Rabu, 30 Desember 2015

basketball stream live NBA Forward Cleanthony Early Reportedly Shot Outside Strip Club

basketball stream live

New York Knicks small forward Cleanthony Early was robbed and shot in the knee outside a strip club in Queens around 4:15 a.m. Wednesday morning, according to the New York Daily News, among other local outlets. 


Early was reportedly already in an Uber car when he was approached by as many as a half dozen people in ski masks. The assailants fled the scene with pieces of Early’s jewelry -- including his gold caps and gold necklace -- after firing a single shot into his right knee.  






As the Daily News points out, a similar situation occurred less than two weeks ago, when over $600,000 in jewelry was taken from teammate Derrick Williams’ New York apartment early one Saturday morning.


Early is now in stable condition at a local hospital, and, fortunately, his injury is not considered life-threatening.


The 6-foot-8-inch NBA sophomore has averaged 4.4 points per game over his two years as a professional. He was drafted by the Knicks in the second round of the 2014 draft, after playing college ball for Wichita State.


Also on HuffPost:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1MGSBKv
via basketball stream live

Selasa, 29 Desember 2015

basketball stream live How I Got There: Roman Sebrle

basketball stream live
2015-12-21-1450661242-2870405-photo12.JPG


Roman Sebrle is one of the world's most successful decathletes, a former World Champion, and a gold-medal winner at the 2004 Athens Olympics. In 15 years, he won a total of 18 medals, half of which were gold, including that from the Olympics and the 2007 World Championships in Osaka, Japan. The winner of the Olympic decathlon is traditionally considered the World's Greatest Athlete. In 2001 in Gotzis, Sebrle achieved a true sporting milestone when he became the first decathlete ever to achieve more than 9000 points, thereby setting the record at 9026 points. Upon his retirement from athletics in 2013, Sebrle started a career in professional golf and currently works as a news anchor at Czech Television Prima. He aims to compete at the 2020 Golf Olympic Games. Lan Anh Vu sat down with Sebrle to hear more about his journey, the challenges he faced and his advice for aspiring athletes.

As told to Lan Anh Vu

Why I Pursued a Career in Sports
I fell in love with sports at a young age. I played a variety of sports with a keen interest in football, tennis, and basketball. I think it's in my genes. I didn't have any early involvement in track and field, but was captivated by the decathlon when I first saw it on television. When I was seventeen years old, I decided to do track and field. A former coach, Jiri Cechak, suggested that I train with him in Pardubice, where I joined the Track and Field Club. Then, in 1996, I competed in six decathlons to earn more than 8000 points for the first time. When doing the decathlons, I never thought that I would one day be the world champion or world-record holder. It just came to me naturally. I had determination to do my best and work toward being the best in what I did.

Challenges
In 2001, I was injured just fourteen days before the World Championships in Edmonton, and due to the injury, I couldn't do myself justice and finished in a disappointing 10th place. That was my worst failure. After the championships, I had surgery. Things happen. An injury is never ideal, and I had to take some time off, but I had no choice.

The transition process is a challenge. For some athletes, retirement is a concept that they don't want to think about in great detail. It's difficult for them to adjust to 'normal life'. Athletes train extensively for years, and it consumes most of their young lives in their 20s and 30s. They often make extensive personal sacrifices in order to pursue their dreams of glory. After retirement from professional sports, some athletes aren't in a financially stable position. So they have to find new jobs.

In the past few years, I've tackled health troubles, and as a result, my performance has declined. When I was down, it was difficult to cope with my situation, but then I decided to retire from the decathlon. It was not an easy decision. I had done decathlons for a very long time, even until I was thirty-eight years old. Then, producers from Czech Television Prima asked me to join their news team. I seized the opportunity. It was a very interesting offer, and I had never done it before, so I gave it a try. Working in television broadcasting is so different from athletics. In the first six months, it was very difficult for me to adjust to the new job, and I've worked hard to accumulate experience and acquire skills. I hope to improve better day by day.

What I Have Learned
I have learned that you have to respect your competitors. There are rules that you have to obey. I have also learned about will power and never giving up. I remember once, when I was competing in the World Championships, I considered giving up, but I never did. I won two silver medals, but not the gold. That motivated me to try harder, because I wanted to win the gold and not finish second place again. You have to be determined in order to leave no stone unturned.

