Front page, Boston Herald, Thursday 29 Sept. 2011.
If there’s one thing you should never do in sports, it’s counting your championship rings before actually earning them.
Sorry, Todd. I feel for ya, dude.
Rutgers University forgave $100,000 of the football coach’s interest-free home loan last year. The women’s basketball coach got monthly golf and car allowances. Both collected bonuses without winning a championship.
Meanwhile, the history department took away professors’ desk phones to save money and shrank its doctoral program by 25 percent. After funding cuts by the deficit-strapped Legislature, New Jersey’s state university froze professors’ salaries, cut the use of photocopies for exams and jacked up student tuition, housing and other fees.
Rutgers also increased funding for sports. The 245-year-old school spent more money on athletics than any other public institution in the six biggest football conferences during the 2009-2010 fiscal year, based on data compiled by Bloomberg. More than 40 percent of sports revenue came from student fees and the university’s general fund.
» via Bloomberg
That’s because Rutgers is a sports company that also happens to run a college.
You gotta hand it to Nike and the U.S. Women, even in defeat they still know how to seize their opportunity.
Damn straight.
(via theworldsgame)
Last night, in my first softball game in a year, I went 1 for 2 with a walk, a run scored and three good catches in right center field including a couple on the run.
Tonight, I returned to the field and followed up last night’s performance with a 3 for 4 outing, two runs scored and four catches, including two in full sprint. No errors tonight.
And we won both games. Last night was a 6-5 come-from-behind win in which we scored two runs in our half of the final inning to win.
Tonights game was a slugfest. We rallied three times during the seven-inning game in which we trailed 10-8, 12-10 and 15-12. We were the home team, so trailing 15-12 entering the bottom half of the sixth inning, we rallied to tie the game 15. After holding them scoreless in the top of the seventh and final inning, we scored a run with two outs to complete the comeback.
The best part of the entire game was having my Boy there to see his old man play. When I talked to him on Monday at his mom’s house, he asked if he could come watch me play sometime, so when the team asked if I could play Tuesday as well, I told him he could watch me.
He cheered everything the team did and when I made one of my two great catches in the outfield, there was my Boy shouting from the dugout, “Great catch, DAD!” And when I got three hits, he’d yell “Nice hit, Dad!” And the one time I grounded out, he was quick to cheer me up with a “Don’t worry, Dad, you’ll get it next time!”
Tonight was one of those nights with my son I will never forget.

Virginia Tech guard Malcolm Delaney was on the court at LeBron James’ basketball camp when Xavier’s Jordan Crawford dunked on the “King.” Said Delaney on his Twitter account:
“YES LEBRON GOT DUNKED ON… FACE @ FACE WIT @ HANDS N IT WAS NASTY.. I had front row seats cuz I was playin.. Lmao..”
James reportedly had a brief conversation with officials from Nike (which sponsors the camp) and shortly thereafter, the only two video tapes of LeBron getting posterized were confiscated.
For starters, if these “journalists” work for any news organization, they should be fired. It’s called freedom of the press and they don’t have to turn their tapes over for anything. My response to Nike would have been, “talk to my lawyers.”
Nike claims the reporters signed some kind of agreement that either did not allow them to record the games, but I think that’s a bunch of crap. If they weren’t allowed to record it, why would you allow them in with video cameras? And, why only after LeBron gets embarrassed is Nike enforcing the rule?
But, what isn’t being reported is that James got dunked on again - at least according to Delaney, who posted the following Tweet:
“he [James] got dunked on again yesterday too.. danny green caught it off the rim on him”
Of course, we’ll never know because the Nike gestapo took the tapes. LeBron could very easily have turned this into a positive PR campaign. What bothers me even more, he denied Crawford evidence of what is probably the most memorable moment in his basketball career. Shame on you LeBron and Nike.
Not normally my kind of music, but this remix of some of the most infamous sports press conference meltdowns is very impressive. It features Jim Mora’s “playoffs” tirade, Allen Iverson’s “we talkin’ about practice” presser, Dennis Green’s “crown their ass” meltdown, plus much more. Sports fans will appreciate this.
