Tony Stewart says he’d be ‘ecstatic’ if NASCAR came to Eldora Speedway

19 Oct
2012

KANSAS CITY, Kan. -- As NASCAR looks for new venues for the Camping World Truck Series schedule, Tony Stewart's Eldora Speedway, a half-mile dirt oval in Rossburg, Ohio has been mentioned as a possible site for the 2013 Truck schedule.

On Friday, Stewart said that the possibility of the series coming to Eldora had, in fact, been brought up, and that he would be ecstatic if NASCAR came to his short track.

"But the rumor about the trucks, trust me, I would be ecstatic if we could get any NASCAR race at Eldora, that would be great," Stewart said. "But, I've talked to NASCAR, they've been looking at all kinds of tracks. You know, it's been brought up in conversation but that's about as far as it's gone right now."

A Truck Series race has never been run on a dirt track. The ARCA Series runs on dirt tracks in addition to paved tracks of all sizes and styles, and according to ARCA owners in this article by SB Nation, the transition between the two surfaces isn't all that complicated.

One race that won't be held at Eldora in 2013 for certain, however, is the Prelude to the Dream, Stewart's annual charity race that features drivers from all different racing disciplines in a late model race. Kyle Busch won the eighth Prelude earlier this year, but because of changes to the format of The Dream (the prestigious late model race that follows the Prelude), the Prelude is taking the year off.

"It takes a ton of work to put the Prelude on and we're changing our format for how we run The Dream that weekend and making it a three day weekend with that series, so we're trying to focus on that a little bit more and some changes that we think are going to be better for our late model race," Stewart said. "So we just needed to take a year off while we focus on that and make sure we don't get overloaded for that."

Tags: Camping, Camping World Truck Series schedule, Eldora Speedway, Eldora Speedway KANSAS CITY, format, Kan., , , , Prelude, Rossburg, Tony Stewart,
No Comments Share Read More

The woman at the center of the silly A-Rod flirting controversy has been identified

17 Oct
2012

Just in case you were wondering what type of woman would have the power to distract the great Alex Rodriguez from his game, it looks like we have some more info. The New York Post says her name is Kyna Treacy and she's a bikini model and swimwear designer from Australia.

A slumpbuster in Mark Grace's traditional definition, she is not.

To recap: The dirty blonde beauty and her gal pal Kate Quinn — sorry, just getting into the tabloid spirit here — held good seats near the New York Yankees dugout for Game 1 of the ALCS on Saturday. A-Rod's eye reportedly wandered over to her during the game, leading to a phone number inquiry in the form of a delivered baseball and then maybe the stupidest playoff controversy New York has ever seen (which is saying something) when a flabbergasted bystander reported the flirting to the Post.

As the owner of the Kini Bikini swimwear company, Treacy is probably enjoying the free publicity that her company is receiving right now. The Aussie, however, hasn't responded publicly to her outing except to tweet a claim that she's 27 years old, not 33 like the Post reported.

It also isn't known whether or not she agreed to A-Rod's reported request, though the benched Yankees third baseman is on the verge of having a lot of free time in his future. The Yankees trail the Detroit Tigers three games to none heading into Wednesday's Game 4.

With A-Rod riding the pine for the second straight night, he could sure use some good company.

Big BLS H/N: Busted Coverage

Make sure all your bases are covered this postseason ...
Follow @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!

Fantasy video from Yahoo! Sports:

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
• Dan Wetzel: Nike, Livestrong abandon Lance Armstrong at wrong time
• Michael Silver: Andy Reid should resist benching Michel Vick
• Derek Fisher could be a Los Angeles Laker again
• omg!: Model unveils $2.5 million 'fantasy bra'

Tags: bikini, , , , swimwear, type,
No Comments Share Read More

The 10 creepiest NHL officially licensed gnomes (PHOTOS)

26 Sep
2012

The National Hockey League licenses thousands of products each year, ranging from the awesome (logos on toast!) to the unsatisfactory (pretty much anything tailored for women).

