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Archive for the ‘Sports’ Category

LeBron telling his mother to “sit yo ass down!” Happy Day-After Mother’s Day, mom!

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008


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Apparently LeBron’s mom has some issues…

LINK old story


One of our favorite underreported stories of the last few months was the arrest of LeBron James’ mother for drunken driving. In case you don’t remember the details, Momma LeBron — who, by the way, is the exact same age as Bill Simmons — was placed in the back of a cop car, kicked out the back window and was ultimately maced. Yeah. They maced LeBron’s mom.

Well, Mrs. LeBron showed up 10 minutes late to her court hearing yesterday, and the judge lambasted her, telling her lawyer that “your client is no different than anyone else.” Her hearing is April 24. Here’s hoping she can avoid getting maced by then.

We’re gonna repeat here: LeBron’s mom got maced.

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KANSAS NATIONAL CHAMPS!!!!!!

Monday, April 7th, 2008

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I’m hung over, did not sleep, voice is fucked, but it’s all good!!!

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Football Orange Bowl victory, now a national champ in basketball, tis good to be a Jayhawk!

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KU spanks that ass! One more to go!

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Kansas 84, North Carolina 66… SO SWEET!!!!!!!

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

.Final Four Postgame Coverage

KU fans celebrate UNC victory

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Keegan: Victory completes transition

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Roy Williams faces dreaded game against KU

Friday, April 4th, 2008

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CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Outside the door and down the steps, they’re waiting for him with cameras.Roy Williams’ press conference begins in 2 minutes, but as he paces about his digs at the Smith Center, the North Carolina basketball coach hardly seems hurried as he points toward the wall and begins to count.“That’s Drew Gooden and I at the Wooden Award ceremony,” says Williams, motioning toward a photo. “There’s Nick Collison … Jeff Boschee … Paul Pierce … Allen Fieldhouse on Senior Day.”

Each shelf is stacked with stories, each wall mounted with memories from Williams’ 15-year tenure as Kansas’ head coach.

A final tally reveals that 34 pieces of Jayhawks memorabilia adorn Williams’ second-floor office. There’s even a picture of North Carolina and NBA legend Michael Jordan – wearing a Kansas shirt. Jordan requested it after working one of Williams’ camps more than a decade ago.

“He was on his way to speak at a Boys and Girls Club,” Williams says. “And he told me he wanted to let everyone to know where he stood.”

Williams reaches for his desk and fiddles with a Kirk Hinrich bobblehead. His eyes sparkle and his voice booms with energy. Each time he talks about his former team … his former school – he says he can’t help but smile.

If only folks in Lawrence could do the same.

Three days before North Carolina takes the court in the Final Four, the coach who tells his players to “enjoy the ride” is having trouble heeding his own advice. That’s because the Tar Heels are matched against Kansas – the one school Williams prayed he’d never have to play.

“He’s dreading this for a number of reasons,” Williams’ son, Scott, said. “He’s thrilled to be in the Final Four, and he won’t lose his focus when he’s on the court. But from a personal standpoint I know this is bothering him a great deal.”

As if trying to defeat his former school isn’t burdensome enough, Williams is aware that a large group of Jayhawks fans are still livid with him for leaving Kansas for North Carolina – his alma mater – in 2003.

Williams guided Kansas to four Final Fours during his time in Lawrence, yet the crowd goes bananas when a losing North Carolina score is announced at Allen Fieldhouse. He won more games than any coach in the 1990s, but “Benedict Williams” shirts are still seen frequently throughout town.

Kansas claimed conference championships in nine of Williams’ final 13 seasons, but in the Jayhawks’ pregame highlight video, his image is shown only for a few seconds.

And even then, almost on cue, fans hiss.

“I know he hears those stories, and I know it hurts him,” said Boschee, who played for Williams from 1998-2002. “He’s a sensitive guy. He doesn’t care what people think about his coaching. But I think he listens to comments about what type of person he is. He takes great pride in his character.

“It really is ridiculous. The people who boo him are childish. They need to get over it.”

Some have, but even Williams’ staunchest supporters know the focus of Saturday’s national semifinal won’t be Kansas vs. North Carolina. It’ll be Kansas vs. Roy. That, more than anything, has Williams on edge as he prepares for the most emotional game of his career.

“We can sit here for two hours and talk about all the negative things,” Williams said. “But the negative things should only take about one percent of our time. This should be about a great Kansas team playing a great North Carolina team. That other stuff should command about one percent of our attention.

“The fact that it’s not isn’t very pleasant.”

READ THE REST

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This team wouldn’t have thought about the KU/UNC soap opera at all most likely if it weren’t for the throngs of well-intentioned but silly fans who have made it a ridiculous life goal to stick it to Williams for leaving THE center of the college basketball universe (it is after all…just ask any KU fan). (link)

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I rarely if ever post any sports stuff here. I’m a Bay Area Sports fan.
49ers Football, A’s, Giants, Warriors although I hate the Raiders; I have hated them since they moved from Oakland the first time years ago and I never forgave them for that. Plus Al Davis is an idiot bastard and the Raiders will never be a decent team until he sells the team or dies.

Anywho, as a resident of Lawrence, Kansas this of course is Jayhawk country.
Although Kansas football is making great strides, basketball is still king.

I have been very frustrated with KU basketball because despite having championship caliber teams they always find a way to fuck shit up. After last years loss in the Elite 8, I said screw it, until they get to a Final Four I won’t be scrutinizing every loss and shrugging off the wins.
For me as a sports fan my pet peeve is simply having my team play to their expectations.

I remember fondly when the Bay Area particularly Oakland was sports heaven.
The A’s championship run in the 70’s, and 90’s, the 49ers Super Bowls, the Warriors winning the NBA title in 1975 Raiders Super Bowl victory in 1976, imaging your team, your city winning championships in 5 consecutive years.

However an Earthquake fucked up what would have been my greatest fan moment having the Giants and A’s in the World Series.

Today my favorite teams SUCK no other way to put it.
It has been a long time since I have looked forward to a game as much as I am North Carolina and Kansas.

If you checked out the stories above and the paragraph immediately above it will tell you about the story line for us here in Lawrence. Beat Roy, beat North Carolina.
As silly as that sounds for some sports pundits to them all I can say is fuck you and fuck off. This is the type of game and drama sports fans live for.

Roy Williams did build up the program and helped the Kansas Basketball become one of the most respected in the nation.
But the man was a liar and a drama queen.
Mrs. Snoop dragged me to the football stadium for the big press conference where 5,000 plus people watched on the jumbo screen to hear Roy say “I’m stayin” the crowd roared and all was well with Kansas basketball.

Then the drama came up again about his possible going back to his home school.
If dude would have been honest about his intensions folks would have understood, but dude said shit like, “I’m not even thinking about the North Carolina job.” Just like Hillary dodged sniper fire. I hate drama queens, and Roy developed into a major one. Dude acted as if the fucken world revolved around him while keeping Kansas fans on the hook.

The other sub plot is Bill Self the current Kansas coach. Boone Pickens from Oklahoma State wants to make him the highest paid coach in college basketball history.
Self may have a huge decision. Stay at KU a premier program or go to Oklahoma State and TRY to do the same thing.

If Self chooses to leave KU fans would not have any issues with dude, especially if he beats North Carolina and ROY. Mainly because he is not stupid enough to say, “oh I’m not thinking about the Oklahoma State job.”

