Kamis, 31 Maret 2016

basketball stream live 10 Non-basketball Events That Happen at Warrior Games

basketball stream live I love watching professional basketball, particularly the Golden State Warriors. But lots of other stuff happens at the game during time-out. Here are 10 non-basketball events:

1. DJ DSharp spinning on the ones and twos.

2. Ruby Lopez, in her third season with the Warriors as a television host and pumping up the crowd and doing contests.

3. Franco Finn "Hype Man" in his seventh season.

4. The "Kiss Cam".

5. The Warriors Dance Team formerly the "Warrior Girls".

6. T-Shirts whether through the parachute drop, t-shirt launch, or on the chairs.

7. There is always something on the chairs and sometimes give-aways at the door or the way in or out.

8. The "Dance Cam"

9. Contests with fans shooting baskets.

10. The performances at the opening, singing of the National Anthem, and half-time.

Peace, love, compassion, and blessings.

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basketball stream live How Much Will it Cost to Attend the 2016 Final Four?

basketball stream live And then there were four.

The 2016 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament has showcased an overwhelming number of last-minute comebacks, thrilling upsets and Cinderella stories, leaving virtually nothing to imagination over the last two weeks. The stage is now officially set for the Final Four in Houston, and with Villanova, Oklahoma, North Carolina and Syracuse each still in the mix, 2016 Final Four tickets at NRG Stadium won't be cheap on the secondary market.

Three ticketing options are available for fans looking to catch the action in Houston this weekend. An All Sessions Pass, which grants access to both Semi-final games on Saturday night as well as the Championship Game on Monday, will be the most expensive option. According to resale aggregator TiqIQ, the average price for an All Sessions Pass is now $1,756.93 and the cheapest is listed for $412.

While those price points are high enough to make even the biggest fan balk, it is worth noting that last year's All Sessions Pass at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis posted even greater ticket demand. Duke, Michigan State, Wisconsin and Kentucky rounded out the 2015 Final Four, and the average price for an All Sessions Pass in Indianapolis was a record-setting $1,985.36 on the resale market. The get-in price started from $551.

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For those fans conscious of their funds, perhaps the most fiscally responsible ticket option will be Final Four Session 1 tickets to both Semi-final games on Saturday night. Granting access to both Villanova-Oklahoma and North Carolina-Syracuse, Session 1 tickets currently own a secondary market average of $1,096.09 and the cheapest is listed for $256. Those numbers also fall slightly below last year's at Lucas Oil Stadium, where a Final Four Session 1 ticket averaged $1,108.95 and the get-in price was $290.

Record ticket prices are on the ledger for 2016 NCAA Championship Game tickets, however. As it stands now tickets to Monday's title game now own a secondary market average of $917.76, up 20.5% from last year's average of $761.34. The cheapest 2016 Championship Game tickets is now going for $134.

If lofty ticket prices weren't enough to break the piggy bank, expect to pay a pretty penny for flights into Houston. Priceline.com offers roundtrip flights from all four remaining school's home cities, including Philadelphia, Oklahoma City, Syracuse and Raleigh. The cheapest roundtrip airfare will be between Oklahoma City and Houston and ranges from $519-$552. The most expensive travel will come out of Philadelphia, where roundtrip airfare is priced between $1,052 and $1,243. Houston hotels on Priceline are also available at a much more affordable rate, with three-star hotels starting from $55 per night and four-star hotels listed from $219 each night.

Of the four remaining teams in this year's tournament, North Carolina was the last to claim a title back in 2009. Syracuse searches for its first championship since 2003 while Villanova last cut down the nets in 1985. Oklahoma has made four previous Final Four appearances but has never won a national championship.

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Rabu, 30 Maret 2016

basketball stream live Nitwit With The Best March Madness Bracket Didn't Pick A Winner

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James Kiki, a South Sudanese man living in Syracuse, New York, is currently the envy of millions of Americans right now.


With just three games left in the NCAA Tournament, he has picked 48 of 60 games correctly. His Final Four is perfect, and his Villanova-UNC title game pick and final score prediction seem very reasonable. 


His Yahoo.com bracket is currently tied with two others for first place in the entire pool, meaning he has done better than millions of other people who filled out brackets earlier this month. He seemingly has a one-in-three chance of nabbing the $50,000 cash prize awarded this year for the best bracket. 


