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VIDEO: Stephen A. Smith on Knicks, “Nobody’s untouchable.”

May 20, 2013 by Shana Renee 1 Comment

Stephen A Smith

Before Game 5 between the New York Knicks and Indiana Pacers, I had the opportunity to catch up with ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith.  During our brief conversation, I asked him to grade the Knicks overall performance on the season, and to also give his opinion about what the team’s offseason priorities should include as they look to improve. Per ususal, Stephen A. didn’t hold back.  Watch the video to hear his response.

Whoa.  I’d be lying if I told you I wasn’t surprised to hear him say that everyone can be shipped to another team, no exceptions.  Although I do agree that the Knicks must undergo a major roster overhaul to improve next season, I don’t agree that no one is safe.  Carmelo Anthony is definitely the foundation of the team, and the Knicks need to focus on surrounding him with talent that complement his game.  Beyond that, the only other player I definitely would like to return is Iman Shumpert.  But I also understand he’s probably our best bargaining chip and we might have to lose him in exchange for some much needed upgrades at other positions.

Regardless, as I mentioned, and to which Stephen A. agreed, Knicks GM, Glen Grunwald, is going to have a very difficult task this summer.  The Knicks salary cap situation is a complete nightmare and will only become more complicated once the new luxury tax fines begin next season.  Looking ahead, the Knicks already have $57 million tied up among Melo ($21.6 mil), Amar’e Stoudemire ($21.4 mil), and Tyson Chandler ($14.1 mil).  Without any roster changes, the team is already capped out at $76 million.  It’s still unknown what the 2013-2014 salary cap will be, but if you base it on the $70.3 million that teams had to work with this season, it’s clear that Grunwald will once again be forced to get creative in order for the Knicks’ season to continue well into June.  Let the roster shakeup commence!

Do you agree with Stephen A. and think it’s important to explore trading everyone, Melo included, or are the Knicks better off than we think?

-@sdotrenee

Filed Under: Featured, NBA, Pro Sports Tagged With: Carmelo Anthony, ESPN, NBA, NBA Playoffs, New York Knicks, NY Knicks, Stephen A. Smith

NFL Draft: ESPN and NFL Network to take Twitter timeout, CBS Sports will play spoiler

April 25, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment
roger goodel_nfl draft

photo via cbssports.com

Twitter is usually the perfect companion while watching live events — sports, award shows, political debates, whatever.  However, there are occasions when Twitter can become a nuisance for broadcast partners, and the NFL Draft ranks among the top.

ESPN and the NFL Network produce months of programming and content about the many potential outcomes of the NFL Draft.  They speculate and build anticipation in preparation for the grand reveal at Radio City Music Hall.  Announcements that everyone’s waited months to hear are finally moments away, yet, millions of people on Twitter can take the words right of Commissioner Goodell’s mouth as he announces each pick because its already public knowledge before he makes his way to the podium.  How?  #BlameTwittter, NFL fans, and pundits in attendance for playing spoiler.

But this year, ESPN and the NFL Network, rival networks that are both broadcasting tonight’s NFL Draft, have addressed this issue.  They’ve both agreed to a plan that protects the tradition of hearing each pick straight from the horse’s mouth.  For one night, neither networks’ insiders will concern themselves with being first to report each pick.  According to Sports Illustrated’s Richard Deitsch,

Both networks have pledged not to show images of players on the phone in the green room at Radio City Music Hall. In addition to that, both networks tell SI.com that they will tell staffers not to report pick-by-pick selections on their Twitter feeds prior to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announcing the picks on the podium. The Twitter edict will extend into the second round of the draft. Teams have 10 minutes to pick in the first round, seven minutes in the second round and five minutes for the rest of the draft.

Fair enough.  After all, NFL fans have less of a reason to watch the action live if they’re the last to know, and a TV network’s main objective is to drive ratings.  With the NBA Playoffs and the return of Scandal, both ESPN and NFL Network have enough competition to worry about.  If they didn’t at least attempt to keep the news from prematurely spreading throughout the Twitterverse, they’d be cannibalizing their own efforts.  However, there’s one flaw.  ESPN and the NFL Network aren’t the only players in the NFL Draft game and they can’t force other major media outlets to join their Twitter timeout.

CBS Sports NFL Insider, Jason La Confora, said he has zero plans to conform to ESPN and the NFL Networks plans.  So, whether you don’t have cable TV, will be on-the-go, or just like being the first to know every damn thing, make sure you follow @JasonLaConfora on twitter.

Here’s what he said about sticking to his script and ignoring ESPN and NFL Networks directives,

We’re not a broadcast partner for the draft.  I will be trying to get the information out as quickly and accurately as possible. What event is made more for Twitter than the NFL draft? If the teams have the information; if the guys in the production truck have the information; if the commissioner has the information; why wouldn’t passionate football fans want it as well?

Yep. I get his point. As an NFL insider, his job is to get the scoop and report it first. Since CBS, the company who cuts his check, doesn’t have a dog in the fight, why should he care about about not ruining ratings for the Draft’s broadcast partners?

Last season I watched the Draft live and followed along via twitter.  My viewing experience wasn’t ruined because twitter announced each pick before Goodell.  I was more offended by the Jets picks, which is why I plan to keep myself occupied doing other things tonight.

The NFL Draft begins tonight at 8PM/ET on ESPN and the NFL Network.

-@sdotrenee

Props:  SI.com and ShermanReport.com

 

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Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: CBS Sports, ESPN, Jason La Confora, NFL Draft, NFL Network, Roger Goodell, Social Media, Sports Illustrated, Twitter

2013 Tribeca Film Festival Carrying Nine ESPN Films

April 17, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment

ESPN-color-logo-1024x330

NYC, today the Tribeca Film Festival kicks off throughout the city.  But more importantly, for us sports heads, it also marks the return of the Tribeca/ESPN Sports Film Festival.  In its seventh year, ESPN is screening nine films, including four titles from its much hyped “Nine for IX” series which features nine films by female directors about women in sports.  Additionally, ESPN is premiering “Big Shot”, “McConkey”, “Lenny Cooke”, and “The Trials of Muhammad Ali”. You can find more information on each film below.