2015-12-27-1451256960-6566854-photo2.JPG


You need to have passion, perseverance, and self-discipline. If you think that this is only a career, then you will never win and never be good at it. When you are exhausted, you don't want to train. The decathlon is very daunting all of the time, especially concerning the amount of training that you have put in. It requires a lot of time, repetition, and skills training. So you have to be disciplined by training and always persevere to achieve your dreams.

My Motivation
When I enter a competition, I want to do the best that I can and, of course, beat my personal records. When I was seventeen years old, from the time that I saw the medals at a local meeting for athletes, I was motivated to one day earn medals. That's how my dream was born. I set my goals. When I won the medal, I wanted it to be gold, and I wanted to be the world champion. I wanted to accomplish more and get further. My motivation is to win; I always try to win.

When you love what you do, you never lose motivation. I really enjoyed myself when I was competing and winning medals. Sometimes I wanted to give up, but I never did. I have been knocked down, held back, and suffered injuries at the wrong time of the year more than I can count. I told myself, "I might get two silver medals in a row, but next time I'll get the gold. Don't ever give up." It motivated me to stand up against the odds and try harder to prove to everyone that I was good. Only injury affected my results and stopped me from winning.

My Advice for Aspiring Athletes
My advice for aspiring athletes is to be resilient and never give up. Don't take a setback as an excuse to keep falling. Take a setback as a way to make a comeback. You need to have passion for whatever you do. It takes time, dedication, and lots of hard work over many years to become successful. Everyone can be good at something; just find what you love and are good at. Commitment is crucial. If you truly desire to compete at the next level, then you must completely commit to that goal. Compete at your best. You always have to be pushing the edge.

I once asked myself, "If other people can do it, then why can't I?" I was an ordinary boy from a small town in the Czech Republic, but I could still make my dreams come true. I became a world champion. When you are persuaded by your dream, you can do great things, and no goals are too much to achieve. You have to work for it, though. With passion, hard work and perseverance, anything is possible.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

This post is part of "How I Got There" series, which features people around the world speaking about their journeys. What is the path to success? What challenges did people face and how did they overcome them? Lan Anh and her guests answer all these questions and much more. To view the entire series, visit here.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1MFxmZu
via basketball stream live

Senin, 28 Desember 2015

basketball stream live Concussions: Could Women Have Increased Risk?

basketball stream live With the topic receiving big screen exposure, concussions are being discussed nearly daily in the news, from broadcast networks and newspapers to professional journals and magazines. The causative factors of long-term cognitive deficits in football players, hockey players and fighters are being researched, published and discussed at conferences. We now know that some of football's legends have experienced sad and tragic ends to their lives, and these outcomes are being at least partially attributed to repetitive head trauma.

Yet, what about girls and women in sports? Do they suffer the same rate of concussion as boys and men in similar sports? The answer may surprise you. Girls and women appear to have an even higher concussion rate in the same sport. Girls in softball (vs. baseball), basketball and soccer have reportedly incurred nearly double the concussion rate of boys (Lincoln AE, et. al. Am J Sports med 2011).

The primary theory for the increased concussion rates for girls is that girls have greater head-neck acceleration when exposed to external force (Tierney RT, et. al. Med Sci Sports Exerc 2005). This head-neck acceleration is sometimes named angular velocity. The reason behind this theory is that the neck muscle mass and strength of females is less than that of their male athlete counterparts, which prevents head velocity from trauma to be slowed effectively. If two male soccer players collide, their heads and necks will move slower than those of two females in the same situation.

The role of acceleration in concussion occurrence is hardly a new topic, as it was described in 1982 (Gennarelli TA, et. al. Ann Neurol 1982). And it has been determined that other factors, such as the direction of the major head acceleration, can have an impact on concussion rates as well.

The latest consensus in research was reached during the 4th International Conference on Concussion in Sport, Zurich 2012. The findings at this conference acknowledged that being female may be a modifier and a possible increased risk for concussion (McCrory P, et. al. Br J Sports Med 2013).

Many sports fans don't realize, or recognize, that direct head trauma is not the only cause of concussions in athletes. Head-neck acceleration may cause the brain to impact against the cranium without head trauma. Here are the most common causes of concussions among the athletes in various sports:

Soccer
  • Two players colliding, with or without direct head trauma;

  • A player's head hitting the ground if he/she falls;

  • A player being hit in the head by an opposing player's knee or foot once on the ground;

  • There is no consensus on heading with regard to head trauma yet, as there are articles implicating transient changes in cognitive function with head that refute this suggestion.


