Wrecking Keselowski Reveals NASCAR’s Biggest Problem

AFLAC's Carl Edwards???

AFLAC's Carl Edwards???

When NASCAR officials handed down a three-race probation to Carl Edwards for intentionally wrecking Brad Keselowski during the Kobalt 500, they sent a clear message that NASCAR’s new hands-off policy is in full force, and drivers must take care of their own squabbles on the track.

With their limited penalty, NASCAR has unintentionally invoked a new code of hockey-style vigilance, into a high-speed, high-adrenaline sport, where death is far more common than any other sport.

Here’s why vigilante justice is a really bad idea.

  1. Too much money at stake
  2. There’s way too much money involved with not only putting together a good car but also with team salaries. Allowing drivers to intentionally wreck each other as payback negatively impacts sponsors, fans, vendors and team payouts; it goes way beyond the two drivers.

    Anyone wondering how AFLAC, Carl Edwards’ sponsor, feels about an insurance company driver intentionally wrecking another car? It’s a little ironic, don’t you think?

  3. Those with a vested interest are emotional
  4. It’s unrealistic to expect anyone with a vested interest in an outcome to remove their emotion from a situation, especially when the adrenaline of driving 180+ MPH is involved. In the heat of a competition, a competitor’s basic instinct of survival will surface, unless there’s a significant deterrent.

  5. Ratings
  6. Viewers tune into NASCAR or any other sport to see their favorite athletes or teams, when they’re out of the game or race there’s a much higher probability that fans will tune out. As fans, we want to watch the best of the best compete and ratings suffer when it’s anything less.

    Anyone notice the PGA’s ratings without Tiger Woods?

  7. Safety
  8. A car, like a gun, can be used as a weapon. People who say the real problem was with the way Keselowski’s car reacted are akin to people who blame the gun when someone’s shot.

    The car wouldn’t have reacted that way had Edwards not intentionally spun him out.

The consequences of an intentional penalty in other sports
What happens when athletes in other sports commit an intentional act during the competition?

  • In football terms you can relate Edwards’ act to a defender committing an illegal blow to the head, which results in a 15-yard penalty and an automatic first down.
  • In baseball terms you can relate Edwards act to a pitcher intentionally throwing at a hitter’s head, which results in the pitcher getting tossed and the batter is awarded first base.
  • In basketball terms you can relate Edwards act to a flagrant foul, which results in two free throw attempts for the opposing team and possession of the ball.
  • In hockey terms you can relate Edwards act to high-sticking or elbowing, which results in time in the penalty box and a power play for the opposing team.

Notice that in every other sport, an intentional act of misconduct not only results in a penalty against the offender but is followed by an award, whether it be free throws, an extra base or yardage, for the opposing player/team. In NASCAR however, the driver who committed the intentional act may be punished but nothing is awarded to the opposing driver. Furthermore, in NASCAR, the driver who’s wrecked is penalized because they’ve got to repair the car, which normally results in losing track position and points.

In effect NASCAR penalizes a driver who was intentionally wrecked by another driver. Is it just me, or does that not make any sense?

My Solution
My solution, to end vigilante-stlye justice, would be to not only immediately park the offender who intentionally wrecks another driver but also award the victim’s team with the offender’s points at the time of the incident.

This solution would not only penalize the driver who committed the intentional act but also award the victim of the attack with the offender’s points.

I believe my solution would be effective because a loss of points would negatively impact a sponsor’s marketing plan, and without the sponsor, most drivers would be racing go-karts on a dirt track.

Intentionally wrecking another driver is hockey-style justice and it dumbs down the sport.

Edwards Facebook page explanation

Crosby 3 Ovechkin 0

In sports, an individuals’ greatness is measured by their ability to capture championships. Who finishes second or scores the most points are feats that pale in comparison to achieving the ultimate prize.

Terry Bradshaw

Terry Bradshaw

Great Rivalries Make Greatness
In the 70’s, Terry Bradshaw and Roger Staubach quarterbacked the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Dallas Cowboys respectively, and these two teams were widely regarded as the two best teams in the NFL. During that run the Steelers won four Super Bowls to the Cowboys three, and most football fans give the nod to Bradshaw as the best quarterback of that decade. Why? Because Pittsburgh beat Dallas twice in the Super Bowl and won more championships.