Last year, the festival premiered the critically acclaimed “Broke” and “Benji” which went on to become two standout films of ESPN Films’ 2012 30 for 30 series.  I guarantee many, if not all, films chosen to screen at this year’s festival will also be worth your time and money.

The festival ends April 28 and tickets are going quickly!

Here’s a brief synopsis of each sports film screening at this year’s festival.

Big Shot
Directed by Kevin Connolly
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

In 1997, John Spano, a previously unknown Dallas business mogul, bought the New York Islanders for a whopping $165 million. The future looked bright for the once-legendary team. Then Spano took his seat in the front office. Entourage’s Kevin Connolly takes us behind the scenes of the biggest fraud in hockey history, as Spano’s wealth is revealed to be a lie and his rise to power a brilliantly concocted scheme.

McConkey
Directed and written by Steve Winter, Murray Wais, Scott Gaffney, David Zieff, and Rob Bruce

(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

An all-star roster of sports movie-making talent directs this heartfelt biography of extreme ski trailblazer Shane McConkey, once described as “the most influential skier ever.” McConkey covers forty years and countless high places to track Shane’s conversion from downhill racer to freeskiing marvel to pioneer of a hair-raising new discipline—ski BASE jumping—giving new meaning to the question, how do you live your life to the fullest?

Lenny Cooke
Directed by Benny Safdie and Joshua Safdie
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

In 2001, Lenny Cooke was the most hyped high school basketball player in the country, ranked above future greats LeBron James, Amar’e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony. A decade later, Lenny has never played a minute in the NBA. In this quintessentially American documentary, filmmaking brothers Joshua and Benny Safdie track the unfulfilled destiny of a man for whom superstardom was only just out of reach.

The Trials of Muhammad Ali
Directed by Bill Siegel
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

Brash boxer Cassius Clay burst into the American consciousness in the early 1960s, just ahead of the Civil Rights movement. His transformation into the spiritually enlightened heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali is legendary, but this religious awakening also led to a bitter legal battle with the U.S. government after he refused to serve in the Vietnam War. This film reveals the perfect storm of race, religion and politics that shaped one of the most recognizable figures in sports history.

The Motivation
Directed by Adam Bhala Lough
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

Go inside the lives and training regimes of eight of the world’s gutsiest professional skateboarders. These fearless stars face unique obstacles on the way to the Street League Championship and the coveted title of best street skateboarder in the world. Adam Bhala Lough, creator of the independent hit Bomb the System (TFF 2003), directs this fresh, energetic documentary search for that elusive quality that separates winners from the pack. In English, Portuguese with subtitles.

Special Screenings from the “Nine for IX” series

Pat XO
Directed by Lisa Lax and Nancy Stern Winters, produced by Robin Roberts
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

In August 2011, Pat Summitt, NCAA basketball’s winningest coach, made the stunning announcement that she had early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.  Before and after resigning in April 2012, the legendary coach and her son, Tyler, have set out to beat this challenge as they had every other—with grace, humor and, most of all, each other. Pat XO tells the remarkable story of this incomparable coach as it has never been told before, straight from the people who knew her best.

The Diplomat
Directed by Senain Kheshgi and Jennifer Arnold
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

At the height of the Cold War, Katarina Witt became one of East Germany’s most famous athletes, winning six European titles, four world championships and back-to-back Olympic gold medals. Known as “the most beautiful face of socialism,” she earned unique benefits in East Germany but also constant surveillance from the Stasi, the notorious secret police force.

No Limits
Directed by Alison Ellwood
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

Suffering from scoliosis as a teenager, Audrey Mestre found freedom in the ocean. Years later, she discovered another reason to love the water: the elusive, often raucous free diver Pipin Ferreras. As Mestre follows Ferreras’s almost spiritual quest to push his limits underwater, she moves from supporter to ardent free diver to world-class competitor. Then a challenge from a rival pushes the couple to the brink of what is possible, both above and below the surface.

Let Them Wear Towels
Directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary

During the 1977 World Series, Sports Illustrated reporter Melissa Ludtke was denied access to the players’ locker room. After a very public fight, the door was opened, but the debate about female journalists in the male sanctum of the clubhouse remained. Through interviews with pioneering female sports writers, Let Them Wear Towels captures the raw behavior, humorous retaliation, angry lawsuits and remarkable resolve that went into the struggle for equal access for women reporters.

In addition to the film series, Tribeca and ESPN are continuing their tradition of hosting Sports Day as part of the Tribeca Film Festival Street Fair.  Saturday, April 27, Tribeca and ESPN will screen all nine films, as well as give attendees an opportunity to partake in many free, sports-related games and activities.  During this day, many local sports figures, mascots, and personalities make appearances.  The event, which takes place on North Moore Street, between Greenwich and West Streets, in Manhattan, is free, open to the public, and filled with enough entertainment to engage the entire family.

For more information on the films, festival, showings or to buy tickets, go here.

-@sdotrenee

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 30 for 30, ESPN, ESPN FIlms, Films, Robert Deniro, Sports Documentaries, Tribeca Film Festival

Jalen Rose should respect Chris Webber and backoff

April 8, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment

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Heading into the NCAA Tournament, I decided I’d ride with the Big East until the wheels fell off.  Since this is the final opportunity for the Big East to enter the record books, I thought it would be awesome to go out with a bang.  That was up until Michigan, my first true college basketball love, made a run all the way to tonight’s championship game against Louisville.

