In certain kinds of positions, the computer sees so deeply that it plays like God.
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Garbine Muguruza is the Wimbledon champion.
(Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)
Monday - July 17, 2017 Mon - 07/17/17
rantnrave:// ROGER FEDERER is timeless. He's sent FATHER TIME back on his heels and into his corner. His career is fantastical. How else can you describe it? Sunday, at WIMBLEDON, Federer won his 19th GRAND SLAM title. His eighth Wimbledon. It's remarkable. He went nearly five years without a Slam before this season. Hadn't won one since 2012. He's got two in 2017 now, at 35 years old. Tennis players aren't supposed to win Slams at that age. Federer especially. RAFA NADAL was supposed to have passed him by. Then NOVAK DJOKOVIC. ANDY MURRAY had his turn atop the field. Federer was getting older and supposedly losing ground by the year. Yet, here he is again. Djokovic seems lost. He's battling injuries and whatever else during an unexplainable slump. Nadal is still the master on clay courts but has won only one slam on other surfaces since 2010. Murray is the top-ranked player in the world but bowed out early at Wimbledon. Federer has always been more like an artist. An athlete with the grace of a ballerina. Watching him is like seeing a painter work. We are witnessing history. Federer, more than any other tennis star of this generation, allows us to enjoy it in the moment. He admits his shortcomings. His game isn't based on brute force. He is a virtuoso... VENUS WILLIAMS couldn't match Federer. But her run to the finals was the best part of the tournament. GARBINE MUGURUZA is a budding star. She has two slams on her resume. If SERENA and Venus ever retire (let's hope not), Muguruza could be one of the faces of the sport. While Venus' loss could share the headline, don't forget to give Muguruza her due. She's a Williams sisters slayer, beating Serena in the 2016 FRENCH OPEN final and Venus Saturday... Writing an epitaph for CHUCK BLAZER isn't easy. He was a criminal who lived large and a key federal witness who helped bring FIFA's corruption into the light. As his life began to crumble, Blazer became soccer's anti-hero. SportsSET: "The Man Who Helped Take Down FIFA"... The OLYMPIC CHANNEL is here. Will enough people want to watch Olympic sports outside of Olympic years to make it viable?... JULIA "HURRICANE" HAWKINS is the next USAIN BOLT... RIP BOB WOLFF and MARTIN LANDAU.
- Mike Vorkunov, curator
strawberries
REDEF
REDEF SportsSET: The Man Who Helped Take Down FIFA
by SportsREDEF
Writing an epitaph for Chuck Blazer isn't easy. He was a criminal who lived large and a key federal witness who helped bring FIFA's corruption into the light. As his life began to crumble, Blazer became soccer's anti-hero.
Harvard Business Review
Nike's Co-founder on Innovation, Culture, and Succession
by Sarah Green Carmichael, Dan McGinn and Phil Knight
Phil Knight, former chair and CEO of Nike, tells the story of starting the sports apparel and equipment giant after taking an entrepreneurship class at Stanford and teaming up with his former track coach, Bill Bowerman. Together (and with the help of a waffle iron) they changed how running shoes are designed and made.
Vice Sports
The Five-Buck Bump of Cocaine That Destroyed an Olympic Dream
by Aaron Gordon
Eric Thompson was a high-jump prodigy with an Olympic future well within his reach, until one failed drug test locked him in a battle with doping authorities that ultimately changed his life.
The Weekly Standard
How Federer Found the Magic
by Tom Perrotta
The 35-year-old, eight-time Wimbledon champ isn't the same player he was a decade ago. He's better.
The New Yorker
At Wimbledon, Garbiñe Muguruza Displays Her Occasional Greatness
by Gerald Marzorati
Muguruza is now the only player to have beaten both Serena and Venus Williams in Slam finals.
The Undefeated
Despite her Wimbledon loss, Venus Williams continues to gracefully rage against the clock
by LZ Granderson
"The first time you win, nobody picks you. The last time you win, nobody picks you. You just have to pick yourself."
