I want you to remember some inspiring words that someone else might have told you over the course of your lives, and go out there and win! | | It's not Hoosiers. It's the Celtics celebrating their 1964 NBA title. (Bettmann/Getty Images) | | | | “I want you to remember some inspiring words that someone else might have told you over the course of your lives, and go out there and win!” |
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| rantnrave:// A great Game 1 of the STANLEY CUP FINALS and what's the biggest talking point? A catfish. Is that an indictment of the NHL or of how we digest sports? The game was enthralling and it had the best player in the world. But a guy threw a catfish onto the ice, so that stole the show. TWITTER and sports' digital media ecosystem have exposed the idea that a good number of fans -- maybe a plurality? -- don't consume sports for the games themselves. They watch for the storyline, or consume the memes, or skip over the action to get to the day-after analysis or how it sets up the roster transactions. Has it always been this way? I'm too young to know what coverage was like in the '80s and '90s. Was there an inflection point where the interest went from the game to the highlight to the trade? Was it highlight shows or sports talk radio? Did the consumers dictate what content they want or is the audience responding to what's in front of them? Is there any way to make the game itself, not the bites and morsels we've become accustomed to, the primary product again, or are we too far gone?... What makes the SPELLING BEE so hard? OLIVER ROEDER’s deep dive into the spelling contest for FIVETHIRTYEIGHT is one of my favorite analytical stories in a while. How do you get readers to read all the way through a long story? By engaging and challenging them. It's informative, curious and fun. Did you know that words with GREEK as a language of origin have been the easiest to spell, or that ones with HEBREW have been the hardest? Roeder gets nerdy and so will you... VIACOM believes a non-sports bundle is not only possible but might be profitable... HOMER AT THE BAT may be my favorite SIMPSONS episode ever. I'm happy the BASEBALL HALL OF FAME honored it. It's iconic to baseball fans of a certain age. One of my first references for KEN GRIFFEY JR. remains his troubles with nerve tonic. I've never seen THE NATURAL but I know about "Wonderbat." I still hum "TALKING SOFTBALL." | | - Mike Vorkunov, curator |
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| On the eve of their third consecutive Finals, Cleveland and Golden State have become a cultural phenomenon -- and the rivalry of the decade. | |
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The story behind the "Halo" franchise as it's never been told--by the key individuals that made it. | |
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Choosing Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup was controversial from the beginning. Setting aside the questions swirling around the bidding process, summer temperatures regularly hit 50 degrees Celsius (121 Fahrenheit), which even FIFA’s experts said posed health risks for the world’s best players and the millions of fans expected to travel to the 32-team event. | |
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Two decades into his legendary career, Roger Federer is playing with a newfound freedom -- and having way too much fun to quit now. | |
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Mayor Bill de Blasio does not want to discuss the curious network of power brokers behind an event that the city paid for. | |
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Jake Waddell revealed his tactics for throwing a catfish on the ice during Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final. | |
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The legendary Sports Illustrated writer was also the editor of The National, where he passed on his love for his craft to a new generation, and a book author who faced his pain the only way he knew how. | |
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It stinks that Strickland believes it’s OK to hunt a human being with a ball, and it stinks that Harper believes it’s OK to endanger not just himself but his teammates with the collateral damage that comes from benches clearing. | |
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The company is spearheading an effort to create a skinny bundle without sports or news that consumers could access as a standalone digital service or through their cable TV provider. | |
| Team USA must help the sport grow internationally - while also trying to maintain its dominance. | |
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Most Twin Cities high school cross country and track teams have Somali students on the roster. Some have gone on to successful college and even professional running careers. Well, the boys’ teams have Somalis, anyway. | |
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The globalism in the sport's pro ranks is just as prevalent on U.S. campuses, to the point where no one much notices anymore. | |
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It's been more than four decades since his death, and distance running hasn't yet found anyone who can match his bravado. | |
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A dispatch from baseball’s celebration of one of the greatest ‘Simpsons’ episodes ever. | |
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In an excerpt from his new book with Tim Brown, ‘The Phenomenon: Pressure, the Yips, and the Pitch that Changed My Life,’ Rick Ankiel recounts the three hours he quit the St. Louis Cardinals. | |
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We put Ben Hogan's old clubs in modern tour pros hands. The results weren't pretty. | |
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The Nike Swoosh was backward on the coat made for Steve Prefontaine’s 1974 visit to Tacoma. | |
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Once I was sitting at a desk writing all day I started putting on the pounds. If I wanted to have a long life as a novelist, I needed to find a way to stay in shape. | |
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