In case you don’t know who Boone Pickens is Google him, he is a billionaire he is trying to personally bankroll Oklahoma State into a nation college power.
He wants Self to come to Oklahoma State badly and is willing to pay him damm near anything to get him there.

If KU beats North Carolina and ROY, Self will become an instant hero in Lawrence and with this game alone will eclipse all of Roy’s accomplishments.

“But Snoop they still will have to win Monday right?” Folks beating North Carolina and ROY and Psycho T. will be our National Championship.
Just think of the American hockey team and the Soviets. That was not the championship game; they still had to beat Sweden or some other team in the finals.

If you are simply a sports fan, this is great drama. For me I have not wanted a favorite team of mine to win so badly since the 49ers beat Dallas in the 1994 NFC title game.

For people saying we should “get over it” about Roy, again fuck off. This is what sports is all about. This is sports soap at its finest.

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Coach Mark Mangino explodes - we love our coach, LOL!

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

Raid rivalry shirt made for personal use

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

From the University of Kansas Daily Kansan

“Scoreboard” shirts referencing Quantrill’s Raid not sponsored by MU

mizzoushirt071.jpgA controversial rivalry shirt referring to Quantrill’s Raid was made for protest, not for mass production.The yellow T-shirts depicting Lawrence on fire with the word “scoreboard” and the Missouri Tiger logo beneath it were not produced by the University of Missouri-Columbia.

Nathan Fowler, who could not be reached for comment, posted a photo of the shirt on an AOL blog last week. On the back was Quantrill’s slogan, “Raise the black flag and ride hard, boys. Our cause is just and our enemies many.”

Misty Nolke, manager at the Team Store, the official apparel store for the Missouri Tigers, said she had not heard of the shirt. She said only three official rivalry shirts were available, none of which refer to the civil war nor to Quantrill’s raid.

Jeff James, 32, St. Charles, Mo., resident and Missouri alumnus, said he produced the shirts in a silent protest against the continued use of the Jayhawk mascot by the University of Kansas. He said that at the time of the AOL blog post, only four shirts had been produced. He said he made the shirt for himself and three of his friends for personal use only.

jayhawk300.gif“I was not aware that the photo was going to be taken or posted to an Internet message board,” James said. “Nor did I realize the immediate stir and reaction or demand for the shirts. I have decided personally not to move forward with any sort of sales or spreading of shirts of this or similar nature.”

James said he had seen several shirts with civil war references made after he produced the “scoreboard” shirt. James cited the Wikipedia.com page on jayhawking to explain that the University of Kansas made reference to civil war atrocities each time it used the Jayhawk logo.

Mark Hersey, interim project director for the Kansas Union-sponsored Web site “This Week in KU History,” said mascots took on lives of their own. He said that the exact origin of the term Jayhawk was disputed among historians but that it did become synonymous with Kansas and Freestaters in the mid-19th century.

“Wikipedia is not the most reliable source; anyone can put anything on there,” Hersey said. “There is a gap between the historical origins of something and what it means conventionally.”

Hersey said he acknowledged that atrocities were committed on both sides of the rivalry, but that it was tough to find sympathy for the Missouri side because it was a slave state.

James said he recognized that slavery was an issue at the time of Quantrill’s raid but that it was not his intention to support prejudice or injustice toward blacks.

“If the University of Kansas acknowledges these points and agrees that its mascot can be seen as offensive and an inappropriate symbol to use, I will then do what I am sure many Kansans would like to see happen to the shirts I made; I will burn them,” James said.

Hersey said the Jayhawk mascot was not offensive to any particular group, and that it would be ridiculous to expect the University of Kansas to change its mascot at this point.

More Kansas Football stuff: Kansas overcoming humble beginnings

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Border War: An uncivil beginning to great rivalry

Monday, November 19th, 2007

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If only Kansas and Missouri could have settled their differences on a football field in the 1850s. Right here in Kansas City, just like Saturday. Maybe blood wouldn’t have flowed in the streets.In understanding the passion of top college rivalries, it’s enough to know that Ohio State detests Michigan, Auburn and Alabama divides a state, and others are equally spirited.Then there’s Missouri vs. Kansas.

Contests go by the name Border War, the nickname not a product of the schools’ publicity departments but because Missourians and Kansans who mostly lived close to the border once waged real war against each other.

Hostilities date to pre-Civil War days and involve the issues that tore apart a nation. Bleeding Kansas became a war zone over the slavery question with deadly consequences. Murder and mayhem broke out between the opposing factions.

There had to have been direct descendents of the chaos sitting among the 3,000 at Kansas City’s Exposition Park in 1891, when the Tigers and Jayhawks first met on a football field.

That’s what makes Kansas vs. Missouri different.

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With Kansas and Missouri building remarkable seasons throughout autumn, opposing fans have gone at it like, well, digital bushwhackers and jayhawkers, exchanging barbs and insults in today’s fan weapon of choice — keyboard strokes and the “send” button to the message-board battlegrounds.

Historical figures William Quantrill, John Brown, Doc Jennison, the Younger Brothers and Jesse James — yes, that Jesse James — have been evoked. The terrorism along the Missouri-Kansas border recounted.

It’s a football game they’re playing on Saturday, voices of reason interject. No sense in dredging up the sacrifices and sins of generations past.

Besides, the game’s participants clearly don’t need the motivation, especially this year with division, conference and even the national championship at stake.

This modern civil war angle seems silly to Van Robinson, 81, of Parkville, who played for Missouri in 1944 when the Tigers met Kansas in Kansas City.

“This was stuff that I never heard when I was playing,” Robinson said.

But he did a few years ago. Robinson and his family attended a Missouri-Kansas game in Lawrence, and he couldn’t believe the “Muck Fizzou” T-shirts or the degree of hostility toward his group by the students.

Finally, somebody in Robinson’s group turned to a Kansas fan and asked for the source of hate toward Mizzou.

“He said, ‘Because you had slaves.’ And I thought, ‘My god, they’re living in the 19th century. What’s going on?’ ”

Kansas fans point to the game at Columbia in the late 1990s when the Jayhawks’ marching band was pelted with liquor bottles and one band member was struck by an unopened can of soda. The Missouri student president at the time put it in historical perspective.

“Other universities, their rivalry is sort of superficial,” said Rob Willard. “But Missouri and Kansas has a long history. You’d be hard-pressed to find another where opposing sides fought and killed each other in the Civil War.”

Read the rest

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“We Burned Your Town To The Ground!” Kansas vs Missouri

Friday, November 16th, 2007

Ok, it’s Friday and posting will be lite today, I’m just tired, finishing up on a video project and doing some web maintenance.
I’m cranky because I did not get to play my video game last night.
For those of you who play NCAA Football I have reached the point where I have the A.I (Artificial Intelligence) maxed out.
Basically what that does is make all of the computers players’ super human which in turn makes the game sometime ridiculously hard.

As good as I am, on occasion I get my ass handed to me.
This is why when I speak to people who play and the say “I never lose” they are just full of shit.
Those of you who play “Dynasty” mode the point is to win a National Championship at least it is for me and it is virtually impossible to win EVERY game.
My current team, 4 national championships in 10 seasons, one of those seasons I was undefeated and did not win it all, therefore I LOST!

I am STILL trying to do something I have yet to accomplish, win 5 consecutive BCS titles. (4 titles in a row twice the entire time I have played NCAA football on X-Box)

I have a made up team, Western Louisiana stationed right on the boarder of Louisiana and Texas close to Arkansas great recruiting territory.
Anywho, success or failure after the completion of my contract I will retire this version of NCAA football and my X-Box and purchase the new version.