Magic Johnson

Magic Johnson

In the 80’s, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird were widely regarded as the two best players on the two best teams in the NBA, the Lakers and the Celtics respectively. During that run the Lakers won five NBA championships to the Celtics three, and most basketball fans consider Magic Johnson as the greatest player of that decade. Why? Because the Lakers won two out of the three head to head NBA Finals match ups against Larry Bird’s Celtics and more championships

For better or worse, in team sports, greatness is measured by one thing, winning championships.

Not convinced yet? Let’s play word association, when I say Emmitt Smith what words come to mind? Champion, greatness, hall of famer…right?
OK, now when I say Barry Sanders, what words come to mind? Awesome, incomplete, lacking, hall of famer…right? Why is there such a difference in the connotation of the words associated with two of the greatest running backs of their generation? Because Emmitt Smith’s Cowboys won three Super Bowls and Barry Sanders’ Detroit Lions were playoff failures.

Unfair or not, this is what we do with sports, we compare.

Sidney Crosby vs Alexander Ovechkin

Sidney Crosby vs Alex Ovechkin

Sidney Crosby vs Alex Ovechkin

The rivalry developing between Sidney Crosby, aka ‘The Next One’ or ‘Sid the Kid’, and Alexander Ovechkin, aka ‘Alex the Great’, is the most interesting individual rivalry in all of sports, and as I watched Sidney’s game-winning overtime goal in the Olympic gold medal game I couldn’t help but think one thing; Crosby 3, Ovechkin 0.

But this rivalry is more than just about two great hockey players, it’s a clash of styles.

Crosby's got role model good looks

Crosby's got role model good looks

Crosby is the role model, the sweet aw-shucks kid from Canada with a tremendous respect for the traditions of hockey, a soft-spoken and humble guy who lives with the team’s owner during the NHL season. Ovechkin is the brass, irreverent Russian, whose game, image and scoring legend overshadows his team’s accomplishments, he’s physical, with a highlight reel full of both insanely wicked goals and crushing hits. And while Ovechkin isn’t really part of the ‘Evil Empire’ Russia of the Reagan 80’s, there’s still some mysterious stigma attached to Russians in the NHL, and it’s easy to portray them as the enemy when compared to Canadians.

Ovechkin's hotness is undeniable

Ovechkin's hotness is undeniable

So it’s within this rivalry’s backdrop that a theme is beginning to take shape; Crosby’s greatness versus Ovechkin’s unfilled promise, and it’s all because of the championships. For all of Ovechkin’s accomplishments, MVP awards and scoring titles, he knows he would rather have what the younger Crosby has achieved before the tender young age of 22; a World Junior Championship, an NHL title and now an Olympic Gold Medal. So on the greatness scoreboard it’s Sidney 3, Ovechkin 0.

One could make arguments for either player’s greatness based on a number of factors, but if we look back at their careers in the year 2030 and Crosby has a couple of gold medals and three NHL titles and Ovechkin has maybe one gold and one NHL title, history will regard Crosby as the best player of this generation.

It’s time for Ovechkin to elevate this rivalry, and the only way he can accomplish this is to beat Sidney when it counts.

Defending Champs Dominate Like No Other

You can tell a lot about a sport just by following the money, and it’s no surprise to even the most casual of sports fans that the Yankees dominate baseball like no other team in any other sport.

Yankee Manager Joe Girardi in the spotlight

Yankee Manager Joe Girardi in the spotlight

I don’t know about you but I consider myself a Yankees admirer, not a fan, but an admirer. What non-Yankee fan wouldn’t want their beloved team to experience the level of success of perhaps the world’s most recognizable franchise? You might hate the Yankees but you marvel at what they’ve accomplished.

Usually I turn a deaf ear to tales of excess and the seemingly good fortunes of the fat wallet franchises but two stories I heard this week left me shaking my head, wondering whether to hate the damn Yankees or touch myself in admiration.

Cleveland Indians Attendance Study
In order to better understand consumer behavior and price elasticity (I never thought I would use those words after grad school) the Cleveland Indians commissioned a study to measure the impact independent events have on attendance. The most surprising finding in the study is that the Indians, much like every other baseball franchise I suppose, have absolutely no control over the one event that brings in more fans than any other; a visit from the New York Yankees.

According to the study the Cleveland Indians could combine a free post-game fireworks show with a free bobble head doll of the team’s most popular player, Grady Sizemore, and still not get the increase in attendance like they do when Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez come to town. As a Cleveland fan or fan of every other team outside of Boston, you can’t deny the Yankees’ greatness.

