Rabu, 31 Desember 2014

basketball stream live UNC-Chapel Hill Firing Professor Over Academic Fraud Scandal

basketball stream live RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- The University of North Carolina's top official says the Chapel Hill school is firing a professor who once led the faculty there for her role in the academic fraud scandal that's rocked the state's flagship public university.



University Chancellor Carol Folt said in a letter Wednesday that philosophy professor Jeanette Boxill was notified of her upcoming termination on the same day last October that a scathing report was released. Boxill, former chairwoman of the faculty council, is appealing.



The report found that fake classes allowed 3,100 athletes and other students to earn artificially high grades from 1993 to 2011. The report described Boxill as directing women's basketball players into fake courses.



The Associated Press and nine other media companies filed a lawsuit demanding the records of those who were disciplined. In response to a mediation session, the university named Boxill, an African studies lecturer who resigned and two lower-level staffers who lost jobs.



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basketball stream live Separate and Unequal: The Moral Challenge for Youth Sports in America

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Youth sports have dramatically transformed over the past century. Organized sports were once the exclusive domain of the privileged. Yet beginning at the end of the 19th and carrying over into the 20th century, private and public sports programs were founded specifically to serve poor children in urban areas. Common to all of these programs was a commitment to protect and serve society's most vulnerable children by providing them with an opportunity to play in safe areas under the supervision of caring adults. In so doing, we leveled the playing-field, as it were, between the economically privileged and the poor.






Over the past few decades, however, youth sports programs have become increasingly privatized and expensive. Once driven by philanthropy, they are now driven by profits and dreams of college scholarships and lucrative professional sports careers. Youth sports have become a seven billion dollar business feeding an eight billion dollar travel industry. According to information compiled by Turbo Tax, twenty-percent of parents spend over $1,000 per child on sports, and many parents in high income brackets are spending upwards of $10,000 per child. While middle and upper class parents pour money into club programs, poor children are left to fend for themselves in dwindling school and recreation programs. Since the economic downturn in 2008, "pay-to-play-sports" have become the norm in urban public schools. According to a study by the University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Family Children's Hospital, the cost of pay-to-play sports is averaging almost four hundred dollars per child and rising, which is causing increasing numbers of working class and poor parents to withdraw their children from school sports.






With rising rates of obesity and stress-related cognitive and socio-emotional impairments, poor children need youth sports programs more than ever. Yet beyond the rising financial burden of fees and equipment, many low income parents simply have neither the time nor the access to transportation required for their children to participate in current youth sports programs.






The American people agree in principle that all children should have a fair and roughly equal opportunity to develop as breadwinners, citizens, and, most importantly, as human beings. Yet our economic, judicial, and political structures are widening the opportunity gap between rich and poor. At a time when we should be coming together to build a better future for all of our children, we live in separate neighborhoods and cultures.






All parents feel responsible to give their own children the best possible head start in life. Many find youth sports to be an outlet for their parental care as well as for their passion for sports and competition. Sadly, their children's sports activities can so consume parents that they lose sight of what is best for their own children as well as the plight of children from less advantaged circumstances.






We need to return to the vision that once democratized youth sports in America. That vision once brought the public and private sectors together to improve the lives of children, especially the most vulnerable. Last June, Play Like a Champion Today's Youth Sports Leadership Conference at the University of Notre Dame honored Michael Poole and Deacon James Page for their work with the South Bend Breakers, a basketball program founded by Poole that serves inner-city girls and boys in South Bend. When asked what led him to devote his life to caring for other people's children, Deacon Page said simply, "These are our kids." Youth sports in America have become unfair and dysfunctional. We owe our children better.






Turbo Tax: http://ift.tt/1jUF7MX






University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Family Children's Hospital: http://ift.tt/174RlEv






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basketball stream live Hawaii Vacation Reunites Obama And Childhood Pals

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HONOLULU (AP) — Since returning to his childhood home this month on vacation, President Barack Obama has spent a good part of most days cloistered with three people whose company puts him at ease. They're not his wife and daughters, who came with him, but a trio of pals whose friendship dates back to Obama's high school days in Hawaii.




The three men — Mike Ramos, Bobby Titcomb and Greg Orme — are among the few people still in Obama's life who knew him long before he was famous. Although their paths have long since diverged, they've made it a point to gather for frequent reunions, in one of Obama's most visible links to the days when his life was much simpler and his problems more mundane.




barack obama


Obama is congratulated by friends Greg Orme (L) and Mike Ramos after his shot onto the 18th green as he plays golf at the Mid-Pacific Country Club in Kailua on December 29, 2014. (NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)




On this visit alone, Obama has spent more than 22 hours with the group on the lush golf courses that dot the island of Oahu. When it rained, Obama and his pals went bowling, instead.




And on Tuesday, in what's become a yearly tradition, the men and their families gathered for a luau hosted by Titcomb. With rain drizzling over Oahu, Obama's motorcade whisked Obama across the island to Titcomb's beachside home in Waialua, about an hour outside of Honolulu on the North Shore.




Increasingly, the reunions have become the focal point of Obama's family vacations in his second term, as his teenage daughters spend less and less time at their father's side. Once content to join their parents for outings to the aquarium or to get shave ice, Sasha and Malia are now more independent. Since arriving more than a week ago, Obama has been out in public with one of his daughters only once, briefly, during a hike.




What Obama and his companions talk about during their many hours alone is anyone's guess. But the foursome rarely goes more than a few months without reconvening in one arrangement or another. In August, Obama kicked off his 53rd birthday weekend golfing with the three friends in suburban Maryland before heading to Camp David, the presidential retreat in the Catoctin Mountains.




All four were classmates at Punahou School in Honolulu, which Obama has described as "a prestigious prep school, an incubator for island elites." In his memoir, "Dreams From My Father," Obama recalled a high school career that was, for the most part, ordinary — "marginal report cards and calls to the principal's office; part-time jobs at the burger chain; acne and driving tests and turbulent desire."




"I'd made my share of friends at school, gone on the occasional awkward date," Obama wrote. "And if I sometimes puzzled over the mysterious realignments of status that took place among my classmates, as some rose and others fell depending on the whims of their bodies or the make of their cars, I took comfort in the knowledge that my own position had steadily improved."




Far less is known about Obama's buddies, of course, than about the president himself. All three live mostly private lives when they're not being photographed with the commander in chief.




Ramos, who graduated from Punahou in 1978, bonded with Obama over their mutual affinity for jazz. He's lived in Colorado, but was listed as a North Carolina resident when in 2012 he attended a state dinner at the White House that Obama held for British Prime Minister David Cameron.




barack obama


Obama and Mike Ramos walk to the 18th green as they play golf at the Mid-Pacific Country Club in Kailua on December 30, 2014 . (NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)




Titcomb, who golfed another two days with Obama this month before the others got into town, was a year behind Obama at Punahou. Titcomb has worked as a commercial fisherman and an airline employee, according to the school's alumni magazine. In 2011, he pleaded no contest to soliciting a prostitute, but Obama has stayed fiercely loyal to his childhood friend.




Obama played basketball at Punahou with Orme, who the alumni magazine says is now a building contractor. Aging photos show Obama and Orme decked out in 1970s fashion with their dates before attending a high school prom.




Among U.S. presidents, Obama is not alone in carving out time regularly to reconnect with his roots. Franklin D. Roosevelt made frequent trips back to Hyde Park, New York, throwing picnics or barbecues for former neighbors and friends, and George H.W. Bush remained pals with men he served with in World War II.




In the second term, presidents have often sought refuge from the pressure by disappearing into nature to fish or hunt, said Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian at Rice University. But such solitude has become less and less attainable for presidents in modern times.




"Many people call Obama aloof, and he hasn't made a lot of friends in Washington," Brinkley said. "When you're president, everybody wants something from you, and only these types of friends are able to simply want your well-being. They have a different level of affection for you than friends you meet later in life."




