Tour Report: Phil to attempt $1 million halftime shot (PGA Tour)

05 Oct
2012
Phil Mickelson gets to combine his love of golf and football for a good cause on Oct. 15 when his hometown San Diego Chargers host the Denver Broncos at Qualcomm Stadium for the Monday Night Football game. He’ll attempt a 100-yard shot in the $1 million “KPMG Chip4Charity” shot to benefit First Book, a non-profit [...]
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A’s pitcher Braden yells at police chief (Yahoo! Sports)

28 Sep
2012
STOCKTON, Calif. (AP) -- Oakland Athletics pitcher Dallas Braden yelled at the Stockton police chief while carrying a bat during an anti-crime rally in his hometown but won't be punished.
Tags: , , , , Oakland Athletics pitcher Dallas Braden, , police, police chief, rally, Stockton, Stockton police chief, ,
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Dallas Braden brings bat to community anti-violence rally, argues with police (Video)

27 Sep
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Pour one out for the 209 area code. Oakland Athletics pitcher Dallas Braden says he's leaving his hometown of Stockton, Calif., because he's fed up with the inability of authorities to handle escalating violence plaguing the community that raised him.

Somewhat ironically, Braden — who was carrying a baseball bat, he said, for protection — was nearly ejected from an anti-violence rally Wednesday in his beleaguered hometown near the state capital of Sacramento. Among a crowd that included his grandmother, Braden shouted his displeasure at the police chief who was up on a stage speaking to residents.

[Jeff Passan: Rising outfield star left A's system to become a monk]

The CBS-TV station in Sacramento was there:

"We'll have you escorted out if you don't wait until the end," said Chief Eric Jones.

But the A's pitcher continued his outrage after the anti-violence rally, making it clear who he is.

"My name is Dallas Braden," he said.

Braden says he no longer feels safe in Stockton, where the murder rate is on a record-setting pace.

Braden wasn't on the verge of swinging the bat at anyone, but if the cops actually followed through on their promise to "escort him out," you have to wonder what would have happened with emotions running hot. Braden is obviously a very passionate man.

[Tim Brown: Hot second half is turning Angels' Torii Hunter into a wanted man]

Braden became widely known to baseball fans in 2010, first when he tangled with Alex Rodriguez of the Yankees over a perceived slight on the pitcher's mound at the Oakland Coliseum. Later, of course, Braden threw a perfect game against the Rays and basically dedicated it to his grandmother and his hometown. He has the city's area code — 209 — tattooed across his midsection and the A's have offered special ticket deals for Section 209 when he has pitched.

Braden has stuck up for his community in the past, using his fame from the perfect game to try and affect change. And he's still trying. Even if it means threatening to leave.

Unable to pitch for the A's during their playoff run as he recovers from Tommy John surgery, Braden probably feels just as helpless to slow the violent crime rate where he lives. It might sound like bluster to us cynics, but you heard the TV news talking heads — if Braden follows through on his threat to leave, it will be a big deal in Stockton. If leading citizens refuse to live there anymore, what hope does the place have of turning itself around?

[Related: 'One At-Bat' campaign pays off as Marlins sign Adam Greenberg]

In defense of the police, though, how much does their lack of effect have to do with state budget constraints?

While shouting at cops and bringing the bat along for protection (and to prove a point) might not be the best tactics to reduce violence, it certainly brought attention to the local crime plight. Then again, maybe it's all over for Stockton except for the shouting. That would be too bad.

Big BLS H/N: The Score

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Unique hometown advantage for Donald at Medinah (Reuters)

26 Sep
2012

European team golfer Luke Donald of England hits from a sand trap near the third green during the 39th Ryder Cup golf matches at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Illinois, September 25, 2012. REUTERS/Jim Young

MEDINAH, Illinois (Reuters) - Much is made of home advantage at Ryder Cups and Britain's Luke Donald finds himself in the unusual position of being the only 'local' player on either team at Medinah Country Club this week. The English former world number one spent four years at the nearby Northwestern University, married a Chicago girl and has lived in the 'Windy City' ever since. "It's a unique situation for me," Donald told reporters on Wednesday. "I make my home here, 25 miles just north of here. I've been living here for 15 years. ...


Tags: , , , hometown advantage, , , , Medinah Country Club, , , , , Unique
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Nelson Cruz buys fire truck for his hometown in the Dominican Republic

25 Sep
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

It could be any small boy's fondest wish: To ride his own fire truck down his street with the sirens blaring and the lights flashing.

But Texas Rangers slugger Nelson Cruz is no boy, and he didn't buy a fire truck to fulfill a childhood fantasy. He did it so his hometown in the Dominican Republic would have the same, basic protection that any municipality ought to have.

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram has the details:

"In my hometown we don't have ambulances or fire trucks, so I decided to buy one," Cruz said. "It was yellow, so we had to paint it red."

That's not all. After hearing about Cruz's initiative, American Medical Response, which provides ambulance service in Arlington, is donating two ambulances. The Fire Department, which found a suitable truck in Minnesota, and the dealer that sold it are chipping in hand tools, hoses and nozzles.

