Archive for the ‘Sports’ Category

Vince Carter Breaks World Record For Longest Shot While Sitting

February 24, 2010

LeBron James to New York Knicks

February 24, 2010

NBA Star LeBron James to New York Knicks say journalists based in New York City.

Reports suggest NBA basketball superstar LeBron James is about to sign a massive contract with the New York Knicks, leaving the Cleavland Cavaliers.

The LeBron James New York Knicks transfer comes as the NBA club looks to sign big stars with new room to move in the NBA salary cap.

The deal is about to be done according to sevaral sources including a journalist who contributes to RollingStone magazine and the Today Show, Touré

Music journalist and author Touré wrote on Twitter: “A first rate source just told me that Lebron told him he is going to leave Cleveland for NYC. Shaq or D-Wade may join.”

“Why has no big NBA free agent ever chosen NY? Bc, my source says, Knicks have never had major cap space. This is the 1st time ever.”

Video: LeBron James best moments in NBA…

Lebron James Makes Math Cool

February 23, 2010


Don’t rush him, he’s gotta get his “projectory” right.

The 20 Funniest Figure Skating Faces

February 22, 2010

The 20 Funniest Figure Skating Faces

Sports Buzz Here’s a list of the 20 funniest figure skating facial expressions from the Olympics so far. I know it’s hard to look “good” in the air, but these are really funny.



UFC 110 @ Australia: Cain Velasquez your my man! Brock you are the next!

February 21, 2010

The Ultimate Fighting Championship takes Australia by storm for the first time and fans at Sydney’s Acer Arena will be treated to explosive matchups featuring two early Fight of The Year candidates.

Wanderlei Silva vs. Michael Bisping
Round 1

Not much action to start, but Bisping scores two early takedowns. He doesn’t do much with the takedowns and Silva got right back up both times. They trade a few shots before Bisping again scores a takedown. They are again right back up, trading at the center of the cage. Bisping lands a hard right hand just past the middle of the round. Then Silva connects with a right hand. Silva lands a couple hard leg kicks and a flurry of hands before Bisping lands a hard right of his own. Silva finishes strong, shucking off a couple Bisping takedowns and lands a stunning punch before the bell.

Round 2
Silva catches a Bisping kick and sweeps him to the mat, then starts working from the Brit’s guard, grounding and pounding. Silva stands and kicks Bisping in the body as he makes his way back to the feet. Silva lands a couple overhand rights before Bisping scores another takedown, landing in side control. Silva gets up quickly though. They trade a few blows, Silva landing more frequently. Bisping shoots and Silva lands a deep guillotine choke, but can’t finish it before the bell.

Round 3
They trade several shots for the opening couple of minutes, Silva slightly ahead, before Silva takes a low kick to the groin for a brief timeout. They start trading more blows, then Silva starts egging Bisping on. They exchange a few more punches and Silva takes a thumb into his left eye and there is another brief timeout. Silva presses, unleashing a little more wildly with his hands. He catches another Bisping kick and sweeps out his post leg. Silva unleashes at the 10-second clacker, connects with an overhand right behind the ear that puts Bisping on his back. He follows with several shots to the downed Brit as the round comes to a close.

Wanderlei Silva def. Michael Bisping by Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28), R3

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira vs. Cain Velasquez
Round 1

Velasquez starts off strong in the stand-up, landing leg kicks and a food flurry of punches that tests Nogueira’s chin. Strong combination to the body, followed by a knee by Velasquez. Nogueira moves in with a jab, but gets caught by a right hook-left hook combination that puts him on the floor. Velasquez follows up with a couple hard punches to the downed Brazilian, knocking him out.

Race to NBA MVP

February 21, 2010

With only a smattering of games since the All-Star break, there wasn’t much opportunity for players to climb or fall in The Race — although Carmelo Anthony sure seized what was there Thursday night in Cleveland, didn’t he?

That doesn’t negate the need for the committee’s weekly meeting, though. No post-All-Star snooze for The Race, not with post-trading deadline news to address.

The trading deadline generated a flurry of team activity to factor into The Race. No one among the many fellows sent packing — or, to take a half-full perspective — “hotly pursued” Thursday had suited up in time for this week’s monitoring, but they all had arrived in spirit and on paper.