___




Reach Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://ift.tt/MJRGf2






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basketball stream live College Basketball Player With Inoperable Brain Tumor Raises $1 Million For Charity

basketball stream live CINCINNATI (AP) -- A cancer charity backed by Ohio college basketball player Lauren Hill has used a final push to reach her goal of $1 million in donations by the end of the year.



Hill got national attention when she played in a Division III basketball game with Mount St. Joseph on Nov. 2 despite suffering from an inoperable brain tumor diagnosed a year ago. She made layups for the first and last baskets of the game.



Hill is a 19-year-old freshman. She has since November helped raise more than $775,000 for cancer research and treatment through a charity called The Cure Starts Now.



The charity tweeted a telethon Tuesday helped it reach her goal.



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You can support Hill's charity here.



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basketball stream live Only In Florida! Game-Winning Buzzer Beater For Wrong Team May Be Weirdest Loss Of 2014

basketball stream live Don't close out those end-of-year lists just yet.



On the penultimate day of 2014, Florida suffered a last-second defeat on the basketball court that might just be the most bizarre and cruelest of the entire year. Tied with Florida State 63-63 in the waning seconds of an in-state matchup in Tallahassee on Tuesday night, Florida forward Jacob Kurtz tipped in a game-winning shot with 0.4 seconds left on the clock. Unfortunately for the Gators, he inadvertently tipped an opponent's missed three-point shot into the basket he was defending.








"That was crazy. I thought he had a rebound. I guess it just slipped out of his hand. I don't know how to explain it, but I was just happy," Florida State guard Montay Brandon said after his team's 65-63 win, via The Associated Press. "At first I was looking around like, did that happen? Then I saw the scoreboard change and I was like, oh man, we're winning. I started going crazy."



Brandon's "oh man" reaction just about summed up the response to the play on Twitter:






















































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Selasa, 30 Desember 2014

Atlanta Hawks Cavaliers at Hawks has tipped. Tune to NBATV (ESPN)

Welcome to our Atlanta Hawks NBA from ESPN. You can watch live streaming about basketball http://m.espn.go.com/nba/gamecast?gameId=400578758

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basketball stream live The Anxiety and Depression of Young Athletes

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Growing up, I lived my life one basketball game at a time. I went to school and I did my work, but my mind was always on the next game, and how prepared for it I would be. I thought I was alone in this thinking, but as I got older, I realized thousands of kids out there have this mindset, and feeling like nothing else matters except for how well they do in their next game.






Because of this mindset, the anxiety and depression of young athletes is overwhelming. When an athlete plays a game, how many people are they affecting? Their coach is counting on them, their teammates are counting on them, and their parents are watching them intently. Most powerful of all though, they will analyze themselves. What happens next are the negative emotions athletes start to experience at an early age.






I was at the basketball courts this summer in New York City, and there was a game with 10 year olds playing. The kids were playing hard, but you know who was more intense than everybody combined? The coaches. I couldn't believe what I was seeing. Both coaches were screaming at the kids, the refs, and everything that happened. They were cursing and screaming for their players to stop turning the ball over, make the shot, or get back on defense. May I remind you, these kids were 10 years old!






When I was 10, basketball was just a fun sport to play with friends by running up and down a court. But today? The pressure is excessive, and it's starting earlier and earlier. The unbelievable thing about these coaches is that many of them have never played that sport before. Maybe they played a little in high school, but they are screaming at these kids to perform when they don't have any idea what they're doing. Because of this extrinsic intensity to perform, it will consume the minds of these young athletes. Maybe not at 10 years old, but once sports start to get serious around 15-16, they will be terrified to play bad in games. Everybody around them will expect them to perform perfectly every game, and when they don't, that's when the depression and anxiety sets in.






Picture this: You're a young athlete, just coming into a new school. Everybody, including your parents, rave about your ability and how you'll be such a great addition to the school, team, and community. You start to believe in the hype as well, and get excited and confident for the year ahead. However, once the season starts, you're not doing that well. You're good, but only mediocre. As time goes on, everybody realizes you're just an average player.






During practices, the coaches start to focus their attention on other players. At home during dinner, your parents ask you every night what's wrong with you, and why you aren't playing as well as you should. Holding back tears, you tell them you're doing everything you can, while your dad mumbles under his breath, "Yea, but it's not good enough." Changing the subject from their disappointing child, they beam about the other players on the team who are doing so well, and ask you why you can't be like them. You go back to your room, put your head down, and feel like an utter failure. You realize that you're letting a whole community down because you're not that good at your sport. School doesn't matter, because everybody only treats you as the athlete that was very hyped up in the beginning of the year for no reason. You feel like a loser, and your confidence is shot. You're only 15 years old.






You may think this is just some fake story, but this is happening to thousands of kids all across the country right now. Nobody wants to talk about it because we live in a culture where people only discuss their success instead of their failure. They promote their strengths instead of their shortcomings. We hear about the kid who works his way out of the ghetto and becomes an NBA athlete, but we don't hear about the thousands who had similar dreams whose confidence was destroyed before they could develop into their full potential.






Sports is imperfect. There is no such thing as the "perfect game". If you have 20 points, you can get 25. If you get 50, you can get 51. Where these negative emotions come into play is when we set our standards too high. If you tell your young athlete to achieve a certain thing in a game, yet they don't achieve it, they are well aware of this. They know that coming home, they'll have to deal with you bringing it up, and it will amplify the pain of not achieving that goal.






The only way out of this is to provide unconditional, genuine support for our young athletes. They are doing everything they can, so let's cut them some slack. They should have an intensity and discipline during practice, but they shouldn't be crying in the locker room after a bad game, worried to come home for fear of disappointing stares from their parents. Let's start to cultivate a new generation of mentally sound young athletes, one kid at a time.






from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tyson-hartnett/the-anxiety-and-depressio_b_6330864.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live Meet Him In Temecula: @MyTweetsRealAF Addresses Viral Twitter Beef

basketball stream live On Christmas day, two popular Twitter users — @SnottieDrippen and @MyTweetsRealAF — began arguing online about the value of aging Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant. @SnottieDrippen does not think Bryant is a great basketball player anymore. To put it mildly, @MyTweetsRealAF disagrees.



The debate quickly escalated and ended with @MyTweetsRealAF, whose real name is David, driving 30 minutes from his home in Riverside, California, to nearby city Temecula to "engage in fisticuffs" with @SnottieDrippen. The latter was, in fact, not in Temecula, but by then the beef had already gone viral. It was popular enough to inspire David to record a diss track on Monday over the beat for Lil Wayne's hit single, "Believe Me."



In his only interview since the infamous disagreement, David joined HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill on Tuesday to talk about the events on Christmas day. @SnottieDrippen declined to be interviewed.



Watch the clip above for some choice quotes from David, including the fact that his family had "no problems with me getting into fisticuffs with some weenie." David also said the beef was not just about Kobe, but more about the disrespect directed toward him in the argument.



Kobe, meanwhile, laughed when reporters told him about the saga, only saying, "Mamba Army don't fuck around."



Catch the full HuffPost Live conversation here.



Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!



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basketball stream live Harbaugh Gets $50 Million; Players Get Pizza Stipend

basketball stream live Big-time college sports keeps getting crazier and crazier, and more and more unjust for the players.



The NCAA -- make that the Power Five conferences that actually run the NCAA -- recently made news by saying they'll allow extra stipends for scholarship athletes to cover the full cost of attendance and maybe a pizza or two a week.



What a grand gesture!



Today, Jim Harbaugh will be announced as the new head football coach at Michigan. He reportedly has signed a contract that will pay him approximately $8 million a year for a total value of about $50 million. He will be the highest paid coach in college football, surpassing Alabama's Nick Saban.



Harbaugh, like hundreds of other coaches, athletic directors, college administrators and television executives associated with college sports at the highest level, will be rolling in the dough. Meanwhile, the players responsible for the business behemoth that is big-time college sports will get a capped compensation package which is limited to a free pass to class, a puny dorm room to rest their heads and the now infamous "pizza stipend."



College athletes have no representation like their professional counterparts. As a result, they're getting screwed economically. Moreover, too often they're left to handle huge medical expenses resulting from injuries incurred while playing for their colleges. That's criminal.