There are a lot of things a gay boy could do with a mini-Grady doll but he only pulls in 6,600 extra fans, add another 4,000 for free fireworks and you get a total of 10,600 for both promotions in Cleveland When the New York Yankees come to Cleveland, attendance jumps 11,000.

Dodgers packaging 2010 Yankees tickets
And then there’s this story from the Dodgers, a team that resides in the second largest city in America with a tradition that rivals anyone save the Yankees, team officials announced this week that they won’t sell individual tickets to Yankees games in LA. Are you fucking kidding me? A franchise with a storied tradition like the Dodgers must use the Yankees demand to help sell bundles of tickets to other less desirable games.

Are things that bad in Los Angeles? Why must a city, known for producing revenue from shit-ass movies like District 9, resort to using the Yankees to help attendance when the Yankees are not even in town? WTF?!? The Dodgers have been in the playoffs for the past two years!

MLB Team Salaries and Merchandise Sales
Consider that just ten years ago the difference between the Yankees team payroll, at $88M, and the Texas Rangers, the team with the second highest payroll was a little more than $7M. In the span of 10 years the difference between the Yankees of 2009 at $201M, and the New York Mets, the team with the second highest payroll was $52M, that’s a seven-fold increase in the span of a decade.

Yes, the Yankees play in a top 10 market and own their own TV network but just ask the Cubs (3rd) and the Braves (11th) if that alone puts you at the top of the salary rankings.

What separates the Yankees from the rest of the baseball universe is their brand, and it’s the brand that generates the income that allows New York to pay for the best players and build championship teams. For the past 20 years the Yankees market share of all baseball related merchandise sales has hovered around 25%, which means the remaining 29 teams split the remaining 75%; advantage Yankees.

Trade Winners, Losers and the Status Quo

The whirlwind of activity from the NBA’s trading deadline left us with tired head; but with 24 hours of relative calm, we’ve been able to reflect upon the moves and declare the winners and losers, and identify those clubs who positioned themselves as major players in the 2010 free-agent market.

Trade Deadlines Losers

Eastern Conference – Atlanta Hawks, Toronto Raptors, Miami Heat, Milwaukee Bucks and Chicago Bulls

Western Conference – New Orleans Hornets, Phoenix Suns, Oklahoma City Thunder, Utah Jazz, San Antonio Spurs and Memphis Grizzlies

These clubs, all either in playoff position or challenging for a spot, failed to make any significant upgrades to improve their chances.

Trade Deadline Winners

Cavs acquire Jamison from Wizards

Cavs acquire Jamison from Wizards

Cleveland – adding Antawn Jamison immediately improves the Cavs athleticism and frontcourt versatility; in addition, it forces Orlando’s Dwight Howard or Boston’s Kevin Garnett, two likely playoff opponents, to play both ends of the court.

Boston – acquiring Nate Robinson, a quality bench scorer, gives the Celtics exactly what they needed, a double-digit scorer who can eat minutes for Paul Pierce and Ray Allen down the stretch.

Charlotte – the Bobcats look to secure the final playoff spot in the East by acquiring frontcourt scorer Tyrus Thomas from the Bulls and Theo Ratliff from the Spurs.

Dallas – dealing with Josh Howard’s inconsistency was a major headache for Mark Cuban, so the deal for Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood significantly improves the Mavs chances of contending this season.

Kevin Martin moves to Houston

Kevin Martin moves to Houston

Houston – dumping Tracy McGrady and acquiring Kevin Martin from Sacramento not only makes the Rockets significantly better this year but also improves their chances of contending next season as well.

Maintaining the status quo

Los Angeles Lakers, Orlando Magic and Denver Nuggets – the contenders maintained the status quo, which tells me they feel good about their chances.

Let’s face it, Cleveland, Boston and Dallas knew if they failed to upgrade they had little chance of catching the Lakers; Orlando and Denver know they’re in the championship discussion.

The Positioners

In order to capitalize of the historic free-agent market of 2010, the Chicago Bulls and New York Knicks made moves to reduce salary. Obviously, the big free-agent fish are LeBron James and Dwayne Wade but both Chicago and New York made enough room to acquire multiple free agents, and with unrestricted free agents like Chris Bosh, Joe Johnson, Amare Stoudemire and Carlos Boozer available, either club could go from pretender to contender next year.

Sorry Johnny But Figure Skating is Kinda Gay

A quick disclaimer here, I’m not a huge figure skating fan but I gotta call out bullshit when I hear it.