Among those items: Gnomes. Creepy, freaky little gnomes that retail for $24.99.

We're not talking about the staid, traditional Tolkien-esque gnomes that were available for events like the Winter Classic. We're talking about what would happen if those gnomes decided to drink Dr. Jekyll's elixir and morphed into Hockey Mr. Hydes. They're all not as cool as the St. Louis Blues one up top, which may actually be Darren Pang under all of that disguise.

Here are 10 of the creepiest gnomes available from the NHL. And their creepy hollowed out animal skin frocks.

And here … we … go.

10. Pittsburgh Penguins

Turns out that when Jean-Claude Van Damme murdered Iceburgh … oh, sorry, "killed it in self defense" during "Sudden Death", its pelt was preserved and turned into a fancy hat for a gnome who looks like Donald Sutherland. This makes us sad on several levels.

9. New York Rangers

Cross-dressing aside with the tourist shop Liberty crown, the bite of the apple would indicate that our gnomish friend is able to unhinge his jaw in an extra-terrestrial way. We're also a little disturbed by whatever substance the helmet and pucks are marinating in, being that we've probably stepped over said substance pooled next to a homeless man on a Manhattan sidewalk at some point.

8. Chicago Blackhawks

The Blackhawks, of course, have a Native American theme to their team nickname, but in 2012 that becomes a bit of a sticky wicket when creating a similarly thematic gnome. In theory, this should be a headdress and war paint. In reality, it appears he's being devoured by the exploding crow from "Angry Birds".

7. Boston Bruins

Not really sure what they were going for here, but they've perfectly captured the look of a gnome with a bear on its head getting surprised by the crew of To Catch a Predator. "Why don't you have a seat, Smokey?"

6. Nashville Predators

This one just struck us because we never realized how cartoonishly goofy the Predators' mascot was. Previously, we saw it as a savage beast that could tear flesh with its mighty fangs. Here it looks like something The Last Airbender would ride to escape the Fire Lord.

5. San Jose Sharks

Turn him into an awesome gnome shark? No, why do that when you can offer the world the creep-tastic joy of giant, three-toed gnome feet? (Incidentally, we hear Douglas Murray was the model for said feet.)

4. Calgary Flames

We boo this one because it's obvious the designers wanted to hit happy hour and call it a gnome. "Flames … eh, [expletive] it, we'll just light'em on fire." While seeing a gnome's flesh sizzling — combined with the look of utter shock on his face — offers us some catharsis, we're turned off by the laziness of it all. What's next? The Edmonton Oilers gnome that looks like a seagull after the Exxon Valdez?

3. Boston Bruins

The Boston Bruins make this list twice because … well, Leahy saw this one and immediately made a clever joke about the Phoenix Coyotes (something about the broken stick and the Goldwater Institute). I pointed out the Bruins shirt to him, and the only conclusion we cold draw was that the designers felt there was no market for a Coyotes gnome, flipped some of the color scheme and created a terrible looking Bruins model.

2. Detroit Red Wings

In order to really understand how horrifying this octopus-eats-gnome figurine is, you have to see the second version that was released. Perhaps they misjudged the market for bearded humans being murdered by maniacal sea creatures. It's actually quite small, and centered around the eventual demise of director James Cameron.

1. Philadelphia Flyers

Yes, the Flyers' gnome is the only one with a black eye and a tooth missing. All the better to eat those mutant hot dogs that we suppose are intended to be cheesesteaks. Black eyes and cheesesteaks, Philly. That's how they see you. But hey, be thankful for small miracles: Nary a battery or a Santa-seeking snowball in sight. Maybe that's in the next release, along with a phone dialed into WIP to complain about Andy Reid.

Fantasy Football video from Yahoo! Sports:

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
• NFL officials will work Thursday
• Fitzgerald takes unique diet in hopes of prolonging career
• Rajon Rondo commits to leading Celtics
• Alligator for hire for kids' birthday parties

Tags: , Dr. Jekyll, gnome, gnomes, , , , , ,
No Comments Share Read More
by in Fantasy NASCAR, General
See NASCAR Late Model Stock Cars at the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300!! Metroseats.com is selling 5 tickets to NASCAR Late Model Stock Car: Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300 at Martinsville Speedway on 10/21/2012. The tickets are for seats in section GENERAL row ADMISSION - can split tickets if necessary.

PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE & AVAILABILITY IS LIMITED. USE DISCOUNT CODE FREESHIP FOR FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OVER $150! Click below for current inventory and price list of NASCAR Late Model Stock Car: Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300 TICKETS



Other TUMS Fast Relief 500 tickets available at: TUMS Fast Relief 500 tickets
No Comments Share Read More

Dwyane Wade gets surprise ‘Good Afternoon America’ visit from noted role model David Hasselhoff (VIDEO)

06 Sep
2012

If you've turned on your television at any point over the past few days, there's a decent chance you've seen Dwyane Wade smiling and laughing right alongside a who's who of TV chat-show hosts. The Miami Heat star has been making the media rounds to promote his new book, "A Father First: How My Life Became Bigger Than Basketball," joining the esteemed panelists of "The View," rocking yellow and blue (Pacers colors!) on "The Late Show with David Letterman," and appearing on "CBS This Morning," "Fox and Friends," CNN and (probably) UHF.

On Wednesday, Wade's whirlwind TV tour took him to ABC's "Good Afternoon America" for a sit-down with hosts Josh Elliott and Lana Spencer, where the two-time NBA champion took part in a word association game called "What's the Word?," in which the hosts showed the guest a picture and he had to say the first thing that came to his mind. First up: The flip-up sunglasses that Wade wore to his postgame press conference after Game 4 of the 2012 NBA finals, which elicited a one-word reply: "Swag."

The second picture: Noted thespian and, apparently, young Wade role model David Hasselhoff.

"See, that's why I like wearing watches, because I think of him, I think about the watch, when he talked to it," Wade said, referencing the radio wristwatch that Hasselhoff's "Knight Rider" character, Michael Knight, used to talk to and control his artificially intelligent talking car, KITT. (Not sure if you've caught this yet, but Dwyane Wade really likes "Knight Rider.")

[Related: Shaquille O'Neal could return to action … in Mexico]

After reiterating the story he tells in "A Father First" about how watching "Knight Rider" was a big part of the time he spent with his grandmother and "away from the streets I grew up in and all the negative things that was going around," Spencer asked what Wade would say to Hasselhoff if he got the chance to meet him, apparently unaware that the two have actually interacted in the past. Just then, Hasselhoff and Wade met again through the magic of Skype, so that the 'Hoff could offer D-Wade a deal.

"Dude, if you send me a copy of your book, I'll send you a copy of my 'Knight Rider' license plate," Hasselhoff said.

"I need that," Wade replied, before ratcheting up his asking price: "Can I get the car?"

Through some Skype choppiness (bloggers everywhere feel you, "Good Afternoon America"), Hasselhoff said he appreciated Wade's love of "Knight Rider" and praised his efforts to be a positive role model for fathers.

"It makes me feel real humbled, because the theme of 'Knight Rider,' one thing was to make a difference, and Dwyane Wade is making a difference," Hasselhoff said. "He's going out there talking to the dads. I mean, I went through a lot of those same problems myself as a dad. It's a very honest book and he's an honest guy. It's hard to find that in show business and in sports."

Saying that the first time he met Hasselhoff, "he probably thought I was like a crazy stalker, because I was so excited," Wade talked about how Hasselhoff's portrayal of Michael Knight influenced him as a kid.

"It gave me a vision and a dream of what I wanted to do and what I wanted to become when I was a kid. So I appreciate that," Wade said. "I mean, everybody knows how impressionable we are to kids. We are role models and he's a role model of mine, so I thank him."

[Related: Allen Iverson would like to play in China, if not the NBA]

Again: David Hasselhoff is a role model of Dwyane Wade's, Michael Knight was Dwyane Wade's vision of what he wanted to do/be when he grew up, and 2012 is the type of place where these kinds of sentences are not only proven to be facts, but reinforced on national television using consumer-strength video conferencing solutions. I know the offseason sucks, but sometimes it's worth remembering that the weirdest things ever happen basically every day.

