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Thứ Bảy, 6 tháng 6, 2015

Inside The NFL's "Boot Camp," Where Players Become Broadcasters

Cromartie and Douzable

Antonio Cromartie looked out of place. The New York Jets cornerback was dressed more for a social event or fashion shoot — in a sharply tailored navy suit, diamond cuff links, and a shirt with his initials embroidered on the small strip of sleeve his jacket left exposed — but instead, he was standing among bike seats, skateboards, and kayaks in the rear corner of a Sports Authority in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, a sleepy Philly suburb.

“You’re talking way too fast and saying too much,” Annie Goodrich gently admonished the 6-foot-2-inch, four-time Pro Bowl pick credited with the league’s longest touchdown run.

Goodrich and her husband, Bob, run a media and broadcast training company for professional athletes. It’s all part of the NFL’s Broadcast Bootcamp, in its ninth year, which trains players for possible future careers in radio, television, and game-calling. After the three-day annual course, players leave with a short reel and an understanding of the broadcast industry. Network talent managers have also started using the program as a scouting resource, and NFL’s Player Engagement Manager Samantha Kleinman described it to BuzzFeed News it as “the Combine, but for broadcasting.”

On Wednesday morning, Cromartie interviewed his teammate Leger Douzable, a defensive end, about his prediction for this year’s biggest fantasy football player. Unable to settle on one, Cromartie named Aaron Rodgers for his consistency and Adrian Peterson because “he’s had a year off”; after facing child abuse charges, “he’s ready to play.” They were were given the option to ask five different questions for the exercise — they read the script from a Teleprompter — and were allowed to write their own if they felt none of the questions allowed for them to think quickly while on camera.

While waiting for their turn to rehearse, Douzable and Cromartie freely and casually conversed about the game and the revamped Buffalo Bills, their division rivals. Cromartie had no shortage of carefully considered opinions on fellow cornerback Richard Sherman, who he’d taken to task the day prior while on a Sirius radio program. It was that easy banter that Goodrich tried to capture for the exercises, where each person spent three 90-second segments as interviewer and interviewee.

Show “more energy and personality,” Goodrich told the duo after their first run-through.

“You wandered off your spot,” she told Cromartie after another. He agreed, and looked at the duct tape indicators on the floor knowingly.

“So much feedback,” Cromartie told BuzzFeed News, wide-eyed.

Cromartie said he enjoys the constructive criticism. As a veteran interviewee after games, he is polished and provides concise, straightforward answers. That will, eventually, translate easily to an interviewer or analyst role.

But he’s not there yet. This is where the football-driven work ethics of Douzable and Cromartie came in handy: After each attempt, they picked up the microphone and ran the route again.

Cromartie


Cromartie is approaching his 10th season in the NFL, and admits he has to think about his life after the full-contact sport. “You never know when that play will come,” he said. He was referring to a hit that could end his career without notice. He said he “absolutely” intends to pursue broadcasting after his player career is over.

The NFL Player’s Association claims the average NFL career is “about 3.3 years.” For “players with at least one Pro Bowl appearance,” which includes Cromartie, the average is estimated at 11.7 years.

Dazzling careers can end with a single hit — think Steve Young — and the effects of years of repetitive brain trauma can make it difficult for a player to maintain a comfortable lifestyle after their career.

The money players are contracted to make is hardly indicative of how much they will be left with when they no longer suit up for games. Contracts are not guaranteed, and agents' fees and taxes can drain up to 50% of a contract earning. Ill-advised investments, legal troubles, and learning to curb spending when the big paychecks stop are issues in retirement.

An April 2015 report by the National Bureau of Economic Research said 15.7% of former NFL players have filed bankruptcy within 12 years of leaving the league. Kleinman told BuzzFeed News that “broadcasting is one of the few career paths with an earnings potential” anywhere near what players make in the NFL.

Kleinman argues that the Player Engagement program is not a direct response to the statistics about former player bankruptcy. The initiative has existed since 1991, long before the issue came into the spotlight and received widespread media attention.

Cromartie insists that money isn’t a factor when considering life after the league.

In 2010, he took a salary advance from the Jets to resolve paternity and child support payments for his reportedly seven children in five different states. At that point in his career, he’d made less than $1 million, but now his projected career earnings have increased to nearly $37 million through the 2014–2015 season.

Today Cromartie has ten children from eight women, one of whom has been his wife since 2010. When asked if child support payments for the children not in his custody present a significant financial expense, Cromartie issued a stern “no.”

“It’s about passion,” he said. “It’s the same as with football: If you’re only in it for a check, you’re not gonna last very long.”

Jaworski (left) at the boot camp.


