Saturday 17 December 2016

Pete Carroll, Richard Sherman meet to discuss sideline rant

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Pete Carroll, Richard Sherman meet to discuss sideline rant

Pete Carroll revealed he and Richard Sherman met for an hour on Friday morning to clear the air over an ugly sideline incident during the Seattle Seahawks’ 24-3 win on Thursday night over the Los Angeles Rams.

Sherman was seen on the sideline shouting at Carroll and Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell after the offense opted to run a pass play from the 1-yard line.

Carroll says he and Sherman hashed things out during the meeting.

“I just spent an hour with him, and we’ve been through it,” Carroll said on 710 ESPN Seattle. “I love Richard. I just flat-out love the dude, and I’ve been with him through so much and watched him grow and do so many unbelievable things. We made it through it. He knows that wasn’t right. He’s just so fiery, and we’ve seen him before. He’ll speak for himself on that. But I feel very good about where he is right now. We’re going to be all right.

“It was too bad. It was a distraction to the game. And that’s not the way it’s supposed to go.”

Pete Carroll revealed he and Richard Sherman met for an hour on Friday morning to clear the air over some ugliness that played out on the sideline during the Seattle Seahawks’ 24-3 win on Thursday night over the Los Angeles Rams.

Sherman was seen on the sideline shouting at Carroll and Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell after the offense opted to run a pass play from the 1-yard line.

“I just spent an hour with him, and we’ve been through it,” Carroll said on 710 ESPN Seattle. “I love Richard. I just flat-out love the dude, and I’ve been with him through so much and watched him grow and do so many unbelievable things. We made it through it. He knows that wasn’t right. He’s just so fiery, and we’ve seen him before. He’ll speak for himself on that. But I feel very good about where he is right now. We’re going to be all right.

“It was too bad. It was a distraction to the game. And that’s not the way it’s supposed to go.”

What drew Sherman’s ire most about the play in question is it provided a stark reminder of when Russell Wilson was intercepted while running a pass play from the 1-yard line in Super Bowl XLIX. The pick of course clinched the championship for the New England Patriots.

“I’m upset about us throwing from the 1,” Sherman said after the game. “I’d rather do what most teams would do, making a conscientious decision to run the ball.

“I was letting [Carroll] know. We’ve already seen how that goes,” referencing the infamous Wilson pick.

Carroll appears inclined to let Sherman’s sideline antics slide this time to a certain extent. But Carroll wasn’t about to allow his “fiery” cornerback off without a stern talking-to, that much appears certain. What’s more, Carroll made it clear in his public remarks that such outbursts aren’t acceptable.

Simply put, when it comes to the sight of a player berating a coach or coaches, the optics of it all aren’t all that flattering for all parties involved.

Published at Fri, 16 Dec 2016 20:24:59 +0000

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Desbiens taking pursuit of national title, Olympic spot one game at a time

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Desbiens taking pursuit of national title, Olympic spot one game at a time

The senior season for a collegiate hockey player can be emotional. After having lived in arenas the last four years and with how the schedule works out, a final season becomes a farewell tour in slow motion. That’s the case for University of Wisconsin goaltender Ann-Renee Desbiens, who has spent her NCAA career frustrating opposing forwards and setting records for the Badgers.

“I don’t know where it went, but it’s definitely hard to know that it’s the last weekend that I’ll be at Ohio State, it’s my last weekend here or there,” Desbiens said as the team prepared to split for winter break. “I feel like every single weekend is the last one for one thing.”

In her junior season, Desbiens set the women’s single-season records for shutouts (21), save percentage (.960) and goals-against average (0.76). This year, with six shutouts in 12 games, she’s grabbed the all-time career shutout record for NCAA hockey—men’s or women’s. She passed former Minnesota Gopher Noora Räty at No. 44, and she’s already up to 46 with half the season still remaining.

Desbiens has exceeded expectations placed on her when she arrived in Madison from La Malbaie, Quebec as a freshman in 2013-14. Despite sharing the workload with U.S. national team goalie Alex Rigsby in her rookie campaign, Desbiens started 11 games and had a team-leading .957 save percentage to go with an 11-1 record. 

As much as any program, the Badgers have a history of outstanding goaltending. Under coach Mark Johnson, Wisconsin has provided a college hockey home to Olympian Jessie Vetter, as well as Rigsby, who led Team USA to gold at the 2015 and 2016 World Championship. Getting the starting gig in Madison comes with high expectations, but Desbiens slotted in seamlessly.

“I feel like I had pretty big shoes to fill when I came here,” Desbiens said. “We had Alex and before there was Jessie, so I wouldn’t say it put a lot of pressure, it’s more like a challenge. 

“[It] was one thing I was looking forward to personally. I was just playing and trying to be the best I could. Having big shoes to fill made it even better. Having to push myself even more because I knew what the coach and the team was expected from a goalie here. I just wanted to make sure I did my role.”

During her tenure, the Badgers have been frustratingly close to a national championship every season, maybe never closer than in 2015-16. They beat the rival Gophers for the WCHA title and then met again, one game removed in the NCAA tournament in the Frozen Four. Desbiens allowed just two goals on 36 shots, but the game required overtime. Despite two power plays in the extra period, the Badgers lost to the eventual champs.

It was tense but frustratingly familiar. In all of Desbiens’s first three seasons with the Badgers, they’ve fallen in the semifinals to the Gophers, with her in net for two of those three games.

“I feel like every year I’ve been here, we have had lessons to learn in the process. I think that just made us better,” she says. “I think [a national championship is] definitely something that we want. Every player in the league wants to win the national championship in her career. But I would say that right now we’re more focusing on one game at a time because you can’t really control the outcome at the end. We can focus on our process and strive to get better every game.”

This year, the Badgers are determined to capitalize on the convergence of a strong core of upperclassmen, a record-setting goaltender, and maybe the best rookie class in the nation, highlighted by first-year standouts Abby Roque and Presley Norby. They’re both adapting to the speed of the college game quickly. “Our freshmen class has been really good. It just shows how much depth we have on this team,” said Desbiens.

The Badgers have been ranked No. 1 in the nation since preseason polls and heading into the winter break they’re taking 18 of 19 first-place votes in the USA Today/USA Hockey Poll. But Desbiens know how little regular season success can mean. “We still need to be sharp every game because you never know what’s going to happen,” she says. “Especially when you get toward the playoffs. It only matters one game at a time. We can’t just sit back and be like, ‘Oh, we did well.’ We need to keep pushing ourselves. Every team has things to improve on and we do too.”

Desbiens takes that approach with everything on her plate. She’s chasing a national championship, but she’ll spend winter break skating with Team Canada at the newly minted December Series, a two-game set of friendlies against the U.S. It’s one of the last opportunities she’ll have to don the maple leaf before Hockey Canada determines the roster for the 2017 World Championship in Plymouth, Michigan. That roster is an honor in itself, but it’s also a massive step toward being on the 2018 Olympic roster, which convenes in the fall of 2017. 

That’s enough to cause a panic attack for most. But Desbiens is moving game by game. “Playing with the best players and against the best players in the world, that’s an amazing opportunity,” she says. “But I feel like I also need to focus here. We have a lot of things to accomplish as a team and that’s going to help me grow as a person, as an athlete, and as a goalie. 

