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Deaf NFL Player Responds To Hearing-Impaired Little Girl With A Heartwarming Note

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“Even though we wear hearing aids, we can still accomplish our goals and dreams.”

Jonathan Ferrey / Getty

Derrick Coleman is a backup running back for the Seattle Seahawks and is deaf. On tuesday, a fan tweeted a letter from one of his hearing-impaired twin daughters. She congratulated the Seahawks on their victory over the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championship and let Coleman know that he is her inspiration.

Via Twitter: @JakeIsMobile

On Wednesday, Coleman tweeted back with a handwritten note of his own thanking his new friend for her kind words. "Even though we wear hearing aids," he said, "we can still accomplish our goals and dreams."

I can literally feel my heart getting warmer. I hope they stay friends forever. And in case you're interested, Coleman recently told his story for a new Duracell commercial, which is also pretty great.


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Why "Bring It On" Is The Best Movie In The Whole Wide World

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“Cheerleaders are dancers who have gone retarded.”

Universal Pictures

Universal Pictures

Universal Pictures


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Bad Lip Reading Of The NFL Is Back With Another Video!

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“Aunt Sharon got out again.”

With over 47 million views, there's a good chance you've seen "The NFL: A Bad Lip Reading," in which the gang from the YouTube channel BadLipReading dub footage from the NFL.

Now they're back with another video and they've added a few different elements, like player introductions and press conferences, to the mix of game footage.

And in case you're a bit skeptical, don't worry, it's still hilarious.

And just as quotable.


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Former Dallas Cowboy Convicted Of Killing Teammate Will Only Spend 180 Days In Jail

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Josh Brent, a former defensive lineman for the Dallas Cowboys, was sentenced Friday to jail time and 10 years’ probation for killing teammate Jerry Brown Jr. in a DUI car crash in December 2012.

Twitter: @ksatnews

A Dallas county jury has sentenced former Cowboy Josh Brent to 10 years and fined him $10,000 for killing his friend and teammate Jerry Brown Jr. in a car crash while driving drunk in Irvine, Texas, in December 2012. The judge in the case, however, suspended the sentence and Brent will spend just 180 days in jail and serve 10 years probation for the intoxicated manslaughter conviction.

Brent, 25, had a blood alcohol level of .18, more than twice the legal limit, and was driving at least 110 mph at the time of the crash. He also pled guilty to misdemeanor DUI in 2009 and was briefly jailed last summer for violating the terms of his bail by failing two drug tests.

Brent faced up to 20 years for the crime.


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23 Reasons Richard Sherman Is Actually One Of The Most Likable Players In The NFL

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Get to know football’s most polarizing player a little better.

Here's what the cameras didn't show you after the NFC Championship.

Here's what the cameras didn't show you after the NFC Championship.

Before Sherman's now infamous post-game interview, the Seahawks' star cornerback flashed Erin Andrews an ear-to-ear smile and pulled her in for a hug. Her thoughts on Sherman's rant: "That was awesome. That was so awesome. And I loved it."

He is a goofball.

He is a goofball.

What's cooler than cool? Dressing as a penguin for Halloween.

instagram.com

instagram.com


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Chad Johnson Doesn't Want Men Sending Him Pictures Of Their Butts Anymore

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Women’s butts are fine with him, however.

Men apparently keep sending pictures of their butts to former NFL receiver Chad Johnson on Instagram and he's not happy about it.

Men apparently keep sending pictures of their butts to former NFL receiver Chad Johnson on Instagram and he's not happy about it.

Via Instagram

Instagram recently started allowing users to privately message each other, and Johnson has been allowing his fans to send him photos.

Instagram recently started allowing users to privately message each other, and Johnson has been allowing his fans to send him photos.

He called some of the photos he received "unacceptable" and shared screenshots on Twitter.

He called some of the photos he received "unacceptable" and shared screenshots on Twitter.

Via Instagram


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Richard Sherman Has Been Fined For Making Choking Gesture During NFC Title Game

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Cornerback faces nearly $8,000 fine for unsportsmanlike conduct and taunting.

Tony Overman / The Olympian / MCT

The NFL has fined Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman $7,875 for unsportsmanlike conduct and taunting in the final seconds of the NFC championship game against San Francisco.

Sherman was penalized for making a choking gesture toward the 49ers bench that he later claimed was meant for quarterback Colin Kaepernick. "Why? Because he decided he was going to try the guy he was avoiding all game, because, I don't know, he's probably not paying attention for the game-winning play. C'mon, you're better than that," Sherman wrote in a post for Sports Illustrated's Monday Morning Quarterback site on Monday.

