Sabtu, 30 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Kenny Sailors, Jump Shot Pioneer, Dies At 95

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LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) — Kenny Sailors, the college basketball Hall of Famer credited by some with being the first to use the modern jump shot, died Saturday. He was 95.


He died in his sleep at an assisted living center in Laramie, the University of Wyoming said.


Wyoming athletic director Tom Burman called Sailors a great representative for the university and the state.


"He touched so many lives," Burman said in a statement. "For years after he moved back to Laramie, he would come to Cowboy and Cowgirl practices and games. He was a great mentor for our student-athletes."





Sailors led Wyoming to the 1943 NCAA title. He was the national player of the year and most outstanding player of that NCAA Tournament.


Sailors said he developed the jump shot as a youngster while playing against his older, taller brother on a makeshift dirt basketball court on their Wyoming farm.


He played five years in the NBA for several teams, spending his last season in 1950-51 with Boston and Baltimore. The 5-foot-10 guard averaged 17.3 points for Denver in the 1949-50 season.


In 2012, at 91, he was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in a class that included Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall, Patrick Ewing and Earl Monroe. After his induction, Sailors said it was a great honor but jokingly added: "The only advantage I got over them is I'm good looking and got a jump shot."






His college career was interrupted by World War II when he enlisted in the Marines and served in the South Pacific.


Sailors returned to Wyoming for the 1945-46 season and again earned All-America honors. He was a two-time consensus All-American in 1943 and 1946 and a two-time AAU All-American those same years.


After retiring from pro basketball, Sailors became a licensed hunting and fishing guide in the Jackson Hole area and Alaska.


Sailors is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, eight grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild. He was preceded in death by his wife, Marilynne, and two daughters.











 


 

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Kamis, 28 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Why The Clippers Should Trade Chris Paul

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If the Cavaliers can't win a title with LeBron James, Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love at the helm, than the Clippers certainly can't compete for one with Chris Paul, Blake Griffin and a severely fractured locker room.


Perhaps motivated by turning 30 and the dazzling play of his counterpart, Stephen Curry, the 2015-16 version of Paul continues to thrive as a premier point guard. While he hasn't shot it especially well thus far, the perennial First-Team All-NBA selection remains a measuring stick of any floor general, ranking in the top 10 for three crucial categories: player efficiency rating, offensive win shares and box score plus/minus.


Ultra willing to distribute the basketball -- his 9.6 assists per game slot him fourth in the league -- Paul remains a phenomenal pick-and-roll operator and is as committed as ever to his patented sticky defense and pesky hands. 



What owner Steve Ballmer and the Clippers' front office must now decide is if they believe that he and Griffin can co-exist at a top level for the remainder of Paul's five-year, his $107 million contract which ends in 2017 -- when he can enter free agency if he wants -- and if not, whether they can they command top dollar in a trade.


Only Curry surpasses Paul's value as a lead guard. He is a legitimate superstar at one of pro basketball's most fungible, yet important positions. And, in the ever-changing style of the modern NBA game, what maybe makes the surefire future Hall of Famer most attractive for a suitor is his capacity to excel in every style of basketball: If you want to play small or big, fast or slow, Paul is elite across the board. 


The Western Conference, however, is loaded, with Golden State and San Antonio both on pace for historically great seasons and Oklahoma City is nipping at their heels. At best -- even with a healthy Griffin -- the 30-16 Clippers are a four seed without home court, tasked with going on the road against either the Warriors or Spurs, neither of whom have lost a single home game this season. And that's a best case scenario. This is a good team, but hardly a threat to the upper echelon of the league, given its inability to maintain a cohesive locker room and patchwork bench.



The reality for this franchise is that until the Paul and Griffin era, it was nothing but an afterthought in NBA circles, the ugly step-brother of the Lakers, whose only similarity was that they shared an arena.


Before Paul's tenure with the organization, the Clips had reached the playoffs just four times in nearly three decades since the 1984 move to Los Angeles. During his four years, Paul's teams reached the playoffs every season. So compiling 50-win seasons compounded by repeated postseason appearances -- albeit brief ones -- isn't the worst thing in the world. But simply put, the longer it waits to deal Paul, the more the Clippers ultimately risk sinking further in its quest for a first title.


A deal now would ensure that whomever acquires the soon-to-be nine-time All-Star would have his services guaranteed for at least the remainder of 2016 and another full season after that. And, more importantly for Ballmer and company, it would allow the team to extract maximum talent in return. 


"We’re all like family," Paul told the team's website. "That's how we're going to deal with this, as a family."


That may be true, but  families can break up. Painful as it may be to disband "Lob City," dealing Paul is really the only move left.


Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related on Twitter at @Schultz_Report, and follow me on Instagram at @Schultz_Report. Also, check out my SiriusXM Radio show Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3-6 PM ET on Bleacher Report channel 83.


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basketball stream live Former NBA Player Jay Williams Predicts 'Collapse' Of Amateur NCAA System

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ESPN analyst and former Duke basketball player Jay Williams doesn't have much faith in the future of the amateur NCAA college system, he told HuffPost Live on Tuesday.


Williams, who opens up about his post-NBA life in his memoir Life Is Not an Accidentsaid the current amateur model will eventually "collapse" thanks to all the big money that has been infused into the game. The scholarships that college players receive pale in comparison to the astronomical coach salaries, money that networks make while airing college games and overall profits that universities bring in from their biggest athletes, he said:



You have these coaches like Nick Saban and Michael Krzyzewski, all these guys, who are making $6, $7 [or] $8 million a year. ... So my thing is, the money is starting to get out of control, and maybe 20 years ago you could have had the excuse that it's all about the academics, but now, even though I get a $60,000 education for that year, it still doesn't outweigh the amount of money that I'm bringing to the organization.



