Remembering 'Mr. Hockey'
Gordie Howe was born in Floral, Saskatchewan.
The Dowbboy spoke to CBC Radio about the late, great Gordie Howe.
Read MoreGordie Howe was born in Floral, Saskatchewan.
The Dowbboy spoke to CBC Radio about the late, great Gordie Howe.
Read MoreBrock Lesnar after losing the UFC Heavyweight belt to Cain Velasquez at UFC 121
Brock Lesnar, 5-3 in the UFC, returns from a four-and-a-half year hiatus at the age of 38 to a sport that has drastically evolved since his last fight - which was his second consecutive TKO loss - to face a former K-1 kickboxer who has knocked out a who’s-who of top competition during the same time frame Lesnar has been play-fighting on a reduced schedule.
Read MoreLike fireworks expanding endlessly as they leapt skyward Muhammad Ali just kept taking away your breath. When you thought he’d crested and was headed back to earth, a new spray of colour and noise emerged. We never wanted it to end. As it did on Friday. Inevitably, as it does to all men.
Read MoreThe circumstances of Team Alpha Male’s fall from grace are well documented. But they are also nothing new. A similar collapse happened a decade earlier. Take a drive south on the I-5 from Sacramento and in less than an hour, you’ll find yourself in Lodi, California, home of the once-great Lion’s Den.
Read MoreA Canadian public health expert has demanded the International Olympic Committee delay or move the 2016 Rio Olympics because of the Zika virus threat. “But for the games, would anyone recommend sending an extra half million visitors into Brazil right now?” wrote University of Ottawa professor Amir Attaran in the Harvard Public Health Review.
Read MoreYou’ve probably seen the TV commercials for the upcoming World Cup of Hockey airing non-stop during the Stanley Cup playoffs. A rather forlorn Jim Hughson appears to be asking the musical question, “What nation owns hockey?” We are then treated to some cheesy vignettes in which big stars brag on their own countries’ claim on world supremacy.
Read MoreIn baseball, revenge is a dish best served high and tight. That’s what Toronto Blue Jays slugger José Bautista discovered Sunday in Texas. After his elaborate home-run bat flip in the 2015 ALDS against the Rangers (http://goo.gl/NU8Zyy), you knew that Texas would exact its revenge. (Bautista had to know it was coming, too.) The brooding Texans went old school when Bautista took a pitch in the ribs from Rangers reliever Matt Bush.
Read MoreIn the “golden age” of sports, a coach used to be fired for just one reason. His team lost.
In today’s enlightened era, a coach can be dismissed for any number of reasons. 1) His team lost. 2) His best player’s agent thinks the coach is an issue in upcoming negotiations. 3) Social media insists that analytics show his strategy sucks. 4) The owner realizes it’s cheaper to pay two coaches than lose a franchise player. 5) The team owner’s wife hates the coach’s wife. 6) He won the coach of the Year award the year previous. 7) Media following the team turns against him.
Read MoreWith apologies to Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby, Saturday night’s NHL Draft Lottery was the night of nights for Canadian hockey fans this spring. With zero domestic teams in the playoffs, folks from Nanaimo to Cornerbrook have taken the opportunity to stain the deck or change thetires on the SUV— instead of watching the playoffs on CBC and Sportsnet.
Read MoreIf a tree falls in the middle of the forest, does any one hear? If a playoff series is conducted in a void can we hear NHL commissioner Gary Bettman hitting the floor in the middle of Manhattan?
Read MoreWill Conor McGregor's retirement tweet and standoff with the UFC implode the world?
Read MoreHow many MLB teams since World War II have won a World Series with an ace who has thrown fewer than 180 regular-season innings in his career? How about winning the Series with another of their top three starters having thrown fewer than 125 regular season innings in his career? For that matter, how many teams have won a Series with a knuckleballer taking a regular rotation turn?
Read MoreThere is good news and bad news for the Ottawa Senators. The good news is they are the 2015-16 winners of the Loonie League, the competition between Canadian clubs in the NHL.
The bad news is they did it by finishing a mediocre 19th overall in the NHL standings. That’s right. Not only did all seven Canadian teams collapse like the NDP vote in the 2015 federal election, the best the Loonie champs could mange was finishing eight points back of the final playoff team in the Eastern Conference.
Read MoreAugusta National, home to this week’s Masters, is a place where tradition is revered. When the players arrive today and tomorrow they’ll find a setting that rarely changes. Magnolias. Amen Corner. The green jacket. Even the prices on the sandwiches reflect the 1950s more than the present day.
One tradition familiar to longtime fans of the Masters has disappeared, however. Once, touring pros having a local black caddy to steer them around the holes was as much a part of the tradition as flowering azaleas. Jack Nicklaus’ annual tandem with Willie Peterson was legendary through five Masters titles. But since the organizers relented and allowed the PGA Tour pros to bring their own caddies to Augusta, the number of black caddies has shrunk to almost zero.
