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Boxing Champ Vitali Klitschko Steps Into The Ring Over Ukraine's European Future

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Ukraine’s move away from Russia’s embrace and towards the European Union looks in serious jeopardy. But don’t count the country out just yet, boxing champion turned opposition leader Vitali Klitschko tells BuzzFeed.

Valentyn Ogirenko / Reuters

KIEV, Ukraine — It's been a rough week for pro-western forces in Ukraine, which looked set to sign a crucial agreement with the European Union only recently but now appear to be pirouetting 180 degrees back towards Moscow. After President Viktor Yanukovych snuck off to the Kremlin for informal negotiations with Vladimir Putin last weekend, parliament postponed a vote on bill that would release jailed former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, breaking a condition pushed by the bloc for the agreement to go ahead.

The tug-of-war between Brussels and Moscow has all the twists and outsized personalities of a classic soap opera. If Yanukovych is the stern, mansion-inhabiting patriarch and Tymoshenko its golden-braided damsel in distress, that makes boxing legend turned opposition leader Vitali Klitschko its brooding strong and silent type. In just a few years since his semi-retirement from the sport — he still holds the World Boxing Council heavyweight title, but has not fought since September 2012 — Klitschko, now a lawmaker in Ukraine's parliament, has leveraged his national hero status in this former Soviet republic of 46 million to emerge as one of the country's strongest pro-European voices.

His newness to politics made him a breath of fresh air in Ukraine, riven since 2004's Orange Revolution by vicious fighting between Tymoshenko and Yanukovych, complete with fistfights in parliament. Klitschko's anti-corruption platform struck a chord, too, in a country where the president lives in a palace appropriated from the state and has a son whose fortune was recently found to have almost tripled in six months. His party, UDAR (it's an acronym for Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform, but it means 'PUNCH') is the third-largest in parliament. Klitschko announced last month that he would run for president in 2015 and appears a serious contender, with some poll numbers higher than Yanukovych's and rock-star status that could sway the president's base in the sports-mad, Russian-leaning east. Yanukovych's Party of Regions, which controls parliament, recently passed an amendment to the tax code that could bar Klitschko's candidacy over his German residence permit.

"You can't compare Ukrainian politics with sports. In sports there are clearly declared rules and you get disqualified for breaking" them, he told BuzzFeed in an interview at UDAR's party headquarters on Thursday. "Ukrainian politics is more like a no-holds-barred fight, and we really want to introduce rules which won't change [and] will be fundamental, European rules," he added, tapping his massive fist on the table for emphasis.

Introducing European rules is precisely what the agreement, which EU officials still hope Yanukovych will sign at the end of the month at a summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, is about: part of a program aimed at drawing former Soviet states away from Russia's embrace to the path to membership, it involves aligning Ukraine's laws to meet a vast number of EU standards. But though EU officials say Ukraine has made broad strides on most fronts, progress has foundered over demands to release Tymoshenko, sentenced to seven years in 2011 on abuse of office charges and currently in a prison hospital in the city of Kharkiv. Yanukovych's office told her supporters this week it would not pardon her. His party has stalled consideration of several bills, including one written by Klitschko, that would allow her to travel to Germany for medical treatment. An EU mission set up to secure her freedom has visited Kiev 26 times without success.

"Yanukovich has no desire whatsoever to sign the [agreement], because it would mean the destruction of all the corruption schemes that exist in the government," Klitschko said. "[But] he doesn't want to be the governor of Ukraine in the Russian Empire either," he added.

The Kremlin has attempted to woo Ukraine with the stick rather than the carrot, starting a small trade blockade in late summer, telling it that moving towards the EU would be "suicidal," and threatening it over an $882 million gas bill. Klitschko suspects the issue may come down to which partner can best aid Ukraine's ailing economy — western financial institutions, Russia's natural resource coffers, or third countries like China, which was reported to have leased 5 percent of Ukraine for farming in September (though this was later denied).

But if Yanukovych forsakes the EU for the vaguely defined customs union that Moscow wants it to join, Klitschko says, the president will have favored his own short-term political interest over the country's long-term future. Opinion polls consistently show Ukrainians favor alignment with Europe, rather than Russia. Russia itself, Klitschko insists, is far more European than it seems.

