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ESPN's Tebow Love Goes To New Absurd Heights

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There's something in the (holy) water in Bristol.

Let's look at that question again.

"Scale of one to ten: How impressive is a QB throwing a football in a trash can?"

That's a question ESPN actually posed after it was reported (REPORTED, as though this is news) that Tim Tebow successfully threw a football into a trash can from about 25 yards away. Tim Tebow is an NFL quarterback. IMpressive doesn't even belong in the same paragraph with this "achievement." The target he's required to hit from that distance in a game (a wide receiver's hands/chest) is smaller than many trash cans and oh yeah IS MOVING. So on a scale of one to ten I'm going to go with zero, ESPN. The answer is zero. Now if he was in a pee-wee league, it'd be a solid six. But he actually makes money doing this, so I think we don't need to report on the fact that he successfully did the bare minimum IN PRACTICE to be able to claim with a straight face that he plays his position.

H/T Christmas Ape at Kissing Suzy Kolber


Yankees Manager Joe Girardi Lost His Damn Mind At A Heckler

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Dear Joe: next time, comfort yourself by thinking about how much richer you are than this dude.

After the Yankees' loss to the Chicago White Sox Wednesday, Girardi got heckled during an interview. He was not happy.

Here's the video, complete with the unintelligible heckling and Girardi's righteous hellfire.

Let's break it down!

Hey Joe! Tell us about your pitcher, or something. TALK ABOUT BASEBALL, BASEBALL MAN.

Hey Joe! Tell us about your pitcher, or something. TALK ABOUT BASEBALL, BASEBALL MAN.

Actually, hold tight real quick while we zoom in on your damn face.

Actually, hold tight real quick while we zoom in on your damn face.


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US Olympic Track Star Runs A Five-Minute Mile While Chugging Beers

Prince Harry And Ryan Lochte Raced In A Vegas Swimming Pool

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Could the royal keep up with the Olympian? Why is Ryan Lochte wearing pants in a pool? If they're both drunk does the race even count?

(Getty/Jason Merritt) (Getty/Pascal Le Segretain)

Image by Jason Merritt / Getty Images

Step One: Identify The Participants

Step One: Identify The Participants

That's Lochte splashing people like a douche.

Step Two: Clear A Path In The Pool Of Drunk People

Step Two: Clear A Path In The Pool Of Drunk People

Step Three: Stretch

Step Three: Stretch

Lochte is wearing pants. I'm not sure why.


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The Sacramento Kings Are Probably Not Moving To Virginia Beach

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This report about the Kings moving to Norfolk, Virginia is premature at best and inaccurate at worst.

Image by Rich Pedroncelli / AP

Earlier today, a report was published in the Hamptons Road Business Journal with the headline "Sources: Sacramento Kings may move to Virginia Beach, arena deal in the works." According to unnamed sources, the Maloofs, who own the Kings, will partner with Comcast to make the move happen. Comcast's involvement will guarantee a 25-year lease on the stadium, yet to be built, in exchange for naming rights. Let's take a second to parse the content of the article.

1. First off, this is all attributed to unnamed sources, which, though not without credibility, could easily be people biased in favor of one company or the other. If you're Live Nation, another rumored partner in the deal, or an official in Virginia Beach, it might be in your interest to make this happen.

2. The arena hasn't been built yet. It's realistic, and probably true, that this is all a proposal that's been written up and is ready to be presented as a formal plan; that doesn't mean the financing, land, or countless other massive details inherent to creating a sports arena have been figured out yet.

3. For the Maloofs to pull the trigger on this, the move would need to be mostly financed by others, since the Maloofs' finances are at this point highly questionable. The Hamptons Road Business Journal states that the family owns the Palms Casino in Las Vegas when, in fact, they only have a 2% stake in the property. Back in April, when a proposed deal for a new Sacramento stadium fell through, most of the funding was supposed to come from a lease to a private parking vendor.

4. This arena has been proposed before, and the proposal failed. In that case, there wasn't an NBA team attached, but obstacles like this — "Virginia Beach Councilman John Baum kicked off a 30-minute session of polite but blunt questioning of Horrow by expressing distaste for major league sports and high-priced athletes. He said Horrow would have trouble convincing him to spend city money on a sports arena." — would still need to be overcome.