“I feel like I have to [draw] a line. When I’m with Team Canada, I need to focus on them and when I come back here, I need to focus on the Badgers and do the best I can here too.”  

As much as any team in the nation, the Badgers are poised for tournament success. Desbiens and the upperclassmen have learned valuable lessons along the way and are ready to lead the team past previous stumbling blocks. “In the game of hockey, that’s the one thing you need to know about,” Desbiens says. “You need to show up every game and play.”

Published at Sat, 17 Dec 2016 06:26:14 +0000

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Aroldis Chapman Says Joe Maddon Overused Him in Cubs’ Title Run

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Aroldis Chapman Says Joe Maddon Overused Him in Cubs’ Title Run

If Manager Joe Girardi’s ironclad, by-the-book protocol leaves some Yankees fans gnashing their teeth from time to time, it feels like a security blanket to Aroldis Chapman.

Chapman, who recently signed a five-year, $86 million contract to return to the Yankees — where he spent the first half of last season as their closer before being dealt to the Chicago Cubs for prospects — made it clear on Friday that despite winning a World Series in Chicago he never quite took to the unpredictable ways of Cubs Manager Joe Maddon in the postseason.

“Personally I don’t agree with the way he used me,” said Chapman, speaking through an interpreter in a conference call with reporters the day after his signing became official. “But he is the manager and he had the strategy, you know?”

Chapman said what bothered him most was being kept in Game 6 of the World Series to pitch the start of the ninth inning with the Cubs holding a 9-2 lead — after he had thrown 42 pitches two nights earlier for an eight-out save in Game 5. In Game 7 the following night, Chapman’s fastball velocity dipped precipitously, and he allowed a tying home run to the Indians’ Rajai Davis before the Cubs won in 10 innings.

“The important game was going to be Game 7,” Chapman said of the Game 6 decision. “We had that game almost won. And the next day I came in and I was tired.”

Maddon said before Game 7 that he should not have allowed Chapman, who had entered Game 6 in the seventh inning with the Cubs up, 7-2, to remain in the game in the ninth. Chapman finally departed after walking the leadoff batter.

But it might not have been just Game 6 that bothered Chapman. Maddon also frequently asked Chapman to pitch earlier in games and to enter in the middle of innings, something Chapman prefers not to do.

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Chapman — who gave up three leads in the regular season for the Yankees and Cubs — ended up blowing three saves in the postseason. In addition to the Game 7 failure in the World Series, he gave up a tying two-run triple to San Francisco’s Conor Gillaspie in Game 3 of a National League division series and allowed a tying two-run single to the Dodgers’ Adrian Gonzalez in the National League Championship Series opener.

In that game, Chapman entered in the top of the eighth with the bases loaded and no one out. He struck out Corey Seager and Yasiel Puig but could not get past Gonzalez.

Chapman told Maddon shortly after he arrived in Chicago, where he quickly blew an eighth-inning save, that he preferred to pitch only the ninth. But he also told Maddon he would pitch whenever the manager wanted. They largely stuck to that plan — until the postseason.

“I never told him my opinion about the way he was using me because the way I feel is that, as baseball players, we’re warriors,” Chapman said, referring to the postseason. “Our job is to do what we need to do on the field. But if they send me out there to pitch, I’m going to go out there and pitch. If I’m healthy, I’m going to go out there and pitch. If I’m tired, I’m going to put that aside and just get through it.”

In many ways, Chapman echoed comments made by his new teammate Adam Warren, who was traded to the Cubs last winter and then returned to the Yankees in the July trade for Chapman. Whereas Girardi typically has well-defined roles for his relievers, Maddon reacts more to the particular situation his team faces in a game.

“Not really knowing when you’re coming in — that was the hardest thing, the unpredictability,” Warren said in July after he was back in the Bronx.

Chapman said that Miami, where he makes his home, made a strong offer to sign him to a long-term deal this off-season but that he was concerned that Jeffrey Loria, the Marlins’ owner, had a history of conducting fire sales.

“Sometimes they change their team a lot, and I wanted to have a stable team of young players where I could feel at home,” said Chapman, 28, who added that the opt-out option in his new contract — he can walk away after three years — came at the suggestion of his agent.

Chapman also said he appreciated how the Yankees treated him when they acquired him last December while he was the subject of a domestic violence investigation. (Eventually, Major League Baseball suspended him for 30 games at the start of the 2016 season.) He said he was still undergoing counseling, as mandated by baseball’s domestic violence policy, and understood that some fans in New York were not necessarily happy that the team had re-signed him.

“Nobody’s perfect,” Chapman said. “We make mistakes, but the important thing is we learn from them and move forward.”

Published at Sat, 17 Dec 2016 01:31:58 +0000

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Mickey Gall Predicts a Quick, Victorious Fight Against Sage Northcutt (VIDEO)

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Mickey Gall Predicts a Quick, Victorious Fight Against Sage Northcutt (VIDEO)

EXCLUSIVE

It’s a fight between two pretty boys … and Mickey Gall says he’s got the edge over his opponent, Sage Northcutt, in both looks AND talent.

Gall and Northcutt will face off at UFC on FOX 22 on Saturday … and when we got Mickey out in NYC he joked that he’s gonna get revenge for all fruit affected by Sage’s “Apple Challenge.”

Gall also gives a prediction for how it’s gonna go down in Sactown … and if it goes the way he says it’s going to, we’d suggest anyone watching to refrain from blinking.

Published at Sat, 17 Dec 2016 08:35:00 +0000

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Road to the Olympic Games: Changing the Olympic equestrian equation

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Road to the Olympic Games: Changing the Olympic equestrian equation

Hosted by veteran broadcasters Scott Russell and Andi Petrillo, Road to the Olympic Games chronicles athletes’ journeys on and off the field of play. Here’s what to look for on this weekend’s show on CBC Television and CBCSports.ca.


The one thing that you can count on in sport is that the rules change constantly.

It’s how the games we play become modernized and more accessible to more people around the world.  

The experts tend to refer to this phenomenon as universality or inclusiveness. The theory being that the deeper the competitive pool, the more attractive the sport is globally – thus ensuring its long term survival.

  • Watch: Rolex Grand Slam of Show Jumping — Saturday at 12 p.m. ET (CBC TV, CBCSports.ca)

Recently, equestrian sport – which includes dressage, jumping and eventing – has had to deal with rule alterations which are ostensibly aimed at keeping one of the oldest Olympic pursuits from becoming extinct at the Games.

Simply put, the rule changes have to do with the team events in each of the three disciplines. There will now be three, not four, horse-rider combinations and there will be no more drop scores.

The proponents of these changes argue that they will eliminate complicated mathematical formulas which go towards determining the winner and thus make the sport more understandable and attractive to a wider audience.

Universal field of play

They also suggest that the elimination of the margin for error for horse-rich nations will open the sport up to more countries and afford them a greater chance of being competitive. The competitive field of play will thus become more universal. In the past, European and North American countries have dominated horse sport at the Olympics.

In the end the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) adopted the proposed changes by a wide margin – only 11 of 107 national horse federations voted against them. But included in that group were France and Germany, who won Olympic jumping gold and bronze, respectively, in Rio de Janeiro.

It is also clear that a significant number of decorated athletes opposed the changes – including every member of the Canadian show jumping squad that finished fourth at the most recent Olympics. The problem is the managers at Equestrian Canada trumped the athletes in this case and voted to support the new vision.