Along those lines, another important revelation from the book, as shared by Elliott: "You write, and I do quote, 'To this day, birds freak me out.'" Wade's response? "I've been attacked a few times."

"Like, seriously, if I'm walking outside and birds are flying around, they are coming for me," Wade said. "And everybody think I'm playing, but they come back for me. Like, they fly and go, 'Oh, there go Dwyane,' and they'll go [around]."

"Are you worried that some of your partners in the NBA [NOTE: It is way more fun if your brain translated this as "pot'nas," as mine did] are going to prank you now?" Spencer asked. "Like, you're going to open up your locker and ...?"

"No, that's not — that's not right," Wade replied. "That's cruel. They shouldn't do that."

No, they shouldn't. But keep on yelling at him all the time, Dwyane, and Mario Chalmers won't be responsible for what happens next. No self-respecting top-10 point guard would stand for such treatment.

More news from the Yahoo! Sports Minute:

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
• The Phoenix Suns are looking for a new Gorilla mascot
• D.C.'s fascination with QB Robert Griffin III goes beyond race
• Fantasy Football video: Which WR deserves a start in your Week 1 lineup?
• Y! News: Man swallows $13,000 diamond

Tags: , David Hasselhoff, dwyane wade, , Good, Hasselhoff, , , , television
No Comments Share Read More

A high-tech model of LeBron James’ new signature Nikes will cost $315

21 Aug
2012

Citing the rising costs of labor in China, of materials like cotton and of shipping, Nike is reportedly going to raise prices on its sneakers by between 5 percent and 10 percent this fall, according to the Wall Street Journal's Shelly Banjo. The across-the-board increase will result in a $5 bump on low-end kicks like the Converse Chuck Taylor All-Stars (the choice of Dan Devine since round about 1999) and a somewhat steeper price tag on the Oregon apparel giant's higher-end items, including the forthcoming LeBron X, the 10th edition of LeBron James' signature sneaker.

James unveiled the LeBron X — which are "inspired, both aesthetically and metaphorically, by the diamond, a precious and nearly indestructible gemstone," according to NikeBlog — during Team USA's gold-medal win over Spain at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. The hotly anticipated signature shoe will hit the market this fall in two models: the standard version, which will retail at $180 a pair, and the LeBron X Nike Plus, which will include the company's Nike+ technology, built around embedded pressure/motion sensors that track and store data on stuff like how much/how far/how fast a player moves during a game or workout, or how high he/she jumped on a dunk.

The model's going to run you $315, making it the most expensive pair of sneakers Nike's ever brought to market, according to Banjo. And while the sneakerhead community's known what the LeBron X will cost for nearly a month now five months now (shouts to CounterKicks), the WSJ report brought the news to the world at large, sparking notices in financial notes columns and business-specific news sites, and even on National Public Radio. The general tenor of such outsider discussion of the price point — which, again, is the going rate just for the high-tech, Nike+-infused model, and not the regular shoes, which will cost $180, or $10 more than last year's LeBron 9 — has been characterized by surprise and, in some places, dismay.

Gawker's Hamilton Nolan offered a fairly succinct encapsulation of the blowback:

As unemployment ravages the working class, our lower and higher education systems shudder in crisis, and murder decimates our forgotten urban poverty zones, Nike is rolling out its first $300+ sneaker. But mom, you don't understand—it's worth it.

Here's the thing: While it's always good to have more information about a topic and it's certainly worthwhile to consider myriad opinions on stuff like sports, marketing, economics and social responsibility, it's kind of hard to see any of what's come down the pike Tuesday about LeBron's new shoes actually changing anyone's opinion about anything.