One of the fun things about this game is the attempt to make a small or a traditionally weak football school into a national champion, which brings me to the Kansas Jayhawks. I don’t want to jinx them, but the fact that this particular football program can possible play for the national championship is just amazing.

IF and I repeat IF they were to win it all, in my mind would easily eclipse the American Hockey team miracle against the Soviets. Because those of you who remember, they still had to play one more game to win it all.

This is the beauty of college football these days; the traditional powers are no longer able to dominate college football because recruits are smart enough to know that they don’t have to sit on the bench of a major power when they can go to a smaller competitive school and make a major impact on a program like Kansas.

If Kansas is not distracted and defeats Iowa State tomorrow and if Missouri beats Kansas State that will set-up the biggest football game in a much heated rival of Kansas and Missouri’s football history.

These two schools HATE each other big time; I can’t begin to tell you how much. Also there is real world history to go with this hate as this post from the AOL Fanhouse Blog written by Nathan Fowler last Monday will point out.
So if you follow college football, this game will in fact be a legitimate war on the field and a game worth your time for those of you on the east and west coasts.

My opinion in this particular story, well let me just say well it’s Missouri.
The shirt depicts the celebration of the murder of 180 plus innocent anti slavery people.
Wearing this particular shirt is as offensive as someone wearing a noose around their necks.
But I’m not going to go into that, people who know better and people with common fucken sense will denounce this particular shirt.


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 You know what the best part of Kansas and Missouri having their best ever seasons at the very same time is? The entire nation will get exposed to what is possibly the most bitter and hateful rivalry in the country in all it’s glory (or shame, if you prefer). You can have your Ohio State v. Michigan or Alabama v. Auburn, but the last time I checked nobody from Columbus ever went to Ann Arbor and systematically executed every man they could find while burning the town to the ground. And certainly nobody made t-shirts later celebrating that fact.

But that did happen in 1863 in Lawrence, KS when William Quantrill led his band of “Bushwackers” to the “Jayhawker” stronghold and went on a 4 hour rampage that would become known as the “Lawrence Massacre” - one of the ugliest episodes of the brutal 10+ years of fighting along the Kansas and Missouri border. While the Civil War has become the South v. the North in most people’s minds, the fighting in fact began as a violent guerrilla conflict between the abolitionists in Kansas and the slave holding Missouri settlers (more or less, like many guerrilla campaigns there were quite blurred lines at times). In many ways, those old wounds have never quite healed - Grandpa Simpson will be be deep in the cold, cold ground before he recognizes Missour-ah as a state, for example.

Those t-shirts seen above that some Missouri fans are making for the showdown at Arrowhead in two weeks are celebrating the Lawrence Massacre and in fact have Quantrill’s visage and slogan emblazoned on the back - “Raise the Black Flag and Ride Hard Boys. Our Cause is Just and Our Enemies Many”. Talk about going straight past normal levels of fan behavior and making a hard right turn into loony land, that might be the single most offensive gameday t-shirt I’ve ever seen. Kansas fans are now responding with t-shirts sporting noted violent Kansas abolitionist John Brown (who led a massacre of his own and the 1859 Harper’s Ferry raid that really kicked off the Civil War powder keg) with the slogan “Keeping America Safe From Missouri Since 1854″ - a mock-up of those t-shirts can be seen here.

This game is going to be played on a neutral site at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City - home to huge parking lots for tailgating and beer sales in the stadium during the game. It’s going to be for a berth in the Big XII Championship Game at the very least, and a shot at the National Championship at the most. Liquored up fans sharing the same parking lots and stadium, some who are celebrating their history of brutal violence against each other? Two fanbases who hate each other, with the chance to not only continue their own dream season but also to end the chance of glory for their rivals? Yeah, no way that doesn’t end up without at least a few folks in the slammer. It’s going to be a fun Saturday for the KCPD and Jackson County Sheriffs.

Article from the University Daily Kansan: Robinett: Rivalry shirts get uglier
Missouri’s new shirt contains message insulting to more than just Kansas fans

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INCREDIBLE!

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Even if you don’t like football you need to see this!

More proof that white liberals types are a bunch of ignorant asses

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

This piece was written by some liberal idiot dumbass Sheldon Drobny found on the Puffington Post via Conservative Grapevine.

I can’t tell you how many idiot ass white people I have read over the past several days that keep writing these stupid ass articles about Michael Vick repeating this ridiculous notion that DOGFIGHTING IS PART OF THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN CULTURE.

What fucken planet are you idiots getting this from?
Dog fighting is no more part of the Negro culture than is baggy pants, parking on the lawn, 40’s, hair weaves and press on nails.

Before any more of you dumbass white people keep spreading this bullshit nonsense, try having a conversation with a Negro who is not from the hood, at least a graduate from high school, employed, wearing a belt and is not named after a major kitchen appliance, a car or some faux “African” sounding name ending with “quan.”

I am a dog lover and have adopted and rescued abused dogs. I believe that inhumane treatment to animals is counter to the best interests of our society. On the other hand, I do believe in proportionate justice and the Michael Vick case is a horrible example of disproportionate justice against blacks and its consequences could be profound.dumbassshelly.JPGThere are many cultures in the world that accept and promote cruelty to animals. In some countries of Hispanic origin, bullfighting is promoted as a national sport. And dogs are eaten in some Asian countries.

It is my understanding that dog fighting is part of the African-American culture despite the fact that it is a federal crime. That does not make it right, but it does explain in part Vick’s participation in this event.

President Bush commuted the sentence of Irving “Scooter” Libby for crimes he committed knowingly which compromised our national security. Surely he could find it in his heart to use the same rationalization for commuting Libby’s sentence. If Libby paid enough of a price for his crime, surely Vick should be given the same consideration since he has lost his over $125 million and his career.

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More Vick talk

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

Article: Vick ‘reaction’ has racial aspect - Link
By Dan Le Batard

We are watching Michael Vick’s glorious life fall apart on TV. The details of his cruelty to dogs are shocking, nauseating and illegal. He is wrong, case closed. To defend him is to defend the indefensible, and the felonious. If a white quarterback such as Peyton Manning had been at the center of this, he would become just as radioactive, maybe more so.How could anyone take any other side on something this black and white?

If you are asking that, you must have missed that little trial involving O.J. Simpson.

There is so much baggage and history and emotion and volume here that a lot gets lost in translation. I don’t hear many black people defending Vick’s actions today. What I hear is many black people objecting to the size and intensity of the reaction. Those are two very different things. But they start to sound the same when white people yell with disgust, ”Not the race card again!” and black people counter with, ”Race impacts everything.” Not a lot gets heard clearly when people are trying to talk while standing that far apart.

And the louder and angrier the reaction gets, the more pressure is put on authorities — usually white authorities — to make an example out of a black icon.

Quibble with our country’s laws if you like, but you have to abide by them if you want to be free here. That’s nonnegotiable, and it is going to get Vick jailed. But it is after that when things get muddier. The question isn’t whether Vick should lose money or freedom today. The question becomes how much of his money and freedom he should lose. The difference there is between penalizing a black icon and ruining him.

It makes sense, based on past history and personal experiences, that black folks might not trust the system to treat one of their own fairly once we go from letter-of-the-law jail to subjective suspension.