During Broadcast Bootcamp, players report for breakfast at their hotel at 6:30 a.m., then spend the day at the NFL Films campus, based in Mount Laurel, until 6 p.m. or 8 p.m., depending on the day’s programming. For most people who aren’t professional athletes, whose lives are defined — not interrupted — by long, intense workdays, the rigorous schedule would be rough.

The boot camp is part of the NFL Player Engagement department, which offers classes in continuing education, personal finances, counseling, and transitions to and careers for post-NFL life — players learn about franchising businesses, coaching, or broadcast, for example. Participation is optional, but Kleinman told BuzzFeed News that “nearly 15%” of players enroll.

For the broadcast classes, players are split into groups and are shuffled around from one hourlong session to the next. Classes like “your studio voice,” writing for Teleprompters, on-site broadcast rehearsal, tape study, game calling, and others are all crammed into the boot camp.

Ike Taylor, a cornerback who retired from the league in April after 12 seasons with the Steelers, joined Douzable and Cromartie this year.

Group photos of Bootcamp alumni run across a wall in NFL Films’ far wing. Few faces are recognizable. In each frame 25 men stand in suits with hands clasped behind a studio desk that reads “PLAYER ENGAGEMENT.”

The final day of this year’s class focused on game analysis — the path to getting a coveted spot breaking down games every Sunday during the NFL season.

Ron Jaworski, a former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback and longtime analyst for ESPN, told the players that a single game can require 80 to 90 hours of preparation. Up to 40 hours of that, he said, is watching game tape to familiarize yourself with play-calling trends and position schemes.

Jaws, as he is known, said the way an analyst watches film is a “180 from preparing as a player.”

“As a player, you are worried only about your own position,” Jaws said. “As an analyst, you have to be tracking everything.”

While watching a set of plays from a 2014 Cowboys–Giants game, players shouted out observation on routes, coverage, and formations, each revealing how they see the game as a player.

“It wasn’t double coverage on Odell [Beckham Jr.],” Jaws said about the New York Giants wide receiver.

“It was just single-high coverage, and he ran a terrible route,” a player echoed.

“You see Eli [Manning, the Giants quarterback] look over in Odell’s direction, but then throws an incomplete,” Jaws pointed out. To be able to accurately understand, analyze, and sometimes even predict what will happen during any given play, an analyst must be dedicated to film, he said.

Greg Cosell, who produces NFL Matchup, a preview show of upcoming games, reminded the players that they have to learn to explain schemes and formations beyond football jargon. “And you only have 10 seconds to do it,” he said.

Jaws added they have to learn to become storytellers. If a play is not particularly noteworthy — say a two-yard run on first down — then use that opportunity to talk about the running back or another game narrative.

“For me, John Madden humanized the game,” Jaws said. “He brought fans football, and he brought us fun.”

As an example, Jaws told a story about Jon Gruden, former player, head coach, and current Monday Night Football color analyst.

“Gruden is one of the most intelligent men I’ve ever met,” Jaws said, already laughing a bit. “But when he started, he would run to [the device announcers use to draw arrows, x’s and o’s] and grip it and get ready to jump into the details of a play.”

Through laughter, Jaws recalled, “his producers had to help him tone it down.”

Twenty-five years into his own career, Jaws told the players they are getting a “master’s degree education” during the boot camp.

“I wish that I’d had this opportunity while I was making my own career transition.”


Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 6, 2015

NBA Professionals Read Mean Tweets About Themselves

This will never get old.

On Thursday night, Jimmy Kimmel Live! did a third installment of mean tweets with NBA professionals. The results were, of course, hilarious.

youtube.com

Jimmy Kimmel Live! / Via youtube.com

Jimmy Kimmel Live / Via youtube.com

Jimmy Kimmel Live! / Via youtube.com


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Steph Curry Opens Up About The Special Impact Riley Has On Him

“She’s always happy to see me when I get home and that kind of makes everything all right.”

Even if you haven't been paying attention to the NBA playoffs, there's a good chance you've seen footage of its breakout star: Riley Curry, the daughter of Golden State Warriors point guard Steph Curry.

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A Tale Of Two MVPs: The NBA Finals Are HERE!!!

What happens when an unstoppable force (Stephen Curry) meets an immovable object (LeBron James).

Let's start at the beginning. Golden State Warriors Guard Stephen Curry basically grew up on the court.

Steph's father, Dell, played for the Charlotte Hornets.

instagram.com

LeBron James was a phenom from a young age, dubbed as "The Chosen One" by Sports Illustrated when he was in high school.

LeBron James was a phenom from a young age, dubbed as "The Chosen One" by Sports Illustrated when he was in high school.

LeBron was one of the most hyped up athletes ever, with college scouts at almost every single one of his high school games.

Sports Illustrated

Amazingly, both stars were born in the same hospital in Akron, Ohio...

