понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

Tackle hopes for low-profile job in the skies.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

By Aaron McFarling

The Roanoke Times

BLACKSBURG

If you happen to recognize a bearded, 270-pound man on an airplane in about five years, try not to blow his cover.

Virginia Tech defensive tackle Demetrius Taylor hopes to be inconspicuous. Aims to blend in. Wants to play it cool.

Those are required traits for federal air marshals, the plainclothes travelers trained to detect, deter and defeat potential terrorists. And if Taylor, a Kellam High grad, is going to reach his goal of becoming one, he's got a little work to do on the camouflaging front.

'I'm not sure,' Taylor said with a smile, when asked just how inconspicuous a guy his size could be. 'Maybe I'll have to drop a few pounds and get a little bit smaller so I don't stick out.'

Taylor sticks out plenty, and not just for his grunt efforts with the No. 13 Hokies. The redshirt senior needed only three years to earn a degree in sociology and is working on his second undergraduate degree in psychology. His weight-room exploits have become the stuff of legend; Taylor set four defensive-tackle records this offseason along with the all-positions standard in the push-jerk.

When Tech coach Frank Beamer talked this preseason about liking the makeup of this year's team, Taylor is exactly the kind of guy he was appreciating. A man with lofty aspirations and a work ethic to match. A guy taking classes on crime and deviance, not one becoming the course's case study outside some bar at 2 a.m.

Taylor's desire to be an air marshal - or an FBI agent - stems from his upbringing and his experiences at Tech. He said his father fought in the Persian Gulf War and his grandfather served in Vietnam.

'It's something that's in your blood, I guess,' he said of a willingness to put his life on the line.

Taylor was a freshman in high school when the terrorist attacks occurred on Sept. 11, 2001. Those events influenced him, but it was the Tech tragedy of April 16, 2007, that solidified his plans.

'I was actually in the building right across from Norris, and I saw the students running out and I saw the police rushing in and the FBI running in ...

'I felt for the students who were running out. They were running for their lives. I had never seen anything like that. But as far as seeing the cops rush in and that kind of camaraderie among the officers, knowing that all of them were putting their lives at risk, it just made me feel like that's something' he wanted to do.

Not that he had an inclination to run toward the gunfire that day.

'Obviously, I wasn't armed like the rest of the policemen were,' he said. 'But I knew that if I got the right training and the right experience, that's definitely something I could be good at.'

Taylor served an internship this past summer with the New Jersey State Police and still keeps in touch with the contacts he made there .

'Playing football your whole life, you kind of get accustomed to the lifestyle of having something to do all the time. Not just sitting behind a desk, but actually being active with your time,' Taylor said.

'I feel like being an FBI agent or air marshal would allow me to do that after football.'

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воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

ROB LONG'S NFL DREAM LIVES ON.(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: Nolan Weidner Staff writer

The brown hair has long since grown back.

And the smile? Well that never really left Rob Long's face, except maybe at times during the darkest hours in his battle with a malignant brain tumor.

It's been a year since the former Syracuse University punter, kick-holder and special teams captain learned that the tumor doctors removed Dec. 14, 2010, contained cancerous cells. It's been almost a year since he began radiation treatments and oral chemotherapy.

Meanwhile, the Downingtown, Pa., resident continues to show no further signs of cancer. There's no trace of the tumor doctors removed at Jefferson University hospital in Philadelphia.

Long finished his degree in marketing management at SU, traveled across the country twice, spent time with his girlfriend, completed an internship with Philadelphia-area chemical shipping company -- and he's still chasing his dream of becoming an NFL punter.

'I feel great,' said Long, who turned 23 on Dec. 13. 'I'm very thankful for the way I feel and what I'm able to do still -- working out and pursuing dreams of punting in the NFL. That's all special to me.'

Though his college career ended several games early, after his tumor was discovered Dec. 2, 2010, Long never wavered in his determination to kick at football's highest level.

A two-time All-Big East selection as a punter (first-team in 2009 and second-team last year), Long's career average of nearly 44 yards a kick made him a solid candidate to be signed by an NFL team for spring camp.

But the surgery -- followed by six weeks of radiation treatments that ended in early March and topped by an extended lockout of players that canceled nearly all offseason activities except the NFL Draft -- conspired to keep him on the sidelines this year.

'It hurt me tremendously,' Long said of the owners' lockout, which dragged into summer and didn't end until late July, just in time for the preseason.

Save for a pre-draft tryout with his hometown Philadelphia Eagles, and a pair of one-day looks by Cleveland and Tampa Bay during the preseason, Long said no other teams called.

'A lot of teams told my agent they were interested, but with what I was going through they needed more than a day to see me before they made a decision. A lot of them kind of shied away, just a wait-until-next-year kind of a deal,' he said.

So Long is waiting until next year. In early January he'll leave the Philadelphia suburbs and head south to Florida, where he'll spend the rest of that month and part of February kicking and training full-time in an effort to earn an invite to a team's mini-camp in March.

Long said the plan is for him to train in good weather while his agent tries to get teams to watch him work out and perhaps sign him. 'That way I'll be able to join a team for an offseason,' he said.

Until then, Long will spend the next few weeks with his family and girlfriend, Jacqueline Russer, who now lives and works in the Philadelphia area. He's training, and kicking, and enjoying a holiday season that wasn't so merry last year.

'Christmas will be fun,' he said. 'Last year I couldn't even really tell you what happened. Honestly, I don't even remember Christmas last year.'

Long also has become a poster boy for Jefferson's Kimmel Cancer Center, which made him the subject of ads that appeared this month in the New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer.

Long said the photo shoot for the ad was a different experience.

'They made me put on makeup. They gave me the whole rundown ... makeup, hair, everything,' he said.

But it was a small inconvenience compared to what he endured a year ago.

It's a battle Long appears to have emerged from both victorious and with a new resolve to chase a dream that cancer couldn't crush.

'I'm pretty determined,' said Long, adding that he's not prepared to quit -- even if the NFL turns him away again this year. 'It's going to take time for them to tell me no.'

Nolan Weidner can be reached at 470-3250 or nweidner@syracuse.com.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

Courtesy of Kimmel Cancer Center

суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

KG launches student project.(SPORTS) - Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)

Byline: Steve Aschburner; Staff Writer

Math, Kevin Garnett told an auditorium of high school students Monday afternoon, is his favorite subject.

But the Timberwolves' All-Star forward stayed away from talk of decimal points, dollar signs and nine-digit sums while officially launching his 4XL project, an Internet-based program to assist minority students with career development.

Garnett, who can become a free agent next July, declined to discuss the talks he and the Wolves have had about a contract extension. His agent, Andy Miller, spoke briefly Monday with Kevin McHale, Wolves vice president of basketball operations.

Instead, Garnett and several colleagues demonstrated the 4XL project (www.4xl.org) for students at Minneapolis North High School. The Web site, produced in conjunction with Monster.com, features content and tools to connect high school and college students with business leaders and potential mentors, while providing links to scholarship and internship information.

'You get the kids to understand there is light at the end of the tunnel,' Garnett said. 'A lot of times, kids at that age don't have a lot of confidence. You got to try to instill some.'

Garnett, 27, said fans approached him constantly this summer to talk about the team's offseason moves.

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

BRONCOS WIN ONE, LOSE ONE ON DEFENSE MARVIN WASHINGTON ADDS DEPTH ON LINE, BUT IRVING DECIDES TO STAY WITH CARDINALS.(Sports) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Clay Latimer Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer

The Denver Broncos went on a little shopping trip Wednesday and came home with a mixed bag.

Defensive end Marvin Washington, a free agent who played last season with the San Francisco 49ers, agreed to a one-year deal that is believed to be worth about $775,000. It didn't include a signing bonus.