The strained relationship between Chris Webber and the other Fab Five members (Jalen Rose, Jimmy King, Juwan Howard, and Ray Jackson) has been well documented.  Webber, who violated NCAA rules and accepted over $250, 000 in donations from a college booster, has refused to acknowledge his college career and has distanced himself from his former teammates.  Whenever Rose, King, Howard, and Jackson are together, Webber is noticeably absent.  Yet, that hasn’t stopped Rose from publicly asking or pleading with Webber to finally put the past behind them and reunite for tonight’s big game.  The other four members of the Fab Five hope to be in attendance tonight and would also like Webber to join them.

While it’s a reasonable request and something I’d love to see, why Rose feels it’s necessary to constantly call Webber out is beyond me.  Two years ago, during promotional rounds for the Fab Five documentary, Rose was quick to let people know that Webber opted not to participate.  Now, Rose is drawing more attention to Webber.  Although I’m sure Rose genuinely would like to reunite the Fab Five for the right reasons, it comes off as a bit self-serving.  If mending the relationship is his top priority, Rose should talk to Webber privately and respect his personal decision to do whatever he feels is best for him.  It’s unnecessary to report every attempt he’s made at reaching out to Webber, back to the media.  Although social media and blogs have created a society that believes every little detail of our lives should be played out in front of the cameras, it’s not true.  Privacy and discretion are still alive and well; and above all, valued.

Personally, I don’t blame Webber for the stance he’s taken.  Before the NCAA handed out its punishment, Michigan self-imposed sanctions upon the basketball program, which resulted in erasing Webber’s name from the books, removing the Fab Five’s Final Four banners from the rafters, vacating team wins, and more.  Webber was also banned from the university for 10 years.  The ban expires next month, but since the national championship game is on neutral ground in Atlanta, Webber is allowed to attend as a fan.  Michigan also asked Webber to pay the school $695,000 in restitution.  Meanwhile, Michigan didn’t return the millions of dollars it earned off of him and the rest of the Fab Five.  It’s one thing for Michigan to rule with a stern hand and send the message that they won’t tolerate such indiscretions, but also hypocritical to keep the money they earned off of someone they wanted absolutely nothing to do with anymore..or at least the past 10 years.

Although Webber was in the wrong, he felt betrayed, and not just by Michigan, but possibly by his former teammates as well.  While Webber was forced to stay away from the school, Rose, Howard, King, and Jackson maintained a relationship with the university.  Perhaps Webber feels their ties to the school in the face of his admonishment showed a lack of loyalty on their part?  I don’t know.  And because Webber refuses to discuss it, all I can do is speculate.

Had Webber participated in the Fab Five documentary and shared his side of the story then, today everyone would be discussing the accomplishments of the current team, not dredging up twenty years of bad blood.  Here’s video of Jalen Rose putting the full court press on Webber, pleading for him to attend tonight’s game…

As a die hard Fab Five fan, I’d love to see them all in attendance at tonight’s game. But if Webber chooses not to attend, that’s his right.  He doesn’t owe anything to anyone, most of all the University of Michigan.  Sitting in the stands, yelling “Go Blue!”, and pretending to have school pride doesn’t sound like an enjoyable night given his history with the school.  I respect his decision, and as a so-called friend and brother, it would be nice to know Jalen Rose supported Webber and did the same.

-@sdotrenee

Filed Under: College Basketball, College Sports Tagged With: Bill Simmons, Chris Webber, ESPN, Fab Five, Final Four, Jalen Rose, NCAA Championship, U of M, University of Michigan

How many brackets predicted FGCU’s improbable Sweet 16 run?

March 25, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment

photo via NYTimes.com

Before Florida Gulf Coast University shocked us all by beating the University of Georgetown, if someone would’ve mentioned FGCU, our collective response would’ve been, “FGCU who?”  Yet, when the Eagles knocked out the Hoyas by playing shutdown defense, going on large runs, and high flying dunks, they earned the attention of a nation; only to follow up that performance with a more impressive victory over San Diego State.  After another dominant performance, we remain enchanted by this year’s Cinderella team who’s become the first 15 seed to reach the Sweet 16 in the tournament’s long history.

But not everyone slept on FGCU.  A very small percentage of brackets predicted the Eagles’ historic rise in their first NCAA Tournament appearance ever.

According to Yahoo Sports,

· 47,950 brackets (1.5 percent) picked #15 FGCU to win their game over No. 2 Georgetown
· 18,583 picked them to also win their Round of 32 game and make the Sweet 16
· 4,982 picked them to also win their Sweet 16 game and make the Elite 8
· 1,591 picked them to also win their Elite 8 game and make the Final Four
· 696 picked them to also win their Final Four game and make the Championship
· 337 picked them to also win the NCAA Championship

In ESPN’s Tournament Challenge, out of 8.15 million brackets, “Just 0.95 percent of brackets picked the Eagles to reach this round, and a whopping 2,354 brackets have them winning it all. Interestingly, 0.3 percent of brackets predicted the Florida-Florida Gulf Coast matchup in the Sweet 16.”

Right now, FGCU are the darlings of the dance, but don’t let the media hype fool you.  According to BetVega.com, FGCU went from 1000/1 odds to 100/1 odds of winning it all.  This proves their stock is rising, however, Vegas hasn’t completely abandoned the Louisville, Indiana, or Florida bandwagon just yet.  Respectively, the odds of them winning it all are 3/1, 5/1, and 5/1.  If you played it safe with any of those three teams, it seems you were smart to do so because you have a greater chance of receiving a payout than FGCU’s risk takers.  And at the end of the day, isn’t that what keeps us vested in the tourney year after year?  The thrill of watching david slay goliath is cool, but nothing beats cashing out.  Whether it’s 100/1 or 3/1 odds, winning it all is priceless.

FGCU’s next big test comes on Friday at 9:57PM/ET when they face their state ‘rivals’, the No. 3 seed Florida Gators.