The people making the decisions about how much of his life Vick gets to keep post-jail are white and applying their sensibilities — which is how you arrive at rules that ban the black athletes who like to celebrate from dancing too much in the end zone. All the team owners and the commissioner are white, as are the richest of Vick’s endorsers and most of the consumers of all this product. You’ll forgive black people if they aren’t terribly comfortable with white people making the rules for them. That hasn’t gone so well in the past.

Then there’s this: The white athlete tends to get more room to rehab his image than the black one. There is no black equivalent to reckless addict golfer John Daly, throwing away talent but nonetheless popular and embraced. Some of that has to do with Daly harming only himself, not teammates or fans of that team, but not all of it. Darryl Strawberry and Doc Gooden aren’t perceived quite like drunk heroes Mickey Mantle and Billy Martin. Some of that has to do with Mantle’s more innocent era, but not all of it.

It would be interesting to see the reaction if it were an NBA team instead of baseball’s St. Louis Cardinals (Tony La Russa, DUI arrest; Josh Hancock, drunk-driving death; Scott Spiezio, rehab) that had the substance-abuse problem. Would they feel more like the Bengals? And how is the reaction different if Michael Doleac, Chris Quinn and Jason Kapono fought fans in Detroit instead of three giant black guys with braids and tattoos? Have you noticed how differently basketball fights are covered than baseball brawls? Is the pressure and penalty as large on Quinn as it was on Ron Artest? If the action is exactly the same, is the reaction?

COMPASSION FACTOR

Race doesn’t always amplify the noise around a national scandal. The Beltway Sniper was black and randomly killed 10 people, and you didn’t hear folks taking sides on that one. But that’s the exception, not the rule. Vick makes for a bad martyr, but it is human nature to feel sorry for your own while watching him beat up daily on television as his life unravels. That’s not racism. It is compassion. And human.

Our experiences always shape our perspectives. We saw it with O.J. Simpson. Blacks were so thrilled to finally beat what they saw as an unfair system — a system that jails them at a disproportionate rate — that the thrill of winning ignored even someone getting away with murder. When the distrust is that large and pervasive, it is going to seep into some places it doesn’t belong — like, for example, this Vick case.

CULTURAL DIFFERENCES

Dogfighting is glorified in segments of the hip-hop community, so there are some cultural differences that complicate matters here. There isn’t much of a difference between killing dogs for sport and the art of bullfighting.

You are walking a thin line if you see a lot of distinction between pitting dogs bred to fight and shooting a deer just to put the head up in your office. Go to Hialeah, and you’ll see that one man’s cruelty to animals is another man appeasing his god. Heck, our own states can’t agree. Dogfighting is but a misdemeanor in two of them. Vick couldn’t have known dogfighting had consequences this large or he wouldn’t have been doing it. And it can be jarring to see one of your own lose his livelihood and freedom and name for something that isn’t a lot different than bullfighting.

This isn’t to say dogfighting is a black thing. It isn’t. It is an illegal thing. It is just to point out that there are shades of gray in here even as we discuss black and white.

And you are more likely to find them only if you are interested in doing so.

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Cult of athlete warped Vick’s values

Tuesday, August 21st, 2007

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This is one article where I don’t have to even comment on because after you read it you too will roll your eyes and say to yourself “what the fuck!?”

It’s clear that the dude who wrote this article was on crack. No seriously, he was. Besides he is not even original.

Pick your typical idiot Negro superstar athlete and insert name in place of Vick’s.

Poor black kid, yada, yada, yada… single mother, high school dropout, growing up in da hood, around crime, gangs, drugs lots of gold teeth, baggy pants, pit bulls, hair weaves, gin and juice…er uh crunk juice. Yawn.

Reason #4,115 it’s whiteys fault Vick is going to jail.

By Shaun Powell - NY Newsday

Michael Vick is not guilty. No, really, in one sense, despite his plea yesterday, this is the wrong guy.

For months, investigators circled their wagons around the Falcons quarterback with the intensity of blitzing linebackers and implied that Vick masterminded the slaughtering of dozens of dogs who couldn’t cut it in the ring. They cut deals with members of Vick’s posse, who snitched about those brutal dogfights held on his spread in Virginia. Vick, the feds believe, created this.

But who created Vick?

Who gave power and money and influence to someone who has done nothing, other than sling a football, to deserve it?

Who failed to teach him right from wrong, or the importance of making good choices, when they had the chance?

Who unleashed, pardon the expression, Vick on those dogs and turned him into a national disgrace?

Those are the real guilty people. If the feds are correct about Vick’s role, then those people also helped strangle and shoot and drown animals that in essence were poisoned by a man who was poisoned himself long ago.

Personal accountability is definitely in order here, make no mistake. What Vick did was heartless and he should do time. But he’s a symptom of something larger and troubling: a young man led down the wrong path by an upbringing that wasn’t exactly “Leave It to Beaver”; by his “boyz” who leeched off him instead of living their own lives; by a celebrity-inhaling society that elevated him to a god and by a sports league loaded enough to give him a $130-million contract.

Vick didn’t build a cruel kennel with just the help of a couple of buddies; he had help from tons of people, the ones who made him who he is, the ones who shaped his character.

He wasn’t a spoiled, immature and misguided animal abuser from birth. Actually, he was exactly like your child: an innocent sponge, ready to absorb the world around him. Except his world was probably a lot different from the one you exposed to your child.

He was born to a mother who was still in high school, and by the time Brenda Vick was 21, she had four kids. She was a baby with babies, not unusual in poor black America today. How could she teach them about life when she hadn’t experienced life herself? How could she watch her kids when she had to work enough jobs to feed them? Plus, she raised them in the projects, where too many influences are bad.

This was the incubator where Vick’s values and morals were shaped. These were the circumstances that also ruined his younger brother, Marcus, who later would be kicked off the team at Virginia Tech for stomping on another player’s leg and who once was charged with pointing a gun at a group of kids.

Vick was a great athlete in high school and a superstar at Virginia Tech, where football fever runs high and football players - especially the special ones - are treated like they’re, well, special. The coddling of Michael Vick intensified when he arrived in Atlanta as the savior of the Falcons. Interestingly, during a “Monday Night Football” promo a few years ago, Vick was asked what was the best thing about being Michael Vick.

“V-I-P wherever I go,” he exclaimed.

The Falcons gave him a monster contract and essentially handed him the keys to the organization, if not the city. But being rich and famous doesn’t necessarily hide all the character flaws, and Vick had a few. He used his middle fingers to salute the home fans last season. He was charged by a woman with giving her a disease. There was the water bottle incident at the Miami airport this year. He showed a pattern of irresponsibility. And in every misstep until now, the Falcons covered for him, excused his behavior, looked the other way.

Vick also loved the gangsta culture that uses pit bulls as status symbols. He surrounded himself with buddies from back home, some with rap sheets, and bankrolled them. They played by their rules and amused themselves with dogfights that claimed plenty of canine victims.

But you tell me:

Born to a teenage mother, raised in the projects, consumed by a negative culture, back-slapped by vulture “friends” and elevated by a sports-mad society, who’s the real Vick-tim here?

And who’s really guilty?

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Bonds 756

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

Former 49ers Coach Bill Walsh Dead at 75

Monday, July 30th, 2007

walsh.jpgSAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Bill Walsh, the groundbreaking football coach who won three Super Bowls and perfected the ingenious schemes that became known as the West Coast offense during a Hall of Fame career with the San Francisco 49ers, has died. He was 75.