The Broncos also offered Arizona Cardinals free agent Terry Irving a three-year deal, but later in the day the linebacker signed a three-year, $2.1 million contract with the Cardinals.

Washington, who played under Denver Broncos defensive coordinator Greg Robinson when both were with the New York Jets, is considered a role player. Defensive lineman Sean Gilbert is anything but, and he'll visit club headquarters next Wednesday. The Broncos also hope to sign starting defensive end Neil Smith, who played a key role during their Super Bowl run, to a new contract.

Washington isn't counting on a starting position, just some playing time - and redemption.

Last season, the 6-foot-6, 280-pound defender suffered a foot injury and finished with only one sack for the 49ers.

``It was really frustrating last year, but that's the thing about football: There's always a time for redemption, and that's what I'm looking forward to, personally and professionally,'' Washington said.

For the Broncos, depth is the name of the game on the defensive line. They like to substitute en masse, in part to exploit the thin air at Mile High Stadium that often leaves visitors sagging during a game's stretch run.

Last season, they needed every man. Defensive end Jumpy Geathers (Achilles' tendon) was lost for the season in training camp, Smith and defensive end Alfred Williams were sidelined because of triceps injuries, and tackle Maa Tanuvasa went down with an ankle injury shortly after taking over for Micheal Dean Perry, who eventually was waived because of subpar production.

``That's why we had all those defensive linemen on the team,'' Broncos coach Mike Shanahan said. ``Everyone questioned that going into training camp. But by the end, people realized you can't replace those players.

``(Washington) is a strong defensive end who's very athletic. He can help our football team. (But) we still want Neil as badly as we wanted him before.''

Washington was a sixth-round draft pick of the New York Jets in 1989 and was a starter from 1991 to '96. In 1992, he finished with an NFL career-high 8 1/2 sacks but was released after the 1996 season after he made only 2 1/2 sacks despite starting 14 games.

Washington, a Denver native who went to high school in Dallas, says he is eager to play once more for Robinson.

``He's probably the biggest factor in getting the deal done,'' Washington said. ``There's a comfort factor there.''

Washington's contract includes a base salary of $350,000 - $425,000 if he makes the roster - plus incentives of $200,000 if he plays 50 percent of the plays, $50,000 for two sacks, $100,000 for four sacks and $150,000 for six sacks.

Irving decided to remain with the Cardinals partly because he has accepted an engineering internship with a high-tech company in the Phoenix area.

``I want to be here,'' he said. ``I've been here when the team has struggled, and I want to be here when we win.''

Irving is the second free agent to turn down the Broncos. Tampa Bay guard Jim Pyne earlier chose the Detroit Lions over Denver.

INFOBOX

J Broncos' 1998 foes

* The Broncos' opponents for 1998 (teams listed in alphabetical order; dates will be announced later):

HOME GAMES........AWAY GAMES

Dallas............Cincinnati

Jacksonville......Kansas City

Kansas City.......Miami

New England.......N.Y..Giants

Oakland...........Oakland

Philadelphia......San Diego

San Diego.........Seattle

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

EX-BADGER ENGLER CONTENT IN FINANCIAL TRENCHES.(SPORTS)(MIKE LUCAS)(Column) - The Capital Times

Byline: Mike Lucas

While Al Johnson will be gaining national exposure this fall as a member of Playboy Magazine's 2002 preseason All-American team, the University of Wisconsin senior is being exposed to a much different world this summer; the business world, where many investors have been getting sacked for big losses.

Johnson and UW teammate Jason Jowers have been working as interns at the Madison office of Morgan Stanley. They know something, too, about the aforementioned football metaphor and what can happen when the protection breaks down in the trenches. Both are starting offensive linemen - Johnson at center, Jowers at right tackle.

And, fittingly, they are being guided through their internship at the brokerage firm by a fellow Badger, a fellow lineman, Derek Engler, the starting center on the 1996 team. Given the turbulent business landscape, how has Engler, a rookie, managed to survive?

'I've got to be honest with you, I'm fresh, I'm just starting out,' he said. 'I'm not a senior broker that has an existing book of portfolios that are just blowing up. I'm starting at the bottom, and, to me, that's the most opportune time.'

Timing is everything.

*

On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, Derek Engler had two associates on the phone. His former agent was on one line, and a business recruiter was on the other. His career was on hold. His eyes were fixed on a television screen.

Engler was in limbo.

After spending four seasons with the New York Giants - 36 games, nine career starts - Engler was rehabbing a damaged shoulder, starting a family and looking for work. Maybe a new line of work.

On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, Engler continued to stare at the TV screen. He couldn't believe his eyes.

'I'm on the line, talking about entering into a new career as a financial advisor,' he recalled, 'and I'm watching the financial capital of the world come crumbling down.'

9-11.

'For the next 72 hours, my eyes were glued on the TV,' he said. 'and I can't tell you how many times I cried. It really shook me up. I had friends down there.'

One of his good friends was beginning his first day of work in New York City, some four blocks from the World Trade Center, when the first plane crashed into one of the towers.

'All the windows imploded in his office, throwing people 50 feet across the room,' Engler recalled of their conversation the following day.

'He said it turned into a war zone. Once he went outside the door, he had to step through two feet of dust, concrete, and glass, and he had to run with his head up, because of falling debris and body parts.'

Shortly after the 9-11 tragedy, Engler traveled to New York to get his shoulder examined. While he was there, he looked up some of his former Giants teammates. 'It shook up a lot of emotions,' he said.

Upon returning to Madison, Engler, then 27, had to make a decision on his future. Although he had been the victim of a numbers crunch in New York, he was happy with what he had accomplished as an undrafted free agent.

His goal was to play three seasons in the NFL to qualify for his pension. He played four with the Giants, highlighted by a trip to Super Bowl XXXV. So he was very content to go in another direction.

'There would be no looking back, no turning back,' he told his wife. 'And I don't care if I get a call from another team tomorrow morning.'

Sure enough, he got that telephone call. Jacksonville coach Tom Coughlin wanted to sign him because of an injury to the Jaguars' starting center. Engler said thanks, but no thanks. A month later, he said the same thing to the Bears.

He told them his shoulder was about 70 percent and he was committed to moving on with his life. Morgan Stanley gave him that opportunity. Like any rookie in any profession, he's going through a learning stage; experiencing the requisite growing pains of a first-year financial advisor.

But he's used to bouncing back up on his feet after getting knocked down. As a player, Engler, a St. Paul, Minn., native, was a self-described late bloomer. He didn't start until his senior year at Wisconsin, making a successful transition from backup guard to starting center.

Engler earned his undergraduate degree in sociology. He also received a certificate from the criminal justice program. He has worked as a summer intern at a juvenile detention center. And he once planned on becoming a teacher.

During one of his off-seasons in New York, he even became certified to teach social studies. But he didn't follow through, though some day he would like to coach high school football. For now, he's got his hands full. This job has been quite an education.

'I had some friends, former NFL teammates, who got scammed by agents-slash-financial advisors,' Engler said.

To this end, he has become heavily involved with the National Football League Players Association and its new financial advisors program.

Over the Fourth of July, he renewed his friendship with a few of his old Badger teammates: Jerry Wunsch, Jason Maniecki and Jamie Vanderveldt. They all took part in a coaching clinic in Alaska.

Wunsch was just named this week on The Sporting News annual list of 'Good Guys.'

Wunsch helps sponsor a five-day outdoor trip in Wisconsin for 25 to 30 kids with cancer and sickle cell anemia.

Another former UW football player, Troy Vincent of the Philadelphia Eagles, made the 'Good Guys' list for his sponsorship of prep athletes.