5. Virginia Beach is a smaller market than Sacramento, and it's a much smaller market than Anaheim, and David Stern already said he wouldn't let the Kings move to Anaheim. (The ultimate decision is up to a vote by the NBA's Board of Governors, aka the owners.) And before you shout Oklahoma City at me, remember that SuperSonics were purchased by a group of OKC-based investors before making that move.

6. The Maloofs claim they haven't talked to Virginia Beach. I mean, that doesn't really mean anything, but whatever. Also, the NBA claims they haven't applied for relocation yet.

7. There might not be an NBA team in Norfolk/Virginia Beach, but there are teams in Washington, D.C., 200 miles away, and Charlotte, North Carolina, 325 miles away — neither of which are doing that well.

8. The Kings would need to remain in the Western Conference, despite playing in a city on the Atlantic Ocean, OR the NBA would need to switch a team from the East to the West.

9. The proposed $1 hike in the local lodging tax probably wouldn't be enough public money to fund the stadium, and if more public money is needed, then the plan will have a lot more bureaucratic and political bludgeoning to survive before it becomes a reality.

10. The Maloofs own Power Balance Pavilion, where the Kings currently play. So that's something to keep in mind.

Anyway, at this point, I'd say that the deal will probably be suggested with some degree of formality — even that might not happen — but doesn't have much a chance of coming to fruition. If Stern and the league do in fact allow the Kings to move, they'd rather have them somewhere like Seattle, and if he allows them to move to Virginia Beach, a lot of money needs to appear before the stadium can even begin to be built. That stadium 100% needs to be a guarantee — with a construction schedule and all that good stuff — before a move could be finalized.

"The Mighty Ducks": Where Are They Now?

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Everyone's favorite hockey underdogs are all grown up.

Gordon Bombay — Emilio Estevez

Gordon Bombay — Emilio Estevez

EMILIO! Charlie Sheen's brother has definitely been the quieter of Martin Sheen's two famous sons. After the Ducks he made cameos in movies like Mission Impossible and TV shows like The West Wing, but his biggest projects since his hockey days have come in the past few years. 2006's Bobby and 2010's The Way was written and directed by Estevez. Both films received mixed reviews and also featured performances from Gordon Bombay.

Image by Charles Sykes / AP

Charlie Conway — Joshua Jackson

Charlie Conway — Joshua Jackson

Joshua Jackson has had the most consistent career from youth to adulthood of any child star I can think of. As a kid he had The Mighty Ducks franchise. As a teen he had Dawson's Creek. As a young adult he had moody teen thrillers like Cruel Intentions and Skulls, and as an adult he has Fox's Fringe. That's crazy impressive. Way to go Charlie.

Fulton Reed — Elden Henson

Fulton Reed — Elden Henson

Fulton had a big role in Ashton Kutcher "thriller" The Butterfly Effect, but has since been relegated to bit parts. He has worked consistently since the Ducks, though, appearing in projects like Grey's Anatomy and Deja Vu.

Goldberg — Shaun Weiss

Goldberg — Shaun Weiss

Everyone's favorite goalie was a mainstay of kid comedies like The Mighty Ducks and Heavyweights. He's continued acting, and has since been seen in Freaks and Geeks, MTV's Undressed, and Drillbit Taylor.


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The First Gay Major Leaguer Already Has A Lot Of Friends

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There are no out male athletes in the major league sports world today. But among pro ballers, the straight part of the gay-straight alliance is finally getting itself off the ground.

Image by John Gara/Buzzfeed

“If he’s sucking cock, he’s getting his ass kicked.”

New Jersey Devils winger Cam Jannsen said those words on an internet-radio talk show on July 12. In context, they were less sinister than they were crass; regardless, they reinforced the most pessimistic assumptions about homophobia in professional sports.

In a culture of increasing acceptance toward out individuals, in which the movement toward marriage equality sometimes appears unstoppable, sports remain one of the last frontiers of homophobic attitudes. Although the prevalence of gay sports leagues and gay sports bars go a long way toward proving that you don’t have to be straight to be an athlete — the North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance, for example, counts more than 700 softball teams across the U.S. and Canada in its 44 affiliated leagues — the major leagues are another story.

