they made up.

Bruno Sammartino at home in his North Hills, Pennsylvania.

Via: Andrew Russell / AP

Once upon a time, Bruno Sammartino was a hirsute, Atlas-sculpted ex-bodybuilder who wrestled 13 out of every 14 days in front of adoring crowds all over the globe. He fought an orangutan and won; he set a world record in the bench press; he received a private audience with the Pope. He became wrestling "champion" of the world during John F. Kennedy's only term and didn't lose the title for good until a few months after Jimmy Carter was sworn in, holding the honor of being the industry's most popular draw for somewhere near 4,000 days.

Today, he sits in the lobby of the Westin in Jersey City, wondering if wrestling fans still know who he is. He keeps reminding one of his sons that they're on a tight schedule, and that he still needs to shave his head for the fully bald look. Most of his hair is already gone, and what's left is flecked with gray. His body shows the damage of a work-intensive career and multiple spinal surgeries. There are large indentations in his elongated, mammoth hands, and he'll ask me to speak up when we first sit down because his ears are nearly swollen over with scar tissue.

But he's in good enough shape to exercise regularly, and has lots of thoughts about how the world he once dominated has changed — and how he will be received during a ceremony at Madison Square Garden that's partially being held in his name. The day before WrestleMania 29, which will take place at the Meadowlands, World Wrestling Entertainment's flagship event, Bruno is being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, a relatively new internet-only institution which exists to fête wrestlers for their part in a sport that isn't always on good terms with its own past. Bruno played a sold-out Garden a record 187 times during his heyday, but he's worried that at WrestleMania 29 there might not even be 187 people in the building who saw him wrestle, even on television.

"I don't know what to expect tonight because these are younger people," he wonders in a gentle Italian accent. "They weren't around for my career. They heard of me, of course, because today with the internet and all this stuff, they know who you are. But I don't know that I can expect what I used to get there because in those days, every time I stepped up in the ring, people would start screaming my name — 'Bruno, Bruno' — and the whole 20,000 people or whatever.

"Somebody said to me, 'Tonight you're going to hear that.' I said, 'I don't know!' I don't know what to expect tonight."

Via: Focus on Sport / Getty Images

In a fair world Sammartino would've been honored in 1993, when the WWE Hall of Fame officially opened with just one inductee, Andre the Giant. He certainly should've been honored 11 years later, when the Hall idea was revived and began inducting an ever-widening stream of retired stars. But Sammartino was on the outs with WWE chairman and godfather Vince McMahon over the increasingly lurid direction of the organization — remember when "Suck it!" was a cultural slogan? — and uncontrolled usage of performance-enhancing drugs, which had come to light soon after his retirement.

It was actually Vince McMahon's father (Vince McMahon Sr.) who'd recruited Sammartino into what was then the World Wide Wrestling Federation in the early 1960s. Born in Abruzzi, Italy, in 1935, Sammartino had emigrated to Pittsburgh with his family fifteen years later, trained as a vaudeville "strongman," and gotten got in the ring for a local promoter who thought he might make an appealing folk hero to Italian wrestling fans. It was an astute observation: Bruno rose to the height of popularity within just a few years, wrestling all over the country. McMahon Sr. promised him the championship belt for his participation with the WWWF, which he earned ("earned") by beating Buddy Rogers on May 17, 1963. That was the start of the aforementioned title run, which saw him grapple with greats like Killer Kowalski and George "The Animal" Steele. He'd wrestle for up to an hour at a time before eventually putting his foe away with his famous finishing move: the bear hug. He didn't lose the belt until nearly eight years later in front of a stunned crowd at Madison Square Garden, but then gained it back and held it for another four years.

As injuries piled up, Sammartino tried to retire from American wrestling in 1981, though he was constantly prodded back into the ring every now and then over the next few years. But his distance from the league began to grow as stars as big as Hulk Hogan admitted to boosting their superhuman physiques with steroids and the league was investigated by the FBI for promoting a pro-steroid environment. Sammartino saw himself as wrestling's public conscience, splintering his relationship with the company where he'd reigned for so long. He took any opportunity to badger McMahon. When a WWE employee named Terry Garvin was accused of carrying multiple inappropriate affairs with younger employees, Sammartino appeared on Larry King Live with McMahon and Barry Orton, one of the wrestlers who claimed he'd been molested, and what transpired was a famously tense exchange. Sadly, all versions of it have been taken off YouTube, but it involved McMahon seeking to undermine Sammartino's credibility by implicitly suggesting he was going a little senile. Sammartino popped up over the years in similar settings — here's a clip from Live With Dan Abrams following the murder-suicide of Chris Benoit — and in acting as such a willing Cassandra of doom and gloom in the state of wrestling, excluded himself from the version of wrestling history the WWE had begun to curate.