The fact that Engler recently was in the company of Wunsch (Tampa Bay Bucs) and another good friend, Ron Stone (San Francisco 49ers), made him a little homesick. It's that time of year again. Pro training camps will be opening this weekend.

'I don't miss waking up on Monday mornings and taking a half-hour to go 10 yards to the bathroom,' Engler said.

'But the part that I miss is going through the hell with those guys because it creates a bond that you always remember. At the same time, I'm thanking God that I don't have to go through another August. That is hell. It really is.'

REDSKINS' OFFER QUESTIONED.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: Combined wire services

NEW YORK -- The NFL is investigating the Washington Redskins' offer sheet to New York Jets wide receiver Laveranues Coles, intensifying the competition for free agents between the teams.

Two football sources, both of whom requested anonymity, said the NFL is looking into whether the Redskins broke the rules by failing to promptly notify the league after reaching an agreement with Coles. On Wednesday he signed an offer sheet for $35 million over seven years.

Redskins spokesman Karl Swanson said: ``We're happy to have the NFL look into it. There is nothing improper.''

Both the NFL and the Jets declined to comment.

The Jets have until Wednesday at 4 p.m. to match the offer. Chargers: Have given Junior Seau permission to seek a trade, apparently ending the star linebacker's 13-year run as the team's leader.

Seau, a first-round draft pick in 1990, was named to his 12th Pro Bowl last season. Panthers: Running back Stephen Davis, released by Washington in a salary move, agreed to a five-year $15.5 million contract.

He ran for 820 yards and seven touchdowns last season before a shoulder injury forced him to miss the last two games of the season. Minority award: Bobby Mitchell, the team's first black player in 1962 who rose to the position of assistant general manager, said his decades in the Redskins' front office amounted to no more than an ``internship'' and showed how hard it is for black executives to advance in the NFL.

Mitchell received the first Paul ``Tank'' Younger award from the Fritz Pollard Alliance, a new group of coaches and executives promoting minority hiring in the league.

``I spent over 40 years with the Redskins, and the best I could do was an internship,'' said Mitchell. Eagles: Linebacker Nate Wayne signed a four-year contract, four days after being released by the Green Bay Packers.

среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

A hot commodity; New England defensive backs coach Eric Mangini, a former team intern, has put in long hours of hard work and become a sought-after coach.(SPORTS) - Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)

Byline: Mark Craig; Staff Writer

Jacksonville, Fla. -- New England Patriots defensive backs coach Eric Mangini is on the brink of collecting his third Super Bowl ring and touching off a potential high-stakes bidding war between the Patriots and three other NFL teams believed to have interest in him as their defensive coordinator next season.

'And to think he came to Cleveland in 1994 as a ballboy,' laughed Kevin Byrne, who was the Browns' vice president and director of public relations at the time. 'He started out at the bottom and just kept working his butt off. Just like [Patriots coach] Bill Belichick did.'

With Patriots defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel expected to take the Cleveland Browns' head coaching job after the Super Bowl, Mangini might assume control of New England's vaunted defense. Or he could leave his mentor for Cleveland, Miami or San Francisco.

Long before Mangini boosted his reputation as the guiding hand through the tumultuous Lawyer Milloy release of 2003, or became the brains behind using veteran receiver Troy Brown at cornerback this season, the young man needed a job. Any job.

'Kevin Spencer was my coach at Wesleyan University [Conn.] and he was Bill's offensive assistant in Cleveland at the time,' said Mangini, who set a school record with 36 1/2 sacks as a nose tackle. 'I called Kevin right before I graduated and asked if there was anything that I could do. I wanted a way to learn about the game.'

Mangini ended up writing a letter to Browns equipment manager Ed Carroll. It didn't hurt that Mangini went to Belichick's alma mater and belonged to the same fraternity.

Belichick said calling Mangini a former 'ballboy' is a stretch. He said he remembers Mangini more as the public relations intern in 1994.

Yes, Mangini was a public relations intern, but the 'promotion' came after a brief stint as Carroll's assistant in minicamp and training camp.

'Call it whatever you want, Eric was a ballboy,' Byrne said. 'He did the same things my kids did when they were ballboys for the Browns.'

When it appeared Mangini's days with the Browns were over, Byrne offered him the internship. Among his many duties were transcribing quotes from Belichick's press conferences and fetching pizzas for the media on Wednesdays.

'And I used to have to cut out every article about the Browns and photocopy them,' Mangini said. 'That was before the Internet. I tell our PR guys now they have it made because they just have to print the stories off the Internet.'

Shortly before Mangini's internship was scheduled to end on Jan. 31, 1995, Belichick stopped by Byrne's office.

'He said, `What are you going to do with that Eric kid?' ' Byrne said. 'I told him his internship was ending. And then he told me to tell Eric to stop by his office. Next thing I knew, Eric was an offensive assistant with the coaching staff.'

Belichick had admired Mangini because he put in long hours for what amounted to less than minimum wage, and never complained. It reminded Belichick of himself when he worked for $25 a day as a gofer for Ted Marchibroda's Baltimore Colts in 1975.

'What Bill didn't know was Eric needed the free food we had at the facility,' Byrne said. 'Eric was always there. He lived at that place.'

Actually, Mangini was sleeping on the couch in an apartment shared by Spencer and Scott Pioli, who was a Browns personnel assistant at the time and now heads the Patriots personnel department. At least until Belichick offered him the coaching job for the 1995 season.

'Bill taught me how to break down film,' Mangini said. 'If he hadn't given me that job, I was on my way to Trinity College to be the offensive line coach.'

Except for one year with the Baltimore Ravens in 1996, Mangini has followed Belichick from the Jets to the Patriots since 1997.

When injuries rocked the Patriots' secondary this season, Mangini found himself needing two new starting cornerbacks and a nickel back. Rookie free agent Randall Gay became one of the starting corners. The nickel back is Brown.

'I joked with Eric a couple of years ago that I could play defensive back,' Brown said. 'He agreed and went to Bill and sold him on it. One day, I'm at my locker, and Eric comes up to me and says, `You got some reps at DB today.' He said, `Don't worry, I'll be right beside you every step of the way.' '

Mangini is quiet and uncomfortable talking about himself. And those aren't the only similarities to Beli-chick.

'He works hard and he's got a real passion for the game,' Belichick said. 'He's a good decision-maker. He can take information, analyze it and make a decision. He has a lot of confidence, communicates well and has a good relationship with everybody he works with.'

All are traits of a good defensive coordinator. One who will never, ever have to fetch pizzas for reporters again.

'He would be a great defensive coordinator,' Brown said. 'Look who he's been around all these years. All of that stuff rubs off on you if you've been around it as long as he has.'

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

route to nfl leads brown to alternate avenue.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

Enough about the rising pro football players from around here. What about the rising pro football executives?

Hampton's Morocco Brown tried, but never got to join that first demographic after failed auditions with the Pittsburgh Steelers and in Canada. So he aggressively pursued a home in the equally competitive and exhausting front-office cauldron.

It turns out tackling NFL personnel matters rather than NFL ballcarriers can be a dream job, too.

'That's my ultimate goal, to run my own team,' said Brown, 34, a former linebacker at North Carolina State who's entering his third season as the Washington Redskins director of pro personnel.

'I didn't want to coach; too much moving, the hours are kind of crazy, not that I wouldn't have done it. But when I heard the breakdown of scouting, it just sounded intriguing. So I said let me at least beat the bushes and see what comes out of it.'

A wise choice. Then again, Brown is fast becoming known for nimble judgment as much as the persistence that founded his decade-long climb into general manager discussions.

In the beginning, Brown said he sent resumes to every NFL team 10 different times to land one internship offer, with the Indianapolis Colts. Yet last year, he interviewed for Washington's general manager's job that went to NFL long-timer Bruce Allen.

