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TL's Sunday Sports Notes

Super Sunday Sports Notes | Feb 9

February 9, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

It’s Super Bowl Sunday – LIX (59)

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – The Dallas Mavericks came through Boston this week, riding into town from Philadelphia after a two point loss to the 76ers. The Mavs’ 757 aircraft carried a team with enough baggage to fill Logan Airport’s entire baggage claim system, and they landed with contrails from the team jet spread out across the entire NBA basketball world.

The Mavericks traded superstar Luka Dončić’to the Los Angeles Lakers and the reaction was as if the Mavs orchestrated a move for the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys to Santa Monica. The full trade went down as follows:

Dallas sent Dončić’ and forwards Maxi Kleber and journeyman Markieff Morris to Los Angles for Anthony Davis, Max Christie and a 2029 first round NBA Draft pick. Utah was the “third man in,” as the Jazz acquired Jalen Hood-Schifino from the Lakers, the 2025 Clippers’ second-round pick, and the 2025 Mavericks’ second-round pick in the trade while giving up nothing except having to waive recently acquired Mo Bamba.

The reaction to the trade can only be categorized as “legendary,” as the Elias Sports Bureau confirmed that a trade involving a reigning All-NBA guard for an All-NBA center in midseason. “Shocking” was the most frequently used word to describe the trade, noting there was no indication the trade was coming down. ESPN’s newsmaker Shams Charania broke the news a little after midnight on February 2.

LA’s Lebron James thought it was “a hoax,” while longtime NBA reporter and current editor and columnist for The Athletic David Aldridge called it a “Holy Shit” trade, utilizing a phrase that legendary Washington Post editor-in-chief Ben Bradlee used for only the greatest of the greatest stories. The Lakers were overwhelmingly considered the winners of the trade. Many gave the Lakers an “A+” grade while criticizing the Mavericks by dumping and “F” grade on the team for not acquiring more.

That wasn’t the sentiment for the young, upcoming and highly competent Dallas GM, Nico Harrison, who targeted and picked Davis as the player he coveted if he planned to trade his franchise favorite. In fact, both the Lakers’ GM, Rob Pelinka, and Harrison said they began trade talks in January facing the February 6 NBA trade deadline. The fact there wasn’t a single leak proved the two GMs kept their negotiations secret.

NBA executives – all around the league – expressed shock at the fact that the Mavericks negotiated exclusively with the Lakers, and argued that Dallas could have obtained a much larger return for Dončić in an open auction. “It probably would have been the biggest haul in NBA history,” said one team executive in an off-the-record interview while another claimed, “every team in the league would have offered everything they could.” Lost in the ‘what-ifs’ is the fact Dončić and his agent would’ve tried to dictate the terms and destination of the deal if they’d been informed and involved.

Here’s TL’s Take: First and foremost, Dallas GM Nico Harrison knew what had to be done and he deserves enormous credit for having the guts to move on it before there was a major hurdle in front of him and time working against the Mavericks in a big way. Dončić was due for a new contract and his All-NBA status qualified him for a “supermax” deal that would’ve included terms above Boston’s five-year, $314 million deal to keep Jayson Tatum.

Dončić would’ve signed a $325m-plus contract but would’ve built-in a one year opt-out to increase his personal salary haul the next year (2026-27) when the new NBA TV deal kicks in and the team salary cap will increase significantly. With that opt-out in one hand but a longterm contract in place in case of injury, Dončić could’ve easily walked from the Mavericks to any team he wanted to play for, as he would be an unrestricted free agent. The Mavericks would be left empty-handed.

Dončić hasn’t played since he left a Christmas Day (Dec. 25, 2024) after 16 minutes and hasn’t set foot on the court ever since. His calf strain has sidelined him indefinitely and reports of his 230-pound playing weight might now be topping 250-260-pounds with a long road of conditioning ahead before he can be effective in the high speed NBA pace of play. To his credit, Dončić played through injury and led the Mavericks to a surprise appearance in the 2024 NBA Finals where they lost to Boston.

Harrison had to wonder if Dončić would be healthy and would he choose to stay in Dallas when every NBA team coffer would open filled with the loot from and 11-year, $76 billion ABC/ESPN, Amazon, NBC Sports and rising global TV deals flooding the league from platforms anxious to air the league’s daily reality show.

In Davis, Dallas has another “big” and a highly skilled two-way player. Harrison stated the old cliche that ‘defense wins championships’ and that fact was his motivation in trading for Davis who is 32 years old. Looking ahead, AD is in his prime holding a contract that is valid through – at least – the ’26-27 season, with his (player option for ’27-28), an option which he’s likely to accept at $66,821,676. for the season. Davis must stay healthy for the trade to work out for Dallas.

Additionally, Max Christie is a very nice piece in this blockbuster puzzle and he is likely to see major minutes for Dallas,

Although Dončić is only 25 years old and has been an All-NBA first team selection five times, joining only Larry Bird, George Gervin, and Tim Duncan as players earning five All-NBA First Team selections in their first six seasons in the league (since the ABA teams were absorbed into the NBA in ‘75-76).

Taking it all in, While We’re Young (Ideas) bucks the trend, and confidently states, “Advantage Dallas.”


LOST IN THE SHUFFLE: With all the attention on the Dallas and LA Lakers, many overlooked a huge acquisition by the San Antonio Spurs when they acquired De’Aaron Fox from the Sacramento Kings.

The Kings, Spurs and Chicago Bulls completed a seven-player, seven draft pick trade which went down in the shadows of the Davis/Dončić deal:

San Antonio Spurs acquire:

  • De’Aaron Fox and Jordan McLaughlin

Sacramento Kings acquire:

Zach LaVine and Sidy Cissoko

  • 2025 first-round pick (via Hornets)
  • 2027 first-round pick (via Spurs)
  • 2031 first-round pick (via Timberwolves)
  • 2025 second-round pick (via Bulls)
  • 2028 second-round pick (via Nuggets)
  • 2028 second-round pick (via Bulls)

Chicago Bulls acquire:

  • Zach Collins, Tre Jones and Kevin Huerter
  • And the Bulls re-acquired their own 2025 1st-round pick (via Spurs)

Advantage Spurs who can now combine Fox with (possible) Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle (UConn) all backing the dynamic ‘24 NBA Rookie of the Year Victor Wembanyama. When they spread the floor – Look out!


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: One other big NBA trade was tucked in on Trading Deadline Eve.

  • The Golden State Warriors will send forwards Andrew Wiggins and Kyle Anderson plus a top-10 protected 2025 first-round pick to the Heat. Also, recently acquired guard Dennis Schroder, will be shipped-out to the Utah Jazz.
  • Utah will send forward P.J. Tucker, who previously played with the Heat in 2021-22, to Miami.
  • Guard Lindy Waters III will go from Golden State to the Detroit Pistons, and Josh Richardson will go from Miami to Detroit.
  • And, the highlight – Miami’s suspended bucket-man, Jimmy Butler, will join the Warriors.

TIDBITS: This weekend is ESPN commentator and Basketball Hall of Famer Dick Vitale’s “Super Bowl Weekend, Baby,” as the popular icon of college basketball returns to the ESPN airwaves after fighting back four bouts of cancer. Vitale called the Duke at Clemson game on Saturday night. … In addition, Hubie Brown, one of the most revered and beloved coaches and broadcasters in basketball history, will call his final NBA game (this weekend), Sunday, February 9, at 2:00pm ET on ABC. Brown will join fellow Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer Mike Breen on the call with Lisa Salters reporting. The trio, along with the late Stuart Scott, served as the broadcast team for the 2006 NBA Finals on ABC. Brown will call the Philadelphia 76ers at Milwaukee Bucks game. The legendary coach made his NBA coaching debut in Milwaukee as an assistant coach for the Milwaukee Bucks in 1972 under the great Larry Costello.


ALL-TIME FICTIONAL CHARACTER HOOPS TEAM: “You can’t teach height,” was the old adage for fielding a competitive basketball team so our Fictional Five and bench players will all stand as the tallest of the tall, rather than the most talented crew. wait no longer, here’s the club:

C: Rubeus Hagrid – Standing 12-foot, Hagrid of Hogwarts has to be our “five,” although there’s going to be plenty of height and length to our line-up, good guy Hagrid will lead this squad. Certainly, all opponents will find it difficult to match-up with Hagrid anchoring a 12-foot, 7-foot-6, 6-foot-9 frontline.

PF: Herman Munster – Straight out of Transylvania (Romania), Munster holds down the power forward spot on the Fictional Five club. He’s tough, quick, defensive minded and stands a lengthy 7-foot-6, according to most accounts.

SF: Lurch – The Addams Family butler stood a legit 6-foot-9 and can man the “three” with the best of ‘em. His abilities as an intimidator and enforcer should not be overlooked, as he can help on weak-side defense. Lurch has a nice stroke, too.

Lurch

SG: Gomez Adams – Castilian-born and surely a fan of León, Gomez Adams stood tall in all photos with his longtime sidekick, Lurch. For the home team, he starts at shooting guard and he’s fine unless he picks up early fouls because of the visiting cheerleaders speaking French.

PG: Bullwinkle J. Moose mans the point. While some might’ve thought Rocket “Rocky” J. Squirrel would’ve been our starter at PG, Moose got the nod over Squirrel, although – at times – they are paired together. Rocky lacked the height to start and match-up vs. taller squads.

The Bench:

The Sixth and Seventh Men come to the club directly from the Bundeslega and they are versatile players who can guard any position. In fact, in their fictional roles, they often had to guard the guard house.

Sergeant Hans Schultz is first man off the bench. The right hand man to Colonel Wilhelm Klink in Hogan’s Heroes, Schultz never melts under opposition pressure. He sees nothing, knows nothing, says nothing when questioned by scouts and media.

Schultz’s cohort from Stanisławów (occupied Austria, back in war-time (American Civil war), was Trooper Hoffenmueller and he joined our club after appearing in 11 episodes of F-Troop. Hoffenmueller had one huge claim to fame, in case you didn’t know, the actor, John Mitchum, had a slightly more famous brother, Academy Award nominee and Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award winner, Robert Mitchum.

The back-up center for our club was the inspiration behind the great nickname given to Celtics star center Robert Parish. “The Chief” gained his nickname from Chief Bromden of the 1975 film “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” With the great Randle McMurphy (LA Lakers fan Jack Nicholson) egging him on, Chief strides up and down the court and scores at will. He does the same thing off the bench for this club.

And, as long as McMurphy came up, he happens to be the first guard off the bench.

Rounding out the team, it would be very easy to go with three characters out of “Space Jam,” and maybe include that “bigger than life” Michael Jordan guy, but not here.

James Bond fans know our reserve power forward, Jaws, from “The Spy Who Loved Me.” The 7-foot-2 bruiser has medical clearance from our team dentist who recently replaced Jaws’ metal teeth with game-friendly plastic.

Jackie Moon is a key reserve on the club. A singer who used the profits from his one-hit wonder, “Love Me Sexy”, to buy his own basketball team, the Flint Tropics, Moon eventually moves to a role player slot on the Tropics which was enough to prove his worth to our club.

The 12th man is a two-way player shared with the Minnesota North Poles. The Abominable Snowman hails from The Island of Misfit Toys, and stands 8-feet tall by most accounts. In basketball season, he needs to take a month-long break in December and report back home.

Our coach from the motion picture BLUE Chips is the great Pete Bell of the Western University Dolphins (played by Nick Nolte). Bell is assisted by David Greene (Gabe Kaplan) of Fastbreak, Ken Reeves (Ken Howard) from The White Shadow and grad assistant Jack Cunningham (played by Ben Affleck in The Way Back (2020). Cunningham comes from the Pete Bell coaching tree and Affleck admired the work of Nolte, as well.


SUPER BOWL MENU: The continuation of a popular column tradition, to be shared today with all readers. Here’s what’s being served at ‘the ranch’ on Super Bowl LIX Sunday.

Breakfast

  • Homemade Belgian Waffles, with Vermont Maple Syrup, served with Fresh Strawberries.
  • Everything Bagel (toasted) with Vegetable or Plain Cream Cheese
  • Fresh squeezed Orange Juice
  • Pot of home-brewed “Kick Ass” coffee, with Half & Half

Lunch and Snacks, in honor of Max “Snax” Lyons, our English Springer Doodle

For the Dogs (yes, we spoil them a bit):

  • Homemade Dog Biscuits cooked with Apple Sauce, PBJ and Assorted treats

For the People:

  • Utz Special Dark Sourdough Pretzels
  • Cape Cod Air Fried Chips with Sea Salt
  • Assorted Greek Olives, freshly shipped from Greece
  • Vegetable Crudite with side of Ranch or Thousand Island Dressing
  • Assorted Cheese & Black Pepper Flavored Crackers

Pre-Game and Halftime | Dinner Offerings:

  • Special Meatballs, slow-cooked in Crock Pot, served with Bulky Rolls
  • Salisbury Steak Style Meatballs, with noodles
  • Pistachio Crusted Boneless Chicken Breast, with Grilled, Crispy Brussels Sprouts
  • Mediterranean spices on Boneless Chicken Breast, Grilled with Broccoli side
  • Chips, Salsa with Simple Guacamole

Beverages:

  • Ice Cold Diet Coke
  • Jack’s Abby, Banner City Lager Beer
  • Wine Coolers
  • Home brewed Cold Seltzer with Orange, Peach, Mango Juice over Ice
  • Fresh Lemonade
  • Coffee and Tea

Dessert:

  • Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream

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Filed Under: Boston Sports, NBA, NFL, Super Bowl LX, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Digital Sports Desk, Super Sunday, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Feb 2

February 3, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – In the depths of a freezing cold winter, there are two things New Englanders can count on to brighten their spirits. Groundhog Day and Fenway Truck Day. No matter what forecast that damn rodent, Pennsylvania Phil, has in store, when the Boston Red Sox equipment truck is loaded up on Van Ness Street and begins its 1,480 mile trip to Jet Blue Park in Fort Myers, Florida.