Basketball - Same as the above, as well as:
  • An impact to the head from another player when trying to rebound;

  • Falling backwards over another player and landing on the floor.


Baseball and Softball - Similar falling conditions above, as well as:
  • Direct head trauma from a ball (pitched or thrown to a base);

  • Direct head trauma from a line drive to the pitcher or base runner;

  • Collisions at bases and home plate.


While the male player can and does incur concussions with these scenarios, the female athlete, with less ability to slow head-neck acceleration, may be more susceptible.

With the world focused on the struggle to obtain a realistic and valid concussion rate among male football players, we may want to consider the results of one sobering survey when estimating how women might actually be impacted. This survey of high school football players revealed a reported concussion rate of 5.6%. A reported concussion was defined as a concussion that the coaches were aware of. Yet, when these same athletes were asked about symptoms after their respective seasons, there was a 65% concussion rate (Moreau WJ. American Chiropractic Board of Sports Physicians Sports Science Symposium, 2005, podium presentation).

We can certainly hypothesize similar errors and underestimation in determining the rate of concussions in female athletes, as well. So what might that staggering number be?

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1mMBxhp
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live Don’t Let Stephen Curry Overshadow Russell Westbrook’s Historic Season

basketball stream live



We’re only a third of the way through the NBA season, but a lot of people around the league are already wrapping up the 2015-2016 MVP conversation. Barring some unforeseen shift or unexpected injury, the award will likely go, for the second straight year, to Stephen Curry -- the man with the three-point shot who is forcing the entire league to change its approach to basketball, and whose Golden State Warriors currently sit atop the NBA at 28-1. It has seemed at times as if Curry could do no wrong this year, whether on paper or on the court. 






Any and all praise for Curry is well-deserved. The three-point slinging Curry leads the league in various advanced metrics, including Player Efficiency Rating (PER), offensive win shares and box plus/minus, and he is doing it with an astonishing degree of efficiency. Nothing can or should be taken away from him.


But with that said, it would be a shame if Curry and his Warriors’ dominance overshadowed what is happening in Oklahoma City, where a man by the name of Russell Westbrook has developed into the closest thing the league has ever seen to a modern incarnation of legendary Hall of Fame point guard Oscar Robertson.  





For as good as Curry and the Warriors have been, Westbrook has been almost nearly as astonishing, and his Oklahoma City Thunder are coming on. The team is 8-2 in its last 10 games, 21-10 in total, and Kevin Durant is back to being Kevin Durant. But make no mistake: This is Westbrook’s team now. The newly minted Western Conference Player of the Week is simply overwhelming opponents. 





Westbrook sits directly behind Curry in the aforementioned advanced metrics of PER, offensive win shares and box plus/minus, but it’s his old school metrics that truly set him apart through the first third of the season. As of Monday, the Oklahoma City point guard was averaging an eye-popping 25.5 points per game (fifth in the league), 9.4 assists (third), 6.9 rebounds (50th) and 2.4 steals (first).


Those are numbers we just haven’t seen before. Should he keep them up, Westbrook would become the only player besides Robertson, the walking triple-double, to average 25 points, nine assists and 6.5 rebounds per game over the course of an entire season, per Basketball-Reference.com.



And he’s doing it while pulling off stuff like this.





And this.





And this.





Now, let’s not forget how incredible Robertson was over the course of his career in the 1960s and ‘70s. Westbrook is on pace to perhaps pull off the 25-9-6.5 season once, but The Big O pulled it off six times, and only one time did he average fewer than nine rebounds per game. He was truly one of a kind. 


But Westbrook’s current campaign is superior to any of those six Robertson seasons in terms of PER and win shares per 48 minutes. And his 2015-2016 season sits alone in NBA history should you include his steals per game: No player since the league started tracking steals in 1973 has ever averaged 25 points, 9 assists, 6.5 rebounds and 2 steals per game, as Westbrook has managed to do this season. (That 1973-1974 season was Robertson’s final one, so we’ll maybe never know how he and Westbrook stack up in that regard.)


