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Alex Rodriguez Files Suit Seeking To Overturn Season-Long MLB Suspension

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After an unfavorable ruling from the arbitrator employed by MLB and the players union to settle his appeal of a PED suspension, the Yankees star is going to court.

Chicago Tribune / Getty

This weekend, arbitrator Frederic Horowitz ruled that Alex Rodriguez should be suspended for a full season for his alleged use of performance-enhancing drugs. Today, according to multiple outlets, Rodriguez has filed a lawsuit asking a federal judge to overturn that ruling on the grounds that Horowitz was not impartial and failed to consider evidence that the player's representatives believe supports his case.

The judge in the case, William H. Pauley, has already ruled that no documents associated with the case will be kept confidential by the court, which means that the details of the league's accusations against Rodriguez could become public for the first time. (At this moment, for example, the Wall Street Journal's Brian Costa is live-tweeting his first look at the full text of Horowitz's ruling, which the WSJ has also posted online here.)


UNC Adviser Who Claimed Ex-Basketball Player Was Illiterate Says Players' Welfare Is Her Main Concern

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“My message…is often misinterpreted.”

Mary Willingham (right).

Craig Barritt / Getty Images

A University of North Carolina academic counselor whose research has shown that many basketball and football players are unprepared for the school's academic rigor told BuzzFeed today that her message "is often misinterpreted."

Mary Willingham, who has faced death threats from strangers and skepticism from her administration following the release of her research to CNN last week, said she remains concerned that players she's worked with in the past "may have left with a degree, but without a real education."

"The young men from football and basketball that I have worked with over the years are exceptional," Willingham said in an email to BuzzFeed. "Their talents, academic dreams and stories are what keep me going every day. I can still see all of their faces. The other thing that keeps me going is the unfairness of the NCAA sports machine that prevents these same young men from receiving a meaningful education."

Willingham's research has shown that between 8% and 10% of the school's football and basketball players read below a third-grade level. In a CNN story last week, Willingham said she knew of a former UNC basketball player who was unable to read or write. UNC subsequently released a written statement saying it didn't believe Willingham's story and that it wasn't able to corroborate her research.

She has also received at least four death threats and dozens of threatening messages, but said, "I am doing well and determined to stay the course. The feedback has definitely gotten better, and the last warning of 'putting an end to my life' was Friday."

A graduation adviser with access to student files, Willingham says that while working as a tutor for athletes between 2003 and 2010, she witnessed NCAA violations but signed forms attesting that she had not seen any rules broken. Around that time, numerous investigations revealed systematic academic fraud perpetuated at UNC on behalf of athletes, with students "given grades for classes they didn't attend, and where they did nothing more than turn in a single paper."

Willingham and her role in the scandal were prominently featured last year in Schooled: The Price of College Sports, a documentary that makes an 80-minute case for granting rights and compensation to college athletes.

The 40 Greatest Fictional Teammates Of All Time

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If you needed a made-up person to get your back, these are the guys you’d go to.

Sidney Dean and Billy Hoyle.

Sidney Dean and Billy Hoyle.

Movie or TV Show: White Man Can't Jump.
Pros: They're both incredibly good basketball players and if they put their personal differences and pride aside they're going to help you win. They're Venice Beach's con artist kings. They're always looking fresh to death.
Cons: THEY ARE CON ARTISTS AND DEGENERATE GAMBLERS. You can't trust them — ever.

cdn.tss.uproxx.com

Steve Lattimer.

Steve Lattimer.

Movie or TV Show: The Program.
Pros: The dude is an absolute monster. He's literally the largest and scariest man to ever grace a fictional football field.
Cons: He is so large and scary because he is completely 'roided out. He won't even be on the field when you need him because of drug suspensions.

questfortheperfectlife.com

Mel Clark.

Mel Clark.

Movie or TV Show: Angels in the Outfield.
Pros: He has angels adding about 25 mph to his fastball. He's Tony Danza!
Cons: Angels can't help him in the playoffs. He's also dying.

wordpress.com

Thornton Mellon.

Thornton Mellon.

Movie or TV Show: Back to School.
Pros: Incredibly wealthy. He has enough money to pay Kurt Vonnegut to write his English papers. He throws great parties and is the only known diver to complete the "Triple Lindy."
Cons: Old. Wildcard. Commitment issues.