In a way you could say Kiki is lucky. He doesn't care about college basketball and he's never filled out a bracket until this year when he decided to on a whim. 


"I was like, 'What the heck. Let me just try it because, why not?" Kiki said to Syracuse.com. 


Except, Kiki's luck is not going to pay off, because the silly man forgot to pick a national champion. HE JUST DIDN'T PUT ANYTHING AT ALL.


"I don't even want to think about it," he lamented. 


Kiki said he would've picked Villanova to win it all, but because he didn't choose a national champion, he's ineligible for any prizes at all.


As Deadspin pointed out, Kiki is not alone in his carelessness -- three of Yahoo's top 30 brackets have no assigned winner, likely because their bracket-picking system is confusing. Once a user goes through their previous 62 choices by just clicking on names, an easy-to-miss button to pick a national champion pops up at the top of the page.  


In conclusion, sports are dumb.  

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basketball stream live USWNT Stars Lead The Way In Concussion Research For Female Athletes

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The stars are aligning for researchers trying to learn more about how head injuries affect a woman's brain.


United States women's national team stars Abby Wambach, 35, who recently retired, and Megan Rapinoe, 30, announced on Tuesday that they plan to donate their brains for concussion research, according to The Lantern. Wambach and Rapinoe dropped their landmark decision during a discussion on Ohio State's campus regarding women's rights, gay rights and Wambach's October retirement.


Wambach, a deadly header of the ball during her playing days (she scored 67 goals with her head for the USWNT), suffered one of the most infamous concussions in women's soccer history in April 2013. After being hit hard by a ball during a National Women's Soccer League match, her team failed to immediately examine her condition and for 11 days didn't admit that she was at risk for a concussion -- failings that U.S. Soccer eventually apologized for. 





The pair's decision follows former USWNT World Cup-winner Brandi Chastain's March 3 pledge to donate her brain for chronic traumatic encephalopathy research, better known as CTE, a degenerative brain condition that's been linked to repetitive hits to the head. 


While Chastain, 47, Wambach and Rapinoe won't have their brains studied anytime soon -- CTE can only be diagnosed after death -- their decisions, as the most high-profile female athletes to pledge, could help inspire other women to donate their brains for concussion research. 


Out of over 300 brains currently in Dr. Ann McKee's brain bank, only seven are from women. Despite representing 50 percent of the population, no woman has ever been diagnosed with CTE -- a stark indicator of the gender gap in concussion research. Dr. Angela Colantonio, the Director of the Rehabilitation Sciences Institute at the University of Toronto, said at the first annual International Summit On Female Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) that of the 200 TBI studies she's analyzed, only 7 percent contained sex-specific data, according to ThinkProgress. 


The need for research is there. NCAA's chief medical officer Dr. Brian Hainline has said that female college athletes in soccer, softball and basketball have up to three times a greater risk for a concussion than their male counterparts. 



Not only are the chances of a concussion statistically higher for female athletes, but the stakes are too: Dr. Jessica Gill, a researcher at the National Institute of Health, said at TBI that women have higher levels of tau (the brain protein scientists look for in diagnosing CTE) after a concussion. The biological factors between men and women, including brain size, blood flow, hormone levels and neck strength all make it clear that male concussion research cannot serve as like-for-like information for women. 






The worrisome reports from TBI hopefully spur a moral initiative for more female athletes to pledge their brains, because as of today, there just aren't enough to study. Chastain, Wambach and Rapinoe are all World Cup winners and superstars in women's sports. Their influence over women of all sports and athletes of all ages is vast and incalculable, but invaluable nonetheless.


Their March pledges to donate will undoubtedly shape the future of how female brains are impacted by blows to the head, but until a test to diagnose CTE in the living is conceived, dividends from their decisions won't be seen for decades -- a fact that current female athletes can ill afford to play through.

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basketball stream live How Each Final Four Team Could Win The National Championship

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The 2016 Final Four is upon us, which means most of the madness is unfortunately coming to an end. Your bracket is probably busted and Warren Buffett won't be dishing out that cool million bucks your way, but there's still some basketball left to watch. Here's a look at what each remaining team needs to do if it wants to cut down the nets in Houston next Monday night.