"If you leave politics and the struggle for a sphere of influence out of it, Russians want to integrate with Europe too," he said. "They value European standards very highly: they love buying and driving European cars, they're happy preferring European education to their own, they prefer medical care in Europe, and they love buying real estate in Europe, if they can afford it. So there's no need to convince them what European standards" are, he added.

Nonetheless, the time for Ukraine to get its house in order in time for the Vilnius summit is running out. Parliament is not scheduled to reconsider the law that would let Tymoshenko leave for Germany until Tuesday — a day after the European Parliament session at which the question of Ukraine singing the agreement is due to be settled. EU diplomats, however, have said they are prepared to wait until the "last seconds" before Vilnius. Klitschko, too, vows to fight to the end. "We'll see what happens on Tuesday," he said. "Hope dies last."


19 Reasons To Start Getting Psyched For The 2014 World Cup

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The World Cup is pretty much always awesome, but this one has extra-awesome potential.

The drama has actually already started.

The drama has actually already started.

The World Cup is eight months off and it already has mad drama going: Portugal and Sweden failed to advance out of their regional qualifying groups and now must face one another in a playoff; the winning team goes to the World Cup and the losing team GETS NOTHING AND LIKES IT. This is a really big deal because it means that one of the top players in the world, either Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo or Sweden's Zlatan Ibrahimović, will not be participating in the tournament. So to say the stakes are high for this matchup is an understatement.

Getty / AFP

And then there's Mexico.

And then there's Mexico.

The current Mexican national team has been ridiculed everywhere for their terrible performance. They're now in the same situation as Portugal and Sweden — having failed to qualify in their group, they're in a playoff for a Cup slot with New Zealand. Now, if Portugal or Sweden doesn't make the World Cup against stiff European competition, it's a disappointment. But if Mexico, the country with by far the greatest soccer tradition and largest fan base in North America, doesn't make it...well, let's not even imagine the consequences. (Though they won the first game of their two-game playoff 5-1 yesterday — whoever scores the most goals in the two games wins — and are probably safe.)

Getty / Hector Vivas

Can Team USA make a run?

Can Team USA make a run?

The USMNT is finally performing at a level befitting the fact that soccer has been a fairly popular sport in this country for going on four decades. During a stellar summer, they won their qualifying group and put together a 12-game win streak on their way to becoming CONCACAF Gold Cup champions. Nobody really knows how well this team will play in Brazil against world powerhouses, but with players like Michael Bradley, Tim Howard, Landon Donovan, and Clint Dempsey having proven themselves in top overseas leagues, a lack of talent is no longer an excuse for the American squad. The Yanks aren't the underdogs anymore, which is fine, because everyone always hated us anyway.

Twitter: @ussoccer

Will England once again make the world LOL?

Will England once again make the world LOL?

Despite winning their qualifying group this year and reaching the quarterfinals in 2002 and 2006, England is not among the top eight seeds for the 2014 Cup. They have talented strikers and defensemen, but they're weak in other areas and are historically...unpredictable. But given the ardency of England's fans, it really doesn't matter if they SHOULD win. Everyone's going to hilariously freak the hell out if they lose no matter what.

Getty / Laurence Griffiths


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Grab A Tissue And Watch This Baseball Player's Reunion With His Grandmother

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Blame the tears on allergies.

Jose Fernandez took the National League by storm this season at merely 21-years-old. The recently named Rookie of the Year finished the season with a 2.19 ERA and a 12-6 record for the lowly Florida Marlins. While his on-the-field exploits are other-worldly, his off-the-field story is even more impressive.

Steve Mitchell / Getty

Fernandez was born in Cuba and unsuccessfully attempted to defect to the United States with his mother three times before finally making it to U.S. soil on their fourth try. During their final attempt, his mother was rocked from the boat at night in rough seas and Fernandez jumped out to save her, not knowing who fell in the water — he was only 15.


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Diesel The Husky High Fives Like A Frigging Champ

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This is my new favorite dog, swoon.

This is Diesel.

This is Diesel.

i.imgur.com

He's been the mascot for the Northern Illinois football team since 2008. He runs with the cheer squad in the end zone every time the home team puts 6 on the scoreboard.

He's been the mascot for the Northern Illinois football team since 2008. He runs with the cheer squad in the end zone every time the home team puts 6 on the scoreboard.

facebook.com

A local celebrity with appearances on ESPN to his credit, Diesel takes his on-field responsibilities seriously: before every game, he goes for a jog and gets his beautiful coat brushed. In short, this dog is no diva.