-@sdotrenee

Need more basketball action? Check out Watch Like A Champion and get all of your hoop updates, trivia, and tournament talk! Then enter to win a Samsung 60″ LED TV, Galaxy Note Tablet, Panasonic Cordless Phone System, and One Year of Free Service through the Cox Ultimate Entertainment Sweepstakes! http://shout.lt/gD9t/

Filed Under: College Basketball, College Sports Tagged With: ESPN, Florida, Florida Gators, Florida Gulf Coast University, Georgetown University, March Madness, NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship, San Diego State, Sweet 16

ESPN and Bill Simmons Are Ambushing CBS/Turner Sports’ March Madness Coverage

March 21, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment

 

photo via youtube.com

photo via youtube.com

Because they can’t broadcast the actual games, ESPN struggles every year to find new and exciting ways to cover March Madness.  This year, ESPN finally said eff the system, CBS, Turner Sports and the billions of dollars they paid to own the Men’s NCAA Tournament multimedia rights.

With the help of its golden boy Bill Simmons, ESPN is full on ambushing the NCAA’s pre and post game tourney coverage.  Simmons with a camera in tow, and a few members of his Grantland posse, which includes Jalen Rose, Joe House, and my personal favorite, Rembert Browne, are setting up shop at Simmons’s residence to provide supplementary programming during the tournament.  The coverage will be live streamed at grantland.com/live.

In true Simmons fashion, this rogue experiment won’t include the typical college basketball analysis.  Instead, Simmons and Co. hope to provide a little levity and a more down-to-earth perspective to the wildly unpredictable tournament.  AllThingsD.com quoted Simmons saying,

We want this to feel like a looser, more irreverent studio show. Like a live podcast where people feel like they are hanging out with us while watching basketball. I have no idea if this will work but we like trying new things at Grantland. … the only way we know if something will be successful is by trying. We will talk about things that I assure you none of the traditional shows will be talking about. Office pools, gambling picks, what we are eating, etc. I can also promise you no other studio show has their mother cooking all day Thursday an Italian feast for everyone to eat on Friday’s shows.At the end of the day this really is just a convoluted way of getting ESPN to pay me to watch basketball with my friends. Oh — and now I can write off part of my man cave on my taxes.

Before live tweeting and live streaming became a thing, Bill Simmons live blogged his thoughts during sport and entertainment events.  Fans love his irreverence, insight, humor, and general point of view on sports and pop culture.  Including other popular personalities from his Grantland all-star team like Jalen Rose, Rembert Browne, and Joe House makes a ton of sense.  While Simmons is the grand poobah of this thing, not to be confused with Grand Puba (although he’s a much bigger deal in my world) Jalen, Rembert, and Joe also have their own cult followings.  Whether loved or hated, the supporting trio are pros at provoking reactions, and that’s the kind of entertainment value that would entice you to fire up the laptop and see what they’re up to.

Although live streaming during events isn’t necessarily new, ESPN is making a huge statement by testing the waters.  If the response is positive, there’s nothing to stop them from using this as another property to drive revenue, or inspiring other media entities to do the same.  Well, until a lawsuit is filed or contract terms are updated to include this loophole.

If you’re interested in this sort of thing, the link to check out the live stream is grantland.com/live.  Also, follow their @grantlandlive twitter account so you can stay up to date on when the Grantland team will be streaming.

Right now, they’re tentatively scheduled to go live on Thursday and Friday at the following times:

11:30 a.m. – 12:15 PM/ET
1:30 – 1:45 PM/ET
6:10 – 6:50 PM/ET

Need more basketball action? Check out Watch Like A Champion and get all of your hoop updates, trivia, and tournament talk! Then enter to win a Samsung 60″ LED TV, Galaxy Note Tablet, Panasonic Cordless Phone System, and One Year of Free Service through the Cox Ultimate Entertainment Sweepstakes! http://shout.lt/gD9t/

-@sdotrenee

 Props: AllThingsD.com
Filed Under: College Basketball, College Sports, Featured, Media Tagged With: Bill Simmons, CBS, ESPN, Grantland, Jalen Rose, Joe House, March Madness, NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship, Rembert Browne, Turner Sports

Kid President Makes Bracket Picks!

March 20, 2013 by Shana Renee 1 Comment

kidpresident-620x400

 Kid President is back, and still awesome.

He headed into his oval office and made his NCAA Tournament picks with the help of ESPN’s Robert Flores. Like Kid President said, President Obama picked his bracket, now it’s his turn to get in on the #marchgladness.

“Mike Sasowsky!”  LOL, so good.

But wait. Why isn’t this kid in school?

Need more basketball action? Check out Watch Like A Champion and get all of your hoop updates, trivia, and tournament talk! Then enter to win a Samsung 60″ LED TV, Galaxy Note Tablet, Panasonic Cordless Phone System, and One Year of Free Service through the Cox Ultimate Entertainment Sweepstakes! http://shout.lt/gD9t/

-@sdotrenee

Video via ESPN
Filed Under: College Basketball, College Sports Tagged With: ESPN, Kid President, March Madness, NCAA, NCAA Tournament, President Obama, Robert Flores

Nine for IX: ESPN Documentary Series about Women; Executive Produced by Robin Roberts

February 20, 2013 by Shana Renee Leave a Comment
Photo via ESPN

Photo via ESPN

As entertaining as sports is, it’s equally transformative; used to highlight or quell racial, political, economic, or gender injustices worldwide.  In fact, that was one aspect of the brilliance behind many of the stories told through ESPN’s critically acclaimed documentary series, 30 for 30.  It connected the dots and communicated how a sports event not only impacted the sports world, but society as a whole.

Unfairly, the media tends to focus on exclusively telling the inspiring and dynamic stories of men.  However, we know women are equally responsible for shifting worldviews.  Yet, the stories of our sports heroines are often ignored and go untold…until now.

ESPN Films and ESPNW are teaming up to bring these stories to viewers in a new documentary stories, Nine for IX.  This Summer, nine films, ‘about women, by women, for us all,’ will air on ESPN.

According to ESPN, “Nine for IX film topics include an intimate look at Pat Summitt, college sports’ most successful coach ever, the largely unknown history of Katarina Witt and her link with East Germany’s secret police, and the focus of sex in the marketing of female athletes.”