Syracuse



The Orange have defied logic -- not just because they're the first ever 10-seed to reach the Final Four, but because even head coach Jim Boeheim didn't plan on making it this far. This is a Syracuse team that lost to lowly St. John's and Georgetown, and was swept in three games by Pittsburgh, including early on in the ACC Tournament.


And yet, the Orange are here because of two highly gifted wings: freshman Malachi Richardson and senior Michael Gbinije, the Duke transfer. Both can score, and maybe just as importantly, both combine to give Boeheim's patented 2-3 matchup zone tremendous length on the perimeter. This limits high post entry passes and in turn, limits the 3-pointer, a classic weakness of any zone. From an offensive standpoint, however, shooting less than 37 percent from the floor -- as the Cuse did against Virginia in the Elite Eight -- won't suffice. The Orange get about 35 percent of their offense from the long ball, and for a team that has struggled to put the ball in the hoop all year, Syracuse desperately needs to be hitting from deep to notch the second title in school history.


North Carolina



Arguably the most talented and the deepest team in the field, Carolina relies heavily on its senior-laden roster, similarly to how it did during its 2005 and 2009 title runs under Roy Williams. The key for the Heels is quite simply not to change -- their average margin of victory in the tournament is 16 points. A renewed commitment to defense has been crucial for a team that ranks first nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency, per KenPom. Moreover, the Tar Heels rank first in the nation in 2-point attempts and makes. Because of their sensational offensive prowess, they're under a lot of pressure to score against UNC.


They'll need to play a nearly flawless offensive game. Consider that a hyper-efficient Notre Dame team connected on 50 percent from deep, 55 percent from the floor and 78 percent from the stripe, and yet lost by double digits in the regional final. Senior trigger-man Marcus Paige has finally discovered his shooting stroke, senior forward Brice Johnson (Paige's roommate and close friend) just notched his school record 23rd double-double of the season (ranking fifth nationally) and ACC Sixth Man of the Year Isaiah Hicks continues to present a host of matchup issues with his vast skill set. Carolina is 17-2 this season when the junior power forward scores 10 points or more. 


Oklahoma



Buddy Hield is the best player in college basketball for a laundry list of reasons: Nobody has made more threes (154), nobody draws more attention defensively and nobody has galvanized a team quite like Hield. His 25.5 points per game is second best in America, and yet it's his remarkable efficiency that stands out. Hield is Curryesque when it comes to the college landscape. He converts over 50 percent from the field, 47 percent from distance and 88 percent from the stripe. But what makes OU a real contender is the balance of Lon Kruger's club.


Flanking Hield in the backcourt is Jordan Woodard and fellow senior Isaiah Cousins, who switched positions with one another before the season. The 6-foot-4 Cousins is the lead guard now, responsible for running the show and distributing to Hield and Woodard, who himself made a Herculean leap this year. As a sophomore, Woodard made a miserable 25 percent of his 3-point attempts. As a junior, that clip has jumped to 46 percent.


As a result, Oklahoma scores about 20 points per game in transition, and has become the second best 3-point shooting team in the country. Kruger is just one of two coaches to take five schools to the tournament, and his willingness to rely on the long ball has been the ultimate coup for the Sooners.


Villanova



The Wildcats know how to win. Their 95 wins over the past three seasons are tops nationally, and don't forget about the three consecutive Big East regular season championships. Villanova features a wonderful defensive group that grinds out late game stops as well as anybody. As a whole, they rank seventh in adjusted defensive efficiency, per KenPom -- and think about the hurt they just put on Kansas, the top overall seed and itself a great offensive team. KU shot just 27 percent from 3 and scored a season-low 59 points. The full-court press that Villanova employs presents a litany of problems. It turns you over and speeds you up.


Jay Wright's team, back in the Final Four for the first time since 2009, can also score the ball. Third-Team All-American swingman Josh Hart (15 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists) is a terrific two-way player who creates a ton of offense from the middle of the floor. Senior point guard Ryan Archidacono may be the toughest player Wright has ever coached, and he's playing the best basketball of his career. And 6-foot-6 Kris Jenkins (11-24 from 3 in the tournament) has enjoyed a shooting terror that has extended opposing defenses much farther away from the basket than they would like. 


Watch my latest for Bleacher Report to find out which remaining head coach has done the best job this season.