Williams said his own college experience is a "prime example" of the problem with the system.  


"My last year in school, my jersey did over $2.5 million of sales, but I'm not entitled to a percentage of that because I'm still labeled an amateur," he told host Alyona Minkovski. "Yet I'm putting in work hours, 15 to 16 hours a day, like I was an employee."


Williams suggested that a better alternative system would "incentivize" the players by ensuring a payout if they keep up their grades.


"If you go to a school like Duke, if you happen to play basketball there, [the school could] set aside the money that the program made that year, allocate a small percentage for each individual player and leave it in escrow, and we'll let it inflate over four years," he said. "And if you graduate, while maintaining this GPA, within that four-year time frame, then you're entitled to this amount of money. This way you incentivize the kid."


Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Jay Williams


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basketball stream live Adorable Little Warriors Fan Asks Riley Curry To Be His Valentine

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We all knew that Stephen Curry’s daughter Riley could steal the spotlight, but now it looks like she’s stealing hearts as well. Just about eight months after Riley burst onto the scene, blessing us all with her presence at her father’s press conference, one eager, starry-eyed young Golden State fan showed his love for the First Daughter of the NBA in the most heartwarming fashion possible.






Ah, young love. 


Prince Charming over here even got to meet Steph after Wednesday's game -- probably to ask him for his daughter’s hand in a Gymboree playdate. 





As the calendar turns to February this week, love really is in the air -- and nowhere is that more true than in Northern California, as basketball fans like Romeo over here watch their beloved Warriors give the kiss of death to opponent after opponent, every time they take the floor.


 


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Rabu, 27 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Steve Nash Dissects Why The NBA's Rookie-Veteran Relationship Is So Crucial

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A blur of purple and orange, and seemingly everywhere at once, Steve Nash had the kind of vision and innate understanding of the game that point guards dream of. If a teammate were out in transition or waiting, hands up, in the corner, it took just a quick moment and a flick of his wrist for Nash to seemingly bend space and stop time, lacing the ball through the swarm of defenders and straight to the chest of his target, setting up the shot perfectly, per usual.


If you also donned a Phoenix Suns jersey, the two-time MVP would find you before you yourself even knew you were open. That’s simply what Nash did throughout his 18-year NBA career -- he’d scan the open floor before him, then guide his teammates toward the spots in which they’d excel, maximizing their potential with just the jerk of his head or the look in his eye.





So it makes sense that even today, the now retired, 41-year-old Nash is still fixated on this idea of helping teammates grow. As he sees it, a career in the NBA can be likened to the circle of life. As others help you develop in your infancy and adolescence, you, in turn, help the next crop learn when you’ve grown wise to the ways of the world. And then those you taught aid others, and on and on, the legacy you helped develop goes and grows.


That, he told The Huffington Post, is the premise behind the new digital series he created and produced alongside The Players' Tribune in the past few months. “Rookie/Vet,” which premieres Wednesday, takes an extended look at the kind of mentor-mentee relationships that form in NBA locker rooms, specifically following the budding friendship between 15-year NBA alum Tyson Chandler and 19-year-old rookie Devin Booker, as the former helps the latter find his sea legs in the ever-unpredictable, ever-changing tides of the professional sports world.


In other words, the guy who for two decades made it his mission to aid his teammates on the hardwood has traded the NBA’s parquet floors for the editing room, the basketball for the camera, as he has now made it his goal to capture the evolution of this kind of intimate mentorship on film.


Speaking with HuffPost on Tuesday, Nash stepped back and took a bird’s eye view of the league, discussing anything and everything from his film series to who he thinks would win in a shooting contest, himself or Stephen Curry -- taking the time to dissect the bonds of the NBA and to explain why the recent criticism of LeBron James in the aftermath of the tragic Tamir Rice shooting is so wholly unfair to athletes everywhere.



How did you first come up with the idea behind “Rookie/Vet”? What made you so invested in this type of mentor-mentee relationship?


I think just through my experiences, I thought it was an interesting concept. We’ve had a few documentary series that are very impactful that take you behind the scenes, so to speak, in professional sports, but I thought the dynamic between a rookie and a vet was very interesting because they are so disparate -- there is such a contrast between not only the stages in their careers but also the stages in their lives, which makes it almost more compelling.



I thought that was really a powerful image: These two people are doing the same job but having a completely different experience doing it.



I just thought it was really poetic -- you have one player who is an economy of movement, everything’s kind of simple and rote in a way, and you have another guy who’s like a deer in the headlights -- experiencing everything for the first time; everyone’s trying to give them advice from the moment they walk in the door to the moment they leave. And they’re just struggling to try to take it all in and make a career for themselves, while, at the same time, becoming an adult, getting away from a college structure and becoming a businessman or a corporation all unto themselves in some respects. So I thought that was really a powerful image: These two people are doing the same job but having a completely different experience doing it.


How did you decide on which pair of teammates to center the series around?


First of all, having a relationship with the Phoenix Suns, they were incredibly gracious to allow us to get unprecedented access to their players and their facility. And then, second of all, beyond my relationship with the Suns, Tyson Chandler is a part of The Players’ Tribune, so we all think the world of him not only as a person, but as a veteran basketball player. So we thought it’d be an amazing opportunity to have him be one of the characters, and his rookie this year is another great kid, Devin Booker, so we thought it’d be an awesome pairing.



In your own career, what mentor-mentee relationships did you have that were comparable to the one we’re going to see on screen between Chandler and Booker?


