Category: General Sports (Page 60 of 112)

T.O. comes to ESPN writer’s aid

Imagine the shock ESPN.com Page 2 contributor Sam Alipour had when he saw a car racing towards him following an ESPYS after-party Thursday night. Perhaps more shocking than being blasted by a car was who was there to help him until the paramedics came: Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Terrell Owens.

Terrell Owens was standing over me. I’m told he was the first do-gooder on the scene of the accident. That he helped me to my feet and off the street to safe ground. That he didn’t leave my side. It seems the mercurial Dallas Cowboys receiver is my hero. But my hero looks scared, and this scares me.

“Wow, you all right, man?” Owens kept asking me, but in a manner that would suggest there is no possible way that I, in fact, could be all right. “Don’t move. Just sit there. Breathe. Don’t move.”

I’m fine, nothing to worry about, but Owens is so concerned, so kind, and I’m so touched by this — we hardly know each other — that I think my lip is quivering. There’s a good chance I could break down like T.O. at that news conference. (It’s just not fair. That’s my receiver, man.)

“So, T.O. was nice, huh?” says the medic who took my blood pressure inside the ambulance. “Boy, you think you know somebody, but the media doesn’t tell you the whole story. You never know how they really are.”

Guilty as charged.

When the medics were done with the paperwork (note: patient has lacerations, bruised knee, stained shorts, etc.) I headed back to the street to deal with the police, meet the driver and thank my hero … but T.O. was gone. He didn’t care to wait for the cameras, the spotlight, the attention. Didn’t need to hear my thanks. He simply vanished into the dark night, alone (well, with his bodyguard, also a nice man) like a samurai, his work complete.

We hammer the guy for being an ass, so it’s only fair to commend him when he does a great thing. We’d like to think that any honorable human being would do the same thing T.O. did, but how many people would gaze astonishingly at what happened and allow someone else to extend a hand? Well done, T.O.

When a promotional campaign goes wrong

You know when the bomb squad has to be called to a television station that a promotional campaign didn’t go over very well.

The San Antonio Spurs’ coyote played a small role in a promotional campaign that went terrible wrong. Here’s the bizarre story:

How stupid. How did the promotion coordinators think the employees at the television station would act? Oh hey, there’s a cake with what appears to be wires coming out of it – anyone got a knife?

That damn Spurs’ Coyote is always up to no good.

The curse of the MLB All-Star Game and San Francisco Giants’ pitchers

There’s a curse bigger than the Bambino, the Billy Goat and the Black Sox that no one seems to talk about. It’s claimed yet another victim this year and still baseball fans choose to ignore it.

I’m talking about the ‘curse of the San Francisco Giants All-Star Pitchers.’ (Or better known as COTSFGASP.)

Since 1983, the All-Star Game has dominated Giants’ pitchers like Chris Berman dominates co-workers. The curses’ latest victim? Twenty-four year old Giants’ phenom Tim Lincecum, who was forced to miss Tuesday night’s game due to being hospitalized because of dehydration.

Seriously, this curse isn’t f’ning around. See below.

1983: Atlee Hammaker
In perhaps the worst beating by an All-Star Game on a Giants’ pitcher happened in 1983. Atlee Hammaker led the NL with a 2.25 ERA that season and was selected to the All-Star Game. He was then hammered for seven runs on six hits in just 0.2 innings and to make matters worse, he gave up the first grand slam in ASG history. Granted he was pitching with shoulder tendonitis but still – the COTSFGASP claims its first victim of the 1980s.

1989: Rick Reuschel
In 1989, the Giants represented in the National League in the World Series. And in the 1989 All-Star Game, Rick Reuschel represented the National League as their starting pitcher. Only he didn’t represent them very well and was shelled for two runs on three hits in just one inning of work.

1990: Jeff Brantley
After the massive beat down the COTSFGASP laid on Reuschel the year before, Jeff Brantley was next. Brantley gave up the most hits (2) and runs (2) of any other pitcher in the National League. He lasted just 0.1 innings.

1993: John Burkett & Rod Beck
John Burkett was an absolute disaster in the 1993 ASG, giving up three runs on four hits in just 0.2 innings of work. His teammate Rod Beck didn’t fare much better, giving up one run on two hits in just one inning pitched.

1997: Shawn Estes
In 1997, Shawn Estes won a career-best 19 games for the Giants, finished the year with a 3.18 ERA and he was selected to his first ASG. In the 1997 Midsummer Classic, Estes made an appearance in the seventh inning of a 1-1 tie. He proceeded to walk Bernie Williams and then one out later, Indians’ catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. blasted an Estes’ pitch over the left field wall that eventually gave the AL a 3-1 victory. Since then, Estes’ ERA has never been lower than 4.00.

1998: Robb Nen
Although it’s fair to mention that just one run was earned, Robb Nen pitches just one inning and gives up three runs on three hits.

2002: Robb Nen
In 2002, the NL was in the midst of a five-year losing streak, but led the AL 7-6 in the eighth inning. That is, until Robb Nen entered the game. Nen allowed the tying run to cross the plate in the eighth and the game eventually ended in a 7-7 tie. Fans were outraged…all because of Robb Nen.

2008: Tim Lincecum
COTSFGASP never even allowed Tim Lincecum to reach the clubhouse after being selected to his first ASG. The media reported Lincecum had “flu-like symptoms”, but everyone knows better. It was COTSFGASP that got Linc.