Supporters of the current system say a free college education is nothing to scoff at. And that's true. It indeed has great value for those athletes that take college seriously. But just because college athletes have the opportunity to get a free education doesn't mean that they're being compensated fairly.



According to a study by the National College Players Association (NCPA) and the Drexel University Sport Management Department, football and men's basketball players at top sports schools are being denied at least $6.2 billion between 2011 and 2015 under NCAA rules that prohibit them from being paid.



Ellen Staurowsky, a professor at Drexel University, has said the fair market value of a football player at the University of Texas during the 2011-12 school year was $567,922 on an annual basis. The calculation was based on an NFL-like shared revenue system. The value of a "full-ride" athletic scholarship at Texas was $21,090 a year at the time of her study. As such, the fair market value denied (the difference between the fair market value and the value of the scholarship) was $546,832.



Big-time college sports is a classic case of economic and social injustice bred of a plantation mentality disguised by the term "student-athlete."



It's past time for the amateur myth to be blown up in college athletics, just as it was for Olympic athletes.



College sports would move forward and still be compelling. But things would be fairer.



And we could enjoy watching the games without feeling dirty about a dirty system.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ken-reed/harbaugh-gets-50-million_b_6396596.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live Jim Harbaugh's Michigan 'Homecoming' Comes With Pledge Of Excellence

basketball stream live The khakis have landed in Ann Arbor.



The University of Michigan announced that Jim Harbaugh will be its next football coach. Just days removed from his final day coaching the San Francisco 49ers, Harbaugh's long-anticipated return to Michigan, where he was a standout quarterback during the 1980s, was confirmed during a press conference on Tuesday.



"There are very special words that are in the English language that we all embrace," Harbaugh said. "There is 'family,' there is 'friends,' there is 'teammates,' there is 'victory.' I was reminded of another very special word when I was driving into Ann Arbor this morning and that word is 'homecoming.'"



In his previous stint coaching in college, Harbaugh went 29-21 over four seasons at Stanford. The Cardinal went 4-8 in his first season but improved to 12-1 in 2010 before he departed for the NFL following a win in the Orange Bowl. He had previously coached at the University of San Diego, going 29-6 in three seasons.



Following his success at Stanford, Harbaugh molded the 49ers into Super Bowl contenders. In his first three seasons on the sideline in the Bay Area, Harbaugh's 49ers reached the NFC Championship Game. The team reached Super Bowl XLVII, but was defeated by the Baltimore Ravens, coached by Jim's brother, John Harbaugh. Following a disappointing 8-8 season in 2014, Harbaugh and the 49ers mutually agreed to part ways.



Michigan Wolverines fans, hopeful that Harbaugh can revitalize their program after it slumped under previous coach Brady Hoke, are set to honor their new coach's signature sideline attire -- khaki pants -- at a basketball game on Tuesday night.










To those fans, Harbaugh made a pledge before closing his prepared remarks:



"Top to bottom, Michigan is about excellence, is about greatness," Harbaugh said. "You have my pledge that I will carry forward the tradition of excellence of the University of Michigan football program."



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/30/jim-harbaugh-michigan-football-coach_n_6396192.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live The 5 Best Fictional Sports Teams

basketball stream live The Patriots, Giants, and Spurs have won many championships this century. However, those teams would be no match against the best fictional sports squads produced in recent years.



1) Tune Squad, "Space Jam"



The Tasmanian Devil is as quick as they come with the rock, and his court vision also provided excellent outlet passes which really spaced the floor. At small forward, "The Heartthrob of the Hoops" Lola Bunny isn't just a pretty face; Lola's ball handling is one of a kind and her jumper isn't so bad either.



Providing the biggest hole in the team was Daffy Duck at power forward, however his teammates were always quick to pick up the slack. Point guard and captain of the team, Bugs Bunny, consistently provided acute leadership and was locked down on defense. And, who could forget Michael Jordan at shooting guard, only the best basketball player to have ever lived.



The Tune Squad's biggest victory was in the Ultimate Game against the Monstars. Despite suffering vast injuries earlier in the game, the Tune Squad received a late spark from Bill Murray and Jordan led the team to a buzzer beating victory.



2) Cleveland Indians, "Major League II"



Despite losing slugger Jack Parkman in a trade with the Chicago White Sox early in the season, the Indians refused to call it quits. The team found a spark from new catcher Rube Baker after Jake Taylor's knees broke down on him.



Pedro Cerrano eventually returned to his home-run-hitting ways after a unique form of encouragement from brand new acquisition Isuru Tanaka. The team would eventually rally around manager Lou Brown after Brown suffered a heart attack in the clubhouse.



Among those who finally turned things around was Rick 'Wild Thing' Vaughn, eventually striking out his old foe Parkman to win the ALCS. Combining the team's slugging, Willie "Mayes" Hayes' base running, Bob Uecker's announcing, and Vaughn's pitching gives you perhaps the best fictional baseball team of them all.



3) Miami Sharks, "Any Given Sunday"



Led by head coach Tony D'Amato, the Sharks are one of the better teams to ever grace the gridiron of the AFFA. After Cap Rooney goes down with an injury, Willie Beamen steps up to fill the quarterback position.



Beamen's flashy style is criticized at first, but he eventually leads the team to the Pantheon Cup Championship. LL Cool J led the charge against Beamen's flashy style, but was eventually won over when Beamen gave a heartfelt apology.



Despite losing in the league championship game, the Sharks are remembered for more than just their on-field play. Their off-field antics, specifically from Shark and Beamen, were nothing but entertaining. And who could forget the ruthless and equally stunning Cameron Diaz?



4) Average Joe's Gym, "Dodgeball"



Everyone loves an underdog, and Average Joe's is nothing if not that. Led by captain Peter LaFleur, the Joe's come together to fight for their way of life.



Steve "The Pirate" provides consistent play, despite developing internal issues during the team's main run. Gordon, an every day poindexter, came to life on the court when provoked. The true star of the team however was Kate Veatch, who possessed a rocket cannon for a throwing arm.



The Joe's most memorable victory came against Globo Gym, featured prominently on ESPN 8 The Ocho. The match went down to a sudden death face off between Peter LaFleur and White Goodman. LaFleur placed his faith in former coach Patches O'Houlihan, winning the tournament and a fair amount of cash as well.



5) Gryffindor, "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban"



Hailed by Lee Jordan as "the best team Hogwarts has seen in the last few years," this edition of Gryffindor turned out to be much more than that. In captain and keeper Oliver Wood's final season, Gryffindor rallied around their leader.



Despite losing a match to Hufflepuff when Harry was attacked by Dementors, Gryffindor rebounded in a win vs Ravenclaw when Potter caught the snitch in the opening 10 seconds of its release.



Aided by Potter's new Firebolt, Gryffindor would finally go on to face Slytherin with the Quidditch Cup on the line. Draco Malfoy and Harry both fought for the snitch, but it was Harry who prevailed, winning Gryffindor the Quidditch Cup.



This edition of Gryffindor was the best for many reasons, starting with Wood solidifying the Keeper position. Fred and George were elite Beaters and Angelina Johnson was a world class Chaser. Potter was in his best form ever at Seeker in his tenure at Hogwarts, making this quite the legendary team.



By: Camden Joiner, University of Georgia



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Senin, 29 Desember 2014

basketball stream live California School District Reverses Basketball Tournament Ban On 'I Can't Breathe' T-Shirts

basketball stream live LISA LEFF, Associated Press



SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A California school district on Monday reversed a basketball tournament ban on T-shirts reading "I Can't Breathe" and said it would allow high school players to wear the shirts during warm-ups as long as they do not cause problems, lawyers said.



With backing from school officials, the athletic director at Fort Bragg High School, previously told the boys and girls teams from Mendocino High School they could not play in the three-day event if they wore the shirts inspired by the last words of a New York man who died after an officer put him in a chokehold.