‘Makes no sense for Canada’

“Given the success we’ve had under the current format, it makes no sense for Canada to vote in favour of changing to three-man teams,” said Eric Lamaze, who has won individual gold and bronze and team silver over the course of his Olympic career. “I am extremely disappointed and feel our national federation did not respect the wishes of its athletes.”

This situation is not new.

When it comes to sport the successful players attempt to protect their territory.  

They like to keep winning.  

Sometimes more competition can threaten their livelihoods or at least their reputations. As is often the case, inviting new kids to play a game means they might steal your thunder and replace you as top dog.

But it can also be argued that changing the rules in order to make it more attractive to a wider audience can threaten the integrity of the competition or change the nature of the game.

Watering down the product?

While it becomes more understandable to more people, it can become less recognizable to the purists. After all, at the last three Olympics the equestrian sports have undeniably produced full grandstands and exciting competition across the board.

Tinkering by watering down the competitive product may backfire, suggest the opponents of the changes.

“I think this would ruin our sport and the excitement of the sport,” said Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum, a German Olympic medallist. “I think it would be a disaster for our competition.”

Still, the changes are going ahead and are likely to be approved by the International Olympic Committee, thus paving the way for equestrian sport to remain on the Games program for the foreseeable future.

“This was a really important vote for the future of our sport if we are to increase universality,” said FEI president Ingmar De Vos. “It opens the door to countries that could only see the Olympics as a distant dream.”

Equestrian sport first appeared at the Olympics in 1900 and was once only open to “gentlemen” who were commissioned officers in the military.

Breaking down gender barriers

In 1952 at the Helsinki Olympics, women earned the right to compete in dressage. And beginning in 1956 at Melbourne, men and women began to compete as equals on the same field of play in eventing and jumping as well. Equestrian sport has been a pioneer in breaking down gender barriers at the Olympics.

The bottom line is that resisting change which makes sport more universally appealing can be viewed as flawed thinking.

After all, does equestrian really want to go the way of Basque Pelota, croquet and compulsory figures in skating?

Or does it want to evolve with the times and stay in the Games?

Published at Fri, 16 Dec 2016 12:44:03 +0000

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Bookmakers: Be A Winner!

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If you have been to either a race track or the fabulous Las Vegas, chances are you know what a bookmaker is. Not to be mixed up with a bookmarker, bookmakers are fondly known as the bookie which can either mean a company or a person who takes your bet. Despite its cute name, bookmakers are generally attached with bad reputations as they used to originate from mobs and gangs.

In this modern world, the occupation of bookmakers are provided from multinational companies that own the betting company, which still seems dodgy to most people. This is also the contributing element to why looking for a bookmaker is a challenging process. Other than Nevada and the Atlantic City in the United States, bookmakers are elusive to locate.

Luckily, the situation is totally not the same outside of the United States. For example, the United Kingdom is practically packed with bookmakers found on every nook and cranny of any given street at any given time. Transactions are constant and well run because these bookmakers though many, all originate from multinational companies with good integrity.

Furthermore, these bookmakers are able to place your bets on a whole variety of games from football to horses as well as greyhounds. You can now also place bet on reality TV competitions such as “Britain’s Got Talent”, guess the sex gender of a royalty’s baby as well as predict the weather on Christmas Day. Simply put, whatever you can think of, some bookie in the United Kingdom probably already has a pool running.

Do remember that the job description of a bookmaker is not to help you place and ace a bet. The job of a bookmaker is to help get your money and make profit. Bookmakers have insider knowledge, and always pool the odds in their favor.

This means that to win against a bookmaker, you need to have tactics and information as well. We suggest that you read up on the Sports Betting Champ System by Dr. John Morrison. Dr. John Morrison is a Ph.D. holder with over 20 years in statistics as well as sports betting experience.

Using the Sports Betting Champ System, Dr. John Morrison has now devised a strategy where you can win with a success rate of 97%. Do note that his success rate is most applicable for Major League Baseball played in the United States. It is also good to note that bookmakers always bet based on volume, rather than betting per game.

The Sports Betting Champ System alsoworks in this way in that you bet in a whole volume of games, hence utilizing this system against the bookmaker is ideal. Besides the Major League Baseball, you can also utilize the Sports Betting Champ System on the NBA, NFL and NHL. Before we conclude this article, we would like to once again highlight that it is important to remember that bookmakers exist to make their own profits, so refrain from betting blindly and instead utilize a strong system such as the Sports Betting Champ System.

Have you seen a bookmaker before? Click here to read more about our investigation on Bookmakers.

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Philadelphia Eagles Tickets: Eagles Could Own 2009 Season

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Lincoln Financial Field is the home turf for a football dynasty and for the fans that hold Philadelphia Eagles tickets. There are over 64,000 seats at this special stadium and during the height of football mania fans are packed in shoulder to shoulder cheering their heroes to victory.

Last year the Eagles once again claimed their Division title and came within inches of a Super Bowl bid. The team has been NFL Eastern champs almost every year since 2000 and 2009 may be the year they spread their wings and fly. Already the demand is on pace to exceed ticket availability as fans anticipate an exceptional season.

Big Birds Walked Before they Learned to Fly

The history of the Eagles dates back to 1931 when the Frankford Yellow Jackets folded halfway into the season. This team was part of the NFL and after more than a year, the franchise was handed out for $ 2,500. The Eagles and the Yellow Jackets were never really considered to be the same team; however, almost no one from the earlier team was signed by the new franchise. The first outing was against the Giants of NY and the Eagles were properly trounced by a score of 56-0.

The players who were on the roster during these early years were mostly former college students who only stayed for a few years. The Eagle’s general manager, in 1935, proposed a yearly draft of college players to enable all of the NFL teams to be more competitive. Thus began the tradition of the team at the bottom getting to choose the first draft pick.

The remainder of the 1930’s did not hold a lot of sparkle for the team and there were probably more than a few Philadelphia Eagles tickets that were used as bribes to attract an audience. Things began to turn around in the 1940’s and the football players began to show that they really could deliver the goods when called upon. In 1943, the team merged with the Steelers because of WW II and the decreased rosters. This created the “Steagles” and Philadelphia claimed their 1st winning season after years of attempts. This arrangement only lasted for one season but in 1944, the Eagles won again in their own right and forged a championship run.

The team was anchored by Coach Greasy Neale and a spectacular new draft pick, Steve Van Buren. For the Eagles, it was a bumpy ride through the 1950’s but 1960 became a golden season that is still revered. The team won their 1st division title since 1944 and in doing so, presented Coach Vince Lombardi with his one and only championship defeat.

The presence and dynamic growth of the team began to flourish under the leadership of the combined talents of coach Andy Reid and quarterback McNabb. The years since 2000 have been dominated almost exclusively by the soaring Eagles.

Checking Out the Stats

A look at the records for Philadelphia is proof of how successfully they have transformed their team into a respected contender.

– League Champions – 48, 49 and 60
– Conference Champions- 60, 80 and 03
– Division Champs- 47, 48, 49, 60, 78, 79, 80, 88, 01, 02, 03, 04, 06, 08
– 19 Playoff Appearances

Perfecting the Blueprint

The title of “Super Bowl Champs” has a nice ring to it, but the Philadelphia Eagles realize that they have some work ahead if they want to make a serious run for the gold ring. Philadelphia Eagles tickets are being snapped up quickly as fans eagerly wait for a new kick off day. The free agents and draft will definitely prove to be very helpful as the team digs in and uses this off-season time to put it all together and find a way to make it work. They have a couple of months to make their February free agent selections, and a healthy supply of 10 draft picks will definitely come in handy during April.

