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While We’re Young (Ideas): Sunday Notes and Memories of Olympics Past

July 25, 2021 by Terry Lyons

Memories …

May be beautiful and yet

What’s too painful to remember

We simply to choose to forget.

– by Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Marvin Hamlisch for The Way We Were

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – Choose to forget?

No Way!

Those of us roaming this Earth with the “Olympic gene” remember every second, In fact we measure time in increments of four years, as in – “We’ll do that after the Sydney Olympics. No. After the Athens Olympics.”

The concept of the “Olympic gene” was introduced by the great Bob Condron, the highly regarded and now retired member of the United States Olympic Committee who was in charge of everything to do with making the Olympic Games run smoothly, mostly from the perspective of the operating machine behind Team USA.

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Condron’s concept was quite simple. You either had the Olympic gene or you didn’t. While he was sure you’d always work hard to help the specific sport you might be attached to, he knew you had the Olympic gene when you jumped at a chance to attend the heats for 10-meter women’s platform diving with a moment’s notice, or ran to track and field to pitch in, or to bring some NBA players to watch the USA boxing team … (you get the point, right)?

The Olympic gene, by the way, is a dominant gene. If both you and your wife have the Olympic gene, your kids have it, one hundred percent of the time. That is the case in this reporter’s household. Summer Games, Winter Games – you name it.

HERE NOW, SOME OLYMPIC MEMORIES: Some of the memories are marvelous, some are just great, some are painful, but none are forgotten.

This writer has vivid memories of watching the 1968 Summer Olympic Games in Mexico City and Winter Olympics in Grenoble. How could you forget the “Fosbury Flop,” performed by the great high jumper, Dick Fosbury? How could you forget the dominance, elegance and determination of downhill Alpine skier Jean-Claude Killy as he won the downhill, the giant slalom and the slalom within nine days in his native France?

The ‘68 Games were highlighted by George Foreman taking the gold medal in boxing, by Al Oerter taking the gold in the discus throw, by Bob Beamonin the long jump and the previously mentioned Dick Fosbury in the high jump. But it was Tommie Smith (gold) and John Carlos (bronze) who protested the racial injustices and stood on the medal stand with hands clinched in single black gloves to call attention to the civil rights movement to all the world as the Star Spangle Banner played to honor the medalists for the men’s 200m. That was 53 years ago and we still haven’t done right by Smith, Carlos or the entire issue of basic civil rights.

When the 1972 Winter Games rolled around, I can remember pleading with my seventh grade science teacher, Mr. Luciano, to put the Sapporo Games on the black & white tv in our home room each morning as the games were televised live – by satellite they told us – by ABC Sports.

Of course, that September of ‘72 would bring the evils of terrorism into living rooms around the world when a group of Palestinian Black September terrorists took 11 Israeli Olympians and coaches hostage in their village dorm rooms. I can still remember the horror and devastation of ABC’s Jim McKayreporting, “We just got the final word … you know, when I was a kid, my father used to say ‘Our greatest hopes and our worst fears are seldom realized.’ … Our worst fears have been realized tonight. They’ve now said that there were eleven hostages. Two were killed in their rooms yesterday morning, nine were killed at the airport tonight. They’re all gone.”

FAST FORWARD: As the years flew by, I nearly had to pinch myself as I was assigned (by the NBA) to assist in the league’s summer program to help prepare the 1984 USA Basketball Senior National team as it practiced for the Games of the XXIII Olympiad in Los Angeles.

The date was June 30, 1984 and I took an early morning “puddle jumper” from New York’s Fiorello La Guardia Airport to Providence, Rhode Island and was the lone NBA rep for the very first game of an eight-game series of NBA Stars vs the Olympic Team. It was the first and only time I’ve ever met and interacted with coach Bobby Knight. Here is the story:

As I jumped out of a taxi which transported me from T.F. Green Airport to the (then) Providence Civic Center (now Dunkin Donuts Arena), I entered the building at about 9:00am for the 1:00pm tip on ABC Sports. My first site was observing our country’s executive director for basketball Bill Wall draping a wrinkled ABA/USA banner over the scorer’s table. The federation was tagged ABA/USA as it represented “Amateur Basketball” and not the professionals. It was 1984, two full years before FIBA’s Borislav Stankovicwould begin his quest to have all players in the world eligible for the Olympic Games and Worlds.