Westbrook is having an unprecedented start to the season in other ways as well. So far, his real plus-minus -- defined by ESPN as "Player's estimated on-court impact on team performance" -- is 11.08, significantly higher than every player in the league, Curry included, and higher than any player since ESPN started tracking the statistic in 2013. He leads all guards in double-doubles and rebounds per game -- the latter of which he grabs at the same nightly rate as Thunder big man Serge Ibaka -- and he is tied with Curry for the most value a player provides to a team compared to an average NBA player.



Curry is having an all-time start to the season. He is on pace to smash his own record for threes in a single campaign. He leads the league in scoring, and he will likely win the MVP trophy come next year. But just know that No. 0 for the Oklahoma City Thunder is doing something we haven't ever seen as well, and he'll be all too ready to show your home team come playoff time. 








 


Also on HuffPost:



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1NMagEA
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live Trying to Reach New Demographics, the NRA Is Outmatched

basketball stream live

You may recall that before he was appointed Attorney General, Eric Holder gave an interview in which he said that the way to deal with gun violence was to tell kids that guns "weren't cool." That statement unleashed a storm of acrimony from the NRA and its various noisemaking minions, all of whom were committed to a strategy that promoted guns to millennials and other non-traditional gun-owning demographics on the basis that they were, in fact, cool.



Probably the most outrageous attempt to sell this 'guns-are-cool' nonsense has been the video antics of an African-American lawyer who calls himself Colion Noir, who prances around the NRA video channel coming up with all kinds of hip and cool reasons why we should all own and carry guns. The folks who write his scripts have come up with some kind of concocted blather about using guns for self-defense, but what's really going on here is an effort by the NRA to capture the hearts and minds of younger minority folks, most of whom don't appear to be all that interested in owning guns.



Of course the truth is that Colion Noir and the NRA in general have about as much to do with defining "cool" as the veritable man in the moon. Most NRA members are older, White men who listen to country music and live in Southern states and smaller, Midwestern towns. They represent a demographic that's about as far away from anything hip and cool as could ever be imagined; getting this audience to respond to an inner-city, jive-talking Black dude would be tantamount to bringing back the Miles Davis Quintet or Ahmad Jamal to play the weekly barn dance at Grand Old Opry in Tennessee.



Which is why I sat up and really took notice when a group of NBA players announced they were joining with Mike Bloomberg's Everytown to run ads on messages about gun violence that first appeared during a series of marquee games that will air on Christmas Day. The ads feature NBA players like the Warriors' Stephen Curry and the Clippers' Chris Paul, along with testimonies from survivors of shootings and relatives of folks killed by guns.





I knew something was up when I noticed Spike Lee becoming very visible on the gun violence issue, particularly when he and Al Sharpton announced a gun violence initiative following the premiere of Spike's new movie, Chi-Raq, which is all about gun violence on Chicago's South Side. At that press conference, Spike and the Reverend Al pledged to hold a series of summit meeting in various cities, but you can't begin to compare the impact of such meetings to the power and force of the NBA ads that are running on national tv.



These ads represent a level of interest and concern that could be (pardon my pun) a real game-changer when it comes to the national discussion about guns. Because the people featured on these ads aren't paid to get up and lament the loss of our 'freedoms,' they don't represent pitchmen for the manufacturers who want to sell guns, and they certainly aren't some amateur-hour video huckster who wants you to think he's a real, hip dude because his skin color happens to be something other than white.



I never thought that gun violence was about race, or poverty, or inner-city life or anything of that sort. I always thought that gun violence was about one thing and one thing only: guns. And the remarkable thing about this television campaign is that every person in these ads talks about guns and what guns have done to their lives and to the lives of people they love and used to love.



I was in a high-end burger bar Christmas afternoon when one of these ads played on the widescreen that was tuned to the NBA. This restaurant tends to be a noisy place, but it quieted down when Carmelo Anthony said what he had to say. Way down.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1YJooH6
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live NCAA Schools Are Reducing The Punishment For Marijuana Use

basketball stream live

LINCOLN, Neb. — At least one-third of the Power Five conference schools are not punishing athletes as harshly as they were 10 years ago for testing positive for marijuana and other so-called recreational drugs, according to an investigation by The Associated Press.