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 Bleacher Report Video for my full college hoops analysis throughout the entire tournament. And tune in to my SiriusXM Radio show Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3-6 p.m. EST on Bleacher Report channel 83.

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basketball stream live The Internet Can't Get Enough Of The Freakiest Game Ending Ever

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Some sports highlights are so crazy and rare, they are worth revisiting. Even in youth basketball.


A heartbreaking moment in which a Kansas middle school lost because a ball got stuck on the rim as time expired has once again gone viral.


Reddit and some mainstream outlets picked up on the clip, which was orginally posted to YouTube in February 2015.


As his team was trailing by 26-25 with seconds left in a league tournament semifinal against the Riley County Falcons, Cameron Minihan of the Rock Creek Mustangs drove the lane and put up a runner. The ball danced on the rim and settled there. Game over. Viral clip born.


Now it's reborn.


"I was shocked when I saw it last night," Rock Creek Athletic Director Scott Harshbarger told The Huffington Post on Wednesday. "It's such an intriguing story, I guess."


But the story didn't end there. Minihan created a legacy that physically remains at the school to this day. For his freaky near-miss, a sporting goods company named Goalrilla felt so bad for Rock Creek that it donated a basket, Harshbarger said. It's standing in the parking lot where kids regularly shoot hoops.


And Minihan, now a freshman at the high school on the same campus, is constantly reminded of his viral moment.


Harshbarger said, "The kids say, 'Hey, Cameron, thanks for the basketball hoop.' "




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basketball stream live This Is, By Far, The Most Humiliating Posterization Of All Time

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There’s a reason why when the likes of LeBron James and Aaron Gordon hurdle through the paint and toward the basket, ball in hand, opposing players duck out of the way. No defender wants to get posterized. No one wants to get embarrassed. And no one wants whatever happened to this Houston Baptist player to happen to them.


In a late-season conference matchup between the University of the Incarnate Word and the Huskies, an unremarkable fast break turned into an unauthorized piggyback ride, as Shawn Johnson’s highlight-reel dunk became a moment to forget for defender Asa Cantwell. It was, it must be said, completely humiliating.





By our count, the post-slam piggyback lasted about 10 ticks.








Poor Huskies. Obviously they lost the matchup, 97-86, with dunker Johnson tallying 27 points, eight rebounds and a portfolio clip for the ages.

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basketball stream live 5 Dominant Basketball Teams That Weren't Accused Of Ruining The Sport

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After another hardwood masterpiece on Monday night, one statistic climbed to 73. Another jumped to 497. 


The two numbers tell the tale of the University of Connecticut's women's basketball team, its dominance and, somehow, the disrespect it's constantly forced to face. With Monday's Elite Eight victory, the Huskies have now won 73 consecutive contests. As of Monday's Final Four berth-earning W, it's now been 497 days -- over 16 months -- since they last left the gym with a loss on their hands.


This past weekend, however, UConn made the headlines not for their superiority or their spectacular play, their long-standing tradition of greatness or the even longer hours they log in the gym to stay on top, but because, according to sportswriter Dan Shaughnessy, they are "killing [the] women's game."


"Watch" the Huskies play? He rhetorically asked himself. "No thanks."






Facing a firestorm of criticism for what many saw as poorly concealed misogyny, Shaughnessy doubled down on his comments on Monday, saying that he tunes in to sports for the aspect of "competition," and that when a team is this talented, their impeccability becomes a negative simply because they are so damn good at their craft.


The problem with this rationale is that we've had dominant teams in the past. We've had winners and record breakers that draw hordes to living room couches, gluing eyes to the screen to watch Jordan soar, Tiger putt or Mantle swing. That is, we've had dozens of supremely talented teams that barely anyone cares to complain about.


For what reason, then, are the Huskies and their 16 straight months of victory after victory viewed as a detriment to the sport while other past teams and their runs are not? We think you can figure that out. 


The take we saw this past weekend was incorrect and insidious. So to show just how flawed its logic was, here are five legendary, dynastic basketball teams that weren't accused of "killing" the game.


 


John Wooden's 1963-1975 UCLA men's basketball programs



From the 1963-1964 season to the 1974-1975 season, the brilliantly coached, star-studded Bruins won a blistering 10 national titles in 12 years. The teams tallied perfect 30-0 records in four of those campaigns and notched only one loss in three others. Graced with the presence of sideline leader John Wooden and players like Lew Alcindor -- better known today as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar -- the club was the cornerstone of college hoops for over a decade. 