WBUR
The Rise, Fall And Rise Of The Rubik's Cube
by Rebecca Sheir
The Rubik's Cube was briefly the best-selling toy in history when it first debuted in the 1980s. Since then it has fallen out of fashion and been reborn in a variety of styles and formats by a devoted community of puzzle-solvers.
Bloomberg
You Can Pay for a Ballpark Without Fleecing Taxpayers
by Joe Nocera
Kudos to Pawtucket, Rhode Island, for doing stadium financing right.
The New York Times
Mike Tirico Would Like to Talk About Anything but Mike Tirico
by Juliet Macur
Mike Tirico replaces Bob Costas for NBC’s Olympics coverage, but he insists “I’m not famous” and is uncomfortable with questions about his background.
ESPN
Somehow, Roger Federer keeps pushing the boundaries of greatness
by Kurt Streeter
Even Roger Federer has trouble explaining his renaissance. But here he is, a Wimbledon champion for an eighth time.
cream
Los Angeles Times
Bryce Harper brings more than passion to the game; making baseball fun is beyond a slogan
by Bill Shaikin
Washington Nationals star Bryce Harper plays the game with passion and flair, often to the chagrin of opposing fans. His future free agency is already creating sparks.
The Kansas City Star
Scott Frantz’s coming out shows how ‘the culture has already changed in football’
by Vahe Gregorian
Kansas State’s Scott Frantz’s revelation he is gay shows the culture has changed in football. If gay players can feel safe in the melting pot of the locker room, it also has implications well beyond those walls. “We’ve got to stop talking about football, particularly big-time football, as though it is homophobic and its coaches and players are homophobic,” Outsports.com co-founder Cyd Zeigler said in a phone interview. “They are not. They’re not. It is a lie. You can’t say that any more.”
The Washington Post
Slingin' drinks and throwin' punches: A 30-year-old bartender stays in the ring
by Dan Steinberg
'Where I come from -- not a lot of fighters would come from there,' Sam Crossed says. 'Because why would you get punched in the head for a living if you don’t have to, you know what I mean?'
espnW
Are we going to go on validating the degenerative Mayweather-McGregor trash talk?
by Sarah Spain
We all knew the buildup to the Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor fight would feature posturing and hyper-masculine aggression -- but it's quickly devolved into bigotry and misogyny. espnW's Sarah Spain asks: Are these people deserving of our admiration?
MMQB
Deion Sanders’ Career in Baseball, Potential
by Ben Baskin
Former baseball teammates and coaches remember what Deion was, and what he might have been (if that pesky Hall of Fame football career hadn’t gotten in the way).
The Guardian
Garbiñe Muguruza determined to do it her way after Wimbledon superstitions
by Martha Kelner
Garbiñe Muguruza was happy to abide by habits imposed by her stand-in coach Conchita Martínez during Wimbledon fortnight but the new champion vows to be her own woman from now on.
Epic Magazine
La Vida Robot
by Joshua Davis
How four underdogs from the mean streets of phoenix took on the best from m.i.t. In the national underwater bot championship.
Bleacher Report
How the NFL Is Cheating Rookies out of Millions of Dollars
by Mike Freeman
NFL rookies are victims of deflated first contracts that make them a steal for their teams.
Bloomberg
How Dead Celebrities Became a Billion Dollar Business
by Lauren Coleman-Lochner
Authentic Brands, which also owns Muhammad Ali and Marilyn Monroe, values dead celebs on their social media presence and the spending power of their fans.
Sports Illustrated
How the Rockies learned to pitch effectively in Coors Field
by Albert Chen
Forget the gimmicks of trying to pitch at Coors Field. The Rockies are proving that success at Coors Field means accepting the beast and surviving it.
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“REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask ‘why?’”
@JasonHirschhorn


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