Category: General Sports (Page 81 of 112)

Top 10 Sports Rituals

FOX Sports’ FunHouse lists the Top 10 Sports Rituals.

9. Chicago Bulls’ opening introductions
The Bulls were quite the spectacle during the 1990s, winning six NBA championships in a period of eight years. And on their home court, the show started before the opening tip-off. The Bulls were the first NBA team to dim the arena lights during the introduction of the starting lineup and a spotlight was used to illuminate each player as he stepped onto the planks. When the team moved to the United Center, it added laser lights and fireworks to the pre-game festivities. Bulls players took the court in the following order: small forward, power forward, center, point guard, and shooting guard. Scottie Pippen would be the first player introduced, while Michael Jordan was last. Other teams were quick to follow suit, shutting off the house lights for the opening introductions.

Great opening. And how about the Worm in a Bulls’ uni, huh?

Great story about HS wrestler

SPORTSbyBROOKS.com (via The Orange County Register) has an inspirational story about a high school wrestler named Cullen Fitzgibbons. The young man went 0-28 on the mat this year, but that’s not the real story. The real story is how Cullen didn’t let Down syndrome keep him off the mats.

Even before Cullen was diagnosed with the disease, he had medical problems from the start. He was born with a hole in his heart, which required open-heart surgery before he even turned 1 year old. His mother Dana recalled the pre-surgery blood work: “I remember him screaming – horrible screaming – for hours. It was heart-wrenching.”

His medical & mental condition didn’t help his education, as teacher & schools resisted putting Cullen into normal classrooms: “In eighth grade, Dana discovered, they were still asking her son to trace his name and connect the dots in class.”

Now a senior at Los Alamitos High, Fitzgibbons finished 0-28 on the mat, including a gut-wrenching one-point loss in his final match. But in no way is Cullen seen as a loser – especially by his high school classmates:

“Who does the wrestling team carry atop their shoulders into the annual pep rally? Cullen. Who do the cheerleaders rush to hug first? Cullen. Who do the fans cheer loudest for – even in defeat? Cullen.”

It’s nice to step away from Roger Clemens and Brian McNamee’s bickering to read a real sports story.

Where are all of these Russian hotties coming from?

The Slate has an interesting article dedicated to answering the question: Where did all those gorgeous Russians come from (ala Maria Sharapova)?

Though this is a fairly frivolous question (OK, extremely frivolous), I am convinced it has an interesting answer. To put it bluntly, in the Soviet Union there was no market for female beauty. No fashion magazines featured beautiful women, since there weren’t any fashion magazines. No TV series depended upon beautiful women for high ratings, since there weren’t any ratings. There weren’t many men rich enough to seek out beautiful women and marry them, and foreign men couldn’t get the right sort of visa. There were a few film stars, of course, but some of the most famous—I’m thinking of Lyubov Orlova, alleged to be Stalin’s favorite actress—were wholesome and cheerful rather than sultry and stunning. Unusual beauty, like unusual genius, was considered highly suspicious in the Soviet Union and its satellite people’s republics.

After watching a couple rounds of Sharapova, Anna Kournikova or Olga Poutchkova, I think I can speak for everyone when I say – It doesn’t matter where they come from, just keep em’ coming.

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