With QBs like McNabb, Kolb, and Feeley, the Eagles have plenty of skill and talent locked up for this all-important position and will probably look to add some playmakers and depth. There are plenty of returning players like Clemons, Darren Howard, Juqua Parker, Jackson, and Abiamiri, but fans are still anxious to see who Philadelphia is considering to add on to their roster. The early word making the rounds is that the team will be looking at players to move into tackle spots. Thomas and Runyan will become free agents and their return is highly suspect, especially with Runyan’s recent surgery. Both players have been loyal and dependable team members for Philadelphia but situations and circumstances change and hard decisions are getting ready to be made. None of this undecided business is hampering the sale of Philadelphia Eagles tickets though, and the 2009 season is on track to be another sell out.

By Matt Joal, sponsored by StubPass.com – StubPass sells Philadelphia Eagles Tickets, sports tickets, Football Tickets, theater tickets, concert tickets and more to just about any event in the world.

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Report: Rams believe Josh McDaniels can ‘fix’ Jared Goff

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Report: Rams believe Josh McDaniels can ‘fix’ Jared Goff

With the multitude of issues plaguing the Rams, including the stagnant progression of rookie No. 1 draft pick Jared Goff, the franchise is going out of their way to look for a new head coach that can help fix an offense that has been the team’s Achilles heel as of late.

The main coach being targeted for the vacant head position in Los Angeles? New England Patriots offensive coordinator and former Denver Broncos head coach, Josh McDaniels (more on that here).

The thought process behind the targeting of McDaniels is simple — his work with Tom Brady and Matt Cassel in New England as well as his development of Tim Tebow in Denver makes him the perfect choice to help mold Goff.

“They want to make a huge splash with a big name, but around the league there is a lot of skepticism they can lure one,” writes Mike Freeman of Bleacher Report. “The reason is Jared Goff. There’s tremendous doubt about just how good he is. The thinking goes that the Rams will find it nearly impossible to get the big name they want because whoever goes there will have his wagon hitched to a player who just might stink.”

McDaniels is known in coaching circles as a quarterback guru. He took the position of quarterbacks coach in New England in 2004 and held the title of quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator during all five of the Patriots’ Super Bowl championships.

“The Rams are focusing on him, I’m told, because he’s more realistic, and he’s a big enough name to sell in L.A. Plus, he can fix any potential Goff issues, the Rams think.”

While it remains to be seen whether or not the Rams can lure McDaniels away from Foxborough, expect him to e considered a candidate for the position right up until it is filled, be it by him or another coach.

Published at Fri, 16 Dec 2016 20:45:59 +0000

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For Caroline Ouellette, 300th CWHL point is bigger than a milestone

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For Caroline Ouellette, 300th CWHL point is bigger than a milestone

For the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, the two-game set between Les Canadiennes de Montreal and the Calgary Inferno on December 10-11 marked a pair of milestones. For the league, it was a celebration of its 10th anniversary, while Les Canadiennes forward Caroline Ouellette, one of the longest-tenured players in the CWHL, became the first to reach 300 career points.

From the moment to puck dropped on Saturday afternoon, media and fans stared at Ouellette, waiting for that seminal goal or assist.

The scrutiny is likely something she’s used to, given that she has played 151 regular season games with the CWHL over eight years, has won four Olympic gold medals with Team Canada and coaches and runs her own annual tournament in Montreal. 

But ask her how it felt to reach 300 and she does the equivalent of a verbal shrug.

“I’m not the most comfortable talking about myself,” she says. Instead, she gives credit to her teammates, who helped her achieve each and every notch on her stick.

“There’d been quite a bit of hype about [reaching 300 points] so I was hopeful that it would come soon because I wasn’t able to do it Saturday,” she says, wryly, noting that the pressure to put on a great game in front of a crowd of more than 6,000 at the Bell Centre—one of the largest the CWHL has ever seen—made her a bit nervous in the weekend opener.

Ouellette, her teammates, coaches and the league had done so much to promote the game that it felt enormous; it seemed to Ouellette to have the future of women’s hockey riding on it.

With such a large crowd, there was potential for broadening the CWHL’s regular paying fanbase, not to mention the league’s hope that the NHL and its franchise teams will funnel more dollars into the women’s league. If they could put on a stunning performance, she said, maybe this would mean more tickets sold or a even yearly game scheduled in the Bell Centre. Beyond all those endless spiraling thoughts, Ouellette simply wanted to have a good game for the sake of her team.

“Before we went out on the ice we said to each other, just enjoy this moment,” says Ouellette. “This is incredible. They are here for us, they are giving us a chance. Let’s just go, play our best and that’s exactly what we were able to do.”

Montreal goalie Charline Labonte and her Calgary counterpart Emerance Maschmeyer practically put on a clinic. Marie-Philip Poulin’s first-period tally for Les Canadiennes turned out to be the game’s only goal. For Ouellette, the ‘W’ was more important than rewriting the record books

“My [300th] point was a very small thing, and probably the last thing I needed to accomplish that day,” Ouellette says. “I knew it would happen eventually. You just have to give the puck to Ann-Sophie Bettez or Marie-Philip Poulin and it’s going to be in the net eventually.” 

And she did, in Sunday’s rematch, assisting on Ann-Sophie Bettez’s first-period tally that brought the crowd to its feet.

While a few teammates congratulated her in the moment and staff had made signs displayed in the stands, the real celebrations were held until after the game. Montreal defenseman Julie Chu, who also coaches the Concordia University Stingers women’s hockey team with Ouellette, sent around an email to their players, praising Ouellette and enumerating all the work it took to get to 300. She didn’t, however, let up on the teasing, reminding Ouellette that she was still fighting for her 50th point.

“But who’s counting?” Ouellette says, jokingly.

Les Canadiennes were not the only ones to acknowledge Ouellette’s milestone moment. Former Montreal teammate Karell Emard told Ouellette she was one of the fiercest competitor she ever played against; Inferno forward and Canadian national team teammate Brianne Jenner also sent a message after the game, congratulating her on her success, being sure to tell Ouellette that she set the bar very high, indeed.

“Coming from her, I got messages also from Laura Fortino from Brampton, Genevieve Lacasse…that means even more,” says Ouellette. “That my teammates and my opponents in the CWHL take the time to acknowledge that, I felt very, very blessed.”

This season Ouellette has been on a hot streak, racking up points more prolifically and more quickly than she has in the past three seasons—her 13 goals and 23 points over 14 games lead the league. While Ouellette is no longer playing with Team Canada, giving her a little more time and energy to dedicate to Montreal, that may not be the only reason she’s seen that burst of points recently.

“I think it’s a mix of I’m enjoying it, I’m having fun, I’m healthy and I have a great team. We’ve had a great start to the season, we’ve had great games and I’m surrounded by incredible players, so that all helps, for sure.

While it was nice to get that point, from Ouellette’s perspective the true win of the weekend was seeing how much the CWHL has grown. 

