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TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | July 20

July 20, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – With Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game played this past Tuesday night, there were all kinds of discussions and arguments behind-the-scenes of the game. The rosters were scrutinized and the drop-outs were criticized. There was quite a bit of negative skepticism on the fact 23-year-old Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Jacob Misiorowski made the National League all-Star roster after being in the Big Leagues for just a month.

On the other side of the coin, fans were thrilled to see the All-Star players back in their team uniforms, as opposed to some contrived “AL” and “NL uniforms. (the exact opposite was the case for the NBA). Upon the 6-6 tie in the game after nine full innings, there was the first-ever tie breaking “Swing Off” to determine the result of the game.

When Philadelphia’s Kyle Schwarber stole the show and sealed the NL victory with back-to-back-to-back home runs, everyone went home happy. It was quite exciting.

If the presentation of the stunning, silver Stanley Cup is the most celebrated moment in all of sports, then the “I Stand Up to Cancer” moment is certainly the most poignant. At the conclusion of the 4th inning at this week’s MLB All-Star Game, the FOX TV audience returned from a commercial break with 42,702 fans and all the players and coaches, umpires and media – everyone – yes, everyone in the building holding a sign of which they penciled-in the name of a person close to them that was battling of, sadly, already lost to cancer. It’s a silent, emotional moment in time, supported by SU2C and Mastercard, and it’s taken place at every MLB All-Star Game and World Series since 2009.

It’s a simple process as Braves staff and MLB volunteers placed pre-printed SU2C placards behind every seat in Truist Park for fans to write-in the name of the person they wanted to support. Each one of the cards was pre-inscribed with the simple message “I Stand Up For,” while a section underneath was left blank for a name.

MLB.com noted, National League manager Dave Roberts honored longtime baseball writer Scott Miller, who passed away just a few weeks ago from pancreatic cancer. American League manager Aaron Boone’s placard read, “Jake.” Braves pitcher Chris Sale wrote “Dad” on his sign, while Reds star Elly De La Cruz honored “La Familia” and “Los Enfermos.”

New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge honored “Uncle Frank,” and FOX commentator and Boston Red Sox Hall of Famer David Ortiz wrote, “Mi Viejo – Leo Ortiz.” Phillies All-Star Kyle Schwarber’s placard read, simply, “Everyone!” And Brewers All-Star Freddy Peralta honored Mr. Baseball – the late, great Bob Uecker, who passed away from cancer in January.

While all the college and pro sports do a tremendous job supporting very important causes – for example, the local home team, the Boston Red Sox efforts for The JIMMY Fund – there is no moment at any time of the year in sports which just stops you COLD. Every single person in that All-Star crowd had a direct connection with one or more people who have been stricken or died from cancer.

There will be some $50,000,000 raised by MLB and its 30 clubs and it’ll be targeted for clinical trials and other research efforts. In about two weeks, the Pan Mass Challenge will attempt to top last year’s record-breaking number of raising $75,000,000 over the Aug 2-3 weekend and that dollar figure was added to the bottom line of the Pan Mass bicycle ride vs Cancer to reach an extraordinary $1.047 billion in lifetime fundraising since Pan Mass Challenge’s founding in 1980.

That money goes directly to research efforts at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute here in Boston. If you’d like to donate, Click HERE.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: This week, two of the world’s greatest players opined on what drives them, what they do to compete at such a high level, but the real message was that they stay in the present and that helps. It’s called perspective and the PGA Tour’s Scottie Scheffler and the WNBA’s Caitlin Clark shared some of their innermost thoughts on keeping it real.

Scheffler: “I don’t look at wins and losses or stuff like that,” he said at a pre-tournament press availability for The Open at Royal Portrush. “I don’t sit down at the beginning of the year and say I want to win “x” number of times; I want to win this many majors; I want to win this many tournament events. That’s not something I do. That’s not something that works for me.