Karen Boyd, a First Amendment lawyer who represents one of the players, said the reversal by the Fort Bragg School District came just moments before she intended to file a federal court motion arguing that barring the shirts violated the free speech rights of student athletes.



The agreement will stand as long as the shirts do not cause any serious problems at the tournament. It also allows spectators to wear the shirts, which several did as the tournament got underway Monday at Fort Bragg High School, Boyd said.



"This is always my preference, if we can get things worked out without a lot of court stuff," she said.



School district lawyer Patrick Wilson said Fort Bragg officials wanted to avoid the cost of a legal battle but remained concerned the shirts could cause a disruption in the community that's still mourning the death of a sheriff's deputy killed in the line of duty in March.



"The concern is, you are in a packed auditorium, this is a polarizing issue and it's about something that happened in New York," Wilson said. "I think it's fine for people to protest about it, but emotions are still raw in that area."



The Mendocino boys team played its first game in the tournament on Monday morning after all but one of the players agreed to forego the shirts. It still has two more games scheduled. Too few members of the girls team accepted the condition and another high school was invited to take their place, Boyd said.



Some of the female players and about 100 supporters rallied outside the tournament, said Jone Lemos, whose daughter, Jin Jackson, is a team co-captain.



"I'm so proud of them for becoming involved in these issues," Lemos said. "On the other hand, I'm sad for them they weren't able to play basketball because it's one of the things they love to do and taking that away from them hurt."



Professional basketball players such as LeBron James, Derrick Rose and Kyrie Irving have worn "I Can't Breathe" shirts during warmups without repercussions from the NBA.



The two Mendocino varsity teams first wore the shirts before a Dec. 16 game against Fort Bragg. Last week, Bruce Triplett, the athletic director at Fort Bragg High said the Mendocino teams would not be welcome at the tournament, but then reinstated the boys when they agreed not to wear the shirts.



___



Information from: The Santa Rosa Press Democrat, http://www.pressdemocrat.com





Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/29/fort-bragg-i-cant-breathe-shirts_n_6393194.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live Jahmani Swanson Is 'Michael Jordan Of Dwarf Basketball'

basketball stream live Jahmani Swanson is only 4 feet, 5 inches, but he stands tall among basketball players -- even those who are a couple feet taller than him.



Swanson, 29, is a star player on the New York Towers, a team where all the players are short in stature, but long on proving a point that little people can play with the big boys.



"People think if they're bigger than me they can post me up, but just because I'm small it doesn't mean I'm weak," Swanson told Barcroft TV/ "I face it when I'm on the street and I face it when I'm on the court but it's a stage and I love showing what I can do."



Swanson, who Barcroft dubbed "The Michael Jordan of dwarf basketball," was born with a form of dwarfism, but has been a hoops fan since childhood.



“I was sleeping with a basketball instead of a teddy bear when I was a kid. All I wanted to do was play. I was a huge fan of Michael Jordan and if he was playing then I was playing," he said, according to the Mirror. "My mother had to tell me many a time to stop playing ball at 12 o’clock in the middle of the night because they got tired of hearing the ball bounce and things breaking."



Swanson prides himself on his defense and ability to take drive the ball down the court.



“I can guard anybody who’s putting the ball down on the floor," he told WBUR.com. "That’s the thing. You don’t want to put the ball down on the floor. And if you are going to put the ball down on the floor, you should protect that ball. Otherwise it’s my cookie.



“People feel that because of my size, I can’t take it in. You know, they’re expecting me to shoot, but they be amazed by it because I like to drive."







Swanson believes he would be playing in the NBA if he were just half a foot taller, but insists he has no regrets about how things turned out.



"If I was 5-foot-1, I'd be the best in the world and a lot of my fans say I am the best player in the world anyway," he said, according to the Daily Mail. "But I wouldn't trade this. I've never in my life said I hate being short. I'm doing everything I would do if I was tall and now when I walk outside I feel like I'm six foot, eight foot, nine foot, whatever. I still get seen and I still do what I'm doing."









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basketball stream live Little League Star Mo'ne Davis Named AP's 2014 Female Athlete Of The Year

basketball stream live PHILADELPHIA (AP) — No one in the sports world had heard of the 2014 Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year until August.



That's when 13-year-old Mo'ne Davis became an instant celebrity as she took the mound in the Little League World Series and mowed down batter after batter, giving "throw like a girl" a whole new meaning. She was the first girl to win a Little League World Series game, and her performance dazzled fans young and old. Her steely gaze and demeanor on the mound were intimidating, while off-the-field, she shined in interviews. She told admirers that if they thought she was good at baseball, they should see her play hoops. Only in eighth grade, Davis already plays for her school's high school varsity basketball team.



Davis appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated, has her jersey displayed in baseball's Hall of Fame and was named Sports Kid of the Year by Sports Illustrated Kids.



She met the Obamas at the White House, starred in a Spike Lee-directed car commercial (the NCAA said it wouldn't hurt her eligibility), marched in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade along with her Taney Dragons teammates and presented Pharrell Williams with Soul Train's "Song of the Year" award.



The talented three-sport star — she also plays soccer — and honor student from South Philadelphia handled all the attention with poise, modesty and maturity.



"A lot of adults around me help out, taught me to be respectful, to be calm during everything and not let anything get to you," Davis said after learning of her latest honor.



A vote by U.S. editors and news directors selected Davis as The Associated Press 2014 Female Athlete of the Year. The youngest winner in history, Davis beat out Mt. St. Joseph freshman Lauren Hill — who played her first college basketball game while battling terminal brain cancer — and three-time winner Serena Williams. The selection was announced Monday.



Davis tossed a two-hitter to help Philadelphia beat Nashville 4-0 in the Little League World Series opener for both teams. Davis, the first girl to appear for a U.S. team in South Williamsport since 2004, had eight strikeouts and didn't walk a batter. Her team was eventually eliminated after losing to teams from Las Vegas and Chicago. Davis gave up three runs in the Las Vegas game, and could not take the mound against Chicago because of pitch limits.



After the tournament, Davis was everywhere.



She threw whiffle balls to Jimmy Fallon on NBC's Tonight Show, threw out the first pitch at Game 4 of the World Series and signed a book deal.



"It's been really fun, got to do a lot of things, meet a lot of cool people," Davis said. "My favorite thing to do was playing in Williamsport or going to the White House. (The Obamas) just seemed like a regular couple, no different from anyone else."



While others are still talking about her Little League performance, Davis, a point guard, is concentrating on basketball.



"It's making me a lot better, helping me make decisions," Davis said of playing varsity. "In middle school, I can get away with small things. The girls now are a lot taller so I'm working on my jump shot and ball handling a lot."



Davis aspires to play for the University of Connecticut and reach the WNBA. She plays midfielder on her soccer team and hopes to play three sports in high school, though she's not sure about baseball.



"I know the boys will be much stronger so that depends," she said. "Hopefully, I can continue playing as long as I can."



Davis isn't just a jock. She excels academically despite such a great demand for her time.



"It's all about time management, how you plan your projects and not waiting until the last minute," she said.



Steve Bandura, a recreation leader for the Philadelphia Parks and Recreation Department and director of the Anderson Monarchs sports programs, has helped coach Davis since she started playing sports. His son, Scott, was the catcher for Taney. Bandura said Davis has maintained her "natural personality" no matter how many cameras or microphones are in her face.



"She's still the same person, still a kid who wants to do kid things," Bandura said. "She has fun meeting celebrities and all that but the bottom line is she loves to play sports, go to school and have fun. The adults make a bigger deal out of it. Her teammates understand she's breaking down barriers and they're proud of her. They've been together so long, it's like she's their sister."



Davis knows she has become a role model.



Her message to everyone, especially girls: "Always follow your dreams. If there's something people tell you that you can't do it, go for it."



___



Follow Rob Maaddi on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_RobMaaddi



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/29/mone-davis-female-athlete-year-2014_n_6391606.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live Wood, Pangos Named NetScouts Basketball Players of the Week

basketball stream live UNLV handed Arizona its first loss of the season and followed it with a blowout win over Southern Utah. Christian Wood recorded a pair of 20-10 performances and has been named NetScouts Basketball's National Player of the Week for games from December 22nd to December 28th.