'I felt like it was a serious look, but either way I chalk that up to experience,' said Brown, a Kecoughtan High grad - his brother coaches basketball at Mount St. Mary's - who was recently home to help at a Peninsula youth football camp.

'I got to see how that process worked. But what I've found is if you just keep working and you do your job well, people will find you. You don't have to self-promote, just do your work. So before I start talking about GM this or GM that, I need to just master being a pro director first.'

Brown got here by turning contacts into a Redskins internship in '99 and then initiative into a promising slot as the Chicago Bears assistant director of pro personnel in 2001. Seven seasons of tooth-cutting in Chicago bought Brown's ticket back to Washington in '08 to oversee the evaluation, essentially, of every North American pro on two legs.

That is, if a guy's cashing a check from playing football - and even if he recently used to -- Brown and his staff of two scouts and a couple of interns better have a full report on him within a mouse-click of Allen and head coach Mike Shanahan.

Brown, whose big future has been endorsed by former colleagues in Chicago and Washington, doesn't make final calls on which elite free agents to chase to which practice squadders to pluck away from other teams to which unemployed tight ends to bring in for emergency workouts.

But those decisions are built on Brown's collected bodies of evidence. That requires a confident eye for detail, and pretty much more hours than are presently in a day.

'It's a ton of work,' said Brown, who will personally scout all the preseason games of the Dallas Cowboys, Washington's opening opponent. During the regular season, Brown has NFC East foes the week before they play the Redskins; his staff will appraise the rosters of every other team.

Printed reports on the pending opponent will land on every important desk at Redskins Park every Tuesday morning. And so far, Brown's insights have been valid enough that he's been left to grind away uninterrupted through the powerful Allen-Shanahan transition.

'Over time, they're gonna know whether you know enough, and if you don't, you know you won't be there,' Brown said. 'They're not gonna triple-check every free-agent list I come up with. But you better believe if somebody's missing off there they'll be like, 'What about Karlos Dansby, how come he's not on here?' 'Oh, I forgot ...'

Brown laughed at that shudder-worthy thought.

'Uh, no, you can't do that,' Brown said.

'I don't know if people understand the inner workings of the NFL, and how you do a roster and keep up with the turnover, but it's like a machine, and everybody has their part to do. You really just have to put the blinders on and go do what you have to do.'

понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

NFL future gets brighter for undrafted players.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

From staff reports

BLACKSBURG

The end of the NFL lockout has been good for several former Virginia Tech players, perhaps none more so than running back Darren Evans.

After leaving school early to pursue his pro dream, Evans went undrafted in April and then had to wait three long months for the NFL's players and owners to finish negotiating so he could be signed as a free agent. But the wait turned out to be more than worth it Tuesday when Evans' hometown team, the Indianapolis Colts, picked him up.

Evans has been living and training in Indianapolis, where he rushed for 7,220 yards and 127 touchdowns at Warren Central High. His parents, both of whom have battled serious health problems in the past year, and Evans' pregnant wife and son also live in the city.

'Never been more proud to be from Indianapolis,' Evans wrote on Twitter after his signing. 'I'll take the hometown kid title and run wild.'

Evans, a 6-foot, 227-pound power back who rushed for 2,119 yards and 22 touchdowns in two seasons at Tech,

was one of the eight former Hokies who signed as undrafted free agents by the end of the day, including two defensive linemen - end Steven Friday and tackle John Graves - who are joining the Houston Texans. That franchise also drafted Tech cornerback Rashad Carmichael and already had former Hokies offensive tackle Duane Brown and linebacker Xavier Adibi on the roster.

With 11 players either drafted or signed as free agents, Virginia Tech will have 35 of its former players in NFL camps.

Norfolk State offensive lineman and Indian River graduate Calton Ford said he signed a free agent contract with the Cleveland Browns, where he hopes his versatility will pay off and get him a job as a backup.

Ford has good size at 6-4, 320 pounds, and played both right tackle and left guard last season.

It's assumed the lack of offseason work will hurt rookie free agents, but Ford was still excited about his chance.

'You don't have the OTAs and other things,' Ford said. 'You have to come in and catch on really fast, impress them really fast. But it's a great opportunity.'

Ford spent the summer working out at Norfolk State, and was helping coach at his former high school. He said he took the call from his agent in the middle of the coaching staff's morning meeting and then, after he got off the phone in the evening, he drove to ODU to help the Braves out with a team camp.

Meanwhile, NSU running back Donovan Cotton found a different way to the NFL.

The former walk-on landed an internship in the Green Bay Packers scouting department. Cotton, the only intern in the group, will take a one-month crash course in scouting at the team's training camp, where the Packers will teach him their grading system and what they look for in players.

Cotton said the team would use him to analyze both its players and members of the upcoming draft class.

'They said you'll actually be doing the work, not just getting coffee,' Cotton said

.

Old Dominion defensive end Deron Mayo has agreed to terms and is expected to sign a free-agent contract today with the Denver Broncos.

The 5-foot-11, 220-pound Mayo, younger brother of New England Patriots linebacker Jerod Mayo, is expected to move to linebacker with the Broncos and hopes to impress the coaching staff with his special teams play.

Although he is small by NFL standards, Mayo said earlier this summer that he hopes people look beyond that and judge him by his production.

'People like (Denver's) Elvis Dumervil and (Pittsburgh's) James Harrison definitely give me hope,' Mayo said. 'I'm 5-11. I look at people like that and it gives me a lot of motivation. It's all about learning the game. I feel I can rush the passer from the edge. It's just a matter of a coach or a team taking a chance on me, which I know will pay off.'

Less than 24 hours after end of the labor dispute, U.Va.'s Danny Aiken was packing for a trip to Buffalo.

Aiken, a deep snapper for the past four seasons, had agreed overnight to a contract offer from the Bills.

The Bills have a returning snapper, third-year pro Garrison Sanborn from Florida State, who has played in 16 games in each of the past two seasons.

'I don't know much, other than I'm going in and competing with him,' said Aiken, who was the only snapper to participate in the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. 'He's obviously a pro-caliber snapper because he's been there. It would be the same anywhere else.'

Two of undrafted Aiken's U.Va. teammates also agreed to terms, defensive end Zane Parr with Houston and wide receiver Dontrelle Inman with Jacksonville.

Fullback Kevin Gidrey, a former Kempsville High standout who played last season at South Florida, tweeted that he'd reached a deal with the Washington Redskins.

James Madison's Ronnell Brown, a 6-2, 270-pound defensive tackle out of Hickory High, agreed to terms with Denver.

- Rich Radford, Kyle Tucker, Chris Carlson and the Roanoke Times contributed to this report

CAPTION(S):

Courtesy of JMU athletics

воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

TALKIN' A GOOD GAME; HOOP STARS GET SCHOOLED IN BROADCASTING.(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: Mike Waters Staff writer

Chris Duhon spent Monday and Tuesday preparing for his future.

Duhon played for the New York Knicks last season, his sixth in the NBA, and averaged 7.4 points and 5.6 assists. The 28-year-old Duke graduate recently signed a 4-year, $15 million contract with the Orlando Magic.

But his preparation had nothing to do with the Magic. Duhon's focus was fixed well into the future, when his still-burgeoning playing career is over.

This week Duhon joined four other NBA players in Sportscaster U, a program that develops members of the National Basketball Players Association for a career in broadcasting. The three-day crash course takes place at Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications under the director of SU adjunct professors Dave Ryan and Matt Park.

'You never know when your playing career will be over,' Duhon said during a break on Tuesday. 'One of my best friends is Jason Williams.'

Williams, the former Duke star, had his NBA career ended when he suffered serious injuries in a motorcycle accident.

'I was always taught to be prepared,' Duhon said. 'My main focus right now is on basketball and getting better, but you have to be concerned about the future, too.'