Good Morning America host Robin Roberts (welcome back!) is an executive producer of the project, and producer of PatXO, the documentary about Pat Summit, Roberts’ former coach.  Other notable directors include Hannah Storm and Sundance Film Festival darling, Ava DuVernay.

The series debuts July 27.

Films included in Nine for IX include:

Venus Vs. (Ava DuVernay)

Everyone knows about the swing.  Everyone knows about the swagger.  But what most Americans don’t know about Venus Williams is how she changed the course of her sport.  In a stunning case that captured the attention of the European public beginning in 2005, Williams challenged the long-held practice of paying women tennis players less money than their male counterparts at the French Open and Wimbledon.  With a deep sense of obligation to the legacy of Billie Jean King, Williams lobbied Parliament, UNESCO and Fleet Street for financial parity.  Indeed, it was her poignant op-ed piece in The London Times that convinced many people that the tournament organizers at Wimbledon were on the wrong side of history.  The boys clubs at Roland Garros and Wimbledon finally relented in 2007.  In fact, it was at Wimbledon that year that Venus became the first women’s champion to earn as much as the men’s (Roger Federer).  So to her seven major championships, another victory can be added.

Pat XO (Lisa Lax and Nancy Stern / Produced by Robin Roberts)

On April 18, 2012, Pat Summit, the winningest coach in the history of the NCAA basketball, did the unimaginable and announced her resignation from the University of Tennessee.  On the very same day, her son Tyler was named assistant coach of the Marquette’s women’s basketball team, his first job out of college.  While the sports world reeled from the news of Pat’s early on-set Alzheimer’s, the coach and her son quietly set out to beat this challenge just as they had every other with grace, humor and most of all, each other.  Pat XO tells the remarkable story of Pat Summit as it’s never been told before.  This raw, authentic portrait takes the camera from the filmmaker’s hands and places it into those who know her best.  With Tyler as the lead storyteller, moving recollections are shared by assistant coaches, players like Chamique Holdsclaw, Tamika Catchings and Michelle Marciniak, fellow coach Geno Auriemma, and such admirers as Peyton Manning and Kenny Chesney.  The archival footage and statistical records woven into the film provide their own insights into a woman who cared about winning, but also about elevating her players and her university.  If it’s possible to do justice to Pat Summitt, Pat XO does it.

The Diplomat (Jennifer Arnold and Senain Kheshgi)

At the height of the Cold War, Katarina Witt became one of East Germany’s most famous athletes. Trained in an ice rink that gave rise to socialist heroes, Witt dominated her field by winning six European skating titles, five world championships and back-to-back Olympic gold medals to become arguably the world’s best figure skater.  Known as the most beautiful face of socialism, her success gave her a unique status in East Germany.  It also triggered constant surveillance by the Stasi, East Germany’s notorious secret police force. This film chronicles how Witt, one of the greatest skaters of all time, fought for her future in socialist East Germany, how she faced the great changes that occurred after the fall of The Berlin Wall and, ultimately, how she ended up both a beneficiary and victim of the East German regime.

Runner (Shola Lynch)

Mary Decker obliterated opponents and records with blazing speed and a starving hunger to win. She dominated her sport, holding U.S. records in every distance from 800 to 10,000 meters, and she did it all without the Olympics.  She was too young in ’72, hurt in ’76 and shut out by the U.S. boycott in ’80.  As Sports Illustrated’s cover “Sportswoman of the Year” in 1983, she was ready: 1984 was the target, with the Olympics in Los Angeles and her skills at their 25 year-old peak.  But the story leads to a single shocking moment in the 1984 Games, with Mary writhing on the ground in physical pain and emotional heartbreak, with the whole world watching.

No Limits (Alison Ellwood)

As a teenager, Audrey Mestre suffered from scoliosis, but in those formative years, she discovered a passion for the ocean.  It offered her a sense of freedom, and the burdens she faced on dry land soon dissipated as she slipped below the surface.  In the final stages of her PH.D., Mestre was drawn to Cabo San Lucas where she became infatuated with free-diver Pipin Ferreras, a Cuban defector whose dives had put him at the forefront of the sport.  The two became a couple and Mestre followed the elusive, often raucous Pipin on his almost spiritual quest to push his limits underwater.  Soon enough, Mestre moved from support team member to ardent free-diver and then to a world-class competitor who outshone her husband.  In 2002, after news arrived that a rival female diver named Tanya Streeter had successfully gone to a record-breaking 525 feet, Pipin began preparations for Mestre to make a 561-foot dive off the coast of the Canary Island.  Having completed practice dives even deeper in the weeks leading up to the record attempt, Mestre was prepared.  But because of a fateful decision before the dive, Mestre never resurfaced alive.

Branded (Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady)

Anna Kournikova was never the greatest tennis player in the world.  In fact, she never rose higher than No. 8 on the WTA world singles rankings.  But her looks and willingness to capitalize on them made her the most famous tennis player on the planet and ultimately, a pioneer for fellow women athletes who understand that sometimes, sex sells.  Sports is supposed to be the ultimate level playing field, but in the media and on Madison Avenue sometimes looks matter more than accomplishments.  This film explores the double standard placed on women athletes to be the best players on the field and the sexiest off them.  Branded explores the question: can women’s sports ever gain an equal footing with their male counterparts or will sex always override achievement?

Let Them Wear Towels (Annie Sundberg and Ricki Stern)

Lisa Olson was just trying to do her job as a reporter for the Boston Herald in 1990 when a group of New England Patriot players sexually harassed her in their locker room by exposing their genitals and making lewd and vulgar comments.  Even though a subsequent NFL investigation concluded that Olson had been degraded and humiliated, the 25-year-old continued to be tormented by Patriot fans so much so that she temporarily moved to Australia to resume her career.  In the meantime, the story touched off a national debate about the presence of female journalists in the male sanctum of the clubhouse.  That debate should have been settled 12 years earlier, when Melissa Ludtke of Sports Illustrated successfully challenged Major League Baseball after she was kept out of the New York Yankees locker room.  Why had equal access for women reporters remained such a hot-button issue?  That question is asked in Let Them Wear Towels, a history and examination of females working in the man’s world of the locker room.  Through interviews with such pioneer women as Ludtke, Claire Smith, Lesley Visser and Jane Gross, you’ll hear stories of raw behavior and humorous retaliation, angry lawsuits and remarkable resolve.