A local celebrity with appearances on ESPN to his credit, Diesel takes his on-field responsibilities seriously: before every game, he goes for a jog and gets his beautiful coat brushed. In short, this dog is no diva.

ftw.usatoday.com

Fans love his distinctive markings and blue eyes, which only confirms what we already knew: he's rather dashing and handsome.

Fans love his distinctive markings and blue eyes, which only confirms what we already knew: he's rather dashing and handsome.

grantland.com


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Player Ties His Opponent's Shoe In Today's Best Example Of Sportsmanship

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But that’s not all…

During a recent game between Saudi soccer teams Al Nahdha and Al Ittihad, there was a surprising act of sportsmanship...

Before Al Nahdha's goalkeeper could clear the ball, he noticed his shoe was untied, and as he contemplated his options (it's quite difficult to tie laces with those large gloves), a member of the opposing team ran over and tied the shoelaces for him.

Unfortunately, because the ball was picked up, he was whistled for delay of game (keepers can only hold it for six seconds), and the opposing team was given an indirect free kick from the spot of the foul.

And with the game tied, Al Ittihad huddled together and purposefully kicked the ball wide.


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33 Reasons Andrew McCutchen Is The Coolest

26 Reasons Rec Specs Are The Dopest Accessory In Sports History

At Least Six High School Football Players Have Died From Head And Neck Injuries In 2013

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It’s been a terrible fall for youth football.

The vigil service for De'Antre Turman.

Curtis Compton / Atlanta Journal-Constitution / AP

We all know that football, from the pros on down, has a brain-injury problem. But the number of teenagers who have died playing youth football in 2013 is still shocking.

On Monday afternoon, 17-year-old Charles Youvella of Hopi High School in Arizona died of a traumatic brain injury suffered during his team's loss two days earlier in the state playoffs. Youvella's team lost 60-6, and he wound up recording his team's lone touchdown. Minutes later, Youvella (whose father was his school's athletic director) was tackled on what was, by all accounts, a "normal"-looking play and suffered a brain injury that ultimately took his life.

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Via azcentral.com

Thursday, one day after Charles Youvella's vigil, ESPN's Outside the Lines dropped a bombshell report featuring hard data on the decline of participation in Pop Warner youth football. Documents provided to OTL show that the number of kids playing Pop Warner football dropped to 225,287 in 2012 — nearly 10% less than the previous two years. One obvious reason for this, as Sports on Earth's Patrick Hruby highlighted yesterday, is that the rate of concussions in youth football is at least 4% and most likely much higher. For parents, that means that in the best case scenario, letting your child play youth football means a 1-in-25 chance that at some point his brain will smash into the side of his skull and cause some measure of debilitation, be it short- or long-term. (And that's not considering the more-frequent sub-concussive hits to the head that could be just as dangerous.)

A study published in 2012 at the University of North Carolina found that 25 high school players died between 2003 and 2012 because of injuries sustained directly from football — i.e., excluding issues like heat stroke. That's an average of 2.5 a year. This year, in addition to Youvella, at least five other players have died from injuries to the brain, neck, or spine:

• 17-year-old Jaleel Gipson of Farmerville, La. died in May from a broken back suffered during what coaches called a "textbook" tackle.

• 16-year-old De'Antre Turman of College Park, Ga. died during a preseason scrimmage in August, breaking his neck during a tackle. His uncle told the local CBS affiliate in Atlanta that it was "a regular hit that he's made 1,000 times."

• 16-year-old Damon Janes of Brocton, N.Y. died in September after a helmet-to-helmet hit in a game. He staggered to his feet but collapsed once he reached the sidelines. Three days later, he was dead. His teammates took a vote and agreed to forfeit the rest of the season.

• 17-year-old Dylan Jeffries of Lost Creek, W. Va., died in October from injuries sustained during a game on Sept. 27. He was rushed to the local hospital with a blood clot in his brain and put into a medically induced coma. He died less than two weeks later.

• 17-year-old Chad Stover of Tipton, Mo. died just yesterday after being taken off life support for brain injuries suffered during a game on Oct. 31.

The last year that more than two high school football players died from direct injuries was 2008, when the number was seven. This is already the worst year in the last five, and the second-worst since 2001.