Let these examples serve as a warning to future All-Star pitchers who represent the Giants. Do whatever you have to do – miss the team bus to the stadium, fake an injury or make up a death in the family. Just don’t pitch in the All-Star Game because your career may never be the same. COTSFGASP is for real.

(Note: I understand Brian Wilson came in during the eighth inning Tuesday night and retired the only two batters he faced. This does not mean that the curse is broken. It just means NL manager Clint Hurdle was well aware of COTSFGASP and got Wilson the hell out of the game as soon as he possibly could.)

Canseco gets slapped by Sikahema inside and outside of ring

Jose Canseco took on former NFL player Via Sikahema in the ring Saturday night in a celebrity boxing match. Well, Canseco kind of took on Sikahema. In all actuality, Canseco acted more like Sikahema’s personal heavy bag instead of his opponent.

Sikahema, who was an amateur Golden Gloves champ during his youth before starring in the NFL, rocked Canseco with a devastating left hook in the first 30 seconds that dropped the former slugger to the mat. After a brief recovery, Canseco withstood another flurry of punches from the “Tongan Terror” before falling like a timber and mercifully ending his night.

Asked after the fight if there were any surprises, Sikahema said, “That it didn’t finish in the first 30 seconds.”

According to a source familiar with the fight, Canseco earned a $35,000 purse – the equivalent of what he once made for several at-bats. But Canseco had to travel across the country to brawl Sikahema in what was supposed to be three, two-minute rounds. If Canseco goes any lower, his next gig may be blowing fire out of his mouth at county fairs.

The 45-year-old Sikahema, meanwhile, received $25,000, $5,000 of which he’s donating to the widow of a Philadelphia police sergeant killed in the line of duty earlier this year. “(Canseco’s) fighting for the money, but I’m fighting for a cause,” said Sikahema, who appeared in 80 amateur bouts before his pro football career. “In boxing, that means something.”

“He’s a very impressive-looking guy,” Sikahema added. “But the guy is a walking corpse, because he’s rotted inside out. He’s a pathetic figure.”

Ouch.


Via Sikahema TKO’s Jose Canseco in less than a minute – Watch more free videos

Spike Lee working with Kobe Bryant on ESPN documentary

Our friends at Premium Hollywood shared news that filmmaker Spike Lee is working on a “30 for 30” feature for ESPN, which includes 30 one-hour films by 30 filmmakers on a subject from the past 30 years. According to PH, Lee has also done a full-length documentary with Lakers’ star Kobe Bryant for ESPN Films, which supposedly “takes a look at the regular game day experience for the NBA great with unprecedented access.”

Will Harris provided the details.

The two really became friends, however, when Lee was in Rome, shooting – of all things – a commercial for a telephone company. “I was shooting at the Coliseum one early Saturday morning,” he said, “and we’re getting ready to do a shot, and somebody taps me on the back. I turn around…and it was Kobe. That’s really where the friendship started.”
The most obvious question would seem to be, “Why Kobe?” He is, after all, a guy who’s already had plenty of media exposure already. (If *I* know Kobe, you have to figure that pretty much everybody knows Kobe.) It apparently all stretches back to a documentary Lee saw at Cannes: “Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait,” about French soccer player Zinedine Zidane.

“This film had amazed me,” said Lee, “because they had 20 cameras on Zidane. They never left him. I said, ‘Oh, shit. This would even work for basketball.’ So I went to Kobe. He’s a great soccer fan, too. So I handed him the DVD, the design piece, and he said, ‘Let’s go.’ Then we went to Genie Buss. Phil Jackson signed on-board the NBA. The commissioner, Adam Silver, ESPN, they got a lot of people involved because what we wanted to be different in the design piece…it was only on the field. But we wanted to go…we needed to go in the locker room. So Phil Jackson allowed us access to the locker room before the game, at half-time, and after. He’s never done that. You know, we were with Kobe the whole day, so we wanted to show…it’s about not just him but the preparation. These guys, I mean, you just don’t show up to a game and put on a uniform and play. I never heard about getting iced before the game, the tape. I mean, it was crazy. And then we had him miked. So I think it would give a unique look of the game…and there’s a great game of basketball. We had 30 cameras…and that’s not including ABC’s camera, because it’s a nationally televised game…so we have a tremendous amount of great footage.”

Spike Lee and Kobe? Now there’s a match.

Harris also had an interesting note about the upcoming film about Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson and who will play Branch Rickey.

Before we sign off from ESPN, let’s make a quick mention of their upcoming film about Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson. It’ll be a theatrical release, and Rickey will be played by…wait for it…Robert Redford. Nice, huh? Rickey’s grandson, Branch Rickey III, was in attendance, so it was inevitable that someone would ask, “So, did your granddad really look like Robert Redford?”

“I have to tell you, when that was first broached, I thought of my grandfather in the pre-Robinson years — he’s in his 60’s and probably a man who always looked like he was ten years older than he was — and I couldn’t possibly envision this ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,’ legendarily good-looking actor pulling off this older gentleman,” said Rickey. “But I’ve had occasion to meet with Mr. Redford and I have to tell you that what is most important to me, the ability my grandfather had to capture someone’s attention and some of the times he did that with what he didn’t say, but with a pause and an anticipated gesture he would make and I am so surprised to see the similarity. Robert Redford has an ability to freeze you, to stop you, to almost cause you to stop breathing as he’s right on the verge of making a point. The similarities to me in that chemistry were remarkable and I think the Rickey family probably today thinks how wonderful to have our grandfather captured by somebody such as Mr. Redford.”

That should be a great film.

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