Orion Pictures / wordpress.com


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ESPN Compiles The Most Powerful College Football Moments Of The Year

Judge Rejects Preliminary Approval Of NFL's Concussion Settlement

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The judge fears the $765 million payout might not be enough.

Harry How / Getty Images

The Associated Press reports that a federal judge has denied preliminary approval of the NFL's $765 million settlement to resolve concussion-related lawsuits with 4,500 former players, saying she fears the number may not be high enough.

U.S. District Judge Anita Brody has reportedly asked for more financial details from the parties, only a week after players' lawyers filed a lengthy payout plan. Brody has said she's concerned some former players who haven't yet been diagnosed with a related brain injury will not receive enough money.

The proposed awards would vary based on the former player's age and diagnosis. A younger retiree with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis — or Lou Gehrig's disease — could receive up to $5 million; ex-players with dementia cases might receive as much as $3 million; others could get as little as $25,000 or could opt out of the deal. The NFL would also pay an additional $112 million to the players' lawyers for their fees and expenses, for a total payout of nearly $900 million.

The deal has broken down on the cusp of one of the NFL's biggest weekends of the season: the conference championship games featuring the league's four best teams — San Francisco at Seattle and New England at Denver.

Previously, many football writers had dismissed the proposed settlement, which breaks down to about $150,000 per player or estate, as inadequate given the lifetime of medical expenses facing brain-damaged patients. Now it looks like Brody agrees — at least in part — with them.

A number of players' attorneys have said the players would face a difficult time if they took the case to trial. Among the complicating factors: the difficulty of finding evidence the NFL knew about the danger of concussions; players proving their medical issues came as a result of head injuries suffered while in the NFL and not, say, in high school or college; and the sheer breadth of players involved in the lawsuits — some who were Hall of Fame inductees and others who made it only onto a practice squad, among other issues.

More than 4,500 former players have filed suit against the league, including NFL Hall of Famers Chris Doleman, Tony Dorsett and Bob Lilly.

UPDATE: Jan. 14, 2:10 p.m., ET: updated throughout.

Why You, Personally, Need To Be Rooting For Shani Davis In Sochi

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The speedskater has a chance to do something no one else has ever done. Again.

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Yuri Kadobnov / Getty

Children are drawn to him.

Children are drawn to him.

The ladies might love "Cool James," but the kids love Shani Davis. Except for the boy just right of center. He definitely has no clue an Olympic skater is behind him. But the little man just left of center throwing the deuce up is all about Davis' visit to his school. They're probably best friends now.

Larry French / Getty


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Definitive Ranking Of Seeded Male Players Of The Australian Open By Hair

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Because they can’t only be ranked based on their skills alone.

Kevin Anderson (Seed: 19)

Kevin Anderson (Seed: 19)

So that's real...

Andrew H. Walker / Getty Images for AYS

Jerzy Janowicz (Seed: 20)

Jerzy Janowicz (Seed: 20)

If tennis doesn't work out he will always have a job as Hulk's body double

Clive Brunskill / Getty Images

Ivan Dodig (Seed: 32)

Ivan Dodig (Seed: 32)

I love it when a man knows how to color coordinate

Clive Brunskill / Getty Images

Stanislas Wawrinka (Seed: 8)

Stanislas Wawrinka (Seed: 8)

Second best thing to come out of Switzerland

Michael Dodge / Getty Images


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17 Reasons The Denver Broncos Are The Least Hateable Team In The NFL Playoffs


Meet Olivier Giroud, The Really, Really Ridiculously Good-Looking Soccer Player

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He’s so handsome it hurts.

This is Olivier Giroud, a French footballer who plays for Arsenal FC.

This is Olivier Giroud, a French footballer who plays for Arsenal FC.

Stuart MacFarlane / Getty

He has a knack for finding the camera.

He has a knack for finding the camera.

Franck Fife / Getty

Or maybe it's just that the camera loves him.

Or maybe it's just that the camera loves him.

Stuart MacFarlane / Getty

But I guess when you look like he does, it's hard NOT to be loved.

But I guess when you look like he does, it's hard NOT to be loved.