At this point in time, the NBA was merely throwing together any players who could and would volunteer to play together for one game in their off-season. The next memory was Cleveland Cavaliers guard John Bagley (of Boston College) soon arriving with no gear and asking, “Hey, man? What size you wear?” Bagley eventually squeezed his large dogs into my size 11.5 Reeboks and joined a cast of NBA players, including Terry Cummings, Darryl Dawkins, John Garris (BC), Joey Hassett (Providence), Rick Mahorn, Reggie Theus, Darrell Walker, Gus Williams and Orlando Woolridge.

That morning, after some scrambling and typing up a roster of our NBA players and their uniform numbers, I was very anxious to go and visit the arriving Olympians and my St. John’s University bud, Chris Mullin, who had earned a place on the team.

I walked down the corridor to the Olympic team locker room as the players were lacing up their basketball shoes and had some quality time with Mullin. A few minutes later, as I was leaving the locker, I bumped into Knight and introduced myself, cordially, “Hi, I’m Terry Lyons and I work at the NBA league office but am here today helping out with our players. If I can do anything for you or “The Team,” please let me know.”

Knight responded with the only words I’ve ever exchanged with him, as he firmly stated, “If we need any help from you, we’re in real trouble.”

I smiled, turned around and walked out of the locker never to speak another word with Knight! (It’s his loss, right)?

‘88: The NBA assisted in similar fashion in 1988 and I was asked to do a number of games that summer. Although I took the gig for granted, and dealing with USA coach John Thompson via Georgetown, became as much a drag as it was with Knight, the friendly games were great and we enjoyed more time to get to know the future NBA players. Kansas center-forward Danny Manning stood out, as did David Robinson and Mitch Richmond, of course. One stand-out took the entire tour with the Olympic team but was a senior in high school. Yes, Thompson had Alonzo Mourning training with the team in preparation for his future career at Georgetown and Mourning held his own, and some. Mourning was the last cut after we played the final prep in Las Vegas. By that point, Thompson had “lost” a few of the players – including some of the best on the team – and I was not surprised when the USA lost to the USSR in Seoul.

GOMELSKI and COMPANY: What was truly amazing to this New York kid with his Olympic Dream-Gene was that by 1988, I knew the members of the Russian team almost as well as I knew my fellow Americans. The relationships built over the four-plus years included “a solid” – complete with late-night vodka toasts – friendship with the Soviet head coach, the late Alexander Gomelsky, and his assistant, Ivan Edeshko, the man better known for throwing the full court pass to Alexander “Sasha” Belov in the 1972 Olympics in Munich. It was the pass after the controversial and illegal re-setting of the game clock by FIBA administrator R. William Jones who came down to the court from his seat in the stands to rule for extra time (three seconds) to be placed on the clock after the United States team had already won the game (twice). It still pisses me off to no end.

DREAM TEAM: This all culminated with NBA players being allowed to participate in the Olympics and Worlds, beginning in 1992. Many believe it was the United States who pushed for that ruling, but the US actually voted against it when the FIBA-led ruling came down in April of 1989. Up to that point, every human being on the face of the earth was eligible to play Olympic basketball, unless you had an NBA contract. In essence, the 425+ best basketball players were the only ones not allowed to represent their countries. (Editor’s note: Be sure to read this: (CLICK HERE).

The stories of the Dream Team are an endless stream of amazing experiences which will be left for another column at another time, as will the reconstruction of the USA men’s program in 2005-2016. The bond formed with my colleagues at USA Basketball are among the most treasured of my quarter century of working at the NBA – both professionally and personally with the great people who run USA Basketball today.