There has never been an out athlete in Major League Baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association or the National Hockey League.

Wade Davis Jr., the former NFL cornerback who is one of the few out gay athletes even to come out after their professional careers ended, sees the impact of anti-gay sentiment in his current work at the Hetrick-Martin Institute, which helps lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth between the ages of 12 and 24. “Most kids who I’ve talked to who are gay who play sports just don’t say anything,” Davis told BuzzFeed. “There are kids who stop playing sports because they’re out.”

Davis felt the same way while in the NFL and NFL Europe during the early 2000s, remaining in the closet until his football days were over. But times have begun to change. Prodded by activists, the four major American professional sports leagues are getting teams and players ready for the reality of out major league athletes.

Jannsen’s comments weren’t meant to suggest that gay men deserved to be assaulted, but to describe the way hockey players would use any available personal information to badger an opponent (the phrase “sucking cock” had been used first by the radio show’s host). Still, the standalone quote spread quickly as seemingly crystal-clear evidence of blatant homophobia among athletes. By the next morning, Janssen had apologized and pledged to eliminate that type of language from his vocabulary. Released through the Devils’s media operation, his mea culpa mentioned one activist group by name: “I would also like to take this chance to express my support for the work the You Can Play project is doing, and for the gay community in general.”

The quick response, the apology and the support “for the gay community” all were notable, but the reference to the You Can Play project statement highlighted what’s quickly become one of the most effective efforts to change the sports world’s mindset on LGBT issues.

In addition to being a scout for the Philadelphia Flyers and a law student, Patrick Burke is one of the three founders of You Can Play. Along with his father, Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Brian Burke, Patrick is invested in LGBT issues because his brother Brendan — who was also involved in the hockey world and wanted to work for the NHL — was gay. Brendan died in a car accident at age 21 only a few months after publicly coming out, and Patrick and Brian have taken up his cause. You Can Play began in earnest in March 2012.

The Cam Jannsen incident illustrated how integral of a role You Can Play already has in turning professional sports into a safe place for LGBT issues. Burke told BuzzFeed that he first saw the video of Janssen’s comments around 5 p.m. that evening. Immediately, he emailed the Devils and told them he could help. Within the day, Janssen would call Burke three separate times. The next morning, Janssen’s apology was made public, including that formal statement of gratitude toward You Can Play.

Change has already arrived. In 2006, Sports Illustrated polled professional athletes and found that 80 percent of NHL players would welcome an openly gay athlete, and Burke estimates that number now at 90-95 percent. However, reaching that ultimate goal — an out player in professional sports — is still a ways off. Burke says that he’s been told by people he trusts that there are major league athletes who are out to select groups of their teammates, but that's as far as it goes for now.

Those working on the issue say that, in order to create an environment where a gay player would be comfortable, the NFL, NHL, MLB and NBA — and, perhaps more importantly, their players — need to take a public stand. As Hudson Taylor, a Columbia University assistant wrestling coach and the founder of Athlete Ally — another organization working to address LGBT issues in sports — told BuzzFeed, “If coaches and league officials and players become vocal allies, then that becomes a very easy place for a player to come out.”

One of the leagues taking direct action today is the NBA.

At this year’s NBA rookie camp, which concluded on Monday, attendees heard something that past first-year players hadn’t: A message about the importance that athletes play in creating a safe environment for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people — including, potentially, their new teammates.

The “ally training” presentation was a joint production of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation and Athlete Ally. Aaron McQuade at GLAAD, who helped prepare the presentation, said, “There’s also an open invitation for any of the league’s players to contact us anytime, off-the-record, with any questions or concerns about how to deal with certain issues.”

Kathleen Behrens, the NBA’s executive vice president for social responsibility & player programs, called the “straightforward” effort launched this year at rookie camp an important and necessary step.

“We’ve always included a session and discussion with our players on cultural awareness and understanding,” she told BuzzFeed. “Given our role in the [Gay, Lesbian and Straight Eduction Network’s] ‘Think Before You Speak’ campaign and some unfortunate instances we had of players using homophobic slurs, we thought it was best to be a little more straightforward with our players in this area.”