Lionel Bonaventure / Getty


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U.S. Olympics Head Draws Criticism For Warning Athletes Against Protests At Sochi

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“They’re there to compete. They’re not there to talk about their politics or their religion or anything else,” U.S. Olympic Committee CEO says. LGBT groups push back on comments “bordering on speech police.”

A view of Olympic rings near the resort of Krasnaya Polyana, near Sochi January 4, 2014.

Maxim Shemetov / Reuters / Reuters

WASHINGTON — With the Olympics less than one month away, the head of the U.S. Olympic Committee made some of his strongest remarks yet urging athletes not to protest Russia's anti-LGBT laws at the Sochi Games — drawing rebukes from activists.

"They're there to compete. They're not there to talk about their politics or their religion or anything else. So for us, we really just want the attention focused on our athletes and their great competitions," USOC chief executive officer Scott Blackmun said in an interview with ESPN.

"We're hoping that our athletes feel very comfortable speaking their minds before they go to the Games. But when they get to the Games, that's really the time to focus on sport," he added.

"His comments were unnecessary and bordering on speech police. Mr. Blackmun: we do actually want athletes to speak out and you shouldn't be telling them not to. Don't put a muzzle on them," Human Rights Campaign vice president Fred Sainz told BuzzFeed.

Hudson Taylor, the executive director of Athlete Ally, also took issue with Blackmun's comments, specifically noting the International Olympic Committee own anti-discrimination policies — found in Principle 6 of the Olympic Charter.

"What's important to remember is that the Olympic Games are not just about competition. They are about values and principles," he told BuzzFeed. "Supporting Olympic Principle 6's commitment to LGBT inclusion in the face of Russia's laws is not mutually exclusive to focusing on the sport. In many ways, it's one and the same."

Mark Jones, a spokesman for the USOC, defended the remarks, telling BuzzFeed on Wednesday afternoon, "As you know, we recognize the seriousness of the issue and Scott has repeatedly said that the law is inconsistent with the fundamental principles of the Olympic Movement. He was asked if we are encouraging athletes to protest at the Games."

All Out, another organization that has been pressing for the IOC to protect LGBT rights, pushed back, with co-founder Andre Banks telling BuzzFeed, "If the Sochi Olympics are focused on gay rights, it will be because the IOC and Olympic sponsors have not pushed harder on the Russian government to repeal it's anti-gay laws before the Games."

Of Blackmun's comments that the Olympics are not a time for politics, Banks added, "It's not about politics, it's about the fundamental principles that define the Olympic movement. Principle 6 of the Olympic Charter bars discrimination. Athletes who take that seriously should be considered true Olympians, not troublemakers."

Brian Ellner, a board member of Athlete Ally who has been working to increase the number of athletes supporting LGBT rights, noted that athletes have been speaking up and condemning Russia's anti-LGBT laws and that he expects that to continue, saying, "With billions around the world watching we anticipate that athletes and fans will choose to speak out for fairness at Sochi."

Sainz agreed: "We hope that athletes express their opinions in a manner that is in conformance with IOC rules. It would be a mistake not to speak up against the heinous laws and practices that are going on in Russia right now."

Brazil Worries About "Violent" Youth Flash Mobs In Latest Threat To World Cup Security

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Thousands of youths are organizing online and then trashing malls, say Brazilian authorities.

Six months before the World Cup, Brazilian authorities are openly worried about another threat to public safety in a country beset by crime troubles: flash mobs of "rowdy Brazilian youths," who are reportedly trashing shopping centers and malls across the nation.

Folha De S. Paulo

The mobs, known as "rolezinhos," are organized and coordinated on social media, reports Ahram Online. Hundreds of "thrill-seeking" youths then descend upon a shopping center or malls, often ending in robberies, a spokeswoman for the Brazilian Association of shopkeepers told Agence France-Presse.

Folha De S. Paulo

Police were called to a shopping mall in eastern Sao Paulo to break up a crowd of about 1,000 teenagers. Cops allegedly used tear gas, rubber bullets, and batons to disperse the group, according to videos taped by the participants posted on social media networks. Three people were subsequently detained.

These incidents have renewed concerns about Brazil's preparation for the World Cup, which starts on June 12. Many believe the ongoing crime troubles and protests have come in response to the event, which has cost Brazil an estimated $11 billion.

