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

23 Incredible, Grueling Images From An Ultramarathon Through Death Valley

$
0
0

A nonstop race through Death Valley on foot in the summer — there’s nothing mankind has devised that eclipses the theater of the annual Badwater Ultramarathon . A vast array of competitors try their best — even a 50-year-old double amputee — and not everyone makes it to the finish line. Because if they did, race organizers would have to find a way to make Badwater even harder .

96 competitors gather at the starting line on Monday morning.

Via: David McNew / Getty Images

It typically takes just over 24 hours to win the race.

Via: David McNew / Getty Images

Aside from the extreme heat, dust and strong winds are a common obstacle.

Via: David McNew / Getty Images

Scotland's Chris Moon lost an arm and a leg while clearing mines in Mozambique in 1995, and this was his fifth time running Badwater. The 50-year-old's previous-best finish was last year's 41 hours, 50 minutes. He finished in 45 hours, four minutes this time around.

Via: David McNew / Getty Images


View Entire List ›


Twitter Loses Its Damn Mind After Marc Anthony Sings "God Bless America" For MLB All-Star Game

$
0
0

Here is a Marc Anthony explainer for those who are confused.

First, a primer. This is Marc Anthony. You may know him because of his high-profile marriage to Jennifer Lopez, which ended in 2011. He's a New Yorker, born and raised.

First, a primer. This is Marc Anthony. You may know him because of his high-profile marriage to Jennifer Lopez, which ended in 2011. He's a New Yorker, born and raised.

He first performed at Madison Square Garden in '92. He is the top-selling salsa singer in history but also had English-language crossover success, peaking at No. 8 on the Billboard 200 charts and being a part of Total Request Live's "Top 99 of 1999" show.

He first performed at Madison Square Garden in '92. He is the top-selling salsa singer in history but also had English-language crossover success, peaking at No. 8 on the Billboard 200 charts and being a part of Total Request Live 's "Top 99 of 1999" show.

Carson Daly, who hosted Total Request Live.

Via: Mitchell Layton / Getty Images


View Entire List ›

Golfer Causes $80,000 Worth Of Damage With One Swing

$
0
0

Whoops.

The British Open began this morning at 1:32 a.m. EST at Muirfield in Scotland. The Open — as it's simply referred to across the pond — tests players' patience as they face super firm greens, pot bunkers, strong wind gusts and knee-high fescue.

Via: David Cannon / Getty Images

Open courses are known for being very unforgiving if you fail to keep the ball in the fairway. Danish golfer Thomas Bjorn — and ESPN's camera crew — found this out firsthand this morning.

Via: Ross Kinnaird / Getty Images


View Entire List ›

Basketball Player Falls Victim To Exploding Shorts

$
0
0

James Bond called; he wants his shorts back.

During Wednesday's Summer League game against the New Orleans Pelicans, Nuggets guard Jordan Hamilton went for a drive to the hoop and had a rather unusual accident: his shorts came off.

Did someone pull them down?

Nope.


View Entire List ›

ESPN Has Mastered The Art Of Making Grown Men Cry

$
0
0

The World Wide Leader is cutting onions every time you turn on the TV.

No one cares about the ESPY Awards. It's that simple. Fans don't care about who wins Best Team or Greatest College Athlete Twitter Controversy. People watch for two reasons: 1) it's the only thing on TV and 2) the emotional segments that leave men weeping on the living room couch. Over the course of the past month or so ESPN has demonstrated an acute awareness of how well they can tug on heartstrings, but last night was their tour de force. The following three segments are the reason the ESPYs exist, and each is equally wonderful. Please do yourself a favor and watch them all.

Best Moment — Jack Hoffman

Best Moment — Jack Hoffman

Why you're not looking anyone in the eye: Jack Hoffman is a 7-year-old Nebraska fan with brain cancer. During the Cornhuskers' most recent spring game Hoffman suited up with the team and ran for a 69-yard touchdown run, which brought the crowd to its feet and will bring tears to all parts of your face.