[Tim Brown: Has Ozzie Guillen painted Marlins into corner?]

Other athletes give back to their hometowns. Sometimes we hear about it, sometimes we don't. Pedro Martinez has built a church — and who knows what else? — for his town in the Dominican. The same goes for players from other countries, including the United States. Jonny Gomes of the Athletics sponsored a Little League team from his hometown in Petaluma, Calif., that went to Williamsport. That counts, a great deal. Lots of players give back. But there's something special about Cruz's gift.

People have died, as Cruz notes, because firefighters couldn't reach fires in more timely fashion, or because ambulances weren't there. But thanks to him, the city of San Francisco de Macoris — a provincial capital with a reported 245,000 residents  — will be safer. It's a most thoughtful gesture and pragmatic gift on the part of Cruz. He is going to be saving lives. Town pride will be boosted as well.

[The San Francisco de Macoris] department provides service to three neighboring provinces and three outlying communities, according to a news report from January in which the chief lamented a lack of equipment and low firefighter pay.

"They cover a lot of territory with just a few trucks. Having an additional truck will help them out tremendously," Arlington Assistant Fire Chief David Carroll said.

The key to the truck will be ceremoniously given to chief Luis Esmurdoc before the Rangers game on Wednesday. The ambulances already are in Florida, and Cruz hopes everything is delivered and in place come November.

Once the baseball season has ended, perhaps Cruz can ride in the fire truck after all — no matter if the Rangers win the World Series. He should be given a hero's welcome home.

Big BLS H/N: Hardball Talk

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Tags: fire truck, fire trucks, gift, , , nelson cruz, street, , , the Dominican Republic, truck,
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Luke Donald: a ‘hometown’ star on the other team (The Associated Press)

24 Sep
2012

Luke Donald, of England, tees off on the ninth hole during the final round of play in the Tour Championship golf tournament in Atlanta, Sunday, Sept. 23, 2012. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

MEDINAH, Ill. (AP) -- The Ryder Cup comes to Chicago for the first time, and it's only fitting that the Windy City can claim one of the players as its own.


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Though he lives and plays in Pittsburgh for the Steelers, linebacker LaMarr Woodley remembers how the rustbelt town of Saginaw, Mich., launched his career—and believes in returning the favor.  LaMarr recently hosted a back to school event for 200 local boys, providing them with free school supplies, haircuts, food, and an inspirational message to ready them for the year.

"It's where I started from. That's where LaMarr Woodley came from," the linebacker recently told Yahoo! Sports. "I first started playing football right here in Saginaw ... my entire family went to Saginaw High, so I grew up bleeding black and gold."

Though he grew up in a depressed area, as the struggling auto industry led to increased unemployment, Woodley was able to transcend his surroundings with an outstanding career at Michigan -- and now, a great tenure in the NFL, in which he is able to re-create that black-and-gold alliance.

"I was lucky that through hard work, I was able to get out of Saginaw and become part of the Pittsburgh Steelers," he said.

Recalling the days when money was tight in his own household brought Woodley back to his hometown for the recent event, in which he was able to help those who have been less fortunate.

"LaMarr is a generous guy," said Janice Staples, Woodley's mother. "He loves Saginaw, and he loves giving back."

The LaMarr Woodley Foundation supports Woodley's appreciation for his hometown in many ways, and giving area kids a head-start for the school year was just one.

"These days, a haircut can cost 15 to 20 dollars, so they save a little money there. Save a little money with the [donated] book bags and school supplies."

Woodley's wife Jordan, who also comes from Saginaw, is just as deeply rooted in the community.

"My siblings are here. His siblings are here," she said of the town. "LaMarr loves to come back to Saginaw. Anytime [the Steelers] have off, even a weekend or a couple of days, you can bet we're going to try and come back."

"Playing football -- I love doing that, and it pays well," Woodley concluded. "But the thing is, I have to do something where money doesn't make me happy. When I came back and saw the kids smiling and people happy, that's where I get my joy from. Putting a smile on other people's faces. Or giving a kid hope that's been put down, [and people are] saying 'You're never going to be anything.'

"Sometimes, the problem in our community is that the people who are successful, they don't come back. It's almost a secret, like 'I made it out, but I'm not going to tell you.' I want kids to see something positive -- 'That guy came from my city, and he comes back!'"

Nobody will ever say anything else but that about Woodley -- he's proven over and over that he's true to his roots.

More Outside the Game:
Larry Fitzgerald
Michael Robinson

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Morris Claiborne’s tricked-out present to his parents

06 Sep
2012
by Maggie Hendricks in Fantasy Football, General

Morris Claiborne signed a $16 million deal with the Dallas Cowboys in July. One of his big purchases with his money? A shiny, custom car for his parents telling the world where their son works.

According to Busted Coverage, this car has been spotted around Shreveport, La., Claiborne's hometown. The design makes it quite clear to any viewer that someone who really loves Mo Claiborne is driving it.

And what a nice gift to give to the parents who have supported him through his football career before he was drafted by the Cowboys in April. Of course, as soon as this is published, I expect a call from my mother asking why I haven't bought her a Yahoo! Sports-themed car.