Amazingly, both stars were born in the same hospital in Akron, Ohio...

Akron City Hospital

...and would grow up to be NBA MVPs.

...and would grow up to be NBA MVPs.

LeBron has won MVP four times: 2009,2010,2012,2013.

Jesse D. Garrabrant / Getty Images


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Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 6, 2015

A Double-Amputee Soldier Did Not Lose The ESPN Courage Award To Caitlyn Jenner

A rumor is circulating on social media that Army veteran Noah Galloway was the “runner up” for the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, but ESPN confirms there is no such thing.

On Monday, ESPN announced that this year's recipient of the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at the ESPYs would be Caitlyn Jenner.

The sports network said it was awarding the former Olympian for her bravery in coming out as transgender.

"[Jenner] has shown the courage to embrace a truth that had been hidden for years, and to embark on a journey that may not only give comfort to those facing similar circumstances, but can also help to educate people on the challenges that the transgender community faces," ESPY executive producer Maura Mandt said in a press release.

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However, soon after the award was announced people on Twitter began sharing this photo, claiming that Jenner had beaten out Noah Galloway for the award.

However, soon after the award was announced people on Twitter began sharing this photo, claiming that Jenner had beaten out Noah Galloway for the award.

Twitter

Caitlyn Jenner won the Arthur Ashe Courage Award. The runner up was this guy: Army Veteran Noah Galloway, who lost an arm and a leg to a roadside bomb in Iraq, and now competes in Crossfit events, runs marathons, and competed in the 58-hour Death Race.

For those unfamiliar, Galloway is a war veteran who lost his arm and leg in Iraq. He recently gained fame by competing on ABC's Dancing With the Stars.

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Thứ Tư, 3 tháng 6, 2015

Here Are The Likely Contenders For The Next President Of FIFA

Sepp Blatter, the president of the embattled world soccer organization, resigned on Tuesday, setting up a special election for his successor.

REUTERS/Ruben Sprich

Blatter, 79, had just won re-election to his position last week.

The announcement came after U.S. authorities arrested nine FIFA officials and five corporate executives on corruption charges on May 27.

The U.S. also revealed that four other people and two corporations had already pleaded guilty to related charges.

At a news conference in Switzerland, Blatter said that he will create an "extraordinary congress" to pick the next leader of the soccer organization. The election will likely be late this year or early next year.

Dave Thompson / Getty Images


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Blatter’s Resignation Threatens Qatar's 2022 World Cup

FIFA President Sepp Blatter was the tiny Gulf State’s main protector. Now sources say leaders of Qatar’s bid committee have been advised not to set foot in the United States, for fear of being arrested in the largest bribery and corruption investigation in sporting history.

Sepp Blatter leaves a press conference after announcing his resignation as president of FIFA.

VALERIANO DI DOMENICO / Getty Images

The fate of the Qatar 2022 World Cup hangs in the balance after the resignation of its chief protector, FIFA president Sepp Blatter, amid the biggest bribery and corruption investigation in sporting history.

Insiders say the leaders of Qatar's 2022 Supreme Committee have now been told not to set foot on U.S. soil for fear of being arrested by the FBI in its investigation into allegations that FIFA officials turned football into a "criminal enterprise" and presided over a "World Cup of fraud."

Blatter resigned in a shock move at an emergency press conference at FIFA headquarters on Tuesday afternoon, days after Swiss authorities, acting at the behest of the FBI, arrested seven senior football officials on the eve of his re-election at world football's annual congress in Zurich last week.

Qatar 2022 vehemently denied that its officials have been warned to avoid traveling to the United States. "Your information is incorrect and running a story based on it is irresponsible," wrote spokesperson Nasser Al-Khater. "Neither the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy nor anyone associated with it or the Qatar bid have any reason to avoid travelling to the United States or anywhere else in the world. Any suggestion by BuzzFeed to the contrary is defamatory and will be brought to the attention of our legal counsel."

But a source close to Qatar's 2022 Supreme Committee told BuzzFeed News that its leaders were "scared about Blatter going because they don't want the World Cup vote to be reopened." He said: "The entire 2022 bid team have been advised not to travel to the USA ... They are concerned about being arrested and pulled in for questioning."

A second source said that Qatari bid officials had been advised by lawyers not to travel to the U.S. "There is an internal informal advice from the US lawyers working for Q22 to the top officials of Q22 not to go to USA," he wrote in an email.

Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, the young royal who chaired the country's successful World Cup bid, is said to be the only senior figure who is exempted from the ban because he is understood to travel under a diplomatic passport which grants him immunity from arrest.

Blatter's bombshell resignation leaves Qatar exposed to mounting calls for the 2022 World Cup to be moved to a new venue in the wake of an avalanche of evidence that the country's most senior football official, Mohamed bin Hammam, waged a multi-million dollar vote-buying campaign to rig the ballot in his country's favour. The official Qatar 2022 bid committee has always vehemently denied any wrongdoing and said he was not working on its behalf.