Via: Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images

Source: youtube.com

Arthur Ashe Award for Courage — Robin Roberts

Arthur Ashe Award for Courage — Robin Roberts

Why you're going to need a tissue: You all know Robin Roberts as the affable and incredibly humane Good Morning America host. You remember her days at ESPN. You remember when she got sick. You remember when she got better. Now, listen to her whole incredibly touching story.

Via: John Shearer / AP


View Entire List ›

Metta World Peace, The Internet's Most Beloved Bully

$
0
0

Villains become heroes when they can amuse you in 140 characters.

Via: Don Ryan / AP

Metta World Peace, the former Ron Artest, is joining the New York Knicks, and Knicks fans have reacted with widespread excitement to his arrival. More broadly, there is a general sense of anticipation around the idea of one of the NBA's oddest characters joining one of its most soap-operatic teams. World Peace became infamous for running into the stands during a 2004 game at Detroit's Palace Of Auburn Hills to attack a fan who he thought had thrown a beer at him (he had the wrong guy, it turned out), but today he is treated as a kind of harmless, soulful goof. If there's one word that would describe his reputation these days, it's "zany." Or, as this piece put it, "wacky." At worst, he's tough:

Whither his reputation as a menace? It's disappeared under a pile of zany, wacky tweets and videos. World Peace has rehabilitated himself with social media. His stream-of-consciousness account has 735,000 followers and is a staple of best-of-Twitter compilations.


View Entire List ›

These Ruffians Wrote The First Rules Of Baseball

$
0
0

The New York Knickerbockers of the 1840s played the style of baseball that would later become the “preferred style of professional baseball.”

New York Knickerbockers base ball club, circa 1847.

New York Knickerbockers base ball club, circa 1847.

Via: 19cbaseball.com

Via 19cbaseball.com:

"The Knickerbocker Club was formed by members of the Gotham Base Ball Club, which became the first organized club in NY in 1837. Although the Knickerbockers existed in 1842, the Knickerbocker Club officially formed on September 23, 1845. The rules they recorded that day and were most likely used for a number of years prior became the foundation for the "New York Game." As the this set of rules was further developed, its popularity eclipsed the Massachusetts Game and the Philadelphia Game, which was based on town ball, to become the preferred game for amateur clubs and subsequently professional baseball.

There's some dispute between the men above over who actually came up with and/or assisted in the writing of the original rules of "base ball." (which is to be expected when epic beards are involved).

Read more about each of the players at 19cbaseball.

1848–1850 New York Knickerbockers, photo taken December 1862. Read more about the team here.

1848–1850 New York Knickerbockers, photo taken December 1862. Read more about the team here .

Via: 19cbaseball.com

Keith Olbermann's ESPN Show: Actually Maybe Worth Getting Excited About?

$
0
0

After 16 years, the proto-sports desk anchor for a generation of fans is back home. Why the pairing might actually work out this time.

Via: ESPN

Amid the groundswell of nostalgia and good feelings that have enveloped the return of Keith Olbermann into the ESPN family this week, it's hard to believe he was only at the network (which included a brief detour to launch ESPN2) for five years. By 1997, he and the network had parted ways, after Olbermann became frustrated with internal politics and his irascible persona had burned every bridge inside Bristol save for the one leading to the exits. Given that acrimony, when his new late-night ESPN2 talk show, set to debut in late August, was formally announced this week, it was somewhat odd that his return felt like a celebratory homecoming.

But that was because the original Olbermann fans never really cared about the internal politics of ESPN. And they were never all that invested in Olbermann's incarnation as an indignant liberal commentator on MSNBC or as a subject of inside-the-media gossip. No, to sports fans of a certain age, his Special Comments and feuds with Bill O'Reilly felt like a bad facsimile of the man who peppered SportsCenter highlight packages with an array of amusing catchphrases. There was no grandiosity in those days, just wry humor to complement an exhaustive sports knowledge and improv skills that could brighten the dullest program.