Walsh died early Monday following a long battle with leukemia, according to Stanford University, where he served as coach and athletic director.

Walsh didn’t become an NFL head coach until 47, and he spent just 10 seasons on the San Francisco sideline. But he left an indelible mark on the United States’ most popular sport, building the once-woebegone 49ers into the most successful team of the 1980s with his innovative offensive strategies and teaching techniques.

The soft-spoken native Californian also produced a legion of coaching disciples that’s still growing today. Many of his former assistants went on to lead their own teams, handing down Walsh’s methods and schemes to dozens more coaches in a tree with innumerable branches.

Walsh went 102-63-1 with the 49ers, winning 10 of his 14 postseason games along with six division titles. He was named the NFL’s coach of the year in 1981 and 1984.

Few men did more to shape the look of football into the 21st century. His cerebral nature and often-brilliant stratagems earned him the nickname “The Genius” well before his election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1993.

Walsh twice served as the 49ers’ general manager, and George Seifert led San Francisco to two more Super Bowl titles after Walsh left the sideline. Walsh also coached Stanford during two terms over five seasons.

walsh2.jpgEven a short list of Walsh’s adherents is stunning. Seifert, Mike Holmgren, Dennis Green, Sam Wyche, Ray Rhodes and Bruce Coslet all became NFL head coaches after serving on Walsh’s San Francisco staffs, and Tony Dungy played for him. Most of his former assistants passed on Walsh’s structures and strategies to a new generation of coaches, including Mike Shanahan, Jon Gruden, Brian Billick, Andy Reid, Pete Carroll, Gary Kubiak, Steve Mariucci and Jeff Fisher.

Walsh created the Minority Coaching Fellowship program in 1987, helping minority coaches to get a foothold in a previously lily-white profession. Marvin Lewis and Tyrone Willingham are among the coaches who went through the program, later adopted as a league-wide initiative.

He also helped to establish the World League of American Football - what was NFL Europe - in 1994, taking the sport around the globe as a development ground for the NFL.

Walsh was diagnosed with leukemia in 2004 and underwent months of treatment and blood transfusions. He publicly disclosed his illness in November 2006, but appeared at a tribute for retired receiver Jerry Rice two weeks later.

While Walsh recuperated from a round of chemotherapy in late 2006, he received visits from former players and assistant coaches, as well as California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

Born William Ernest Walsh on Nov. 30, 1931 in Los Angeles, he was a self-described “average” end and a sometime boxer at San Jose State in 1952-53.

Walsh, whose family moved to the Bay Area when he was a teenager, married his college sweetheart, Geri Nardini, in 1954 and started his coaching career at Washington High School in Fremont, leading the football and swim teams.

thecatch1.jpgHe had stints as an assistant at California and Stanford before beginning his pro coaching career as an assistant with the AFL’s Oakland Raiders in 1966, forging a friendship with Al Davis that endured through decades of rivalry. Walsh joined the Cincinnati Bengals in 1968 to work for legendary coach Paul Brown, who gradually gave complete control of the Bengals’ offense to his assistant.

Walsh built a scheme based on the teachings of Davis, Brown and Sid Gillman - and Walsh’s own innovations, which included everything from short dropbacks and novel receiving routes to constant repetition of every play in practice.

Though it originated in Cincinnati, it became known many years later as the West Coast offense - a name Walsh never liked or repeated, but which eventually grew to encompass his offensive philosophy and the many tweaks added by Holmgren, Shanahan and other coaches.

Much of the NFL eventually ran a version of the West Coast in the 1990s, with its fundamental belief that the passing game can set up an effective running attack, rather than the opposite conventional wisdom.

Walsh also is widely credited with inventing or popularizing many of the modern basics of coaching, from the laminated sheets of plays held by coaches on almost every sideline, to the practice of scripting the first 15 offensive plays of a game.

After a bitter falling-out with Brown in 1976, Walsh left for stints with the San Diego Chargers and Stanford before the 49ers chose him to rebuild the franchise in 1979.

The long-suffering 49ers went 2-14 before Walsh’s arrival. They repeated the record in his first season, with a dismal front-office structure and weak-willed ownership. Walsh doubted his abilities to turn around such a miserable situation - but earlier in 1979, the 49ers drafted quarterback Joe Montana from Notre Dame.

Walsh turned over the starting job to Montana in 1980, when the 49ers improved to 6-10 - and improbably, San Francisco won its first championship in 1981, just two years after winning two games.

Championships followed in the postseasons of 1984 and 1988 as Walsh built a consistent winner and became an icon with his inventive offense and thinking-man’s approach to the game. He also showed considerable acumen in personnel, adding Ronnie Lott, Charles Haley, Roger Craig and Rice to his rosters after he was named the 49ers’ general manager in 1982 and the president in 1985.

“Bill pushed us all to be perfect,” Montana said years later. “That’s all he could handle as a coach, and he taught all of us to be the same way.”

Walsh left the 49ers with a profound case of burnout after his third Super Bowl victory in January 1989, though he later regretted not coaching longer.

He spent three years as a broadcaster with NBC before returning to Stanford for three seasons. He then took charge of the 49ers’ front office in 1999, helping to rebuild the roster over three seasons.

But Walsh gradually cut ties with the 49ers after his hand-picked successor as GM, Terry Donahue, took over in 2001. Walsh was widely thought to be disappointed with John York, DeBartolo’s brother-in-law who seized control of the team in 1998 and presided over the 49ers’ regression to the bottom of the league.

But Walsh stayed active through his posts on various advisory boards, plus writing, lecturing and charity work. He also became more involved at San Jose State, directing a search committee to hire a new athletic director and football coach in 2004, and served in various leadership positions at Stanford.

Walsh wrote two books and taught classes at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

“I’m doing what I want to do,” he told the AP in an interview in 2004. “I hope I never run out of things that interest me, and so far, that hasn’t happened.”

Walsh’s son, Steve, an ABC News reporter, died of leukemia at age 46 in 2002.

walsh4.jpg

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Michael Vick

Monday, July 23rd, 2007
vick.JPGNeal Bortz get to the point in this article;

At this point I’m sure that I don’t have to do to much to bring you up to speed on Michael Vick and his latest troubles. A federal grand jury has indicted Vick on charges related to dog fighting. That may be just the beginning. The State of Virginia has yet to be heard from, and as I understand it mere ownership of property on which dog fights are held is a felony under Virginia law. Just one felony conviction and Vick is through with professional football in this country.

Let’s put this “innocent until proven guilty” nonsense to rest right here at the beginning. When you kill someone you are a killer. If you do so in violation of the law; if it is not in self defense, for instance, you are a murderer. A person who kills a girlfriend because she merely wants out of the relationship is a murderer as soon as his victim’s heart stops beating .. you don’t have to wait for a jury to come in with a verdict.

So, where does this “innocent until proven guilty” stuff come in? The presumption of innocence is, in my view, a limitation that is primarily place on government. Generally speaking, only government can use force – deadly force – to deprive you of your property, your liberty or your life. If the government is going to do so as punishment for the commission of a crime, then the government must afford you your constitutional rights and prove your guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It is the government, then, that must consider you to be innocent until otherwise proven. After the act, the rapist is only innocent in the eyes of government. The victim views him quite differently.

O.J. Simpson is a murderer. There is not one rational-thinking American familiar with knowledge of the facts of his case who honestly believes otherwise. A renegade jury failed to convict him however, so the government cannot punish him for his butchery. If O.J. objects to my characterization of him as a murderer he has civil remedies he can pursue. I, however, am powerless to punish him for the slaughter of his wife and Ron Goldman.

