Wednesday, October 14, 2009

On Rush Limbaugh and why he can't buy the Rams

Rush Limbaugh is out of a bid to be a minority (irony!) owner in of the St. Louis Rams.

And over at The Corner at the National Review, Kathryn Lopez unveils this gem:
Rush Limbaugh is not an acceptable sports investor because of his politics. How else to interpret the state of a sports world where Keith Olbermann can be on Sunday Night Football and Rush Limbaugh's hard-earned money can't be spent as a partial owner of a team in a sport he loves?
First of all, it isn't his politics. The Center for Responsive Politics looked into where the political money from the National Football League (NFL) went to.

And many of the owners that made political donations were, well, conservative. Dean Spanos, the owner of the San Diego Chargers (I'm typing this from the San Diego airport, actually) was a bundler for John McCain.

Daniel Snyder, the owner of the Washington Redskins, has given $199,000 to Republicans and $1,500 to Democrats.

Robert McNair, the owner of the Houston Texans, has given lots of money to Republicans, including Mitch McConnell, James Inhofe and Rudy Giuliani.

In other words, you can be conservative and be an owner; in fact, if you look at the percentages of money given to Republicans versus Democrats for most teams (the Rams, ironically, are one of the exceptions to this rule), Republicans got more money from NFL people than Democrats did.

As for the Keith Olbermann comment (he's the new bogeyman of the Right), did Lopez forget that he already had his chance to be an NFL commenter?

Limbaugh had to resign after this gem on ESPN's NFL Countdown pre-game show:
"I think what we've had here is a little social concern in the NFL. The media has been very desirous that a black quarterback do well," Limbaugh said. "There is a little hope invested in McNabb, and he got a lot of credit for the performance of this team that he didn't deserve. The defense carried this team."
McNabb, according to the Philadelphia Eagles website, "is the Eagles all time leader in pass attempts, completions, yards and TDs."

The previous three seasons, the Eagles had been to the playoffs three times and the conference finals twice in a row. In 2003, the year where Limbaugh made his idiotic statements, McNabb again led the Eagles to the conference finals. The next year, they made the Super Bowl.

In other words, not only was Limbaugh's "analysis" of McNabb wrong, it was just plain race-baiting for no reason.

So why can't Limbaugh be "partial owner of a team in a sport he loves" as Lopez asked?

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell put it best:
"I have said many times before that we are all held to a higher standard here," the commissioner continued. "I think divisive comments are not what the NFL is all about. I would not want to see those kind of comments from people who are in a responsible position within the NFL. No. Absolutely not."
In other words, Rush Limbaugh is not the sort of person the NFL wants to associate itself with. It's as simple as that.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Highlights from the USA - Honduras game

The United States of America vs Honduras game happened Saturday night, but odds are that you didn't see it. Why? It was on closed circuit TV only in the United States. Yeah, dumb.

But here are the highlights from the best game you never saw, unless you watched it on an internet stream.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Golf, Rugby new Olympic sports for 2016

So reports ESPN:
After more than a century on the sidelines, golf will return to the Olympics at the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro. Rugby, last played in 1924, is coming back as well.

Both were reinstated for the 2016 and 2020 Games after a vote Friday by the International Olympic Committee. They are the first sports added since triathlon and taekwondo joined the program for the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
Yet baseball is no longer an Olympic sport.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Confessions of a MLB ball hawker

Crazy.
Hample is a pro. He carries a cap for the home team and the visitors (more on that shortly). He has a streak to maintain (at least one ball per game attended since 1993), a reputation to uphold (he's written a book about ball-snagging, which essentially makes him the Dan Brown of books about ball-snagging) and an ongoing competition to win (he's currently in first place in an online ball-snagging league, and yes, there actually is an online ball-snagging league).
I've been to a number of minor league baseball games and two major league baseball games in my life, and I've never really been close to snagging a ball. The closest I've come is when I was at batting practice before a San Diego Padres game in 1998.

It was a game where Mark McGwire hit a home run (I remember two home runs, but apparently he never hit two home runs in a game while in San Diego in his 70 home run season, so my memory must be mistaken) -- but it was in batting practice where McGwire hit a blast to left field that was directly at me -- but five rows too far beyond me.

That wasn't his gut

From ESPN's recap of the Los Angeles Dodgers' 3-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Divisional Series:
A sinking line drive sailed through the chilly evening air toward Matt Holliday. All he needed to do was make the catch and St. Louis would have a series-tying victory.

Instead, the ball smacked him in the gut and dropped to the grass -- and the Cardinals never recovered.
I was watching the game, and I can assure you that the ball didn't hit him in the gut, but a little bit more... sensitive area.

There's video at that link above.

Newly found Babe Ruth footage excites baseball afficianados

A cool story from the New York Times:
Babe Ruth has struck out looking. Displeased, he leans on his bat, right hand on his hip, and looks back at the umpire. He utters something that can only be imagined. Lou Gehrig, on deck, leans on his bat, too, as if he has seen this act before. Ruth finally shuffles away, head turned to the umpire, dragging his bat through the dirt.

The scene, along with eight seconds of footage never publicly seen of Ruth playing the outfield, was part of an 8-millimeter film found by a New Hampshire man in his grandfather’s home movie collection. It provides a rare look at Ruth, a showman even in defeat.
Cool stuff. Head over to that link to see the video.

Marring an otherwise good article on Letterman

The New Yorker has an otherwise good blog post on David Letterman, but this mistake shows that the person who wrote the article obviously hasn't watched The Late Show with David Letterman in a while, let alone watch it on a regular basis:
But from the beginning things were a little off. Letterman made a show of running across the back of the stage before walking out to greet the audience, and then he went off to the side to talk to someone for a second or two. It’s hard to say what that was all about—nerves, blowing off steam, a pretend escape from the theatre?
The Late Show does this gag every day.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Get pumped for 30 for 30

ESPN is doing something crazy for it's 30 year anniversary -- doing 30 sports documentaries about 30 sports stories in the past 30 years.

And if this doesn't get you pumped for it... then there's something wrong with you. The first one airs on Tuesday October 6,so set your DVRs.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

NBA lays down the Twitter law

No using PDAs, cell phones or other electronic devices by players, says the NBA's Twitter rules.
The league has defined "during games" as the period of time beginning 45 minutes before the start of a game and ending "after the postgame locker room is open to the media and coaches and players have first fulfilled their obligation to be available to media attending the game."

"During games" also includes halftime, according to the memo.
Then Milwaukee Bucks player Charlie Villanueva famously tweeted during halftime of an NBA game last year.

What can make toddlers fighting with giant foam fingers even funnier?

Having ESPN boxing analyst Teddy Atlas call the action.