“I was so proud to see how far our league has come,” Ouellette says. “Our first regular season game at the Bell Centre and having 6,000 fans was a moment I’ll never forget. For us it was a big test, earning, hopefully, the privilege to play there every year. Hopefully it was a success.

“I think that it’s a huge step forward for women’s hockey,” she continues. “Our dream is to have that pro league and I certainly think that goes with a partnership with the NHL, just like they have in the WNBA and the NBA. Hopefully one day we get to a point where young girls and young boys can aspire to play pro in the sport where they do best. Right now that privilege is only offered to boys. To me, Saturday’s game was a huge step towards that.”

What’s next for Ouellette? There’s a few goals, short- and long-term. She’d love to add another Clarkson Cup to her resume, and maybe even a trip back to the Olympics—behind the bench. For now, though, she’s enjoying the ride.

“I loved every minute in the CWHL. I can’t believe it’s already been ten seasons. I still love it, that’s why I still play.”

Published at Sat, 17 Dec 2016 06:43:20 +0000

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University of Minnesota and Football Players Met Over Boycott

Wednesday 14 December 2016

Ravens waive Devin Hester

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Ravens waive Devin Hester

The Baltimore Ravens surprisingly cut Devin Hester on Tuesday following the team’s loss to the New England Patriots on Monday night.

Hester, the most dynamic kick/punt returner the NFL has ever known, has scored 19 career touchdowns on punt and kick returns.

This year, he has the NFL’s ninth-highest kickoff return average this year (24.5 yards per return) but has been far less dynamic on punt returns, averaging just 7.2 yards per return. Interestingly, the team the Ravens just lost to on Monday night could potentially be interested in Hester, having a need at the return man position.

The #Ravens have released WR/KR Devin Hester following last night’s game. Interesting with the #Patriots having return issues

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) December 13, 2016

As a receiver, Hester’s current value is practically nil. The last time he caught a pass in an NFL game was in 2014 as a member of the Atlanta Falcons. Still, a contending team looking for a home-run threat as a returner would be smart to pick Hester up heading into the playoffs.

Published at Tue, 13 Dec 2016 22:44:41 +0000

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How to watch Manchester City vs. Watford: Game time, live stream

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How to watch Manchester City vs. Watford: Game time, live stream

Manchester City will host Watford on Wednesday in a midweek Premier League game. 

Pep Guardiola’s side is coming off a surprise 4–2 defeat at Leicester City, which had been struggling prior to this weekend’s meeting. Jamie Vardy scored a hat trick for the victors. 

Watford beat Everton 3–2 over the weekend. Entering Wednesday’s match, Watford sits in ninth in the Premier League table with 21 points, while Manchester City is in fourth with 30 points. 

Following its match with Watford, Manchester City will host Arsenal on Sunday. 

See how to watch Wednesday’s game below. 

How to watch

Time: 2:45 p.m. ET

TV/Live stream: You can live stream the game by clicking here

Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016 14:25:25 +0000

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An N.F.L. Executive, Honoring His Lost Sister, Speaks Out About Anorexia

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An N.F.L. Executive, Honoring His Lost Sister, Speaks Out About Anorexia

SAN FRANCISCO — Paraag Marathe’s structured, analytical mind has served him well in the offices of Silicon Valley and the National Football League. He figured that he could lean on those traits the first time he spoke publicly about his sister, Shilpa, and how anorexia had taken her life.

But composure failed Marathe in 2011, six years after Shilpa’s death, while he spoke to survivors and grieving family members at an event for Andrea’s Voice, a nonprofit foundation that tries to promote education about eating disorders and their treatments.

“Not only did I break down a little bit during that speech,” said Marathe, 39, the San Francisco 49ers’ chief strategy officer and executive vice president for football operations. “It was also one of those weird moments afterwards. I emotionally collapsed in the arms of somebody there who had lost her daughter.”

The memories were back. Marathe had watched his brilliant sister succumb to self-destructive thoughts and starve herself. He had seen Shilpa wither to less than 50 pounds in the last years of her life, had felt the shame and puzzlement that her condition brought to his family.

Fueled by regret — why had he not noticed sooner, and why wasn’t he more assertive in trying to help Shilpa? — Marathe has found his voice. He will patiently tell you that 30 million Americans are believed to suffer from eating disorders, and that medical insurance plans rarely cover treatment of the condition. He will remind you that anorexia has the highest fatality rate among mental illnesses — about 10 percent, according to a 2011 meta-analysis published in Archives of General Psychiatry and cited by the National Institute of Mental Health.

Eating-disorder caregivers and advocates welcome Marathe’s help in shattering the myth that anorexia afflicts only well-to-do white girls and women. The illness claims men, too, and frequently remains a taboo subject in less affluent or nonwhite families, said Kristina Saffran of Project HEAL, an organization that raises money to cover care from diagnosis to recovery.

“He told me, ‘I’m your perfect spokesman: I’m a male, I’m a minority and I’m in football,’ ” Saffran said.

Paraag and Shilpa grew up in Saratoga, Calif., a prosperous bedroom community southwest of San Jose. They were the children of successful Indian immigrants. Paraag, three years younger, was gregarious and smart, but drawn more to Wiffle ball and Nerf football than homework. Shilpa was bookish and introverted, a straight-A student; she hated sports.

She also had compulsive idiosyncrasies. Shilpa insisted on eating her meals at the same time every day, her brother said. After dinner each night she would walk around the house for half an hour listening to her Sony Walkman.

Marathe said he thinks now that Shilpa was showing signs of mental illness as far back as junior high school. At the time, just a child himself, he dismissed the signs as typical of his “weird sister.”

By the time Shilpa graduated from law school at U.C.L.A. (magna cum laude, of course), she was down to 55 pounds, Marathe said. He remembers that firms eagerly invited her for job interviews after reading the incisive legal papers she wrote, but no one would hire her after seeing her in person.

Shilpa spent her final 10 years living with her parents. She died at 31 in March 2005.

It took Marathe years to emerge from a cocoon of secrecy. He had friends who never met Shilpa. That included his wife, Jennifer, who Marathe said became his best friend when they were at the University of California, Berkeley. In retrospect, he sees his own vanity.

“I was a kid,” Marathe said. “I was in my early 20s, and I used to convince myself that I was just a protective little brother when I saw other people looking at my sister the way they did. When in reality, the truth was that I was embarrassed by being seen with her. So I could never take her to a coffee shop or a movie. I used to be jealous of my cousins who would be able to do that.”

Marathe is now on the board of directors for Andrea’s Voice, and he has supported other similar organizations in Northern California, like the Eating Disorder Resource Center and the Monterey Institute of Mental Health.

But there is one place where Marathe has not dared to tread. He still has not found a way to discuss Shilpa’s deterioration in any detail with their parents, or invited them to hear him speak about it.

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He recognizes deep sacrifices they made for Shilpa: Their father quit his job as an engineer at Hewlett-Packard to help care for her and carried her to bed when she became too weak to climb the stairs. His mother changed Shilpa’s diapers and dutifully steamed broccoli for her. The family spent huge sums of money on her treatment, including what Marathe estimates were 30 trips to the emergency room or intensive care unit and, later, hospice care.

Through all of that, he said, he never heard his parents talk openly about what was happening to their family. And he hasn’t figured out how to break the silence.

“Immigrant families are particularly susceptible, because of the whole Tiger Mother, Tiger Father concept,” Marathe said. “You don’t talk about your feelings. There’s no such thing as mental illness. You don’t want to bring shame on the family by being put in an inpatient facility.”