Robert Cianfione / Getty Images


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16 Reasons Why The San Francisco 49ers Are The Most Fearsome Team In The Playoffs

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They play how they want, they shop for khakis how they want, and they apologize to no one.

Because their coach is a madman who would sacrifice a life to win a game.

Because their coach is a madman who would sacrifice a life to win a game.

Wesley Hitt / Getty

But still buys $8 khakis in bulk at WalMart because he doesn't play by your rules.

But still buys $8 khakis in bulk at WalMart because he doesn't play by your rules.

Twitter: @Matt_5_9

And neither does his quarterback.

And neither does his quarterback.

Seriously though, people. It's a friggin' hat. Let it go.

twitpic.com

In fact, breaking rules is what Kaepernick does best.

In fact, breaking rules is what Kaepernick does best.

And doing so gives him great pleasure.

gamerewind.nfl.com


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21 Animals Preparing For The Winter Olympics

24 Reasons You Were Obsessed With Women's Figure Skating In The '90s

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Tonight, ESPN premieres 30 for 30: The Price Of Gold , a look back at the Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan scandal that rocked women’s skating in the ’90s. Obviously they’ve been reading your diary, because you’ve been dreaming about these ladies for years.

Because of everything happening in this photo:

Because of everything happening in this photo:

Getty Images / Tim DeFrisco

And this one:

And this one:

Getty Images / Mike Powell

Big smiles.

Big smiles.

Getty Images / Chris Cole

Surya Bonaly's back-flips.

Surya Bonaly's back-flips.

Jamie Squire / Allsport / Getty Images


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15 Reasons Peyton Manning And Tom Brady Are Exactly The Same Person

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It’s like looking in a mirror. A very tall, rich, successful mirror.

They're two of the greatest quarterbacks to ever play the game.

They're two of the greatest quarterbacks to ever play the game.

They literally trade passing and touchdown records like kids traded Pokémon cards in the early 2000s.

Ezra Shaw / Getty

SNL

SNL


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Sochi Trip Secured, U.S. Figure Skating Champion Sounds Off On Russia's Anti-LGBT Laws

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“I think the laws are incredibly unfortunate. They go strongly against my personal beliefs,” Jeremy Abbott tells BuzzFeed.

Jeremy Abbott.

Matthew Stockman / Getty Images

With a place on the U.S. Olympic team firmly in hand, four-time U.S. figure skating national champion Jeremy Abbott staked out a stronger position on Russia's anti-LGBT laws than in the past — telling BuzzFeed Thursday that they "are incredibly unfortunate."

Abbott, who will compete in men's figure skating at the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia next month, said he felt more comfortable speaking out about the laws since earning a spot on the national team Sunday.

"I've been asked this question a lot and I tried to push it to the side a lot. I didn't know if I was going to be on this team and I wanted to make sure my focus was on the team," Abbott said. The laws "go strongly against my personal beliefs. It's very upsetting to me and very unfortunate."

A first-time Olympian in 2010, Abbott was much more measured in his comments about Russia in remarks to the Denver Post in August 2013.

"I'm not going to go into somebody's house and be like, 'Um, the way you decorate is hideous, and you need to completely redo this or I'm never coming back,'" he said at the time. "It's a little rude, so I don't want to say bad things about a country that's hosting the world, essentially. Maybe I don't agree with their policies, and maybe I don't agree with some things, but that's for them to sort out. My speaking out just makes me look like an ass."

Now, however, he was speaking out — including describing his thoughts about the presidential delegation to the Sochi Games being led by former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and including three out athletes, Billie Jean King, Caitlin Cahow and Brian Boitano.

"I can't say whether the envoy is in protest. I think it's a pretty clear message," he said. "I'm good friends with Brian Boitano and happy to see him part of this team and part of envoy."

Abbott's shift in tone comes just days after the head of the U.S. Olympic Committee made some of his strongest remarks yet urging athletes not to protest Russia's anti-LGBT laws at the Sochi Games. "We're hoping that our athletes feel very comfortable speaking their minds before they go to the Games. But when they get to the Games, that's really the time to focus on sport," USOC Scott Blackmun said.

Abbott is currently finishing up training for the Winter Olympics in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, just outside of Detroit. He didn't say whether he planned to speak out about the anti-LGBT "propaganda" law during competition, saying merely that he hoped to be more focused than during his last Olympics appearance in 2010, when he finished ninth.