When I was a rookie [on the Suns], Rex Chapman was a veteran that had a big impact on me and taught me a lot of things about the league. He taught me a lot about how to be a pro and what it took to survive in this league and to thrive in it, so I’ve experienced it on that side of things -- and there were also others, for sure.


And then on the other end of the [mentorship] spectrum, I remember when I first came back to Phoenix, [working with younger] guys like Leandro Barbosa -- and we’re still very close -- [who was then] 22, 23 years old. I was able to reverse roles and share the things [I’d learned], as I did, hopefully, for the last 10 years of my career when I was able to come into contact with different players.


Why do you think that this rookie-veteran dynamic is so important as players transition into the league?


It’s kind of poetic -- because it’s very cyclical. You have a player coming into the league -- green, unsure of what to expect or how to survive -- and you have a veteran that was once in his place, who’s able to impact that younger player. And before they leave the league, it’s rewarding and cathartic to be at that point where you are sharing lessons learned and you are giving back, so to speak, to those who came after you, as an homage, perhaps, to those that came before you and helped you. So there is something, I think, beautiful about it … [and] I feel like that symmetry or cyclical nature of the relationship is kind of like life: People come and go, someone passes away and another person is born.



I think Steph [would beat me in a shooting contest] ... He’s phenomenal, and I think he’s probably the best shooter we’ve ever had in the game.



There is something nice about that [cycle] -- that you try to leave the game a better place than it was when you came, and you give back where you were once the recipient of those lessons. So I think it’s beautiful and I think it’s so impactful for a young player to be paired up with a solid veteran. And you see some people that maybe aren’t paired up with a Tyson Chandler-type person, and they are so much worse off for not having a person like that on their team or in their life. I know Devin is going to be greatly impacted, and I’m sure we’ll see it as the series progresses.


Today, in your post-playing days, you’re acting as a player development coach for the red-hot, record-breaking, reigning champs: the Golden State Warriors. What’s it been like to work this team in what really amounts to a new type of mentorship role for you?


It’s a pleasure to be associated such a successful organization and team. To be honest, I haven’t had to do much at all. They’re obviously a historic team at this point in the season, and it’s a pleasure to watch them do what they do. I can’t take any credit for what they’ve done. I’m here for them, whenever they need me, if I can be of help in my role, but, frankly, they’re a championship team and they’re well-oiled and obviously flying, so I can’t really take any credit there. If anything, I’m trying to learn from watching the organization and how they built a culture and chemistry in such a short period of time and had so much success so quickly.



I have to ask -- shooting contest, you versus Stephen Curry. Who wins?


I think Steph. He’s got me beat there. He’s phenomenal, and I think he’s probably the best shooter we’ve ever had in the game.


One of the other big storylines in the NBA this year is Kobe Bryant’s impending retirement. You two were Western Conference rivals for years before eventually becoming teammates. Given your unique relationship, what goes through your head now, as he marches towards retirement?


He deserves a last lap, so to speak, and all the attention and accolades he gets. He’s had a career that very, very few have had, and he’s one of the best to ever play the game, so -- like we see in some ways in “Rookie/Vet” -- it’s that cycle of life: It has to come to an end as all things have to, but at the same time what he’s accomplished has been out of this world.



Lastly, you’ve been someone willing to speak out about your political beliefs, most famously by wearing a shirt at the 2003 NBA All-Star game denouncing the Iraq War. LeBron James has received criticism in the past month for not speaking out about the recent Tamir Rice trial in Ohio. What was your reaction to that wave of criticism and, more generally, what’s your take on this growing pressure professional athletes are facing to voice their opinions on societal issues that don’t necessarily have a direct relationship to their jobs on the court or the field?


I think it’s an individual thing, I don’t think I can speak on [the specific James situation] because I’m not LeBron. I don’t know what’s going on in his life or what the parameters and contributing factors are to why he would or wouldn’t speak up [on a given issue]. So, unless I could have a detailed conversation with him and understand his perspective, there’s no way I could judge him for speaking out or not speaking out.



So, unless I could have a detailed conversation with him and understand his perspective, there’s no way I could judge him for speaking out or not speaking out.



I think a difficult thing for people to understand is that we’re all individuals as well, going through different things in our own right and doing different things. He’s probably done a lot of things for people in Ohio, and so for people to make a blanket statement or criticize him without knowing why he decided not to speak out I think is rash.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.  


 


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Selasa, 26 Januari 2016

basketball stream live We’ve Got Our First LeBron-Hamas Comparison After Cavs Fire David Blatt

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While the Cleveland Cavaliers’ abrupt dismissal of former head coach David Blatt last Friday was frowned upon by many within the NBA’s ranks, that was nothing compared to the apparent ire that some in Israel felt at Blatt’s unceremonious boot.


According to the American Free Press, Israeli basketball fans unequivocally blame LeBron James for Blatt’s firing, pointing their collective finger at the Cavaliers' superstar who had famously questioned the coach in the past. Blatt, an Israeli-American, had been highly successful on the European sidelines for years before journeying to the NBA in 2014, having endeared himself to Israeli basketball loyalists by leading Israel's Maccabi Tel Aviv to a 225-55 four-year record prior to the trans-Atlantic move.


While fans shared their newfound animosity towards James on his social media pages in recent days, one Israeli sports journalist went so far as to compare their sudden “hatred” toward James to their abhorrence towards Hamas -- the militant group that rules the Gaza Strip.


"LeBron James is now the most hated person in Israel … It's a little bit joking and a little bit true: These days I can only compare the Israeli hate for LeBron James to the hate for Hamas,” reporter Sharon Davidovitch explained to the AFP.