Groundhog Day is (today) Sunday, February 2 while Fenway Park Truck Day is (tomorrow) Monday, February 3. The truck will be loaded starting at 7:00am and is scheduled to leave around 1:00pm. This will be the 28th straight year that Milford native Al Hartz will drive the 53-foot truck, which will carry an assortment of baseball equipment and supplies, including:

  • 20,400 baseballs
  • 1,100 bats
  • 200 batting gloves
  • 200 batting helmets
  • 320 batting practice tops
  • 160 white game jerseys
  • 300 pairs of pants
  • 400 t-shirts
  • 400 pairs of socks
  • 20 cases of bubble gum
  • 60 cases of sunflower seeds

The celebration of Truck Day has been a Red Sox tradition since 2003, signaling the unofficial start of Spring Training. Boston’s Pitchers & Catchers report on Wednesday, February 12 while other Major League clubs report anywhere from February 9 (Chicago Cubs – traveling to Tokyo for games against the LA Dodgers – March 18/19) through February 13. For the most part, full squad workouts begin Monday, February 17. The Dodgers have scheduled their first spring training dates for February 11/15).


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Boston is a tough town, known very much as a “Hockey Town,” but it’s also a large community of figure skating families as nearly every single New England Mom or Dad has memories of taking the youngsters to the local rink (outdoor or indoor) with the kids dreaming of skating for Olympic gold. New England, along with the rest of the Figure Skating world community – a very tight knit group – are all mourning the loss of legends, friends and family in the freak airplane accident. American Airlines Flight 5342 and a Blackhawk military helicopter collided less than a mile from the runway at Washington DC’s Reagan National Airport where the Wichita to DC flight was within seconds of landing safely. Instead, all souls aboard both the jet and helicopter experienced true horror and immediate death. Then, another air catastrophe in the same week as a Medivac transport jet crashed in North Philadelphia, killing all six aboard the Learjet 55. They were all Mexican nationals returning home after a child was treated in Philly.

The American Airlines regional air flight originated in Wichita, Kansas just a few days after the U.S. Figure Skating Championship and subsequent Development Camp, held for the most promising young skaters in the country.

Two Boston area teenage skaters, two coaches and two parents from The Skating Club of Boston (Norwood, MA) were on the flight that crashed Wednesday into the Potomac River in DC after a midair crash with an Army helicopter, the club confirmed. A total of 14 members of the US skating community were aboard among the 67 passengers and crew.

Ice skating coaches and former world champions Evgenia Shishkova and VadimNaumov were aboard the flight from Wichita, coming home from the camp that followed the national championships, which ended last Sunday. Shishkova and Naumov were both coaches at The Skating Club of Boston, and had been with the club since 2017, according to Doug Zeghibe, the club’s executive director.

Shishkova and Naumov were a married couple, settled in Boston, who competed for Russia in pairs skating in the 1994 Winter Olympics and placed fourth. Later, they won their gold medals ‘94 World Championship.

The young skaters were identified by the club as Spencer Lane and Jinna Han and they were accompanied by their mothers, Christine Lane and Jin Han. All six were a constant presence at the skaking club, often 10-plus hours at a time, six days a week.

The Skating Club of Boston is the third-oldest club in the country and is a founding member of U.S. Figure Skating. In 2020, the club closed its Soldiers Field Road facility it had occupied since 1938 and moved to a fabulous three-rink headquarters in suburban Norwood, Massachusetts. Unlike most New England ice rinks, the Skating Club is dedicated 100% to figure skating, as opposed to sharing the ice time with men’s and women’s hockey.

The club has a rich history as home of Tenley E. Albright, the first American woman to win gold medals at the Worlds (1953) and Winter Olympics (1956). After her skating career, Dr. Albright went on to study medicine at Harvard Medical School where she held a faculty appointment as Lecturer in the Program of Surgery.

The great Dick Button also skated at Boston when he was enrolled at Harvard. A native of Englewood, New Jersey, Button, a five-time World Champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist. Button, who later became a fixture of American figure skating coverage as a TV network color commentator, was the only male skater to simultaneously hold the Olympic, World, North American, European and US National Championship titles.

Button passed away this week at the age of 95, providing the figure skating community another kick in the teeth as they mourn some 20 deceased colleagues, six from the Boston area.

BAD MEMORIES: The horrific Wichita to DC plane crash reminded some of the February 15, 1961 crash that killed 18 members of the U.S.A. world figure skating team, along with sixteen coaches and relatives of the skaters. Those dear souls were lost when Sabena Flight 548, traveling from New York’s Idlewild Airport to Brussels, crashed on approach to Brussels.

TIDBITS: The NHL, according to ESPN, is expected to significantly raise its team salary cap over the next three seasons, according to a memo the League and the NHL Players’ Association sent to teams. … According to the memo, obtained by ESPN, the salary cap for 2025-26 will rise to $95.5 million, with a floor of $70.6 million. In 2026-27, it is projected to increase to $104 million with a floor of $76.9 million, and in 2027-28, it will again go up to $113.5 million with a floor of $83.9 million. … The NHL’s current salary cap is $88 million with a floor of $65 million. … The minimum team salary or ‘floor’ is important to keep teams from operating at an incredible low salary in years when they feel they can not be competitive.

The Washington Wizards are experiencing their second 16 consecutive loss streak of the 2024-25 season. The first was November 2 through December 5 and the current losing streak began January 3. (The Wizards faced the Minnesota Timberwolves in Minneapolis as press time was calling).

Super Bowl LIX commercial spots on FOX Sports are going for $8m. Just think of the good one could do with $8m bucks.


TOP NBA COACHES, RANKED by TL: There’s been a list of the “best” NBA coaches floating around. It’s pretty good, but here’s a TL Sunday Notes version to ponder. The thoughts are for the whole body of work, over their careers, for the Top 6 and a tip of the hat to the younger generation in the second half dozen:

  1. Erik Spoelstra, Miami
  2. Gregg Popovich, San Antonio (heavy on the body of work side, and a get well soon)
  3. Steve Kerr, Golden State
  4. Nick Nurse, Philadelphia
  5. Rick Carlisle, Indiana
  6. Tom Thibodeau, NY Knicks

THE NEXT GREAT CROP of NBA COACHES:

  1. Ime Udoka, Houston
  2. Joe Mazzulla, Boston
  3. Mark Daigneault, Oklahoma City
  4. Ty Lue (he’s actually been terrific for a while), LA Clippers
  5. Kenny Atkinson, Cleveland
  6. Mike Malone, Denver

THIS JEST IN: The National Hockey League just announced that Boston Bruins forward David Pastrnak was named the NHL First Star of the Month for January. Pastrnak led the NHL in scoring in January, totaling 11 goals and 13 assists for 24 points. The 27-year-old recorded points in 12 of the team’s 14 contests, with four three-point games. Pastrnak started February even hotter than January as he registered his first hat trick of the season and an assist to lead the Bruins to a 6-3 win over the visiting New York Rangers on Saturday afternoon.

The 6-foot, 200-pound winger has played in all 53 games with the Bruins this season, notching 24 goals and 37 assists for 61 points overall. He leads the team in goals, assists, points, points per game (1.15) even strength goals (18), even strength points (47), power play goals (6) and power play points (14) this season.

Currently in his 11th season with the Bruins, Pastrnak has skated in 727 career NHL games, totaling 372 goals and 416 assists for 788 points with a plus-135 rating. The Havirov, Czech Republic native was originally drafted by Boston in the first round (25th overall) of the 2014 NHL Entry Draft.

YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver asked by radio mogul Dan Patrick for “the wildest ideas” about the game cited discussions on awarding only two free throws for fouls on three-point field goal attempts. Then, Silver noted that he was in the minority on another idea. That being reducing the NBA game to a 40-minute game, with four 10-minute quarters. Silver cited the fact international basketball (FIBA) rules call for 40 minutes. … Repercussions from a change to a 40-minute NBA game is the fact every NBA record, dating back to 1946, would be signed, sealed and engraved into the books. Team game records, scoring records, most or fewest points scored, rebounds, assists and everything in between would be enshrined. The NBA would need to begin a new record book as Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game mark would be chiseled into stone.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Boston, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 19

January 19, 2025 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – Way back in 2008, then-President Barack Obama – half-kidding – told a 60 Minutes TV audience, “I’m gonna throw my weight around a little bit. I think it’s the right thing to do,” he said, speaking about the collegiate football season. “I think any sensible person would say that if you’ve got a bunch of teams who play throughout the season, and many of them have one loss or two losses, there’s no clear decisive winner that we should be creating a playoff system.”

By the time the 2015 College Football championship game rolled around, the Ohio State Buckeyes made a trip to The White House as national champions after defeating Oregon in the first full-scale playoff victory. “I will say, it was about time,” the president joked. “I cannot claim full credit. I will point out that I pushed for a playoff system in 2008.

“You’re welcome, America,” he added. “It was a great playoffs.”

The BCS had fiddled with the system, the rankings (AP, New York Times, Atlanta Journal-Constitution and others but never really got the job done. This year? It was a 12-team playoff with the first round on campuses spread across the nation. Then, on New Year’s eve and New Year’s day, the quarterfinal teams played off – super-charging the annual Fiesta Bowl (Arizona), Peach Bowl (Georgia), Rose Bowl (Pasadena) and Sugar Bowl (New Orleans).

The semifinals were even better games as Notre Dame defeated Penn State (27-24) at the Orange Bowl (Miami) and Ohio State beat Texas (28-14) in Arlington (Dallas area).

Tomorrow night, at 7:30pm (ET), it’ll be Notre Dame against Ohio State at the Mercedes-Benz Dome in Atlanta for the national championship to define all national championships.

But, it’s been a lot of football since the week before Labor Day and a long postseason.

“To lead the country in plays snapped wasn’t our goal,” said Ohio State offensive coordinator Chip Kelly, the former Oregon head coach. “Our goal was to get to the national championship game.

“The fact that we have two running backs that can rotate all the time, We’ve rotated our receivers and, we have a bunch of receivers that can play. We have a bunch of tight ends that can play.

“A part of it was the length of the season has changed. Before, back when I was at Oregon, you were in the regular season and then you go to a bowl game. We had 37 days off between the final regular season game against Oregon State and then our bowl game against Auburn.

“That’s an entirely different thing. You play your last game in the regular season. Two weeks later you’re playing Tennessee. If you beat Tennessee you go to the Rose Bowl. If you win the Rose Bowl, you go to the Cotton Bowl. If you win the Cotton Bowl, you go to the national championship. The whole landscape of the schedule has really impacted what we did on both sides of the ball,” said Kelly in a Thursday media day session.

Kelly notes that OSU head coach Ryan Day talked to our entire staff about the marathon season Ohio State was planning for all the way back to the summer.

“That’s been on the forefront of our strength and conditioning program, our nutrition program, how our offense plays, how our defense plays, how our special teams play.

That was an overall program decision from the head coach down of how do you handle this length of a season, because it hadn’t been done before. It wasn’t, like, hey, let’s go call this guy because he did it. At this level it hadn’t been done.”

Day recognized the challenge of the season and the opportunity ahead: “I think in life — that’s why they call them “growing pains,” because in life you only grow when you go through difficult times,” said Day.

“I say all the time to our players, ‘the first time you got on a bike you didn’t just ride the bike, you fell down, and how quickly did you learn from falling down to get back on the bike to learn to ride a bike? Well, it’s like that in life.’

“You learn from going through difficult times like that. I think our team has done that, but now we have to go finish what we started. There are great stories on this team individually. There’s great stories on this team collectively. But I’ve said this before, the only way those stories get told is if we win, and we have an opportunity to become the ninth team in Ohio State history to win a national championship and the third team in over 50 years, and there’s been a lot of really good football teams in Ohio State history.

“We talked about that, looking up at the banners of those years, and to see just a couple of them over 50 years of great teams. We have an opportunity to separate ourselves, so that’s it. That’s the only thing right now that matters, and how do we do that? By being in the moment, preparing ourselves.”

On the Notre Dame side of the field (which is the opposite side than when ND defeated Georgia Tach back on October 19), there are no secrets to be shared from head coach Marcus Freeman.

“Yeah, I think more than anything, each team has a plan to do what they do well,” said Freeman on Saturday. “Again, we know we’ve got to be able to run the ball and we’ve got to be able to stop the run, or it’s going to be a long day.

“That’s the reality of when you talk about playing in this game, you have to do what you do well and do the things that have given your program a chance to be in this situation. That’s we’re going to do.