Marathe hopes to talk with his parents soon, so he can share his growing understanding of Shilpa’s illness. What he has learned, as well as the help he tries to offer, brings him some comfort.

Marathe’s 16th year with the 49ers has been bumpy. He lost the title of team president in February. The organization called it a restructuring, but it was largely reported as a demotion for Marathe. The 49ers have been dreadful on the field, and the fan base has grown rebellious with management.

Coming to terms with his sister’s death, however, has kept professional disappointment in perspective. He and his wife have a young daughter, Juniper. A few months ago, just before her first birthday, Juniper was standing on her own and clearly ready to walk. But she couldn’t muster the courage to take that first step. As he watched her, something clicked for Marathe.

“I want to do everything I can to help her develop self-esteem or self-worth,” he said. “My sister didn’t have that. She felt worthless.”

Marathe knows that his words alone won’t erase the despair of anorexia. But they’re a powerful first step.

Correction: December 13, 2016

An earlier version of a picture caption with this article misstated the location of the home of Paraag Marathe, the San Francisco 49ers’ chief strategy officer and executive vice president for football operations. It is in Los Altos, Calif., not Los Angeles.

Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016 02:06:56 +0000

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Lamar Odom’s Memory of Son’s Death Pushed Him to Rehab

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Lamar Odom checked himself into rehab out of fear he’d go on a major bender as his deceased son’s birthday approached … TMZ Sports has learned.

Lamar’s son, Jayden, was born Dec 15, 2005, but died the following June from SIDS. We’re told his son’s death was the primary reason he started doing hardcore drugs … and he was keenly aware the birthday might push him over the edge again.

As we reported, our Lamar sources say he went to a San Diego area facility late last week.

We’re told Lamar’s also struggling with the fact his divorce from Khloe will be final on Saturday, and he didn’t want to be tempted to use.

Lamar is shooting for a 60 day rehab stint. He bailed after 3 weeks when he attempted rehab in 2012.

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Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016

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NHL Playoff Tickets- Devils Lead Atlantic Division

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Teams are starting to get geared up for playoff action, meaning that the fight for the top spot in each division is heating up immensely. One very competitive division is the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference. With less than two months left in the season, the New Jersey Devils have the top spot in the division, followed by the Philadelphia Flyers, the New York Rangers, the Pittsburgh Penguins and the New York Islanders. Don’t count any team out just yet, however, because there is more to the story. Make sure you are there for all of the postseason action with NHL Playoff tickets.

The New Jersey Devils may be on top as of March 2, but they have also played more home games than away games so far this season. They have played 63 games with a record of 41-19-3 with 85 points. During the month of February, they have a record of 8-4-0. They also started the month of March with a 3-0 win over Philadelphia on March 1. Unfortunately, a little over a week earlier they finished with a 0-4 loss to the New York Islanders. They will have to keep their momentum up if they want to stay in the hunt, and the Devils seem to have a pretty good chance of doing so, thanks to the return of goalie Martin Brodeur after a biceps injury.

Around the same time Brodeur returned, the Philadelphia Flyers saw the return of Danny Briere, a welcome change. As of March 2, they have played 61 games with a record of 33-18-10 and 76 points. The return coincided with band news for the Flyers, as they had to waive two veterans and send Claude Giroux to the minors because of salary cap guidelines. The team won all but four games in February, one of which was in overtime. The month was much better than January, where they lost six games. Philadelphia still has a good chance of making the playoffs, even if they finish behind the Devils.

Another team with playoff hopes is the New York Rangers, who after 64 games have a record of 32-24-8 with 72 points. The Rangers added a new head coach in late February: John Tortorella. Hopefully for Rangers fans, the change will help them improve on their February performance, as they finished the month with just three wins. With a talented roster, the Rangers still have a fighting chance.

The Pittsburgh Penguins also dropped their head coach, Michel Therrien, and are under the direction of interim head coach Dan Bylsma. The Penguins are 32-26-6 with 70 points after 64 games. They finished February by winning four out of their last five games. They start March with a slew of away games before staying at home for seven games at the end of the month, which is sure to be a boost to their record.

The Islanders are at the bottom of the pack with a record of 19-36-7 and 45 points after 62 games. The biggest reason for the less-than-stellar record is their away performance, as they have a record on the road of 6-23-2. They won only four games in February, all of which were home games. March features a streak of six away games that will make it tough for the Islanders to recover.

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Miami Dolphins Tickets – Estefans Buy Minority Stake in Dolphins

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The Miami Dolphins had quite the 2008 season, which was even more surprising since they finished the 2007 season with a record of 1-15. The headlines are continuing for the Dolphins as a Miami music legend, Gloria Estefan, and her husband recently bought a minority share in the team. That isn’t the only good news coming from the Dolphins camp. They have also signed Tyrone Culver to a two-year extension and brought back legendary defensive end Jason Taylor. With all of the returning talent as well as the new, this is shaping up to be another exciting season for the Miami Dolphins. This is also a season fans will want to see in person, and fans can get Miami Dolphins tickets online.

Gloria Estefan may have little ties to sports, but she and her husband are quite the stars in the music scene. Estefan was born in Cuba but her parents left her home country when Fidel Castro came into power. After her father became sick because of exposure to Agent Orange while in Vietnam, Estefan turned to music as a way to cope. She met her husband, Emilio Estefan, in 1975, and the two have been musical counterparts ever since. She first rose to fame with the Miami Sound Machine, which started grabbing attention in the 1980s. She remained on top of the Latin and pop scene into the 1990s with singles like “Conga,” “Anything for You,” “Don’t Wanna Lose You,” “Coming Out of the Dark” and “1-2-3.” Her stake in the Dolphins makes history, as the Estefans are the first Cuban-Americans to own part of an NFL team.

The signing of an extension by safety Tyrone Culver means that coach Tony Sparano has big plans for Culver that expand beyond what he has done for the team already. Culver caught attention while he was a standout at Fresno State from 2002 to 2005. He was selected in the sixth round of the 2006 NFL Draft by the Green Bay Packers. That first year, he played in 14 games but didn’t start any, finishing with nine tackles and one pass defended. He was out the entire 2007 season because of a shoulder injury. The Dolphins picked him up as a free agent right before the start of the 2008 season. Though he had mostly a special team’s role last year, he still tallied 35 tackles, three passes defended and one interception.

Jason Taylor coming back to the Miami Dolphins holds special meaning for both player and team, as Taylor departed after the embarrassing 2007 season and spent the 2008 season with the Washington Redskins. To come back to the Dolphins he took a major pay cut, but to Taylor it was well worth it. Taylor was with the Miami Dolphins from 1997, which was when he entered the league, until 2007. He was even named the Associated Press NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 2006. Taylor is also known outside the football scene for his performance on the hit show Dancing with the Stars.

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Wake Forest says their radio announcer Tommy Elrod gave game prep info to opponents

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Wake Forest says their radio announcer Tommy Elrod gave game prep info to opponents

After Wake Forest lost 44-12 to Lamar Jackson and Louisville last month, head coach Dave Clawson said “We are concerned that there was some type of security breach” and the athletic department decided to investigate. It looks like Clawson was right. ACCSports.com (a site that covers the conference) reported Tuesday that Wake Forest’s investigation concluded their own radio analyst, Tommy Elrod, gave game preparation information to opponents. SB Nation’s Blogger So Dear has the full release from the athletic department’s investigation; here are the key parts.