BARCELONA TO TOKYO: Aside from the game’s invention, the ‘92 USA Dream Team experience was the most important and significant occurrence in the history of basketball. If you don’t agree with that statement, just ask Germany’s Dirk Nowitzki, France’s Tony Parker, and the 121 NBA and WNBA players dotting Olympic basketball rosters in Tokyo this week.

The NBA issued a news release this week that stated: “A record 121 NBA and WNBA players are featured on national team rosters for the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan. The men’s and women’s 5×5 competitions will feature a record 49 current NBA players and a record 29 current WNBA players, along with 16 former NBA and 22 former WNBA players. The inaugural 3×3 basketball tournament features four current and one former WNBA player. The USA men’s 3×3 team(s) did not qualify for the tournament in Tokyo.

The previous records for current NBA and WNBA players in the Olympics were 46 and 26, respectively, at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Outside of the U.S., Nigeria has the most current NBA players on its roster with eight, followed by Australia with seven and France with six. Eleven of the 12 teams competing in the men’s tournament have at least one current NBA player, and national team rosters include 13 players who have been NBA All-Stars. … Twenty-seven NBA teams are represented in the men’s 5×5 competition, with the Miami Heat featuring a league-high four players. The Dallas Mavericks, Denver Nuggets, Milwaukee Bucks and Utah Jazz each have three players competing. … In the women’s 5×5 competition, outside the U.S., Australia has the most current WNBA players with five followed by Canada and Spain with three each. Eight of the 12 teams in the women’s tournament have at least one current WNBA player, and 10 of the 12 WNBA teams are represented on national team rosters. The Phoenix Mercury and Seattle Storm lead with five players each, followed by the Minnesota Lynx with four players. … The inaugural women’s 3×3 basketball tournament is being held from July 24-28 and features five current and former WNBA players.

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Tokyo Olympics, USA Basketball, While We're Young, While We're Young Ideas

PGA Tour: Tringale Leads at 3M Open

July 25, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

3M Open at TPC Twin Cities: Notebook After 54 Holes

BLAINE (MINN) – Cameron Tringale posted a bogey-free 5-under (66) in his attempt to win his first career PGA Tour title in his 307th start.

Gary Woodland overcame a double bogey at the first hole and converted birdies on five of his next six to post 4-under (67). He’s T-2 with Maverick McNealy. McNealy closed in on third Top-5 finish of the season and fifth consecutive Top-30 finish.

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Pat Perez followed a bogey-free 6-under (65) in R-2 with a bogey-free (66) in R-3.

Keith Mitchell became the fourth player since 2003 to begin a round with seven straight sub-par scores.

Rickie Fowler (T-29) at (-6) was 6-under through 10 holes before bogeys at 13 and 14 and a triple-bogey-8 at the par-5 18th resulted 1-under (70). Fowler’s score at No. 18 marked the highest score of his career to finish a round. Through three rounds, he has played Nos. 1-12 in 11-under par and Nos. 13-18 in 5-over par.

Past 3M Open champions: Matthew Wolff (T-22) at (-7) and Michael Thompson (T29) at (-6).


3M Open Leaderboard After 54 Holes

Cameron Tringale 67-68-66—201 (-12)

Gary Woodland 69-66-67—202 (-11)

Maverick McNealy 67-67-68—202 (-11)

Eight players 10-under 203

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: 3M Open, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

Armour, Hadwin Lead at 3M Open

July 24, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

BLAINE (MINN) – Following a season-best T-5 finish in last week’s Barbasol Championship, Ryan Armour holds his fifth 36-hole lead/co-lead, tied with Adam Hadwin. Armour is 1-for-4 to date. Hadwin holds his second PGA Tour 36-hole lead/co-lead and is 1-for-1 to date converting to victory.

Bo Hoag recorded lowest 36-hole score of his PGA Tour career (133), two days before his 33rd birthday.

Chez Reavie (T-3) at (-9,) recorded rounds of (66) and (67). He recently opened with (133) at the 2021 John Deere Classic (131) but finished T-18.

World No. 2 Dustin Johnson missed the cut after rounds of (70)-(72).