(In a delicious irony, Jordan Spieth, who has gone first/ second in his first two trips to the Masters, employed one of the local caddies to help him and his regular caddy Michael Greller read the nuances of the ever-so-subtle Austa layout before the tournament.)
The demise of black caddies at the Masters prompted radio host Bob McCown to examine the issue in a broader context on his Sportsnet Radio Prime Time Sports program. The lack of black faces in general at Augusta prompted McCown to ask, “Where are all the black golfers who were supposed to appear in the wake of Tiger Woods?”
One of the great media assumptions when Woods first laid waste to the Tour in the 1990s was that he’d inspire a generation of black kids to take up the sport. While Tiger’s Asian heritage is duly celebrated in many players on Tour these days, there is no black Tiger patrol teeing it up every week. Not even a Tiger twosome. Indeed, there is just one black player as a regular on Tour this season (Harold Varner III) as Woods continues to convalesce from injuries.
“It’s just as hard now for a poor white or Latino or Asian child to break through the economic glass ceiling. For instance, it’s been pointed out that neither Gordie Howe nor Bobby Orr, products of small-town Canada, could have become a star NHL player in this age. The notion of the kid from humble means who learns his craft on a frozen pond has passed for good.”
McCown’s guests attributed the absence of Tiger successors to a lack of facilities in inner cities and the cost of equipment and range time for black youth. Woods may have changed the perception, they said, but he hasn’t changed the reality of inner city life for black kids. Easier to take up hoops, which can be played on any school yard or driveway. McCown noted that there are many middle and upper class black neighbourhoods now in America where a future Woods could be produced.
But he didn’t argue with the thesis that there might be some element of prejudice in the failure to produce another golf star of colour.
Much to the chagrin of those in modern society who wish to attribute everything to race, the fact is that the failure of golf’s star pipeline has much more to do with finances and city size than skin colour. While it appears anecdotally to be a whiteout in golf, a glance at other sports demonstrates that economic class, not colour, is revolutionizing who gets ahead in pro sports. (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/17/your-money/rising-costs-of-youth-sports.html?_r=0)
It’s just as hard now for a poor white or Latino or Asian child to break through the economic glass ceiling. For instance, it’s been pointed out that neither Gordie Howe nor Bobby Orr, products of small-town Canada, could have become a star NHL player in this age. The notion of the kid from humble means who learns his craft on a frozen pond has passed for good. (Don’t tell Hockey Night In Canada which still dines out own this narrative.)
Stars are also far more likely to come from urban rather than rural backgrounds, places where they can access the training and resources to thrive.
The care and feeding of a prodigy in any sport has risen to stratospheric heights for parents. Between travel, nutrition, private coaching, promotion and mentoring it can cost in the six figures to bring an athlete to prominence. The payoff is in the millions, but the payout is crushing. So we see educated professionals and former stars getting their kids to the top of the heap, while kids from impoverished backgrounds never surface in the way they once did.
The same goes for even less-expensive sports such as baseball, soccer and basketball. While the equipment is cheaper, getting the training needed is just as expensive in sports such as hockey, football and golf. So admire the dazzling colours this week at Augusta. Just don’t go looking for a lot of black in the scene. The reason? A lack of green.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy
Bruce's career is unmatched in Canada for its diversity and breadth of experience with successful stints in television, radio and print. A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada's top television sports broadcaster, he is also the best-selling author of seven books. He was a featured columnist for the Calgary Herald (1998-2009) and the Globe & Mail (2009-2013).
There was a time in sports when athletes like Day enthusiastically embraced the role as the “bad guy”. You know, the guy you loved to hate. The player whom opposing players couldn’t stand. But judging by today’s collegial atmosphere, stabs in the back are now pats on the back.
Read MoreA baseball player turns down a lot of money for his kid and a tennis player who makes a lot of money is told her gender should thank the other gender. PC sports.
Read MoreThey say justice delayed is justice denied. If you believe that old axiom then Calgary Flames defenceman Dennis Wideman was in big denial after the treatment he received from the NHL over his 20-game suspension. When word finally— finally!— came down this past week that the suspension had been cut to 10 games by an independent arbitrator, he’d already served 19 games of the original sentence.
Read MoreWhen you stand to close to something bright, you fail to see the finer details around you. Nate Diaz proved by defeating Conor McGregor that the brighter the star, the more we ignore the details.
Read MoreLast week we documented the Fukushima zone known as the NHL’s Loonie League— the seven Canadian clubs wallowing at the bottom of the league’s table. You’d have to think that there’s going to be some firing going on in the coaching ranks as a result.
Read MoreOn the day after the NHL Trade deadline Day, we have a Tuesday edition of IDLM to catch up on the Loonie League post TDD. Like its namesake loonie, the Loonie League has seen a steep depreciation this winter. We got one big thing right about the Loonie League and one big thing wrong about the Loonie League when we unveiled our Canadian team rankings last fall.
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