 


Bill Russell's 1960s' Boston Celtics



Behind five-time MVP Bill Russell and his long-as-the-night arms, the Boston Celtics painted the 1960s' NBA scene green. The franchise won 11 titles in 13 years, riding Russell's leadership, length and loyalty to record after record. The Celtics' 11 championships in that decade and change are more than any other franchise, excluding the Lakers, has earned to this date.


  


The Dream Team: the 1992 U.S. men's Olympic basketball club



A power lineup from A to Z, the Dream Team romped its way to the 1992 Olympic podium, dismantling and disheartening every foe on its way to that gleaming gold medal. Imagine having M.J. and Larry Bird fill the lanes on a Magic Johnson fast break. Or having John Stockton come off the bench to provide a one-two punch with his parter in crime, Karl Malone. Clyde Drexler, Patrick Ewing and David Robinson waiting for their own moments to strike. Charles Barkley blocking out, chasing the boards. The myth is true: The team was that good. After all, they took down their opponents by an average of 44 points per game.


And with that squad came basketball as we know it today.


 


Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls 



It barely even needs to be said. When a sweaty, exhausted, elated Michael Jordan hoisted the Larry O'Brien trophy into the air in June 1991, he gave birth to a new era in the NBA. We all know the highlights from the Bulls' dynasty: M.J. soared and shot and up-and-under-ed his way to six titles in eight years, making the city of Chicago see red as his legend grew whenever he stepped onto the floor. They won '91-'93, and '96-'98, with the two-year title drought coming only when M.J. took his hiatus from the game of basketball. He was Michael. That was it. The first first-name player. And along with David Stern, he helped usher in the league's supremely successful global platform, as audiences all over the world climbed and clawed their way for any opportunity to see His Airness take flight.


 


Today's Golden State Warriors



Barring a collapse, Golden State is just days away from shattering one of the most revered records in all of basketball. Set by Jordan's Bulls in 1995-1996, the 72-10 win-loss record is the ultimate tape measure of an NBA team's success -- so for (likely) breaking that alone, Golden State should get a spot on this list. But they've also broken about a dozen other records this year, as Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson help redefine the small ball game.


If you ever oohed and aahed over Jordan or Johnson, if you ever wore Bruins blue or Boston green with pride, you should appreciate the passion and play of the UConn women's team. They are dominant because they are dedicated. They are successful because they have honed their skills more than any of us could ever imagine. As champions, they have changed the game. And you can be sure that they've changed it for the better.

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Selasa, 29 Maret 2016

basketball stream live Coaching Beyond the Court: What I Learned from Coach Jim Calhoun

basketball stream live I'll never forget the moment. I stood on the court with my head in my hands. Tyus Edney threw the ball in the air and the final buzzer sounded. All I wanted was to be alone and lick my wounds out of sight.

But there was coach right by my side. He hugged me, and with a few caring words made me feel like I could keep going. That's Coach Calhoun. He's always been there for me--since the day he walked into my house to recruit me.

Since I met him in 1991, he's changed my life completely. I remember he came into my mom's living room and swept her off her feet. I think she could sense that he had good intentions that he actually cared. Moms have a way of doing that.

After that day, I went from a kid with a dream to an athlete with a real shot. Eventually I'd go on to be his player, his friend, his family, and now--his successor.

But back in '95 going into our Elite 8 game against UCLA--I didn't know all that laid ahead for us. All I knew was the importance of that game. I wanted to win, but really I wanted to give coach something that could compare to all that he gave to me. His first time making it to the Final 4.

THE GAME

There are some moments that shift the trajectory of your career, and this was one of mine. As we stepped into the stadium the momentum was on our side, and I was ready.

I wish I could write a different story that I could say "we did it." That Coach Calhoun looked at us with pride, as we brought home the W. I'd tell you how we went on and won the whole thing.

But here's the thing about Basketball--the ball doesn't always bounce your way.

That day in 1995--it just wasn't there for me. I shot 1-6, I fouled out, and I sat on the bench as we lost.

THE HUG

What coach did for me in that moment impacted me forever. It's the kind of thing they don't show fans in replays. Coach Calhoun and I teamed up with Dove Men+Care to recount this day. Because when it comes to coaching, these are the moments that should be seen.