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3M Open Leaderboard After 36 Holes

Adam Hadwin 67-65—132 (-10)

Ryan Armour 67-65—132 (-10)

Bo Hoag 67-66—133 (-9)

Chez Reavie 66-67—133 (-9)

Jhonattan Vegas 64-69—133 (-9)

Roger Sloan 64-69—133 (-9)

Cut: 72 players at 2-under (140) from a field of 155 professionals and one amateur.

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: 3M Open, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

Let the Games Begin

July 23, 2021 by Digital Sports Desk

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Opening Ceremonies of the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Opinion, Sports Business Tagged With: Olympic Games, Tokyo Olympics

Fowler, Merritt, Vegas Lead at 3M Open

July 23, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

BLAINE – (MINN) – The first round of the 3M Open was suspended at 11:28am (local), due to lightning in the area. Play resumed at 1:52pm (local), following a delay of 2 hours, 24 minutes. Play was suspended due to darkness at 8:54pm (local). The first round will resume at 8 am, with the second round beginning as previously scheduled.

Following missed cuts in his last two starts on Tour, Troy Merritt birdied his last two holes, and eight holes total on the round, to begin his 3M Open with a 7-under (64) and is T-1 with Rickie Fowler.

In his 3M Open debut, Rickie Fowler made seven birdies and had no bogeys to post (64), his first bogey-free round since Round-1 of the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic when he T-32.


3M Open Leaderboard After 18 Holes

Rickie Fowler – 64 (-7)

Troy Merritt – 64 (-7)

Jhonattan Vegas – 64 (-7)

Scott Stallings – 65 (-6)

Adam Schenck – 65 (-6)

Roger Sloan – (-6) through 16 holes

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: 3M Open, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

PGA Tour: 3M Open Preview

July 21, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

BLAINE (MINN) – This week’s 3M Open marks the third year for the tournament. Both Matthew Wolff (2019) and Michael Thompson (2020) will be on hand to attempt to repeat their prior 3M Open championships.

TPC Twin Cities is the 10th TPC venue to host a PGA Tour event this season.

World No. 2 Dustin Johnson is returning to the 3M Open after having to WD from the 2020 event after a first round (78).

The Par 3 17th at TPC Twin Cities had the distinction of having the most balls (118) in the water of any hole on Tour.

The Basics:

Tournament Tee Times begin Thursday at 7:50am (EDT)/6:50am (local) through 3:12pm (EDT)/2:12pm (local).

Weather: Thursday’s forecast in the Twin Cities area is for partly cloudy skies, 82-degrees with 56% humidity and a 20% chance of rain. Winds blowing South at 13 mph.

The Home Stretch – 3M Open Preview

COURSE: TPC Twin Cities (Blaine, Minn)

ARCHITECT: Arnold Palmer

YARDS/PAR: 7,431 yards/Par 71

PRIZE Money/First Place Winnings: $6,600,000/$1,188,000

DEFENDING CHAMPION: Michael Thompson (2020)

PAST RESULTS: (link)

PAST CHAMPIONS: (link)

FEDEx CUP Points Total/Winner: 2,989/500

SOCIAL MEDIA: #PGATour #FedExCup @3MOpen

OFFICIAL SITE: (The 3M Open)

 

TV COVERAGE: Thursday, July 22 and Friday, July 23: From 2:30am to 6:30pm (EDT) on Golf Channel.

On Saturday, July 24, Round 3 coverage 1:00pm to 3:00am (EDT) on Golf Channel. Then, CBS takes over from 3:00pm to 6:00pm (EDT). On Sunday, July 18: Golf Channel opens final round coverage 1:00pm to 3:00am (EDT) and CBS wraps it up from 3:00pm to 6:00pm (EDT).

PGA TOUR LIVE STREAMING: Streaming coverage on Thursday and Friday, from 7:45am (EDT) to 6:30pm (EDT) on PGA Tour Live. On Saturday and Sunday, PGA Tour Live will stream 7:45am (EDT) to 6:00pm (EDT).

