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White Coaches Pick The Wrong Side When They Talk Down To Their Black Athletes

By Andre Perry/The Hechinger Report

Now that the NCAA tournament is over and passions about everyone’s favorite basketball team are not running as high, we need to have a conversation about coaches’ abusive treatment of black athletes.
In late March, when Michigan State and Bradley were in a dead heat during the NCAA basketball semifinals, the actions of coach Tom Izzo on the Spartans’ sideline brought fans to their feet. Freshman sensation Aaron Henry was about to reach the team huddle during a timeout when Izzo, fists clenched, walked out to berate him, pointing his finger a few centimeters from Henry’s nose, and then proceeded to yell at him in front of thousands in the arena in Des Moines. Millions across the country watched the fracas on their television and computer screens. Izzo continued to violate the players’ personal space throughout the timeout; other players had to restrain Izzo, who offered no apologies for the incident.


In interviews, Izzo and members of the team seemed to dismiss the incident as tough love, a lesson that Henry needed to learn, to push him to do better. “What’s wrong with challenging a kid that makes some mistakes?” Izzo said in a press conference after the game. But Izzo’s body language during that outburst gave him away. His tirade did not appear to be about tough love so much as intimidation and bullying – and he’s not the first to use (and defend) it as a teaching tool.

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Posted on April 17, 2019

The Ex-Cub Factor

By Steve Rhodes

One in an occasional series tracking the movements of ex-Cubs.
1. Starlin Castro.
Because the Cubs are in the midst of a series against the Marlins down in Miami, it’s a good time to check in with the once-future star shortstop who found it hard to focus over the course of 162 games.
It might be forgotten now, but Castro went to three All-Star Games over his six years as a Cub.
Castro lost his job at shortstop to Addison Russell that year, but after moving to second he actually upped his game at the plate. That December, though, the Cubs sent him to the Yankees for reliever Adam Warren and a player-to-be-named-later, who turned out to be infielder Brendan Ryan. The Cubs released Ryan six days after acquiring him.

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Posted on April 16, 2019

SportsMonday: Tiger No Ben Hogan!

By Jim Coffman

Ho hum. Another Sunday, another ridiculous morning-to-night run of sports drama.
Of course, the big headline was the return of Tiger Woods. And there was no recency bias whatsoever in the immediate declaration that his victory at the Masters was the greatest sports comeback ever.
It was not. It wasn’t even the biggest comeback in golf history. Goodness gracious, people, could you maybe let 24 or even 48 hours pass before you make bad ridiculous declarations like this? Ben Hogan rallying from a near-fatal auto accident in 1949 to win the 1950 U.S. Open in 1950 still stands as golf’s greatest comeback. It isn’t even close.

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Posted on April 15, 2019

What About Coop?

By Roger Wallenstein

Listening to White Sox broadcasts and reading what the beat writers have to say, Don Cooper, who’s been the White Sox pitching coach since 2002, is well-respected and very successful. He has been instrumental in developing talented pitchers such as Chris Sale, Jose Quintana, Mark Buehrle, Jon Garland and others. Perhaps his shining moment came in the 2005 World Series when starting pitchers Jose Contreras and Freddy Garcia joined Buehrle and Garland to stifle the Houston Astros on their way to the four-game sweep.
When talking about Sox pitching successes during Cooper’s tenure, quality starts are frequently mentioned. In half of Cooper’s 16 seasons coming into this year, the Sox ranked in the top 10 among the 30 teams when it comes to starting pitchers who lasted a minimum of six innings on a yield of no more than three runs. Guys like Sale and Quintana were masters of the craft.
Keeping the opposition in check for a game’s first six innings should produce a winning ballclub, providing that the bullpen can protect a lead, helping the starter to pick up a victory.

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Posted on April 15, 2019

TrackNotes: Storming Oaklawn

By Thomas Chambers

When little brother Jim Jr. was doing his work down in Conway, Arkansas, I was lucky to enjoy the hospitality of he and his bride and son.
It’s the home of Central Arkansas University, a beautiful campus where Crumbs found Scottie, and you know the rest.
We even ran into Scottie once, at a pizzeria, when he was in town to be inducted into something and have something named after him. Feeling “jolly,” I pressed to shake Scottie’s hand, and his bodyguard, nearly as tall as the Pip but twice as wide, nearly killed me with his stare. You’d be stupid, and I wasn’t, to not think he was packing heat.
The little jockey on my shoulder, belatedly, said, isn’t there a race track down there? Smarty Jones, Arazi, Zenyatta in the Apple Blossom? YEAH.
So I fully exploited said hospitality, fluttered the eyelashes, and angelically said, “Hey, why don’t we go to Oaklawn Park?”

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Posted on April 14, 2019

The Beachwood Radio Sports Hour #247: Cy Darvish

By Jim Coffman and Steve Rhodes

Greatness unappreciated by all except media, Maddon. Plus: Yu Darvish Is Even Annoying His Neighbors; The White Sox Are Also 3-8; Sale Sucks, Rays Rock; The Fight To Pay Minor Leaguers; The Circuitous Route of Wauconda’s Matt Mooney; Now The Bulls Pray To The Lottery Gods; Lottery Gods Smile On Blackhawks; “Q” Now Florida Man; Chicago Fired; DePaul Demons Officially Nation’s 103rd Best Team; and Co-Ed Swim Team Launches.

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Posted on April 11, 2019

The Fight To Pay Minor League Baseball Players

By Fox 10 Phoenix

“Depending on the level, you’re making $45 a game, $60 a game, $70 a game.”
And for non-roster invitees, spring training is unpaid.
“For a guy a step away from the big leagues . . . ”

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Posted on April 9, 2019

Co-Ed Swim League Launches

By Grey Horse Communications

We teased it in our last newsletter, and now we’re shouting it from the rooftops: our client, the International Swimming League launches today as the first gender-balanced professional sports league, and also the first to pay elite swimmers living wages to compete.
Those enormous milestones will impact the landscape of competitive swimming around the globe. About 75% of swimming’s current Olympic champions and world-record holders will compete in ISL tournaments, which will rapidly establish fair pay as a standard among the world’s top swimmers. The league also plans to televise tournaments to a mass viewership – another first.

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Posted on April 9, 2019

SportsMondayTuesday: Players Win National Championship

By Jim Coffman

I totally lucked into being able to watch the last 10 minutes and overtime of the national men’s college basketball final last night. Virginia pulled away from Texas Tech in overtime (85-77) thanks to stellar efforts from sophomore forward De’Andre Hunter (a career-high 27 points, including the ultra-clutch game-tying three as the final seconds ticked away in regulation) and junior guard Ty Jerome.
Notice what I did there. I focused on the players first and foremost. Even the best national college basketball analysts continue to fail to do that. We hear so much about coach Tony Bennett, and how he handled the heartbreak of Virginia’s historic loss in the first round of last year’s tournament to the University of Maryland Baltimore County (becoming the first ever No. 1 seed to lose to a 16), but it is the players who win or lose everything.
All pregame and postgame analysis should begin and end with the players. One of the elements of college basketball that continues to infuriate me is that analysts still can’t seem to help themselves. They still worship at the cult of the coach.

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Posted on April 9, 2019

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