In just its third year, the Sportscaster U program already has a list of successful alumni.

Last year's class consisted of six NBA players. Three continued their playing careers this past season. The other three were Malik Rose, Donyell Marshall and Brevin Knight. Marshall became a studio analyst on the Philadelphia 76ers' pregame and postgame shows. Knight joined the Charlotte Bobcats radio team. And Rose spent the 2009-10 season doing radio work for the NBDL's Austin franchise, while also becoming part of the MSG network's studio crew.

Eric Show, a member of Sportscaster U's inaugural class in 2008, is now a fixture on NBA TV.

Joining Duhon in this year's class are Steven Hunter, Gary Trent, Antonio Daniels and Pat Burke.

'The program is going great,' said Rich Rinaldi, the NBA Players Association's liaison to Sportscaster U. 'The key is they all want to be here. They're very engaged. They've made the effort to be here and they obviously care about life after basketball.'

Daniels, a 12-year NBA veteran who is a free agent this summer, called Sportscaster U an eye-opening experience.

'It's been harder than I expected,' Daniels said. 'I had no idea what went into the production aspect of a broadcast. The homework. The preparation. The timing. Learning how to multi-task. Listening to a person's voice in your ear, while you look at the camera and talk like you're not being spoken to.'

Duhon said he's gained respect for the former NBA players who have become successful television analysts.

'You see guys like Jalen Rose, Mark Jackson and Tim Legler and they make it look so easy,' Duhon said. 'It's definitely harder than what you think. You think it would be easy because we're talking about basketball, which is what we've always done, but when the camera comes on and you have a set amount of time to get your thought across, it's definitely hard.'

The curriculum at Sportscaster U consists of studio shows, production meetings, on-court demonstrations of the kind seen frequently on ESPN's College GameDay and doing an actual game broadcast. This year's players/students will get to broadcast Game 7 of the 2010 NBA Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Boston Celtics. ESPN senior coordinating producer Gerry Matalon will speak to the class and offer one-on-one evaluations.

Ryan, a former ESPN announcer who now works for the CBS College Sports Network, said the ones who can tap into their experience and work ethic as players usually make the best students.

'They're used to being coached,' Ryan said. 'They're used to watching themselves on film and critiquing their performance. They've been doing that all their lives. So, even in this environment, they're very coachable and more than willing to work.'

The NBPA has established similar programs for coaching and business. Two years ago, Daniels got a coaching internship through the players association.

'This sends me in another direction,' Daniels said of Sportscaster U. 'I think it's important to plan for the future and have an idea of what you want to do after basketball. The best way you can get there is to experience it for yourself. This is a great experience.'

Mike Waters can be reached at 470-3086 or mwaters@syracuse.com.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

Clay Willis / The Post-Standard

MATT PARK (center), an adjunct professor at SU, discusses broadcasting methods with former NBA center Pat Burke (left) and former NBA forward Gary Trent at the Melo Center on Tuesday.

Clay Willis / The Post-Standard

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

PRO PLAN IN PLACE FOR TULSA'S `STACY P'.(Sports) - Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Byline: DAN RALEY P-I reporter

AUBURN -- She's far down the leaderboard, two holes spoiling her otherwise pinpoint play. Just one agent has called in recent months, inquiring about her future plans. Her gallery at Washington National Golf Club starts and ends with her parents, in from Enid, Okla.

Yet Tulsa's Stacy Prammanasudh always has made the most of what she has.

Once the NCAAs end, she will turn pro without fanfare. No news conference, podium or entourage. In two weeks, she'll simply show up and tee off in a Futures Tour event in Decatur, Ill.

Prammanasudh will approach the next stage of her golf career with little more than the will to succeed. So far, this method has worked just fine for a golfer simply known as Stacy P.

She was raised on the very public Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Enid, a basketball town in the heart of football country. Before heading to the NBA, Mark and Brent Price grew up there.

Her father, Lou, is a factory worker, a machinist, originally from Thailand; her mother, Brenda, is a Kmart layaway clerk. They're a hard-working family without the frills.

There were no country club memberships, no Leadbetter Academy sojourns paving the way for this golf career to flourish. Just good old-fashioned grit.

'I work labor,' Lou Prammanasudh said while trailing behind his daughter during the second round. 'We didn't have the money to send her to college.'

Golf got her there. Today, Prammanasudh is an internship away from graduation with a degree in sports medicine and exercise sciences, her Tulsa education paid for by her natural ability to hit a little white ball. She has a 3.88 grade point average. She has won 10 collegiate tournaments, fifth best all-time among NCAA women golfers.

About all she hasn't done is lay claim to a NCAA title, her rounds of 76 and 72 dulling those possibilities, leaving her nine strokes behind. However, she doesn't act like it's over.

'It would complete a good college career,' Prammanasudh said. 'But if I don't win, there's lots out there.'

No one will deny her anything. She hails from the same school that produced Nancy Lopez, and naturally has drawn favorable comparisons to the LPGA Hall of Fame player.

'They both have this attitude, which is common sense, but not a lot of people seem to know it, that golf is not perfect and you have to make the most of your mistakes,' said former Tulsa coach Dale McNamara, who recruited both golfers. 'Nancy was wonderful at this. So is Stacy. They both keep their cool.'

Prammanasudh worries about paying for her early pro efforts. Funny, no one else does.

'In her second year at college, she said, `I want to be on my own, live by myself, support myself; I don't want your money, I'll work in the summer,'' Lou Prammanasudh recounted. 'I said, `I'll put the money aside in case you fall.' She hasn't touched it yet.'

HOST TEAM: Washington had three of its five players shoot lower scores in the second round, one significantly better, but the Huskies still weren't happy. Their 9-over-par 599 total left them tied for 13th with Tulsa.

UW coach Mary Lou Mulflur says her team belongs in the top 10 and, because of the home-course advantage at Washington National, she had viewed the Huskies as possible contenders.

'You can't win with one player playing well,' Mulflur said. 'Mentally, we just don't handle things very well. We had it going at one point and really let it get away from us. It's frustrating. I know they're frustrated, too.'

Freshman Paige Mackenzie shot 2-under 70, six lower than her first round. She nearly aced the 16th hole. Using a 9-wood on the 178-yard hole, the Yakima native rimmed the cup with her tee shot, leaving it 18 inches away for a tap-in birdie.

'I had just bogeyed the previous two holes, so I needed a boost coming in,' she said.

Said Mulflur of Mackenzie, 'She's very, very talented. She's certainly one of the best players to come out of the state in a long, long time.'

Louise Friberg shot 76, a three-stroke improvement, and Kelli Kamimura shot 77, six better than her first round. Michelle Grafos posted another 74, while Lindsay Morgan had a notable falloff, shooting 80, seven worse than her opening round.

'We certainly thought we could win on our own golf course,' Mulflur said. 'Now we'll have to re-evaluate.'

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

SOSA'S 500TH HOMER BALL UP FOR AUCTION.(Sports) - The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH)

Byline: Joe Kay Associated Press

The college student who caught the baseball Sammy Sosa hit for his 500th home run is putting it up for auction.

MastroNet Inc. of Chicago will take bids on the ball starting Aug. 11. The auction house has set a minimum bid of $20,000, but expects the ball to go for many times that amount.

President Doug Allen doubts that Sosa's suspension for using a corked bat will drive down the value of the ball.

The Cubs outfielder hit No. 500 at Great American Ball Park on April 4. Sosa's homers came under suspicion after cork was found in his cracked bat on June 3.

'I think you'd have to be naive to say there's no impact at all,' Allen said Wednesday in a telephone interview. 'That impact is offset by a couple of things. He's come back so strong. Second, he's still a player that's loved by fans. I don't think anybody's going to question his significance in the history of baseball.'