Better safety protocols, more research, better education — these things might help reduce the danger in the game. But the fact that this season has been so deadly — at a time when awareness of football's risks is at an all-time high — underlines the fact that football has never been and will never be a "safe" sport.


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The Design For Qatar's First World Cup Stadium Looks Like A Vagina

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It’s supposed to look like a boat.

The World Cup in Qatar is still over eight years away, but the designs for the first stadium to be built, in Al Wakrah, have already been released. The architectural firm that designed the stadium based it on the "dhow" boat that Qataris traditionally used for pearl diving. But for those who have no clue what a dhow boat looks like, Al Wakrah stadium looks like something else entirely. A vagina.

The state-of-the-art stadium is slated to hold 40,000 spectators and is expected to be ready in 2018. Let's go inside, shall we?


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Michigan Sets Up, Kicks Improbable Game-Tying Field Goal In 12 Seconds As Clock Runs Out

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Just your typical panicked 44-yard kick to send a game to triple overtime.

Down three points with 18 seconds left and facing 3rd and 23, the Michigan Wolverines completed a 16-yard pass to Jeremy Gallon. Which unfortunately, did not stop the clock.

So with 12 seconds left and no timeouts, the Wolverines had to get their entire field goal team onto the field. But holder Drew Dileo slid or possibly slipped into position, and Brendan Gibbons hit the 44-yarder to pull it off.

Three overtimes later, the Wolverines beat Northwestern 27-19, just like they drew it up.

Watch the video here:


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Auburn Tops Georgia On Instantly Legendary "Marshall Miracle"

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Are you kidding me?!

After falling behind by 20 in the fourth quarter, Georgia stormed back against Auburn today to take a late lead on a 5-yard rushing touchdown by quarterback Aaron Murray.

Via sbnation.com

With just under two minutes left in the game, it seemed as though the Dawgs had pulled off the comeback and the upset.

But on fourth and 18 with just over 30 seconds left, Auburn quarterback Nick Marshall launched a pass which was deflected by the Georgia secondary and fell perfectly into the hands of receiver Ricardo Louis for a 73-yard touchdown.

As you can see, Louis really had no chance at the ball initially, but a little bit of luck and a heads-up adjustment allowed him to make the catch.


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The Best GIFs Of NFL Week 11: The Right To Bear Arms

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Also featuring an impromptu dance party and all the nightmare fuel you can possibly stomach.

DANCE PARTY: MIAMI EDITION

DANCE PARTY: MIAMI EDITION

Let's get the party started, shall we?

Cheer Up, Dog

Cheer Up, Dog

The Bengals eventually pulled away thanks to a 31-point second quarter. After that, this li'l guy was really crying in his water bowl.

Burfict Technique

Burfict Technique

Bengals linebacking beast Vontaze Burfict had quite the day: 11 solo tackles, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery, a defensive TD, and one hilarious homage to Bo Jackson.

Juuuuuust A Bit Wide

Juuuuuust A Bit Wide

Everything went wrong for the Jets today, so no one will remember this Nick Folk field goal attempt that ended up in another zip code.


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A High School Football Team Taunted A Rival Team Named The Indians With A "Trail Of Tears" Banner

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The reaction online has not been positive.

This photo was posted on Tumblr over the weekend. It was taken at McAdory High School in McCalla, Ala.

This photo was posted on Tumblr over the weekend. It was taken at McAdory High School in McCalla, Ala.

fiftyfourfortyorfight.tumblr.com

Last night, this sign went up at a McAdory High School football game.

I am absolutely disgusted that this sign was allowed to go up, and that it was not stopped by school administrators, and that after this, no one has mentioned it.

The school and the students have shown no remorse for the sign (as expected) and the students have claimed ignorance and/or that it was just a "joke".

Sorry, but the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and the death of thousands of Native Americans is not a joke.

EDIT: As of 5 pm Sunday, no response from the school has been issued, and the local news to which I have reported this incident have not looked into it either. Further information will be added as it comes to me.

McAdory's opponents were the Pinson Valley Indians. (Incidentally, McAdory is where Bo Jackson went to high school.)

instagram.com


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Is Peewee Football Turning Our Little Ones Into Weapons Of Retrograde Masculinity?

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Bullies like NFL player Richie Incognito aren’t born, but trained.