One of those instances came in 2011, when Kobe Bryant, one of the most visible athletes in the world, called a referee a “fucking faggot.” Bryant later apologized and was fined $100,000 by the league. Only a month later, Chicago Bulls center Joakim Noah yelled “fuck you, fag” to a fan during a game. New York Knicks star Amar’e Stoudemire called one of his critics a “fag” on Twitter two months ago.

Specifically, Behrens noted, “Working with GLAAD and Athlete Ally gives us a chance to not only say ‘don't say this,’ but hopefully to give our players a better understanding of the challenges LGBT kids are facing and the role we can play in ensuring that sports, schools and playgrounds are a safe haven for all kids.”

McQuade explained that the video presentation was focused on the idea — prominent throughout pro-LGBT sports work — of creating allies among straight athletes.

“First, we defined the word ‘ally.’ We then explained why NBA players should strive to be allies, touching on their status as role models, their ability to impact young people, and a frank talk on the problems that can arise from using anti-gay language,” he detailed. “Finally, we gave players some tips on how to be allies, from the basics (watch what you say) to participating in things like Spirit Day, up to and including partnering with organizations like GLAAD and Athlete Ally to spread a message of respect and inclusion.”

GLAAD’s McQuade has been heading up the media watchdog group’s involvement in sports-related issues, observing to BuzzFeed that “leagues, teams and athletes hold the same cultural status that [traditional GLAAD observation subjects like] networks, studios or celebrities do — in some cases perhaps even more — and have just as much potential to make the world a safer place for LGBT people.” Said McQuade: “There are dozens of outlets dedicated to nothing but sports, and those involved with the sports world are some of the most active and influential in social media.”

Meanwhile, the sports world is even less gay-friendly now than the military, which post-DADT is filled with out members. Army Brigadier General Tammy Smith recently became the first out general. That’s part of why Taylor says changing attitudes within the sports world is important for LGBT advocates — but also why it can be so difficult.

“Our athletic community isn’t going to be everything that it should be until we have a critical mass of straight allies who are vocal supporters,” Taylor said. “I’ve been a wrestler my whole life, I was raised as an athlete, and I think I was taught a very narrow conception of what was masculine or what was required of me to be a successful athlete,” he added.

Calling the NBA’s inclusion of LGBT issues in rookie camp “an enormous statement,” Taylor said, “I think it sends a very clear message to the closeted athletes in the professional sports world, as well as closeted coaches and athletes in college and high school, that an organization like the NBA not only supports them but is willing and ready and actually doing something to advance LGBT equality and inclusion in sports.”


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Lance Armstrong: I'm Still Not Guilty

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The world's most famous cyclist is giving up his fight against USADA and will be stripped of his Tour de France titles. But his lawyers still say he did not dope.

2003 Tour De France

Image by Christophe Ena / AP

Lance Armstrong's attorney sent a two-page letter to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) on Thursday before the agency announced it will strip the cyclist of his seven Tour de France titles. The letter addressed the organization's "dogged" pursuit of Armstrong, a scolding a federal judge gave the USADA despite throwing out a court case Armstrong's attorneys filed, and the organization's violation of its own statue of limitations (USADA claims that it restarted an investigation that was halted while Armstrong was investigated by federal prosecutors).

Any organization that is serious about fair play, integrity, and respect for rules, would take Judge Sparks’ criticisms to heart, rather than waste taxpayer money in the vindictive pursuit of Mr. Armstrong. Sadly, based upon our experience with USADA over the recent months, we have little confidence that USADA has the institutional character for that task. Indeed, the Court further observed that

“USADA’s apparent single-minded determination to force Armstrong to arbitrate’ indicated that USADA was “acting according to less noble motives” than to combat doping."

To be clear: Mr. Armstrong is not requesting a AAA arbitration because -- unlike USADA – he respects the rules applicable to him and not because of any belief that USADA’s charges have merit or any fear of what a fair proceeding would establish.

Finally, you are on notice that if USADA makes any public statement claiming, without jurisdiction, to sanction Mr. Armstrong, or to falsely characterize Mr. Armstrong’s reasons for not requesting an arbitration as anything other than a recognition of UCI jurisdiction and authority, USADA and anyone involved in the making of the statement will be liable.

2002 Tour de France

Image by PETER DEJONG / AP

Armstrong, for his part, added a statement saying he wanted to move on with his life.