PGA TOUR RADIO COVERGAE: SiriusXM Radio will have live radio calls of The Open with Thursday and Friday coverage 2:00am (EDT) to completion of play. Weekend coverage on Sirius XM Radio begins at 4:00am (EDT) until conclusion. The Open Radio is available on Sirius 208/XM 92)

How to Watch: In case of changes, visit: (PGATourCom)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: 3M Open, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

Morikawa Wins Open Championship

July 19, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

SANDWICH – American Collin Morikawa won his second major title (2021 Open Championship, 2020 PGA Championship) in his eighth major championship appearance and became the first player to win two different majors in his first attempt.

Morikawa scored his fifth PGA Tour title and moved to No. 1 (FedExCup) and No. 3 (Official World Golf Ranking).

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The 2017 Open Champion Jordan Spieth finished as runner-up for his 11th Top-4 in a major. Spieth tied the lowest total score by a runner-up at The Open: (267) in 2016 by Phil Mickelson.

2010 Open Championship winner Louis Oosthuizen, who held the solo-lead after each of the first three rounds, recorded his third consecutive Top-3 in a major this season: (PGA Championship/T2, U.S. Open/2, The Open/T3).

2021 U.S. Open winner Jon Rahm finished T-3.

Three players recorded four rounds in the 60s: Collin Morikawa (1st), Jordan Spieth (2nd), Mackenzie Hughes (T6). Spieth and Hughes join list of seven players to record four rounds in the 60s and not win The Open with the most recent being Rickie Fowler at the 2014 Open Championship.

Final Leaderboard at The Open

Collin Morikawa 67-64-68-66—265 (-15)

Jordan Spieth 65-67-69-66—267 (-13)

Jon Rahm 71-64-68-66—269 (-11)

Louis Oosthuizen 64-65-69-71—269 (-11)

Dylan Frittelli 66-67-70-68—271 (-9)

Final Leaderboard at the Barbasol

Seamus Power 65-68-67-67—267 (-21)*

J.T. Poston 65-66-66-70—267 (-21)

Anirban Lahiri 68-67-68-65—268 (-20)

Sam Ryder 66-69-68-65—268 (-20)

*defeated J.T. Poston with a par-4 on the sixth playoff hole (No. 18)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: Barbasol, Collin Morikawa, Golf, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, The Open

While We’re Young (Ideas) – July 18

July 17, 2021 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – The organization dates back to 1784 and was originally known as the Society of St. Andrew’s Golfers. By 1834, King William IV recognized the club as Royal and Ancient and the name was changed to the Royal Society of St. Andrew’s Golfers and what is now known as The Old Course was proclaimed the Home of Golf.

In 1897, the Society first recorded the rules of golf and the sport was soon to become popular throughout the world. Anyone who calls themselves avid golfers marvels at the thought of playing a round at what is now known as The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews.

The Royal moniker was bestowed upon golf clubs the world over. From Scotland to England to Wales to Ireland to Malta to South Africa to Australia and Hong Kong. This weekend The Open is being contested for fifteenth time at Royal St. George’s Golf Club in Sandwich, England. In 2021, it has been splendid just as it was in 1894 when the golf club hosted its first Open.

As the game became more and more popular, the rules were solidified and – unlike most other sports – they are self-regulated. In golf, you keep your own score. You honor the game by not improving your lie of the ball. You only utilize 14 different golf clubs packed in your bag on any given round. The rules apply to golfers of all abilities and the respect given to the rules by golfers is much the same as their respect for the game itself.

In many other sports, competitors often try to cheat the system. In Baseball, it is not uncommon to attempt to “steal” signs (codes from pitchers/catchers or from the dugout/Manager to players). In Basketball, a quick travel with the ball, an illegal screen, a flop to draw an offensive foul is almost coming practice. In Football, a little extra surveillance of your opponent, or taking some air out of the ball brought scandals sized to rival Watergate. Athletes and organizations bend the rules in many ways, sometimes in any way they can. They hope not to get caught – by the referees, the league or the organizing body.