Swoopes (Hannah Storm)

Sheryl Swoopes has famously been labeled as the female Michael Jordan.  Actually, she’s far more interesting.  On the court, she was nearly as dominant as Michael: a national championship with Texas Tech, three Olympic gold medals, three MVP awards and four consecutive championships with the Houston Comets of the WNBA, the league she helped start.  She even had a Nike shoe named after her, the Air Swoopes.  Off the court, she gave birth in the middle of her first WNBA championship season, divorced her high school sweetheart, and became the highest-profile athlete in her sport to declare she was gay.  She has struggled with love, family, money and lack of recognition, but she has never lost her spirit.  In this portrait, viewers will meet someone who’s not the everyday superstar, a woman who has defied a multitude of labels, including old in August 2011, Swoopes, at 40, hit a buzzer-beater to end the Tulsa Shock’s 20-game losing streak.

The 99ers (Erin Leyden / Produced by Julie Foudy)

The world of women’s sports was kicked upside down on July 10, 1999.  Before a sold-out crowd of more than 90,000 at the Rose Bowl and an estimated 40 million Americans watching on television, the women’s soccer team reached a cultural and athletic pinnacle with its penalty-kick shoot-out victory over China to win the Women’s World Cup.  These players were more than the ponytailed poster girls celebrated by mainstream media.  As told through the voice of longtime team captain, Julie Foudy, viewers get an inside look at the strong team ethic and rare do for each other mentality that propelled them to victory that day and turned the team into a cultural touchstone.  With unprecedented access, the film uses candid, behind-the-scenes footage shot by the players themselves during the tournament to present a unique portrait of the women who irrevocably changed the face of women’s athletics.  Reuniting key players from the 1999 squad and talking with current U.S. players as well, the film examines how women’s soccer  and women’s sports as a whole lot has changed since that epic day at the Rose Bowl.

For more information on Nine for IX, go here.
-@sdotrenee

 

 

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 30 for 30, Ava DuVernay, ESPN, ESPN FIlms, ESPN W, Nine for IX, Pat Summitt, Robin Roberts, Venus WIlliams

Why I Love Sports…From A to Z!

February 14, 2013 by Shana Renee 1 Comment

SPORTS

In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, I thought it was only right that I pour my heart out and gush about my first true love, sports.  Here are the reasons I love sports…from A to Z.

Athletes- Without you, I’d have nothing. Seriously.

Buzzer Beaters- This is a gift and a curse, but regardless of whether my team is on the winning or losing side, I always marvel in disbelief and think what a ride!

120304-lebronkobe-590Clutch Gene-  Hitting a base hit to extend the inning, leading a game-winning drive with less than two minutes remaining, hitting the game-winning shot, or knocking down a pair of free throws, it doesn’t matter the form.  Across all sports, on every level, nothing tops witnessing an athlete in possession of a dominant clutch gene do work, especially when their team needs it most.  When they switch into beast mode and takeover, it’s next level amazing.

Debates- Nothing is off limits because the master manipulator that I am will trap you into a circular discussion that has no finish line.  And when you’re part of a family who debates every. single. thing, you become extremely good at it.  Even if by chance I’m proven wrong, which happens exactly never, but hypothetically speaking, I’d stand my ground like the true champion I am.  Test me.

ESPN Highlights- I was raised on Romper Room, The Cosby Show, and ESPN Highlights.  But being content watching the same ESPN highlights back to back for hours without interruption is the epitome of living the dream…unless my team lost in the playoffs or championship. Because if that’s the case then it’s the epitome of living a nightmare.  And at that point, ESPN ceases to exist in my universe.  I’m off that for a week…at least.

Food and Beer- Having a legit excuse to unapologetically and publicly over indulge in terrible, greasy artery clogging food and multiple rounds of beer is a major win.

Gus Johnson-  If you mic’d me up in a booth and let me loose, I could only hope the undying passion I have for the game would be as illuminating as it is when Gus is making the calls.  In a time when TV personalities are so caught up with appearing fair and balanced, it’s relieving to see a pro like Gus go apeshit over a remarkable game-winning play.  He’s a god.

Hi-Fiving- The discomfort caused by having my personal space invaded by strangers is no longer a concern when I’m taking in the action live or at a bar.  Locking eyes with a stranger who shares my team affiliation is the fastest way to win me over and remedy my germophobia.  It’s also the only time I’ll openly engage in the otherwise uncool social expression of hi-fiving.  With every base hit, clutch free throw, or first down, I’m spreading love one hi-five at a time.

Iverson- Cornrows, crossover, rebellious attitude, dripped in diamonds and completely swagged out in jerseys and oversized jeans.  That’s the Iverson I’ve loved since his Hoya days.  And anything the tabloids report about him these days is rubbish.  Miss me with all of it.

Jets Jordan- The Jets vs Jordan?  Not even close.  Despite MJ repeatedly ripping my heart out as a child, and shrugging it off like it was nothing, I appreciate and respect everything he’s done for the game — sports, basketball, and our culture.  He set the bar, eclipsed it, and set it again.  Salute to His Airness.

Knicks- The extreme highs and lows we’ve experienced together taught me what it means to love unconditionally.  I’m your ride or die chick.  Believe that.

article-2260694-16DFECA5000005DC-206_634x422Lionel Messi-  ESPN taught me.  I shed my American ignorance of the beautiful game in 2009 when I worked on ESPN’s World Cup campaign. While the media focused on Christiano Ronaldo, true futbol heads put me on to Messi and I’ve been obsessed with watching him play ever since. His agility, explosiveness, passing ability, and dominance are everything.  If brilliance was a verb, the definition would be Messi.