And so now that Olbermann has returned to ESPN 16 years later, people are rightfully wondering if we'll get The Big Personality, the one on full show during his the MSNBC years — and a subsequent run at Current TV from which he was fired — or the understated wiseass who charmed us all during his first tour of duty. The safe bet is some hybrid of the two, with the occasional big statement and gesture, since the battle to make noise and keep the upstart Fox Sports 1 network at bay will be a priority from the moment the channel hits the airwaves. Olbermann's debut on ESPN2 comes a week after FS1 goes live, but there are rumblings that Olbermann may be asked to host SportsCenter in the week running up to his show's first episode. (Although guest-hosting would presumably require going to Bristol, Olbermann's show will based in Manhattan, away from his old colleagues at HQ in Connecticut.)

Olbermann will show up five nights a week for an hour a pop, but the grind should be no issue for him. The New Republic's Marc Tracy writes this week about Olberman's triumphant cobbling-together of a Mickey Mantle obit under immense time constraints back in the day. Ideally, what we can expect is some more mature, seasoned version of the Olbermann who left in 1997 — one that combines the less ostentatious personality of his previous ESPN stint with the reporting and storytelling skills he's no doubt improved in his time as a news anchor. He'll also have more talent to work with, and more mediums in which to work, at ESPN, which has added countless reporters and online platforms like Grantland since he left. (Olbermann's recent baseball blogging has been a joy unto itself.) It's been a long road back to ESPN for Olbermann, but for old-time fans who can remember the days before political punditry wore down his public image, there's hope that the guy we used to meet for a few laughs every night at 11 is still in there somewhere.

Source: youtube.com


5 Golf Stretches Guaranteed To Ignite Your Loins

$
0
0

Miguel Angel Jimenez has it all figured out.

Meet the 49-year-old ponytail-rocking, cigar-smoking Spaniard who is currently near the top of the British Open leader board at Muirfield in Scotland. Miguel Angel Jimenez has a smooth swing and an even smoother approach to the game of golf. In summation: he's really awesome.

Via: Stuart Franklin / Getty Images

Golfers and golf fans everywhere are watching the British Open wondering, "how is this middle-aged dude simply owning life right now?" Well, the secret is in his mesmerizing and sensual stretches.

Drop 'dat ass real low.

Drop 'dat ass real low.


View Entire List ›

Inside The Catty Feud Between Johnny Manziel And A.J. McCarron

$
0
0

The world may never know for sure why they’re fighting. But we have an idea.

Via: Scott Halleran / Getty Images

Last weekend, Texas A&M quarterback Johnny "Football" Manziel made headlines when he was allegedly too hungover to fulfill his duties as camp counselor at the Manning Passing Academy and wound up leaving camp early.

After the incident, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner came forward and insisted that he simply overslept because his phone had died and his departure from the academy was the result of being stretched too thin from all of his obligations in and outside of camp.

Via: Patric Schneider / AP

Then we found out that his roommate at camp was A.J. McCarron, quarterback for the Alabama Crimson Tide. And so the plot thickens...


View Entire List ›

Cool Dog Has Amazing Reaction Time

$
0
0

It’s like watching Air Bud on drugs.

Dogs are awesome.

Dogs are awesome.

They can pretty much do anything.

They can pretty much do anything.

And when it comes to retrieving balls...

And when it comes to retrieving balls...

They will do whatever it takes.

They will do whatever it takes.


View Entire List ›

Basketball Player Sings, World Weeps

$
0
0

Press play and consider your weekend ruined.

Dirk Nowitzki is good at a lot of things. He's an 11-time NBA All-Star, a finals champion and a league MVP. Dirk has also proven to be goofy and pretty down to earth over the course of his career, which you don't typically expect from an unorthodox German 7-footer with a penchant for shooting beyond the arc.

(Dirk is on the left. You know, just in case you couldn't identify the 7-foot tall German NBA player in the photo.)

However this off-season Dirk appears to be making a concerted effort to show the world all the things he isn't so good at, such as diving in soccer...


View Entire List ›

A-Rod's H.S. Scouting Report Throws Shade At The Yankee Captain

$
0
0

“Similar to Jeter only bigger and better.”