There comes a point in every man's life when he has to say, "Enough is enough." For me, that time is now. I have been dealing with claims that I cheated and had an unfair advantage in winning my seven Tours since 1999. Over the past three years, I have been subjected to a two-year federal criminal investigation followed by Travis Tygart's unconstitutional witch hunt. The toll this has taken on my family, and my work for our foundation and on me leads me to where I am today - finished with this nonsense.


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Lance Armstrong To Be Banned From Cycling, Stripped Of 7 Tour Titles

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The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency swiftly responded to Armstrong's announcement Thursday that he would no longer challenge the agency. Here's why he stopped fighting.

Image by Mike Hutchings / Reuters

Image by Francois Lenoir / Reuters

Image by  Francois Lenoir / Reuters

LINK: See Armstrong's full statement here.


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Parks And Rec's Jean Ralphio Kidnapped An NBA Star

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Pacers star Roy Hibbert is having a contest where he's looking for fans to submit audition videos for a chance to get free tickets to games to sit in a special cheering section called “Area 55.” Ben Schwartz from Parks And Recreation submitted what is by far the best of the videos.

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Source: pacersarea55.com

NBA Rookie Vs. A Folding Chair

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What happens when you put a 275-pound center on a folding chair? This.

Source: youtube.com

NFL Agents On When To Hold Out And When To Suck It Up

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Will Maurice Jones-Drew get what he wants or just lose a lot of money in fines? Probably the latter, say agents, and here's why.

When Maurice Jones-Drew chose to hold out for a better contract this preseason, he followed in a long tradition of NFL players who believe their services have become worth more than their contract pays. Last year, it was Chris Johnson with the Titans. The year before, Darrelle Revis with the Jets. Next year it will undoubtedly be someone else.

Some think holdouts are a way for players to fight back and win a small victory against a league whose power is shifted towards wealthy team owners. Others consider them temper tantrums by overpaid millionaires who need more money to play a game they’re lucky to be a part of. Let's ignore that debate and look at the bottom line: when are holdouts financially worth the trouble?

Chris Johnson

Image by Streeter Lecka / Getty Images

Holdouts are obviously risky: players coming off them aren't in game shape and have lost time with their teammates and playbooks, while the new collective bargaining agreement specifies hefty fines that can make camp absences incredibly costly. Jones-Drew is already on the hook for $840,000 and the clock is still ticking.

But, of course, they still happen — because sometimes they work. We asked four agents when and why, and the first notable aspect of our conversations was a factor that the player reps didn't bring up: exactly how much the performance of the hypothetical player in question is worth to his team relative to his current contract. While that issue is obviously a baseline consideration, the particulars seem to be dictated more by off-field concerns: how much fan support a player has and how badly their team's current regime needs a good season.

Agents said they recommend players test the waters of the holdout with the knowledge that they might have to back down quickly if they don't get the right response. Revis, in 2010, won his campaign for a new deal ($46 million over four years) on the back of clamoring from Jets fans but backed off quickly from threatened holdouts in 2011 and 2012 when rumors that he was still unhappy drew little more reaction than "oh, this again." (There's also a clause in his new contract limiting his ability to hold out). Mini-holdouts can be part of this tactic: while about a dozen players skipped voluntary workouts going into the 2012 season, by preseason play the number holding out was just four. And by the third week of preseason, with Mike Wallace apparently returning to the Steelers this weekend, it's down to one.

Half-holdouts can work to push teams towards a deal that they were already heading for. After making less than $500,000 in his rookie season, in 2008, Devin Hester continually dipped his toes in and out of holding out (he went to team events, but skipped a few early workouts) to get a new contract. In a way, Hester's absences might have been good for the team, because it allowed them to reward a key player and placate fans without looking like pushovers. "If the team just backs down immediately, other players will do the same thing," observed sports lawyer Darren Heitner.

Agent JR Rickert's firm represents more than two dozen current NFL players and in 2010 won a bigger contract for Josh Cribbs thanks in large part to a "Pay Da Man" viral PR campaign. "We tried to illustrate vividly and thoroughly how unfair the contract was," Rickert said. Cribbs in fact never actually held out, but threatened to, and at one point theatrically cleaned out his locker during the 20-month fight over his contract. He ultimately got a deal worth $18.5 million over three years.