“I have some dreams and aspirations that I’m always striving towards, but at the end of the day, I try to stay present. I try to practice hard each and every day. I feel like for me, when I start looking too far into the future, I think I’m a bit of a procrastinator. That’s how I was in school.

“If I want to look at my career and say I want to win, let’s say, five majors, I think sometimes when you’re a human, you just have that invincibility where you’re just like, I’m going to play professional golf my whole life; this stage is never going to end.

“Ultimately, it’s not, and I’m only going to be doing this for a finite amount of time. What works best for me is just to stay present, continue to put in the work, which I would argue that’s the most fun part for me. I love being able to practice, and that’s what I enjoy doing, and just try to get the most out of myself each day.

“I think the rankings are — being No. 1 in the world is a great accomplishment, I think, as a golfer. As a professional, to be ranked as the best in the world, I think, is a huge career accomplishment. I don’t think it should be taken lightly. But you don’t become No. 1 in the world by thinking about rankings. You don’t stay No. 1 in the world thinking about rankings. Each tournament is its own challenge.

“It’s funny, it’s like, look at this week for example. What’s the best-case scenario? I win this golf tournament, and then I’m going to show up in Memphis, and it’s like, okay, listen, you won two majors this year; what are you going to do this week? That’s the question you’re going to get asked.

“If I come in second this week or if I finish dead last, no matter what happens, we’re always on to the next week. That’s one of the beautiful things about golf, and it’s also one of the frustrating things because you can have such great accomplishments, but the show goes on. That’s just how it is.

“It’s great to win tournaments. It’s a lot of fun. Sometimes the feeling only lasts about two minutes, it seems like, when you’re celebrating, and then it’s like, okay, now you’ve got to go do all this other stuff, which is great, but sometimes the feeling of winning only lasts a few seconds. It’s pretty exciting and fun, but it just doesn’t last that long.

“I think I said something after the Byron this year about like it feels like you work your whole life to celebrate winning a tournament for like a few minutes. It only lasts a few minutes, that kind of euphoric feeling.

“To win the Byron Nelson Championship at home, I literally worked my entire life to become good at golf to have an opportunity to win that tournament. You win it, you celebrate, get to hug my family, my sister’s there, it’s such an amazing moment. Then it’s like, okay, what are we going to eat for dinner? Life goes on.”

“Is it great to be able to win tournaments and to accomplish the things I have in the game of golf? Yeah, it brings tears to my eyes just to think about because I’ve literally worked my entire life to be good at this sport. To have that kind of sense of accomplishment, I think, is a pretty cool feeling. To get to live out your dreams is very special, but at the end of the day, I’m not out here to inspire the next generation of golfers. I’m not out here to inspire someone to be the best player in the world because what’s the point? This is not a fulfilling life. It’s fulfilling from the sense of accomplishment, but it’s not fulfilling from a sense of the deepest places of your heart.

“There’s a lot of people that make it to what they thought was going to fulfill them in life, and you get there, you get to No. 1 in the world, and they’re like what’s the point? I really do believe that because what is the point? Why do I want to win this tournament so bad?

“That’s something that I wrestle with on a daily basis.

“I’m kind of sicko,” he admitted. “I love putting in the work. I love getting to practice. I love getting to live out my dreams. But at the end of the day, sometimes I just don’t understand the point.

I don’t know if I’m making any sense or not. Am I not? It’s just one of those deals. I love the challenge. I love being able to play this game for a living. It’s one of the greatest joys of my life, but does it fill the deepest wants and desires of my heart?

“Absolutely not.”

“I love playing golf. I love being able to compete. I love living out my dreams. I love being a father. I love being able to take care of my son. I love being able to provide for my family out here playing golf.

“Every day when I wake up early to go put in the work, my wife thanks me for going out and working so hard. When I get home, I try and thank her every day for taking care of our son. That’s why I talk about family being my priority because it really is.

“This is not the be all, end all. This is not the most important thing in my life. That’s why I wrestle with, why is this so important to me? Because I’d much rather be a great father than I would be a great golfer. At the end of the day, that’s what’s more important to me.”