How do spirit and paper impact The Race before they impact the standings? Easy: It changes supporting casts. While none of our Top 10 changed teams, several of their teammates did and it’s well-established that teammates, pro and con, can dramatically affect an NBA star’s MVP prospects. The more help a No. 1 guy has — the closer his team gets to having a 1A and 1B, rather than clearly defined Nos. 2 or 3 — the more his MVP claims tend to dip.

In essence, The Race is a sort of Strongman contest. The greater the load a candidate has to carry, and the farther he carries it, the higher he ranks in the eyes of the committee. When you really think about it, this turns the traditional views of team-building topsy-turvy.

An NBA star who does everything he can to chase a ring cannot help it if his GM doesn’t surround him with sufficient help to get that job done. Meanwhile, an MVP candidate who does everything to win that particular bauble cannot help it if his GM surrounds him with so much help that his need to be super-human — and really impress all of us — is lessened.

That gets us back to the original point: Did Cleveland, by acquiring forward Antawn Jamison, improve itself enough around LeBron James that James’ MVP prospects are dimmed? After all, Jamison seems like an ideal choice to provide enough firepower and defensive size to cope with or push rivals in Orlando, Boston and Atlanta. There could be nights when the emancipated Washington Wizard paces the Cavs in scoring or rebounding, giving LBJ a breather. His unbridled joy at winning the equivalent of an Eastern Conference lottery — stuck in Washington’s mess one moment, landing on Cleveland’s championship-focused express the next — could boost chemistry off the floor, too; even without the joy, he is a solid character guy on a team with lots of them.

And by my count, the Cavaliers now have four current or former All-Stars — James, Jamison, Shaquille O’Neal, Mo Williams — among their top eight. There even was rumbling Thursday that a fifth, trusty center Zydrunas Ilgauskas, could be headed back if Washington cuts him loose and he opts to wait the required 30 days before returning.

So is James less likely to win the MVP now? Nah.

The Race regrets pulling the rug out from under its own preamble, but as long as Cleveland motors along with the league’s best record, as long as James stays healthy and as long as he can produce numbers like he did in defeat to Denver Thursday (43 points, 13 rebounds, 15 assists), he can count on having a second Maurice Podoloff trophy to bookend the one he got in 2009.

1. LeBron James, Cavs (43-12)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
55 39.0 30.1 7.2 8.4 1.6 1.0 .505 .353 .774

Last Week’s Rank – 1
What’s not to like about James’ third triple-double of the season and the 27th of his career? Well, he did miss some crucial free throws down the stretch, finishing 12-of-17 from the line. And he went three-happy, shooting 1 of 9 from the arc (and 0 of 4 in overtime). Over his past three games, James is 4 of 19 on three-pointers. Still, that sample size is way too small to even rattle him in this perch.

2. Kevin Durant, Thunder (31-21)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
52 39.8 29.7 7.5 2.9 1.4 0.9 .481 .377 .876

Last Week’s Rank – 2
Got to cut Durant some slack, considering how busy he was during All-Star Weekend, doing his duty for his vast regional fans at the game in Dallas. He missed 19 of his 28 shots in his return to real action, but scored 25 to keep alive his streak of 26 consecutive games with at least that many points (next up to catch: Allen Iverson’s streak of 27). Durant also had 12 rebounds and three blocks as the Thunder beat the Mavericks and moved within a half-game of them in the West standings.

3. Kobe Bryant, Lakers (42-14)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
51 38.6 28.0 5.3 4.6 1.7 0.3 .461 .327 .814

Last Week’s Rank – 3
There’s a saying in sports that you don’t lose your starting job to injury, and The Race has a similar version: An MVP candidate doesn’t lose his Top 3 ranking to an injury that doesn’t require surgery or figure to sideline him for more than a few weeks. Hey, committee’s Race, committee’s rules. Besides, Bryant’s case might have been helped when he wasn’t around to take (and make?) the final shot in the Lakers’ 87-86 loss to Boston. The one-game losing streak bolsters his MVP claims, too, after those four inconvenient Kobe-less victories.

4. Dwight Howard, Magic (37-18)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
55 35.1 18.2 13.4 1.6 1.1 2.8 .604 .608

Last Week’s Rank – 5
The Race was impressed by Howard’s 33 points, his 17 boards, his seven blocks and his five dunks in the post-All-Star spanking of Detroit. But it was wowed by his 11-of-13 foul shooting. Don’t look now but the Orlando specimen is showing a nice touch, making 18 of his last 23 free throws and 51 of 73 in February (not counting 2-of-3 in the All-Star Game).