In the moment when I wanted to disappear, there was Coach Calhoun hugging me saying:

"I'm proud of you Kevin. You did so much to get us here."

THE LESSON

His words did more than reassure me, they taught me something that's lasted a lifetime. Coach wasn't thinking about himself--he was thinking about me, and not just as his player. It hit me: for him, winning wasn't only about the score, the fame, or the trophies. It was about helping all of his players grow as people.

It takes strength for a coach to do that.

In the locker room I cried with my teammates, my brothers. At one point, it would have been hard for me to admit that. But the emotion we shared only proved how much we cared about our team, our friends, and our family. That day bonded Connecticut in an unbreakable way.

THE IMPACT

What makes my relationship with Coach Calhoun so special is that we've never really stopped supporting each other through all these years. It's made us both stronger--as coaches, players, and people.

Now, I'm out here to make him proud.

He trusted me enough to leave Connecticut in my hands. 20 years after that hug, I'm lucky enough to be with this team through another March Madness. We've made it to the tournament when many doubted we would, and hit an impossible buzzer beater to get there.

But sometimes we'll miss those shots. And in those moments I know I won't be thinking about the number on the scoreboard. I'll be thinking of Coach Jim Calhoun, and the care he showed me on that day and every day. I'll be thinking about what really matters for a basketball team--and that's being there for each other.

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basketball stream live New Rochelle, NY Schools Give Students Notable Choices in Athletics

basketball stream live We have all heard about the benefits of physical activity for children, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) agrees with the many upsides of fitness: "Sports help children develop physical skills, get exercise, make friends, have fun, learn to play as a member of a team, learn to play fair, and improve self-esteem."

To implement these important concepts, the New Rochelle schools offer an unusually wide array of athletic opportunities for students K-12. At the highest level, this support resulted in four of our athletes recently signing National Letters of Intent to play college athletics at Coppin State (women's basketball), Northeastern University (women's track and field), University of Alabama (women's track and field), and Long Island University-Post (football).

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For all of our students grades 7-12, comprehensive athletic activities take place throughout the school year. As examples, we provide opportunities for our student-athletes that include varsity and junior varsity rugby teams and a merged ski team with one other school district in our area. More broadly, our program operates on three levels, spanning 77 middle school, junior varsity and varsity teams in 19 sports for both boys and girls. Overall, these athletic programs provide rich experiences for nearly 1,600 students.

For younger children, we expand upon existing physical education classes through work with community organizations like the Boys and Girls Club. Through this collaboration, we offer elementary basketball teams at each of our six K-5 schools. For the summer, we work hand-in-hand with a local non-profit, Backyard Sports, to create a four-week Camp Shape sports program for students in grades 3-7.

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More recently, supporting and guiding students in these many endeavors has resulted in significant athletic achievements. Five teams (boys varsity cross country, girls varsity cross country, girls varsity soccer, girls varsity swimming, and girls varsity tennis) earned prestigious New York State Public High School Athletic Association (NYSPHSAA) Scholar-Athlete Team Awards. These are given when all individuals on a team maintain report card averages of 90 percent or greater during a sport's season. Other highlights include the varsity rugby team's trip to the state championship game last spring; a New York State semifinals game for the football team; a Section One semifinals appearance for girls soccer; and a volleyball team that advanced to the Sectional semifinals.

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We are proud to create as many avenues as possible for our students to learn, grow and succeed. Focus in this area demonstrates the strong commitment our Board of Education, administration, faculty, staff, and coaches have to our core belief in educating the whole child.

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basketball stream live A New Definition for March Madness

basketball stream live I'm starting to think there are two definitions for March Madness. The first being the one everyone already knows; March Madness: (noun) The American NCAA Division I basketball championship tournament that happens primarily during the month of March.

Then another definition I've recently come up with March Madness: (noun) a strong feeling of regret and anger as a result of choosing teams that completely ruin your NCAA basketball bracket. To use it in a sentence: It is almost April and I've got March Madness prior to the Final Four and Championship games.

Yes, I am one of many who have completely ruined brackets. I even went wild with one of my brackets and came close to being a possible winner, if Virginia hadn't lost. Anyways, despite my March Madness I've gathered Sage predictions on what could happen. Agree or disagree, I think your March Madness should subside mid-April.