Mike Blake / Reuters

"Well hey there, little girl! Where's your dress?" My nephew and I were making our way to the field for his little league football game. The question was addressed to my 8-year-old nephew's teammate: a little boy in an oversized jersey. "Aww," the coach continued, pinching the boy's cheeks. "Look at that face. She's so cute!"

I couldn't help but wonder what the not-wearing-a-dress kid learned about the world when his coach joked with him that way. He might have learned that grown-up men sometimes make unprovoked jokes about gender. He might have learned that football coaches insult their players, and the players simply need to toughen up and deal with it because that kind of bullying and hazing are just part of the game. If the kid doesn't like it, he's free to follow the example of NFL player Jonathan Martin and give up football altogether.

After a "threatening and abusive" exchange between Martin and teammate Richie Incognito was made public, Martin decided to leave the Miami Dolphins. The voicemails and texts, according to ABC, contained such "expletive-laced rants" that Incognito was placed on suspension. But even after feeling bullied enough to leave the team, Martin told Incognito in a text message that he doesn't harbor any hard feelings against him. "I don't blame you guys at all," Martin wrote. "It's just the culture around football."

There's been a lot of debate over the past few months about the physical dangers of football, and virtually every conclusion is that — surprise — it's dangerous. And the danger isn't restricted to professionals. According to Allen Barra at The Atlantic, some of the most dangerous football is happening in the peewee leagues. In fact, said Barra, children's football injuries may be worse than those sustained by older NFL players "because a young athlete's brain is still developing." Barra's concerns are warranted, but they stop short.

There's an old phrase, commonly (though incorrectly) attributed to the Duke of Wellington, that might offer some perspective: "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton." This phrase refers to Wellington's belief that his troops were successful in battle because of their sport education. He saw his soldiers' military prowess to be a direct result of the training they received from playing cricket on the fields of Eton College.

Translation: Teaching a boy to win cricket has something to do with teaching him how to win war. What happens on the playing field is preparation for what happens off it.

In his book Inclusive Masculinity: The Changing Nature of Masculinities, Eric Anderson examines how contemporary notions about masculinity came to be enmeshed with youth sports. In the wake of the second Industrial Revolution (roughly 1870–1914), fathers moved outside of the home for work, leaving their sons to be raised and educated by their mothers. As a result of the structural and emotional distance that widened between boys and their fathers, the stage was set for the 20th century's infamous crisis of masculinity. Within this "gender-panicked culture," Anderson argues, "sport was thrust upon boys" as part of a "political project to reverse the feminizing trends" gaining ground since the father's abrupt departure from his home. Anderson's interpretation might be overstated, but, even still, it's hard to ignore the connection between gender coding and sports education.

My nephew's coach understands this code intuitively. Boys don't wear dresses like girls. Boys aren't cute like girls. Regardless of his intention, his dress joke reinforced the heteronormativity of the football field by jokingly reminding his players that certain gender boundaries have been articulated and must be obeyed. Football, like most sports, is coded by identifying the out-groups and defining itself in opposition to those.

American football came of age during an era that witnessed the decreasing distinctiveness of roles traditionally associated with masculinity. As 20th-century wars waged, the boundaries of traditional manhood began to blur, and as a result, the functions that once belonged exclusively to masculinity began to be taken over by historically marginalized — and feminized — groups. Fearing their masculinity was being appropriated by out-groups, men latched onto aggressive sport as a way of reminding their sexually progressive culture that strength and domination still belonged to men.

It's understandable that sports culture is often characterized by heightened displays of hypermasculine power given its inextricable connection to martial culture. According to journalist JR Moerhinger, the contemporary game of football came into its own during the Cold War. "Football as we know it," he wrote in an article for ESPN, "grew out of that unique moment when violence on an apocalyptic scale was imminent." Lee Lowenfish, lecturer of sports history at Columbia University, doesn't go as far as Moehringer, but still notes the connection. "Football," said Lowenfish, "is a super-macho activity where players become warriors." But rather than fight for democracy, football players fight for their own identities as men.

Mike Blake / Reuters

If it's true that manhood must be won, rather than thinking of masculinity as being in crisis, we should begin to think of masculinity as crisis: that at the core of masculinity is the need to set itself up in opposition to weakness, a trait traditionally found in women and gay men.