"They were all resentful of me because I was very outspoken about those issues and of course they didn't like it," he says. "Yes, there was much resentment. But I resented them as well because to bring wrestling down, to bring this kind of damage to the business I'd spent 25 years — I was very outspoken about it because I was hoping maybe somebody would listen and something would be done to stop it, because guys were dying from drugs and steroids.

"And so I didn't care who liked it or who didn't like it — I was doing it because of the love I had for the business when I was in it, and I wanted it to stop and change direction. I was outspoken about it for a couple of years. When I saw that nothing happened I said, 'Well I gave it my best shot and now it's time for me to go on with the rest of my life.' And that was it."

Flash forward to 2013 and a different WWE, unafraid to suspend its biggest stars for violating the drug policy, one that has toned down the ribald humor and blood splatter that drove the company's popularity in Bruno's absence. They're downright family friendly — in Wrestlemania's media room, we'll be handed flyers announcing a new partnership with the Special Olympics. Some of the change has to do with the (failed) Senate campaigns of Linda McMahon, matriarch of the McMahon family and the company's former CEO, who pushed a PG direction so that political opponents wouldn't connect her to the WWE's juvenile material. (They did it anyways.) Some of it happened because the WWE could no longer be lax toward drugs after years of deaths — out of good taste, yes, but probably also out of a desire to avoid lawsuits and federal investigation.

Whatever the cause, it was enough of an improvement that Bruno agreed to come back into the fold after being approached about a year ago by Paul "Triple H" Levesque, a star of the '90s who married into the McMahon family and is now an executive within the front office. "It feels fine because I'm coming in the proper condition," Bruno says. "I would not go into the Hall of Fame unless they cleaned all these things out." He watched wrestling programs for a few months until he was satisfied that his long-standing problems had been resolved, and planned his return with perfectly poetic timing: The 50th anniversary of capturing the World Wide Wrestling Federation title for the first time at Madison Square Garden.


View Entire List ›

The 11 Kinds Of People You'll Meet At Every Golf Tournament

$
0
0

The overserved Hawaiian shirt guy, the hilarious foreigner, and more.

Should you be lucky enough to find yourself on the grounds at this year's U.S. Open, or any golf tournament, here what you're guaranteed to see, if our hundreds of hours of people-watching experience at major golf tournaments are any indication.

The Excitable Dad

The Excitable Dad

He works 9 to 5 in a middle management job, takes out the garbage every night without fail, and drives a Kia Sorrento. Life isn't too shabby for the Excitable Dad, but he craves more. He probably scored some tickets to the tournament this weekend for Father's Day and he's JACKED UP about it. Give him two Michelob Ultras and a $38 dollar souvenir hat and watch the magic unfold.

Via: youtube.com

Source: golfweek.media.clients.ellingtoncms.com


View Entire List ›

What's So Great About Golf? For Many People The Answer Is "Dad."

$
0
0

At the U.S. Open at Merion Golf Club outside of Philadelphia, I asked 35 spectators who originally got them interested in the game.

"Dad."

"Dad."

"Joined women's league. Thorndale, PA."

"Alex Meister," his friend.


View Entire List ›

Boston Tied Up The Stanley Cup Finals With This Wicked Overtime Wrist Shot

$
0
0

Five more games like this, please.

Early on in Game 2, it looked like more of the same from Game 1. Boston's Tuukka Rask certainly came to play.

Early on in Game 2, it looked like more of the same from Game 1 . Boston's Tuukka Rask certainly came to play.

As did his counterpart, Chicago's Corey Crawford.

As did his counterpart, Chicago's Corey Crawford.

A crazy, sharp-angled goal from Patrick Sharp put the Blackhawks up 1-0 in the first, and it seemed that Chicago's sustained pressure would make this one a laugher before long.

A crazy, sharp-angled goal from Patrick Sharp put the Blackhawks up 1-0 in the first, and it seemed that Chicago's sustained pressure would make this one a laugher before long.

But despite 14 more scoring chances, the Blackhawks only led by one.

But despite 14 more scoring chances, the Blackhawks only led by one.


View Entire List ›

The Most Epic Dad-Style Golf Celebration From Father's Day

$
0
0

Phil Mickelson may have lost the U.S. Open, but he’s still America’s dad.

