Since 1981, I’ve spent every Thanksgiving Day broadcasting a game, and it is one of my favorite days. You can say, ‘Woe is me, I never get to be part of the tradition,’ or you can say, ‘Heck, we’ve got our own tradition, and it’s pretty good.’ | | Bobby Fischer (thierry ehrmann/Flickr) | | | | “Since 1981, I’ve spent every Thanksgiving Day broadcasting a game, and it is one of my favorite days. You can say, ‘Woe is me, I never get to be part of the tradition,’ or you can say, ‘Heck, we’ve got our own tradition, and it’s pretty good.’” |
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| rantnrave:// There has been much discussion about the effect of DONALD TRUMP on the media (and it’s vast) but BRYAN CURTIS of THE RINGER wrote about an interesting wrinkle: the influence of sports talk radio on Trump and the electorate. Sports, like every other spark of American life at this point, is not immune from sectarian head-butting and battle between the visceral and the intellectual, and the old school and the new age. Trump, like a radio host, positioned himself as the only truthful voice for his audience and communicated in easily digestible ways. WASHINGTON POST columnist DAN STEINBERG sees parallels, too, in the controversy over the REDSKINS team name. When BOB COSTAS used his NBC platform to call for a name-change, Steinberg writes, it came off to Washington fans as “a know-it-all elitist dictating for the simple masses what is right and what is wrong.” Trump spoke the language, talking to the beleaguered fan that had grown wary of the front office. It's certainly an interesting analog for the new president-elect. And perhaps we can take some value from the way points are made on sports talk radio to learn how to discuss the more important issues in our lives and how to listen… A new chess world champion might be crowned soon, if he can finish off an upset... Thanksgiving and its televised feast of football games is nearly here. For so long, it was PAT SUMMERALL and JOHN MADDEN in our living rooms, serving up the color to our day. It’s just hard to look at a turducken the same with Joe Buck and Troy Aikman breaking off a leg. Buck and Aikman don't quite match the homespun appeal of Madden and Summerall, who used to hold their own huge Thanksgiving banquets… On that note, some housecleaning: SportsREDEF won’t be publishing Thursday or Friday. Enjoy your turkey and your pie. Happy THANKSGIVING. We’ll be back MONDAY. | | - Mike Vorkunov, curator |
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| With the 428th pick in the 1974 NFL draft, the Green Bay Packers selected. . . one of the most violent killers in U.S. history. | |
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Why the president-elect has replaced sports chatter as the topic of choice and how he mastered the sports radio host persona on the stump. | |
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"You're the true winner,” Aliyah Charbonier told Amaiya Zafar, who has been fighting to box in traditional garb for two years. | |
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Arena, who has won five M.L.S. titles and five N.C.A.A. titles, will lead the Americans for the balance of this World Cup cycle after having coached them in the 2002 and 2006 Cups. | |
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While Kasparov had his aura, it's Carlsen's resilience under pressure and deep understanding of the game that make him the opponent everyone hates to face. | |
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Parkour, as we know it today, stems from the activities of nine young Parisian men. The Yamakasi group, as they were known, trained together in what they called “l'art du placement”: a spectacular, regimented and controlled way of moving. But that was at the turn of the 21st century. | |
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If you want to know the story behind Carr's MVP-level season, start with the line in front of him. | |
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27 More Rules of Thanksgiving Touch Football: Will the family game be more contentious than the election? Will Tony Romo show up? And where’s the bourbon? | |
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Bob Thornbladh and John Hicks were on opposite sides of the Ohio State-Michigan rivalry, but the two would form an unbreakable friendship later in life. | |
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One great catch made the Auburn tight end a hero. One bad decision killed him at 23. But the lessons of his tragic death in a drunken driving accident, detailed here for the first time, could save lives for years to come | |
| What's Sunday like for one of Jacksonville Jaguars lifeguards who monitors the pools at EverBank Field? Well, for starters, it's full of bikinis, selfies, and babysitting. | |
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After years on the Sports desk, the reporter Richard Sandomir heads for the Obits desk. And he seems excited for it. | |
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Gotham Chopra’s new TV documentary, “Religion Of Sports,” says the answer is absolutely yes. | |
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Hockey is a rapidly growing sport in China, backed by the government and influenced by the Russians. After entering the KHL, China, the host of the 2022 Winter Games, hopes to be a player on the international stage. | |
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If writers plan to vote David Ortiz into Cooperstown in five years, they must stop being hypocritical about other greats suspected of PED use. | |
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The best climber in the world just conquered one of the hardest routes in the world in record time. | |
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Joel Embiid is making the most of moment, even in limited minutes. | |
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Two decades after his one appearance for Southampton, Ali Dia is the most famous phoney in the history of British football. But how did his move come about? And where is he now? | |
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The preservation of a basketball legacy strengthened Melvin Booker’s relationship with his son | |
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Fox Sports University, which counts more than 40 college partners, is how Fox Sports tests out new uses for VR and other emerging mediums. | |
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