The other consideration, one agent who wished not to be identified told BuzzFeed, is what’s going on in a given player's organization. If the coaching staff or ownership is new and doesn’t have any expectations of winning immediately, it’s unlikely they’ll pay up. “If you’re a coaching staff that has to win this year, then maybe you have a little better chance to affect that team with a holdout,” the agent said. The Bears, for example, were quick to renegotiate the contracts of their major holdout threats after a dismal finish to the 2011 season. (While the Bears do have a new GM this year, coach Lovie Smith and much of the team's core have been around for quite a while, putting the franchise in win-now mode.)

Rookie holdouts are out of fashion at the moment, which makes sense: almost no rookie is popular enough to get fans on his side, while GMs of teams that have high draft picks are usually not banking on immediate winning seasons. (UPDATE: As one agent pointed out to us, we missed the most obvious reason: the new CBA pay scale has lowered the amount of money that rookies can win through negotiation.) And there are some prominent recent examples of what can go wrong for rookies who miss camp: After a long holdout before his first season, JaMarcus Russell's career in Oakland never recovered and Michael Crabtree, who missed part of his rookie year, is still left shaking off his reputation as a diva.

In Jones-Drew's case, a new owner and new coach have resisted his request for more money while the morbidly depressed Jacksonville fan base doesn't seem to have rallied behind him. The Jags' owner, Shad Khan, most recently told ESPN that "this team's not about one person," with Jones-Drew's camp responding that he was open to being traded. With Jones-Drew getting booed and lectured by dance-contest contestants during an appearance at a local car dealership, and a new Jacksonville regime holding low expectations heading into the 2012 season, it seems his options right now are to get traded or slink back into camp.

Darrelle Revis

Image by Winslow Townson / AP


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Ryan Lochte's Sister Is A Crazy Racist

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This is uncomfortable.

Megan Lochte made waves in London, by being an attractive woman sitting on Ryan Lochte's lap. TMZ published a photo of them with the headline "Breaststroke, Anyone?" Then everyone realized that it was Ryan's sister and immediately agreed to forget that we had temporarily turned our Olympic douchesweetheart into the creepy incestual Luke Skywalker that George Lucas made us deal with in Empire Strikes Back.

Turns out, there were other, way more disgusting reasons to ignore Megan. For instance, she's a horrible racist. This interview is from shortly after she returned from the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, and in it, she seems to really be enjoying a certain epithet for Chinese people.

Note: We've been asked to remove the video, so instead enjoy what was previously thought to be the most embarrassing video associated with the Lochtes.

Source: youtube.com

A Sampling Of Lochte's "Insight" On China:

A Sampling Of Lochte's "Insight" On China:


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The Biggest Insult Owners Can Inflict Upon Their Team's Fans...

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…Is probably something like changing an iconic blue, avian logo into a red dragon. This is what happened to a century-old Welsh soccer team's supporters as British soccer, once ultra-parochial, keeps going global.

In boxing, there is a fighter in the red corner and one in the blue corner. In politics, there are red states and blue states. Red and blue are the colors of rivals — Red Sox and Yankees, Michigan and Ohio State, Manchester United and Manchester City.

For over 100 years, the Cardiff City soccer club were on Team Blue. Their jerseys were blue. Their nickname was "The Bluebirds." But when the cash-strapped club recently accepted a $160 million investment, they also accepted a big change: this season, their emblem is a red dragon, and they'll wear red at home. (Their away jersey remains blue).

The brand overhaul was an essential condition of a cash injection by Malaysian billionaire Vincent Tan. When news of his demand leaked in May, fans reacted furiously, and Tan was ready to pull the plug on his purchase of a stake. But with Cardiff approximately $32 million in debt and losing $1.6 million every month, the club's board ultimately chose to save themselves by accepting the money and the re-brand.

To this day, says Tim Hartley — chair of the Cardiff City Supporters Trust, a fan group — "the reason for changing to red and changing the badge has never been explained,” he says. “We don’t understand why the investment was partly dependent on the change of color.”

One can easily read between the lines in Cardiff City's statement on the new uniforms, though: “The color red is widely recognized as being synonymous with Welsh culture and heritage. The color also holds strong spiritual significance in Asia, where it is seen as a symbol of power, prosperity and good fortune.”