“You have to be able to make adjustments. If your plan going into the game isn’t having success, then you’re insane not to make adjustments to try to give your program a better chance to succeed. This game will be about, hey, who has the best plan going in, but how you make adjustments in terms of having success on offense and being able to stop them defensively.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: “For more than 50 years, George (Kalinsky) was synonymous with Madison Square Garden,” the MSG family of companies said in a statement announcing the death of The Garden’s official photographer. “There wasn’t a single important moment at The World’s Most Famous Arena that George didn’t capture. From Willis Reed‘s inspiring walk onto the court for Game 7 of 1970 NBA Finals to ‘The Fight of the Century’ between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, George and his lens were there.”

MSG Networks announcer Mike Breen told Newsday, “First off, he just was so kind, and whenever you ran into him, he made you feel that he was so happy to see you. There’s nobody that’s that happy to see me. But George was like that. He did really make you feel good.”

Other tributes came in after news of Kalinsky’s death spread throughout the Garden’s longtime dwellers. “The kindest guy,” said Walt “Clyde” Frazier during Friday night’s Knicks telecast on MSG Net. “He took my first ‘Clyde’ pictures. [It was] his ingenuity, folks. The Garden has been able to find a facsimile for Clyde, for Reed, for Ewing. No one has come close to replacing George Kalinsky.”

In 1979, Pope John Paul II visited the Garden, and Kalinsky spoke to him briefly backstage. Later, Kalinsky captured the Pope singling out 6-year-old Geralyn Smith in the crowd and lifting her up by her lower legs onto his “popemobile.”

Pope John Paul II at The Garden, quite possibly George Kalinsky’s greatest photo

The Pope liked the image so much he asked for a copy and put it on his desk at the Vatican.

Kalinsky was awarded numerous high honors during his career, including the Basketball Hall of Fame’s Curt Gowdy Media Award in 2021, the highest tribute for writers, broadcasters and photographers in the world of basketball.

Kalinsky is survived by his daughter Rachelle Kalinsky, his son Lee Kalinsky and grandchildren Emily Birnbaum, Jason Birnbaum, Josh Kalinsky and Jackie Clarke, his sister Marilyn Kalinsky and brother Howard Kalinsky, according to Newsday.


TIDBITS: The International Basketball Federation announced its 2025 Hall of Fame Class. The group is headlined by Spain’s Pau Gasol, South Carolina and USA Women’s national team head coach Dawn Staley and former Duke and USA Basketball senior national team coach Mike Krzyzewski. Staley was named as a player.

Pau Gasol was a “colossus on the floor for Spain,” said the FIBA statement, “inspiring unprecedented success with his towering performances and leadership. He achieved superstardom status at the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2006 in Japan when he earned MVP honors alongside winning Spain’s first-ever major trophy.” A five-time Olympian, the center was Spain’s flag bearer at London 2012 and led his nation to three medals at the Olympic Games. These accomplishments also came alongside three titles at the FIBA EuroBasket, as well as two NBA Championships with the Los Angeles Lakers.

Said the statement of Staley: “Dawn Staley, a floor general for the USA during her playing days, lifted the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup titles in 1998, in Germany, and in 2002 in China. The point guard played at three Olympic Games and conquered the gold medal on each occasion. She stepped out in 1996, 2000, and in Athens in 2004, when she was the flagbearer for her country. Staley won a total of 10 gold medals as an athlete, before transitioning to the sidelines. As the head coach, Staley steered the USA to gold at the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup 2018 and at the 2020 Olympic Games.”

Mike Krzyzewski masterminded USA’s effort to return to the summit following a blistering defeat in the Semi-Finals of the 2006 World Cup. He was at the helm of the star-laden Team USA that was nicknamed Redeem Team and conquered the Gold Medal at the 2008 Olympics and followed up by steering a Kevin Durant-led USA to World Cup glory in 2010, in Turkey. … ‘Coach K’, as he is affectionately known, led USA to one World Cup title and two more Olympic gold medals before stepping down as his nation’s head coach in 2016 to focus exclusively on his illustrious NCAA career, where he has no fewer than five championships.

Here is the full list of inductees that make up the 2025 Class of the FIBA Hall of Fame:

Players

– Alphonse Bilé (Côte d’Ivoire)

– Andrew Bogut (Australia)

– Leonor Borrell (Cuba)

– Pau Gasol (Spain)

– El Khatib (Lebanon)

– Ticha Penicheiro (Portugal)

– Ratko Radovanovic (Serbia)

– Dawn Staley (USA)

Coach

– Mike Krzyzewski (USA)

The members of the Class of 2025 will be honored at an enshrinement ceremony on May 17 that will take place alongside the FIBA Mid-Term Congress in Bahrain. A total of eight players and one coach are being recognized for their stellar individual contributions to the sport.

On Friday, the University of South Carolina’s board of trustees approved a contract extension for women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley that will make her the highest-paid coach in women’s college basketball. … The extension keeps Staley in Columbia through the 2029-30 season with an annual base salary of $4 million per year. Previously, she was the third-highest-paid coach in the country — behind LSU’s Kim Mulkey and UConn’s Geno Auriemma — at $3.1 million per year in base. With a signing bonus and annual increases, the total contract is worth more than $25 million


THIS JEST IN: The January 5th WWYI prediction, among many for the calendar year 2025, was as follows:

  • Free agent pitcher Roki Sasaki will sign with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Check ✅ marks the spot.

On Friday night, news broke that the San Diego Padres, one of three MLB team finalists in the Sasaki-Derby, had folded the tent and offered their international free agent pool money to other prospects based in the Dominican Republic. Team 2, the Toronto Blue Jays, tried to sweeten their pot of signing bonus gold but to no avail. That left the door open for the Los Angeles Dodgers to sign Sasaki, pay the international player signing bonus, but then recoup the benefits, equivalent to securing a rookie and having him sign a minor league contract. The reigning MLB champion Dodgers secured the best 23-year old free agent starting pitcher for the duration.

SIGN OF THE APOCALYPSE: Again, stealing a title from Sports Illustrated in its glory years, Bill McCartney, a football coach who in the 1980s took the University of Colorado from perennial losers to national champions, but who later left behind his $350,000 annual salary to refashion his locker-room message about prayer and sacrifice into a sprawling men’s evangelical movement, died on Friday in Boulder. He was 84 and the cause of death was complications of dementia, his family announced in a statement released by the university. … According to The New York Times, “As the founder of the Promise Keepers, a men-only Christian group based in Denver, Mr. McCartney reached his greatest influence in 1997, when an event he staged in Washington drew an estimated half-million men to the National Mall. … Historians described the movement as “one of the fastest-growing religious revivals in American history,” The New York Times reported afterward on its front page. The group then lost momentum — but regained it in recent years, when new leaders relaunched it as a vehicle for support of Donald J. Trump to express a newly assertive Christian masculinity, wrote the Times. … The Promise Keepers are not to be confused with the Oath Keepers who played a major role in the January 6 insurrection at the United States Capitol. More than 500 Oath Keepers either pleaded guilty or were convicted for their role in the riot at the Capitol on January 6, 2021. More than 1,000 cases stemmed from January 6, with sentences of 18 years for seditious conspiracy. The Promise Keepers have distanced themselves from those of the Oath Keepers, but with little to no comment.


YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: A gold medal awarded at the 1904 Olympics, the first Olympic Games hosted by the United States, was sold at auction for over half a million dollars, part of hundreds of lots of memorabilia from the Games gone by.

The 1904 St. Louis Olympics medal sold for $545,371. It bears the inscription “Olympiad, 1904” and shows a victorious athlete holding a wreath on the front. On the other side, Nike, the goddess of victory in ancient Greek mythology, is shown alongside Zeus, the pantheon’s king of gods, and the words for the 110-meter hurdles. The medal, awarded to American Fred Schule, included the original ribbon and leather case.

Similarly, an “extraordinarily rare gold winner’s medal from the St. Louis 1904 Olympics, issued by the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) to American gymnast George Eyser for placing first in the rope climbing competition,” was auctioned for a cool but more affordable $80,163.

While We’re Young (Ideas) is a weekly (every weekend) collection of Sports Notes and News written by Terry Lyons. The posting of each notebook harkens back to the days when you’d walk over to the city newsstand on Saturday night around 10pm to pick-up a copy of the Sunday papers. Inside, just waiting, was a sports-filled compilation of interesting notes, quotes and quips in a column that always sold a few newspapers.

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes is brought to you by Digital Sports Desk.

Filed Under: NCAA, NCAA Football, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: CFB Playoffs, CFP, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 12

January 13, 2025 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – When the Boston Celtics raised Banner 18 to the rafters of the TD Garden this past Fall, it marked the 12th title for New England area pro teams in 24 years, or since the year 2000. Since the New England Patriots drafted Tom Brady with the 199th overall selection in the 2000 NFL Draft, the Patriots led the way for titles with six since 2001. Banner 18 was the second NBA title for the Celtics in that span and MLB’s Boston Red Sox managed four championships after breaking the “Curse of the Bambino” way back in 2004.

The question at the dawn of 2025?

What happened?

First, let’s look at the Patriots:

Tom Brady, a legit VVIP in the Greatest of All-Time discussion amongst NFL quarterbacks, departed from Foxborough on St. Patrick’s Day of 2020 with six championship rings in his bag of tricks. Three days later, the fate of the Patriots was sealed when Brady (and eventually TE Rob Gronkowski) signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The two year deal lined Brady’s pockets with an additional $50m (and he added incentives, too) and put a seventh NFL championship ring on his finger in 2021.

Just preceding the development of Brady as the Patriots’ starting QB, head coach (and defacto GM) Bill Belichick took the reigns of New England and created an NFL dynasty like none other. From 2000 to his departure on January 11, 2024, the Patriots compiled a regular-season record of 266–121–0 over 24 seasons. Belichick is the most successful coach in Patriots history, by far, as his 266 wins with the franchise are more than quadruple those of runner-up Mike Holovak. Belichick compiled a 30–12 record in the playoffs with the Pats, including a 6–3 record in Super Bowls. He led the Patriots to 17 divisional titles, including five consecutive titles from 2003 to 2007 and eleven consecutive titles from 2009 to 2019. This streak of 11 consecutive playoff appearances is the most in NFL history for any team.

As most NFL fans know, when Belichick’s exit was combined with Brady’s departure, it sealed the Patriots’ fate.

Fast forward to the regular season just completed and an autopsy on the 2024 New England Patriots results in a (4-13) record with the only quality win coming in the final weekend of the season with a 23-16 win over Buffalo coming a week after the Bills had locked-in as the AFC’s No. 2 seed.

The season was a complete disaster, resulting in the one-and-done firing of coach Jerod Mayo, one of the most popular former players in New England history.

Aside from the drafting of QB prospect Drake Maye, the Patriots are depleted in talent department at nearly every position, aside from cornerback Christian Gonzalez and special teams ace Brenden Schooler. There’s no quick solution, although the Pats have more cap room than any other NFL team.

Of course, the Patriots didn’t help themselves when they won their final game of the season and went from NFL Draft first round pick No. 1 to pick No. 4. The only saving grace? The New England Patriots’ schedule for 2025 will include (Dates TBA):

Home @ Foxborough

*Buffalo Bills

*Miami Dolphins

*New York Jets

Atlanta Falcons

Carolina Panthers

Cleveland Browns

Pittsburgh Steelers

New York Giants

Las Vegas Raiders

Road Games

*Buffalo Bills

*Miami Dolphins

*New York Jets

Baltimore Ravens

Cincinnati Bengals

New Orleans Saints

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Tennessee Titans

*AFC East divisional opponents

Maybe the expected signing of former Patriots outside (and eventually inside) linebacker Mike Vrabel, will provide an added edge in training and execution next season. Vrabel, an accomplished NFL head coach and most recently a consultant with the Cleveland Browns, has been interviewing for head coaching jobs throughout the NFL. In addition to a key hire for head coach, the Patriots’ front office must draft very well over the next two seasons while improving via trades and free agency.

Now? A look at the Boston Red Sox:

Offseason moves include: The Sox’ moved for an ace in starting LH pitcher Garrett Crochet, acquired in a trade with the Chicago White Sox while shoring up the (possible six man) rotation and bullpen with free agent signing of reliever/closer Aroldis Chapman (age 36, 335 saves); signing of former LA Angels pitcher Patrick Sandoval and a stab at another ace in acquiring former Dodgers ace Walker Buehler could call for the 6th Man award!

Buehler, 30, went 1-6 with a 5.38 ERA during the 2024 regular season after missing the previous year recovering from Tommy John surgery. But in the 2024 postseason, he went 1-1 with a 3.60 ERA and added a save. Not bad.

The Red Sox lost free agent OF Tyler O’Neill who came out smoking in the spring of 2024 only to falter and fall to injury later in the summer. But, prospect Kristian Campbell will join OF Jarren Duran, INF Triston Casas and the Sox lone superstar in 3B Rafael Devers in a make-it-or-break-it offensive line-up.

Stiff competition in the AL East places the Red Sox solidly behind the New York Yankees and Baltimore Orioles, so a postseason berth is not likely in 2025.

Next up? The NHL Boston Bruins snapped a six-game losing streak with a big win at Florida on Saturday afternoon. The Bs (21-19-5) – went (8-9-3) early on to cause the dismissal of coach Jim Montgomery on November 19th after the club lost four of five.