“Following the Louisville football game on November 12, Wake Forest conducted a thorough investigation to determine if confidential and proprietary game preparation information had been compromised. The investigation was not limited to the situation with Louisville and was comprehensive in nature. The investigation determined the following:

  • Based on emails, text messages and phone records, Tommy Elrod, a radio announcer for Wake Forest football games, provided or attempted to provide confidential and proprietary game preparations on multiple occasions, starting in 2014.
  • No members of the Wake Forest athletic department, football staff or players were involved in any way in these actions.

Elrod has been terminated immediately from his position at IMG and will no longer broadcast Wake Forest football games. He has been banned from Wake Forest athletics and its facilities.

According to a cached version of his bio on the Wake Forest website, Elrod played for Wake Forest as a walk-on quarterback from 1993-97, lettering in 1996, then served as a graduate assistant from 1999-2001, returned in 2003 and served for 11 years as an assistant coach under Jim Grobe, first coaching fullbacks and tight ends then working as the quarterbacks coach and two as the passing game coordinator. However, he wasn’t retained when Clawson took over in 2014 and shifted to radio. In the initial release about his hiring, he sounded ready to move on from coaching (cached):

“I am thrilled to join the IMG/WME team for the upcoming Wake Forest football season,” said Elrod. “I spent 18 great years at Wake Forest as a coach or player and as I have transitioned out of college coaching, this is an opportunity to bring some insight and observations based off my history with the program. August signals that football season is almost here and I look forward to kicking things off with Stan and Dave.”

According to that Wake Forest investigation, though, Elrod started providing opponents with information that same year. He’s now deleted his Twitter account and his LinkedIn account, and the Verger Capital Management company he was listed as business development director at no longer lists him (cached version here). So, it looks like he’s going to try to keep a low profile for a while. You can imagine why; Demon Deacons fans are going to be understandably outraged over this. The statements from Clawson and AD Ron Wellman show how upset they are:

Statement from Ron Wellman, Wake Forest Director of Athletics:

I have known Tommy Elrod since his days as a player on our football team. I’m deeply disappointed that he would act against Wake Forest, our football team and our fans in such a harmful manner by compromising confidential game preparation information. It is a relief that the team can move forward without his actions further undermining the positive strides Dave Clawson, his staff and the team have made. All of us are now preparing for final exams and the Military Bowl and continuing to build an outstanding football program.

Statement from Dave Clawson, Wake Forest Head Football Coach:

I am extremely disappointed that our confidential and proprietary game preparation was compromised. It’s incomprehensible that a former Wake Forest student-athlete, graduate-assistant, full-time football coach, and current radio analyst for the school, would betray his alma mater. We allowed him to have full access to our players, team functions, film room, and practices. He violated our trust which negatively impacted our entire program. I am glad we have taken steps to ensure it will not happen in the future. At this point, this is a matter for Ron Wellman and others to act on. My staff and I are focused on Temple and preparing the team for the Military Bowl.

It stands out that this wasn’t a one-off situation, either, but “on multiple occasions, starting in 2014.” That could have implications far beyond Wake Forest. Football coaches are an oft-paranoid fraternity, worried about any sort of media access to practices and game plans, and finding evidence that a seemingly-trusted media member (keep in mind that many NCAA radio announcers are closer to being team employees than independent media members) actually gave information to the opposition is going to only increase that paranoia. If you can’t trust a former coach for your team who’s working as your team’s radio analyst, it’s going to be even harder to trust those who are covering your program from a more independent perspective. There’s no evidence that this sort of information leaking from media members is at all common, but you can bet there will be plenty of coaches worried about it in the wake of this incident.

Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016 00:07:37 +0000

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Jim Brown says he admires Donald Trump

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Jim Brown says he admires Donald Trump

Pro Football Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown says he admires President-elect Donald Trump for what the businessman says about trying to help the African-American community.

Brown and Pastor Darrell Scott met with Trump in New York City on Tuesday in what has been reported as a meeting to discuss community relations with African-American citizens. Former NFL linebacker Ray Lewis and rap musician Kanye West also attended the meeting at Trump Tower.

“When he goes through what he went through to become the president, he got my admiration,” Brown told CNN. “No one gave him a chance.”

Brown has been a civil rights activist for decades after his playing career with Cleveland Browns. When asked race, Brown says that his greatest influences that made a difference in his life have been Caucasians.

“The three greatest people in my life were white, OK. My high school coach, my high school superintendent and my mentor in Manhasset, Long Island,” Brown said.

“I can’t speak for the pastor, but I fell in love with him, because he really talks about helping African-American, black people and uh that’s why I’m here,” Brown added

Brown later tried to clarify those remarks and said he was referring to Scott, not Trump.

“I was talking about my partner sitting right here,” Brown said. “I was talking to the man who got us together. The man who’s been the catalyst. The man who has represented. And he’s comical and he’s very vivacious. You know, he’s a character.”

Scooby Axson

Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016 14:36:17 +0000

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Chauffeur, Shootaround and Boneless Chicken Wings: Living Large With the Nets

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Chauffeur, Shootaround and Boneless Chicken Wings: Living Large With the Nets

My friend and I were at a Nets game the other night, being ushered between exclusive locations by our personal concierge, when suddenly we strayed into an area full of normal fans waiting in line to buy their own food.

It was weird, the way it would be weird if you were flying first class and for some inexplicable reason found yourself in coach. You would not be proud of your ungracious attitude toward the passengers crammed into standard-issue seats in an un-luxurious cabin with no free Champagne, but neither would you want to change seats with anyone.

Nothing at Barclays Center shouts “us” and “them” as emphatically as the Brooklyn Sports and Entertainment Experience, the super-deluxe fan package my friend and I were experiencing that conjures a parallel universe of individually tailored privilege.

Few people experience the Experience. For one thing, it is so intricate — requiring so much planning, such precise choreography, so many people to attend to your every need — that the arena can’t reasonably be expected to pull together more than a couple of Experiences at a time.

Also, it costs $6,189.

“People always want access to things that you normally can’t buy,” said Kate Girotti, vice president of global marketing for Brooklyn Sports and Entertainment, which owns Barclays Center, the Nassau Coliseum and the Nets. “Whether it’s parking in the building with the players, a tour of the locker room or being on the court with your favorite players.” (Packages are also offered for Islanders games and for concerts; not-as-premium experiences are also available, for as low as $700.)

We live at a time when consumers with gold cards get worse treatment than those with Super Platinum Premium Plus Cards, in which people who have all the possessions they want crave intangible luxury — novelty, exclusivity, enhanced reality and freedom from petty logistical annoyances. The Brooklyn Experience is for those sorts of people. For one night, it was also for my sort of person.

(I didn’t pay for it. Seeking publicity for the program and also possibly for the Nets, who are having a bad season and suffering from low attendance, Brooklyn Sports and Entertainment offered The New York Times a look at it.)

Here is what happened:

Gregg Arrives

Who needs public transportation when there is Gregg, the Nets driver, and his spacious SUV, stocked with water and candy in case anyone gets hungry in the 20-minute journey from my house?