The NCAA last year cut in half the penalty for athletes who fail screenings for substances like marijuana at its championship events, and its chief medical officer is pushing for college sports' governing body to get out of the business of testing for rec drugs altogether. The AP found that some of the nation's biggest universities, from Oregon to Auburn, have already eased their punishments as society's views on marijuana use have changed.Marijuana use among U.S. adults has doubled over a decade, according to government surveys, and recreational use is now legal in four states.


The AP analyzed policies for 57 of the 65 schools in the Southeastern, Atlantic Coast, Big 12, Big Ten and Pac-12 conferences, plus Notre Dame.


Of the 57 schools, 23 since 2005 have either reduced penalties or allowed an athlete to test positive more times before being suspended or dismissed. Ten schools have separate, less stringent policies addressing onlymarijuana infractions.


In the Pac-12, five schools do not suspend athletes for as long as they once did. At Utah, for example, a third failed test used to mean dismissal; now it's a half-season suspension.


"It's a moving target, and we have to find that balance between being too punitive and not punitive enough, and making sure that we help people that have a problem," Utah athletic director Chris Hill said.


Recreational use of pot is allowed for adults in Oregon and Washington but is against the rules at Pac-12 schoolsin those states. At Oregon, an athlete doesn't lose playing time until a third failed test; at Oregon State, a third failed test used to mean dismissal, but athletes are now given one more chance.


At Washington, a third failed test used to be a one-year suspension but is now just 30 days.


"The change was intended to make the policy more rehabilitative," Washington spokesman Carter Henderson said.


Northwestern, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Southern California, Syracuse, Vanderbilt and Wake Forest did not provide copies of their drug policies despite repeated requests, citing privacy laws. Stanford does not test its athletes. Illinois has a separate pot policy that has become more strict but isn't as punitive as its policy for drugs like cocaine or heroin.


The Big Ten and Big 12 are the only Power Five conferences that do their own testing in addition to the testing done by the schools and NCAA. Those two conferences punish athletes who test positive for performance-enhancing drugs. The Big 12 is the only conference that screens for recreational drugs, but it does not sanctionathletes who test positive. Instead, the Big 12 notifies the school of a positive test and leaves any discipline to theschool.


Alcohol remains by far the most abused substance on college campuses, with marijuana ranking second. In the most recent NCAA survey of athletes (2013), 70.9 percent of Division I football players acknowledged using alcohol in the previous 12 months and 19.3 percent acknowledged using marijuana or synthetic marijuana. In men's basketball, reported use was 58.1 percent for alcohol and 11.3 percent for marijuana/synthetic marijuana.


While schools come down hard on athletes caught using performance-enhancing drugs — a first positive test typically results in a one-year suspension — they are much less punitive for marijuana and other so-called street drugs.


Athletes who test positive a first time typically receive counseling but lose no playing time. Also, athletes who come forward and acknowledge drug use before they are tested are offered help under "safe harbor" programs. Second positive tests typically result in some lost playing time. Suspensions generally start kicking in after a second positive, though Kansas, Mississippi, Purdue and Oregon don't mandate a suspension until a third offense.


Football coach Mike Riley, in his first year at Nebraska after 14 years coaching at Oregon State, said he becomes suspicious marijuana is being used when he notices a player who misses or is late for meetings or is not fully engaged on and off the field.


"Through my years in coaching, I can almost pick out the guys who have a marijuana problem," Riley said. "You give me three weeks with a team and, if you've got five guys, I could get three or four of them."


Former Nebraska defensive end Randy Gregory failed a marijuana test at the NFL scouting combine last February and later publicly acknowledged his use in college. Once considered a high first-round draft pick, he wasn't selected until late in the second round by Dallas.


Gregory said he and his Nebraska teammates didn't worry a lot about being tested. Nebraska, under a policy effective since September 2014, suspends an athlete for 10 percent of his or her sport's season after a second failed drug test and 20 percent after a third failed test. A fourth failed test results in dismissal. The previous policy, in place when Gregory initially enrolled, didn't take away playing time until a third failed test.


"I'm not saying that we were kind of like invincible," said Gregory, who played under former Huskers coach Bo Pelini. "But they don't make it a big deal. ... They didn't really test you unless you had failed one and then after that, they test you weekly almost."


Dr. Lonnie Albers, Nebraska's associate athletic director for athletic medicine, declined an interview request through the sports information department.