Looking back, in his first season as Boston’s head coach (2022-23), Montgomery led the team to a historic season with the best single-season record in league history (65-12-5). The Bruins logged 135 regular season points and an .823 points percentage, also NHL bests. Montgomery won the Jack Adams Award that season as the League’s top coach. But, the Bruins lost to the Florida Panthers in seven games in the 2023 Eastern Conference First Round, and it was the Panthers – not the favored Bruins – who went on to the Stanley Cup Final.

It’s been downhill ever since with the retirement of Patrice Bergeron, the Bs highly respected captain and soul, leaving the club with quite a void. Can interim head coach Joe Sacco shed that preliminary title with a second half seson run to the Cup Playoffs?

And that brings us to the defending NBA champion Boston Celtics.

Without a doubt, the Celtics remain a solid contender for the 2025 NBA title, but they find themselves a distant third – behind the East’s Cleveland Cavaliers and the West’s Oklahoma City Thunder – when a look at the standings bring a realistic look of the ‘25 Finals.

The Celtics are a mediocre (8-7) over their last 15 games going into Sunday’s game against a struggling New Orleans Pelicans (8-31) team. Truth be told, the Cs have been battling a variety of injuries all season long. Bigman Kristaps Porzingis return brought hope, but he’s been slow in acclimating back into the regular rotation. Others – from PG Jrue Holiday to all-star swingman and Finals MVP Jaylen Brown to All-NBA forward Jayson Tatum to sharpshooter Sam Hauser to bigman Al Horford to reserve Luke Kornet to starting off guard Derrick White, have been in and out more often than teens at a Souther California burger joint. Boston coach Joe Mazzula has juggled 17 starting lineups during a first half-season timespan.

This week, a Friday/Saturday back-to-back against Orlando and Atlanta will provide another test. Will the Celtics regain that laser focus or will the likes of Tatum turn the ball over eight times, like he did this past Friday night in a 114-97 loss to the visiting Sacramento Kings?

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 each and every club. The NBA Trade Deadline is February 6 (3:00pm ET).

And, how ‘bout dem Revs?


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The NBA is investing in a biomechanics program, according to reports from Sports Business Journal, the sports business trade magazine that reported on of a league-wide memo to all 30 NBA teams. According to SBJ, the league established two biomechanics committees, studying “a number of factors — the size of players, the nature of the game, the number of games in the season, the hardcourt surface — (all indications) that there’s reason to think about biomechanics that could be as helpful in basketball as almost any sport,”

BANNED FROM BASEBALL: You think Pete Rose had issues? The two fans who interfered with the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Mookie Betts during Game 4 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium have been indefinitely banned from all MLB stadiums and facilities. … The letter read: “On October 29, 2024, during Game 4 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, you interfered with play by intentionally and forcefully grabbing a player. Your conduct posed a serious risk to the health and safety of the player and went far over the line of acceptable fan behavior.

“Based on your conduct, Major League Baseball is banning you indefinitely from all MLB stadiums, offices, and other facilities. You are also hereby banned indefinitely from attending any events sponsored by or associated with MLB. Please be advised that if you are discovered at any MLB property or event, you will be removed from the premises and subject to arrest for trespass.”

TIDBITS: The need to cancel a few games in Los Angeles doesn’t come close when comparing the toil of the all-out devastation on-going in the LA area as wild fires burn as much land, homes, businesses in spaces equal to the size of the City of Minneapolis or the island of Manhattan. The League and teams also had concerns as the support to the games and arenas would take away first responder personnel fighting the wild fires. … Said the league in a statement cancelling two additional games, “The NBA and the Clippers and Lakers organizations have been in communication with local officials in Los Angeles and Inglewood about the ongoing situation in the Los Angeles area and the game postponements ensure no resources will be diverted from the wildfire response efforts. … The league and its players put their money where their mouth is with a cool $1m donation. … “The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association are donating one million dollars for immediate relief to the American Red Cross, World Central Kitchen and other organizations to support those affected by this disaster and are working with the Lakers and Clippers on ways to support longer term assistance and rebuilding efforts.” … The NFL was forced to move its Monday Night Playoff games between the Minnesota Vikings and the LA Rams to State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. … The LA Chargers changed their practice schedules to minimize their players’ outdoor time in coastal El Segundo. The Chargers are on the road Saturday against the Houston Texans in the wild-card round. … The LA Kings of the NHL were the first to postpone a regular season game, cancelling their Wednesday home game against Calgary at Crypto.com Arena. The Kings are now in the midst of a five-game road trip and play their next game January 20th against the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins. … The PGA Tour has not yet decided whether to play the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club in LA, scheduled for Feb. 13-16. … There are several wild fires spread out across the neighboring towns of Los Angeles, including Pacific Palisades. At Santa Anita, the horse racing track is being used to stage fire fighting and relief equipment. The track, located in Arcadia, is near the smoldering Eaton fire that decimated Altadena. … The Palisades Fire is already the most destructive in Los Angeles history.

The Philadelphia 76ers are (4-17) against NBA clubs playing .500 or better basketball and that fact contributes to the Sixers’ (15-21) record overall. … If the NBA Playoffs began today, the once mighty 76ers would not qualify to play, nor attempt to play in.


selective focus photo of DJ mixer
Photo by Alexey Ruban on Unsplash

ADIEU VENU: That was quick. What was proclaimed to be the greatest viewing destination in the history of sports broadcasting has been scrapped. Gone. Left of the editing room floor. Kaput. Said Disney in a statement on the venture which would’ve been the mother of all ESPN, “After careful consideration, we have collectively agreed to discontinue the Venu Sports joint venture and not launch the streaming service. In an ever-changing marketplace, we determined that it was best to meet the evolving demands of sports fans by focusing on existing products and distribution channels. We are proud of the work that has been done on Venu to date and grateful to the Venu staff, whom we will support through this transition period,” the statement read.

Disney was supposed to join forces with FOX and Warner Bros. Discovery and package ESPN, ESPN2, ABC (Sports), Fox, Fox Sports 1, TNT, TBS and others for a whopping $42.99 per month.

Fubo-TV jumped into the fray and filed an anti-trust lawsuit to stop the venture. As of this week, Fubo has settled its lawsuit and will merge efforts with the Walt Disney Co. and its Hulu + Live TV streaming service and join together to create the second-biggest digital pay-TV provider.

IN OTHER SPORTS BUSINESS NEWS: Former NBA China CEO Derek Chang was named President and CEO of Liberty Media. In a January 8th announcement by Liberty Chairman John Malone, Chang’s work with leading the NBA China efforts from 2018 to 2020 when the league expanded its efforts and created a stand-alone entity with offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Taipei. Greg Maffei stepped down from his CEO rile in November (2024). Maffei was a driving force behind Liberty’s acquisition of Formula 1 in 2017. After his stint with the NBA, Chang worked in executive roles with EverPass Media, DIRECTV, Scripps, Charter and TCI. EverPass Media was a 2023 effort between the NFL and RedBird Capital Partners to market the NFL League Pass and other sports offerings (Peacock, Thursday Night Football) to commercial customers.

XFINITY AND BEYOND: Here in Boston, Comcast’s Xfinity service has made a move that might take the NBA’s Celtics and NHL’s Bruins right off your remote come this Tuesday, unless customers are ready to anti-up and extra $20 a month for a premium sports package. Come springtime, the same goes for fans looking to watch the Red Sox on NESN. Comcast – Xfinity’s parent company – reached agreements with NESN and NBC Sports Boston to move the channels from its Popular TV (or basic cable package) to its Ultimate TV (premium) level of service. The midseason timing is a killer for Cs and Bs fans who are looking to save some money on their monthly bills.


PARTING WORDS AND MUSIC (from the The Appalachian lap dulcimer): Here’s a treat and something completely different from the usual weekly music clip. This week, a loyal reader sent along a very short clip – highlighting the great movie line, “It ain’t a fit night out for man or beast.” … The famous line comes from the 1933 W.C. Fields motion picture, “The Fatal Glass of Beer,” set in the Yukon. (By the way, a common mistake when quoting the epic is to use the word (nor) instead of the proper (or) when delivering the goods – which comes at the 4:55 mark or so. Enjoy.


While We’re Young (Ideas) is a weekly (every weekend) collection of Sports Notes and News written by Terry Lyons. The posting of each notebook harkens back to the days when you’d walk over to the city newsstand on Saturday night around 10pm to pick-up a copy of the Sunday papers. Inside, just waiting, was a sports-filled compilation of interesting notes, quotes and quips in a column that always sold a few newspapers.

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes is brought to you by Digital Sports Desk.

-TL-

Filed Under: Boston Sports, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Boston Bruins, Boston Celtics, Boston Red Sox, Boston Sports, New England Patriots, TL's Sunday Sports Notes

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Christmas ’24

December 22, 2024 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

Merry Christmas ‘24 to all who celebrate the day. To others, this columnist wishes you sincere best wishes and joy for 2025 with peace during the holiday(s) you celebrate.

A sincere wish for Peace on Earth for all of us while we live our lives conveying Goodwill Towards Men (and women)!

As in years past, this Christmas-themed column carries the torch of the legendary writings of the late, great Shelby Strother. Later in the column, we’ll take a look back at 2024 with a week-by-week listing of what was covered by While We’re Young (Ideas).

I hope you enjoy this tradition.

Let’s get to it.


Each Christmas Day Contains the Past, Present and Future

By SHELBY STROTHER

It did not matter that the wind-chill was life threatening. It was Christmas morning, and a bright sun stabbed the frozen land. And children were playing.

The decision over which to play with – the official World Cup soccer ball or the Turbo Football – never materialized. With all the snow, a soccer match was out of the question. So spirals of pink and black performed in the most sincere imitations of Rodney Peete and Joe Montana floated back and forth in the yard.

What a nice sight.

The Annual Second Chance is near – it’s called New Year’s Eve. It is the window of opportunity where the hopes and fears of all the year (not to mention the mistakes) can be erased.

But Christmas Day is a time of reinforcement and the essence of tomorrow. And children playing with toys are the finest examples of what that tomorrow looks like.

I look out the window. I’ve been in that yard. All young boys have. Sports become such a part of childhood. Santa is aware of all of this, naturally.

This particular day is exquisite, I think to myself. I take personal inventory, not only of blessings and personal satisfaction, but of the presents of Christmas past. Still the kid, I suppose.

I got my first basketball when I was six. I made my first basket a year later. There was a tetherball set; I must have been eight. And a football helmet when I was ten. A Carl Furillo model baseball mitt at eleven. There were tennis rackets and fishing poles and boxing gloves and shrimp nets and a Mickey Mantle 32-inch Little League bat and one time, even a badminton set.

Every Christmas, I’d play out my dreams and my mind would fly over the rainbow, imagining my propulsion. Of course, I would become a major-leaguer, an All-Star, an all-time great, a Hall of Famer. We all would. My vision extended well beyond the day.

My athletic ability, alas, never kept stride. It was not the worst realization I would ever make.

But I have noticed a direct correlation between Christmas gifts and sporting dreams. The dreams are for the young. So are the gifts. Usually, the two disappear in unison. The rare few who project into greatness discover they do not need imagination to make those lofty flights of fantasy. Hope is not the co-pilot. Expectation is.

It must be a wonderful view.

I was thinking about all of this when another memory nudged me. My 17th Christmas I got a typewriter.

It was about the same time that I’d maneuvered my fantasy a few extra miles. I’d received a baseball scholarship to pitch at a small school in Florida. There were other opportunities, other colleges available. But none that would allow my athletic vision to continue.

I had expected a Christmas of more games in the yard. More dreams to celebrate. I got a typewriter instead.

“What am I going to do with a typewriter?” I asked.

My mother said I’d need it for college. But she also said, “Sometimes you get too old to play games. But you never get too old that you can’t use your imagination.”

Sometimes Christmas is taken for granted. Almost always, in fact. I think Christmas music, and I hear bells. I turn on the radio and I hear someone named Elmo and Patsy lamenting their grandmother’s head-on collision with a reindeer. I think of the meaning of Christmas, and I think of the most special birthday in the history of the world. But I turn on the TV and there are all these Claymation raisins doing Doo-Wop homages to the joys of buying machines wherein a microchip can seize command of entire generations.

Christmas (will soon) be gone, 364 days to go. But children still play. They chase the wonderful image of themselves as they would like to be seen. Christmas is their favorite arena. But they settle for lesser stadia.

But remember this – the present is sometimes confused with the package it comes wrapped in. Sometimes the gift is simply the freedom to imagine. There may be no greater one.

It was a great typewriter. I still play with it.