And while Monday’s Cavaliers game wasn’t aired in Israel according to Cleveland.com beat writer Joe Vardon, local papers smattered headlines like “Goliath Eliminates David” across their weekend editions. In this analogy, LeBron, of course is Goliath -- with owner Dan Gilbert acting as Goliath’s famous javelin. 


Even U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro joined the public outcry this weekend, if in a more muted fashion, posting on Facebook: “I don’t really understand the Cavs’ decision to fire David Blatt after all his success. But I congratulate him, a wonderful man and a talented coach, on all his accomplishments, and wish him well in the future.”





 In a now-famous incident last season, James pushed Blatt while arguing with an official.


Virtually as soon as David Blatt joined the Cleveland coaching staff in June 2014, the Cavaliers’ popularity in Israel skyrocketed. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu even reached out to Blatt before the 2015 NBA Finals, telling the coach that “all of Israel is behind the Cavaliers.” Blatt is considered one of the greatest coaches to have ever graced the coaching circles of European hoops, and nabbed Israeli League Coach of the Year honors four times during his career overseas.


And after leading Cleveland to its first Finals appearance in eight years last June, Blatt guided the franchise back to the No. 1 spot in the Eastern Conference this season before his unexpected release.


 


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basketball stream live The Worst Thing About The East Coast Isn’t The Weather

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The East Coast can be a frigid nightmare in the winter.


Last Tuesday, it was below freezing in New York City, where I live, hitting a low of 16 degrees at one point. This past weekend, over 26 inches of snow fell in Central Park. Today, the temperature is in the mid-40s, which would be damn near celebration-worthy, except for the mounds of slowly greying slush everywhere you look.


Numbers and words will forever feel inadequate when trying to describe what an East Coast winter truly feels like though. You can’t know until you yourself have felt the sting of cold air on the smallest sliver of skin between your gloves and winter coat. Or until you’ve turned the corner of a Manhattan avenue, only to be knocked over by a gust of freezing wind. Or until you’ve taken a step onto what you thought was concrete, only to realize your shoes and pants are eight inches deep in something that is anything but. And that’s before you consider the very real consequences of seasonal affective disorder, which consumes you, quietly and slowly but ever so consistently, until you are a shell of your Summer self.  


In short, the winter in New York City can be and often is a completely soul-sucking and depression-inducing period of unquestionable awfulness. But five and a half years after I first moved out East from the West Coast, I’ve come to realize it’s not the worst thing about living here. That would be the late start times for West Coast sporting events.


For the past month, I’ve been talking with friends about how excited we were for Monday night’s game between the Golden State Warriors and San Antonio Spurs. The 2015-2016 incarnations of the Spurs and Warriors are two of the best regular season teams ever, and they just happen to be playing historically good basketball at the same time. Stephen Curry is one of the most miraculous basketball players ever. Kawhi Leonard has made the leap. Both teams are filled with fantastic players and personalities, coached by some of the best to ever do it. They are finely tuned basketball-playing machines.


FiveThirtyEight called the game “the best defense-offense clash in NBA history.” SBNation predicted it would be “the best NBA regular-season game ever.” ESPN dubbed it the “best regular-season matchup in NBA history.”


I agreed. And in the hours leading up to the matchup, I felt like a little kid right before Christmas. I was hopelessly, embarrassingly excited. Willing to talk to whoever for whatever period of time about their thoughts on the game. This is why we watch sports, I thought. This is the sort of game you remember forever.


And then, I fell asleep at halftime.


If you're a sports fans on the East Coast with a day job, you're probably nodding your head in agreement right now. And if you're a West Coast transplant, you're probably nodding a bit more furiously. Because keeping up with West Coast sports (football exempted) is a mostly hopeless affair on the East Coast. The games start impossibly late, regularly at 10:30 p.m. ET, which means in theory you need to stay up until 1 a.m. to make it through a full home game of your West Coast team of choice. In reality, it means something much worse for those of us who need sleep: No longer truly following your team in live time.


Nights like this past Monday have become routine in my time on the East Coast. Every once in a while, I'll convince myself I can make it through a full West Coast game. Almost every time, I fail. I hate the winter, sure, but I hate not being able to watch West Coast NBA games more. I'm a diehard Los Angeles Lakers fan. Growing up, almost every game was an event worth clearing your plans for. Now, I'm a shell of my former fan -- a dreary-eyed adult that can't for the life of him stay up through the third, ignoring entirely the question of whether the full game is a possibility.


To a lot of you, this will all sound stupid. But I'm certain there is a small subset of West Coast sports fans out there on the East Coast who feel similarly. When we moved East, we braced for the winter. What we didn't consider were those 10:30 p.m. ET starting times. And every year, they just feel later and later. 


 


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Senin, 25 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Women's Professional Tennis is a Mess

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What the hell is the matter with Women's Tennis at the moment? Seeds 2 and 3 have gone out in the first week of the Australian Open, and the tour continues to be dominated by someone noone likes. Alright, I'm sure that some people like Serena Williams, but she is one of those polarising sports figures that is a bit like Mel Gibson. You either like her, or just don't. And there are not to many people, at least from the people that I talk to, that actually like her. Simona Halep fell to a Chinese player that had never previously won a Grand Slam match. Garbine Mugaruza was meant to be the player that was going to be the next big thing in women's tennis. But not only did she lose in round 3, she lost in round 3 in straight sets to the world number 48. She didn't even put up a fight. Venus Williams lost in the first round, which was incredibly disappointing after her strong 2015. At the ASB Classic in NZ, a comparitively lowly 250 event, she also lost early in the tournament.