North Carolina will win the 2016 #NCAAB Championship #marchmadness: http://ift.tt/1MQyafN

Felix T.



Oklahoma will win the #NCAA Championship. #sooners #marchmadness: http://ift.tt/1MQy9II

Sage



Buddy Hield will be the #ncaab Tournament MVP #marchmadness: http://ift.tt/1MQyafR

Felix T.



UNC will beat Syracuse in the #FinalFour to advance to the NCAA Championship game. #ncaab #marchmadness: http://ift.tt/1MQyafX

Sage



Buddy Hield will lead Oklahoma to defeat Villanova in the Final Four. #finalfour #marchmadness: http://ift.tt/1MQyawd

Sage

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basketball stream live 10 Records The Golden State Warriors Have Already Broken This Year

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The record is all anyone in sports circles can talk about these days. Spoken of with a special emphasis -- implied italics, underlying underlining -- the record is the 72-10 best-ever win-loss benchmark currently held by the 1995-1996 Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls, which Stephen Curry and his Golden State Warriors are trying to top.


The NBA’s (blue and) golden boys are close. To date, the Warriors are sitting at 66-7, and with just nine games left until the playoffs roll around, it’s looking like win-loss history will indeed be made in a matter of days, barring a collapse.


But lost in the shuffle of the record are a bevy of other notable, no-way-but-how benchmarks that Golden State has already reached this year, largely thanks to the downtown heroics of Curry and backcourt mate Klay Thompson. So while we all count down the games until that one well-known record is set, here are 10 other feats that the Warriors have already accomplished this season.



Nov. 2 | Largest win-margin over a campaign's first four games


With blowout victories over the New Orleans Pelicans (twice), Houston Rockets and Memphis Grizzlies to start the year, Golden State kicked off its quest for another ring by tallying the largest win-margin ever (100 points) over a team’s first four contests.


Dec. 5 | Best-ever start to a season


Taking down the Toronto Raptors, 112-109, the Warriors clinched the best start to a season of any professional sports team ever, at 21-0. They’d eventually reach 24-0 before falling to the Milwaukee Bucks on Dec. 12.


Feb. 10 | Best-ever All-Star break record 


The defending champs breezed into All-Star Weekend with a 48-4 record -- the best record at the break in league history.



Feb. 27 | Quickest playoff berth ever


Golden State officially clinched a postseason spot on Feb. 27, doing so more quickly than any team ever had before. There were nearly two months remaining in the regular season at the time of the berth.


Feb. 27 | Most single-season threes by one player


Pouring in 12 triples in one game, Curry became the sole owner of the single-season three-point record. Who’d he knock off that top spot? Himself. Naturally -- somehow unsurprisingly -- Curry now holds the top three spots, all time





March 7 | First player to hit 300 threes in one campaign


In a win over the Orlando Magic, Curry dropped his 300th trey of the year -- becoming the first player in league lore to do so.


March 7 | Longest-ever home court winning streak


In that same victory, Curry’s team became the first ever to tally 45 consecutive regular season home victories, a streak that extends back to its 2014-2015 campaign. The Bulls Of Old had previously held the record, winning 44 straight in the mid-90s. As of today, the Warriors have won 53 consecutive regular season matchups at Oracle Arena.


March 25 | Most threes in one game


Thanks to a helping hand from the Dallas Mavericks, the two teams combined for the most made triples in single-game history (39). Again, Golden State broke its own benchmark. It had been just 14 days since the Warriors and the Portland Trail Blazers had scratched their names onto that long-distance record with 37.



March 25 | Team record for threes hit in one season


With their spate of made threes that night (21), the Warriors nabbed the league’s single-season record for treys as well (933).


March 27 | First teammate duo to drain 600 threes


The Splash Brothers swished and splashed their way to another downtown first: With nine threes made against the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday, Thompson and Curry became the first pair of teammates to combine for 600 triples in one year


We still don't know whether Golden State will top Chicago's win-loss record. But it's already clear that Curry and his 2015-2016 Warriors will decorate the NBA's record book for some time.

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Senin, 28 Maret 2016

basketball stream live What Sets Buddy Hield’s March Madness Run Apart

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With his latest 37-point outburst over No. 1 Oregon on Saturday, Oklahoma senior Buddy Hield has thrust himself into historic March Madness territory. Suddenly, the comparisons to Stephen Curry are flying in hot and loud. As unfair as it is to link a 22-year-old shooting guard to the reigning NBA MVP, it'd also be a disservice not to adorn him with comparisons as well.