The Palmdale, Calif. native started with a career-high 24 points on 10-of-17 shooting to go with 10 rebounds in a home win over Arizona. After setting a career-high in scoring, the 6-foot-11 sophomore grabbed a career-high 14 rebounds in a 79-45 victory against Southern Utah. He added 22 points on 9-of-12 shooting and five blocks. On the week, Wood averaged 23.0 points, 12.0 rebounds, and 3.5 blocks per game while shooting 65.5 percent (19-of-29) from the field.



Wood has had a breakout sophomore season after averaging just 4.5 points and 3.2 rebounds per game as a freshman. He's boosted those numbers to 14.6 points and 10.0 boards as UNLV is 9-3 on the season. The Rebels begin conference play at Wyoming on Wednesday and look like possible Mountain West contenders if the young squad can show consistency.



Kevin Pangos has been a vital contributor for Gonzaga over the past four seasons and came in clutch once again in an 87-80 win at BYU. The Holland Landing, Ontario native has been named NetScouts Basketball's International Player of the Week for games from December 22nd to December 28th.



The 6-foot-2 point guard scored 21 points against BYU while shooting 6-of-11 from the field and 5-of-8 from three-point range. He added seven assists, two rebounds, two steals, and just one turnover in 38 minutes of action.



Gonzaga improved to 12-1 on the year as the Bulldogs look like Final Four candidates. Pangos has had his scoring numbers dip to 11.6 points per game, but he has the best assist-turnover ratio of his career (4.3:1). After falling to Arizona in overtime earlier this season, Gonzaga has a chance to run the table the rest of the regular season.Wood,



Carl Berman is Managing Partner of NetScouts Basketball.



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Minggu, 28 Desember 2014

basketball stream live 'I Can't Breathe' T-Shirts Banned From High School Basketball Tournament

basketball stream live SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A high school basketball tournament on the Northern California coast has become the latest flashpoint in the ongoing protests over police killings of unarmed black men after a school was disinvited because of concerns its players would wear T-shirts printed with the words "I Can't Breathe" during warmups.



The athletic director at Fort Bragg High School informed his counterpart at Mendocino High School this week that neither the boys nor girls team would be allowed to participate in the three-day tournament hosted by Fort Bragg High starting Monday, Mendocino Unified School District Superintendent Jason Morse said. The boys were reinstated after all but one player agreed not to wear the shirts inspired by the last words of Eric Garner, the New York man who died after an officer put him in a chokehold, while on the Fort Bragg campus during the Vern Piver Holiday Classic tournament, Morse said. Too few girl players accepted the condition for the team to field a tournament squad, he said.



Mendocino varsity teams first wore the "I Can't Breathe" T-shirts before a game with Fort Bragg on Dec. 16, according to the girls coach, Caedyn Feehan. The girls also wore them before games at two other tournaments and didn't receive any blowback, Feehan said.



"I didn't even know what it meant. I thought it was a joke about how I had conditioned them so hard," Feehan said. "None of the administrators knew what it was or that any of them were doing it in advance. This was entirely for their cause that they had strong feelings about."



Professional basketball players such as LeBron James, Derrick Rose and Kyrie Irving wore "I Can't Breathe" shirts during warmups this month without repercussions from the NBA. After Kobe Bryant and other Los Angeles Lakers players wore them before a game and on the bench on Dec. 9, coach Byron Scott said he viewed it as a matter of "freedom of choice and freedom of speech."



That's how Marc Woods, whose 16-year-old son Connor plans to sit out the tournament, sees it. Connor wore the T-shirt at the Dec. 16 game in the name of team solidarity, but the shirt has now taken a constitutional angle, the father said.



Marc Woods said he brought the issue to the American Civil Liberties Union, and hopes to hear back after the holidays. He referred to a 1969 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Tinker v. Des Moines, which found high school students wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War were protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.



"This is completely a First Amendment issue," Marc Woods said. "That's why I'm offended."



Bruce Triplett, the athletic director at Fort Bragg High, did not return a call and email seeking comment. Principal Rebecca Walker issued a written statement Friday saying school administrators respected the Mendocino teams "for paying attention to what is going on in the world around them" and that the T-shirts were being prohibited as a security precaution.



"To protect the safety and well-being of all tournament participants it is necessary to ensure that all political statements and or protests are kept away from this tournament," wrote Walker, who said she was speaking on behalf of the athletic director and the Fort Bragg school superintendent. "We are a small school district that simply does not have the resources to ensure the safety and well-being of our staff, students and guests at the tournament should someone get upset and choose to act out."



Marc Woods, whose father was a California Highway Patrol officer, said he is outraged by what he sees as using intimidation to silence players and fans. Fort Bragg administrators have warned spectators who plan to protest the T-shirt ban that they will be asked to leave, he said.



"It doesn't take a lot to suppress the exchange of ideas when you put fear into it," Marc Woods said.



Both schools are located in Mendocino County, known for redwood forests, rugged coastline and marijuana-growing, located 120 miles north of San Francisco. The student bodies at the two schools are 1 percent black and 50 percent white and 41 percent Hispanic at Fort Bragg, 75 percent white and 9 percent Hispanic at Mendocino.



__



Associated Press Fresno Correspondent Scott Smith contributed to this report.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/28/school-bans-i-cant-breath_n_6387066.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live Man Steals Basketball Player's Powers, Just Like In Space Jam (VIDEO)

basketball stream live Has anyone checked on Lavoy Allen recently? Because we're pretty sure his powers just got stolen.



In a video uploaded to YouTube on Saturday, a man can be seen deviously smelling Indiana Pacers' player Lavoy Allen's jersey.



The diligent reporters at Weird News have been scratching their heads trying to figure out why this man wants to smell Allen's jersey so bad. Is it because he just enjoys the musk of sweaty athletes? Maybe the smell is nostalgic, and brings him back to his youth. Maybe Allen weirdly has a bunch of cologne on.



Our best guess, however, is that this culprit is attempting to steal Allens' basketball-playing powers by sucking up his talent, Space Jam style.







Let us know your theory in the comments.



H/T Reddit







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basketball stream live Jennifer Lawrence Cheers On The Louisville Cardinals

basketball stream live The Louisville Cardinals may have lost their basketball game to the Kentucky Wildcats on Saturday, but the team couldn't have asked for a better cheerleader in the stands.



Jennifer Lawrence, a Louisville, Kentucky native, rooted on her home team at the KFC Yum! Center. The 24-year-old threw up an "L" hand signal, as if her University Of Louisville tee-shirt and red Cardinals baseball cap didn't already tell you where her allegiance lies:



jennifer lawrence louisville cardinals



A fellow fan captured a video of the "Hunger Games" actress as she chanted for her team and munched on a slice of pizza:







Nick Stover, social media director for University of Louisville athletics , shared photos of Lawrence as she posed with a young fan and showed her Cardinals pride:

















Way to represent, J.Law.





from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/28/jennifer-lawrence-louisville-cardinals-_n_6386890.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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basketball stream live 6 Big Takeaways From Michael Sam's Interview With Oprah (VIDEO)

basketball stream live When Michael Sam became the first openly gay man drafted into the NFL, the world watched him celebrate with his longtime boyfriend, Vito Cammisano. In those brief moments captured on film, we were given a small glimpse into Sam's world. The lens opened a bit wider on Saturday night with the airing of "Michael Sam" on OWN, a 90-minute documentary about the history-making athlete and his desire to live an open, authentic life. Afterwards, Sam sat down with Oprah for his first interview since being drafted and later cut from two teams. Below are six big moments we're still talking about.



The Kiss Was Not Staged





After three days of anticipation, Sam learned he was picked up by the St. Louis Rams, an emotional moment for any player. While celebrating with his boyfriend, Sam playfully smashed cake in his face and gave him a kiss, a moment some criticized as controversial and staged.