Now .. back to Vick. Personally, I have no doubt that he knew of and was a willing and eager participant in this blood “sport” of dog fighting. I’m an animal lover. I particularly love dogs. I would have no problem whatsoever seeing him serve some time in jail for his crime. I believe that people can be judged by how they treat animals. If what they allege about Michael Vick is true then he is completely lacking any sense of morality and human decency. Jail might be too good for him. Better to baste him in steak sauce and throw him into a cage full of the very dogs he so loved to brutalize.

Read the rest here

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For one father, not enough has changed. Warning: Idiot negro alert!

Monday, July 9th, 2007
williamssis.jpgOnce, Althea Gibson was barred from the grounds. A half-century later, the Williams sisters have won six singles titles.

WIMBLEDON, England - Once, Althea Gibson was barred from the grounds. A half-century later, the Williams sisters have won six singles titles.

Once, Gibson won two singles titles and had no prize money. Saturday, Venus Williams earned more than $1.407-million. Yet, said her father, Richard, not enough has changed.

“What it means to me, from the way I see things, is that blacks are treated the same way here at Wimbledon as when she (Gibson) was coming along in the ’50s, ” he said. “I don’t see it any different than now. I will always see it that way.”

Minutes after his daughter won her fourth Wimbledon title, he was talking as usual outside Centre Court. The Times asked about the significance of Gibson’s breakthrough win in 1957, and he was off and running.

“If you’re past 10 years old, you know what I’m talking about, ” he said. “I turn on the TV here, and you can’t find one black player, not one black man or woman or child, on TV that does a commercial. And we came here four days before the tournament. Why don’t the English have one black (person) doing a damn commercial? I’m not saying they don’t, but I’ve been here three weeks, and I haven’t seen it, and I’ve taped everything. Not one. What 50 years are you talking about?”

Throughout the careers of daughters Venus, 27, and Serena, 25, Richard Williams has been outspoken, often amusing and often controversial. As he talked Saturday, his voice rose.

“I don’t think there has been progress anywhere in America. In America, (George W.) Bush was the governor of Texas, and they pulled a black man down the street with his neck separated from his head (the James Byrd Jr. murder in 1998 in Jasper). Nothing has changed, and nothing’s going to change. The only way I can see things changing is for the black people in America to do the same thing the Iranians are doing, and that’s to fight until the s— is over with. And this interview is over with.”

******

More foolish nonsense from an old ignorant ass “rich” Negro, who does not have shit else to do but mumble nonsense as stupid ass media types stick a microphone in front of his face to give him credibility, credibility he otherwise would not have if is daughters were not tennis stars.

Just as Julian Bond, until these old stupid ass Negro fucks die off, the rest of us black folks will continue to be, tangled in a web of colossal verbal ignorance not because people like Williams have anything meaningful to say but it gives white liberal media types and excuse to write race baiting stories demeaning society and therefore creating more and more angry uneducated victims of this “clearly” racist society.

Things have changed for the better, that is not even debatable, however class warfare is the battle ground. Black folks today have fewer weapons to fight with, but that is by choice.
If you are an uneducated lazy bastard with dark skin who do you think is coming to your defense? It sure as hell will not be me.
When the tools to fight perceived racism and victim hood are given to you free, with instructions and you “choose” not only to take them and then also refuse to read the instructions then you don’t have a damm thing to complain about.

As far as I’m concerned if you are sitting on a corner in East St. Louis consuming liquid gold from a paper bag or in Kansas City sitting in an audience listening to Mrs. Bill Clinton speak about cronyism and racism in government while speaking in ghettoized dialect you are both on the same collision course.
Yes indeed idiot ass liberal Democrats at least have the decency to use Ebonics to help idiot Negros understand just how they will fuck them over.
Republicans and Conservative talk all “proper” trying to mislead “us.”
What’s the use, if you are too fucken stupid to realize the dilemma Negros have themselves tangles in, then you too would agree with Richard Williams assessment.

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Slug Fest

Friday, July 6th, 2007

Plan to support Nolan is well-suited for 49ers fans

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Mike Nolan coach of the San Francisco 49ers is actually being prevented by Reebok from wearing a business suit on the sidelines during NFL games.
He wants to pay respect to his dad and the coaches from earlier generations who wore suits on the sidelines.
This is another example of how commercialization has fuck up everything from Christmas to Fathers Day. Class and good taste is actually frowned upon. Every sports fan should tell Reebok to go fuck themselves and let the dude wear the suit.
***

nolan.jpgSANTA CLARA — Reebok might be able to prevent Mike Nolan from wearing a suit on the 49ers’ sideline, but the sneaker giant is powerless to stop a stadium-load of fans from donning their Sunday best on game day.

Call it the Formalwear Revolution, which was sparked last week by an Internet zealot who read that Nolan wasn’t getting anywhere in his quest to permanently return the coat and tie to the NFL sideline. So “Ninerfan21″ made a modest proposal: Why don’t the 49ers’ fans show Reebok where to shove it by showing up to the team’s Sept. 10 home opener — a prime-time affair, mind you — dressed as businessmen? Since then, the idea has spread like chicken pox at summer camp.

And why not? It’s a creative way of sticking it to a faceless, multi-gazillion-dollar corporation that insists grown men coach football games as if they’re getting ready to run a 5K. It’s a lesson to all the kids out there: You don’t need lawsuits to settle disputes.

You just need suits.

And you have to believe that ESPN, which will air the opener, will have a field day with the concept. Every segue to a commercial — and Lord knows there will be a lot of them — will involve a throng of dapper Nolanites in button-down suits.

Finally, it’s a novel concept.

Back when Y.A. Tittle and Joe Perry were playing, the stands were filled with fans in tweed and fedoras. Since then, the fan look has moved away from Joseph Abboud and toward, say, Kid Rock. The suit and tie could become a San Francisco trademark, like cheeseheads in Green Bay or hog noses in D.C.

Tipped off that there’s a revolution afoot, Nolan laughed.

“I’ll say this,” he said, “I hope they do it for the same reason I’m doing it, which is out of respect for the league, the 49ers and to those who have done it in the past.”

Then he let the idea sink in.

“I like it,” he finally said. “It shows unity. I like that.”

Reebok admittedly pays a lot — $250 million — to be the NFL’s tailor, but it’s hard to imagine the sneaker company continuing to fight this and looking anything but venal and petty.

The suit, after all, is designed to make men look good.

Middle-aged men generally don’t belong in clothing designed for younger men, as anyone who witnessed Chicago Cubs manager Lou Piniella spilling out of his uniform last week can attest. (Apparently, the moniker “Sweet Lou” now applies to his favorite food group.) When Nolan and Jacksonville coach Jack Del Rio were permitted to wear Reebok-approved suits for two games last season, the experiment was considered a success. Despite heaps of positive reviews — and a lot of glowing press for Reebok — Nolan and his black suit only will be allowed to make two appearances again this year.

Reebok surely wants the issue to die, and despite having what seems to be a small army of public relations specialists, had a devil of a time returning phone calls on Monday.

Last year Nolan, too, seemed a bit embarrassed by all the attention paid to the suit debate. This season, however, he’s resolute in his quest.