What about Golf?

In Golf – how dare you – as the respect of the game and its rules carries on to higher ground, as well. There is no other sport where sportsmanship is more highly regarded. As golfers, especially weekend hackers, we are really competing against ourselves with hopes of setting personal records, rather than competing in a match against the others in our foursome.

Picture a single golfer joining a threesome of friends on a late afternoon round at a public course. Immediately, the single has three cohorts helping (him/her) find an errant tee shot or high-fiving a great hole-out from a sand trap. The single golfer respects the space and lie of his newfound partners’ putting line. He is quiet and motionless on and around the tee until it is his turn. Honors go to the golfer who scored the best on the prior hole.

Golfers are taught the written and un-written rules in their first few rounds of their golfing lives. The sport of golf is a sport for your entire life and respect of the game is paramount.

Then along come Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka.

The two professionals – both among the very best the game has ever seen – have been feuding like school children out on the playground at recess. They bicker verbally, non-verbally and even electronically via Twitter. They’ve been bickering since 2019 when one slighted the other on “slow play” and the feud festered from that point onward.

This week, with the British media fueling the theatrics of such a “juicy” story, the questioning about Ryder Cup pairings of the two paved a landing strip for their duel to last all the way to Whistling Straits (September 24-26 in Wisconsin). It’s all become such foolishness – eye-rolling and all.

This week, some predicted it was all “made for tv” and the two would hold a grudge match – on pay-per-view, of course. Others fuel and wallow in the gossip like girls at an Eastside NYC private school.

Some of us have simply had it and urge the PGA, the R&A, the PGA of America (who oversee the Ryder Cup) to lock the two golfers in a room and call for them to cut it out – once and for all – as they are ruining the one sport we could all count on to abide by rules and decorum.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Whether you are a student of Greek Mythologyat the University of Texas – San Antonio, Seton Hall, Harvard, or just an NBA fan, the main focus of study in the past month or two has been a total analysis of the Greek god of Milwaukee, by way of Athens. The study of Giannis Sina Ugo Antetokounmpo … also admirably known as “The Greek Freak.”

An MVP-level player in the National Basketball Association, Antetokounmpo has led his Milwaukee Bucks team to the NBA Finals, a difficult task for any god of the hoop. Antetokounmpo, however, has now taken it to another level.

As the Bucks compete against the Suns of Phoenicia, a mighty group themselves, Antetokounmpo went all Freudian on us. He did so, in of all places, the NBA Finals media interview room where he dazzled all with his interpretations and his own philosophy on Ego & Pride.

In a setting common to The Finals, media inquiries delved into Antetokounmpo’s upbringing, family life, his practice habits, his state of mind, the pressures of the game at such a high level, and now, with even higher stakes, the god of a Great Place on a Great Lake had a way of explaining how he absorbs and synthesizes the pressure.

“Obviously, as I said, the ball gets heavy. But if you are only thinking about winning and you don’t think about what’s going to happen next, it can get heavy,” he explained. “Because you want to win so bad, you know?

“So it can get heavy. But if you go back and think about the specific three minutes of Game 2, Game 4, and it could go either way, now the environment kind of gets heavy. But at that specific moment, I wasn’t thinking about what’s going to happen at the end of the game. I was thinking about that specific play. How can I set a good screen for Khris (Middleton), how can I block a shot, how can I rebound the ball, how can I run, how can I get the easy layup, what can I do to help the team win?

“So my mind is so occupied by that that I don’t think about the pressure, all that.”

Certainly Antetokounmpo was not the first NBA player to philosophize on the methods to cope with pressure. Philadelphian philosopher Julius “Vocabularius” Erving was a master at post game analysis. But Antetokounmpo was going deeper.

At age 26, who was teaching him these coping mechanisms that years of study and advanced degrees in Psychology might not produce?

“I think I would say life,” he thought. “Usually, from my experience, when I think about – Oh, yeah, I did this, I’m so great, I had 30 (points), I had 25-10-10, whatever the case might be – you’re going to think about that.