Sam says the kiss was absolutely not staged. In fact, he says, cameras were supposed to be finished filming at that point. "They were only supposed to film the moment I got drafted. That's what people don't understand," he says. "They say it was staged. Well, I'm having fun. I'm in a good mood."



Does he think the kiss was too much? "If you didn't like it, grab your remote control, turn the channel," Sam says.



"I'm Not the Only One"






Since publicly coming out, Sam says other gay men in the NFL have reached out to him. "Very few reached out to me and pretty much just told me their gratitude," he says. "They wished that they had the courage to come out."





When asked how many, Michael declines to give a number. "There's a lot of us out there," he says. "I'm just the only one who's open."



He Would Never "Out" Another Player



Sam tells Oprah he would never encourage another NFL player to come out just because he did. "They need to come out whenever they feel comfortable for them coming out," he says. "Not once have I ever tried to advise them coming out."



He did, however, think his openness would spark others in the NFL to come out publicly as well. "I was wrong, but everyone has to come out in their own time," he says.



Sam Was Tormented a Kid





Sam's two older brothers, known around his small Texas town as the "damn Sams," bullied him mercilessly. "They used to abuse me daily," Sam says. "Maybe just for fun. Maybe because I was different."



In the seventh grade, Sam recalls receiving his very first trophies for honors in football, basketball and track. "I was so proud of those trophies," he says. "My older [brother], he was so jealous and he just broke them in front of me and it was just the saddest thing. I couldn't have anything without them destroying it or taking it from me."



He'll Forgive His Brothers -- One Day



When he graduated from the University of Missouri as an All-American, Sam says his mother handed him a letter from one of his brothers.



"I never read it just because all the memories came back to me and I chose not to read it," Sam says. "I know one day I will forgive my brothers for everything they did for me."



Sam Hasn't Given Up on His NFL Dreams



After being cut from the St. Louis Rams, Sam was picked up by the Dallas Cowboys practice squad, only to be released after seven weeks. "Do you think now that the reason why you are not with a team is because you weren't good enough to play?" Oprah asks Sam. "Or because you are gay?"



"I don't like to think that way," Sam says. "But I do believe I'm a very talented football player and I'm going to continue on working hard and trying to get that opportunity to play in the league."



As to why he was cut from the Cowboys, Sam says it was just business. "I did everything I was told to do," he says. "I was on a scout team. There was nothing I could do, the roster was full already and I had to go."



Sam is now acting as a free agent and says he'll hold onto his NFL dreams for as long as he can. "The season's coming to an end and I know I'm still fresh. I could still get a call right now -- it's highly unlikely, but I can go up in next season and start all over again."



"I believe good things are on the horizon," he says.



Related: Sam and his boyfriend share the ups and downs of their love story.







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Sabtu, 27 Desember 2014

Atlanta Hawks Hawks at Bucks has tipped (ESPN)

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basketball stream live A Knicks' Fan's Open Letter to Santa

basketball stream live Dear Santa,

This year has been a tumultuous season. We knew it would be bad, but not this bad. Not 5-26 bad. Coal has filled our stockings long before Christmas.



Carmelo Anthony passed a milestone the other day, becoming the first player to score 30 or more points in four-straight appearances on Christams day since Oscar Robertson. That's fitting. It's synonymous with the career of our star-player: personal accolades with little team success.



But hold on, this isn't "bash Carmelo Anthony day." I'm not on that team, I refuse to join the club. That's your bad-weather-fan. Enough with it. There are bigger issues.



First, the Knicks rank 27th in defensive efficiency per basketball reference. The triangle offense is the dinosaur of the NBA. It can only run effectively with players like hmmm.. maybe Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen? Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant? You take your pick. Not Carmelo Anthony and a whole bunch of misfits.



Who knows if it would even work in today's game. It's all about pace and spacing in today's game.



Phil Jackson can't run a team from LA LA Land by the way. Los Angeles that is. Full-on-commitment is needed. José Calderon and Raymond Felton just swapped places and Tyson Chandler's winning habits and leadership was really taken for granted in the Big Apple.



But it's a marathon not a sprint. Although, something tells me it's neither. It seems like a constant bloodbath where the fans are always the victims. Another year comes and well, another failure ensues in the "World's Most Famous Arena."



Maybe, it was Pat Riley's abrupt and infamous exit out-of-town. What a jerk. Who sends a fax with their resignation? That's why the end-of-the-year press-conference Riley gave scolding LeBron on "honor and integrity" was hypocrisy at its finest. He dodged town as fast and ill-willed as one possibly could.



Or perhaps it is the curse of Ewing. New York shopped him to Seattle only to be sent to Orlando the next season. Who wants to end a storied-career around rain and retirement homes? Ewing never won a ring so that whole "I'm going to Disney World" slogan probably took on a different ton for him--bummer.



Kind of like the curse of Babe Ruth in Boston until 2004. Ehh kind of a stretch but you get my drift. Since then, the aura and mystique surrounding Knicks games has plummeted.



The Knickerbockers haven't sniffed the Eastern Conference Finals since the 1999-00 season and have only made the playoffs five out of the last 15 seasons.



With the exception of the "Linsanity" in 2011-12, the Garden has been flooded with the suit-and-tie mystique, and somehow, the gritty, blue-collar fan is no longer a factor.



The result? City blues -- we own them. There's no substitute. The downs, the even-more-downs, and the hope-for-ups, but fall-even-lower-downs. This is the plight of the Knicks' fan.



The coal is overflowing, it has been. This Christmas we didn't get anything but John Wall double-double's and and-1's -- broken down defensive schemes, and alleged triangle offenses.



I am not asking for anything next Christmas. Instead, I want you to give it all away. With the exception of Carmelo, everyone can go. After all it is the season of giving, right?



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/julian-mcwilliams-/a-knicks-fan-open-letter-to-santa_b_6384792.html?utm_hp_ref=sports&ir=Sports

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Jumat, 26 Desember 2014

basketball stream live Michael Sam Tells Oprah Heartbreaking Childhood Bullying Story (VIDEO)

basketball stream live Coming out as a gay athlete takes courage -- just ask Michael Sam, the first openly gay player drafted into the NFL. In his first television interview since being cut from the Dallas Cowboys, Sam opens up to Oprah about the painful experiences he faced as a gay youth.



One of eight children, Sam grew up in the small town of Hitchcock, Texas. One of his five brothers was killed, and another was declared dead after going missing. Sam says his remaining older brothers were always getting into trouble and known around town as the "damn Sams."



"They used to abuse me daily," Sam says in the above video. "Maybe just for fun. Maybe because I was different."



"They called me a lot of things," he says. "They called me fag, they called me gay -- anything you could think of, just to hurt me."



Sam threw himself into sports, and in the seventh grade, received his first honors in football, basketball and track. "For the first time in my life, I got a trophy," he says.



"Validation," Oprah nods.



"Yes, and my mom was so proud of me and it was the first time any of her kids had achievement that high," Sam says. "It was most valuable player. And I was so proud of those trophies."



But his joy quickly was shattered. "My older [brother], he was so jealous and he just broke them in front of me, and it was just the saddest thing," Sam says. "I couldn't have anything without them destroying it or taking it from me."



Oprah's full interview with Sam airs Saturday, December 27, at 10:30 ET, following the premiere of the exclusive "Michael Sam" documentary at 9 p.m. ET on OWN.







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Atlanta Hawks Bucks at Hawks has tipped (ESPN)

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basketball stream live Wild Stat of the Week: Rebuilding 'The Pyramid', Re-Visiting 'The Book of Basketball'

basketball stream live (Win Shares calculate how many wins a player has been responsible for over his career. WS/48 is a measure of how many wins a player contributes for every 48 minutes he is on the floor. All numbers courtesy of Basketball Reference)







The Book of Basketball by Bill Simmons should be considered the bible for basketball fans everywhere, and its crown jewel is The Pyramid, Simmons's idea for a new basketball Hall of Fame and his ranking of the 96 best players in basketball history. The only problem: the last edition of the book came out in 2010 and clearly a lot has changed since. When the book was published: LeBron had only just signed in Miami, Chris Paul was a member of a long forgotten team called the New Orleans Hornets, and Kevin Durant had only made his first All-Star Game. Let's take a look at how our contemporary players rankings should change if we could update the list today.