We clamber into the car — me, my friend Craig and a Times photographer, Hilary Swift — and glide down Atlantic Avenue. It turns out that there are three Barclays Center entrances: the democratic one, for fans with normal tickets; the Calvin Klein V.I.P. one, for fans with better-than-normal tickets; and the supersecret one around the back, for players, executives, talent, higher-class V.I.P.s and us.

Gregg drives us directly into the building and onto an elevator, which by some magical means descends to a lower floor without seeming to move at all. The Nets point guard Yogi Ferrell is also riding the elevator, though he is not in his car. We are too classy to ask for his autograph.

After Gregg drops us off in the players’ parking lot, we are met by a small but enthusiastic welcoming committee that includes two Brooklynettes dancers. This is not as exciting to me as it might be to some people, but we get our photographs taken with their arms around us. Girotti, who is serving as our concierge for the evening, leads us deep into the Barclays Center underbelly.

We Repair to Our Dressing Room

The hallway is decorated with photographs of past arena performances — Leonard Cohen, Arcade Fire, Rush, you name it. It smells different down there, an aroma something like men’s cologne, and we learn that a special scent is pumped into the V.I.P. sections of the arena via the air ducts.

We pass the Nets locker room but do not see any players, in part because of the guard/bouncer positioned at the door. There are several dressing rooms reserved for visiting important people. One is for the referee; another is for the lady singing the national anthem; a third is for Craig and me. It has our names printed outside, its own bathroom, its own television, and a sofa in case we need to lie down at some point.

Not yet.

The Pregame News Conference

Filing into the room where the coaches traditionally meet the news media, we watch Kenny Atkinson, the Nets’ careworn head coach, explain to the assembled reporters how his team expects to defeat the visiting Boston Celtics, who are having a far superior season. It is a fair bet to say that this is not his favorite part of the day.

“Obviously, we focused on our defense and tried to make some improvements,” Atkinson says of the Nets’ pregame preparations, “without forgetting our offense and trying to make some improvements there, too.”

I’ve been to lots of news conferences — and often you learn even less than we learn at this one — but it’s fun to watch from the perspective of a privileged outsider getting special access to behind-the-scenes events. Also, how great is it to attend a news conference but not have to cover it?

We Eat Dinner

We watched top-level athletes mixing it up inches from our seats in their pregame warm-up. Then, it’s time to eat at our reserved table in a special restaurant not open to members of the public. It is called, and we see a theme developing here, the Calvin Klein Courtside Club. One of its features is glass walls that allow you to watch the players walk onto the court for the game.

Because it’s a buffet, we eat too much, from choices that include steak, turkey, chicken, various kinds of pasta, various kinds of sushi, mini-cheeseburgers, Nathan’s hot dogs, a sundae station and a genius V.I.P.-worthy Buffalo chicken wing dish wherein the chicken is white meat, the sauce does not make you feel sick and there are no bones.

Aaron La Greca, the executive sous chef, wanders to our table — random interesting people popping up to talk to you is part of the Experience — and informs us that every game, his kitchen prepares between 200 and 250 pounds of shrimp for the hungry Barclays Center crowds. Judging by the way people are inhaling the shrimp at the buffet, that sounds entirely plausible.

We Play Basketball, Sort Of

Somewhere in the vast network of not-open-to-the-public back areas lies the Barclays Center practice court, where we and some other privileged people get to shoot baskets before the game begins.

I am not filled with enthusiasm about this part of the evening — it’s been some time since I’ve been on a court in an athletic capacity — but Craig grabs a ball, gets going and immediately transforms into someone else entirely.

After a few minutes, so do I. There’s something seductive and then addictive about trying to get the ball in the basket. It’s so simple and so hard, so thrilling when it works out. My enjoyment is somewhat marred by how bad I am at it, and by the arrival of some hypercompetitive preteens who, and I use this term advisedly, blow me off the court. But that is O.K. I have worked up a sweat and had a participatory sports experience and burned off all that dinner.

We Go to the Court

By now, the regular fans are taking their seats, the players are coming in, and we’re standing on the court, inches from the Nets. It is exciting. The lady – it turns out to be Kissy Simmons, who played Nala in “The Lion King” — performs the national anthem. At one point the Nets shooting guard Sean Kilpatrick indicates that he has to perform his regular pregame stretching ritual under the basket, and that it would be really helpful if we would get out of the way. This is also strangely exciting, watching him do his lunges.

The Game Begins

We are seated right on the floor, next to the table reserved for the visiting Boston broadcast media and within sweating distance of the players. Our spot appears to be even better than the Calvin Klein V.I.P. section. The Celtics, whose shorts are winsomely decorated with a shamrock near the waistband, help themselves often to the gum, breath mints, sore-throat lozenges and chalk at the broadcasters’ table.

This sounds dumb. But from this intimate spot, I am struck by how gorgeously the athletes play, how smoothly they glide across the court, how effortless they make it all seem. It’s particularly fun to get up close to Isaiah Thomas, the freakishly talented Celtics point guard, at 5-foot-9 more than a foot shorter than some of the other guys. He is everywhere at once and is always smiling as if in some private amusement.

The Nets are down by 15 points, then they miraculously rally and by halftime are only two points behind.

At the Half

We head to another fancy location, the Billboard Lounge, open to Nets or Islanders season ticket holders (annual fee: $500). It is dark and loud and has a Russian-billionaires-trawling-for-dates vibe, even though we don’t see any billionaires or women of obviously ill repute. But we are cheered when someone offers us free drinks, a perk apparently denied to people not having Experiences.

The Broadcast Booth

We are led high-ish up in the stands, where we find Chris Carrino, now in his 16th season as the Nets’ radio play-by-play announcer. His speaking voice is like his radio voice, smooth as honey, and he is lyrical on the subject of how much he loves his job, how thrilling it is to find the precise description for what he sees in front of him. Through headphones, we get to hear snatches of his nimble broadcast.

Back at Courtside

The Nets scrape and claw their way to within a point of the Celtics but are soon are riding the downbound train to nowhere. Meanwhile, Brad Stevens, the Celtics coach, patrols the sidelines in front of us, shouting at his players. “Stay up! Stay up!” he says, and “Out, out, out!” and “In the middle!” and “Be smart with your hands!” and, my personal favorite, “Save your time and space!”

None of it makes much sense, but neither does it sound like some secret code he’s using to impart information to his team while confounding the opponents. It sounds like stuff you might say in the heat of a game, although your teammates would not be as good as these players.

In any case, it works. The Celtics win, 111-92.

Other, Random Experiences

* Our faces were broadcast live on the scoreboard, with a caption identifying us by name and welcoming us to the arena as “BSE Experience V.I.P. Guests.” That was embarrassing. However, some friends sitting high up in the stands sent a text to say how impressed they were.

* We got to participate in the T-shirt Toss, meaning that someone handed us T-shirts and told us to throw them into the crowd. Mine just about cleared the second row. That, too, was embarrassing.

* We exited through some kind of V.I.P. passageway, and someone went to our dressing room to retrieve our stuff so we did not have to carry anything ourselves.

* Gregg drove us home.

The evening could not have been more eye-opening, to say the least. But as I showed myself through my front door, I had a sudden flashback to the time when Elizabeth Hurley, the famous-for-being-famous British actress, airily observed that there were two types of people in the world: celebrities and civilians. I know which type I am.

Published at Wed, 14 Dec 2016 13:35:21 +0000

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