This past weekend Merion Golf Club took turns kicking the asses of every player in the field of the 113th U.S. Open. Justin Rose won the endurance test, however the shot of the tournament belonged to Phil Mickelson who holed an incredible 75-yard shot from the 10th rough.

Via: Andrew Redington / Getty Images

Mickelson's eagle gave him a momentary one-shot lead over eventual champion Justin Rose, and made dads everywhere gleefully jump off their couches.


View Entire List ›

Even By Hole-In-One Standards, This Is Really Lucky

$
0
0

Usually hole-in-ones are at least hit toward the hole on purpose. This was not on purpose.

Thanks to a little luck and a long roll, Shawn Stefani was able to capture the only hole-in-one in the five U.S. Opens that have been played at Merion Golf Club. The 31-year-old Texas native made golfing history when his tee shot rolled right out of the rough and into the cup for an unlikely ace on the 17th hole.

As you can see, Stefani's tee shot completely missed the green.

But then the ball rolled an estimated 50 feet before settling right into the cup.


View Entire List ›

Behold The Most Pathetic Play Of The 2013 Baseball Season

$
0
0

The New York Mets infield does an excellent impression of a Little League team.

During the 5th inning of yesterday afternoon's game between the Chicago Cubs and New York Mets the professional baseball players in the Metropolitans infield treated sports fans to the most inept defensive play so far this season.

Via: Jason Szenes / Getty Images

The comedy of errors starts off with two-time Gold Glove-winner David Wright making a nice diving stop on a grounder by Alfonso Soriano and proceeding to airmail the throw well over the head of first baseman Daniel Murphy.


View Entire List ›


College World Series Makes Ironic Spelling Mistake

$
0
0

So close, NCAA. So close.

Quick! How do you spell "college"? If you said, "With three consecutive L's," congratulations, you can work for the NCAA helping out America's scholar-athletes.

That's right, the word "college" was spelled with an extra "L" on the third base dugout during the opening round of the College World Series between Mississippi State and Oregon State. Not surprisingly, this blunder was quickly noticed by fans, who were all, "LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL," and "Nice job, NCAA," but, like, in a really sarcastic tone because it was not a nice job.

Check out the misprint below:

Source: @howielindsey

Source: @howielindsey


View Entire List ›

Lean Mean Danny Green Breaks Sharpshooting Record, Makes Ray Allen Cry

$
0
0

Green broke the record for the most three-pointers in a Finals through only five games. And the guy whose record he broke was sitting right there, being all pouty.

Spurs guard Danny Green has been phenomenal this Finals. He's shooting 25-38, or an insane 65.8%, from three — a 20% higher rate than what even the best shooters usually do. And last night, he made history.

Spurs guard Danny Green has been phenomenal this Finals. He's shooting 25-38, or an insane 65.8%, from three — a 20% higher rate than what even the best shooters usually do. And last night, he made history.

That shot, above, tied Ray Allen's record for most threes in a single NBA Finals. And this, below, broke the record. Green still has one or two games to pad that number, too.

That shot, above, tied Ray Allen's record for most threes in a single NBA Finals. And this, below, broke the record. Green still has one or two games to pad that number, too.

Making things even more interesting: Allen, who plays for the Heat, was on the bench when Green broke his record. And here's how he reacted.

Making things even more interesting: Allen, who plays for the Heat, was on the bench when Green broke his record. And here's how he reacted.

That's not the only thing interesting that happened to Green, either. After halftime, he ran into the tunnel and encountered... this guy. Apparently, it's Tim Duncan's son.

That's not the only thing interesting that happened to Green, either. After halftime, he ran into the tunnel and encountered... this guy. Apparently, it's Tim Duncan's son.


View Entire List ›

Thousands Of USA Soccer Fans Channel Wu-Tang Clan's "Bring The Ruckus"

$
0
0

The unlikely combo resulted in pure awesomeness.

The enthusiastic crowd at the USA men's national team victory over Panama in Seattle has been praised as one of the most impressive and rowdy in US soccer history.

The team's superb performance on the pitch grabbed the headlines, but the real highlight happened in the stands. Thankfully ESPN's microphones picked up the crowd's chant in all its glory.

Source: youtube.com


View Entire List ›

Jack Edwards Is America's Best And Most Insane Sports Broadcaster

$
0
0

Interviewing the Bruins superfan and proud son of a drama professor about his bombastic and sometimes-controversial calls .