Kevin Durant (Career Win Shares: 89.9, WS/48: .206):



Kevin had understandably not made it onto the Pyramid in 2010, but leaving him off at this point would be insane. Despite only having played eight seasons in the NBA, Durant has more career win shares than 34 players already ranked on the Pyramid. Two players already on the list he compares closely with are George Gervin at #34 and Bernard King at #58. Large small forwards who could score at will, and all without a single ring. In fact, Gervin and King both never made an appearance in the Finals, at least Durant can claim he did that in 2012. Even though Durant hasn't played for very ling, there is no justification to rank him below Bernard King. However, I'm also not quite ready to have him jump George Gervin. Until Durant claims a championship of his own, I'm going to slide him in just behind Paul Pierce at #47.





Dirk Nowitzki (Career Win Shares: 187.2, WS/48: .208)



Nowitzki was placed at #39 in the 2010 edition, the season before the Mavericks stunned the Big Three Miami Heat team to give a lot of veterans their first rings. With his ring, and the 15th best WS/48 of anyone on the list, Nowitzki should vault ringless players like Allen Iverson, Steve Nash, and George Gervin into the 29th spot, bumping David Robinson (who despite winning two rings, was not the best player on either team). And who is at #28? Dwyane Wade. These two are forever linked by the epic 2006 and 2011 Finals, and it is fitting to see them so close together.





LeBron James (Career Win Shares: 171.2, WS/48: .242)



James's ranking among the all time greats still remains almost impossible to fairly assess. Since the last ranking, James has won two Finals and two MVP's, but also lost two Finals in spectacular fashion to the Mavericks and Spurs respectively. It's hard to know whether to give credence to the LeBron is a choker argument, how do you balance his disappearance in the 2011 Finals with his evisceration of the Celtics in Games 6 and 7 of the 2012 ECF? And what do we make of the fact that he would have a career record of 1-4 in the Finals if it wasn't for Ray Allen hitting the most clutch shot in the history of the NBA?



Ultimately, I think it's too hard to answer these questions about legacy for a player only turning 30 this week (How is that possible?). We also can't penalize a player with the sixth-best WS/48 and the fifteenth-best career Win Shares on the Pyramid this early in his career. For earning another two MVP's, I'm moving LeBron from #20 to #16, Doctor J's old spot. With that said, it will be a disappointment if LeBron doesn't move into the top 10 by the time he retires, and if LeBron plays another 6 or so seasons at something resembling how he's played to this point, he can pass Kareem for the most Win Shares in league history.



Chris Paul (Career Win Shares: 119.6, WS/48: .249)



No, that is not a mistake. According to Basketball Reference, Chris Paul has a higher WS/48 than LeBron James, and the fourth highest in NBA history. Now Win Shares isn't the gospel, if that was the case David Robertson would be the second best player of all time. Advanced stats have always loved Chris Paul for his blend of Isiah Thomas like passing with effortless scoring and a proclivity for steals on the defensive side of the floor. But not only has Chris Paul not won a ring, he hasn't advanced past the second round of the playoffs. It is really hard to overlook that. After playing out of his mind in a very memorable first round matchup against the Warriors last years, Paul was largely responsible for the Clippers late-game meltdowns against the Thunder in the second round.



Of course, the Clippers were dealing with the Donald Sterling fallout last year during the playoffs, so we can't put too much value into that one series. But it is a microcosm for Paul's playoffs failures throughout his career. Paul's WS/48 in the playoffs takes a HUGE drop off, falling all the way to .189. That's not a bad number, but it is legitimate evidence to backup Paul's post-season struggles. Paul simply has to make a deep run into the playoffs this year to take some of the pressure off himself.



Despite the poor postseason performances, after four more years of being the best point guard in the game, Paul deserves a bump up from #90. For now, I'm placing Paul with another consistent highlight-making, but ringless, guard in Pete Maravich, at #68. Winning a ring or coming close will push him into the 50's, and possibly even the 40's.



Tim Duncan (Career Win Shares: 193.8, WS/48: .211)



Duncan was already ranked #7 in the 2010 edition of the book so there is not a lot of room him to shoot up in on the list. The debate with Duncan is if he should pass Wilt Chamberlain at #6. Duncan can't compete with Chamberlain's completely ridiculous WS/48 of .248. But Duncan's late career run to two straight Finals appearances and his fifth ring might compel some to make the case for Duncan over Chamberlain. However, under any real analysis, if Duncan wasn't better than Chamberlain in 2010, the past four years haven't moved the needle. Over the past four years, Duncan has averaged about .178 WS/48. Over the last four years of his career, Chamberlain averaged .214 WS/48, and added three Finals appearances and a ring. Everybody loves Duncan, and he's clearly a first-ballot Hall Of Famer, but I can't buy the argument of putting him over Chamberlain despite his recent postseason heroics.





To cap it off, I have a plea for a non-active player to make the Pyramid:



Yao Ming (Career Win Shares: 65.9, WS/48: .200)



Who is the only starter who played post-merger with a top 50 WS/48 that didn't make Simmon's Pyramid? Yao Ming. In Bill Simmons entry on Bill Walton, he says he would always take a few years of utter brilliance over 15 years of decent play. If that's how we're ranking players, Yao deserves a place in the Pyramid. Ming was not a flash in the pan, he played 7 years of incredibly high-level basketball. His defensive reputation sometimes takes a beating when he is discussed now, but his Defensive Win Shares compare favorably with any mortal big man. Ming wasn't the complete rebounding, defending, and passing savant Walton was, but he could do a bit of everything and was just an unstoppable scorer. For his contributions as a player and an ambassador of the game, Yao deserves a spot somewhere on the Pyramid.



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Rabu, 24 Desember 2014

basketball stream live The Real Truth About Collegiate Athletic Scholarships

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Since the formation of the new power five conferences, there has been a stream of Division 1 schools announcing the guarantee of 4-year athletic scholarships for sports that give out so-called 'full or whole' scholarships. This essentially means that football, basketball and a handful of other sports will fall into this category. On the other hand, swimming scholarships are broken up into pieces to maximize the potential of the team and the number of participants at the NCAA Championship meet. Thus swim and diving scholarships would not fall into 'full scholarship' category. Essentially, not all scholarships are guaranteed.






Even when scholarships were guaranteed, would coaches still be looking for loopholes to get athletes off the team? There are always ways around an athlete losing a scholarship regardless if it is stated as being guaranteed. One example might be one in which an abusive coach makes the sports environment so unbearable that an athlete quits, just to be able to restore himself or herself to sanity.






There are silent injuries that aren't being recognized as injuries at all such as the harassment and abuse of a coach, or teammate for that matter, that leaves an athlete to suffer with no voice. The athlete often doesn't know what is really wrong other than they are in pain and become distant from teammates and sometimes take on behavior like drinking heavily to numb the pain.






The athlete is often tortured by the notion of having to decide between using the talent and skill that they have rightfully gained through hard work , continue with the pain and suffering of a sports program or end the pain through quitting. The continued pain can have life long effects and scarring. I can affirm that dilemma from my own personal experience. Then there is also the obvious question of the financial strain on the athlete's family if they choose to quit that may or may not allow them to continue their education.






A lot of schools offer many resources and services to the athletes for their wellbeing. Then one has to ask, how can an athlete that is promised everything, still suffer in silence? It's quite simple, a winning coach has the favor of the athletic department the alumni and the donors. A winning coach is the very reason that everyone in the athletic department has a nice job.






We can look back on how we got here and why the silent injuries are often overlooked. We can assess why the coaching staff is given a free pass frequently to assassinate the character of the athlete to save their own hides. When Athletes try to speak up or say something, threats and intimidation are often the general operating procedure for coaches. Also we must take into consideration, a winning coach is believed over the voice of a temporary or 'pass through' athlete. It will take an army of athletes to speak up over the power of the athletic department and the establishment to see any type of fair and equitable treatment of a young athlete.