"We need to send a proud strong positive message. As athletes, the Olympics are about unity and the human spirit. I've always admired that about Olympians and I want to continue to uphold that ideal. I believe that these laws go against that," he said. "I don't have much more else to say about that. I just want to go and make my country proud and show the world how strong we are."

But the 28-year-old Abbott actually did have a little more to say, following up in an e-mail to BuzzFeed after a phone interview. He wanted to expound a bit on his response to a question about the extent of his LGBT advocacy.

"I don't care what people assume about me, whether or not I am gay or straight. Ultimately I think it has no baring on the conversation," he wrote. "I'm an ally and I believe everyone should be supportive of human rights."

Jared Wickerham / Getty Images

Ahead Of Olympics, Head Of Chechnya Says Main Terror Leader Is Dead, Again

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Chechnya’s rebels call Kadyrov’s announcement, made on Instagram, “a stupid falsehood.”

instagram.com

Ramzan Kadyrov, the ruthless leader of Chechnya, took to Instagram on Thursday to assuage growing fears of a terror threat hanging over the Sochi Olympics by announcing the death of Doku Umarov, a rebel who leads the terror attack-fueled insurgency ravaging Russia's south.

"Journalists ask me if Doku Umarov poses a threat to the Olympics in Sochi," Kadyrov wrote. "I said before that he is no longer alive, and now we've received a recording of so-called emirs, where they speak of his death, sympathize with each other and speak about the candidacy of a new emir. They won't reach the Olympics. So all this talk about threats to the Sochi Olympics are absolutely groundless."

Concerns over the threat of terrorism in Russia, especially in the south of the country near Sochi, which will host the Winter Olympics next month, have grown since a double terror attack killed 34 people in Volgograd earlier this month. Russia has been plagued by terror attacks, particularly in its restive North Caucasus region near Sochi, for years, though news of them rarely reaches beyond Russia.

Kadyrov last proclaimed Umarov, the head of an umbrella rebel group called the Caucasus Emirate, dead on Dec. 18. He has been declared dead many times before, and at least twice in 2005 alone.

Kavkaz Center, the rebels' online mouthpiece, did not strictly confirm or deny Kadyrov's words, but ran a short article on his statements with a satirical tone. It also said: "Kavkaz Center's sources in the mujahideen groups called Kadyrov's tale a stupid falsehood."

Kadyrov later told Interfax, a Russian news agency: "Now we have proof that he has really been destroyed, though we haven't found his corpse, but we're looking for it." An unnamed source in the Russian security services told the news agency: "We can't confirm the destruction of Doku Umarov. We have no further information."

In his Instagram post — Kadyrov's social medium of choice — the Chechen leader added the hashtags #Kadyrov #Umarov #StateDuma #Terrorism and #Law.

How Dennis Rodman Got To North Korea

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An unlikely trio has been instrumental in helping Rodman travel to see his “friend,” Kim Jong Un.

John Gara/BuzzFeed

WASHINGTON — John Doldo IV is a senior at American University in Washington, D.C., with a passionate interest in international affairs; he visited Libya during its revolution and has been to Pyongyang multiple times. In February 2013, he watched from afar as Dennis Rodman went to North Korea with the Harlem Globetrotters for a documentary by Vice, the hipster media company.

"Seeing the supreme leader of the DPRK meeting with an American in a friendly atmosphere was a positive change," Doldo said during an interview in a student center at his school. "We were excited to see that."

The "we" to whom Doldo was referring comprises Joseph Terwilliger, a professor of neuroscience at Columbia University with a degree in tuba, and Michael P. Spavor, a Canadian consultant based in China who is well connected in North Korea, according to several people familiar with him. Together, the three men have been the driving force facilitating Rodman's trips to North Korea. They planned the logistical details of his last three trips, arranged visas, and facilitated Rodman's meetings with the country's dictatorial leader, Kim Jong Un — a man Rodman affectionately refers to as "the Marshal." The three became involved out of a wish, Doldo said, to help Rodman's vision of "basketball diplomacy" and increase the chances of a rapprochement between North Korea and the West.