The "masculinity as not X" formula is an integral aspect of peewee football, said Wade Davis, former NFL player and executive director of the You Can Play Youth Sports Initiative. "I was never told gay men can't play ball," he recalled of his experiences with youth sport. "I was just told gay men do X, Y, and Z, and I knew that football players didn't do those things." While his coach never spelled it out for him, Wade learned intuitively that gay men were soft like women, and that if his masculinity was to be achieved, he would have to find a way to set himself apart from that weakness. Wade calls this "passive homophobia and sexism," and sees it as one of the negative side effects of the gendered values young athletes are learning to prize.

The "no pain, no gain" value system that is perpetuated throughout youth sport is negatively affecting impressionable young men, said Caroline Fusco, associate professor in the kinesiology and physical education department at the University of Toronto. The "heteronormative spaces" of peewee ball, she argues, are places where boys are taught to "police their emotions to project the dominant masculine ideal."

The trouble with football is that it locates masculinity within the same space as violence, war, and exclusion, and in turn, suggests to young boys that their bodies are weapons — that their manhood itself is a weapon. The coach may or may not reinforce these ideas, but the crisis is already there on the playing fields of Eton, in the very stuff that makes the game what it is.

So where does that leave us? Do we pull our kids out of their peewee leagues because of the critical masculinities confronting them in those spaces, or do we simply dismiss the suggestion that the entire American Sports Complex is fraught with problematic notions of manhood?

At this point, it's not likely that we can majorly revise or erase the physical violence that is integral to the game of football. We can, however, try our best to combat the ideological violence that continues to be perpetuated in youth spaces. And since, as Fusco noted, whatever happens at professional levels filters down and gets perpetuated by young athletes, we need to make certain to address any ideological violence that might be occurring in the NFL. Which means, for starters, taking a serious look at not only the Incognito/Martin scuffle, but the greater context of the locker room.

If we start to unpack what it is about "the culture around football" that makes it acceptable for players to threaten to rape a rookie or physically assault his real mother, then we should begin to realize that the ethos framing that Great Ol' American Game demands reconsideration and, if and where possible, reform.


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The 27 Worst Fashion Mistakes Of Carmelo Anthony's Career

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The man apparently LOVES bucket hats.

Getty / Garrett Ellwood

For the most part, Carmelo Anthony is a pretty dapper man. When he puts the pieces together, it's a nice fit (see above picture), but sometimes he gambles with his wardrobe and, well, he loses all of his money and gets kicked out of the casino and then a car drives by and splashes dirty mud water on him. Here are a few examples of those poor fashion choices:

The Beginning

The Beginning

If there's one thing Carmelo loves, it's baggy oversized suits that make him look ridiculous. It's something Michael Jordan has been doing for many, many years. Sadly.

Getty / Jennifer Pottheiser

Lazy Sunday

Lazy Sunday

Allen Iverson, is that you?

Getty / Brian Bahr


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Free Diver From Brooklyn Dies After Attempting To Break Record

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Nicholas Mevoli died trying to set a free diving record Sunday after he surfaced from a depth of more than 200 feet in the Bahamas.

freediveblog.com

Nicholas Mevoli, a 32-year-old from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, hoped to break a new record in free diving by reaching 236 feet with one breath and without fins. He set his sights on diving at the 2013 Vertical Blue Competition in Dean's Blue Hole, considered the world's deepest ocean blue hole.

Although a relative newcomer to the sport, Mevoli had already won many competitions and held the U.S. record for free diving without the aid of weights and while wearing a monofin. There are three categories in free diving, and going without weights or fins is considered the most difficult.

Sunday, in the Bahamas, surrounded by other athletes and observers, Mevoli pierced the water and swam down into the ocean on what would be the last dive of his life.

On his way to the bottom, at 223 feet, he hesitated and almost went back, but instead kept swimming deeper until he reached the 236 foot mark. Mevoli turned around and arrived at the surface, after a dive of 3 minutes, 38 seconds, the New York Times reported.

He took off his googles and attempted to mouth "I am OK" — standard practice to complete the dive — but he wasn't. Within 30 seconds, he fell unconscious.

Five safety divers were on the scene and lifted him onto a platform, where a doctor attempted to revive him. There was still a pulse — at times —for almost 15 minutes, but something was clearly wrong with his lung, and when they turned Mevoli onto his side blood began pouring out of his mouth.

After his pulse stopped, Mevoli's wetsuit was cut off and divers continued to attempt to revive him for 90 minutes, with CPR and adrenaline shots, but nothing proved successful.