Often when the coach snaps, the athlete is left to make a quick decision, or not really given a decision but rather forced in a direction that would require them to lose their scholarship. These quick decisions often don't allow for a parent or an attorney to be present to help the athlete through the problem. Such situations occur despite the fact that no athlete can sign an athletic scholarship without his or her parents consent, even if the athlete is married.






One has to ask, if the system is really fair if it doesn't acknowledge or understand abusive coaching styles and how that affects an athletes' performance? We need to also realize that all people are not created equal and some thrive in environments where others are harmed and scarred for life.






So one has to ask, if the NCAA requires that all parents check their child into the athletic department that they also should be allowed to be able to check them out. The requirement for parents checking their athlete into the athletic department is void of an age requirement, so the fact they are young adults should not be the argument. This is especially true when we have a legal system in this country that allows for everyone to have legal representation regardless of affordability.






We must hear our athletes voices, give rights to those with silent injuries, like abuse and harassment. We must be impeccable with our words during the recruiting process and not make promises that can't be kept.






In order for there to be a "4 year guaranteed scholarship system to truly work, the balance of power must change between the athlete and the coach and the athlete and the athletic department. Otherwise we are left with a system that is unfair and not all inclusive of the issues that would pull an athlete away from their sports environment.






from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1EfAxsV

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basketball stream live The University of Michigan Will Win With Men's Basketball, Even If the Team Loses

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Big-time athletics at the University of Michigan haven't been going so well lately. The football team recently finished with a 5-7 mark. This marked the third time in the past seven years the Wolverines failed to win half their football games. Prior to this stretch, Michigan hadn't had a losing record since 1967.






After such a miserable football season, Wolverine fans were probably looking forward to another men's basketball season. After all, the men's basketball team has advanced to the NCAA tournament in each of the past four seasons. And when the 2014-15 season began, the Wolverines were ranked 17th in the nation.






In the past week, though, the wheels have come off of the basketball bus. After starting the season 6-1, the Wolverines proceeded to lose at home to the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Seemingly in an effort to prove that a loss to NJIT wasn't a fluke, Michigan then lost at home to Eastern Michigan. And then on Saturday Michigan lost by 27 points to Arizona.






At this point it seems clear that Michigan has declined in the sport of men's basketball. Unlike football -- where very large interaction effects make individual player analysis difficult -- we can actually look at the numbers in basketball to see which specific players are responsible for the team's success (and/or failure). Specifically, the box score statistics tracked for the players can be utilized to measure how many wins each player produces (in a similar fashion to what has been done for the NBA).






In addition to measuring each player's contribution to wins, we can also look at how much revenue these players are worth. According to the Department of Education, the University of Michigan's men's basketball team generated $13,636,966 in revenue in 2012-13 (the last year data is available). North American professional sports leagues -- (like Major League Baseball and the National Football League) tend to pay about 50 percent of their revenue to their players (a similar story is told in the NBA and the NHL). If we argue that Michigan's players are worth 50 percent of the team's revenue -- and revenues did not change in 2013-14 -- then these players produced $6.8 million this past season.






This revenue could be allocated a few different ways. If the money is allocated equally across all 14 team members, then each player would be paid $487,035. For a less equal distribution, one could divide revenue in terms of minutes played or player productivity. As the following table indicates, either approach indicates that every player who played at least 100 minutes in 2013-14 was worth at least $250,000 in revenue. And since this number greatly exceeds the cost of attending Michigan, it is clear that the University of Michigan got a very good deal.
















































































































































































































































































































































































































































Player



Minutes






Played



Wins Produced






per 40 minutes



Wins






Produced



Revenue






(divided by






Minutes Played)



Revenue






(divided by






Wins Produced)



Nik Stauskas



1281



0.166



5.3



$1,172,413



$1,316,293



Caris LeVert



1258



0.146



4.6



$1,151,363



$1,137,412



Derrick Walton



989



0.151



3.7



$905,165



$926,689



Jordan Morgan



743



0.196



3.6



$680,018



$904,708



Glenn Robinson



1194



0.090



2.7



$1,092,788



$665,294



Spike Albrecht



546



0.188



2.6



$499,717



$636,566



Jon Horford



511



0.193



2.5



$467,684



$611,525



Mitch McGary



198



0.261



1.3



$181,216



$321,119



Zak Irvin



568



0.079



1.1



$519,852



$279,240



Andrew Dakich



24



0.141



0.1



$21,966



$20,982



Sean Lonergan



23



0.135



0.1



$21,050



$19,209



Cole McConnell



10



-0.013



0.0



$9,152



-$803



Max Bielfeldt



89



-0.004



0.0



$81,456



-$2,229



Brad Anlauf



16



-0.176



-0.1



$14,644



-$17,523



TOTALS



7450



NA



27.5



$6,818,483



$6,818,483







To understand what is happening this year, let's start by noting that Michigan lost eight players -- including Stauskas, Morgan, Robinson, Horford, Morgan and McGrary -- from the 2013-14 team. These eight players produced 15.4 wins (or more than half the team's wins last year) So unless the Wolverines found a collection of very productive freshmen (and/or transfers), it seemed likely Michigan would decline. And when we look at how the Michigan players have done after 10 games -- reported in the following table -- it seems clear that Michigan's newest players haven't been able to replace the players who have departed.




































































































































































































































































































































































Player



Minutes






Played



Wins Produced






per 40 minutes



Wins






Produced



Caris LeVert*



361



0.214



1.93



Derrick Walton*



301



0.202



1.52



Spike Albrecht*



277



0.187



1.30



Ricky Doyle



168



0.175



0.73



Mark Donnal



138



0.189



0.65



Zak Irvin*



342



0.037



0.32



Max Bielfeldt*



85



0.100



0.21



D.J. Wilson



24



0.033



0.02



Kameron Chatman



207



0.003



0.02



Sean Lonergan*



12



-0.008



0.00



Austin Hatch



3



-0.321



-0.02



Aubrey Dawkins



53



-0.040



-0.05



Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman



31



-0.354



-0.27



Total



6.34



Wins Produced of Returning Players



5.27



Wins Produced of New Players



1.07







* - returning players






As one can see, Michigan's six returning players have produced virtually all the team's wins this season. And that means the freshmen Michigan has added really haven't helped much. This group includes Kameron Chatman, the 38th ranked recruit in 2014 (according to ESPN). Currently Chatman is only shooting 28.3 percent from the field. So it is not surprising that he has not produced any wins for the Wolverines.






Despite these results, Michigan is still getting a good deal from this collection of players. Let's imagine that Michigan continues to lose and this reduces team revenues (there is a link between wins and revenue in college basketball). For example, Penn State in 2012-13 only won 2 games in the Big 10 and the team's revenue was only $10,386,880. If Michigan only brings in this amount this year, then the players are still worth $5,168,440. And an equal distribution means each player receives nearly $400,000.






If we focus on wins, three returning players -- Caris LeVert, Derrick Walton and Spike Albrecht -- are projected to be worth more than $700,000 (assuming their current performance continues). This is far more than Michigan is giving these players. So even with the team's struggles (which are not caused by these three players), Michigan is still coming out ahead with its men's basketball program in 2014-15.






Of course, not everyone is happy. Certainly the fans are not happy. They are accustomed to an institution (that is supposedly devoted to higher education) providing them with winning sports teams. And the players, who are clearly underpaid by a very large amount, should also be unhappy.






Of these players, one should be even more unhappy. Caris LeVert has been named as an early pick in some very early NBA mock drafts. But since research indicates that college wins impact where a player is drafted, Michigan's losses could cause LeVert to drop next summer. And that will cost him dollars in the NBA.






Obviously that is not really Michigan's problem. In fact, as we have seen, the University of Michigan doesn't have any real problems with respect to its basketball program. Yes, losing seems bad. But because the pay of players is restricted by NCAA rules, Michigan is a winner even when the team loses.






from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1vpidUU

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