A follow-up on the guys from this video.
Four footballers who wore green armbands in solidarity with Iranian protesters have been forced to retire from the national team.
Their gesture in a recent World Cup match in Seoul attracted worldwide attention last week.
But the authorities have now taken revenge revenge by imposing life bans on Ali Karimi, 31, Mehdi Mahdavikia, 32, Hosein Ka’abi, 24 and Vahid Hashemian, 32. According to the paper, they have been ‘retired’ from the sport.
They were among six players who took to the field wearing wristbands in the colour of the defeated opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, which has been adopted by demonstrators who believe the 12 June election was stolen.
Most of the players obeyed instructions to remove the armwear at half-time, but Mahdavikia wore his green captain’s armband for the entire match.
Usually having the No. 1 pick in any professional sports draft is a good thing, but that might not be the case for the Washington Nationals. The team selected San Diego State pitcher Stephen Strasburg with the top pick in the Major League Baseball draft this week and already, reports are stirring that Strasburg’s agent, Scott Boras, has stated that it will take $50 million in guaranteed money to sign the hard-throwing prospect.
Salaries in professional sports are out of control and that’s for players who have proven they can play. But when Scott Boras, who is by all accounts a greedy money grabbing low life, is telling teams that his client is worth $50 million in guaranteed money, we’ve gone far beyond insanity. No, we’ve crossed into a whole other dimension. Of course, we are in the government bailout era where billions of dollars are being throw around like chump change, so maybe Boras (pronounced Bore-ASS by my favorite sports radio show host Steve Czaban), thinks no one will notice another $50 million.
This kid has been a good pitcher for all of two seasons. A large percentage of MLB players are drafted out of high school, but every MLB team passed over Strasburg because he was a trouble maker, according to an ESPN.com article back in February.
“I saw a game where there were quite a few scouts there and he blew up, just absolutely lost it on the mound,” said an American League scout. “He was a kid that would challenge his infielders when they would make mistakes. He would challenge his coach. He would challenge the umpires. … When you put that into the professional equation, it doesn’t work.
“I think 30 teams got it right with Stephen Strasburg. I don’t think we missed it. Everyone did their job. And it seemed like we all came to the same consensus: not quite ready.”
During his freshman year of college baseball, the strength and conditioning coach flat out told him he should quit. To his credit, hearing that only ticked him off and he set out to prove everyone wrong. He dropped 30 pounds, added 8 mph to his fastball and was throwing 101 mph by his sophomore year. That’s pretty impressive, but two very good seasons does not equate to $50 million, sorry.
He pitched in the Mountain West Conference, not the ACC or the SEC, the Mountain West. His numbers are astronomical, but if I’m a MLB GM, there’s no way I am paying this kid that kind of money when he hasn’t even throw a single pitch against MLB-caliber hitters.
Also, keep in mind that the current record for largest contract handed out to a No. 1 pick is about $10 million, which went to Mark Prior of the Cubs several years ago. Mark had potential, but like a lot of hard throwing pitchers, he was plagued by injuries and is currently out of baseball. But Boras expects the Nationals to pay this unproven kid FIVE times the previous signing record? In guaranteed money? What a farce.
If the Nationals pay it, they get everything they deserve. I don’t want to see the kid fail, but anything less than 20 wins a season and a record-setting pace of Cy Young Awards will be a disappointment.
That Nationals need to make a stand and tell this kid that he’s getting $10-15 million, take it or leave it. I hate that he’ll get that much, but I’m going with the times here. If the Nationals can’t sign him, he sits out a year and waits for next year’s draft, but I doubt he’d sit out a year - he’s probably pitch somewhere in an independent league. Of course, then he risks getting hurt and losing out on any chance of a big payday. It’s a game of chicken, really, but I’m afraid that the Nationals, like most teams, will cave in and give this kid a ridiculous contract.
And this is one of the reasons that I don’t follow MLB any more. These guys get paid way too much money and I refuse to pay $40-$80 for a ticket so these guys can get their millions every year for playing a kids game. I’d much rather go watch a minor league game, college game or even a local high school game where they still play for the love of the game.