“Usually the next day you’re going to suck, you know,” he said smiling? “Simple as that. The next few days you’re going to be terrible. I figured out a mindset to have that when you focus on the past, that’s your ego.

“I did this. We were able to beat this team 4-0. I did this in the past. I won that in the past.

“When I focus on the future, it’s my pride,” he noted. “Yeah, next game, Game 5, I do this and this and this. I’m going to dominate. That’s your pridetalking. It doesn’t happen.

“You’re right here. I kind of try to focus on the moment, in the present.

“That’s humility. That’s being humble. That’s not setting no expectation.

“That’s going out there, enjoying the game, competing at a high level. I think I’ve had people throughout my life that helped me with that. But that is a skill that I’ve tried to, like, kind of — how do you say – perfect it.

How can he continue to win while spreading and sharing such deep knowledge?

“I think it starts from the environment, the leaders, the message that they push back to the team, to everybody,” said Antetokounmpo. “But we’ve been down before. When we were down before, we didn’t act like it was the end of the world. We were like, Okay, we know what the deal is.

“We’re going to try to go and execute. We weren’t worrying about going and trying to win two games in a row. We didn’t worry about that. We’re going to try to go back and execute. Try to put ourselves in a position to win. Now, if it went our way, we’re extremely happy, but it could go either way. It could go the other way and we’d be back home right now and nobody would be talking about us. But I feel like as a team we’re really good at turning the page — the next one.

“Okay, on this page – this, this, this, this – is what we got to do in order for us to be in a position to have a chance to win games down the road. I think the team has a great mindset in that. Hopefully we are going to keep doing it moving forward.”

Which takes us right back to Antetokounmpo’s birthplace – Athens and the Greek goddess of Athena – the goddess known for knowledge, a calm temperament and a huge understanding of others.

TESTING: The NBA and its players (and the WNBA, too) have managed the COVID-19 health crisis about as well as any organization on the planet – sports, business or other. As we’re going to post this Saturday evening, Milwaukee Bucks forward Thanasis Antetokounmpo entered the NBA Health and Safety Protocol and missed/will miss (depending on when you are reading this) Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Saturday night. Antetokounmpo, the older brother of two-time NBA MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, was not listed on the league’s early afternoon injury report but was noted Saturday evening at 5:30pm.

Recent break-outs of COVID-19 – largely due to a delta variant to the original virus – hit Major League Baseball hard, causing the cancellation of a post All-Star break Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees game at The Stadium. All-Star Aaron Judge was among six Yankees players sidelined under the MLB protocols for COVID+ testing and a number of their teammates have been battling nagging injuries. Of note, 1B Luke Voit returned to the MLB injured list.

Crosstown from The Bronx to Flushing, Queens and the New York Mets are tending to pitching ace and Cy Young favorite Jacob deGrom and his right forearm tightness. deGrom will miss his planned start Monday.


DIAMOND DUST-UPS: After the MLB All-Star break, Jarren Duran was selected to the Boston Red Sox major league roster from Triple-A Worcester. Duran is likely to be the fifth player to make his MLB debut this season with the Red Sox (Bazardo, Sawamura, Whitlock, Wong). But, if he plays in the weekend series, he’ll have one other distinction. The last Red Sox position player to make his MLB debut at Yankee Stadium was the great Mookie Betts (6/29/14). … The Red Sox earned their fourth shutout win of the season Friday night and their first against the Yankees since June of 2018.

ARE YOU PAYING ATTENTION in ANAHEIM: LA Angels second baseman David Fletcher notched two hits and extended his league-leading hitting streak to 25 games. He’s now tied with the great Rod Carew for the second-longest in franchise history. The Angels play the Mariners (July 17) at 9:07pm (EDT). Keep an eye on that boxscore.


FASTER, HIGHER, STRONGER DEFICTS: (With an emphasis on the higher) – The Tokyo Olympics will cost an estimated $28 billion (3 trillion yen), say media outlets Nikkei and Asahi, far exceeding the organizing committee’s claims. The decision to ban spectators will cost nearly $1 billion in ticket revenue. Ouch.