ON CLARK: (As told to Boston-based reporter Gethin Coolbaugh when the WNBA Connecticut Sun hosted Caitlan Clark and the Indiana Fever at Boston’s TD Garden).

“I feel like, over the course, of whether it’s been my professional career or college career, you kind of take it as it goes and you learn from it as things come,” Clark said. “I feel like the attention – whatever that is, I don’t want to say that I get used to it, but to an extent, you do. You just accept that’s how it’s going to be.

“People are going to criticize you. People are going to praise you, no matter what it is when you play on this level and you have this type of spotlight whether it’s me, whether it’s any professional athlete that’s at the top of their game.

“That’s just how it’s going to be, so I think you kind of build on what you want to get better at. I think that’s probably the greatest challenge at times, is, everyone else has expectations. at the end of the day, there’s no higher expectations than what I have of myself and I feel like that can be lost at times.

“So I think just giving yourself a bit of grace and just having a lot of fun out there, too, is what I try to remind myself.”


TIDBITS & NUGGETS: Respected sports writer Christine Brennan has been making the rounds to promote her new book, “On Her Game.” While being interviewed by CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Brennan expounds a belief that “the WNBA wasn’t ready for Caitlin Clark.” … In numerous interviews, Brennan has stated the same stock statement, criticising the WNBA organization for falling short. “I think it’s because they had always gotten short shrift from the national media, the male-dominated mainstream media,” Brennan said. “It was an unfathomable thought, that someone could break through wearing the jersey of a WNBA team and become the biggest name in sports. I think it was beyond comprehension for WNBA officials, and therefore they didn’t prepare. They didn’t help their players understand the magnitude of the moment. “But how can you not know when you’re looking at what was going on around the country in Big Ten arenas and others. And you look at the TV ratings. When the NCAA women’s final beats the men by 4 million (viewers) in 2024, how on earth could you not see this and say something extraordinary is coming to the WNBA?”

In the CNN interview, Brennan cited interviews with WNBA officials and others in the sports industry to support her claim. One thing this column can guarantee is that no one who worked for former NBA Commissioner David Stern nor employees of current NBA Commissioner Adam Silver would be unprepared for ANYTHING. Starting long before he became the NBA’s fourth Commissioner, Stern drilled it into the NBA culture to stay well ahead of the curve, to read everything and anything that might intersect with sports and the NBA, to spot issues long before they would ever surface, to know the players, the prospects, the international prospects, the standings in Lithuania – you name it, Stern wanted the information and the intel on EVERYTHING. Being caught short was never an option.

Now, I can not speak on behalf of the current WNBA vibes and Brennan cited WNBA Commissioner Kathy Engelbert by name, charging the leader of the women’s league with failing to prepare.

Anyone worth a pair of the late Bill Walton’s basketball shoes and his coach, John Wooden’s “pyramid of success,” knows that “Failing to prepare, is preparing to fail.”

Of course, Wooden is often credited with the quote but it was used as far back as 1919 by The Reverend H. K. Williams. Regardless, it is very difficult for a former NBA employee to even fathom that the league didn’t see the storm of an opportunity like Caitlin Clark coming, long before Clark broke Pete Maravich’s record for all-time scoring in NCAA basketball (men or women – 3,667 points) back in March of 2024.


HAPPY: 85th to CBS’ Verne Lundquist … Fans of the Twitter (X) account @Funhouse (aka @BackAftaThis) might celebrate Saturday’s David Wright Day a little bit differently than others as they remember a called to Mike Francessa at WFAN. When there’s time to listen to the whole strand of comedy acts, go fot it, but today you can settle for a dream of hearing, “Mike, when the Mets honor David Wright Day, do you think they’ll do something special for Ed Charles and Felix Millán?”

 

Filed Under: MLB, While We're Young Ideas, WNBA Tagged With: TLs Sunday Notes

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