– A column by Shelby Strother


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Let’s take a look back at 2024 with Part One to follow starting today, and Part Two to come in next week’s missive. Here’s January to June 2024:

Part One – January 2024

Jan. 7th:

The PWHL Begins; The politics of Pro golf; PGA Tour Top 20 Players; NCAA TV Deal

Jan. 13th:

Bill Belichick saga; Jerod Mayo named Patriots head coach

Jan. 21st:

Celtics (20-1) at home; RIP Bud Harrelson; Sports Illustrated ^ sold (again)

Jan. 28th:

AFC/NFC Champ Sunday; BC vs. BU (ice hockey); Red Sox Truck Departs Fenway

February 2024

Feb. 4th

BIG EAST Update; 2024 NHL All-Star Weekend; Connor McDavid

Feb. 11th

Super Sunday (KC); NFL Honors (MVP Lamar Jackson); Super Menu; Clipped

Feb. 18th

NBA All-Star Weekend and Mac McClung; NBA All-Star ‘92 with Magic Johnson

Feb. 25th

Summer of ‘69 … From the Earth to the Moon; St. John’s Rick Pitino Meltdown

March 2024

March 3rd

March Madness; MIT Sloan Sports Conference; Hockey East; UConn Hoops

March 10th

MLB Spring Training & Seoul Game; The PLAYERS; Hockeyville, USA

March 17th

☘️ St. Patrick’s Day ‘24; BIG EAST at MSG; NYK St. Patrick’s Day tease

March 24th:

BC v. BU in Ice Hockey; National PUPPY Day ‘24; Irish Hurling

March 31st

MLB Regular Season; Predictions; UConn Dominating

April 2024

April 7th

Fenway Park; Basketball Hall of Fame Class; Caitlin Clark

April 14th

Boston Marathon/Patriots’ Day; Macklin Celebrini/Hobey Baker; Masters

April 21st

WNBA; Comparisons Miss the Facts; Scottie Scheffler Making History

April 28th

RIP St. John’s & ESPN’s Howie Schwab | The Who for Howie

May 2024

May 5th

FIBA Hall of Fame; The UFL; NBA’s Best Scorers Exit the Playoffs

May 12th

The NBA Draft Lottery; Thank you Mike Gorman; MLB Prospects

May 19th

Ice Hockey World Championship; ‘24 PGA Championship/Scheffler Arrested

May 25th/Memorial Day

The Sky is Falling at TNT; NLL Finals; 2024 Sports Emmy Awards

June 2024

June 2nd

Rest in Peace – Bill Walton (1952 – 2024) – Grateful Dead Tribute at The Sphere

June 9th

NBA Finals in Boston; Hockey’s Four Nations tournament

June 16th

Memorial tribute to Jerry West (1938 – 2024); Most Impactful in NBA History

June 23rd

The 2024 Travellers Championship; PGA Tour Update; Future CFB Playoffs

June 30th

The Greatest Things of Summer; BC Swimming/Dara Torres Hired to coach


TIDBITS: As the year comes to a close, it’s always fun to look at some sports business facts and figures, complete with a peek at the NBA team valuations provided by dear friends at Sportico. Each year, Sportico does a great job with the valuations of the major North American sports leagues. To see the full listing and the archives of others, you’ll need to subscribe (it’s a great value). Here? We’ll look at the Top 10:

  1. Golden State Warriors … $9.14b
  2. New York Knicks … $8.3b
  3. Los Angeles Lakers … $8.07b
  4. Brooklyn Nets … $5.7b
  5. Los Angeles Clippers … $5.68b
  6. Boston Celtics … $5.66b (team is for sale)
  7. Chicago Bulls … $5.56b
  8. Miami Heat … $5b
  9. Houston Rockets … $4.77b
  10. Toronto Raptors … $4.66b (US)

You’ll note, the Golden State Warriors took over the No. 1 slot previously held by the New York Knicks.

Also of note, the valuations were issued the week before the Dallas Mavericks hired longtime NBA Executive and Hall of Famer Rick Welts as its CEO. With that in mind, Digital Sports Desk estimates the Mavericks valuation improved mightily.

  • Dallas Mavericks (as of December 10, 2024) … $4.46b
  • Dallas Mavericks (as of this Thursday, December 19, 2024) … $5.46b

BOSTON PLAYER SALARIES: Here’s a look at the TOP 10 list of pro players cashing the loot during the 2024 season here in the Boston area:

  1. Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics … $49,205,800
  2. Jayson Tatum, Boston Celtics … $34,845,340
  3. Jrue Holiday, Boston Celtics … $30,000,000
  4. Kristaps Porzingis, Boston Celtics … $29,268,293
  5. Mike Onwenu, New England Patriots … $26,000,000
  6. Rafael Devers, Boston Red Sox … $25,000,000
  7. Drake Maye, New England Patriots … $24,262,100
  8. Trevor Story, Boston Red Sox … $22,500,000
  9. Kyle Dugger, New England Patriots … $21,000,000
  10. Derrick White, Boston Celtics … $18,821,429

THIS JEST IN: Harvard announced its first foray into the land of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL). The press announcement read, “We are excited to announce the launch of Harvard’s One Crimson NIL Exchange platform, designed to connect businesses with our talented student-athletes for Name, Image and Likeness opportunities.

“This platform, powered by INFLCR, offers a streamlined process for businesses to engage directly with Harvard student athletes, facilitating collaborations that can enhance your brand’s visibility while providing our athletes with valuable partnerships.”

YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: The FBI arrested and charged Atlanta-based Eugene Toriko travel agency’s CEO Maurice Eugene Smith in connection to the failed George Mason men’s basketball trip to the Bahamas this year. Again, credit to Sportico along with the D-1 Ticker, both reporting that $159,756 designated for accomodations and flights for George Mason’s team were allegedly utilized for private trips to Mexico and Panama. There is a possible 20-year sentence awaiting if convicted of wire fraud.

The complaint was filed this week in U.S. District Court in Virginia. Apparently, none of the money was returned to the school or its athletic department.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: 2024, NBA, NBA Valuations, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, Year in Review

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | A Memorial Tribute to Coach Lou Carnesecca

December 8, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

While We’re Young (Ideas) | Paying Tribute to Coach

A wreath and flowers in memory of the great St. John’s Coach Lou Carnesecca (St.John’s Photo)

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

JAMAICA ESTATES – If you attended St. John’s University in New York anytime between 1958 and 1992, chances are you knew Coach Lou Carnesecca. With the exception of a three year stint (1970-1973) with the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association (ABA), Carnesecca roamed the Hillcrest Queens campus of St. John’s much to the delight of the athletics department, the basketball players, the student bosy, faculty and administration.

Simply put: Everyone Loved Louie.

He was so great, you’d have thought he’d last forever.

This columnist first set eyes on Carnesecca at a Niagara College at St. John’s game held on Thursday, February 13, 1969 – a school night I might note. St. John’s thumped Niagara 97-60 and sent All-American guard Calvin Murphy back to the Falls after placing quite a hurtin’ on the longtime rivals with games that date back to 1909. I can vividly remember Murphy conducting a “Globetrotters-like” warm-up stationed on the free throw line, tossing fancy passes to his teammates as they made lay-ups in entertaining fashio, all decked out in 1960-70s stylish warm-ups. It was quoite a sight and quite a show.

Then the game started and the show shifted to the sidelines, as Carnesecca marched up and down, legs kicking, arms tossing, hands gesturing on every field goal, free throw and every single call made by a referee.

Of course, Carnesecca lived by the adage of “Peacock Today, Feather-duster Tomorrow,” so the side show was not about the legend of Little Louie. It was Carnesecca’s very own way of coaching his players, living the game with his players, protecting his players, rooting his players on to victory. After all, what could a little body English hurt when the Italian language was accompanying every shot or challenging every single call.

At Louie’s side was assistant coach John Kresse, an able sidekick who tried-out for the St. John’s varsity but was cut. Carnesecca spotted the basketball genius of the then 21-year old and basketball history was made, both at St. John’s (1965-1970 and 1973-1979) and at the College of Charleston where Kresse became the fifth highest winning coach by percentage (.797) of any Division 1 NCAA college basketball coach, registering 560 wins and 143 losses during his 23 years as head coach.

Before Kresse left Louie’s side, Carnesecca was well on his way to a (526-200) regular season record of his own, establishing a yearly 20-win season back when college programs played 27 or 29 games maximum in a single basketball season. In doing so, St. John’s basketball became “New York’s Team,” outshining big time college programs and rivals at NYU, Fordham, Columbia, City College or Manhattan.

The key was a combination of Carnesecca’s roots at St. Ann’s Academy where he won two Catholic High School titles and his following the legendary Joe Lapchick who decided to leave St. John’s in 1947 to coach the New York Knickerbockers of the (Basketball Association of America (BAA), the predecessor or the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Through his work at St. Ann’s (now Archbishop Molloy) and his network of Catholic High school coaches, Carnesecca claimed all he needed were some subway tokens to recruit the best basketball players in the world. Carnesecca, Kresse and third assistant Ron Rutledge combed the city schools, even coaxing many of the public school’s best to stay home in NYC rather than play in front of strangers in Carolina (North and South), Florida or California.

After all, at that time, only St. John’s could offer a regular schedule of games at the MECCA of basketball, Madison Square Garden – the World’s Most Famous Arena – which Louie tagged as, “MACY*s window.”

One of the players, Frank Alagia, from St. Agnes Cathedral High School on Long Island, took Carnesecca up on his offer to play in front of friends and family. Alagia reflected back on his coach and mentor from some 50 years ago saying, “The thing that he really taught us, most of all, was he led by his example and he was a very humble man. He was a very giving man and he gave everybody the same time, whether you were from a big network, a small network, a big newspaper, a small newspaper. He was very good with everybody, and that was a great lesson to me.

“He’s such a part of the fabric of New York,” added Alagia. “Don’t forget, he followed a legend in Joe Lapchick and became bigger than that legend. When you think about it in sports, how many times can you remember when a legend follows a legend like that? So, I mean, that kind of speaks for itself.”

The undaunted following of a legend, the sideline exhuberance, and the subway token approach put Carnesecca in gyms all over Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Long Island with an occasional trip to Staten Island, Jersey or Connecticut. It also allowed Carnesecca to be reacquainted with players he met and coached at his legendary summer camps, as he maintained a stable of local high school coaches who were employed each and every summer to help run the camps.

Let St. John’s and Golden State Warriors Hall of Famer Chris Mullin explain: “Obviously, Coach spent his whole life here, right? That alone, just the longevity alone, but it was more his infectious personality,” noted Mullin. “His warmth, his care, his love, his protection, I always felt like he protected us.

“He gave us praise for wins and he took the losses. He burdened the losses for us, and he gave us the wins, let us celebrate the wins. With that, he just treated everyone with respect.

“I’ve known him for over 50 years. I met him when I was 11 years old. Just looking back, he was always gracious, very humble. He won with class and lost with grace.”

St. John’s Billy Goodwin Celebrates the 1983 BIG EAST title

Mullin, the ‘92 Dream Team shooter extraordinaire and possibly New York City’s best collegiate player of all-time (if you think of Power Memorial’s Lew Alcindor/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as a Los Angeles collegian) met Carnesecca in 1974 as an 11 year old. By 1981, Mullin was shooting jumpers and owned a set of keys to Alumni Hall (now Carnesecca Arena). By 1985, Mullin and Carnesecca were headed for the Final Four in Lexington, Kentucky. By 2011, the duo stood center stage at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts as Mullin asked Carnesecca (Hall of Famer as of 1992) to be his honorary presenter to the all-time greatest players assembled.

After Coach Carnesecca’s funeral service celebration this week at St. Thomas More on campus, former Seton Hall and NBA coach P. J. Carlesemo summed it up quite nicely, quoting words mentioned during the Mass of Christian Burial, “When you think back to the BIG EAST, I think Father Shanley said it, but I mean, the BIG EAST would never have been the BIG EAST without Lou, and I can’t think of St. John’s without him.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: For this special column, how about a few other notes and quotes about Lou Carnesecca, all from those in attendance at the funeral Mass on Friday?

St. John’s center-forward Walter Berry, College Player of the Year in 1986: “We were here playing, and some of the things he instilled in me as a man, forget about basketball.

“It’s about Lou today. He did a lot for a lot of people and he was one of the greatest people I’ve known. You know, I don’t want to break down, but, this is a hard day for everybody. Coach was my guy, man. He helped me in ways that nobody else could.”

Alagia: “There’s just so many memories I have with him. Just playing for him, but later on, going to visit him and talking about old times because I can go back with Coach to the 60s and even 50s and talk about guys, and Coach loved that. He loved his days when he coached at St. Ann’s, like his gradual rise and how he came to St. John’s. There’s just so many memories that I have. It would be hard to pick one.”

St. John’s guard Mark Jackson on the first time he met Carnesecca: “I remember Coach sitting there, and his presence in the gym, almost like a spotlight was just on him. Any room or gym he walked into, you can tell there was something special about him, and from that moment on, I wanted to be a member of St. John’s basketball team.”

St. John’s phenom Felipe Lopez on getting calls from Coach Carnesecca long after he turned pro and long after his retirement from the NBA: “He would still call me sometimes. I was like, ‘Lou Carnesecca is calling me? That’s amazing’. That was the type of human being he was. Someone who really cared about his players, his family, his community, his college, and obviously he built such a great legacy in basketball.”

St. John’s guard turned highly competent broadcaster, Tarik Turner, on Carnesecca’s legend at the school even when Brian Mahoney took over as head coach: “I knew about just the legend, watching him coach on the sidelines and coach great players like Mark (Jackson) and Chris (Mullin) and Walter (Berry), but I knew I was going to get a chance to play for Brian Mahoney, his long term assistant, so I knew I had a connection to him, but I didn’t know what kind of man he was until I met him and sat down with him.”