In addition to school testing for a wide range of drugs, Gregory and his teammates were subject to random screening for PEDs by the Big Ten and NCAA.


"Did I know folks that were abusing it? Yeah, on different ends of the spectrum. I think you know what I mean, smoking and other performance-enhancing drugs," Gregory said. "Sometimes guys get lucky. The Big Ten comes in, we're testing steroids, might be a guy on steroids but he may say, 'You know what, I don't think I'll be one of the 12 guys that they're testing out of the 100-and-how-many guys we have on the team.' And they'll get lucky and not get tested. It's kind of hit or miss, I think."


The NCAA has been testing for marijuana and other street drugs at championship events since the 1980s. The NCAA suspends athletes for a full season for a failed PED test. Starting in August 2014, however, the penalty for failing an NCAA street-drug test was reduced from a suspension of one full season to a half season.


NCAA medical chief Dr. Brian Hainline said his organization should concentrate on busting athletes who use PEDs and leave it to the schools to deal with the rest, preferably through treatment rather than punishment.


"The most important thing that I can't emphasize enough is that as a society, we have to make a clear distinction between recreational drug use and cheating," Hainline said. "I really believe that they require two different approaches. One is more nuanced, and one is hard core."


What about marijuana being against the law in most states?


"If we're going to test at championship events for things that are illegal, then we shouldn't just test for pot," Hainline said. "If there are any kids under the age of 18 smoking cigarettes, we should test for that. We certainly should be testing for alcohol for everyone under the age of 21. Then we ask ourselves, 'Where does the moral authority stop?' I'm all for moral authority as long as there is a philosophical consistency to it."


Also on HuffPost:




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1mmsjrM
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live Meadowlark Lemon, Harlem Globetrotters Legend, Dead At 83

basketball stream live

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Meadowlark Lemon, the "clown prince" of basketball's barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters, whose blend of hook shots and humor brought joy to millions of fans around the world, has died. He was 83.


Lemon's wife and daughter confirmed to the team that he died Sunday in Scottsdale, Ariz., Globetrotters spokesman Brett Meister said Monday. Meister did not know the cause of death.


Though skilled enough to play professionally, Lemon instead wanted to entertain, his dream of playing for the Globetrotters hatched after watching a newsreel of the all-black team at a cinema house when he was 11.





Lemon ended up becoming arguably its most popular player, a showman known as much for his confetti-in-the-water-bucket routine and slapstick comedy as his half-court hook shots and no-look, behind-the-back passes.


A sign of his crossover appeal, Lemon was inducted to both the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame and the International Clown Hall of Fame.


"My destiny was to make people happy," Lemon said was inducted into basketball hall as a contributor to the game in 2003.





Lemon played for the Globetrotters during the team's heyday from the mid-1950s to the late-1970s, delighting fans with his skills with a ball and a joke. Traveling by car, bus, train or plane nearly every night, Lemon covered nearly 4 million miles to play in over 100 countries and in front of popes and presidents, kings and queens. Known as the "Clown Prince of Basketball," he averaged 325 games per year during his prime, that luminous smile never dimming.


"Meadowlark was the most sensational, awesome, incredible basketball player I've ever seen," NBA great and former Globetrotter Wilt Chamberlain said shortly before his death in 1999. "People would say it would be Dr. J or even (Michael) Jordan. For me it would be Meadowlark Lemon."


Lemon spent 24 years with the Globetrotters, doing tours through the racially-torn South in the 1950s until he left in 1979 to start his own team.


He was one of the most popular athletes in the world during the prime of his career, thanks to a unique blend of athleticism and showmanship.


Playing against the team's nightly foil, the Washington Generals, Lemon left fans in awe with an array of hook shots, no-look passes and the nifty moves he put on display during the Globetrotters' famous circle while "Sweet Georgia Brown" played over the loudspeaker.


He also had a knack for sending the fans home with a smile every night, whether it was with his running commentary, putting confetti in a water bucket or pulling down the pants of an "unsuspecting" referee.


"We played serious games too, against the Olympic teams and the College All-Stars," Lemon said. "But that didn't stop us from putting the comedy in there."


Lemon became an icon in the 1970s, appearing in movies, including "The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh," numerous talk shows and even a stint in the cartoon "Scooby Doo," with Scatman Crothers doing his voice.


