The anniversary isn't receiving much attention, but it was 10 years ago Wednesday that 34-year-old William Ligue Jr. and his 15-year-old son William III attacked Kansas City Royals first base coach Tom Gamboa at Chicago's Comiskey Park. That's 10 years of knowing that, yes, there are cretins like that living among us and they can hurdle a short fence to beat a baseball lifer and irreparably change his life. Gamboa suffered permanent hearing loss during the attack.

"I felt like a football team had hit me from behind. Next thing I knew, I'm on the ground trying to defend myself," Gamboa told reporters at the time. "It just happened so fast."

The Chicago Tribune did a where are they now?-style piece with the three subjects of the story last November. Gamboa never coached in the major leagues after being let go by the Royals after the 2003 season and spent several years as a minor-league coach for the Padres and Angels before retiring last year at age 63.

The Ligues, not surprisingly, have struggled to stay out of trouble. The elder Ligue, who's now 44, was sentenced to five years in prison in 2006 for breaking into a car, which was a violation of the probation he received for beating Gamboa. The younger Ligue, now 25 and apparently still proud of his 15 minutes of shame, was released from prison in 2011 and is on parole after serving time for a 2010 drug charge.  Of all the great father and son highlights that baseball has produced over the years, there's no doubt that the Ligues authored the sport's worst moment between two generations. May we never see something like that again.

Here's a story about Gamboa's post-attack life that was filmed in 2009:

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Quebec Labour Board rejects injunction against lockout; somehow, everyone is pleased

14 Sep
2012

Last Sunday night, the NHLPA made an effort to complicate the owners' march towards a labour stoppage by seeking an injunction against locking out the Montreal Canadiens in particular. Their argument: you can't lock out the players' union in Quebec, because the NHLPA isn't a union in Quebec. Suck on that.

It wasn't an injunction that would save the season, but had it been accepted, it could have fractured the owners' united front. After all, it would have been a lot harder for the owners to have a united front during a long labour stoppage when one of the owners was still paying salaries.

Unfortunately, it didn't go through. The Quebec Labour Board rejected the injunction outright, making the lockout legal across the continent.

This necessitated the snarkiest, smuggest, gloatiest statement imaginable from deputy commissioner Bill Daly:

"We are pleased but not surprised with the Quebec Labour Board's ruling tonight that any lockout of Players will be effective on a League-wide basis, including in Quebec, and we are extremely appreciative of the expeditious and decisive manner in which the matter was handled. We are hopeful that this ruling will cause the Players' Association to cease pursuing these needless distractions and instead focus all of its efforts and energies on making progress at the bargaining table."

I'll tell you what should really be illegal: sass like that.

Mind you, it shouldn't come as a surprise that Daly was dismissive and smug in victory. He was dismissive and smug before too. "This is a joke," he told the Canadian Press on Monday.

But hold up a second. The NHLPA's statement also begins "we are pleased".

"We are pleased with the ruling that the Commission released tonight. While the Commission denied the players' request for emergency relief, it also rejected the NHL's request to dismiss the case.  The ruling acknowledges that the players have raised issues about the legality of the NHL's planned lockout that require a full hearing on the merits.

We remain confident that the lockout is prohibited by the Quebec Labour Code and look forward to presenting our case to the Commission in the near future. Should the NHL carry out its threat to lock out the players in Quebec, it will do so at its own risk."

Okay, if you wanted any more proof that these two sides are nowhere near a deal: they can't even agree on what the Labour Board ruling meant.

As ominous as the PA's statement sounds, it looks like there isn't much left here. Yes, the Labour Board is open to the possibility of a hearing down the road and there are some legal issues, but clearly it isn't anything that's gotten them worked up, or they'd be working to set a date for this hearing. And, with the lockout slated to drop in a little over 24 hours, it's clearly not going to delay the work stoppage or expedite negotiations that will put an end to it in any way.

As much as I hate to side with Bill Daly after a statement so catty he deserves to be sprayed with a water bottle, I think he's right. The NHLPA should be focused on getting a deal done, and this subplot doesn't look like it will help.

Tags: , , injunction, Labour Board, , , NHLPA, Quebec Labour Board,
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NFL filings detail scuttled bounty rehearing (Yahoo! Sports)

07 Sep
2012

FILE - This Feb. 3, 2012 file photo shows NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell gesturing during a news conference in Indianapolis. The NFL has pledged $30 million for medical research to the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health. Commissioner Goodell announced Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, the funding to the NIH, which is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The NFL filed court documents Friday showing that suspended Saints linebacker Jon Vilma initially agreed to a new bounty hearing with Commissioner Roger Goodell last month before Vilma's lawyers and the players union talked him out of it.


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Mularkey hearing rumors that MJD will report soon (Yahoo! Sports)

01 Sep
2012
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Jaguars coach Mike Mularkey is hearing rumors that holdout Maurice Jones-Drew will report soon, but says none of the talk is coming from anyone who matters.
Tags: anyone, , Drew, , , hearing rumors, , Jaguars coach Mike Mularkey, , , MJD, ,
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Mesoraco still waiting on suspension appeal – Devin Mesoraco | CIN

16 Aug
2012
Devin Mesoraco is still waiting for an appeal hearing about his three-game suspension.
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Fairley’s trial on DUI, other charges delayed (Yahoo! Sports)

13 Aug
2012
Detroit Lions defensive tackle Nick Fairley's court hearing on charges including driving under the influence and attempting to elude police has been pushed back to Sept. 26.
Tags: court hearing, , , driving under the influence, , elude, Fairley, , , , Nick Fairley, police
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