Looking back, the International Olympic Committee granted the USA broadcast rights across all media platforms, including free-to-air television, subscription television, internet and mobile to NBC Universal (call it Comcast, too). The agreement runs from 2021 to 2032 and it’s valued at $7.65 billion, plus an additional $100 million bonus to be used for promotion of Olympic ideals.

JAPAN HOOPS to COMPETE in TOKYO OLYMPIC GAMES: There will be a number of NBA players dotting the rosters of most men’s Olympic team rosters when the basketball tournament tips off July 25th. Japan-Forward previews the Olympians from Japan and there’s a few names you’ll recognize, notably NBA forwards Rui Hachimura (Washington Wizards) and Yuta Watanabe (Toronto Raptors). Japan’s men’s national basketball team last competed in the Olympic Games in 1976 in Montreal.

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Opinion, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Golf, NBA, NBA Finals, PGA Tour, The Open, While We're Young Ideas

Oosthuizen Still Leads at The Open

July 17, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

SANDWICH – Sunday marks exactly 11 years since Louis Oosthuizen’s win at The Open in 2010, his lone PGA TOUR title. Oosthuizen holds the seventh 54-hole lead/co-lead of his PGA TOUR career, fourth in a major and third at The Open (1-for-7 to date).

Embed from Getty Images

2020 PGA Championship winner Collin Morikawa is making his tournament debut at The Open. No pro golfer has ever won two different majors in their first attempts.

Three-time major champion and 2017 Open Championship winner Jordan Spieth played the final two holes in 2-over and enters the final round trailing by three strokes (3rd place (-9). Spieth has two come-from-behind wins on Tour (2013 John Deere Classic, 2015 Valspar Championship).

Defending Open champion Shane Lowry stands T-12 after a third-round (69) as he attempts to become the first player to successfully defend his title at The Open since Padraig Harrington in 2008.

Amateurs to make the cut: Matthias Schmid (T-44 at (E), Yuxin Lin (T-71 at (+5).

The Open Leaderboard After 54 Holes

Louis Oosthuizen 64-65-69—198 (-12)

Collin Morikawa 67-64-68—199 (-11)

Jordan Spieth 65-67-69—201 (-9)

Corey Conners 68-68-66—202 (-8)

Scottie Scheffler 67-66-69—202 (-8)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, The Open

Oosthuizen Sets Record, Leads Open

July 16, 2021 by PGA Tour Brunch

SANDWICH – The 2010 Open Championship winner Louis Oosthuizen (129) recorded the lowest 36-hole score in The Open Championship history and the second-lowest in major championship history and leads by two strokes going into the weekend at Royal St. George’s.

Two of the five 36-hole scores of 131 or better in tournament history have come this week (129) by Oosthuizen, (131) by Collin Morikawa)

All five of Oosthuizen’s 36-hole leads/co-leads on the PGA Tour have either come in majors or THE PLAYERS Championship. He is 1-for-4 to date.

Morikawa, Jordan Spieth, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Jon Rahm, who have combined to win 11 majors since the start of the 2015 season, all enter the third round within six strokes of the lead.

Embed from Getty Images

The Basics:

Tournament Tee Times start Saturday at 4:20am (EDT)/9:20am (local) through 10:55am (EDT)/3:55pm (local).

Weather: 61-degrees (F) and dry in morning with some patchy low clouds.Winds: N or N/NE at 8-12 mph, and gusts from14-18 mph during the morning, gradually becoming NE then E/NE 6-10 mph, and gusts 12-16 mph through the afternoon and evening. Becoming mostly sunny throughout the day.

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, The Open

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TL's Sunday Notes | March 30

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While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
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Gotta Give Pitino the credit. Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/ ... See MoreSee Less

Gotta Give Pitino the credit.  Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. https://digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/
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In each round-up, there are far too many questions and not nearly enough definitive answers to the woes facing the New England clubs, the Celtics included. It might be time for some major shake-ups at...
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KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar: KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar:
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