I know from attending that event in NZ this year, that having a marquee player like Venus going out early puts added pressure on a tournament. Obviously the organising committee's want their top players to go deep in the tournament. But also, it is good to have a bolter to liven things up a bit. A good example of what a tournament wants was displayed at the men's event in Melbourne in 2008. The semi-finalists that year were Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic (the top 3 seeds) and Jo Wilfred Tsonga (who was unheralded at the time). Everyone at the tournament that year was really behind Jo, and urged him on to the final. And since I arrived in Melbourne only in time for the semi-finals that year, it was awesome to see Federer and Nadal, even though they were the two losing semi-finalists. In the final, the supporters were either the fanatical Serbians supporting Djokovic (who were the minority), or everyone else (who were all supporting Jo). When Jo won the first set, the crowd almost erupted into a battle. The cold reality is that the men's tennis tour props up the women's tour.


Women's tennis as it currently stands just doesn't have the ability to generate the kind of popularity that men's tennis has had for the past decade. In the men's game you have had consistent beloved champions like Federer and Nadal. In the early 2000s, players like Marat Safin and Andy Roddick also inspired devotion. But when you think about it, men's tennis has Andre Agassi to thank for its enormous popularity today. His resurgence in 1999, and exciting power-hitting baseline play, has inspired a high level of devotion to the sport that has persisted throughout. Women's tennis has just not had any consistent beloved champions. Although players like Maria Sharapova, Victoria Azarenka and Petra Kvitova are undoubtedly talented and mostly liked, they just haven't been consistent enough. Perhaps the greatest shame of the women's game in the past decade was the departure of Justin Henin, she was someone who could put the fight to Serena. And her small stature and fighting spirit despite it, inspired a loyal fan base. You almost have to ask the question whether the equal pay for women that players like Billie Jean King and Venus Williams fought so hard for in the mid-2000s is actually justified. Does women's tennis provide the same financial value to Tournaments and Media that the men's game does? Almost definitely not.


In summary, while this is a very harsh thing to say, I feel that I must say it; the dominance of Serena Williams (and the inability for anyone to challenge her) has destroyed women's tennis, and has made it one of the worst sporting spectacles around. In mean; women's golf, horse jumping, and basketball are all far more interesting. But on the other hand, the rivalry between Federer and Nadal has enlivened the men's game, and has made it the greatest year-round sporting spectacle in the world today. The tournaments all need to give a collective bow to Federer, Nadal and Agassi, because they have made professional tennis what it is in the 2010's.

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basketball stream live Cavaliers' Championship Window Is Quickly Closing

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When you have LeBron James in your lineup, problems get overlooked. It may not be intentional, but the player's rare greatness masks things that should not happen. For the Cleveland Cavaliers, LeBron happens to mask significant issues -- problems that worsen with time, especially in the fourth-oldest roster in the league. It's what led to the firing of Head Coach David Blatt, despite the fact that he brought the team to the finals last season and had a 30-11 record this season. In fact, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, Blatt is the first head coach since conferences began in 1970-71 to be fired when his team has the best record in its conference.


The 31-year-old LeBron, who has reached a record five consecutive NBA Finals, can only impose his will for so long without more problems coming to light. On the heels of defending world champion Golden State throttling the Cavs by 34 in their own building, let's look at why LeBron's window to bring a long-awaited title back to his home state is quickly disappearing:


The K-Love Conundrum



It may have come as a surprise to some when 27-year-old Kevin Love re-signed in a long-term deal with Cleveland last summer, but it shouldn't have: Love couldn't command max dollar anywhere else, and there wasn't another suitor offering a legitimate second option.


The issues with Love -- twice a Second-Team All-NBA selection -- in 2016 are the same issues from last year, only amplified. He has never quite figured out how to play second -- or even third -- fiddle to LeBron and All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving. Blatt, to his credit, tried to integrate Love into late-game situations, but the reality was simple: He was never a consistent weapon in his half-court attack throughout the course of a 48-minute game.


One of the beauties of Love's game is his ability to stretch the floor with his 3-point shooting. And yet, in Cleveland, the former UCLA standout has become overly reliant on the 3, often drifting away from the hoop and primarily into the role of pick-and-pop man. He's still shooting upwards of six triples per game, as he did in Minnesota. The difference is that his shots are skewed greatly towards the perimeter. Now you're taking your best rebounder and best interior passer away from the basket, where he becomes a jump-shooting big and not a playmaker.


This season, in addition to a miserable defensive rating, Love is shooting just 36 percent from distance and under 42 percent from the floor, the worst clip of his storied eight-year career. As a result, he's made the lowest number of free-throw attempts of his career, and has the lowest scoring output since 2010.


Whether Love gets dealt before the deadline remains to be seen, though it seems highly unlikely because of the $110 million commitment. Now, newly minted coach Tyronn Lue has to figure out how to further integrate Love into the offense.


Kyrie's Woes



He may have been selected to play in another All-Star game, but 23-year-old point guard Kyrie Irving has not played like an All-Star. After missing 26 games recovering from a broken kneecap, Irving has played the worst basketball of his career. He's never shot a worse percentage (41 percent), and he's never been so anemic from 3-point territory, where his sub-30 percent clip is shocking for a guy known as a knockdown shooter.


"Personally, I don't feel like I deserve it," Irving said of not being chosen to start in the All-Star game, "just from the amount of games that I've played and the body of work."


In many ways, Irving -- the No. 1 overall pick in 2011 out of Duke and an All-NBA performer -- is the Cavs most important player. His creativity is undeniable, as is his unique ability in the pick-and-roll game. Few players are as dynamic and gifted from an offensive standpoint than Irving, whose prowess allows LeBron to play far more off the ball and not expend energy as a permanent point-forward. Make no mistake: LeBron is the focal point of the offense, but he doesn't always have to assume the lion's share of the responsibility.