In an interview with Frank Deford of HBO’s Real Sports, Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir claims just because he’s a figure skater who’s effeminate and likes sparkly things he’s “no less macho than men who get out there in a muscle shirt and tattoos with grease stains or whatever.”

Huh? Has he ever Tivo’d his performance?

Sorry Johnny, you and your sport are less macho; there’s nothing wrong with it, it’s just a fact.

Websters defines macho as: characterized by machismo.
Websters defines machismo as: a strong sense of masculine pride : an exaggerated masculinity.

So follow me here, you can’t say you are feminine but no less masculine then those who exhibit an exaggerated masculinity, it just doesn’t make sense.

In the interview, Weir goes on to say that “everyone is their own individual self.” Absolutely! If you truly believe that’s the case then own it, celebrate the differences between figure skating and team sports; don’t try to convince us the Emperor has new clothes.

Here’s how the conversation should’ve gone IMHO:

Frank Deford: Do you think that figure skating being dismissed as gay, hurts the sport?

Weir: Who gives a shit? It’s not like the poorly educated, close minded biggots who hate gays would like the sport if it suddenly turned straight. Yes, there are a lot of gay men in this sport and it’s because we are good at it; we should celebrate this diversity instead of being turned off by it Frank. And by the way, you need to get your money back from that haircut.

Instead Weir attacks masculinity by saying “American men would rather see men in spandex pants slap each other on the ass.” What Johnny doesn’t understand is that in a sports environment, straight men don’t associate a slap on the butt as sexual, only a gay man, like myself, would view it that way.

I’m not saying there aren’t any masculine gay figure skaters or that gay men can’t be masculine, all I’m saying is don’t lie to yourself.

Maybe I’m being too hard on Weir. How about some visual evidence?

Johnny Weir is macho, right?

Johnny Weir is macho, right?


Brady Quinn looking all effeminate

Brady Quinn looking all effeminate

Daytona 500 Preview

The countdown to The Great American Race, otherwise known as the Daytona 500, is winding down. Daytona International Speedway’s 2.5 mile trioval is to NASCAR what old Yankee Stadium was to baseball, and at the end of the NASCAR season there are two things you remember; who won the Sprint Cup and who won the Daytona 500.

2009 Daytona 500 Winner Matt Kenseth

2009 Daytona 500 Winner Matt Kenseth

Daytona 500 Details
Daytona 500, Daytona International Speedway
Sun, Feb. 14 @1:00 PM ET – FOX

No other sport incorporates technology as much as motorsports, no other sports rewards attention to detail as much as motorsports, no other league begins its season with its most prestigious event like NASCAR, and no other sport puts a person’s life at risk like racing does; these are the reasons we love NASCAR.

The Field
Hendrick Motorsports teammates’ Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. secured the front row for the 2010 Daytona 500 in last Saturday’s qualifying; which sets the stage for Thursday’s 150-mile qualifying races to determine the starting positions of the remaining top 35 drivers from last season’s standings.

Jr with his 2009 ride.

Jr with his 2009 ride.

Eight other spots will round out the 43-team field and will be determined from the teams who did not finish in the top 35 from last season as follows: the top two drivers in each Gatorade Duel, the fastest three remaining qualifiers from last Saturday’s qualifying, and one spot is reserved for a previous Sprint Cup Champion who was unable to qualify or the fourth fastest qualifier.

Daytona 500 Rules Changes
The 2009 season suffered from an increase in cautions, coupled with a lower average speed and fewer lead changes. NASCAR’s first attempt to re-infuse excitement into the brand will be tested at the 2010 Daytona 500 where restrictions on bump-drafting will be lifted and horsepower will be increased with the introduction of the largest restrictor plate since 1989.

If you want more in-depth coverage of all things motor sports from a gay perspective check out our friends over at queers4gears.com

The Gatorade Duels
Much like how the Regional Finals of the NCAA tournament are usually more exciting than the actual Final Four so are the twin 150-mile races that determine the final qualifiers and set the starting positions.