After leaving the Globetrotters, Lemon started his own team, The Bucketeers, and played on a variety of teams before rejoining the Globetrotters for a short tour in 1994.


Lemon spent the last years of his life trying to spread a message of faith through basketball. He became an ordained minister in 1986 and was a motivational speaker, touring the country to meet with children at basketball camps and youth prisons with his Scottsdale, Ariz.-based Meadowlark Lemon Ministries.


"I feel if I can touch a kid in youth prison, he won't go to the adult prison," Lemon said in 2003.


He never lost touch with his beloved sport. Lemon said he rose every day at 4 a.m. and, after prayers, headed for the gym to run sprints and practice shooting.


"I have to keep that hook shot working," he said.


Born in 1932, Meadow George Lemon III — he lengthened his name after joining the Globetrotters — didn't have money for a basketball when he was young, so he rigged up a makeshift hoop in his backyard in Wilmington, N.C. Using a coat hanger and onion sack for the basket, he made his first shot with an empty milk can.


Lemon first contacted the Globetrotters before his high school graduation and joined the team in 1954. He missed a game in 1955 because of a bad bowl of goulash in Germany, but that was the last one. What followed was run, by his calculations, of more than 16,000 straight games that took him to places he never could have imagined.


"I was one of the most fortunate athletes that ever lived," he said. "I was able to watch history."


 


Also on HuffPost:



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1JErvDP
via basketball stream live

Kamis, 24 Desember 2015

basketball stream live The NBA's Christmas Schedule Is A Wonderful Gift

basketball stream live

The NFL may dominate Thanksgiving, but Christmas belongs to basketball. And this year, the NBA is giving its fans an amazing holiday gift: a full slate of games featuring the sport's top players, including Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, Anthony Davis, and Stephen Curry and LeBron James in a rematch of last year's NBA Finals.


On this week's episode of "The Second Half" podcast, Huffington Post sports reporter Travis Waldron and NFL veteran Donté Stallworth break down some of the interesting storylines of the NBA's Christmas Day schedule:





Here's the full schedule for Friday (Eastern times):



12 p.m. – Pelicans vs. Heat, ESPN
2:30 p.m. – Bulls vs. Thunder, ABC
5 p.m. – Cavaliers vs. Warriors, ABC
8 p.m. – Spurs vs. Rockets, ESPN
10:30 p.m. – Clippers vs. Lakers, ESPN




Also on this week's podcast, Travis and Donté discuss the possibility of the NFL relocating a franchise -- or two -- to Los Angeles, Gibert Arenas' terrible criticism of the WNBA, and a Missouri legislator's idea to take scholarships from college athletes who protest campus issues in the wake of the University of Missouri football team's walk-out earlier this year.


This podcast was produced, edited and engineered by Peter James Callahan and Adriana Usero, with assistance from Christine Conetta.


Also on HuffPost:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1J6iSah
via basketball stream live

Rabu, 23 Desember 2015

basketball stream live 10th Annual Celebrity Basketball Charity Game Hosted By Floyd Mayweather

basketball stream live This past Sunday, I had the pleasure of attending the 10th Annual Celebrity Basketball Charity Game and Toy Drive, presented by Team Watson and TMT at the Calabasas High School Gymnasium. Hosted by boxing legend Floyd Mayweather, the event raised money for kids battling cancer and helped put smiles on the faces of dozens of disadvantaged children this holiday season.

2015-12-23-1450900616-7424215-Image16.jpg

Team Mayweather vs. Team Watson line up.

The event was impressive on many levels. I was blown away by the sheer number of people in attendance, as well as the large number of well-known celebrities that came out to show their support for the cause. Celebrities such as Travis Barker, former NBA point guard and hall of famer Mark Jackson, Los Angeles Clipper Paul Pierce, as well as many others, were all there to take a stand against cancer in the community.

2015-12-23-1450897498-5164223-Image20.jpg

Los Angeles Clippers' Paul Pierce

Many if not all of the featured guests made generous donations in support of this worthy cause to help many of those in need this holiday season. The enormous amount of genuine love and support for the cause I witnessed that evening was truly exhilarating.

2015-12-23-1450898406-4407187-Image21.jpg

Youngest member of the Chi-town finest breakers, 8-year-old Dj livia.

