Author: Michael

NFL Hall of Famer Ray Lewis‘ 28-year-old son, Ray Lewis III, has tragically passed away, confirmed by TMZ Sports on Thursday. No official cause of death has been provided as of current reporting.
Lewis III was one of six children born to the ex-Ravens linebacker.

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A post shared by Ray Lewis III (@ray_ray1k)

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A post shared by Ray Lewis III (@ray_ray1k)

Rahsaan Lewis posted the news of his brother’s abrupt death on Instagram.

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NFL legend and former Tennessee Volunteer Peyton Manning helped his alma mater’s baseball team get ready for the College World Series.
Fitting, seeing as it’s held each year in a city that has become synonymous with Manning even though he never played there: Omaha, Nebraska.

LSU-Tennessee College World Series Duel Saturday To Match Power Vs. Power In Potential Classic

The Volunteers topped Southern Miss to secure a trip to the College World Series.

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As a first-time NBA champion following the Nuggets’ NBA Finals victory, Jeff Green deservedly spent Thursday living it up during the team’s championship parade. 
But, even amid all the excitement, the former first-round pick made sure to shout out the team and city where it all began 16 years ago.
The 36-year-old Green paid homage to his first NBA home, Seattle, by wearing a hat adorned with a logo of the now-defunct Supersonics, who have been the Thunder since 2008.

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Major League Baseball (MLB) earned a C+.
Apparently, a group called the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport (TIDES) grades the league each year on its dedication to inclusivity.
The 2023 MLB Racial and Gender Report Card, the official title of the score card, ruled that the league earned a B for racial hiring practices and a C for gender hiring practices, thus the overall grade of C+.
The grade drew the ire of ESPN. Particularly, some guy named Richard Lapchick, who ESPN bills as “a human rights activist, pioneer for racial equality, expert on sports issues, scholar and author.

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Photo by Harry How/Getty Images
Sam Burns got the afternoon crowd excited at the U.S. Open after sinking an incredible hole-in-one at the par-3 15th.
Sam Burns knows how to celebrate a hole-in-one, U.S. Open style. He threw his club more than 10 feet up in the air after sinking an ace on the par-3 15th hole at Los Angeles Country Club.
This is the shortest hole on the golf course, but with a wide variety of pin placements. It can measure as short as 78 yards but as long as 145. Thursday, it is listed at 124 yards.

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High school graduations are for the parents, lets be honest. But every now and then we’ll get videos of the students being the ones who have all the fun. This was the case for one graduating senior, who decided to go full Randy Orton and deliver an RKO at his crowing event.
We all know how boring these things get. If you have a last name that puts you toward the bottom of the call-out list, it’s even worse. But for those two hours, parents get a few seconds to scream at the top of their lung when they hear the last name of their kid.

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LA can’t keep the lights on for arguably its biggest sports team… but yes, let’s model the rest of the country after Los Angeles and California as a whole (Gavin Newsom 2024?).
The legendary Dodger Stadium suffered a temporary power outage during Wednesday night’s primetime game against the Chicago White Sox.
Moments before the bottom of the ninth inning, the entire stadium suffered an outage and fans were sitting in the pitch-black night of Chavez Ravine without an answer.

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Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images
Xander Schauffele is laid back but after shooting a first-round 62 at the U.S. Open, someone needs to check his pulse.
Xander Schauffele made history in his opening round at the 123rd U.S. Open. He posted a bogey-free 62, tying Rickie Fowler for the lowest round in major championship history. Incredibly, they did it in a span of three groups of each other Thursday.
After his record-breaking performance, he was asked what the mark meant to him.
In typical Schauffele fashion, he was cool as a cucumber.

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