Sosa became the 18th player to reach 500 homers when he connected off reliever Scott Sullivan in the seventh inning of the Reds' 10-9 win. His bat was sent to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, and was among five that were later tested for cork and found to be clean.

Zach Kirk, 22, of St. Louis, was in the right field stands with his girlfriend and got the 500th homer ball, which deflected off several sets of hands and came to rest at his feet.

Kirk is a Cardinals fan and considered giving the ball to Sosa, reminded of how a grounds crew member returned Mark McGwire's 62nd home run ball after he broke the season record in 1998.

After thinking it over, Kirk decided to put it up for auction to pay for his college education. A senior at Missouri, he plans to become a high school teacher and soccer coach.

'I decided after talking it over with my parents,' Kirk said Wednesday in a phone interview from St. Louis. 'They were a big influence on why I decided to sell it.'

Kirk went to the Reds game at the urging of his girlfriend, Jessica Shull, who lives in suburban Cincinnati and attends Miami University in nearby Oxford. They wanted to see the Reds' new ballpark.

Sosa's 500th homer wasn't a consideration when she got the tickets. She picked right field hoping that Adam Dunn or Ken Griffey Jr. would hit a homer there.

Kirk, who is working this the summer as a tour guide at the Anheuser-Busch brewery in St. Louis, got an education in finding an agent and then an auction house for the 500th homer ball.

'It's been almost like an internship in itself this summer in how sports collectibles work,' he said. 'I've taken the attitude to enjoy it and have fun with it. It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I've been treated like an athlete without actually being an athlete.'

CAPTION(S):

MELVIN GRIER/Post file photo

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

PROFILE: Harris' world of PR experience fits the Ducks' bill.(biography of Charles Harris, PR agent for the Anaheim Mighty Ducks) - PR Week (US)

With a PR career that has taken him from southern California to Israel and back, Charles Harris proves that sometimes the most fruitful journeys land you where it all began. Gideon Fidelzeid reports.

'You only live once. In that time, you should always be evolving,' professes Charles Harris, director of publicity, community development, and synergy for the NHL's Anaheim Mighty Ducks. With a career that's seen him hold top jobs at two SoCal pro sports teams, with the launch of his own firm in Israel sandwiched in between, Harris, 37, practices what he preaches.

The man who has helmed the Ducks' PR for just over a year puts landing his present job down to good fortune and great timing. The club was celebrating its 10th anniversary, and would advance to the Stanley Cup Finals.

'I've always sought newly created positions where I could really make my mark,' says Harris. The first such imprint was at his alma mater, UC-Irvine. As an ambitious freshman, Harris went to the school's sports and information director (SID) and created his own internship. ('Someone said I could work in sports and get paid,' Harris remembers. 'Sign me up.') Upon graduation, he became the assistant SID. One year later, he launched the university's sports marketing and promotions department.

In the process, Harris caught the eye of the LA Dodgers, who in 1991 made him, at 25, their assistant director of publicity - a dream gig for a baseball fan. For three years, Harris learned sports marketing's ins and outs, but something was missing. He'd find it after the '93 season.

Following the team's Far East exhibition tour, Harris visited Israel.

'I saw an abundance of brainpower there,' he recalls. 'So many people making great contributions in business, medicine, and culture. But they couldn't market themselves. I saw opportunity.'

With a baseball strike imminent as the 1994 season began, Harris traded in his Dodger blue for the land of milk of honey. He gave himself six months to learn a language he didn't speak and develop contacts without knowing a soul.

After two months in a four-hour-a-day Hebrew course, surrounded mostly by Russian immigrants and Arab citizens who spoke no English - 'the best way to learn Hebrew quickly,' he advises - Harris had become fluent enough to convince a small Jerusalem PR firm to give him some projects. His name got out there, and his half-year experiment would become a new life.

Two years as an SAE at Charles Levine Communications cemented Harris' standing. He was ready to scratch that entrepreneurial itch in May 1996, and Coast 2 Coast Communications was born, with a focus on guiding nascent, fast-growing Israeli tech companies targeting the US and European markets.

Soon thereafter, an influx of US government agencies came over on trade missions to convince Israeli companies to move to America. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, then governor of Pennsylvania, was among the top visiting delegates who sought assistance with the Hebrew-speaking media contingent based in Jerusalem.

With a client list that included Ridge and Major League Baseball (for which Harris secured the Middle East rights), this one-person operation grew to a nine-person staff over a five-year period, and revenue grew at least 50% over each of the next five years.

Harris had surpassed his aspirations and decided to return to the US. A deal to sell his firm was nearing completion. He was negotiating with a large US PR agency looking for someone to launch an Orange County outpost.

On September 5, 2001, he came home. Six days later, terrorists scotched all those plans.

All offers went by the wayside. It took eight months before Harris was courted heavily again. The two most intriguing suitors were a California-based tech PR firm and the Ducks. His skepticism over the tech industry's ability to turn around quickly made his decision easy.

The Ducks wanted one individual to direct both publicity and community development, as well as the website and alumni association, and they wanted a proactive person. With his sports and agency experience, Harris fit their needs.

'In sports PR,' says Harris, 'you're so busy reacting to media needs, you have little time to think strategically. Having owned my own agency, I understood branding, messaging, and the like.'

Among the projects Harris initiated was a Ducks-branded postcard supporting the US military. When the war in Iraq began, the team offered Ducks fans postcards they could send to US troops in the Middle East.

Another project Harris proudly cites relates to the Ducks' home arena, The Arrowhead Pond. The team has called that building home since its 1993 inception, but there were no highway signs or billboards signifying its presence. After eight months of lobbying, Harris secured freeway signage in eight places.

'Charles is always thinking and anticipating,' notes Tim Ryan, GM of The Pond. 'Sometimes in marketing, gut feelings prompt appropriate action. His unique combination of global and local experience gives him, and the Ducks, every reason to trust his instincts.'

Harris faces an interesting second year. The Ducks are coming off that fantastic playoff run. On the flip side, the league's collective bargaining agreement expires after next season, and the prevailing sentiment holds that a work stoppage is unavoidable. As is often the case in pro sports, there are a litany of factors out of the PR staff's control.

'I can't get consumed by that,' offers Harris. 'I must focus on how the Ducks can penetrate a region that, despite our recent success, isn't a traditional hockey hotbed. Aggressive PR is the only way.

'In my experience,' adds Harris, 'I'd say most pro sports teams don't have clipping services or specific media kits for office functions. They don't do the basic X, Y, and Zs of proactive PR. We will, because, quite frankly, we must. Good thing I'm a type-A personality.'

A team will enjoy its greatest success when its best players rise to the forefront and lead. The Ducks certainly did that on the ice this past season. With Harris' guidance, the team is counting on similar success in the PR arena.

CHARLES HARRIS

2002-present

Anaheim Mighty Ducks, director of publicity, community development, and synergy

2001-2002

Dual Graphics, SAE

1996-2001

Coast 2 Coast Communications (Israel), founder and president

1994-1996

Charles Levine Comms. (Israel), SAE

1991-1994

LA Dodgers, assistant director of publicity

1987-1991

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

UW: REEBOK'S SHOE FITS ATHLETIC BOARD APPROVES DEAL.(Sports) - The Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI)

Barring a major upset next month, the University of Wisconsin will become business partners with Reebok starting this fall.

The UW Athletic Board gave formal approval to the five-year, $7.91 million deal Friday, two days after its members voted to support it pending a couple modifications.

Those alterations were addressed between the two legal teams Thursday. According to Athletic Board chairman Jim Hoyt, a telephone poll of board members was completed Friday afternoon.

``Everything has been approved on both sides,'' Hoyt said.