Via: NESN / YouTube

Jack Edwards, America's most pleasantly maniacal play-by-play announcer, is a good neighbor. Introducing himself to a family that recently moved in next door, he suggested they buy earplugs, since the NHL playoffs were about to begin. Everybody laughed. But Edwards, whose employer, New England Sports Network, stops airing Bruins games after the first round of the playoffs, was serious. "When there's a big Bruins goal, people think something's going on," he said. "Like there's a murder happening or something."

That Edwards emits terrifying noises during games he's not even calling shouldn't surprise hockey fans. As the local television voice of the Boston Bruins, he's become known nationally for his profoundly theatrical on-air persona. Each emotional burst seemingly tops the last.

For example: on Friday, two days after Bruin Gregory Campbell played a shift with a broken leg in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals, Edwards took to the airwaves and, in a four-minute soliloquy delivered on Boston sports radio station WEEI, compared the injured center to both the Allied forces on D-Day and Richard Donahue, the Boston transit officer shot during the manhunt for the Marathon bombing suspects.

Sports Illustrated then ran an item called "Jacked Up," in which Richard Deitsch analyzed a few of Edwards' most hyperbolic calls. One that made the list was from the 2002 World Cup. After the United States beat Portugal in the group stage, Edwards, who at the time was at ESPN, recited the opening line of the Battle Hymn of the Republic.


View Entire List ›

Should We Feel Bad For Second-Place Finishers?

$
0
0

Phil Mickelson came in second at the U.S. Open for the sixth time on Sunday. But does that mean we should pity him?

Phil Mickelson heartbroken by 6th runner-up finish at U.S. Open. Phil Mickelson hits more U.S. Open heartbreak. Phil Mickelson, Champion Sad Sack. Rose wins U.S. Open; more heartbreak for Mickelson. Phil Mickelson's bridesmaid heartbreak continues as Justin Rose wins U.S. Open. Heartbreak kid.

These are all headlines describing Phil Mickelson's second-place finish at the 2013 U.S. Open, and they uniformly tell of failure, disappointment, and, most frequently, heartbreak as the results of Mickelson's weekend. For the sixth time in his career, Mickelson came within one spot of winning the U.S. Open. "Every time I think of the U.S. Open, I think of heartbreak," Phil says himself. We, viewers and readers of headlines, are presumed to feel sorry for Mickelson, or, if not, at least recognize why someone night.

Let's go over some other relevant information about Phil Mickelson the athlete:

1) Phil Mickelson is the second-most famous golfer of the Tiger Woods era, trailing, of course, Tiger Woods, and he's one of only two players other than Tiger — the other being Ernie Els — to win four majors since 1990. This is not a guy who's never had his big moment.
2) Phil Mickelson has won 41 tournaments in his career, for a total earnings of $70,366,578.
3) From June 2011 to June 2012, Phil Mickelson earned $43 million in endorsements.

Aside from being rich beyond plausibility and having succeeded in his sport to an extent greater than all but one or two other humans during the time that he played it, Mickelson has — no, that pretty much covers it. Mickelson is successful. He hasn't won the U.S. Open, sure; he also hasn't won the British Open, where he came in second in 2011. But Mickelson is still an all-time great.

Unlike other careers, though — say, banking, or police work, or flying planes filled with people all dependent on you not crashing that plane — most sports have rings which, if not grabbed by an athlete, can always be used to shame or belittle him or her. In team sports, that's the championship and/or the MVP. In individual sports, like tennis and golf, it's each major. Athletes are expected to collect all the rings; if they don't, it's a failure or "heartbreak" just like Phil's. The second-best airline pilot or police detective in America probably doesn't feel like a heartbroken failure.

Part of the issue for Phil is that he has made the U.S. Open into his own white whale, and when he loses there, he tends to do so spectacularly, i.e. Sunday, when he missed a short putt on 16 for a crucial birdie, and in 2006 at Winged Foot, when, with a chance to become one of only three players to ever win three consecutive majors, he double bogeyed 18. When the athlete feeds the beast himself, all the better.

But I don't feel bad for Mickelson, and neither should you. Coming in second at the U.S. Open is not a failure; it's a success that falls slightly lower on the sliding scale of golfing achievement than winning the tournament would have. Success comes in gradients, and Phil Mickelson has routinely existed in the topmost gradient, if not at the very apex, of his sport. The chronic need to heap heartbreak and pity onto what is a wildly impressive accomplishment — six times, Mickelson has come in second! — is both a failure and a success of imagination. It's a failure in that it's missing the forest for the trees. It's a success in that it allows the rest of us, who are probably not the second- or thousandth-best at what we do, to relate to a world-class athlete who is often the best at his job.