The team's away kit remains blue, but the home laundry is red.

Global appeal: English soccer is all about it these days. Some Saturday and Sunday games are now played at 12.45 pm GMT instead of the traditional 3 pm, allowing hundreds of millions of fans in Asia to watch live and still go to bed at a reasonable hour. But far more radical proposals are on the table. It will be a long time before promotion and relegation are abolished, but such a "breakaway" by a top group of teams is considered an eventual possibility. And the "39th Game" — an extra game that would be added to each EPL team’s fixture list and played in the Middle East, Asia, Australia or the US — is a real likelihood.

This season, 11 out of 20 Premier League teams are foreign-owned. Most of the prime candidates for relegation — the bottom three teams in the EPL get demoted to the second-tier Championship league, whose top two squads are then promoted, as is a third decided by a playoff — will be British-owned teams, while many of teams pushing for promotion from beneath are foreign-owned. It’s possible that 14 foreign-owned teams could start the 2013-14 season. And 14 is the magic number needed to pass any vote on Premier League rule changes, which could mean that practices like the 39th Game could become reality.

Teams (and indeed the whole EPL) ignore the imperatives to think globally at their peril. The league is currently by far the most popular in the world in terms of both revenue and viewership. Sport Markt, a German consultancy, found that fans of EPL teams worldwide accounted for 70 percent of the total global soccer fanbase of 2.3 billion people. EPL games are beamed into 643 million homes globally and the league generates £500 million ($800 million) each year from its foreign broadcast rights.

According to a survey performed by Kantar, Manchester United, the world’s biggest sports team, has 659 million supporters worldwide. 325 million of those fans are found in the Asia Pacific region. Cardiff’s entire population is just 325,000, so even a small share of the Asian market would massively boost Cardiff’s coffers.

Stefan Szymanski, a University of Michigan professor who co-wrote Soccernomics, believes that many teams are at serious risk of being left behind in this new phase of economic expansion.

“To be a club that makes it into EPL is the biggest prize in world sports,” he says. “It would be worth moving heaven and hell to get into the EPL. There’s no other soccer league to compare. It’s becoming a global league, the first truly global league in history.”

The financial rewards of playing a single season in the EPL are enormous —promoted teams can expect to earn at least £40 million ($64 million) from the EPL’s TV revenues alone. Teams in the Championship, like Cardiff, urgently need to make the leap for reasons beyond pride alone.

From an economic perspective, at least, Cardiff's beleaguered fans are ahead of the curve in soccer's scramble for Asia, fighting for a share of that enormous and still-developing market, and the cash windfall that might finally push them up into the Premiership. And so far this season, Cardiff are unbeaten in red. But they did lose an away game wearing blue.


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Half Of Fantasy Football Drafting Is 90% Mental

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Okay, it all is. But the strategic and psychological aspects of the game often get lost in a haze of numbers. We've employed an ace from Football Guys, the web’s smartest and most hard-core fantasy football site, to provide some draft-day tips for your mind, head and brain.

Image by John Gara/Buzzfeed

The foundation of a good fantasy team is preparation and clarity in your player rankings — but preparation is nothing without the mental qualities of agility and tranquility on draft day. Here, guidelines for drafting like a ninja gymnast: flexible, sneaky, calm but alert, and ready to execute acrobatic decapitations.

Prepare Constantly For Disaster

Prepare Constantly For Disaster

Although there maybe wasn't a Plan B for these guys by this point. "Is it never put water on a blimp fire or always put water on a blimp fire?"

Source: upload.wikimedia.org

As information becomes more free and swift-travelling in the fantasysphere, it is becoming more difficult to count on being able to land a specific player in a specific round. Your plan A might be Matt Ryan in the sixth round at quarterback, but would you call an audible if Tom Brady fell to you in the second? Michael Vick in the fifth? By walking through these scenarios before they happen, you’ll avoid the panic of improvising. Not knowing what to do when an expected pick is sniped is the primary cause of “going on tilt” and losing your focus. Envision your perfect successful draft, but also envision failure — both before the draft and during it — and make notes on what you might do if you don’t get what you want.