Moments before the gesture, Sherman had deflected a pass intended for Michael Crabtree in the end zone that was intercepted by linebacker Malcolm Smith and clinched the Seahawks' 23-17 victory. He ran to Crabtree, patted him on the bottom and attempted to shake his hand, to which Crabtree responded by shoving Sherman in the facemask. That's when Sherman turned around and made the choking gesture.

That postgame celebration was later punctuated by an audacious TV interview with Fox sideline reporter Erin Andrews that provoked a nationwide discussion about sportsmanship.

Big Wave Surfers Take On Monster Waves At 2014 Mavericks Contest

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Thousands of people descended on Half Moon Bay, Calif., Friday to watch 24 of the world’s best big wave surfers compete. The surfers braved 40-foot faces before Grant “Twiggy” Baker of South Africa was crowned winner.

Peter Mel rides a wave during the second heat of round one of Mavericks Invitational on January 24. in Half Moon Bay, California.

Getty Images/Ezra Shaw

Tyler Fox rides a wave during the second heat of round one of Mavericks Invitational on Jan. 24 in Half Moon Bay, California.

Getty Images/Ezra Shaw

Tyler Fox rides a wave during the second heat of round one of Mavericks Invitational on Jan. 24 in Half Moon Bay, California.

Getty Images/Ezra Shaw

Tyler Fox rides a wave during the second heat of round one of Mavericks Invitational on Jan. 24 in Half Moon Bay, California.

Getty Images/Ezra Shaw


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Struggling Little League Hockey Player Gets Some Help From A Friendly Ref

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Failing has never looked so cute.

During a recent Montreal Canadiens game, the Timbits -- a young hockey league in Canada funded by Tim Horton's for children four to eight years old -- carried on the tradition of playing a quick game at intermission. Unfortunately, as the players were rushing out on to the ice, the goalie had a little trouble finding his footing.

Thankfully, there was a photographer skating behind everyone, who was able to lend a helping hand.

But as soon as he let go, the poor kid fell down again.

Realizing the goalie gear was too much for the little guy, the referee skated over, picked the kid up and carried him over to the goal so he could fulfill his role as protector of the net.


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Stanislas Warwinka Wins Australian Open

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He overcomes an injured Nadal in four sets 6-3 6-2 3-6 6.

Jason Reed / Reuters

Wawrinka played brilliant tennis and broke Nadal early in the first set.

Wawrinka played brilliant tennis and broke Nadal early in the first set.

Via bbc.co.uk

He won five straight points to take the first set.

He won five straight points to take the first set.

Via bbc.co.uk

He kept up the high standard in the second set.

He kept up the high standard in the second set.

Via bbc.co.uk


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23 People Tackling A Muddy Assault Course Who Will Make Your Monday Seem Bearable

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So much mud.

This is the starting line for the annual Tough Guy survival day near Wolverhampton, a 15km assault course with 15m obstacles, razor wire, fire and mud. Lots and lots of mud.

This is the starting line for the annual Tough Guy survival day near Wolverhampton, a 15km assault course with 15m obstacles, razor wire, fire and mud. Lots and lots of mud.

Darren Staples / Reuters

Lots of people tackle Tough Guy in fancy dress.

Lots of people tackle Tough Guy in fancy dress.

Getty Images / Bryn Lennon

But then this usually happanes.

But then this usually happanes.

Darren Staples / Reuters

It helps if you don't mind climbing over 15m obstacles without being tied to anything.

It helps if you don't mind climbing over 15m obstacles without being tied to anything.

AP Photo/Jon Super


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16 Eye-Popping Examples Of Alleged Corruption At The Sochi Olympics

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A leading anti-corruption campaigner points fingers.

Gary Hershorn / Reuters

When pressed about the 2014 Sochi Olympics' record $51 billion price tag — a sum that is five times the amount spent on the last Winter Games in Vancouver and that dwarves the GDP of three-fifths of the world's countries — Vladimir Putin has shrugged off allegations of corruption, insisting that the eye-popping figure simply reflects the cost of doing business in his new Russia.

"If anyone has such information, give it to us, please. I repeat once again, we will be grateful," Putin said this month, denying an International Olympic Committee member's recent claim that a third of the cost was siphoned away. "But so far there has been nothing but talk."

A new report on the construction process released Monday by leading anti-corruption campaigner and opposition firebrand Alexey Navalny, however, intends to make him face facts.

According to Navalny's investigation, shared exclusively with BuzzFeed prior to publication, Russia handed out massive contracts with no real competition to contractors who overcharged them by hundreds of millions of dollars and, almost without exception, has failed to make them face consequences.

"It's amazing how open they are about it," Navalny, who rose to prominence exposing graft in state-run corporations before emerging as the leader of an anti-Putin protest movement in winter 2011, told BuzzFeed by phone from Moscow. "They start out with a low price, then drive it up once the contract is guaranteed. Prices go up several times, and they bring in their own subcontractors to do all the work."