St. John’s center Bill Wennington, a three-time NBA champion who grew up in Montreal, Canada but knew of the St. John’s coaching legend: “When you come to New York, playing at The Garden – The Mecca – Coach Carnesecca’s name is a part of the legacy. He got kids in off the street from the city to come and play here, and molded them into men and taught us life lessons, made us better basketball players, but made us better people and better men in our lives.”


TIDBITS: St. John’s tribute to Coach Carnesecca will continue into 2025. On January 4, one day prior to what would’ve been his 100th birthday, St. John’s will host Lou Carnesecca Day for the Johnnies’ matchup vs. Butler. Fans in attendance will receive a replica of the Lou Carnesecca statue, a fixture in the arena’s lobby. In addition, throughout the game, St. John’s will celebrate Coach Carnesecca with several video board features and messages. … This week’s edition of “The St. John’s Red Storm Podcast” will feature a never-heard-before sit down interview with Coach Carnesecca and fellow Hall of Famer and St. John’s legend Jack Kaiser. To listen to “The St. John’s Red Storm Podcast,” To listen, visit HERE.


THIS JEST IN: Things are looking up for the Arizona Bowl. They went from being the Barstool Sports Arizona Bowl in 2023 to the Snoop Dog Arizona Bowl for 2024. Of course, dating back to 2020, we had the Offerpad Arizona Bowl, a sponsorship from the California-based home sales joint.


YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: The BIG TEN fined both Michigan and The Ohio State University a cool $100,000 for their parts in the wild post game melee that took place in Columbus, Ohio last week. … The on-field fight took place when Ohio State defensive linebacker Jack Sawyer took exception to Michigan’s edge rusher Derrick Moore deciding to plant a blue Michigan flag on the midfield Buckeye logo.

The melee broke out from there, with reports of Michigan Wolverine players being maced by attending police officers.

Dueling statements accompanied the fines.

The BIG TEN tried to close ranks and put the issue to bed saying, it “considers this matter concluded and will have no further comment.” But, the conference said the teams violated the league’s sportsmanship policy, noting: “Not only did the actions of both teams violate fundamental elements of sportsmanship such as respect and civility, the nature of the incident also jeopardized the safety of participants and bystanders.”

Ohio State countered: “What happened post-game (Saturday) was unfortunate,” the statement read. “Good sportsmanship is always important in everything we do at Ohio State. Moving forward, we will continue to examine and address our post-game protocols to ensure our student-athletes, coaches, visiting teams and staff safely exit the field.”

The fisticuffs came immediately after time ran out and players met-up at midfield after Michigan’s 13-10 win at Columbus.

To the BIG TEN’s proclamation, considering the matter over, WWYI notes the all-American line from the motion picture, Animal House, “What? Over? Did you say over? Nothing is over until we decide it is.”

In other words, “was it over when the Astros were banging on Gatorade coolers? Was it over when Tom Brady said the footballs were properly inflated? Was it over when Gil Hodges looked at the the baseball with J.C. Martin’s shoe polish?

Surely, if that melee happened after an NBA game on Thanksgiving Weekend, they’d still be showing the fight’s lowlights and seeking a Federal investigation on the pepper spraying of athletes.

Filed Under: NCAA, Opinion, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Big East Basketball, Coach Lou Carnesecca, St. John's, TL's Sunday Sports Notes

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Dec 1st

December 2, 2024 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – The naysayers are awaiting their failures. But, WWYI comes – not as a naysayer – but a realist … a teller of truths.

Entrepreneurial spirit, private equity, an abundance of time slots for programming on a growing number of global sports channels, and an endless amount of time and space for sports on digital-only, online sports sites, complete with your favorite mobile apps has created a monster for sports fans.

That monster is too many pro sports leagues.

How many is too many? Let us count the way.

But, first let’s pay a little tribute to a few upstart leagues that paved the vacant roads long ago. They come in all shapes and sizes for both men and women. Here are a few that deserve ultimate high fives:

  • Women’s Tennis – the WTA
  • Men’s Tennis Tour – the ATP
  • Women’s Golf – the LPGA
  • Minor League and affiliated baseball leagues (Cape Baseball)
  • The WNBA
  • The Premier Lacrosse League – Men’s lacrosse, aka the PLL
  • The NBA Summer League
  • Of course, the PGA Tour, NASCAR and F-1 are rock solid pro circuits
  • National Women’s Soccer League – the NWSL
  • Professional Women’s Hockey League – the PWHL
  • Pro Bull Riders – PBR (solid since ‘92 founding on The Nashville Network, Outdoor Sports Net = Versus but challenges ahead)

Spring (American-style) Football is in a category of its own. The UFL – with big time backers – seems to be finding a place on the sports landscape, after a few more failed attempts came up dry. The CFL (Canadian Football League) was founded in 1958 (66 years ago) and has stood the test of time. Former basketball execs turned CFL Commissioners Mark Cohon (2007-2014) and Jeffrey Orridge (2015-2017) each lent a hand in trying to build on the foundation but to no great lengths of change. The most recent Commissioner, Randy Ambrosie, announced his resignation on October 26, 2024, and it took effect following Toronto’s 41-24 victory over Lose-a-peg in the 111th Grey Cup. Ambrosie reportedly lost a vote of confidence among the league’s owners. They are currently seeking a new league commish to guide the grey lady.


Now we get into the nitty gritty and to prove open-mindedness, the top of this list will include a few fledgling professional sports leagues that have a chance – or at least have a chance in the mind of WWYI.

  • Women’s Flag Football (NFL backed)
  • Pro Volleyball – (Real volleyball, not the Beach version but four women’s leagues will need to be condensed to one and the under-leveraged men’s circuit has value
  • The Snow League – (WWYI is not making it up) – see: SNOW
  • Pro Fight League – (the UFC owns the space, but there’s room here for growth)
  • Pro Women’s Lacrosse – (PLL Backed)
  • Canada’s Summer Pro Basketball League
  • Major League Rugby
  • Major League Cricket
  • Athletes Unlimited (Offerings in Volleyball, Lacrosse and Softball)
  • American Cornhole League (niche city but success on the rise)
  • The Pro eSports Leagues (i.e. The NBA 2K League) – Can they make it?

Now, from the sublime to the sometimes ridiculous, and new leagues that have little chance of surviving for the long haul.

  • Pro Dodge Ball
  • Pro Kickball
  • Pro Pop-a-Shot
  • Pro Table Tennis
  • Pro Pickleball (a great grassroots play, but not sure it can be a media property)
  • USL – W League (while men’s version is doing well, is there room for more women’s pro soccer teams and a league in USA?)
  • Roller Derby – (sorry to you Bay Area Bombers fans)
  • Pro Ultimate Frisbee (fun, but a hobby – not a pro sport)
  • Pro Ax Throwing
  • World Chase Tag – (Pro “Tag, You’re It” – Who knew?)

Let’s not forget Arena Football. The sport had its heyday, but is now being repackaged and re-launched. Currently, the headline on the homepage for Arena Football states, “2025 Season Announcements Coming Soon,” and there’s only 32 days until 2025. There’s a caution flag on the field for Indoor American Football.

And, how about men’s professional golf? LIV Golf had a rough start, has been relegrated to off hours on the CW Network but recent sports biz rumors have former NBA, former 76ers/NJ Devils/Prudential Center, former Merlin Entertainment CEO Scott O’Neill being named as LIV golf’s new CEO (The Athletic, Sports Business Journal and New York Times have all reported it as a done deal).

LIV Golf at Boston’s International (Photo by T. Peter Lyons)

LIV Golf has a very non-North American friendly schedule for 2025, and its end game of a possible merge with the PGA Tour remains elusive, but good things might be ahead for a complement to the PGA Tour and DP World Tour. The LIV and DP world Tour are very likely to merge by 2026. Other changes can be expected with O’Neill at the helm.

Starting January 7, we’ll have TGL Golf. Six TGL teams representing six different cities will go head-to-head in a season-long competition at SoFi Center, a first-of-its-kind venue built specifically for TGL on the campus of Palm Beach State College. Matches will air on ESPN and ESPN+ in the United States. The concept calls for a hybrid of simulated golf which switches to live play around the holes. TGL has solid backing and great time slots on ESPN/ESPN2.

The overall future of indoor, simulated golf is good (think batting ranges, or the experience of bowling with buddies). Former NBC Sports PR colleague Mike McCarley is in charge of the TGL brand, via the TMRW investment vehicle set forth by Tiger Woods, and Rory McIlroy in partnership with the PGA Tour.


BACK TO BASKETBALL: There are a few others Pro ventures to be listed, but for the sake of brevity, let’s draw the line and delve deeper into women’s pro basketball, especially “Unrivaled,” the new women’s 3×3 league.

First, please remember this commentary is coming from a Title IX era sportsman, who as a youngster, witnessed and supported the growth of women’s participation in sports at all levels. Aside from the traditional women’s sports, such as field hockey, softball, gymnastics, swimming, track and field, at Trinity, there were championship-level teams playing women’s basketball, lacrosse, tennis, soccer and golf.

But as the mid-1970s evolved to the mid-2020s, there’s certainly a glut of professional basketball leagues dotting the landscape – some competing against women’s college basketball.

As background, there are two women’s professional basketball ventures launching in 2025. Since 1997, when the WNBA established an everlasting women’s pro basketball league competing mostly in the summer months, there are two additional leagues – Athletes Unlimited (in traditional 5×5 style) and Unrivaled Basketball (3×3 competition).

There will be six teams of six players each in the 3×3 Unrivaled. The team names are the Laces Basketball Club, Lunar Owls Basketball Club, Mist Basketball Club, Phantom Basketball Club, Rose Basketball Club and Vinyl Basketball Club.

Unrivaled gives credit to co-founders Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier – both WNBA players – for the foundation of the league, along with Unrivaled president Alex Bazzell. They named former WTA tennis executive Micky Lawler as the league’s first commissioner.

Unrivaled was met with a blue chip list of investors including, former Warner Bros CEO Ann Sarnoff, and athletes like NBA All-Star Carmelo Anthony and Steve Nash who invested through the venture capital firm led by U.S women’s national soccer team captain Alex Morgan.

Unrivaled’s next step was luring former head of ESPN and DAZN John Skipper and former Turner Sports president David Levy. They joined forces with leadership and landed a TV deal with Levy’s former employer for games to be broadcast by TNT and Tru TV starting January 17, 2025.

Meanwhile, the established but still trying to establish an audience Athletes Unlimited Pro Basketball is utilizing traditional 5×5 rules but competing directly against the NBA, men’s and women’s college basketball. In its fifth season of Athletes Unlimited Pro Basketball, the entity is attempting to find its footing as a minor league offering in a crowded space. It will have a short run from February 5 to March 2, 2025, at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium.

There’s surely a chance the new basketball leagues will work out, but these leagues are splitting an audience with Women’s College Basketball which has made great strides in recent years, much to the credit of Caitlin Clark. But, please remember, there’s a long history of successful and entertaining women’s college basketball teams and players, dating back to clubs like the 1980 Old Dominion squad with Anne Donovan. Add: Great teams from Tennessee under the guidance of Pat Summitt, USC with Cheryl Miller, the 1974 Immaculata team with Maryanne Stanley, the great Carol Blazejowski and the Montclair State (NJ) team of the mid-1970s, a slew of great – let’s call them historic – teams from Delta State, Louisiana Tech, Notre Dame, Baylor, South Carolina, Stanford, Texas Tech, Rutgers, Maryland, Oregon, UCLA and Texas.

Now, toss in the decades of great (championship) teams from UConn – from Rebecca Lobo to Sue Bird to Diana Taurasi to Breanna Stewart and you’ve got Hall of Famer coach Geno Auriemma’s resume.

One of the WNBA’s tent pole establishing decisions was to go for the summer months rather than compete head-to-head with women’s college basketball.

So it’s a “Battle for Nielsen Ratings” – Pro Women’s 3×3 vs. College hoops?

All the leagues mentioned in all the sports claim “percent emergence.” They all promise they’re the “fastest growing sport,” a claim the sport of lacrosse has made since WWYI was While Yet to be Born Ideas.

At some point, it’s just too much. There’s a glut of emerging sports ventures and something has got to give. Overall, the make it or break it on sports franchises involves three simple factors. They are:

  • Market
  • Money
  • Media

You can weigh all the factors, the sports and make up your own mind on the future of emerging pro sports leagues.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The Top 10 of the FIBA Men’s World Basketball Rankings remains unchanged from its summertime posting. USA Basketball solidified its No. 1 place with the Gold Medal at the Paris Olympics Games. As a reminder, here are the national teams in order of their rank, along with some formidable challengers:

  1. USA
  2. Serbia
  3. Germany
  4. France
  5. Canada
  6. Spain
  7. Australia
  8. Argentina
  9. Latvia
  10. Lithuania

Challengers include: Brazil, Slovenia, Greece, Italy and Puerto Rico


TIDBITS: BIG EAST teams were (55-20, .733) going into the weekend games. UConn was down as (4-3) with four wins coming at home but three losses coming from its trip to the Maui Classic. … Thursday marked the 14th straight NBA season without a game scheduled for Thanksgiving Day.