The Switzerland-based international association of free divers, known as AIDA, released a statement Sunday, which said "Nick appears to have suffered from a depth-related injury to his lungs."

Nicholas Mevoli on the right in a picture from 2012.

deeperblue.com

Mevoli was a Florida native who had moved to New York and worked behind the scenes in the television industry, but he traveled for competitions extensively in the past year.

He arrived at the 10-day Vertical Blue Competition, which brought together 56 divers from 21 countries, confident, but his attempt to break another national record on Friday in Free Immersion, where divers use a rope to pull themselves down and go back to the surface without fins, ended when he had to be assisted to the surface.

Mevoli is the first athlete to die in an international free-diving competition in the past two decades, but the popular sport is known to be dangerous and it is still common for deaths to occur. Outside Magazine reported statistics are not well established, "but one estimate of worldwide freediving-related fatalities revealed a nearly threefold increase, from 21 deaths in 2005 to 60 in 2008."


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Most Controversial Finish Of NFL Season Drives Tom Brady To Live-TV Profanity

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Unless you’re a Patriots fan, the disputed ending only added to the drama as New England and Carolina played one of the year’s best games.

Tonight, in what felt like a playoff atmosphere in Charlotte, the Patriots and Panthers faced off in one of the best games of the NFL season. It was a back-and-forth battle that had a bit of everything — early intensity, star performances, mind-boggling athleticism, great defense, and a final play that drove America's most famous Uggs spokesmodel into a profane rage.

Grant Halverson / Getty

With just minutes remaining in the game, Panthers QB Cam Newton engineered a touchdown drive to take a 24-20 lead over Brady and Patriots.


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24 Stages Of Watching Your Kid Play Soccer

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This is how you’ll be spending your weekend whether you like it or not.

Your alarm goes off even earlier than it does during the work week.

Your alarm goes off even earlier than it does during the work week.

Because some genius decided these games have to start at 8 a.m.

Columbia Pictures / Via chacunmesgouts.tumblr.com

You spend twenty minutes frantically searching for a missing cleat.

You spend twenty minutes frantically searching for a missing cleat.

Castle Rock Entertainment

And then another ten minutes waiting for your kid to put on her shin guards.

And then another ten minutes waiting for your kid to put on her shin guards.

Flickr: 92028135@N00

You race to the field and barely make it in time.

You race to the field and barely make it in time.

thechive.com


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Watching Rob Ford's Favorite Football Team With Rob Ford's Constituents

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Amusement, pity, and a surprising amount of support in Toronto.

Fred Thornhill / Reuters

TORONTO — After the Hamilton Tiger-Cats rolled into downtown Toronto and dispatched the hometown Argonauts on Sunday, a group of Ticats fans, distinct in their yellow-and-black jerseys, headed toward a cluster of bars down the street from the Rogers Centre. A cab, caught in the afternoon traffic, slowed beside them. The window rolled down. The Ticats fans looked over. A man in the back seat, presumably an Argonauts fan, leaned forward, pointed two fingers up, put them across his lips, and flicked his tongue.

This being Toronto, in the year 2013 — otherwise known as the year our mayor, Rob Ford, got his own syndicated reality TV show (it's called "the news") — one of the Ticats fans reached for the nearest heavy weapon. "You look like Mayor Ford," he said.

Insulting a citizen by comparing him to his own mayor is not a common taunt. But these days in Toronto, WTF is the new normal. Here's what Ford told a scrum of reporters last week: "The next thing, I want to call [Mayor Bob Bratina] in Hamilton and tell him we're going to have to spank their little Tiger-Cats. Oh, and the last thing was, Olivia Gondek [a former adviser], who says I wanted to eat her pussy. I've never said that to my life to her. I would never do that. I'm happily married. I've got more than enough to eat at home. Thank you very much." Then he turned around and walked back into his office, where he works, at City Hall, in the fourth-largest city in North America, showing the world the back of his No. 12 "MAYOR FORD" Toronto Argonauts jersey.

Ford's regard for football outstrips his sense of decorum by a country kilometer. That's why I thought there'd be no better place to survey the people of his city than at the playoff game he'd been discussing shortly before remembering to address his access to cunnilingus. So I bought a ticket, headed to the upper deck, and asked fans to write down a message they'd like to deliver to the mayor. Here are their responses.