It's easy to forget a time — way before the steroids and New York — when Alex Rodriguez was one of the most exciting and likeable players in Major League Baseball. He was a young star on a fun Mariners team that included future Hall of Famers Ken Griffey Jr. and Randy Johnson as well as a borderline candidate in Edgar Martinez. A-Rod was compared with Derek Jeter his entire career and no matter how many home runs he hit or RBIs he totaled he never surpassed the Yankees' captain in adoration. Nevertheless when Rodriguez was 17 he was simply "bigger and better."

Source: coedbc.files.wordpress.com

Australian Rugby Player's Nude Selfies Have Gone Viral (And The Internet Rejoices)

$
0
0

His nickname is “Gorgeous” George Burgess because… duh.

This fella is George Burgess. He plays something called rugby in Australia.

This fella is George Burgess. He plays something called rugby in Australia.

Via: Matt King / Getty Images

Via: Getty Images

Via: Getty Images


View Entire List ›

30 Things Rock Climbers Love


Tour De France Photo Taken Right Before Face-Plant

$
0
0

Perfect timing.

Yesterday, during a stretch of the Tour de France, a fan decided to run alongside American cyclist Tejay Van Garderen.

But before he could get very far, another fan stepped in and tripped the runner, causing him to fall face first into the pavement.

Right before that, though, this glorious moment was captured on camera:

Source: reddit.com


View Entire List ›

Phil Mickelson Is Your 2013 British Open Champion

$
0
0

Lefty stole the show with one of the greatest final rounds in British Open history.

Merely a month after another heartbreak at the U.S. Open Phil Mickelson played one of the greatest rounds of his storied career to win the British Open at Muirfield in Scotland.

Via: Matthew Lewis / Getty Images

Mickelson birdied four of his final six holes in dramatic fashion in route to shoot a 5-under-par 66 to win the first British Open of his career.

Via: Andrew Redington / Getty Images


View Entire List ›

Little Red Sox Fan Pwns Yankees With Hat Switcheroo

$
0
0

If this kid is the future, then the future is going to be hilarious.

During Saturday's Yankees-Red Sox game, a young fan placed a Yankees cap over his Red Sox gear, presumably to better lobby for balls from the Yankee dugout. It worked.

Having received the souvenir from the Yankees, the boy took off his Red Sox hat, as if switching allegiances.

PSYCH! Back to the Sox hat. This little man was a Red Sox fan all along. He just wanted a free ball.


View Entire List ›

Aaron Hernandez Listed As Key To Patriots Offense In "USA Today" NFL Preview

$
0
0

The next time an old person starts complaining about the decline of newspapers and magazines vis-à-vis “blogs” and “Twitters,” show them this.

On Sunday, Adam Schefter, the NFL Insider writer for ESPN, pointed out that USA Today had listed Aaron Hernandez as the New England Patriots' X-factor in their 2013 NFL Preview issue.

Source: twitter.com

The same Aaron Hernandez that is currently facing murder charges and is possibly linked to a 2012 double homicide in Boston? Yeah, that guy is who USA Today believes will be the Patriots X-factor this upcoming season. But that's not even the worst part.

After Schefter's tweet, a fan noted that ESPN put Hernandez in their preview issue too, even including a huge picture of him in the football uniform he will most likely not ever be wearing again.

Source: twitter.com

Clearly, these two publications just fell victim to deadlines that were set before the Hernandez story broke, but that's why the internet rules and print is soo yesterday.


View Entire List ›

Landon Donovan Single-Handedly Defeats El Salvador, Looks Great In Shades

$
0
0

The veteran carried the U.S. men’s national team to the Gold Cup semifinals.

Men's national team coach Jurgen Klinsmann made waves last month by keeping Landon Donovan off the roster for the World Cup qualifying games in June. Klinsmann wanted Donovan to prove he's still interested in soccer and has the physical tools to play at a high level. Yesterday, the greatest player in USMNT history single-handedly dominated the quarterfinal game against El Salvador and silenced his critics like a boss.

The 31-year-old midfielder recorded three assists and a goal to lead the USMNT to a dominant 5-1 win. He helped get the U.S. on the board in the 28th minute with this excellent pass through traffic to a wide-open Clarence Goodson.


View Entire List ›

Viewing all 6716 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images