Phil Mickelson has one of the most intriguing and accomplished careers of any athlete of the last few decades, and the six U.S. Open second-place finishes are a large part of that. It'll be thrilling when and if he wins one. But we needn't cry ourselves to sleep until that day comes.

What To Expect When You're Expecting Your Locker Room To Regularly Overflow With Raw Sewage

$
0
0

In Oakland, this is an issue.

The Oakland County Coliseum is the home of the Oakland Athletics and Raiders. The outdated and overused multi-purpose stadium is the fourth oldest in both the MLB and NFL.

Via: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images

During this past weekend's series between the Mariners and Athletics raw sewage flooded both locker rooms, forcing the teams to share the Oakland Raiders facility on the floor above them.

Via: Michael Zagaris/SI


View Entire List ›

Boston Clips Chicago To Take Command Of Stanley Cup Finals

$
0
0

The Blackhawks’ offense takes a night off, and the Bruins pull ahead with ease.

Entering the always critical Game 3, the double rainbow right outside the TD Garden was as positive a sign as you could have for the hometown Bruins.

Entering the always critical Game 3, the double rainbow right outside the TD Garden was as positive a sign as you could have for the hometown Bruins.

In fact, the worst thing to happen to Boston all night was captain Zdeno Chara taking a tumble during the pregame skate. He needed a few stitches, but he was good to go by game time.

In fact, the worst thing to happen to Boston all night was captain Zdeno Chara taking a tumble during the pregame skate. He needed a few stitches, but he was good to go by game time.

At first, it seemed like the offense might never get on track against Chicago netminder Corey Crawford.

At first, it seemed like the offense might never get on track against Chicago netminder Corey Crawford.

But then Daniel Paille put the B's up 1-0 a couple of minutes into the second period.

But then Daniel Paille put the B's up 1-0 a couple of minutes into the second period.


View Entire List ›


Mexican-American Pitcher's New Ice Cream: "It Only Tastes Illegal"

$
0
0

Sergio Romo, who brought attention to immigration attitudes during the San Francisco Giants’ championship parade, comes up with a sinful follow-up.

Sergio Romo is the closer for the San Francisco Giants — a fiery guy, who wears his heart on his sleeve.

Sergio Romo is the closer for the San Francisco Giants — a fiery guy, who wears his heart on his sleeve.

Via: AP

He received a lot of attention for wearing an "I just look illegal," T-shirt during the team's championship parade last year as commentary on the hot topic of immigration.

He received a lot of attention for wearing an "I just look illegal," T-shirt during the team's championship parade last year as commentary on the hot topic of immigration.

Romo, whose father is the son of Mexican migrant farmworkers, was raised in the border town of Brawley, Calif.

Via: Getty Images

Now he's teamed up with Three Twins Ice Cream for Sergio Romo's Mexican Chocolate: "It only tastes illegal."

Now he's teamed up with Three Twins Ice Cream for Sergio Romo's Mexican Chocolate: "It only tastes illegal."

Via: threetwinsicecream.com


View Entire List ›

Three Very Sound Reasons To Eliminate College Sports (And Perhaps All Sports)

$
0
0

This is all just stuff that came to light in one day .

Here are three current stories from the world of college football:

One of the Louisville football program's "core values" is "NO GUNS," as per a sign in its locker room.

One of the Louisville football program's "core values" is "NO GUNS," as per a sign in its locker room.

No guns!

(Apparently Ohio State has a similar sign. Louisville coach Charlie Strong and OSU coach Urban Meyer used to work together at the University of Florida.)

Via: @georgewhitfield

A top football prospect told a reporter he committed to South Carolina because it would be so hard to fail out.

A top football prospect told a reporter he committed to South Carolina because it would be so hard to fail out.

"The academic part, it's like you almost have to try to fail," he said.

Via: Streeter Lecka / Getty Images

Alabama is installing a waterfall in its locker room.

Alabama is installing a waterfall in its locker room.

That's according to a tweet by a recruit which was seemingly confirmed by a Crimson Tide beat writer.


View Entire List ›

Philanthropic NFL Player Battling Lou Gehrig's Disease Mocked By Now-Fired Radio Hosts

$
0
0

This is so appalling it’s practically unbelievable. The upside is that it will bring more attention to a truly impressive guy.

From 2000–2006, Steve Gleason played defensive back for the New Orleans Saints.

