Less is more, so I’d rather have fewer people doing more work than more people doing a little more work. As long as everybody is busy, as long as everybody feels productive, they feel good about what they’re doing and they feel like they’re contributing; I think when people have lag time and kind of not enough to do, that leads to getting distracted and complaining or being less productive. | | Sebastian Vettel, on the move. (Mark Thompson/Getty Images) | | | | “Less is more, so I’d rather have fewer people doing more work than more people doing a little more work. As long as everybody is busy, as long as everybody feels productive, they feel good about what they’re doing and they feel like they’re contributing; I think when people have lag time and kind of not enough to do, that leads to getting distracted and complaining or being less productive.” |
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| rantnrave:// So what if MLB has backslid into another PED-littered era? That's what SI's TOM VERDUCCI alleges, and he would know after he helped expose the STEROID ERA of the 1990s. Any sport's stance on PEDs has always been relative. Deciding what is legal and what isn't is drawing an arbitrary line on how far science can affect sports. The steroids of the '70s and '80s were forceful and dangerous. Can the same be said for HGH and the new drugs available to potential cheats today? Leagues must walk a complicated road when it comes to PEDs. Their athletes are role models, whether they like it or not. They must also avoid the scrutiny of politicians. MLB's trip to CAPITOL HILL 12 years ago is still a black eye and it probably doesn't want to do it again. But fans dig the long ball. Higher-scoring games make for arguably better product. Would the integrity of the game really be hurt if players could avail themselves of medical progress? It at least makes for a good argument, doesn't it?... A show starring BOMANI JONES and PABLO TORRE sounds like must-see TV... Baseball has no better spokesman than ADAM JONES right now. His YAHOO SPORTS interview opens a window into the complexity of race in MLB and what it's like to be in the spotlight as the loudest voice in the room on the topic. MLB can only hope that Jones continues to talk. He's worth listening to every time he speaks... I almost bought my own food scale after reading this. But I still don't want to step on a scale... TED LEONSIS thinks media companies should be run like sports teams. Maybe he has a point. But those media companies live in an ecosystem with much tougher competition. Sports teams can handle losing seasons and sell hope. The demand for their product is relatively inelastic compared to the marketplace media companies live in. But the two have something in common. Whether you run AMAZON or the JETS, your long-term success is dependent on your owner. Sustained winning in sports only comes with competent ownership. And what thriving media company doesn't have a strong CEO? But I bet sports fans wish they could push out a poor owner as easily as a board can depose its chief exec. | | - Mike Vorkunov, curator |
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| How can an NBA head coach be both essential and unnecessary? Steve Kerr's absence has revealed that the true test of a leader happens once they leave. | |
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In a conversation with Yahoo Sports, Jones addressed his place in baseball today, the ugly incident at Fenway Park in which a fan berated him with the N-word, Curt Schilling’s belief Jones made up the story, and how baseball is a white-man’s sport. | |
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The man who shot and killed Dejean-Jones after the NBA player broke into his apartment tells #BRmag his side of the story. | |
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Tracking down a silent sender in the Pacific Northwest. | |
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On Saturday 6 May 2017, Olympic Gold medallist Eliud Kipchoge donned a pair of Nike ZoomX VaporFly Elite shoes (containing a specially designed carbon fibre plate promoting a forward-tilt of the feet) | |
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The digital-media power has unveiled a new logo and revitalized app over the past month. | |
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A black-owned business breaking into a white-dominated industry is finding few supporters in its corner. | |
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After 30 years dominating New York sports radio, Mike Francesa is moving on. What’s next? Dumb question. | |
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There are three ways to manage promotion to the top flight. Let QPR, Blackpool and Burnley guide you through the choices. | |
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| Suiting Up with Paul Rabil |
Welcome to Suiting Up, where professional lacrosse player, operator and investor, Paul Rabil, talks to influencers within the world of sports to examine the duality between sport and business. His first guest is a man who doesn't do many podcasts--this may be his first, actually. | |
| Hitting more fly balls doesn’t always equal better performance. (Just ask Jason Heyward.) | |
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How Alan Eustace, a Google engineer on the edge of retirement, broke the world record for high-altitude jumping. | |
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Whenever I tell a New York Yankees fan that my new book, "The Captain Class," is a profile of the greatest team leaders in sports history, they inevitably say some variation of the same thing. | |
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To those who have dedicated their lives to studying the minds and mental well-being of elite athletes, this feels like a moment. At least they hope it is. They hope Penn State kicker Joey Julius will no longer serve as an outlier. That his openness and honesty about struggling with an eating disorder, an illness not typically associated with football players, will be a beacon for others. | |
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Every year during the upfront (and now, NewFront) season, I think about the state of the media industry -- what has happened over the last year and how the media landscape will shift during the next one. My interest stems from my time as an AOL executive during the 1990s, when we were propelled by a vision of what was possible with the screech of a modem and the click of a mouse. | |
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Chris Rock and Joe La Puma go Sneaker Shopping at Stadium Goods in New York City and talk about the time Michael Jordan was on "SNL," why Yeezys are a must-cop, and the history of Lil' Penny. | |
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We give an inside look at the Know Your Rights Camps being hosted by free agent quarterback Colin Kaepernick, as he and a remarkable team of people try to educate youth on their legal rights, health, history and financial literacy. We also tear apart the disinformation campaign being put forward by nameless NFL executives about why Colin Kaepernick is without a job. | |
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She fell in love with cycling, but was tired of never seeing anyone else who looked like her on two wheels. So she did something about it. | |
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Among other things: potatoes are wonderful, junk food is OK, and everything you know about serving sizes is wrong. | |
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As home runs continue to rise, the suspicion of increased PED usage still looms over Major League Baseball. The question now is whether the penalties for a positive test should be more stringent. | |
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