When Irving struggles, LeBron is forced into a heavier usage role. It's something he considered in an interview with The Huffington Post before last season. The Cavs, as a result, rank just 10th in field goal percentage. To quantify that number, consider that San Antonio, Golden State and Oklahoma City -- widely viewed as the top tier of contenders -- make up the top three. Perhaps more important, this is hardly a knockdown shooting team -- an issue that is only exacerbated against elite competition. The Cavs are slotted 12th in the league from 3-point territory, an issue that's exacerbated when dealing with double-digit deficits.


Bench Problems



Perhaps just as important, the Cavs have not been able to generate consistent production from their ancillary parts, specifically on the perimeter. Wing stalwarts J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert have been too inefficient, shooting a combined 41 percent from the floor. In addition, Mo Williams and Matthew Dellavedova have struggled as well -- particularly with erratic shooting, a no-no with passers like Lebron and Irving consistently creating quality looks. And Lue says both Williams and Dellavedova will earn more minutes now that he's at the helm.


Not to harp too much on the Spurs and the Warriors, but consider their superior depth in comparison to the Cavs. Both teams employe lineups that go 10 or 11 deep, enabling stars to rest during the regular season. But that's only the obvious benefit. Depth also allows a team to build trust and "steal" wins. It's why the Warriors' Andre Iguodala captured Finals MVP last June -- over the immortal Steph CurryKlay Thompson and even Draymond Green. 


Sharing Is Caring



Easy offense is the best offense, especially come playoff time. The Cavs, for all of LeBron's greatness, simply do not generate enough easy offense to win a championship. We can discuss defense all we want, but to win a prolonged series in the NBA against a great team requires an assortment of easy buckets. Cleveland ranks a pedestrian 12th in assists and just 14th in fast-break points per game.


If you score at an elite clip in the half-court (like the Spurs, for example), a lack of transition offense can be overcome. If you don't (like the Cavs), the postseason becomes an arduous process. Lue has already implored his team to accelerate the pace of play, but learning how to run takes time.


Blatt either never understood the benefit of an uptempo attack or was never able to delegate responsibility for it to someone else. With all due respect to Cleveland's other bugs, this might be Lue's greatest responsibility in his new role.


Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related on Twitter at @Schultz_Report, and follow me on Instagram at @Schultz_Report. Also, check out my SiriusXM Radio show Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3-6 PM ET on Bleacher Report channel 83.

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basketball stream live WNBA Star Lisa Leslie Has The Perfect Response To Comments About Her Height

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Let's begin by stating the obvious: At 6'5", Lisa Leslie is tall.


She always has been. In fact, the former WNBA superstar had reached the six-foot mark by the time she was in middle school. Height is a clear advantage for someone in her sport, but for a child just trying to fit in among her classmates, it can be a nightmare.


As Lisa recently shared with "Oprah: Where Are They Now?", being tall certainly made her a target among her childhood peers, but thanks to a wise and experienced mother, Lisa was well equipped to whatever came her way.


"I think when you're tall as a kid, you can face a lot of challenges -- if you don't have people pouring into you the positive things about being tall," Lisa says. "I was lucky, because with my mom being tall, she already knew that kids would tease me."



Lisa's mom, a woman over six feet herself, had one particular approach she encouraged Lisa to use when people would comment on her height.


"She armed me the same way I arm my daughter, which is saying... 'When people say you're tall, we say and beautiful,'" Lisa says.


She continues, "It's really been a blessing to have a mom who is 6'3". My mom's very beautiful, very tall. But she's always been a hard worker."



Lisa's mother began her career as a mail carrier before making a switch when Lisa was around 7 or 8, she says.


"She became a truck driver, driving an 18-wheeler truck cross-country," Lisa says. "She's always been very strong, independent. My father, I met once when I was 12, so I didn't have a dad. My mom was just a great mom and a dad."


None of this means that Lisa's mom was anything other than feminine, she adds.


"The two things I always laugh about is that my mom ... always had her lipstick tucked in her bra and her nails polished," Lisa says.



As for her own femininity -- especially in the context of playing basketball -- Lisa again takes a page from her mother's book.


"We don't have to look like the boys to play this sport," she says. "For me, I've always been a very girly-girl, if you will, very feminine, and I just happened to choose basketball. Or, basketball chose me."


No matter what, for Lisa, life boils down to one important thing.


"It's really about being true to yourself."



Also on HuffPost: WNBA star confronts mother about alcoholic past



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Minggu, 24 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Shaq Provides Surprise Backup In Kids' Basketball Game With Police

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When it comes to surprises, it doesn't get much bigger than Shaquille O'Neal.


The retired NBA great dropped in on a group of neighborhood children in Gainesville, Florida for a basketball game with their local police department Saturday.


The 7-foot-1 legend was moved to join in after video of a Gainesville officer playing ball with the kids went viral.


In that dashcam video, Officer Bobby White was responding to a noise complaint about their early evening game Jan. 15 when, instead of breaking them up, he joined in.



"I don't know who called but, obviously, I ain't got no problems with it," he says in the video before taking the ball and shooting hoops.


After ending their match, which drew more than half a dozen kids, he asks, "Are you guys out here every day? I might bring some backup. Will you be out here tomorrow?"


O'Neal, who was sworn in as a reserve police officer in South Florida last year, was reportedly so moved by White's response that he reached out to the Gainesville Police Department asking to get in on the fun.



As seen in a six-minute video titled "The Rematch," O'Neal's appearance proved to be a truly heartwarming and awe-inspiring sight, for everyone involved.