Trevor Lahey and Cory Bowles, Sunnyvale, Ontario. Unapologetic Ford supporters excited to be included in any article related the Argos or Ford. The Gravy Train comment is a Fordism — the mayor talks a lot about needing to cut spending to get government employees off said train.

Sam Eifling

Jacen Irvine, Richmond Hill, Ontario. Also a Ford supporter. Marveled aloud that the city's "most-money-saving mayor in the past 20 years also smokes crack." Ford's Gravy Train-related claim that he's saved money for regular-Joe taxpayers during his tenure is debatable, but seems to have been effective.

Sam Eifling


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French Soccer Player Pleads For Release From Qatar: "This System Is Slowly Killing Me"

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Zahir Belounis, a professional soccer player from France, has accused the Qatari government of keeping him “trapped” in the country as he fights for unpaid wages.

Laurence Griffiths / Getty

Ever since FIFA awarded Qatar the 2022 World Cup and representatives from the country cheered as they held the most esteemed trophy in sports, there has been almost continuous controversy, much of it stemming from the rights (or lack thereof) afforded to immigrant workers who are building much of the new infrastructure.

Now, a professional soccer player participating at the country's club level is also protesting the Qatari government for its restrictive treatment of him as a foreign national. For much of the past two years, Zahir Belounis of France has been embroiled in a legal fight against his Qatari club and the government's tightly controlled power structure, one that he claims has now essentially made him a prisoner.

The situation came to a head late last week when Belounis, who has not been allowed to return home to see his extended family in France for almost 18 months, wrote an open letter to two well-known international soccer stars with ties to Qatar's successful World Cup bid: Zinedine Zidane, perhaps France's most famous soccer player, and Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola, who used to play in Qatar.

His letter, published last Thursday by The Guardian, read in part:

After a legal dispute with my club, I am being prevented from returning home to France.

I haven't seen my family in France since June 2012 because my employer refuses to give me the exit visa needed to leave the country. This is a special document that only exists in this country and Saudi Arabia.

I am not alone in this predicament. Many workers who are to build the stadiums for the 2022 World Cup risk finding themselves in the same situation as me.

When someone suggested that I write to you, I figured that you have been great footballers but also great men so I would appeal to you to use your renown to intervene, or try to intervene, to end the impasse.

I know that you have many demands for your time but I ask you to please help me. Please understand that I am a victim.

Belounis' fight became international news in May when Human Rights Watch wrote of his fight, using the moment to showcase how Qatar was exploiting its exit visa program:

Law No. 4 of 2009 regulates the entry and exit of expatriates in Qatar and their residence and sponsorship. It is Qatar's version of the kafala or sponsorship system, forms of which regulate the residence and employment of expatriate workers across the Gulf region. All expatriate workers in Qatar and some visitors require a residence permit, which is provided by a resident sponsor, who can be an employer, a father of the visitor or the person inviting a visitor on his or her sponsorship.

However, resident sponsors can also effectively prevent the people sponsored from leaving Qatar. Article 18 states that "other than women sponsored by the father and the minors and visitors visiting the state for no longer than 30 days, expatriates may not leave the state temporarily or permanently unless they provide an exit permit issued by the Residence Sponsor."

Residence sponsors do not need to justify their failure to provide an exit permit.

Belounis' case seemed to be coming to a close a month ago when a fresh wave of attention reportedly compelled the Qatari Football Association into allowing him — and his wife and two young kids — to return home to France, but they are all still in Qatar.

Since Belounis' plea for help was published last week, the Qatari Football Association has outright disputed his claims that he is "trapped" in the country, while further denying that he ever played for the club for which he is demanding back pay.

FIFA, soccer's international governing body, is pleading ignorance on the entire situation, claiming there is nothing it can do:

"FIFA has to date received no contractual claim from Belounis against his Qatari club as well as any accompanying documentation to support his case," FIFA said.

"FIFA fully respects basic human rights and also requests that its member associations and the hosts of its events fully respect them. FIFA was actually made aware of Zahir Belounis's predicament through the civil authorities in his home town.

"FIFA is unable to intervene in this matter given that Mr Belounis chose the option of contacting an ordinary court in Qatar."

When reached by phone last week, Belounis told Euronews, "I don't think I can take it anymore. ... I'm desperate. I'm not a criminal. I've done nothing wrong. Please help me."


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