The reason, he disclosed last week, is that the health of his father, former 49ers coach Dick Nolan, is deteriorating. The elder Nolan suffers from Alzheimer’s disease and last month was placed in an assisted living facility for patients suffering dementia. The 75-year-old Nolan also is fighting prostate cancer.

Dick Nolan coached alongside men such as Tom Landry and Hank Stram, in an era in which coaches wore suits on the sideline. The younger Nolan’s desire to do the same is an homage — a tip of the fedora, if you will — to the men who helped build the league and especially to his father.

It is for that reason that Nolan won’t let the issue go. And it is for that reason Reebok should give in.

Viva La Revolución!

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Go Warriors!!

Sunday, May 6th, 2007

The Best Fans In The NBA
Warriors fans have created one of the loudest, most influential venues in all of sports.

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The Greatest Upset in the History of the NBA!!

Friday, May 4th, 2007

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Way to go Warriors, props to the fans!!!!

Dallas YOU SUCK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Props to my Warriors and the Oaktown fans!!

Monday, April 30th, 2007

Go Warriors!!

Thursday, April 19th, 2007

warriors2.JPGOk I rarely put sports stuff here, I am a huge Bay Area Sports fan, 49ers, A’s, Giants, Sharks, Cal, Stanford, fuck the Raiders, when they left Oakland the first time it broke my heart and I hate Al Davis.
My favorite basketball team the Golden State Warriors made the playoffs for the first time in over a decade.
They may get bounced in the first round, but I’m happy they finally broke through.
I know the fans in Oakland have been supporting them through thick and thin so I had to send a shout out here on the Poop.
I was 12 the last time they won a championship and I remember it well.
Oakland in the early 70’s ruled the sports world.
Go Warriors!!

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Georege Will: Remembering Jackie Robinson’s day

Sunday, April 15th, 2007
jr2.jpgBy George Will LIKE MANY New Yorkers leaving home for work on April 15, 1947, he wore a suit, tie and camel-hair overcoat as he headed for the subway. To his wife he said, “Just in case you have trouble picking me out, I’ll be wearing number 42.” No one had trouble spotting the black man in the Dodgers’ white home uniform when he trotted out to play first base at Ebbets Field. Suddenly, only 399, not 400, major league players were white. Which is why 42 is the only number permanently retired by every team.

Jackie Robinson’s high school teachers suggested a career in gardening. Robinson’s brother Mack had finished second to Jesse Owens in the 200-meter dash at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Whites who won medals found careers opened for them. Mack, writes Jonathan Eig in “Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson’s First Season,” wore his Olympic jacket as a Pasadena, Calif., street sweeper, while Owens found himself racing against horses at county fairs, “one small step removed from a circus act.”

(more…)

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Decades After Robinson, Many Blacks Dismiss Baseball

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

jr1.jpg April 15, 2007 — Jackie Robinson first broke baseball’s color barrier not on Ebbets Field but on a diamond in central Florida.On March 17, 1946, more than a year before he debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Robinson took the field in Daytona Beach with the Montreal Royals, the Dodgers’ farm team.

Bethune-Cookman College is a historically black school, and its baseball team, the Wildcats, plays its home games at Jackie Robinson Ballpark, the very stadium where Jackie Robinson made history.

Today, Bethune-Cookman planned to start the same number of African-Americans that started on Robinson’s team 61 years ago — one.

Read the rest from ABC News

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L.A. Galaxy adding David Beckham in a $250-million deal

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

kick.jpgI’m not going to bother linking to this or any related stories, because this is just so fucken stupid it tis simply incomprehensible.

Look at the picture, why would I give a shit about a sport with such enduring images.

David Beckham can’t dunk. He can’t throw for 4000 yards in a season.
He can’t rush for 1500 yards. He can’t stop Kobe Bryant or Shaq, he can’t bat .300 or hit 50 homers or steal 50 bases.
He does not know how to throw a curveball or slider or turn a double play.
He can’t skate, so hat tricks are out of the question and no redneck is likely to have a Beckham sticker on his pick-up.

So what the fuck is this $250 million for?
I swear how come somebody doesn’t come to this blog and reckanize my writing talents and offer me some million dollar contract.

Shit, fewer people will watch this dude play soccer than will be reading this blog.

C’mon there has to be someone out there with money to piss away on this broke ass blogging Negro.

Help a brotha out, I’m fo sale!

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A Disturbing Violent Trend

Friday, January 5th, 2007

Why are we no longer shocked to hear that a black athlete has been murdered?

crime.jpgBy Jemele Hill - ESPN

“Wrong place at the wrong time.”

Who knew the wrong place to be on New Year’s Eve was at a party welcoming in the new year? Who knew the wrong time to be murdered was now – when people are so callous about death that it’s almost as if we’re asking the victim, “Just what did you do to get yourself murdered?”

There are many words to describe the senseless killing of Denver Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams. Unfortunate. Heartbreaking. Sad. But here’s the one word we can’t use in describing such a death: Unexpected.
Over the past 12 months, three NFL players have been shot, and in the past couple weeks, police discovered one NFL player, Bears defensive lineman Tank Johnson, had enough weapons in his home to mount a terrorist attack. University of Miami lineman Bryan Pata was shot to death at his apartment complex in November. In Denver alone, three notable athletes have been shot since 2003 – Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Joey Porter, Denver Nuggets guard Julius Hodge and now, tragically, Williams.

One unavoidable commonality about these episodes of gunplay: all of the athletes are black.

It leads to an inevitable question from all of us, but particularly mainstream America: Why do black athletes often seem to find themselves either holding a gun or staring down the barrel of one?

Real talk for a moment.

Contrary to stodgy opinions, young men have a right to go out. They want to hang with their peers. They want to talk to women. They want to show off a little of their success. Nothing wrong with any of that – as long as they’re careful.

Who they’re with, what time they’re out and what they have is only a small part of the issue. The larger problem here is the one no one is ready to openly discuss.

While America is generally a violent place, no culture in this country glorifies violence more than the African-American community. And consequently, no other racial group is as disproportionately affected by it.

This isn’t to say black people invented violence or have a penchant for it. But far too many of us glorify shooting people for revenge, perceived slights or to prove toughness. Two things you almost always see when “MTV Cribs” features a black superstar: a poster of Tony Montana and a poster of the Godfather. Montana and Michael Corleone, though fictional, are considered heroes by young black men everywhere. Montana and Corleone had one thing in common: both killed people to gain respect.

BET, the same network that saw fit to cut its nightly news program, has a new show called “American Gangster,” which “chronicles the life and times of some of Black America’s most notorious crime figures.” It’s explained that the program has a strong moral component and doesn’t seek to glorify violence, but on BET’s Web site the show is promoted by showing Ving Rhames, the king of cool, in slick gangster apparel – as if he were promoting a music video, not a show about violent criminals.

And sure enough, right beneath Rhames’ promo ad, a BET dot.commer says, “Young, black males will look at this [show] as an inspiration.”

Now, criminal biographies appear on The History Channel all the time, but the difference is that violence is often marketed to blacks in a way that makes it appear more sexy and daring.

Black men constantly receive the message that they can’t make it in life through using legitimate means, and the only way they gain society’s respect is through the street game.

This is the mentality black athletes greet when they go to the club. A recent Public Library of Science Medicine study shows black men living in urban America have the shortest life expectancy of any other racial group in the country. The life expectancy of a black man in Cleveland is closer to that of West Africans than the average white American. So wearing a jersey every Sunday doesn’t protect you from anything.

Of course, movies and songs don’t make people kill people, but they can influence the way people think and live.