All that is standing in the way of implementation is approval from the Board of Regents, which will consider the contract at its meeting June 6-7 in Milwaukee.

Given the financial ramifications -- not only does the athletic department expect to net at least $2 million over the term of the contract, a $457,800 slice of the benefit pie would go to the chancellor's scholarship fund -- it would seem unlikely the Regents would sideswipe it.

Reebok, the second-largest athletic footwear and apparel company in the world, would outfit all 22 men's and women's sports beginning in the fall. In addition, it would provide cash for scholarships, internships, computers and other perks.

In exchange, the company would have an exclusive license to produce replicas of team uniforms and sideline apparel. It also would have access to advertising space, tickets and parking for all Wisconsin sports.

At its meeting Wednesday, the Athletic Board asked that four areas be revised, two of which prompted considerable debate.

One dealt with a no-disparagement clause against the school that called for ``reasonable'' steps to ``address'' derogatory comments made by ``any university employee, agent or representative.''

Reebok officials agreed to have a sentence added that said: ``Nothing herein is intended to abridge the rights of students, faculty or employees to express a personal or individual opinion.''

The other major issue related to Reebok and its international human rights policies. The company, which has been criticized for its involvement with unscrupulous overseas suppliers, included a copy of its human rights ideals in the contract.

Board members wanted to make sure the policy was officially tied to the agreement, prompting an addendum that read: ``There is an expectation between the parties that this policy will be adhered to during the term of this agreement.''

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

Sportscaster U; Basketball Players Prepare for Careers in Broadcasting.(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: Mike Waters Staff writer

Of all the things Samaki Walker had to worry about as he attempted to tape a segment on the Philadelphia 76ersAE signing of free agent Elton Brand, the last thing he expected to deal with was an overly efficient air conditioner.

As Walker, a 10-year NBA veteran, projected energetically with his hands, the air conditioner fluttered the pages on the desk in front of him. Finally, a camera-man offered a pen to hold down the papers.

Welcome to Sportscaster U.

Walker, along with current NBA players Eric Snow of the Cleveland Cavaliers, Casey Jacobsen of the Memphis Grizzlies and Adrian Griffin of Seattle/Oklahoma City represent Sportscaster UAEs first graduating class. The four players have come to Syracuse University to take part in a mini-broadcasting camp with the goal of turning their experiences here into a career.

oMy interest started when I was a freshman at Stanford,o said Jacobsen, who just finished his fourth year in the NBA. oI love talking about sports. I could do it for hours, but itAEs different in front of a camera.o

The National Basketball Players Association came up with the idea of Sportscaster U to help NBA players interested in broadcasting learn more about the industry. The NBPA brought the idea to Syracuse University where the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications has produced the likes of Bob Costas, Sean McDonough and Mike Tirico.

ESPN play-by-play announcer Dave Ryan and Syracuse radio play-by-play announcer Matt Park, both adjunct professors at SU, put together the program, which seems like a crash course in sports broadcasting.

Most of the players arrived in Syracuse on Sunday. They toured Alliance Bank Stadium and taped a mock report from the ballpark after the Syracuse Chiefs game was rained out. On Monday, the players got a taste of studio work, taped a segment opining about the 76ersAE signing of Brand and ran through an NBA pre-game show. The course will wrap up today with each player taking part in a broadcast of Game 6 from the 2008 NBA Finals.

oTheyAEre going to leave here with their heads spinning,o Park said. oWeAEre putting so much into about two full days.o

As Walker taped his segment, Jeff Lamp and Debbie Rothstein of the NBPA sat in the back of the studio. Lamp said Sportscaster U is part of the players associationAEs program to help players transition out of the league. Two years ago, the NBPA developed a mini-MBA business program at Stanford. There is also a coaching internship program.

Sportscasting, said Lamp, is a natural career move for many athletes.

oWhen we get feedback from players on their post-career interests,o Lamp said, obroadcastingAEs always at or near the top of the list.o

The sportscasting school took a real career spin when Laurie Orlando, ESPNAEs senior vice president for talent development (i.e. she could hire one of these guys), made a guest appearance. The players will all receive a DVD of their work to help them attract jobs in the future.

Park said he expects Sportscaster U to grow in the coming years.

oI think it has a lot of legs,o Park said. oBut we have to do it first to see it work and then build on it.o

Snow, who has spent 13 seasons in the NBA, said he had been a guest on studio shows and post-game shows, but Sportscaster U was giving him a deeper look at broadcasting.

oWhen youAEre just a guest, itAEs made to be as easy as possible,o Snow said. oWhereas here, theyAEre trying to teach you the whole aspect.o

In his solo shot behind the anchorAEs desk, Walker stumbled a few times before getting it right. Par for the course, said Ryan, who served as the segmentAEs producer.

oItAEs been tough,o Jacobsen said, onot that I was expecting it to be easy.o

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

Li-Hua Lan/The Post-Standard

NBA PLAYER Adrian Griffin (left) gets instruction from ESPN announcer Dave Ryan Sunday at Alliance Bank Stadium. Griffin is one of four basketball players participating in a three-day program with the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

Li-Hua Lan/The Post-Standard

MATT PARK (right), a Syracuse University radio play-by-play announcer, gives some tips on sportscasting to NBA player Casey Jacobsen on Sunday at Alliance Bank Stadium. Jacobsen plays for the Memphis Grizzlies.

Li-Hua Lan/The Post-Standard

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

GUESS WHO'S BEHIND MAD AVE'S LATEST STARTUP? NASH TEAMS WITH DEUTSCH'S DUDA; Consultancy Consigliere will work with entrepreneurs in sports, e-commerce and durables.(NEWS)(Madison Avenue Inc.) - Advertising Age

Byline: RUPAL PAREKH

The latest venture sprouting forth from Madison Avenue is a marketing consultancy armed with a $20 million investment fund to take stakes in start-up companies. But beyond its bankroll, the firm has serious drawing power at the helm: Phoenix Suns basketball star Steve Nash and a widely respected agency executive, Deutsch's Michael Duda.

The company, dubbed Consigliere (insert your 'Godfather impersonations here), wants entrepreneurs to consider marketing not as an afterthought, but as a strategic part of the growth process. It'll focus on investing in budding firms in only a few sectors, such as e-commerce, sports and durables. Among the backers Consigliere has nabbed already are New York-based venture capital fund Zig Capital, Interpublic Group of Cos.' Deutsch and its chairman, and sometime TV personality Donny Deutsch.

After carefully studying the venture-capital world and pressure-testing his idea with potential partners, Mr. Duda, Deutsch's chief corporate-strategy officer, last summer presented his idea to Mr. Nash. The two became friends in 2007 after the NBA star and his marketing agent, Bill Sanders of BDA Sports, came to Deutsch's New York office with a special two-week marketing project.

Mr. Nash took to visiting the agency regularly, sitting in on creative department meetings and probing staffers with questions about the ad business. His interest grew to the point that in 2008 he took a three-month unpaid internship (after all, how much do you pay a two-time NBA most valuable player?) at Deutsch's Manhattan office, even dabbling in creative work for clients, including an interactive project for Anheuser-Busch.

While the idea behind Consigliere was fully Mr. Duda's, Mr. Nash, who is considered one of basketball's most gifted playmakers, also knows a thing or two about sketching out business plans and raising funds, thanks to a healthy realization that after 14 years in the NBA, he needs to build a life after basketball

'I realize I'm not going to play basketball forever, said Mr. Nash, who spoke to Ad Age on two occasions about his involvement in Consigliere. 'But I want to learn, grow, do something creative. I don't want to be stuck after basketball going, 'What's going to give me life now?' I wanted to give myself options to do the things I love so when I'm done playing, I don't have to be a coach or a broadcaster.