As the NFL bounds through it Thanksgiving Day weekend schedule which always marks the home stretch of the regular season, games are averaging a healthy 17.5m viewers per game, the largest average audience per game through 12 weeks since 2015. That does not compute NFL International Series Games and the use of the NFL RedZone channel by many as their go-to way to watch the Sunday games. … Forty-seven of the Top 50 TV shows since September are NFL broadcasts, according to NFL Media. If you look back to 2023, the NFL season and playoffs captured 93 of the Top 100 audiences of the year.

The others?

  • College Football accounts for three
  • State of the Union
  • MACYs Thanksgiving Day Parade
  • The Academy Awards
  • The Super Bowl

In college football news reported by ESPN Saturday morning, former No. 1 overall NFL pick Andrew Luck is now following his dad (Oliver) into a new college sports management role. ESPN reported that the 35-year-old former Stanford Cardinal QB is returning to his alma mater to be the General Manager of the men’s football team, a role that will “place him in charge” of the entire program.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Nov 24

November 24, 2024 by Terry Lyons

 

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – Over the course of the year, this column focuses the majority of its effort on sports, covering the what’s new, what’s old, what’s coming, what’s gone. It occasionally drifts away from sports to meet-up with some current event or to toast a new music act while often remembering some of the classic rock artists of our days gone by. In the end, it’s a sports notes column, delivered to your inbox every Saturday night in preparation of your Sunday morning routine – Coffee? Tea, or TL?

As Thanksgiving approaches, it’s only appropriate to pay tribute to the things in sports we should appreciate. This column of thank-yous will concentrate on sports and sports only for a giant thank you and a reminder to those in the industry to not take our sports or our colleagues for granted.

And, most importantly, please don’t take our athletes for granted as they deserve the most thanks for their life-long effort to practice, develop, train for conditioning, perfect their technique and – all the while – be good citizens of our sports world and contribute to make the world a better place. In many instances, that’s called “Giving Back” instead of “Thanks Giving.”

You might remember a thanks to all column from a year ago. Feel free to reference it for old times sake. There might be a few repeats, but hopefully not too many. But, if mentioned in both columns, the athlete or the sport must be doing something right.

It’s our weekend edition of November 24th, and we’re looking forward to this Thursday, November 28, 2024 – Thanksgiving Day in the USA. Let’s stop for a moment and give thanks for what we have in this crazy sports world. Here we go.

Since it’s November 24, let’s give thanks to Dave Bing and Rudy T, both Nov 24ers, and the very best the NBA ever offered to its fans. And, donlt forget Oscar Robertson, born on this date in 1938. The Big O lost his longtime rival, friend and 1960 USA Basketball Olympic Games teammate, Jerry West, this year, so while we’re at it, let’s remember West and give thanks for everything he meant to so many sports fans around the country and the world.

As stinging as a loss that West was to the NBA (logo himself), many of us are still mourning the loss of the great Bill Walton this year. Not only was Walton the very best collegiate basketball player, along with his counterpart Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) leading UCLA, Bill had an impactful NBA career, winning two NBA titles, the most recent, the ’86 Boston Celtics championship when Walton was the Sixth Man of the Year and an un-guardable force inside. Bill was also a dear friend to so many of us and I think of him everyday – twice when I hear “Fire on the Mountain” by Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead.

Let’s give thanks to college football and the fact it will have its first 12-team playoff this winter. Thanks to all the great teams over the many years fans have enjoyed the rivalries. Thanks to Michigan and Ohio State, to Alabama and Auburn, to Georgia and LSU. Thanks for The Game – Harvard vs Yale(this weekend’s score: Yalies 34, Harvard 29) Thanks to Ole Miss, USC, UCLA, Oregon, Penn State, and thank God for Notre Dame and all the other great schools fielding college football teams.

While we thank the athletes of Air Force, the Coast Guard and the U.S. Merchant Marine Acdemy, there’s a special thanks to Army vs Navy, coming to Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland just 20 days from today, or simply December 14th.

Aside from the Stanley Cup, the Commander in Chief’s Trophy just might be the best in sports in America.


Let’s give thanks for our Cons (Chuck Taylor All-Stars), our adidas superstars with three green bands for the Holy Trinity Titans. Thanks for our Air Jordans, our Reeboks, Under Armours, our New Balance training shoes, and our Puma Clyde model shoes – as much fashion as you can pack in a basketball shoe. Steely Dan might pass along thanks for bad sneakers and a pina colada, but let’s just thanks Walt Clyde Frazier.

Thanks to NBC Boston Sports’ Mike Gorman and NESN’s Jack Edwards for their longtime efforts as respective voices of the Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins. They each retired in the Year 2024 – a good year in sports, thank-you very much.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Let’s give thanks to the NBA and Warner Brothers-Discovery-Turner Sports for working out a compromise that will enable NBA fans to see “Inside the NBA” on ABC and ESPN instead of the troubled pre-game and halftime shows of ESPN past. Let’s hope ESPN’s Malika Andrews is worked into the mix for both NBA coverage and general sports coverage and let’s hope ABC moves Jay Bilas into the game analyst spot alongside play-by-play man Mike Breen.

On the parquet, it’s a thanks to Bob Cousy and Tom “Satch” Sanders. … On the ice, it’s thanks to Pasta and Jeremy Swayman, but a sad good-bye to Bs head coach Jim Montgomery who was fired this past week and replaced with Joe Sacco (interim, it said). … On the Sox, welcome aboard to Outfielder Jhostynxon Garcia. … Don’t hold your breath on Soto.

For the Boston-New-England-Route 128-Providence Patriots, it’s a warm Thanksgiving Day wish for rookie QB Drake Maye. Maybe the Patriots need to find 21 other guys?


We’re thankful for better and speedy video challenges. Get the call right. … We’re thankful for Peyton Pritchard and Derrick White of the Celtics, both drafted late in Round 1, (Pritchard, Boston 2020, Rd. 1, Pick 26), (White, San Antonio 2017, Rd. 1, Pick 29).

Thanks to the New York Mets of yesteryear. Sadly, we lost Ed Kranepool this year. He was a fan favorite for every kid who loved the Mets in the ‘62 until June 23, 1970 when he was demoted to the minors – the Tidewater Tides. Kranepool fought his way back to the Mets and the Majors, and played until he was 34 years old in 1979. He holds the record for Most Games Played for the NYM.

Here’s a line of gratitude for some of the other Mets greats. To Ron Swoboda, Tommie Agee, Tom Seaver, Donn Clendenon, Cleon Jones, Jerry Grote, Ed Charles, Gary Gentry and my personal favorite, lefty – should be in the Baseball Hall of Fame – Jerry Koosman. Great memories stem from the names, Cal Koonce, Duffy Dyer, Ron Taylor, and TugMcGraw. Here’s to Managers Gil Hodges and Casey Stengel.

When the Mega Millions Lottery heads north of $300m, there are some “pick your own numbers” to be played.

Mine are:

  • 10 – Frazier
  • 12 – Barnett
  • 19 – Reed
  • 22 – DeBusschere
  • 24 Bradley
  • 15 – The bonus number for both Dick McGuire and Earl “The Pearl” Monroe
The Islanders alternate logo; aka the new Coke of the NHL team

If playing another, which is usually the case

  • 5 – Potvin
  • 9 – Gillies
  • 19 – Trottier
  • 22 – Bossy
  • 31 – Smith
  • 18 – for the Captain, Eddie Westfall

Every now and then, alternate numbers such as No. 23 for Bobby Nystrom, No. 27 for John Tonelli, and maybe a No. 1 for Glenn “Chico” Resch or No. 6 for one of the all-time greats, yet underrated players in Ken Morrow.As a reminder, Morrow was a member of the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” USA Hockey gold medal team, then ran off with four consecutive Stanley Cup championships from the spring of 1980 through 1983. Not a bad stretch.

Butch Goring deserves mention, for sure, but I don’t play his No. 91. Thoughts go back to Germaine Gagnon, Gary Hart, Billy Harris, Lorne Henning, Garry Howatt, and goalkeeper Gerry Desjardins.

TIDBITS: In the “did you know” category of NHL history, DYK that Garry Howatt (then New Jersey Devils) and Mickey Volcan (then Hartford Whalers) are the only two (active) players to officiate an NHL regular season game? The date was January 15, 1983 and a Boston to Hartford snowstorm delayed the assigned officials from making a NJ at Hartford game. The Whalers won the game, 2-1, and Howatt and Volcan were relieved from their duties after the other “real” refs arrived at the Hartford Civic Center.

A bit off my original pledge to keep this on sports, let’s pay tribute to the Allman Brothers Band and two of the great instrumentals of all-time, Jessicaand In Memory of Elizabeth Reed (November 9, 1845 – May 3, 1935). Both were written by ABB guitarist Dickey Betts.

If Thanksgiving is near, it’s time to tune into the Detroit Lions (hosting Da Bears) and Dallas Cowboys (vs NYG) games on TV (along with a Miami at Green Bay tilt in the evening). Although Dallas and Detroit host games every year on Thanksgiving Day, they necver seem to be good/great at the same time. Thinking back, the years with Barry Sanders running for the Lions and Emmitt Smith carrying the ball for the Cowboys were certainly the glory years, complete with John Madden and Pat Summerall calling the games. To the winners went the “TurDucken.” Let’s hope for two of the three games being entertaining and close. Whoever loses the NYG at DAL game will surely pack it in for the remainder of the season.


THIS JEST IN: Pick-up improvement? The NBA is addressing the major problem of the downfall of serious competition at the annual NBA All-Star Weekend. The league is reportedly trying an approach that just might put more intrigue into both the Rookie vs Sophs (Rising Stars) game and the ASG itself. Proposed to the NBA Competition and Rules Committee this week was the outline of a new four-team tournament-style format for this season’s All-Star Game in San Francisco. The league is expected to have two semifinal games played up to 40 points, with the winners advancing to the final match up to 25 points, as reported by NBA television partner ESPN.

“The first-of-its-kind event is expected to serve as a quick-burst competition that resembles pickup games where the winner moves to the championship round in single-elimination play,” said ESPN before any official announcement was made.

Sources told ESPN last week that the NBA was in serious discussions to have three All-Star teams of eight players each and the winner of the Rising Stars game take part in an All-Star Game tournament on Sunday.

Aside from the exciting “Elam Ending” game in Chicago in 2020, the recent games have been lopsided three-point chuck-fests. Last season’s 211-186 blowout by East of West at Indiana was the breaking point.

The tournament style set-up is worth a try.


YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: Six years after the fact, but we’ve now got it confirmed that former Titans coach Mike Mularkey is – well – full of malarkey. On a podcast report this week and then on the NFL Network, reporter Ian Rapoport commented on Mularkey’s admission that he played a joke, using Rapaport to report that Mularkey was going to get an extension to his contract. In fact, Mularkey dropped the nugget when he himself was in fear of being canned by the Titans.

“That is not cool,” said Rapoport on NFL Network, recalling the setback of his early career as a major NFL reporter. “That’s not funny. I was a younger reporter back then, and the amount of online hate and ridicule I got because Mike Mularkey thought it would be funny to get back at his old boss. It was not fun.”

In the WWYI’s realm of reporting, it’s usually the reporter who gets the last laugh in these situations. “Never argue with someone who buys ink by the barrel,” is the old political quip, credited to Indiana Congressman Charles Bruce Brownson (1914-1988).

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: ESPN, NBA, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Nov 10

November 10, 2024 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – On Wednesday night, it took some inner strength to push my human motor to commute to Boston’s TD Garden to take in the Golden State Warriors vs. the Boston Celtics basketball game. The night before was spent gazing at a TV screen, aghast at the one-sided results pouring in, not just at the top of the ticket but in Senate contests as well. Tuesday night to the early morning hours Wednesday was not a pleasant experience for half of the USA, but the sun rose brightly this past Wednesday morning and it set by 4:30pm, three hours before the Warriors and Celtics would tip-off their NBA game.

After a quick bite with family members at a North End pizza joint, it was time to enter Boston Garden with 19,155 best friends to take-in the game between the 2022 NBA Finalists. It was time to escape from the realities of life and disappear into an amazing place, a place many of us retreat to every day or night – we concentrate 100% of our energy and focus into a sporting event whether it be on TV or, ideally, in person.

Earlier this Fall, a good escape into an NFL Sunday was sometimes interrupted by endless commercial spots for the New Hampshire Governor race.

Blah. We were served up with unwanted and uncalled for stress, thrust upon us weekend after weekend during our sports get-a-way in the Commonwealth. But, for an NFL Sunday, we have the solution, the NFL RedZone, seven hours of commercial free action.

Away from the never-ending world of politics, escaping into sports is a really good thing. Whether its children playing in the backyard or participating in organized teams sports, the experience allows for teaching moments, lifetime lessons and important building of lifetime bonds with friends and the sports they play. Kids can escape and forget their problems in a second. Sometimes, adults need a little more time.

The Boston College vs Syracuse football game offered an escape pattern, without a cloud in the dark blue sky. A brisk breeze combined with bright sunshine at Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill and a crowd was entertained by a great ACC rivalry game, as the home team won 37-31. Some fans left the stadium with some tint, as the sun beat down upon their faces, the kind of sun Led Zeppelin sang of in Kashmir.

It was a great place to escape from life’s bummers.