March Madness- Duh.

Ninth-Inning Rallies- But only when it’s my team doing the rallying.  Otherwise it sucks.

Olympics- The world’s most elite athletes unite on the grandest stage to compete all in the name of national pride.   And we get to watch.  What’s not to love?

Pro Football- Quarterbacks. Offense. Defense. Special Teams. NY Jets. Sacks. Hail Marys. The Build Up. Overtime. Rivalries. Super Bowl. NFL Redzone. Competition. The Hits. Sunday Rituals.  Thanksgiving. Touchdowns. Fantasy Football. Pick 6s. Touchdown Celebrations. And probably a million more.

Quest for Championships- Because at the end of the day, that’s why players play and fans watch them play.

Rivalries- Yankees vs Red Sox. Cowboys vs Redskins. OSU vs UM. Duke vs NC. Auburn vs Bama. Lakers vs Celtics. Federer vs Nadal.  Tennessee vs UCONN.  Real Madrid vs Barcelona.  Bears vs Packers.  The emotions and memories conjured up at the thought of these matchups caused heart palpitations. Did you feel it too?

Streaking and Slumping-  Sports is a game of numbers and recordkeeping.  In order to deliver on that, streaking and slumping is necessary to raise the level of competition and prove the game is evolving as athletes continue to do what’s never been done before.  The good and the bad.  Whether you suck like the Charlotte Bobcats or go on a tear like Lebron James, the games needs it all. John-Starks-the-dunk

The Dunk- Even though Starks and I beefed for years after his dreadful 2-for-18 shooting performance of Game 7 in the NBA Finals against the Houston Rockets, The Dunk is still one of my favorite sports moments EVER!

Underdogs and Upsets- Because you never see it coming.  When powerhouses are dropped by underdogs, we all take an unexpected trip to bizzaro world.  Up is down. Down is up. In is Out. Black is White.  And as crazy as everything appears, I relish in the opportunity to return often because taking a chance on the underdog and watching them actually succeed is pretty awesome.

Vertical Leaps- Yep, I’m reaching here. Get it? Vertical leap…Reach.  Dunking is an art.  Getting enough elevation off the ground, momentum to finish strong, and a solid grip on the ball is way too much hand eye coordination for me to fathom.  How do these dudes do it?

Winning- When I feel the world around me is crumbling, but my team is winning, suddenly everything else seems less important or at least more manageable.  Winning.  Life’s Elixir.

Xs and Os- Talent is important, but having a coach who understands the fundamentals of the game is priceless.  And having one who doesn’t is torture.  And when matched up against each other, it’s a beautiful mess.

Yankees- Kiss the rings.  All 27 of them.

Zone- Not as in Zone defense or endZone, but more like “Don’t let me get in my zone. Don’t let me get in my zone.”  The pure passion, focus, killer instinct, determination, and can’t be stopped(ness) really gets me going!

These are some of the reasons I love sports.  But enough about me, I want to hear from you.  Join the lovefest and share the reasons you love sports below.  There’s nothing worse than being on the receiving end of unrequited love.  So I beg of you, on Valentine’s Day, please don’t be that guy or gal.

-@sdotrenee

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Filed Under: Fashion, Featured, MLB, NBA, NFL, Olympics, Pro Sports, Soccer, Tennis Tagged With: American football, ESPN, Gus Johnson, Jets, Knicks, Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, Lionel Messi, Michael Jordan, MLB, NBA, NFL, Valentine's Day, Why I love sports from A to Z, Yankees

Athletes tweet reactions to ESPN’s ‘Broke’

October 3, 2012 by Shana Renee 1 Comment

Photo via ESPN

 

After last night’s premiere of Broke, I took to twitter to see what the general consensus was among athletes.  Did they feel it accurately portrayed some of the challenges they face in becoming a millionaire overnight?  Did they identify with the excessive lifestyle Andre Rison, Keith McCants, and Leon Searcy lived? Will it impact how they spend their money going forward? Or, did some continue to think, “that’ll never be me?”

Well, the truth is…it was mixed. Here are some of the best twitter reactions during and after Broke.

Some athletes believed the doc was a cautionary tale and encouraged current and aspiring professional athletes to tune in:


Everyone in sports, doesn’t matter if u play or not. Associated with it in some form or another should be watching ESPN #30for30 “BROKE”
October 2, 2012 8:07 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@KingJames
LeBron James

 


I hope all athletes and inspiring athletes watched the 30 for 30 #Broke…don’t just say it can’t happen to you. Do something about it.
October 2, 2012 9:40 pm via Twitter for iPadReplyRetweetFavorite
@DwyaneWade
DAD

 


This 30 for 30 is something serious… My fellow athletes take care of ur money…
October 2, 2012 9:20 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@DemaryiusT
Demaryius Thomas

 


Broke on espn… you should check it out #dontfallintothetrap
October 2, 2012 8:32 pm via Twitter for AndroidReplyRetweetFavorite
@50janderson
James Anderson

 


Broke: on espn right now everyone should tune in
October 2, 2012 8:02 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@DeAngeloRB
DeAngelo Williams

 


Watching Broke by @BillyCorben on @ESPN right now. Eye opening stuff for a current (& young) professional athlete. Must watch!
October 2, 2012 9:28 pm via Twitter for AndroidReplyRetweetFavorite
@LoMoMarlins
Logan Morrison

 


Watching 30 for 30 Broke! Good Life Lesson For Athletes.
October 2, 2012 9:00 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@Qui22Rodgers
JacQuizz Rodgers

 

Others just reacted to the absurdity of the stories shared and the doc overall:


This 30/30 crazy
October 2, 2012 9:01 pm via Osfoora for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@CutonDime25
Lesean McCoy

 