Doldo met Terwilliger during travels to North Korea with the Pyongyang Project, a Canadian "social enterprise" that runs some tours in North Korea for which Spavor is listed as a director on his LinkedIn profile. Doldo first traveled there in 2011 and then twice in 2012, studying the Pyongyang dialect of the Korean language along with Terwilliger. The next year, Rodman made his notorious visit with Vice.

"Dr. Terwilliger contacted me after we saw Mr. Rodman in the DPRK and said 'we should meet this guy,'" Doldo said. To that end, Terwilliger entered and won an auction in the spring of 2013 where the prize was to play horse with Rodman. He and Doldo met Rodman in New York later that spring. They shot hoops and talked about North Korea. Terwilliger already had plans to spend the summer teaching genetics at a university in Pyongyang.

"As we were finishing, his agent Darren Prince said 'we'll be in touch,'" Doldo said. "Shortly thereafter Dr. Terwilliger got an email from Darren Prince saying basically that Mr. Rodman wants to go back to the DPRK and doesn't want to go with Vice."

Rodman didn't want to work with Vice anymore, Doldo said, because the North Koreans found the coverage of their country too critical.

"The DPRK government does not like them because they have in the past produced several documentaries that portrayed their country in a negative light and a unfair light," he said. And what's more, Rodman didn't want the media attention, Doldo said, but wished for a "private visit" with Kim Jong Un — which is what he ended up getting in September 2013.

[A Vice spokesman said that the company never planned to do more than one trip to North Korea with Rodman.]

Over the summer, Spavor, the Canadian, began arranging visas from his base in China. Rodman wrote to the North Korean government announcing his return and went back in September, having promised to make a visit in August, accompanied by his bodyguard plus Terwilliger and Spavor.

Organizing the visits is "not as simple as it looks," Doldo said. "We've got Mr. Rodman's people, we've got the sponsors, Paddy Power, we've got our people, and suppliers in different countries and different continents, so I helped with that as well." Paddy Power, the Irish betting giant, sponsored Rodman's December trip that he took to train North Korean basketball players, but it pulled out before the latest trip in January, citing Kim Jong Un's murder of his uncle.

The September trip, Doldo said, was more of "a small kind of vacation for Mr. Rodman." As Rodman prepared to travel back to the country in December to train the North Korean team, Terwilliger, Spavor, and Doldo once again sprung into action. Doldo recalled working the phones in the middle of the night, calling Chinese companies to order basketball gear.

According to Doldo, Terwilliger helped grease the wheel by working with North Korea's representatives in New York, whom he declined to name beyond saying that the organizers had gone "through the normal channels that anyone would go through to get a Korean visa." He said Terwilliger's contact was not Han Song Ryol, the North Korean diplomat at the U.N. and custodian of the "New York channel" by which the U.S. exchanges messages with Pyongyang.

"There are various individuals in the Korean government with whom we deal," Doldo said. When Rodman goes to North Korea, he is officially hosted by the country's Olympic committee.

Doldo and others involved in the trips have said that the North Korean government isn't paying for them. Both Doldo and Jules Feiler, a publicist for Rodman, were vague on the topic of whether or not Paddy Power paid for the January trip and exhibition game.

"I'm sure it does seem strange but for obvious reasons the person who sponsored this at some point decided they didn't want their name on it," said Feiler.

"We withdrew all of our involvement with the project before Christmas, however honoured our contractual obligations," Rory Scott, a spokesman for Paddy Power, said in an email.

He declined to say whether the former NBA players had been paid, saying: "I'm afraid we never discuss our commercial arrangements."

Doldo said that the only thing the North Koreans might have paid for was Rodman's hotel room.

"As far as I'm aware the most the DPRK government might have done in terms of sponsoring or funding this would have been for hotels," he said. "I don't know for certain whether Mr. Rodman is paying his own hotel bill." Doldo later said that he had confirmed that the North Koreans had not paid for the hotel.

"I don't have any answer for you" on the topic of the hotel room, Feiler said on Thursday. "We're trying to get to the bottom of it and I don't have an answer for you right now."

Both Terwilliger and Spavor spoke to Canadian magazine Maclean's for a lighthearted article on their North Korean adventures last year. According to the story, Spavor has been traveling to North Korea since 2005 and "developing key contacts in the regime along the way. Spavor speaks the North Korean dialect—a more formal variant of the southern—so fluently that he fools people on the phone, and he ran a school specializing in DPRK Korean in Yanji, the city in a largely Korean corner of northeast China where he now lives." Terwilliger, for his part, "had become fascinated by the DPRK as a kid listening to shortwave radio from Pyongyang; he'd been on North Korea's propaganda mailing list for years and found the material he received 'interesting.'"