This is also where tier-based drafting can be your Xanax. List your targets in groups of players you consider to have roughly the same value; when the last guy in one tier is nabbed right in front of you, it's time to move to a different position of need.


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LeBron James Wants To Do "Space Jam 2"

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File under: Things that must happen!

Last night, LeBron James couldn't sleep. I don't know if it's a good thing or not that I know that, but thanks to Twitter, I know that LeBron was the only person at his house awake last night. And after initially dealing with his insomnia by unpacking his bags and opening some packages that had come for him (seriously, do we need this much access to celebrities and athletes?), he decided to open his Twitter feed up for questions.

Most of them were the typical, boring questions we've grown to expect guys like LeBron to answer, but two stood out.

The first was, "Where did your hairline go?" Now that he's silenced all of those fourth quarter and "Lord of No Rings" jokes, the only consistent laugh people are getting at LeBron's expense is at his quickly vanishing hairline. So it was fun to see LeBron join in. Well, as fun as watching a multi-millionaire with insomnia answer boring tweet questions can be. Says the king, "Man I have no idea! If u find it, let me know and we'll go pick it up 2gether." Well played LeBron.

The other fun question should immediately put the gears of Hollywood in motion.

Source: @KingJames

I say this as a LeBron hater (Cleveland born and raised), but this guy was born to hang out with Bugs Bunny. LeBron is naturally charming and charismatic in a way that Jordan never was. Jordan was engaging and intense, but LeBron is actually funny. (See his ESPY hosting job, for example — can you ever imagine Jordan letting himself be the joke like this?) So someone better have a sequel idea ready.

What's that? Do I have an idea? If you really want to know—


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Gay Athletes Prepare For Asia's First LGBT Sports Festival

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Nepal will host the groundbreaking games in October. See photos from the LGBT community's first training session.

More than 200 LGBT athletes from 17 Asian countries are slated to compete in the festival on Oct. 12.

Image by Niranjan Shrestha / AP

Here, members of the Blue Diamond Society, Nepal's only gay rights group, practice at Dasarath stadium in Katmandu on Sunday, Aug. 26.

Sunilbabu Pant, head of the Blue Diamond Society.

Image by Niranjan Shrestha / AP


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This Triple Amputee Is A Stone Cold Badass

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Warning: May cause spontaneous desire to achieve greatness. Corporal Todd Love isn't going to let something like losing all but one of his limbs slow him down.

The Spartan Race is an international obstacle course that challenges participants to push themselves beyond their limits. Which is exactly what Corporal Todd Love chose to do as part of Team E-X.T.R.E.M.E., an eight member group that signed up to run the Beast, the most brutal of all Spartan events.

Over a span of five and a half hours, 22-year-old Love covered 10.5 miles of muddy, rugged terrain and completed over 75 obstacles with minimal help from his team.

The corporal had been preparing for the challenge ever since he began to recover from the explosion in Afghanistan in 2010 that left him with only one of his natural limbs. Love said he set out, "…to push [myself] in all things physical, proving that overcoming obstacles isn’t just something you attempt, it’s something that you embrace."

You can read more of his incredible story here.


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Utah's Guide To Having A Native American Logo Without Being Racist

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The University of Utah's logo features a drum and feather, and they take their team name from the Utes, an area tribe. But athletic director Chris Hill took to Twitter to clarify what's OK and what's not.

Not OK: wearing a headdress; building a tipi; wearing a headdress while dressed as a bottle of Budweiser; other stuff.

Source: youtube.com

This is particularly interesting because of the debate that's surrounded Utah's logo. For a while at the end of last year, it looked as though the school would abandon the drum and feather, but they ultimately decided to stick with it, at least for now. (According to the school, they have the support of the tribe in doing so.)

On one level, it's reassuring to see Hill taking extra steps to make sure the fanbase understands what's appropriate and what isn't. On another, is any of this appropriate? Native American-themed names and mascots seem pretty anachronistic in contemporary sports. Until 1972, the Utes were known as the Redskins, which is a far more offensive and stereotypical take on the whole tradition (cue dansnyderdoesn'tcare.gif). So at least there's that.

And, I mean, seriously: don't be this guy.

LINK: Via Color Lines


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12 GIFs That Prove Kobe Bryant Has Stolen Everything From Michael Jordan

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