If you were of the mind that it is ridiculous to pay multiple hundreds of dollars for a pair of sneakers before you opened up your Wall Street Journal or turned on "Morning Edition" on Tuesday, learning that Nike is raising the pricing bar isn't going to change that. If you are someone who thinks having a cool-looking sneaker is important, that having a cool-looking sneaker that can tell you how high you jump sounds neat, and that having a cool-looking sneaker that can tell you how high you jump and is endorsed by the guy who's won just about everything you can win on a basketball court in the past couple of months is worth paying a premium for, then A) you probably already knew what the new LeBrons would cost and B) your opinion on that price is unlikely to be altered by a bunch of people who only write about sneakers when aghast on your behalf.

Everyone wondering Whether People Will Really Pay $300 For A Pair Of Sneakers??? probably isn't really wondering, because they know that people with money always have, and always will, pay lots of it to own things they think are cool and to be perceived as cool themselves. The wonderers, especially those coming from outside sneaker culture, might not have known just how strong a market there is for expensive basketball shoes (thanks, Chris Littmann) and for Nike Basketball's product in particular (thanks, Business Insider), but they do know that.

What they're wondering about, and judging, is why people who like sneakers value them as much as they do and how anybody could be crazy enough to do so, in the same way folks wonder about and judge the relative cachet of designer/boutique options in clothes, drinks, works of art, clubs, restaurants and a million other things. That's not an unreasonable perspective, of course, but apparently, it's one that's not shared by the millions of consumers who continue to beef up shoe companies' revenues despite what analysts cite as a 9.4 percent overall year-over-year increase in basketball shoe prices. The question of why Nike is going to charge $315 for a pair of sneakers has a pretty simple answer — because they can.

No matter what your stance on the price point itself, the only thing that really seems to matter is consumer safety — namely, avoiding the kind of violent, chaotic shopping-mall hysteria seen during the re-release of the Air Jordan XI Concords back in December. Nike has reportedly established new rules for sporting-goods stores to follow on release dates, including eliminating midnight openings that lead to lengthy lineups and hectic rushes to the front as soon as store doors open.

That's a start, but it's unlikely to help too much if Nike continues its long-held practice of releasing only small numbers of pairs to retailers, keeping supply low to stoke demand to a fever pitch that has, time and again over the past couple of decades, boiled over into violence. If Nike's serious about increasing customer safety and limiting violent incidents related to releases, it'd be great to see them eschew the exclusivity argument and simply ship more LeBron X units when the fall comes; whether they'll actually do it, of course, remains to be seen.

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
• Mark Cuban won't retire Jason Kidd's jersey because he went to the Knicks
• Fantasy football: Peyton Manning leads group that could become costly
• Arsenal defender Andre Santos reportedly led cops on 130 mph chase
• Y! TV: Michael Strahan to join 'Live! With Kelly' as permanent co-host

Tags: , , , , LeBron X, , , Nike, , , sneakers, Wall Street Journal
No Comments Share Read More

Who do you trust to fix NHL revenue sharing: Owners or the players?

21 Aug
2012

The single most overrated victory in collective bargaining between the NHL's owners and players will be in the "public relations war", because one side never had a chance to claim victory.

The owners won the last lockout, implementing a salary cap system they wanted and giving the players 57 percent of the revenue cut. They then spent the next seven years circumventing their own rules before attempting to cut the players' share down to an even split, with justifications ranging from "hey, basketball did it!" to crying poverty for teams whose own foibles — bad contracts, arena deals and transactions — have caused their ills.

Frankly, the owners lost the trust of the fans and media that supported them in 2004-05. They also don't have a clear ideological rallying call as they did back then, when "saving the game" wasn't necessarily just a hyperbolic mantra but a viable goal.

So the players went into the CBA negotiation having already won the PR war — hell, the NHL couldn't even successfully hang the death of realignment on them.

Donald Fehr and the NHLPA aren't taking anything for granted in winning the popularity contest. They're measured and cohesive where Bob Goodenow's union was hair-trigger and permeable. They've used media surrogates and social media outlets to hammer their opponents. Their first "alternate" proposal was as reasonable as the NHL's was extreme; offering solutions to pressing issues that seemed, at face, like a jumping off point for a settlement.

