Conor McGregor, Death of a Sportsman
The old Conor was a poor kid from the streets of Dublin who just wanted his piece of the pie. The new Conor is a wealthy man with his own whiskey label willing to go corporate for anyone.
Read MoreThe old Conor was a poor kid from the streets of Dublin who just wanted his piece of the pie. The new Conor is a wealthy man with his own whiskey label willing to go corporate for anyone.
Read MoreIt was the NHL Final series of 2011. Vancouver versus Boston. It was more than just the best chance for a Canadian NHL team to win the Stanley Cup since 1993.
The NBA season is upon us. And if you haven’t noticed, Canada is on the verge of becoming a hoops nation. Or maybe we should say Hoops Nation. But there are lingering questions of whether Basketball Canada can get its act together to employ all the best talent the nation is providing.
Read MoreLegendary baseball manager Leo Durocher once growled, “Show me a good loser, and I‘ll show you a loser.”
Read MoreFor a moment he was lost in the throng. Then, like Gandhi emerging from the mass, he pulled free of the adoring throng. The noise, the exuberance of the crowd, their cameras soaking up the moment. All to proclaim. Tiger Woods, the People’s Champion.
Read MoreThe problem with giving an athlete all the money he’ll ever need in his life is that he’s going to ask you for something that you can’t guarantee— no matter how much money you have. And that is a championship.
Read MoreNFL Fans, We Need To Talk About Failure
When your team loses a heartbreaker, blame has to go somewhere. Sometimes the blame goes the correct way but for the wrong reasons.
Read MoreIf you’re one of those who think that today’s uber-rich athletes are maybe a little got up on their societal importance, last week was not a great time to be a sports fan. From Nike playing the Colin Kaepernick race card to Serena Williams pleading for women’s rights, it was the agony of the feed from the culture mavens.
In retail the time-honoured phrase is “Under-promise and over-deliver”.
In sports you might amend that to: “If your promise something you’d better deliver”.
It’s the next frontier of TV sports broadcasting. Naturally, the Canadian Football League is leading the way.
What? The CFL schooling all the big boys on cutting-edge telecasts?
Read MoreAfter six months of no NFL football, fans are waking from their long sleep to discover that the league has tried yet again to fix its rules. This time it’s not to increase scoring— although the new rules will probably jack up scoring.
I'm On Team Roquan
Not Team 'Team'
If it takes someone like Roquan Smith every once and a while to reveal to fans (those who want to pay attention) that their NFL team’m ownership groups can’t change and that’s why we are losers, so be it. I'd rather cheer for a person fighting for themselves than a family screwing over an entire city.
Read MoreWe sit in the golfing trough between the 147th Open Championship and the 109th Canadian Open, two of the longest-standing tournament dates on the calendar. After the Open wound down in Carnoustie, Scotland, with Italian Francesco Molinari as champion, many of the top players were on a red-eye flight back to Canada to fulfill their obligations in playing Canada’s top tournament at Glen Abbey in Oakville, Ontario.
Read MoreNeymar dives. But what’s new? Football players have always tried to find the line and cross it. To place the blame over the antics of the most egregious violators on the whole sport is just a bit unfair. As unfair as Neymar throwing himself to the ground, looking for attention.
Read MoreSo the penetrating question of the 2018 World Cup of Soccer— better known as Putin’s Festival of Bribery: Why do the large, powerful nations have short national anthems while the smaller countries have ones that go on forever? God Save The Queen (England) is over faster than you can save Bobby Charlton. But Iceland and Peru seem more like a six-part Netflix series than an anthem.
Read MoreAs far as Phil Mickelson is concerned the GA in USGA probably stands for “god awful”. In his putting protest against course conditions in Round Three of this year’s Mens U.S. Open (run by the U.S. Golf Association) Mickelson pitted his sterling reputation against the prestige of the USGA.
Read MoreWatching the super horse Justify cruise to the Triple Crown this past weekend by winning the Belmont Stakes in New York City was a sublime moment for lovers of sports. The three-year-old became just the 13th horse in the modern history of American thoroughbred racing to win the three jewels of racing’s Triple Crown.
Read MoreThe World Is Not Enough
There was a time when calling Paul Pogba one of the best players in the world was not controversial. How much changes in two years. In the midst of an uncertain future with Manchester United, Pogba leads France into the World Cup with the most talented squad in the world. Will taking home the biggest prize in the sport be enough to stave off the doubters?
Read MoreWhen did sports leagues decide the the best way to decide their biggest games was to throw away the rule book and procedures at the most stressful moments of the championship? To ignore the standards that got the teams to the Finals?
Read MoreThis week the NFL re-cast its rules about kneeling in protest during the Star Spangled Banner. As is their wont, the NFL owners made things worse, not better, with their compromise. Stated simply, players and coaches must stand for the playing of the anthem before NFL games. However, those with objections are told they can hide out in the dressing room until game time.