Think about it. Great competition for the players, combined with tailgating, cheering and revelry for the fans, some 44,500 strong. That’s a pretty good way to forget your troubles for a couple hours.

Dozens of homemade signs for ESPN’s College GameDay show provided comfort for ESPN commentator Kirk Herbsteit whose dog, Ben, passed away this week – a devastating loss to Herbstreit and college football fans everywhere, all who saw Ben on the GameDay set each Saturday for years. (ESPN)

Surely, the Alabama at LSU game in Baton Rouge provided ESPN GameDay analyst Kirk Herbstreit with a couple hours of distraction and enjoyment Saturday, just a few days after his loyal dog, Ben, passed away after battling cancer. Herbstreit updated college football fans on November 4, but things took a turn and Ben headed for his short walk to Dog Heaven.

Thousands of tributes came in on social media – totaling some 150,000+ by night time – and ESPN paid tribute to Ben, who earned star status with fans and Kirk’s colleagues as he traveled to games, no matter where the week-by-week GameDay schedule destination led them. There has been no better example of the bond between man and dog displayed weekly over the years by the monument of a man and his companion.

“Our love of football is what unites us every weekend,” said Herbstreit in his on air eulogy to his departed dog. “What I experienced with Ben was just that, and so much more.”

Here’s the ESPN memorial feature for Ben – not a dry eye in the house. Click HERE

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: In their third FIBA 3×3 Men’s World Tour competition in as many weeks, Team Miami secured their fifth FIBA 3×3 World Tour title of 2024 with a tournament victory at the Neom Masters in Neom, Saudi Arabia. For the USA contingent, Dylan Travis, James Parrott, Mitch Hahn and Trey Bardsley. Parrott, Miami’s versatile 6-foot-4 slasher, earned MVP honors for the second time in his 3×3 career. … In case you haven’t heard of Neom, it’s a brand news, state of the art tech center community being built in the desert of Saudi Arabia. … Indoor sports can play a major role in the new tech townand competitive 3×3 is a nice start. The FIBA-sanctioned tournament is among the attractions for the Neom Beach Games of 2024. … In addition to the LIV Golf Tour, Saudi Arabia has been attracting other world sports, such as Formula 1 racing, boxing, mixed martial arts and a list of others all in queue as facilities are being constructed.


TIDBITS: Two days after election day, a day after the fans of Jayson Tatum and the Boston Celtics gave an opposing coach a piece of their minds for USA Basketball Olympic Games snubs gone by, Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr was asked about his viewpoint on the result of the Presidential election.

Kerr: “I believe in democracy. I think the American people have spoken and voted for Donald Trump. I want him to do well the next four years. I want our country to do well.”

Kerr (added, sarcastically): “I’m just thankful there wasn’t any voting fraud this time. Last time, all those illegal immigrants who crashed the border, raped and murdered people and then voted six times, that was unfortunate. But thankfully, this time everything was clean. It’s great that every election has been really valid except for that last one four years ago. Twinkle in my eye as I say that, in case you didn’t see it.”

We’ve featured a few Jack McCallum-like “Sign of the Apocalypse” news items, but this week, how about a new subsection in the column?

YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: On Friday afternoon, a charter airline pilot flying the Auburn Tigers to a game at Houston (game scheduled Saturday night, 9:30pm CT) had to turn around and return to the airport of origination as a fight broke out on board between two Auburn players. Auburn took a second flight to Texas and arrived in Houston at 1:00am. … Reports are sketchy, at best, but some are attempting to downplay the incident, tagging it as horseplay. Note to Auburn: Do not let your horses play in a metal tube at 30,000 feet with jet fuel flowing to jet engines fully operational. It might not end well.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Nov 3

November 5, 2024 by Terry Lyons

Breeders’ Cup 2024

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – Oh, how I wish this dateline was originating from sunny Del Mar, California, a stones throw from San Diego and a shorter throw to Torrey Pines Golf Course, which is a driver and nine iron from La Jolla, one of the most beautiful towns in all the 50 States.

If there’s one race course in the entire United States of America that is perfect for the annual Breeders’ Cup championships, it is Del Mar, situated adjacent Pacific Ocean and the beautiful sights of Southern California. While other horse tracks have enjoyed great days for the Breeders’ – namely Belmont in New York, Churchill Downs in Kentucky, or Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, hosted by our neighbors to the north – Del Mar is something extra special. Paradise for the horse player and the equivalent of Monte Carlo for the rich and famous of the industry known as The Sport of Kings.

Any sports fan has to call The Breeders’ Cup the most underrated event in the sports industry. It’s seven World Series games in one day. The very best of the best all competing at one track over two days.

The event began Friday afternoon with “Future Stars Friday,” where the sport’s stars of tomorrow compete in five Juvenile (two-year-old) races as the warm-up. Keep an eye on Immersive, the Juvenile Fillies winner for trainer Brad Cox. It was Cox’s seventh straight Breeders’ with a win.

In 48 hours, the Breeders’ crown 14 World Champions across different surfaces and divisions, including the season-defining $7 million Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic, won by Sierra Leone, the No. 2 finisher in May’s Kentucky Derby.

EDITOR’S NOTE: There were two sudden thoroughbred deaths from cardiac events as they raced or trained this week. On Tuesday (Oct 29) at Santa Anita, Practical Move, a horse training for the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile, died of a cardiac event after a morning gallop. … On Saturday, 3-year old French colt, Jayarebe, finished seventh in the field of 13 for the 1 ½-mile, $5 million Breeders’ Cup Turf race, which was won by Rebel’s Romance. Trained by Irish native Brian Meehan, Jayarebe was making his sixth start of the year and eighth of his career. He had won four times. “He was immediately attended to by a team of veterinary experts led by Dr. Brent Cassady, but unfortunately passed away,” said Dr. Al Ruggles, the on-call veterinarian for American Equine Racing Practitioners.


Mookie Betts (holding trophy) – (Getty Images)

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Just in case you didn’t notice, former Red Sox All-Star Mookie Betts had the World Series winning RBI when his new team, the LA Dodgers, disposed of the New York Yankees Wednesday night in New York. The Series ended in LA’s favor a night after a moron, otherwise identified as a Branford, Connecticut man, ripped a ball out of Betts’ mitt but was later tossed out of Yankee Stadium to the streets of the Bronx for the act. The umps properly ruled the play as an out and the so-called fan was banned for Game 5.

THE NBA in MEXICO CITY: The NBA staged another Mexico City Game on Saturday night (9:30pm ET), featuring the Miami Heat and Washington Wizards in concert with a lengthy roster of marketing sponsors. The sponsor line-up included presenting partner Michelob Ultra, and associate partners 2K, AT&T, Azteca, Banco, Betcris, Elektra, Emirates, Hennessy, Hisense, Mercado Libre, Nike, PlayStation, Pepsi, Tissot, TotalPlay, Visit Washington and Wilson. … It was the 33rd time the NBA played a game (preseason or regular season) in Mexico with most games in Mexico City and a few in Monterey.

GET JACKED: The Boston Bruins and their broadcast partner NESN (co-owned by the Red Sox and Bruins) will celebrate former play-by-play announcer Jack Edwards’ career at the mic on Sunday, November 3. The honors will include in-arena and NESN’s features on the game broadcast as the Bs take on the Seattle Kraken at TD Garden at 5:00pm (ET).

“Jack has been an integral part of the Bruins organization for many years,” said Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs. “His passion for the game and deep connection with our fans elevated the experience of Bruins hockey.”

“Jack’s career as the voice of the Bruins on NESN has been nothing short of extraordinary,” said Matt Volk, COO of NESN. “For nearly two decades, he brought an unmistakable energy and passion to every game, making each moment memorable for fans across New England. We thank Jack for his exceptional contributions and the impact he’s had during his time with us at NESN, and we are thrilled to be able to do so tonight with such a special celebration at TD Garden and on NESN.”

The team will commemorate Edwards’ storied career and lasting impact on the organization with a special pregame presentation. Sunday’s game will also feature special Jack Edwards-themed contests and entertainment in the arena while Jack Edwards t-shirts and commemorative hockey pucks will be on sale in the team store.


BOB COSTAS: After a 44-year stint as one of baseball’s all-time greats, veteran broadcaster Bob Costas announced his retirement from play-by-play broadcasting of games. He will still be involved in various broadcasts, studio shows and general coverage of the game and other sports. Costas will appear on MLB Network’s MLB Tonight Monday at 6:00pm (ET) to discuss his decision. Costas was the recipient of the 2018 Ford C. Frick Award, recognized by the National Baseball Hall of Fame as a legend of the game.


NHL VALUATIONS AND CLUB $ INCREASES: It’s been a while since we’ve passed along a few notes on NHL valuations, reported by friends of WWYI from Sportico. The recent numbers are quite impressive, although still at the bottom of the four major North American team sports.

Sportico did the entire league, of course, and highlighted the Top 10 NHL franchises, in terms of value as of 2024. Here’s the Top 5, the usual characters:

  1. Toronto Maple Leafs – $3.6 billion
  2. New York Rangers – $3.25b
  3. Montreal Canadiens – $2.93b
  4. Boston Bruins – $2.67b
  5. Los Angeles Kings – $2.5b

In terms of franchise value increase this past year, there’s a surprising list of clubs rising in the ranks:

  1. Utah Hockey Club – +193%
  2. Florida Panthers – +140%
  3. Carolina Hurricanes – +137%
  4. New Jersey Devils – +127%
  5. Tampa Bay Lightening – +124%

While the average NHL franchise value is now $1.7 billion, Commissioner Gary Bettman estimates an expansion club would fetch more. “Whether it is $2 billion or $2.5 billion or $2.7 billion, I think that is the range I believe the owners would want to be in if we were going to consider expansion,” said Bettman to The Hockey News earlier this year. … Of course, Bettman’s main focus among franchise issues is the settling of the Utah Hockey Club which just relocated from Arizona and the Ottawa Senators, a franchise struggling in the national capital of Canada.


TIDBITS: There are some serious NFL coaches ready for induction at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in the years to come. This year, the Pro Coach Blue-Ribbon Committee narrowed a list of 14 candidates to these semifinalists: Bill Arnsparger, Tom Coughlin, Mike Holmgren, Chuck Knox, Dan Reeves, Marty Schottenheimer, George Seifert, Mike Shanahan and Clark Shaughnessy. All but Arnsparger, Knox and Seifert reached the semifinalist stage in 2023.

RETIRING, BUT NOT TODAY: The 2024 NWSL regular season is coming to a close this weekend. “Betcha” didn’t know Christine Sinclair will be the biggest storyline, as the 41-year-old veteran will retire after her final game – whenever it comes. Sinclair has spent her whole NWSL career with the Portland Thorns and is one of the all-time greats of the women’s game, maybe the very best. With 190 goals for Team Canada, she is the most prolific international goal scorer in history, female or male. For Portland, she’s netted 66 goals in 199 regular-season appearances and is one of just three active players to have spent her entire NWSL career with the same club. On Friday night, she scored in the first half of Portland’s 3-0 victory over Angel City FC as the win allowed the Thorns to qualify for the NWSL playoffs. Sinclair received a standing ovation as she was subbed out in the 83rd minute, replaced by Meghan Klingenberg.

RATINGS GAME: The Los Angeles Dodgers clinched their eighth World Series title by defeating the New York Yankees in Game 5 this week and the TV numbers capped an amazing postseason for MLB. Game 5 attracted 18.6 million viewers across multiple FOX platforms. It marked the most-watched Game 5 in seven years and the most-viewed World Series game since 2019. Overall, the series averaged 15.8 million viewers, a 74% increase year-over-year from 2023.

SPORTS BIZ: Moonshot, one of the fastest growing companies in the national security industry, and CTH Advisors, an investment banking and advisory firm specializing in sports, media and entertainment, have announced a strategic partnership to combat the rising digital threats in the sports industry. … Moonshot secured over $20 million in government contracts to protect schools, national infrastructure, and public figures from terrorism. This initiative will leverage that technology to deliver best-in-class national security solutions to elite athletes, officials, and sports organizations. … Moonshot’s technology is already being used by major sports institutions, including the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) and the Southeastern Conference (SEC). Moonshot is responsible for protecting all Team USA athletes from online threats on behalf of USOPC. … As digital threats become more sophisticated, from AI-generated deepfakes to coordinated doxxing (the act of publicly providing personally identifiable information about an individual or organization, usually via the Internet and without their consent), the sports industry is increasingly vulnerable to both physical harm and threats to an athlete’s reputation. One in five players at major international sporting events, such as the Women’s World Cup, experiences significant online abuse​. Female athletes face disproportionate volumes of online threats, much like the national security space where Moonshot has found that 92% of women in public life experience bullying and abuse online.

Note: To receive the Notes column on Saturday nights at 10:00pm ET, please see: While We’re Young (Ideas)

Filed Under: NHL, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Breeders' Cup, Horse Racing, MLB, NBA, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

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For us at Globalist Sports, working with the NBA Basketball School represents an opportunity to bring world‑class standards, structure, and ambition to youth basketball in Türkiye, said Devrim Kıv...
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“The Boston Marathon is to a runner as Red Rocks is to a Rock n’ Roll band.” - TL “The Boston Marathon is to a runner as Red Rocks is to a Rock n’ Roll band.” - TL
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Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods. Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods.
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