That included Officer White who, like the kids, was kept in the dark about O'Neal's involvement until the all-star athlete entered the police station looking to play ball.


After shooting hoops with the kids, O'Neal snapped photos with them, signed basketballs and even offered $100 to anyone who could complete a free throw shot -- something each one of them impressively pulled off. When they were finished, he huddled with the kids to offer some advice.



"Stay out of trouble, listen to your parents, respect your parents. You can be anyone you want to be," he told them. "I'm from the same neighborhood you all are from. I grew up just like this, so only you can change this."


He then got all the kids to repeat after him:


"I will become whatever I want to be. I will be a leader and not a follower. I will respect my peers, my elders, and especially my parents."


Also on HuffPost:


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Jumat, 22 Januari 2016

basketball stream live Cop Steps In To Sing National Anthem When Performer Can't Make It, Slays In Uniform

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This cop's motto? To protect and to serenade, probably. 


After the singer who was supposed to perform the National Anthem at a recent college basketball game between West Virginia University and the University of Kansas was stuck in traffic, unable to sing at the game, an unlikely hero stepped up to save the day with unbelievable grace -- university police officer, Carlton Smith





A video of the officer's impassioned performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner," done in his uniform, was shared on social media where people were left in awe of the law enforcement member's pipes. Trust us -- you will be too. 


Watch as Smith, a WVU alum, beautifully navigates through the melody, maintaining a silky tone from beginning to end.


The officer, who's competed on "American Idol," told "The Bob Huggins Show" that he's sung the National Anthem for a crowd before, however this time, he was barely given any notice and was told he'd need to fill in about five minutes before showtime. 


His unexpected performance was so amazing that the Kansas coaches even fist-bumped him.  


Smith will sing the National Anthem once again at the Feb. 13 men's basketball game between WVU and Texas Christian University.


 


Also on HuffPost: 






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basketball stream live A (Very) Brief History Of Women Working In Men's Professional Sports

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(Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

By Dayna Evans

Wednesday evening the Buffalo Bills announced that they hired Kathryn Smith as special teams quality-control coach, making her the NFL's first-ever full-time female coach. On the Bills' Twitter account, head coach Rex Ryan said Smith "certainly deserves this promotion based on her knowledge and strong commitment." Hearty congratulations were in order, and here they are: Congratulations, Kathryn. Best of luck out there. (Continue to be wary of rambunctious Bills fans, of course.)

Related: A Salute to the Women of American Ninja Warrior


But the celebration over Smith's hire also forced an uncomfortable question: Wait, Smith was the first female full-time NFL coach in history? Of all time? Like, ever? Hasn't professional football existed for almost a hundred years? What in the world took so long?

Sports teams' refusal to consider women has a long, sexist history, but it could be starting to change. Over the past few years, a handful of women have been hired in managing, coaching, and professional roles in men's pro sports. We have Kathryn Smith now, but let's not forget the ones who came before her.

Jen Welter

During last year's training camp and preseason, Jen Welter worked as inside linebackers coach for the Arizona Cardinals, making her the first "official" female NFL coach in history. Welter's position was only temporary -- lasting from mid-July through the end of August -- but her visibility has lasted far longer. Why did Welter believe she did a great job in her position? "Because I cared as much about them as people as I did about them as players, and I actually really know football."

Related: U.S. Women Deserve a Pro Hockey League


Becky Hammon

In August of last year, the San Antonio Spurs hired six-time WNBA All-Star Becky Hammon as an assistant coach. While recovering from an ACL injury, Hammon had been observing team meetings for the Spurs when head coach Gregg Popovich decided to take her on as an assistant. Though Hammon was the first female coach in the NBA, Popovich insisted that her hiring was not a play for media attention: "She's a coach, and she's good at it. I think some people thought this was some kind of gimmick or we were just trying to be cool. I'm glad she's there."

Sarah Thomas

In the midst of a year of high-profile failures on sexual assault and domestic violence issues, the NFL made the right kind of news in April 2015 when it hired Sarah Thomas as the first female official in league history. Thomas, who had officiated high-school and college games for nearly 20 years, made her NFL debut in September of last year in a Texans-Chiefs game. "I've just been doing this truly because I love it," she said. "The guys don't think of me as a female, they see me as just another official."

Nancy Lieberman

Lieberman, one of the best players in the history of women's basketball (she's nicknamed Lady Magic), was hired as an assistant coach for the Sacramento Kings in August 2015, becoming the second female assistant coach in NBA history. Before joining the Kings, Lieberman coached the Texas Legends in the NBA Development League from 2009 to 2011, making her the first female head coach of a men's basketball league in history. When Lieberman was hired, she told ESPN, "It has an effect on a lot of people's thinking and the acceptance. I believe a lot of people saw that and went: 'Why can't we do that? That's something that's really important, and there's other people [who are] open-minded, why can't it be us?'"

Related: Campaign Demands That Journalists Start Actually Asking Female Athletes About Sports


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Jessica Mendoza (Photo: Michael Buckner/Getty Images)

Jessica Mendoza

Just last week, former All-American softball star Jessica Mendoza was named a permanent fixture on Sunday Night Baseball after a few appearances last season. When she filled in for Curt Schilling on a Sunday-night broadcast last September, she became the first woman to ever to call a prime-time MLB game. Later that fall, Mendoza called the American League Wild Card game, making her the first woman analyst to call an MLB postseason game. Her permanent spot now secured, Mendoza says she knows people are paying attention. "I realize that anything out of my mouth, people are going to listen a little more," she told the Washington Post this week. But she's not scared. "What's helped is once the game began, it was just baseball, and not a female broadcasting baseball. I was like, 'I can do this.' I just honed in on it, and all the other stuff went away."