Sick to my stomach after watching that 30 for 30 broke but it was educating while telling good stories
October 2, 2012 9:48 pm via Twittelator NeueReplyRetweetFavorite
@roddywhiteTV
Roddy White

 


Watching broke!!! 500,000 on ur friend!!! Smh!!!
October 2, 2012 8:50 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@ajgreen_18
Aj Green


Some athletes in and out of the game attested to the accuracy of the doc:


Unfortunately family can be an athletes worst enemy #Broke
October 2, 2012 8:50 pm via TwittelatorReplyRetweetFavorite
@damienwoody
Damien Woody

 


Can’t lie it’s TOUGH telling a loved one “no” but hell I had to do it! Dont feel good and sometimes there is tears but that’s life. #broke
October 2, 2012 8:51 pm via webReplyRetweetFavorite
@Follow24Hodge
Julius Hodge

 


Just watched 30 for 30 on Espn……..Be smart with your $
October 2, 2012 10:03 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@MikeVick
Mike Vick

 

The Cleveland Cavs watched together.  Omri Casspi instagrammed the following pic with the caption, “Our cold tube is pretty full lol.”:

 

Judging by the reactions of NBA hopefuls in college, Broke was their Scared Straight.  Here’s what some players thought:

 


This ESPN 30 for 30 is REAL life.
October 2, 2012 8:58 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@NerlensNoel3
Nerlens Noel

 


Can’t wait to get my smart car. Never going #broke
October 2, 2012 8:50 pm via Twitter for iPadReplyRetweetFavorite
@3JMcCollum
CJ McCollum

 


December 31, 1969 8:00 pm viaReplyRetweetFavorite
@

 


You dont know when the ball is going to stop bouncing thats why im going to get my degree .. #blessed
October 2, 2012 9:14 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@KevinParrom3
Kevin Parrom

 


IM NEVER GETTING MARRIED!!! *shrugs
October 2, 2012 8:56 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@PierreJackson55
Pierre Jackson

 


Or having kids! Lol
October 2, 2012 8:58 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@PierreJackson55
Pierre Jackson

 

Others were a bit skeptical, overall.  Athletes like Arian Foster seemed uninterested in the doc, while others like Wilson Chandler didn’t believe the doc would suddenly make athletes more conservative with their spending:


Nope didn’t see it. RT @MrSavarino1868: I hope @ArianFoster watched 30 for 30 tonight and learns to spend his new contract wisely
October 2, 2012 11:40 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@ArianFoster
Arian Foster

 


Believe it or not there are people who educate themselves before the television tells you it’s an issue.
October 2, 2012 11:42 pm via EchofonReplyRetweetFavorite
@ArianFoster
Arian Foster

 


Oh my God everybody watches 30 for 30 and is good with money all of a sudden.
October 2, 2012 9:34 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@wilsonchandler
Wilson Chandler

 


Same thing you do with a little is what you’d do with a lot…
October 2, 2012 9:35 pm via Twitter for iPhoneReplyRetweetFavorite
@wilsonchandler
Wilson Chandler

 

 And then there’s Delonte West…smh:

 


Hell naw I ain’t gon be on no E60…homie I’m 10yrs in…counted a mill in all 2dollars bills before I turned 21…I den been broke got back
October 2, 2012 8:40 pm via Mobile WebReplyRetweetFavorite
@CharleeRedz13
Delonte West

 


Got broke again…got back again….and so the world continues to turn…..hey u can’t take it wit cha…
October 2, 2012 8:41 pm via Mobile WebReplyRetweetFavorite
@CharleeRedz13
Delonte West

 


U think ima die and let another-joker spend all the money I saved..u must be crazy ..oh imma save some …spend more..u do d same shit.!
October 2, 2012 8:44 pm via Mobile WebReplyRetweetFavorite
@CharleeRedz13
Delonte West

 


Naw…I’m watchin dis joint…I mean I got my story too…mine start before NBA….but as a man I make decision ..that I weigh good and bad
October 2, 2012 9:22 pm via Mobile WebReplyRetweetFavorite
@CharleeRedz13
Delonte West

 

Yesterday I wrote I was disappointed in the doc and was interested to see how it evolved in the past few months, if at all.  And some of ASE’s readers reached out to ask if my opinion changed.  While they beefed up the list of experts to provide more context for viewers, overall, I still believe it was too surface and a huge disappointment.  My reasons for feeling this way are overwhelmingly long, but if you reached out privately, I’d be happy to discuss.  As I mentioned, I’ve done a ton of research on this topic, including interviews with athletes and sports professionals, and I know it doesn’t just start and end with athletes overspending.  That’s oversimplifying a very complex issue.

Also, I don’t believe athletes flippantly detailing their outrageous spending habits does anything to change this culture among athletes.  If Billy Corben thought using brash personalities would ignite dialogue about a taboo topic, then perhaps the documentary was a success.  But the manner in which the content was disseminated won’t do much to decrease the rate at which athletes mismanage their money and ultimately go broke.

And quite frankly, I’m surprised by athlete reactions.  I don’t think their community was portrayed in a positive way at all.  I’ve always felt the media reports these stories at nauseum not to inform the general public about the pitfalls athletes encounter, but to exploit them.  Broke was no exception.

I could go on and on, but I won’t. It’s on record that Broke was probably my least favorite of the 30 for 30 series so far.  But I’ll definitely be tuning in for next week’s 9.79* doc about track and field at the 1988 Seoul Games.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on the doc. Sound off in the comments below.

-@sdotrenee

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Filed Under: Featured, Media, MLB, NBA, NFL, Pro Sports, Sports Marketing, Sports Tweet of the Day Tagged With: 30 for 30, Andre Rison, Arian Foster, Arian Foster tweets, athletes going Broke, Broke, Delonte West twitter, Dwyane Wade tweets, ESPN, ESPN 30 for 30, Keith McCants, LeBron James tweets, Leon Searcy, MLB, NBA, NFL, Omri Casspi, sports documentary, Twitter, Wilson Chandler
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