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Fred Couples withdraws from hometown event (The Associated Press)

24 Aug
2012
SNOQUALMIE, Wash. (AP) -- Fred Couples withdrew from the Champion's Tour Boeing Classic on Friday because of back problems on the first hole.
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What a player’s day with the Stanley Cup tells us about his personality type

19 Aug
2012

Since Stanley Cup winners only get the Cup for one day, and since it's a highly photogenic piece of hardware, the adventures of hockey's holy grail always yield interesting pictures galore.

You never know what you're going to see in these photos, since nobody really knows what Cup-winning players and officials are going to do with it until they do it. But as time passes, you can sort of predict what you're going to see. Players at parades. Players returning to their hometown rinks (i.e., above). The unique nature of each day with the Cup notwithstanding, the photos from the day tend to fall into a series of categories.

We don't know much about professional hockey players, other than that they enjoy playing hockey, we assume, but each one of these categories reveals something about the player. I fancy myself something of an amateur psychologist (a fancy my psychologist calls "dementia"), so allow me to guide you through a few of these classifications and what they tell us.

This photo features the Cup winner standing over some majestic geographical landmark near his hometown, holding the cup aloft in a moment of triumph. No doubt that geographic landmark has taunted him all through his childhood with its sublimity and awe-inspiring beauty.

For years, it's made the player feel small — it's mocked his big dreams, saying, No, son, I'm big. Your dreams are marginal and unlikely to come true because something as great as I — let alone this entire earth — is far too massive to grant you your piddling wish. Go to college.

But the conqueror is compelled to return to that spot a champion, stand up to this monstrous beauty and flaunt the Cup, as if to say, Suck on that, the earth.

Personality type: Competitive with mountains.

This player is photographed in the midst of some mundane activity, the Cup next to him in a stark and amusing contrast. It's Jonathan Toews riding the bus. It's Bill Guerin or Dustin Brown at the supermarket.

Now, it may look like a mockery of the common man to do common man activities with an uncommon item in tow, but it's not.

The Cup isn't there to say: Envy my excellence, commoners. Your bus ride sucks compared to mine. It's there to serve as a reminder to the player and the world that the Stanley Cup does not make him exempt from normality. Nothing has changed. He's still a simple man, simple enough to take the Cup on the bus because he still needs to get around and that's how simple men get around. It says: Hey commoners, Cup or no Cup, I'm just as lame as you are.

Personality type: Fearful of being too awesome.

Now, some players don't have this crisis of self. Some players think the Cup is beyond their trivial chores.

But that doesn't mean they can be satisfied simply having and holding Lady Stanley. No, as the gold standard the players' best pursuit, it's only worthy of the players' other high-ranking pursuits. Thus, rather than take it to the DMV to renew one's car insurance or onto the roof to clean the gutters, the player takes it hunting or fishing or whatever.

What does this tell us about the player? It tells us he's so into that other activity that he can't even forego it on his day with the Stanley Cup. It's a cry for help, you guys.

Personality type: Addicted to hunting or fishing or whatever.

The Cup is more than just some shiny prize. It has a body guard. Most don't feel worthy to touch it until they've won it. Grown men can't help but kiss it and take it into their arms. It's ageless and beautiful. The Cup is an heiress -- maybe even a queen, and a delicate one that has to be handled with gloves, like Curley's wife in Of Mice and Men.

Is it any wonder, then, that once men have it, some become smitten? The Cup has enchanted them, and they respond in kind. Thus, we get photos of men looking amorously at the Cup in bed, snuggling while watching the sun set, kissing it in the presence of friends and family.

Some men have the ability to switch off the romance. But the saps the Cup enchants are nature's enchantable saps. In past lives, they were knights, troubadors, storytellers. In this life, they're hookers with hearts of gold (because all hockey players hook).

Personality type: Enamoured by shiny objects. Borderline objectophile.

It's common to see players eating out of the Cup. What's the deal with that? Are they compulsive eaters, overcome by the urge to snack at unexpected times, and if the Cup is the first bowl they spot, so be it?

It's far less complicated than that. Some players can't help but let the Cup serves its most obvious function. They see a bowl on a pedestal and think, That's a bowl, and sustenance goes in bowls -- I'm on it. It's a compulsive need for everything to be in its right place, used for its proper purpose.

Thus, we get Brad Marchand eating Cinnamon Toast Crunch from it, Mike Richards eating Captain Crunch out of it, Zdeno Chara eating rice pudding out of it, Brent Sopel eating Reese's puffs out of it, and so on ad infinitum.

I mean, sure, the Cup has been slobbered on by half the earth, defecated in by children and whatnot, and sure, a drink from it tastes "like horse pee from a tin cup", according to Gump Worsely. But it's a bowl on a pedestal, dammit, and disgusting, bacteria-riddled aftertaste be damned, something must be consumed from it.

Personality type: Obsessive-compulsive eater.

Tags: beauty, , , , , , Personality type, , Stanley Cup winners, the Stanley Cup
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