Justine Siegal

The founder and executive director of Baseball for All, an organization that calls itself "the hub of girls and baseball in the U.S.," Siegal became the first woman in history to throw batting practice to an MLB team at the Cleveland Indians' camp in 2011. In 2015, she became the MLB's first female coach when she took on a role as guest instructor for the Oakland A's instructional league club. Like Welter's, Siegal's job was only temporary, but she remains convinced that her involvement with the organization will turn into a full-time coaching position.

Violet Palmer

On October 31, 1997, Violet Palmer became the first woman to referee a regular-season NBA game, working the season opener between the Mavericks and the Grizzlies. Palmer played Division II college basketball but switched to refereeing after college, officiating preseason games and women's basketball games. When she became the first woman to officiate a regular-season NBA game, she said she walked onto the court confidently. "I was given an opportunity and, with that, it's really simple." She has since officiated thousands of NBA games, including in the playoffs, and two other women have since held jobs as NBA refs.

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Kobe Bryant and Violet Palmer. (Photo: Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images)

More from The Cut:


Kathryn Smith, the NFL's First Female Coach, Says She Won't Be the Only One for Long

My Wife and I Are (Both) Pregnant
Marriage and Two Kids: A Most Scandalous Fantasy
Watch 7 Actresses Perform Powerful Abortion Stories
25 Famous Women on Female Friendship

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basketball stream live Taxpayers Shouldn't Shell Out Money If Fans Won't Show Up

basketball stream live Since the National Football League allowed the St. Louis owner to move his team to Los Angeles, a host of columnists have slammed the action, claiming the "loud and loyal" Rams fans would be hurt. But it ignores the fact that St. Louis had one of the least supportive fan bases in the entire NFL, which contributed to the move to L.A. And throwing even more taxpayer money toward a St. Louis stadium that is likely to be fairly empty seems like a bad idea.

Dan Wetzel of Yahoo News described the move as "cold and cruel," noting that it was a victory for Rams owner Stan Kroenke. "Meanwhile, it's over for the folks in St. Louis, who are left feeling the worst loss imaginable for a sports fan: abandonment and betrayal, a realization they are just powerless pawns, if even that much."

Wetzel adds "This does nothing for those left behind in Missouri, the ones who loudly and loyally supported the Rams, who embraced the franchise, who made it part of their lives and now are told no one cares. The ones who didn't do anything other than what the team asked them to do back in the 1990s - prove that St. Louis was a viable NFL market."

Simon Evans adds some quotes in his Reuters article "St. Louis fans distraught as Rams head west." Missouri Governor Jay Nixon claimed "This sets a terrible precedent not only for St. Louis, but for all communities that have loyally supported their NFL franchises... St. Louis is a world-class city deserving of a world-class NFL team."

Evans adds quotes from fans and the St. Louis NFL Stadium Task Force, each emphasizing how loyal the fans were, and how supportive they were of the team, and what a bad move it was to move to L.A.

Ben Rohrbach from Shutdown Corner adds words from St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay. "The NFL ignored the facts, the loyalty of St. Louis fans, who supported the team through far more downs than ups, and the NFL ignored a strong market and viable plan for a new stadium." He also includes a quote from the St. Louis County Executive, who claimed "This region deserves an NFL team. This region is fully capable of supporting an NFL team. That team should have been the Rams."

One might conclude that legions of fans were out there backing the Rams, and taxpayers should cough up money for a stadium to support them. But evidence paints a different portrait.

According to Statista.com (based on information from ESPN), the St. Louis Rams finished dead last in the NFL in attendance, with an average of only 52,402 fans per game. That's about 14,000 a game less than the completely awful Cleveland Browns, a franchise parodied for ineptitude.

It wasn't much better in 2014. According to ESPN statistics, St. Louis averaged 57,018 fans a game, third to last in the league. And they didn't travel well either, as combined with total fans in other stadiums, were second to last in the league in that category.

In 2013, it was a similar story, with St. Louis finishing second-to-last in attendance, according to statistics from ESPN. The team was third from last in attendance in ESPN data from 2012. And if anything, the statistics show a downward trend from 2012 to 2015.

St. Louis is tied for tenth in terms of media market potential, but in the bottom five for actual ratings. And if anything, the data from Sports Business Daily from 2013 showed that the team ratings declined over time. Their ratings are almost half of those of the Detroit Lions, Buffalo Bills, and San Diego Chargers from 2011-2013.

One could make the argument that the team plays in an ancient stadium, but it's only about 20 years old. You could fault the team, but they had a coach who's been to a Super Bowl, a quarterback with playoff experience, the most exciting rookie running back around with college star Todd Gurley, and one of the better defenses. There was a reason to go to the game. Besides, teams with worse records had more fans in the stadium, or watching the game at home.

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Photo by the author shows the new Atlanta Falcons home, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, next to the Georgia Dome.


St. Louis lost the Hawks in basketball to Atlanta, the Cardinals of football to Arizona, and now the Rams. The city loves their baseball Cardinals and their hockey Blues, but the numbers show it just doesn't seem like St. Louis can hold much more. And taxpayers should not kick in tons more money, if most folks in the region show little interest.

John A. Tures is a professor of political science at LaGrange College in LaGrange, Ga. He can be reached at jtures@lagrange.edu.

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basketball stream live OTL: Report Reveals New Details Of Alleged High School Attack

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CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- Two Tennessee high school basketball coaches and their athletic director went before a juvenile court judge in a Chattanooga courtroom Thursday morning to answer charges that they failed to report the alleged rape and assault of a freshman player by three of his Ooltewah High School teammates.


 

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