The cost of the Olympic Stadium alone may have gone up by as much as 14 times. A construction company owned by Siberian politicians with no experience building sports arenas built the hockey arena and bobsled course at $260 million over market price. The company building the IOC's offices only put up 14% of the total cost and isn't expected to pay back the rest in state loans, but will still inherit the building after the Games.

Working out how much has been spent on the Olympics was "really problematic," Navalny said, because the Russian government has not published numbers since 2006. Putin has said that the Olympics themselves, as opposed to infrastructure projects he insists Russia would have built in Sochi anyway, only cost $6 billion, less than half of which comes from the state budget.

Navalny's team of 23 people spent two months sifting through documents to calculate that the Kremlin, the province of Krasnodar that includes Sochi, state-run corporations, and Russia's state development bank accounted for over 96% of total Olympic spending — 30% of which was given to offshore companies whose real owners are unknown. Many of the known contractors have close ties to the Kremlin, including Putin's former judo sparring partner, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's ski coach, and the main sponsor of Putin's flight with cranes on a dirigible in 2012.

The corruption and cronyism documented in the investigation is "the natural consequence of [Putin's] manual control" of the political system, Navalny said, and the biggest threat to Putin's goal of making the Olympics the crowning moment of his presidency. "For him, it's a monument to himself, like Peter the Great building St. Petersburg," Navalny said. "But for people a level below him, corruption is the goal. And since they know how super-important the project is to Putin, they knew they'd get the contracts at crazy prices, because he trusts them."

The full investigation is available at sochi.fbk.info as an interactive map of the Sochi Olympic sites. Users can click on individual sites to explore price calculations in detail. Highlights from the report are below.

Russian taxpayers are picking up 96% of the tab.

Russian taxpayers are picking up 96% of the tab.

The Kremlin has said that at least half of the money spent on the Olympics and surrounding construction comes from private investors: The state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported that total was at least $25 billion. But, according to Navalny's report, almost none of that counts. Most of the projects not funded directly from the Russian budget were paid for through the Krasnodar provincial budget with federal funds, by state-run corporations, or through loans from VEB, Russia's state development bank. About 75% of the $7 billion-plus in loans had to be restructured last fall, ensuring the government would lose most of its investment. Most of the $1.5 billion Navalny estimates oligarchs did spend — a mere 3.5% of total Olympic expenditure — was backed by those loans, often at up to 90% of the projects' total cost.

Samohin

The Olympic Stadium is two and a half times more expensive than similar stadiums in Europe; its cost may have gone up 14-fold in seven years.

The Olympic Stadium is two and a half times more expensive than similar stadiums in Europe; its cost may have gone up 14-fold in seven years.

A ticket to the opening and closing ceremonies at the 40,000-seat Fisht stadium will set you back $12,500. But that's nothing compared with the chunk it took out of the Russian budget. Nobody is sure how much it actually costs: Estimates range between $500 million and $665 million. That's up to 14 times more than originally planned (and that original number was supposed to be the worst-case scenario). Even at the lowest estimate, the stadium is still two and a half times more expensive than similar soccer arenas built in Europe in the past decade, according to Navalny's report.

The company building the stadium, Engeocom, has been embroiled in embezzlement proceedings for city-funded projects in Moscow and didn't assess the environmental impact until a year and a half after it started building it, in violation of Russian law. Russia's Audit Chamber has accused it of artificially jacking up the cost. An arbitration judge fined Engeocom for violating safety and technical regulations in November 2013, but the company doesn't seem to have taken notice: Just over a week later, one worker died and two others were seriously injured in an onsite accident. Migrant laborers told Human Rights Watch that they were only promised two months' pay and were threatened with having their entire salaries withheld.

Thomas Peter / Reuters


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The New Yorker Cover With A Figure Skating Vladimir Putin Is Pretty Much Perfect

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It’s called “Jury Of His Peers” and it sticks the landing. Barry Blitt is very good at what he does.

newyorker.com

Every Reason You Can't Stand ESPN In One Image

The 15 Worst Types Of People At Every Super Bowl Party

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“Who’s playing again?”

The Ex-Football Player

The Ex-Football Player

They will chew your ear off about their glory days and how they could've gone all the way. Now the only thing they're going all the way for is to the fridge for another 5,000 calories to add to their continually expanding fat rolls.

NBC / Via guyism.com

The Coach

The Coach

Says "if it were up to me" a lot.

Via beermugsports.com

The Gambler

The Gambler

Coin flip? First to score? How many chips can he fit in his mouth? It doesn't really matter, because all the gambler wants is to "make things interesting."

Via youtube.com

The Clueless One

The Clueless One

I understand the complexities of the NFL rulebook go over the heads of even the most diehard fans, but it's really not THAT hard to remember what a first down is. Like, five-year-olds can do it.