From 2000–2006, Steve Gleason played defensive back for the New Orleans Saints.

Via: Tom Berg/NFLPhotoLibrary / Getty Images

Gleason mostly made his career as a reserve safety and special teamer, and there's a statue outside the New Orleans Superdome commemorating a punt he blocked during the first Superdome game following Hurricane Katrina.

Gleason mostly made his career as a reserve safety and special teamer, and there's a statue outside the New Orleans Superdome commemorating a punt he blocked during the first Superdome game following Hurricane Katrina.

Via: Gerald Herbert / AP

In 2011, Gleason announced he'd been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig's disease. Since then, he's been active in the New Orleans community as an advocate for ALS sufferers. He has lost nearly all of his motor functions.

In 2011, Gleason announced he'd been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig's disease. Since then, he's been active in the New Orleans community as an advocate for ALS sufferers. He has lost nearly all of his motor functions.

Via: Gerald Herbert, File / AP

That's the setup. This is the story: Because of his disease — a diagnosis of ALS usually results in death after three to five years — Gleason communicates via a computer that he controls by blinking. And he wrote an essay about his disease and his family via the same means, which Sports Illustrated's Peter King ran as his column this week. It's emotionally touching, and it's intellectually impressive in its analysis of what science can and can't offer us as people. It's worth reading in full.

A few radio hosts in Atlanta — Steak Shapiro, Nick Cellini, and Chris Dimino — decided that this was grounds for humor. They were wrong, of course, but that didn't stop them from launching into one of the most ill-advised, obscene, and, frankly, deranged segments likely to ever happen on live radio. Listening, it's hard to believe that what you're hearing actually happened; even the hosts sound like they're being tortured, and yet they plow on.

You can listen here if you'd like, but you shouldn't; it's not worth it. Instead, I'll give you a quick rundown of what happened.

During Monday's "Mayhem in the A.M." on 790 The Zone, the hosts pretended they had Steve Gleason on the phone. Instead, it was a robot voice, which told knock-knock "jokes" that were actually just perverse excuses to reference death. The robot voice says, "I wish I could play," "I may not be here on Thursday," "I'm going to hell," and asks the hosts to, "Smother me ... do me a favor." Throughout, strained silence punctuates forced responses; it sounds like the men were being forced at gunpoint to do the segment. Which, of course, they were not.

All three hosts have since been fired, with a complete and total disavowal by 790 The Zone. They're gone, but Steve Gleason remains, as does his Team Gleason effort to raise money for ALS. Visit their website here. And do read what Gleason wrote.


View Entire List ›

Never Get In The Way Of A Little Girl And Her Foul Ball

$
0
0

Or at least be prepared to suffer the consequences.

As a kid, getting a foul ball at a baseball game is basically the American dream. Aside from eating ice cream out of a tiny helmet, it's the main reason kids enjoy going to the ballpark. It's a moment you cherish and a priceless souvenir you'll hold on to for about three days.

Via: Mike McGinnis / Getty Images

During last night's College World Series game between Mississippi State and Indiana University, a foul ball was tossed into the right field stands. This prompted one determined little girl to use any means necessary to acquire the ultimate prize.

"Oh, wow, a foul ball! Can I see it? Let me see it! GIVE IT TO ME! NOW!"

"Oh, wow, a foul ball! Can I see it? Let me see it! GIVE IT TO ME! NOW!"


View Entire List ›

What Nate Silver's NHL Would Look Like

$
0
0

Visualizing the Times analyst’s recommendations about realigning the league to put more teams where hockey fans live.

Via: Bruce Bennett, David E. Klutho (Silver — Sports Illustrated) / Getty Images

Nate Silver of the New York Times wrote a great piece about hockey recently that starts with the question of why Canadian NHL teams haven't won the Stanley Cup in the last two decades. One reason is simply that there aren't that many Canadian teams anymore, with various franchises having relocated from the Great White North to the southern and western United States. Silver, by estimating the approximate number of hockey fans in various markets, makes a strong case that the NHL would be better off financially to abandon its American expansion and return to being a more strongly Canadian league. Below is a visualization of his recommendations.

(Silver didn't specifically recommend that the Coyotes move to Seattle, the Ducks to Hamilton, etc., just that the former set of teams be eliminated and the latter created. We added the lines to help emphasize the northward shift he recommends.)

Via: John Gara/Buzzfeed

There's a lot more interesting stuff in the article; read it here.


View Entire List ›

Viewing all 6716 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images