There were also musical performances by hip-hop artists Eric Bellinger and O.T. Genesis, which came as a pleasant surprise for everyone. Kids and adults alike got up from their seats and showed their moves on the dance floor as kids got to line up to shoot three-point shots for a chance to win $1,000 from Mr. Floyd Mayweather himself. This truly was an event put on for the kids.

2015-12-23-1450899756-8589477-Image22.jpg


Esteemed boxing and Esnews reporter Elie Seckbach got a chance to get with Mr. Mayweather for a rare and exclusive interview about the event.

In addition to the many other guest appearances, I was also entertained by the event's basketball game itself. Many current and retired boxers, including Floyd Mayweather, Shawn Porter, Adrien Broner, and J'leon Love displayed that they also hone some skills outside of the boxing ring, as they battled head to head in a game that was competitive throughout. It was great to see that these fighters were being showcased outside of their element and all for a great cause.

2015-12-23-1450898543-3189822-Image18.jpg

Adrien Broner takes time between quarters to take photos with fans.

Boxing is sometimes considered a brutal sport, and to see these fighters coming together to support a cause that is bigger than themselves was more than inspirational for the young kids who look up to these athletes for leadership. Getting the opportunity to meet and discuss serious topics with these esteemed guests of honor, along with seeing the countless number of smiles being put on these kids faces was truly the highlight of my night.

2015-12-23-1450895994-2330785-Image8.jpg

Floyd Mayweather sheds positive feedback to players thoughout the game

2015-12-23-1450900249-512972-Image19.jpg

Shawn Porter and Brittany Lucio

I was honored to have taken part in the Team Watson and TMT's annual event. Events such as these clearly make a huge difference in the lives of those impacted by poverty and sickness. Team Mayweather may have won the game and fought his way to becoming a champion, but on this day everyone was a winner, especially the kids.

Photo Credit: Crystal Frost

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1Tiy3h3
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live Does Kobe Bryant Actually Think The Lakers Can Still Make The Playoffs?

basketball stream live

The setting was the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas, as the Lakers faced off against the Spurs on December 11, 2015. The game came less than two weeks after Kobe Bryant announced his impending retirement, which will likely take place right after LA's April 13 contest against the Utah Jazz, as the Lakers look ill-equipped to compete for a playoff spot with their current ragtag roster.


But don’t tell Kobe Bryant that. True to form, the all-time great has refused to count himself or his team out of the postseason chase, even as they sit in last place in the Western Conference. Or so rookie forward Larry Nance Jr. said in his post on The Players' Tribune Tuesday: 



Kobe came into the huddle before the game in San Antonio and said, ‘Look, we’re five games out of the playoffs right now. Just think about that. We’re five games out of the playoffs. There’s three-fourths of the season left. This book is not written. We’ve still got time to do what we need to do, and sneak into one of these spots.’



At that point, the Lakers held a 3-19 record and, as CBS Sports’ James Herbert pointed out, were nowhere near the postseason hunt -- that five-game magic number was a fallacy.


But it’s just so typical Kobe to view the metaphorical mountain in front of him as just a molehill -- as a problem that can be solved, a deficit that can be overcome, by just a few made jump shots or transition layups.


You never know -- this is Kobe Bryant we’re talking about. After all, Bryant has been playing well lately, pouring in 31 points against the Denver Nuggets  on Tuesday alone, including this beauty from behind the backboard (!). 





And this jumper with the game on the line. 





If there’s anything Lakers fans were spoiled by during the Kobe era, it was the feeling that their team was never out of the game, no matter the opponent or the situation. “Sneak[ing] into” the postseason may look pretty unlikely right now, but we’ve certainly learned better than to doubt No. 24.


 


Also on HuffPost:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1OLSbEm
via basketball stream live

basketball stream live Nothing Better Than Aaron Rodgers And Chris Paul Taking Trick Shots

basketball stream live



Mix two sports standouts with lots of goofy trick shots involving basketballs, footballs, a pogo stick and confetti -- and what do you get?


Let Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers and Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul show you in this collaboration with Dude Perfect.


Yes, Rodgers shows a good arm ... 





... but Paul can toss the ol' pigskin, too. And it was all for charity.





H/T Viral Viral Videos


 


Also on HuffPost: 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.













from Sports - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1NCH2b4
via basketball stream live