Thursday’s Gatorade 150-Mile Duels Starting Grids

Duel 1 – 2:00 PM ET on Speed TV
1 Mark Martin 5 Chevrolet
2 Ryan Newman 39 Chevrolet
3 Bill Elliott 21 Ford
4 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet
5 Clint Bowyer 33 Chevrolet
6 Kyle Busch 18 Toyota
7 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet
8 Joe Nemechek 87 Toyota
9 Jamie McMurray 1 Chevrolet
10 Michael Waltrip 51 Toyota
11 David Ragan 6 Ford
12 AJ Allmendinger 43 Ford
13 Carl Edwards 99 Ford
14 Denny Hamlin 11 Toyota
15 Kevin Harvick 29 Chevrolet
16 Jeff Burton 31 Chevrolet
17 Regan Smith 78 Chevrolet
18 Greg Biffle 16 Ford
19 Reed Sorenson 32 Toyota
20 Max Papis 13 Toyota
21 John Andretti 34 Ford
22 Jeff Fuller 97 Toyota
23 Robert Richardson 38 Ford
24 Travis Kvapil 37 Ford
25 Terry Cook 46 Dodge
26 Michael McDowell 55 Toyota
27 Kirk Shelmerdine 27 Toyota

Duel 2 – 4:00 PM ET on Speed TV

1 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 88 Chevrolet
2 Juan Pablo Montoya 42 Chevrolet
3 Kurt Busch 2 Dodge
4 Matt Kenseth 17 Ford
5 Sam Hornish Jr. 77 Dodge
6 Scott Speed 82 Toyota
7 Marcos Ambrose 47 Toyota
8 Brad Keselowski 12 Dodge
9 Joey Logano 20 Toyota
10 Bobby Labonte 71 Chevrolet
11 Tony Stewart 14 Chevrolet
12 David Reutimann 00 Toyota
13 Paul Menard 98 Ford
14 Kasey Kahne 9 Ford
15 Mike Bliss 36 Chevrolet
16 Robby Gordon 7 Toyota
17 Martin Truex Jr. 56 Toyota
18 Brian Vickers 83 Toyota
19 Elliott Sadler 19 Ford
20 Casey Mears 90 Chevrolet
21 David Gilliland 49 Toyota
22 Aric Almirola 09 Chevrolet
23 Boris Said 26 Ford
24 Dave Blaney 66 Toyota
25 Derrike Cope 75 Dodge
26 Mike Wallace 92 Dodge
27 Norm Benning 57 Chevrolet

Daytona 500 Prediction
I gotta sneaky feeling that Dale Earnhardt Junior is going to have a big year and it starts Sunday at the Daytona 500.

Super Bowl’s Super Call

Brees and the Saints capture their first Super Bowl trophy.

Brees and the Saints capture their first Super Bowl trophy.

It was truly a transcendent call, the turning point of Super Bowl XLIV and one of those plays you will always remember. With his team trailing 10-6 and kicking off to start the second half, New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton called for an onside kick.

Seriously?!? This wasn’t a meaningless week 3 game against the Raiders, this was the Super Bowl!

Thomas Morstead’s onside kick bounced off the face mask of Colts ‘hands man’ Hank Baskett and the ensuing scrum took a few minutes to sort out, but when it was settled, Sean Payton’s call gave the explosive Saints offense another possession which culminated in their first touchdown and first lead of the game.

The Saints took the game from the Colts, and on this day they were clearly the better team. Kudos to the much-maligned Saints defense and their multiple looks which never allowed Colts quarterback Peyton Manning to get comfortable.

Will this game erase any of the devastation of Hurricane Katrina? Absolutely not. Will the win help the region financially? That’s debatable.

We should not over-dramatize this win and we should remember Saints owner Tom Benson worked behind the scenes to move the Saints to San Antonio in the wake of the hurricane. Could you imagine the unbelievable kick in the crotch it would have been had we been talking about the Super Bowl Champion San Antonio Saints?

Instead, New Orleans has something to be happy about and that should make everyone outside of Indiana smile.

The 10 Most Watched Events of 2009

According to a report released this week by the Future Sports + Entertainment group, the UEFA’s Champions League Final overtook the Super Bowl as the most watched television event in the world.

Per the report, the finals match between Manchester United and Barcelona attracted 109m viewers in its entirety, and “reached” 206m people, meaning they caught parts of the game. The Super Bowl, traditionally the biggest TV event in global club sport, attracted 106m live viewers for the whole thing, with a reach of 162m.

Santonio Holmes' Super Bowl winning catch

Santonio Holmes' Super Bowl winning catch

For those inclined to gather some meaning from the numbers we offer two insights:

1. The Super Bowl is far more popular in the US than UEFA Championship is in Europe.

Comparing the total viewership as a percentage of population for each event we find that ~ 15% of the European continent tuned in to the UEFA Finals and ~ 32% of the US viewing public watched the Super Bowl. Considering the population of Europe is more than twice that of the USA one could argue as a cultural event, UEFA doesn’t enjoy the demographic reach of the NFL.