Chief among them: Revenue sharing. Reading a Donald Fehr proposal without meaningful revenue sharing would be like seeing a Dane Cook concert without hearing anyone else's jokes. The only mild surprise was the lack of a luxury tax for teams that exceed to cap — perhaps sensing that it's a non-starter for the NHL.

But you know who else proposed an increase in revenue sharing?

The NHL, in its opening proposal.

But this is what happens when you've already lost the PR war, and when your concepts are crushed under the weight of flawed ideas: The NHLPA offers a revenue sharing plan that's celebrated like a New Year's baby, and the NHL's own plan — which they believe is the better plan — is summarily ignored.

The good news for us: They both want expanded revenue sharing to teams that don't currently qualify for it.

The bad news for us: They have significantly different theories on how to effectively accomplish this.

Fehr suggested that "the players partner with the financially stronger owners to help stabilize the industry and assist the less financially-strong ownership groups."

Part of that stabilization would come from the players capping their salary escalation for three years at an incremental 2-percent rate, before reverting back to 57 percent of the revenue in an optional fourth year.

But it was the NHLPA's suggestion to "fix" the current revenue sharing model — and expand it to more "have-nots" than are currently served by it — that had outlets like The Sporting News calling Fehr's gambit "a stroke of genius."

This probably had the NHL jumping up and down, waving its arms and wondering what it had to do to share in that genius. After all, it was proposing the same broadening of revenue sharing as the players were, but getting none of the adulation.

The Globe & Mail was one of the few to notice:

In addition to the paper work the owners turned over, they also made their first proposals on revenue sharing. There is some revenue sharing in the current agreement, which expires Sept. 15, but the players are expected to demand much greater revenue sharing between the NHL's wealthy and poorer teams in the new agreement.

The NHL's revenue sharing plan was pushed aside by Fehr upon arrival: "We haven't evaluated the changes from current revenue sharing to determine whether we think it's the appropriate thing to do or if it misses the mark in some respect," he said.

The current model for the NHL's revenue sharing has the teams in the bottom half of the League-wide revenues eligible for revenue sharing. Which means if you're in the top 15 revenue-generating teams but are playing through a mountain of debt — hello, New Jersey Devils — you aren't eligible under the current system.

According to NHL sources, the League has proposed that the system will be opened up to any team in the NHL that might require revenue sharing, and not just the bottom 15 revenue generators.

Essential to that broadening of the system: Dropping the current CBA rules that prohibit teams in big media markets — 2.5 million TV households or more — from being eligible for revenue sharing. In theory, teams like the New York Islanders, the Devils, the Anaheim Ducks and the Dallas Stars that should logically qualify for revenue sharing would be eligible under the new model.

As David Shoalts of the Globe & Mail detailed earlier this summer, the NHL's revenue sharing system is tangled and baffling.

Part of that confusion comes from a "clawback" system that incentivizes teams to maximize their local revenue streams — if they hit certain growth targets, usually at a rate above the League's average revenue growth, then they qualify for a larger share of the revenue. If they miss the targets … they don't.

The NHL intends to loosen those restrictions and make it easier for teams to qualify for a larger share of revenue sharing.

Now, if the NHL expands revenue sharing, that means it needs a bigger pot to draw from, right?

Where oh where might that money come from … a TV contract? Nah, not as big as the NFL's or the NBA's.

Ticket sales? Nah, that's already the financial lifeblood of the entire League. The NHL Guardians Project? Uh, yeah, about that …

Oh, that's right: It'll come from a reduction in player salaries and reallocation of those funds by the NHL's revenue-generating big market teams.

Which is how you convince teams like the Toronto Maple Leafs, Montreal Canadiens and Philadelphia Flyers — all opponents of expanded revenue sharing in the past — to buy into a new system: By taking from the players to broaden the current system, without draining more dollars from the big market teams already subsidizing the Phoenix Coyotes of the world.