The decision to award the world's biggest sporting tournament to the tiny desert nation of Qatar was greeted with dismay and derision around the world when it was announced by Blatter following a secret ballot of FIFA voters in 2010. The county had almost no soccer infrastructure, no serious professional league and its searing summer temperatures of up to 122ºF were judged by FIFA's own technical assessors to pose a "high risk" to the health of players. Allegations the the secret ballot had been rigged by bribery and back-room deals soon began to surface.

More than perhaps anyone, Blatter has protected Qatar. Time and again, he has rebuffed calls for the tiny Gulf state to be stripped of the right to host the tournament. Sources say he has shielded Qatar from allegations of corruption since striking a deal with the country's royal family to protect the 2022 tournament if its most senior football official, Mohamed Bin Hammam, dropped his challenge for the presidency of FIFA in 2011.

"Blatter had told Qatar that he would expose their bid unless they made bin Hammam pull out," a source close to the Qatari billionaire has told me. "He told me there was a deal and he was forced to withdraw."

Bin Hammam pulled out on the eve of the election, and Blatter has since repeatedly refused to consider reopening the World Cup vote despite massive and growing evidence that the original ballot in 2010 was skewed by rampant vote-buying.

Days after the deal was allegedly struck in 2011, Blatter announced that Qatar was "not touched" by corruption allegations, and FIFA would do "nothing" about evidence passed to a parliamentary inquiry by The Sunday Times suggesting Qatar had paid massive bribes to FIFA voters to obtain the right to stage the 2022 competition.

Then last year, when my colleague Jonathan Calvert and I published evidence from a vast trove of leaked documents showing how bin Hammam had used a multimillion-dollar network of slush funds to bribe dozens of officials to support the country's bid, Blatter took no action against Qatar and instead accused us of "discrimination and racism". The story of bin Hammam's vote-buying campaign and the Qatari deal with Blatter is set out in our new book, The Ugly Game.

The full lengths to which Blatter was prepared to go to protect Qatar became clear when FIFA suppressed its own internal report on corruption in the 2018 and 2022 bidding race, submitted to its ethics chamber by the former U.S. attorney Michael Garcia last September.

Blatter refused to publish the report in full but claimed it had cleared Qatar and Russia of any wrongdoing. However, Garcia promptly resigned in a fury saying that FIFA's summary of his work contained "numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts."

Despite international outrage at the handling of the Garcia report, Blatter appeared at a press conference in December last year to confirm that the 2018 and 2022 World Cups would not be moved.

With Blatter at the helm, it appeared that the two tournaments were unassailable. A source close to Garcia told BuzzFeed News last week that FIFA would never respond properly to the evidence of corruption until Blatter was deposed. "Nothing's going to change as long as the current administration is there," he said.

Blatter was sailing serenely towards re-election for a fifth term at the helm of world soccer until the U.S. Department of Justice last week indicted 14 football officials and marketing executives accused of corrupting the game over two decades in a criminal enterprise involving an alleged $150 million in bribes. Though Blatter himself was not indicted, investigators refused to rule him out of their enquiries.

At the same time, Swiss prosecutors announced their own investigation into the decision to award the rights to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar, and are understood to be planning to pull Blatter in for questioning.

The pressure intensified when the United Kingdom's Serious Fraud Office announced on Friday that it was actively assessing material related to corruption within FIFA.

Despite the firestorm of scandal engulfing world soccer in the wake of the arrests, Blatter refused to stand aside and was reelected for a fifth term in office last Friday. But his stunning resignation on Tuesday came after his right-hand-man, the FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke, was linked to a $10 million payment from the organisers of the South African World Cup to accounts controlled by a key voter, the longtime FIFA grandee Jack Warner.

The FBI indictment cites the $10 million payment as an alleged bribe in exchange for Warner's vote bid to host the 2010 World Cup. FIFA initially denied claims of Valcke's involvement, which emerged on Tuesday morning. But within hours a leaked letter surfaced on Twitter apparently showing that the secretary general was told about the payment, which was transferred to Warner via FIFA's own accounts.

The apparent implication of Valcke — Blatter's most senior lieutenant — in the payment of an alleged bribe brings the scandal closer to the door of the president's office than ever before.

Blatter's departure — after 17 years at the helm of world soccer — leaves the fate of Qatar's 2022 World Cup dream in greater jeopardy than it has ever faced.

Qatar's biggest rivals — the U.S. and Australia — are poised to jump straight back into the mix, should a new president decide to take the bold step of ordering a re-run of the vote on the hosting of the world's biggest sporting tournament.