2. The NFL is doing a lousy job at going global.

Even the most die-hard European soccer fans admit the NFL brand of football is more exciting than traditional European brand of football, so why isn’t the NFL doing a better job of capturing a global audience?

10 most-watched events of 2009 – reach in parenthesis

  1. Champions’ League final 109m (206m)
  2. Super Bowl 106m (162m)
  3. Bahrain GP 54m (115m)
  4. Men’s 100m final 33m (95m)
  5. Federer-Roddick 29m (89m)
  6. Japan-South Korea (World Baseball Classic) 27m (82m)
  7. World Series game 6 26m (72m)
  8. NBA finals game 5 26m (59m)
  9. Masters final day 21m (49m)
  10. South Korea v China (badminton) 19m (56m)

The Gay Man’s Guide to Super Bowl XLIV

Super Bowl Sunday 2010 is almost here and although some of us gay sports fans may be tuning in just for the commercials, we at SportsFags offer up some talking points so you can speak with authority at that lame-ass Super Bowl party.

Colts' TE Dallas Clark looks for his second Super Bowl trophy

Colts' TE Dallas Clark looks for his second Super Bowl trophy

Super Bowl XLIV (44)
New Orleans Saints vs. Indianapolis Colts
Line = Colts -4
Sun Life Stadium, Miami
Sunday, February 7 @ 6:25 PM ET on CBS

Mix two prolific offenses, one decent defense, the two best quarterbacks in the game, controversial commercials, alcohol and lots of casual sports fans and you have a recipe for disaster. Rarely does the Super Bowl turn out to be truly super, yet we hold out hope for a repeat of Pittsburgh’s thrilling come-from-behind win in last year’s Super Bowl.

I must admit that I am somewhat of a sports’ snob, meaning I can’t watch important games with casual sports fans. There’s a greater than zero percent chance the drunk-ass kid yelling ‘Defense Girl’ during Super Bowl XL is directly responsible for my preference to watch big games at home. Plus, I can rewind on a hottie.

On Offense
Choosing between Colt’s quarterback Peyton Manning and Saints’ quarterback Drew Brees is like trying to choose between 7.5 or 8 inches, they’re both great but you gotta respect one more. Manning is facing one of the worst pass defenses, ranked 26th during the regular season, in the NFL, so expect a huge game from the current NFL MVP.

Brees will get his chances as well, but with the re-emergence of Reggie Bush at running back I expect the Saints will put more emphasis on the ground game in an effort to keep Manning’s ass on the sideline.

Both teams are loaded with great pass catchers but a slight edge goes to the Colts because of their depth.

On Defense
The Saints porous defense is best known for creating turnovers. Just like they did against Minnesota in the NFC championship game, for New Orleans to have a shot at winning Super Bowl XLIV they must finish on the plus side of the turnover margin.

On the road to the Super Bowl the Colts’ defense registered second-half shutouts against the Ravens and the Jets. I’ll take the unit that shuts offenses down versus the unit that relies on turnovers.

Prediction
Indianapolis Colts 30, New Orleans Saints 24

Hottie Watch
Indianapolis Colts’ Wide Receiver Austin Collie

Colts WR Austin Collie speaks with media

Colts WR Austin Collie speaks with media


Austin Collie's glamour shot

Austin Collie's glamour shot

New Orleans Saints’ Running Back Reggie Bush

Reggie relaxes, I cut the skank out of this photo.

Reggie relaxes, I cut the skank out of this photo.


Reggie Bush shirtless

Reggie Bush shirtless

Kentucky is No. 1 and Done

Devan Downey drops in 30 against Kentucky

Devan Downey drops in 30 against Kentucky

The Kentucky Wildcats, the final remaining unbeaten and No. 1-ranked college basketball team in the land, suffered their first loss of the season Tuesday night at South Carolina, 68-62.

The Gamecocks got another stellar performance from the SEC’s leading scorer, senior guard Devan Downey, who led South Carolina with 30 points and is averaging 22.4 per game this year.

Even with this loss, Kentucky is clearly the best team in the weak-ass SEC. When they failed to convert on numerous easy opportunities, the Wildcats propensity for letting less-talented teams hang around finally bite them in the ass.

The Wildcats return home for a Sunday afternoon ESPN game against #23 Vanderbilt, just how the Wildcats respond to their first bit of adversity this season will tell us a lot about this young squad’s chances come March.

SportsFags top four teams right now:

  1. Kansas
  2. Syracuse
  3. Texas
  4. Kentucky
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