After all, in some ways, Hield is having a better NCAA Tournament run than Curry did during his own iconic turn as a sophomore at Davidson in 2008, when he dropped 40, 30, 33 and 25 points against Gonzaga, Georgetown, Wisconsin and Kansas, respectively, nearly leading his Cinderella squad to the Final Four.


While Curry was amazing, Hield's run is even more impressive once you consider how efficiently he has played. In that respect, he has eclipsed 2008 Curry, which is especially impressive considering 2016 Curry is eight games away from posting the most efficient NBA season ever.




Curry's 40-point outburst against Gonzaga in the 2008 Round of 64.


When comparing Hield's 2016 March Madness performances against Curry's 2008, there's not much separating the look of their games and their top-line numbers. Their quick strokes and similar games let them score in comparable bunches -- 32 points per game for Curry in 2008 and 29.3 points per game for Hield so far this tournament. On Saturday, Hield also became the first player since Curry to score 100 points and hit over 15 3-pointers before the Final Four, and the first player to average over 25 points per game going into the Final Four since 1990 -- a distinction Curry would have earned had his Wildcats not fallen to Kansas 59-57 in the Elite Eight. 


Look at the numbers behind the numbers, however, and you'll begin to appreciate just how efficient Hield has become. Curry shot 46.7 percent from the field and 44.8 percent from three in 2008 -- impressive numbers on their own, but slightly less gaudy when compared to the 56.7 percent from the field and 47.5 percent from three that the unconscious Hield is currently shooting. 


To appreciate the percentages, we have to get away from them: Curry took 90 shots to score 128 points in his four games, while Hield's taken only 67 shots to hit 117 total points. A difference of 23 shots is nearly an entire game's worth of shooting, and it has led to almost a 10 percent difference in the pair's true shooting percentage, a metric that accounts for all of a player's shot attempts. Hield, possessing some sort of robotic shooting stroke, has a true shooting percentage of 72.8 percent, while Curry's 2008 percentage was 63.1; an impressive percentage, but again, nothing compared to Hield's.


To put that into perspective, that 9.1 percent gap is the difference between shooting like Kevin Durant and shooting like Zach LaVine.





Hield nailed 8 of his 13 3-point attempts against Oregon on Saturday.


There are a few simple explanations for Hield's superiority. Compared to Curry, he gets to the free-throw line a bit more (28 attempts for Hield against Curry's 24), makes more of his 3-pointers and shoots way fewer of them -- Curry took 12 more 3-point shots in 2008 (52 versus Hield's 40), but Hield has only made three fewer in total (19 versus Curry's 22 makes).


But individual basketball statistics are also a product of how one functions within a team, and that's where we should give Curry some credit. Hield has playmakers like Jordan Woodard and Isaiah Cousins to his left and right, while Davidson relied heavily on Curry for the bulk of their shot attempts, with guard Jason Richards providing the only other outlet on the perimeter in the 2008 Wildcat offense. With a better team around him, Hield can one-up Curry in another big way: by winning a National Championship. 


By necessity, Curry had to do more, but Hield's efficiency is also a credit to his improved ability off the bounce and inside the paint. Just look at how he made his defender short-circuit on Saturday before draining this jumper: 





This is where we should note that there are really more similarities between the two players than differences. To even reach these lofty March Madness heights and shed presumptive overachiever tags, Hield and Curry have had to maximize their talent through logging long hours in the gym. Both are undersized for their position and have seen their respective NBA prospects slighted by so-called experts. For Curry's part, his shot has gotten better every year of his career. Hield, who was an atrocious 23.8 percent 3-point shooter as a freshman, reportedly puts up 500-700 shots a day after practice -- the kind of work ethic that gets you noticed by notorious workout warrior Kobe Bryant. 


In many ways, they are more alike than different. Much like Curry in the 2009 NBA Draft, Hield's seemingly week-to-week improvements have bumped him from a borderline first-round pick and future D-Leaguer into draft lottery consideration.


Who knows where Hield's NBA career will go. But even if he doesn't become the next Stephen Curry in the NBA, he's already become it in college -- and then some.

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