5. Carmelo Anthony, Nuggets (36-18)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
41 37.9 29.5 6.4 3.4 1.3 0.4 .463 .376 .854

Last Week’s Rank – 6
There was a season or two in which Carmelo Anthony was said to be neck-and-neck with James as a franchise-type young star from the Class of 2003. There were several more during which the comparisons got a little awkward, with only Anthony and those who love him claiming much proximity, skills- or status-wise, to the guy in Cleveland. And then there was Thursday, with the two defending each other and posting monster numbers, all the while enjoying the matchup. Anthony smiled a little more, even before his overtime winner with 1.9 seconds left.

6. Chris Bosh, Raptors (29-24)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
53 36.4 24.5 11.4 2.3 0.6 1.1 .525 .375 .790

Last Week’s Rank – 4
After a strong outing at Cowboys Stadium, Bosh put up pretty numbers in a loss to Memphis: 32 points, 10 rebounds, four assists, 11 of 22 from the floor, 10 of 10 from the line. He was around till the end but suffered an ankle sprain that threatened his availability for two games this weekend.

7. Tim Duncan, Spurs (31-21)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
49 32.2 19.1 11.0 3.1 0.6 1.8 .516 .750

Last Week’s Rank – 7
“Worst shooting night of my career,” Duncan said after going 4-of-23 for eight points at Indiana Wednesday. That’s horrible for an MVP candidate. What wasn’t horrible, though, were Duncan’s 26 rebounds — 11 of San Antonio’s 17 in the game — his five assists or the Spurs’ road victory.

8. Dirk Nowitzki, Mavs (33-21)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
53 37.7 24.7 7.8 2.5 0.8 1.1 .474 .349 .897

Last Week’s Rank – 8
He averaged 26 points, eight boards and 4.5 assists as the Mavericks split their first two games back. But gee, his supporting cast is looking a lot better now since that trade with Washington; Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood were among Dallas’ six scorers in double figures in beating Phoenix Wednesday. Remember how we started this: Better crew, tougher MVP chances.

9. Deron Williams, Jazz (34-19)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
48 37.0 18.5 4.1 9.9 1.1 0.3 .484 .366 .785

Last Week’s Rank – 9
New Orleans rookie Darren Collison did a reasonable Chris Paul impersonation (24 points, nine assists) but Williams won the pseudo-matchup anyway by helping the Jazz to a victory, the second in back-to-back road games. Williams had 16 points and 10 assists with four turnovers, after posting 17, 15 and four at Houston Tuesday.

10. Steve Nash, Suns (32-23)

G MPG PPG RPG APG SPG BPG FG% 3P% FT%
55 33.7 17.9 3.3 11.2 0.5 0.2 .513 .426 .940

Last Week’s Rank – 10
Nash was about as busy as Durant over the break, after carrying the Olympic torch up in Canada, winning the skills competition and dishing 13 assists in the All-Star Game. Maybe that explains his 5-of-17 shooting (1-of-8 from the arc) in two games back, though he had 28 assists to five turnovers and helped the Suns split road back-to-backers.

The History Of Jordan’s Shoes

February 21, 2010

For nearly 25 years now, Michael Jordan has had his name imprinted on these shoes. Beginning in 1984 in Jordan’s first year out of college, Nike knew they had struck quite the deal when they signed MJ to endorse their new pair of basketball sneakers. Little did they know that they had just signed a deal with the greatest player in basketball history and that their shoes would be breaking the bank for decades to come.

It is 2010 now and the 25th anniversary pair of Air Jordan’s are due to come out within the next week. But first, let us see where it all began. [COED Magazine]

Jordan 1. First released in March of 1985. When Jordan brought these out for the first time they were banned by the NBA. Apparently the red and black were not a part of the color scheme of NBA regulation sneakers, but little did the management know that they would soon be worshiping the player wearing them as somebody finally made the NBA something worth watching and talking about.

Jordan 2. Not exactly the most eye-popping of the Jordan brand, but he averaged 37 points per game and won his first dunk contest in these bad boys. Buying these shoes will not allow you to jump higher than usual, but you’ll certainly feel a spring in your step (it might come from being 2 bills lighter, but none the less.)

Click here for the rest of the article from COED Magazine.com