As James Mirtle wrote in July:

"Bettman and Co. believe they will have far more luck prying $200- or $300-million out of the players than the big moneyed teams, the owners of which feel they've given up enough of their advantage by agreeing to a cap, some limited revenue sharing and greater parity."

The players and owners agree that revenue sharing needs to be strengthened, but the devil's in the details.

Using a 12-percent revenue-sharing figure that was calculated by Justin Hunt, a sports attorney in Columbus, OH, the New York Times figured that the owners' portion of revenues came to $1.42 billion last season, and at 12 percent the shared revenue among struggling teams that qualified would have been $170 million.

The League believes its current system, and the expansion of that system, would lead to the "meaningful" revenue sharing both sides desire. The NHL estimates that its revenue sharing would increase by 30 percent under its proposal.

Donald Fehr believes the players' revenue sharing partnership with big-market teams would generate as much as $250 million for teams.

The NHL's concern with the NHLPA's system? That it may hurt more clubs than it helps, particularly because the players' share of League-wide revenue would remain in the neighborhood of 54 percent.

As Gary Bettman said, there's a "gulf" between the two sides after dueling proposals. Without fully knowing the numbers being considered, it's difficult to determine if the players or owners have the right approach to expanded revenue sharing. It may not even be a "make or break" issue when it comes to a work stoppage, although it's inherently tied to one that is — the players' percentage of revenues.

One thing's clear: The players own the issue right now. Their proposal was built on revenue sharing. Donald Fehr's reputation as Mr. Revenue Sharing greets him whenever he walks into a room.

In 2004, the NHL won majority support with a proposed reinvention of the system and by gaining the trust of fans that their ideology would stabilize the League's economy.

Now it seems the NHLPA have that high ground in the early stages, especially when it comes to spreading the wealth.

Tags: , , , , , revenue sharing,
No Comments Share Read More

Tim Tebow is a role model for NFL’ers, says Osi Umenyiora

25 Jul
2012
by in Fantasy Football, General

Continuing with today's theme of Osi Umenyiora pearls of wisdom, this time, he's urging his NFL brethren to be more like the straitlaced, church-going, high-on-life Tim Tebow.

"I know that everybody likes to make fun of Tim Tebow and talk about him, but he sets an outstanding example for people," Umenyiora said. "I think if more people would focus and try to be like him and carry themselves the way he does, I think things would be better."

Tebow, of course, is a devout Christian and behaviorally, as far as anyone knows, walks the straight and narrow. He's never been arrested, never been in trouble, never been anything other than a model citizen and extremely charitable man.

I know who Osi is talking about when he mentions people making fun of Tebow. Maybe it happens in Osi's world, but I think people are more making fun of the Tim Tebow legend, the beloved media creation, incapable of ever doing wrong on a football field or being something other than the perfect human being.

But maybe there are NFL players who do ridicule Tebow. I don't know. If they do, I'd hate to think it was any of the ones who have been arrested recently — the ones at whom Osi pointed his comments.

"For the life of me, I can't understand it," Umenyiora said. "It's ridiculous, to be honest with you. People need to be more focused and more grateful for what it is that they have … to be messing around like that, man, it's really unfortunate."

It is. And sure, Tebow would be a good role model for any NFL player considering throwing their career away because they don't want to call a cab, but no one has to go full Tebow, either. There are plenty of solid people in the NFL who set an example every day: Madieu Williams, Reggie Wayne, Malcolm Jenkins, DeMeco Ryans, etc. There are a lot of role models out there.

Tags: , , NFL player, , role model, theme, , , ,
No Comments Share Read More

Recent Posts

  • Tour Report: Ask Paul Haley II a question (PGA Tour)
    Tour Report: Ask Paul Haley II a questio...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Chargers send K Kaeding to injured reserve – Nate Kaeding | SD
    Chargers send K Kaeding to injured reser...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Saints ‘feel good’ about Graham’s status – Jimmy Graham | NO
    Saints ‘feel good’ about Gra...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season Previews: The Dallas Mavericks
    Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season ...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season Previews: The Dallas Mavericks
    Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season ...
    October 22, 2012No Comments