But ultimately, if we want to see fewer black athletes as victims of violence, African-Americans must stop worshiping at the altar of their own demise.

[Jemele Hill, a Page 2 columnist and writer for ESPN the Magazine]

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Runner Fails Gender Test, Loses Medal

Monday, December 18th, 2006

Read the article if you want but why bother, just look at dude!

runner.jpg

The Racial Gap In The Grandstands

Monday, September 25th, 2006

coloredfans1.jpgI have never understood the “marketing to Negros” approach when it comes to sports.
Thinking back to my youthful days, I played damm near every sport, so did many of my friends, we as kids were never “marketed” to. Kids who don’t play sports usually can’t because of finances and parental commitment. This translates to lack of participation in the stands. Black folks simply weigh the entertainment dollar.
Here, Chiefs tickets are $75 and $20 for parking that is insane.
KU football tickets to a meaningful game is $50 plus. You just about can’t get tickets to KU basketball.
But, hell black folks are willing to shell out $50-$100 for a concert ticket or a comedy show. So it’s not simply cost.

Major League Baseball is aggressively courting Latinos as African Americans drift away

From Business Week - Link

Inside the main gate of Angels Stadium, home of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, an eye-catching sign directs fans to the Tienda Del Equipo (aka team merchandise store). But it’s more than a mere sign. It’s a sign of the times. As Major League Baseball sails toward another attendance record this season, Latino fans are turning out in large numbers to cheer on the game’s growing cadre of Latino stars. And they’re being aggressively courted with everything from Spanish-language Web sites such as loswhitesox.com to Cuban sandwiches at the New York Mets’ Shea Stadium.

What makes MLB’s skillful wooing of Latino fans so fascinating is how starkly it differs from the sport’s failed efforts to engage African Americans. Once blacks were among MLB’s most die-hard fans, as MLB commissioner Bud Selig is fond of recalling. Selig revels in a childhood memory of sitting with his friend Herb Kohl (now a Democratic Senator from Wisconsin) at Chicago’s Wrigley Field in May, 1947. “As I looked around I remember saying: ‘My God, we’re the only white people in the upper deck,”‘ Selig says.

Nearly 60 years later, blacks are fast vanishing from big-league seats — and big-league fields. Black players held just 9% of roster spots in 2005, down from 18% in 1991. It’s trickier to track black fans, because MLB doesn’t keep count, but Scarborough Sports Marketing, based in New York, puts African American turnout at MLB games at 8% of total attendance. That’s puny considering that blacks constitute 13% of the U.S. population and that more than a third of MLB teams are located in metro areas where blacks make up 25% or more of residents, according to 2000 U.S. Census data.

This tale of two minorities partly reflects cultural forces that MLB couldn’t have anticipated. In black communities, baseball fell victim to “the perfect storm,” says MLB Executive Vice-President Jimmie Lee Solomon. He cites the shrinking number of baseball diamonds in inner cities over several decades and the rise in popularity of football and basketball, which youths see as easier stepping stones to college scholarships and pro careers — partly because baseball requires a long apprenticeship in the minor leagues.

Latinos, on the other hand, have proved a comparatively easy sell. Fans with roots in Latino nations make up 13% of big-league attendance, according to Scarborough. And they’re not not just cheering at ballparks: The number of Latinos who watch baseball or listen on the radio is up about 15% since 2001.

Many of these aficionados brought a love of baseball with them from places like the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, locales that also are pipelines for MLB players. Latinos now hold 29% of big-league positions, a record, up from 14% in 1991, according to the University of Central Florida’s 2005 Racial & Gender Report Card. And many, from the Cardinals’ Albert Pujols to the Mets’ Carlos Beltran and Carlos Delgado, are major stars.

The growing Latino audience has big-league teams fishing for new customers. This season 17 teams, including the Kansas City Royals and Milwaukee Brewers, staged Latino heritage celebrations. Corporate America is tuning in, too. On Sept. 2, Coca-Cola (KO ) and Toyota (TM ) treated about 10,000 gyrating Los Angeles Dodgers fans to Viva Los Dodgers, a Latin dance party in the parking lot outside Dodger Stadium. “If you go to a Major League game anywhere, you see the same [Latino] influence. There’s a more global flavor in who’s playing and who’s coming to watch,” says Mets General Manager Omar Minaya.

What’s missing, however, is many African American faces in the stands. One striking aspect of that phenomenon is how little MLB seems to know about it — including when the exodus started and how quickly blacks drifted away. One of the few teams that does track attendance of minority fans, the Chicago White Sox, says a mere 4.5% of fans coming through the turnstiles are black — in a city with an African American population of 37%.colored.jpg

That frustrates White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf, who bought the team in 1981 and is unusual for having put in place a Latino manager, Ozzie Guillen, and an African American general manager, Ken Williams. The standard explanations offered for low turnout among blacks — high ticket prices, MLB’s failure to have even one franchise owned by a black investor, inadequate marketing — don’t impress Reinsdorf. He says in the decades he has owned the White Sox and the Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Assn., blacks have never turned out for either team in big numbers. He attributes it to another factor: “For whatever reason, the African American community seems to participate in sports but not watch them. Maybe they are smarter than the average person. Maybe there is something in the black culture that tells them: ‘I don’t benefit when the Cubs win or the White Sox win, so why spend money?”‘ Selig disagrees and maintains that black baseball fans can be won back.

MLB has tried to woo African Americans. Ten years ago, Selig presided over a season-long tribute to Jackie Robinson on the 50th anniversary of baseball’s first black major leaguer. (Another league-wide tip of the cap is planned for next season, the 60th anniversary of Robinson’s debut.) Events honoring Negro League history are now common. And MLB’s most ambitious outreach to inner-city blacks is the Urban Youth Academy in Compton, Calif., a 10-acre oasis where young boys and girls play on manicured fields and are schooled in the game — on MLB’s tab. This year, in the academy’s inaugural summer, about 900 boys and girls enrolled, most of them from troubled neighborhoods, almost all of them black. For many, it was their first experience owning a mitt or taking batting practice. When director Darrell Miller, a former major leaguer, took groups of students to see Dodgers and Angels games, that was a first, too.

Less impressive is baseball’s marketing to Black America. “It doesn’t make sense to me why they wouldn’t do more,” says Richard Lapchick, head of the DeVos Sport Business Management Program at the University of Central Florida. Solomon, MLB’s highest-ranking black official, agrees: He’s pushing for more daring marketing of the sport’s top black stars, such as Florida Marlins pitching sensation Dontrelle Willis and Philadelphia Phillies slugger Ryan Howard. Says Solomon: “We’ve got to take these names and make them cool.” But Tim Brosnan, MLB’s executive vice-president for business, endorses the league’s efforts and says: “There aren’t any plans to market players differently than we have. That includes Latino players, African American players, players of all colors and stripes.”

It may well be that MLB, setting attendance records year after year, figures if it ain’t broke, why fix it? But it pains owners such as Reinsdorf to watch the African American audience slip away. “It’s not an immediate problem,” he grants. “But if we’re America’s game, we want all of America to be interested.”

Sphere: Related Content

One World Cup

Tuesday, July 11th, 2006

Soccer gives American elites the chance to celebrate nationalism in other countries but not ours.

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By Steve Sailer - The American Conservative 
Just as Brazil, soccer’s dominant nation, has been the “Country of the Future” for, roughly, ever, the quadrennial arrival of ano