Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
Keeping tabs on the ridiculous things Shohei Ohtani does this season
There is a joke around social media that “Twitter is not real life.”
However, there are moments that cross the bridge from memes, to reality.
One such moment comes to us courtesy of Shohei Ohtani. The incredible two-way player is doing things in major league baseball that we have not seen in years, if not decades. Or even ever.
Author: Michael
LeBron James recently opened up House Three Thirty, a community center in his hometown of Akron, Ohio. Instead of focusing on the good the community center will do for the city, PETA found something wrong with it: the milk being served.
The community center has a Starbucks inside, and just like every other store around the world, it serves milk. Real milk, that is, as in, the milk that comes from cows.
PETA has an issue with that.
PETA wants LeBron James to stop serving milk.
LeBron James appeared to exchange some very heated words with a fan Wednesday night.
The Lakers dropped a rivalry game to the Clippers 125-118, and the four-time NBA champion didn’t seem to be happy with his a fan supporting his team.
In a video from ClutchPoints, a fan wearing a Kobe Bryant appeared to be chirping possibly about championships as LeBron shouted back “I got you one.”
It’s always a great look when you’re arguing with fans of your own team.
Angels star Shohei Ohtani had himself a day against the Mariners on Wednesday.
He made some unique pitch clock violation history by getting called for it on the mound and at the plate and got his first win of the season, giving up just one run (and had eight strikeouts) in six innings of work.
He also had a fun little moment between innings when he was able to show off how thoughtful and nice he can be. Ohtani, his interpreter and his manager were talking to the home plate ump when he suddenly decided to swipe a baseball and toss it away.
Rookies have become a much bigger part of the fantasy football landscape in recent seasons, especially at running back and wide receiver. Unfortunately, the same can’t be said for tight ends. They’ve been the “black sheep” of the offensive skill positions, at least as it pertains to first-year players looking to make a fast impact.
Does that mean we’ll see similar outcomes from the 2023 class?
The list of top prospects at the position is deep, with at least one and possibly even two projected to come off the board in the first round of the NFL draft.
The Baltimore Ravens, currently invested in quarterback Lamar Jackson to the tune of a $32.4 million franchise tag for the 2023 season, raised more than a few eyebrows on Wednesday when they admitted they might be drafting a quarterback.
Even in the first round.
“It depends on the [draft] board, it really does,” general manager Eric DeCosta told reporters. “I mean, I’d have to say yes, because we have quarterbacks in our Top 31. So, just based on that alone, simple math, I would have to say, yes.”
It’s more than just about simple math. Anyone with eyes can see that.
The idea that any one moment in a general manager’s tenure can make or break their tour of duty is a bit of a fallacy. The GM’s seat is so different from any other position in the football hierarchy, as much about politics and the ability to explain certain decisions that were made, or not made, during a critical period of time as picking or trading players. There are great GMs who were dismissed unceremoniously because they were bad corporate suits. There are terrible GMs who still walk their halls today, waiting to disappoint their fan base all over again.
All Russian and Belarusian players were banned from competing at Wimbledon last year, but Iga Swiatek doesn’t believe that was a strict enough punishment. The top-ranked women’s player in the world believes players from both countries should be banned from the sport indefinitely.
Wimbledon 2022 was the first time players were excluded based on their nationality since post-World War Two when German and Japanese players were banned from competing.
Not signing a running back to an expensive, long-term deal continues to be common-sense wisdom in the NFL. But on the other side of that coin is a disgruntled player hoping to score a new deal.
There’s drama in the backfield for the Los Angeles Chargers as the top running back, Austin Ekeler, continues to push for a trade. Ekeler thinks he’s criminally underpaid, causing a deep split between the two parties.
Austin Ekeler Feels Slighted By Own Team
Playing on the final year of his four-year, $24.
Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports
Peter Skoronski was a standout tackle in college, but will he have to transition to guard following the 2023 NFL Draft?
Not much went right for Northwestern football in 2022, but one of the bright spots was the outstanding play of offensive lineman Peter Skoronski, a projected top-15 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. Earning the highest pass-blocking grade in all of college football by PFF (93.0), Skoronski won the Remington-Pace Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year award, becoming the first Northwestern player to receive that honor.