"For the past seven years, I have amassed a considerable amount of experience, and made many contacts and friends working within the DPRK," Spavor writes on his personal website. "In addition to working in many organisational leadership and management positions, my past roles have involved close cooperation with various governments, UN organisations, humanitarian and development NGOs, academics, investors, tourists, professional athletes, celebrities, and world leaders."

"In the media, Marshall Kim Jung Un is portrayed as serious," Spavor told Maclean's. "But we were able to see a more charismatic, friendly side to him. He has a good sense of humour."

Spavor did not respond to repeated requests for an interview. Terwilliger said he was under a "media embargo as Rodman has the right to first interviews."

"All I can say regarding your questions is that I paid my own way on all trips and was not reimbursed for travel costs, nor was I compensated in any way by anyone," Terwilliger said. "Paddy Power paid the players consistent with their preexisting contracts, as far as I know, and Rodman received no compensation whatsoever, as far as I know. Sorry I cannot answer any other questions, but we are prohibited from discussing details of the trips before Rodman gives his exclusive interviews in a few weeks."

According to people involved in a tour group that traveled to Pyongyang to watch the exhibition game between the North Korean team and the former NBA players, the experience was bizarre, though at times thrilling.

Koryo Group, a company that organizes guided tours to North Korea on a monthly basis, brought a group of 20 to the country during the time that the players and Rodman were in Pyongyang. The price, according to more than one person who attended the tour, was about $10,000. Accoding to Koryo Group organizer Simon Cockerell, who said the trip cost 6500 euros, the extremely high price "reflects the exclusive nature of the tour (single rooms, higher quality restaurants, etc. and all inclusive nature of the tour throughout) but also the charitable aspect of it." Cockerell said that some of the proceeds from this trip are going to a charity for the deaf called Together, a German initiative that he said was involved in building a school for deaf children in Pyongyang. Another tour group run by a group called Uri Tours was also in Pyongyang at the time, though they did not attend the game.

The tourists stayed at the same hotel in Pyongyang as Rodman and his teammates, and had drinks with them at night, mostly with the other players but one night with Rodman himself.

"On the last night we hung out and talked with Rodman," said Sean Agnew, a music promoter from Philadelphia. "It was definitely pretty weird and unusual."

"He didn't talk about the game much other than saying it was history making," said one American tourist who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not willing to speak publicly about the trip. "But he kept asking personal questions to the group of guys at the table, asking about women we've slept with, etc." The tourist said Rodman didn't mention Kenneth Bae, an American citizen currently being held in a North Korean labor camp, but "did talk up 'the Marshal' Kim Jong-un though, saying he's a good guy and that what the media says about him is not true."

Rodman "seems to have a completely different conception of [North Korea] than pretty much all other Americans," the tourist said.

The group got to attend the game itself, traveling there as part of a diplomatic caravan arranged by countries that have relations with North Korea . They were told that they were not allowed to take pictures or bring their phones into the game.

"There were 15,000 people in monochrome outfits, and everyone's sitting there quietly," said John Milton, an American investment banker based in Budapest who went on the trip.

"Every seat is completely full but it's pin-drop quiet," said Agnew. "Then Kim Jong Un came in and the place erupts, goes crazy. It probably lasted around 15 minutes or so. Loudest applause I've ever heard in my life."

Rodman took the microphone and started singing "Happy Birthday" to the North Korean leader.


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Goalie Comes Out Of Nowhere To Make A Spectacular Save

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“Many years from now that might be THE highlight save.”

During the second period of Thursday night's Nashville-Philadelphia game, Predators goaltender Carter Hutton made a ridiculous diving grab to rob the Flyers of a sure goal.

As the puck rattled around the boards, Hutton attempted to make a play behind his own goal, but then the puck took a strange bounce, giving Flyers left winger Michael Raffl an open look at an empty net.

And even though Raffl was tripped in the process of shooting, Hutton's save was still pretty sick.

Raffl couldn't believe it.


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