BBC / Via cuddlebuggery.com


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Los Angeles Times Uncovers Extremely Patronizing Handbook For Raiders Cheerleaders

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ALWAYS keep your nail polish nearby.

Russia Today

Last week an Oakland Raiders cheerleader (pictured above with her attorney) filed suit against the team, alleging that it violates labor laws by failing to compensate its sideline dancers for rehearsals and mandatory community appearances. Today, a Los Angeles Times article uncovered a purported Raiders cheerleader conduct guide, and, as they say, it is a doozy. (The team has yet to issue any comment on the lawsuit or the conduct guide.) Among the excerpts from the handbook quoted in the Times:

• "Keep nail polish pads in your car for emergencies."

• "If you don't like your meal, try a little of everything and strategically move the rest around your plate." (From an inexplicable section on how to eat in public.)

• "Make a point to find out if a player is married ... In most cases, he won't tell you!"

• "There are some young men on the Raider staff who are married and yet some of the Raiderettes like to call them 'just to chat.'"

Well! Read more here.

This Is How British People Describe The Super Bowl

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“Maybe they win a large bowl?” Also, Brits love Richard Sherman.

What happens when you ask a bunch of British people to describe the Super Bowl?

On the sport itself...

On the sport itself...

On the Super Bowl...

On the Super Bowl...

And on Richard Sherman's famous post-game interview...

And on Richard Sherman's famous post-game interview ...


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21 Badass GIFs To Get You Amped For Slopestyle At The Sochi Olympics

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Start buying your Mountain Dew in bulk because this is gonna get pretty extreme.

Slopestyle skiing and snowboarding will appear in the Winter Olympics for the first time next month in Sochi, Russia. The event combines a mixture of high-flying jumps and rails that allow competitors to perform a wide variety of tricks — cleaner runs of higher difficulty are rewarded with the highest scores. If we know anything from its X-Games origins, slopestyle promises to be one of the most exciting events at the Olympics. Here are a few things you can expect to say while watching in a couple weeks:

"Whaaaaaaaaaaattttt."

"Whaaaaaaaaaaattttt."

youtube.com

"Are you kidding me?"

"Are you kidding me?"

youtube.com

"Oh, so that's how you get vertigo."

"Oh, so that's how you get vertigo."

youtube.com


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Redskins Coach Says "Stats Are For Losers," Which Is Funny Because Stats Show He Does A Lot Of Losing

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Washington Redskins secondary coach Raheem Morris doesn’t believe in stats. The stats show a different picture.

This is Raheem Morris.

This is Raheem Morris.

He's just finished his second year as the secondary coach for the Washington Redskins.

Last week, he went on Comcast SportsNet's Redskins Nation to discuss his defense. Here's what he had to say:

Streeter Lecka / Getty Images

"You know, my thing is, I’m never gonna look at stats,” Morris said. “Stats are always for losers."

Via csnwashington.com

17-31 — Morris' record in three years as head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

22nd — The Redskins' ranking out of 32 teams in passing touchdowns allowed in 2013, in Morris' second year coaching the secondary.

20th — The Redskins' ranking out of 32 teams in passing yards allowed in 2013.

31st — The Redskins' ranking out of 32 teams in passing touchdowns allowed in 2012, in Morris' first year coaching the secondary.

30th — The Redskins' ranking out of 32 teams in passing yards allowed in 2012.


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Northwestern University Football Players Are Attempting To Unionize

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The movement is led by one of the team’s quarterbacks and affiliated with an advocacy group founded by a former UCLA linebacker.

Kain Colter, Northwestern quarterback.

Jonathan Daniel / Getty

Northwestern football players have begun the process of applying to the National Labor Relations Board to form a union, ESPN's Outside The Lines reports.

The players are receiving support from the United Steelworkers and a group called the National College Players Association, which was founded by former UCLA linebacker Ramogi Huma. Huma says an "overwhelming majority" of the team's 85 scholarship players signed cards requesting union representation.

The players seek to create an entity called the College Athletes Players Association that would initially represent only football and basketball players and would not — at least not at first — advocate for college athletes to receive salaries.

Huma said the goals of the CAPA are the same as that of the NCPA. The group has pressed for better concussion and other medical protections, and for scholarships to cover the full cost of attendance.

Having already successfully advocated for the creation of multiyear scholarships, it now would like those scholarships to be guaranteed even if a player is no longer able to continue for injury or medical reasons. The group has also called for a trust fund that players could tap into after their NCAA eligibility expires to finish schooling or be rewarded for finishing schooling.

The application to unionize "could take years to resolve," ESPN writes, as Northwestern and the NCAA are expected to oppose the action.

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