NOT THE FIRST, BUT THE MOST HANDS-ON

So far, that life is shaping up to be busy. He owns Meathawk, a film-production company that produced creative projects for Vitamin Water and Nike and is working on a documentary about Pele, one of the greats of Mr. Nash's second-favorite sport, soccer. He also owns a chain of gyms, a vitamin company and a social-media company, Apoko, which aims to help celebrities and athletes better connect with their fans on Facebook or Twitter.

With Consigliere, 'It appeared there was a great opportunity to construct something new in the marketing space, Mr. Nash said. 'To have an agency background and capabilities and merge that with private equity makes a lot of sense.

Mr. Nash isn't the only NBA star to launch a marketing consultancy; Kobe Bryant has Zambezi Ink and LeBron James has LRMR Marketing. But Mr. Nash is committed to spending time on this venture. 'The ones where you build a company from the ground up, like Consigliere, take a lot of love. Asked how much time he can realistically devote to the venture in between games and in the off-season, he said, 'I'm going to spend hours on it every weekI don't know if that's three or 20, but some weeks it will be a full-time job.

Said Mr. Duda: 'Steve weighing in kept me in check, because he's the one who championed the power of creativity otherwise it was headed to be more of a brand-brokering venture-capital unit. It was a reminder from someone outside the agency space to reiterate how valuable that is.

Messrs. Duda and Nash have tapped Zig's Andrew Mitchell as their chief investment officer and are bringing on a handful of others with data strategy, brand-planning and financial analysis skills. It promises to be a lean operationfewer than 10 peoplefor which Mr. Duda is eyeing office space in downtown Manhattan.

Consigliere is betting on a trend in the VC world that has seen little guys get a leg up on the big ones. By some estimates, less than a quarter of all funds raised last year were less than $100 million, and lowered technology costs are making it easier for start-ups to get off the ground. Given the size of Consigliere's fund, it won't invest in every company it consults with and won't buy start-ups outright, but will take minority and, in some cases, majority stakes in the firms.

'We think it is innovative and exciting but better served outside of Deutsch, as it is not our model, Deutsch CEO Linda Sawyer, who will sit on an advisory board for Consigliere, told Ad Age. 'The beauty of our alignment is Mike benefits from our investment in Consigliere and the ability to tap into our resources and our people get to play in this space and work on businesses at their inception stage. Mike's an entrepreneur at heart, and we encouraged him to explore his passions on a new stage.

Deutsch will potentially reap the benefits of being an early ad adviser to the next Monster.com or Expedias of the world. At the same time, Mr. Duda's departure does mean Deutsch needs to quickly find a replacement new-business leader. As one industry consultant put it, the New York office needs a 'big hit after having losing high-profile accounts such as Ikea and Tylenol this year.

WHAT MAKES THEM STAND OUT

One person who thinks Consigliere will be a slam dunk is Kent Goldman, a principal in San Francisco at First Round Capital who's met with both Mr. Duda and Mr. Nash. 'I think I'll be reaching out to Consigliere quite a bit [for potential business partnerships].

'What really stands out about Mike is his understanding of brand and consumer business, said Mr. Goldman. 'I don't want to downplay the importance of having good technology, but we're moving to a world where tech is moving more and more to commodity infrastructure, and what distinguishes these companies is how they distinguish their brand.

As for Mr. Nash? 'If you look at the way he's built his own brand, he's an entrepreneur and as a basketball icon, he's in the center of pop culture, experiencing trends and, quite frankly, setting trends, said Mr. Goldman.

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

BEARS NARROW GM SEARCH.(SPORTS) - The Capital Times

The Chicago Bears' search for a general manager is down to three names. The three finalists are Tampa Bay vice president of player personnel Jerry Angelo, Baltimore Ravens pro personnel director James Harris, and Denver Broncos collegiate scouting director Ted Sundquist. Bears president Ted Phillips plans to interview the three again this week and hopes to make a decision by June 13.

Tom Modrak, former Philadelphia Eagles director of football operations, was thought to be the frontrunner for the job. But on Monday Modrak told Phillips he didn't think he was the right fit for the job.

Every day will be take your child to work day this summer for Green Bay Packers general manager and head coach Mike Sherman. The Packers hired his eldest daughter, Sarah, 18, for a 12-week internship in the team's public relations department.

She will scour newspapers each day, clipping Packers- and NFL-related articles before starting as a journalism major at Marquette University in the fall.

Sherman said having his daughter nearby will be more than just training.

'Very seldom do you have a chance to be with your son or daughter in a situation like this,' he said. 'She's going off to college, and I'm going to miss her because she was always there for me when I came home late at night and would be waiting up for me.'

The assistant of indicted sports agent Tank Black was sentenced Monday to six months' house arrest for helping pay former University of Florida football players while they were still students and defraud NFL players of millions of dollars. U.S. District Judge Stephan Mickle also sentenced former sports recruiter Alfred 'Tweet' Twitty, 31, to five years' probation and fined him $5,000. Twitty's six months' home confinement was to include electronic monitoring, the judge ordered.

Denver waived veteran defensive lineman Lester Archambeau, who spent one year with the Broncos after seven seasons at Atlanta and three with Green Bay.

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

Thursday's Sports In Brief - AP Online

The Associated Press
AP Online
12-18-1998
NEW YORK (AP) _ With all the big-name free agents signed, teams turned their attention to second-tier pitchers.

The Pittsburgh Pirates agreed to a $4 million, two-year contract with Pete Schourek, and the Baltimore Orioles agreed to a two-year deal with Xavier Hernandez worth about $2.5 million.

Schourek, a 29-year-old left-hander, spent last season with Houston and Boston, going 7-6 with a 4.50 ERA in 15 starts for the Astros and 1-3 with a 4.30 ERA in 10 appearances for the Red Sox.

Hernandez, 33, made 46 relief appearances for Texas, going 6-6 with one save and a 3.57 ERA. Also, the Orioles agreed to a minor league contract with right-hander Doug Linton, and said they reached a tentative agreement with right-hander Ricky Bones.

Among players eligible for salary arbitration, Detroit right-hander Brian Moehler agreed to a $4.7 million, three-year contract; New York Mets backup catcher Todd Pratt agreed to a $350,000, one-year deal; San Francisco shortstop Rich Aurilia agreed to a $2 million, two-year contract; Toronto right-hander Bill Risley agreed to a $575,000, one-year contract; and Chicago Cubs infielder Manny Alexander agreed to a one-year deal.

Meanwhile, New York Yankees outfielder Darryl Strawberry withdrew his free-agent filing as part of a complicated process that will end up with him agreeing to a minor league contract.

As a result, if he is not recovered from colon cancer surgery by opening day and starts the season either in the minor leagues or on a minor league disabled list, his $2.5 million salary will not count in the Yankees' payroll, and thus will lower the team's luxury tax bill for 1999. FOOTBALL

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - With the Carolina Panthers quickly going from one of the NFL's promising teams to one of its worst, Dom Capers reportedly will be fired at the end of the season.

Owner Jerry Richardson, who has not granted interviews in six months, is not saying if he plans to get rid of the coach whose team played for the NFC title two years ago but is 2-12 this season. Four newspapers, all quoting unidentified sources, reported that Capers will not return.

One coach who definitely won't be back is assistant Kevin Steele, who told the team he's leaving to take the head coaching job at Baylor. Linebacker Kevin Greene attacked Steele on the sideline during Sunday's game, but Steele had interviewed for the Baylor job before the scuffle.

ATLANTA (AP) - Atlanta Falcons coach Dan Reeves was expected to be released from the hospital today, four days after quadruple bypass surgery.

Reeves, 54, will miss the last two games of the regular season, but expects to return for the playoffs. The Falcons (12-2) can clinch the NFC West title Sunday with a victory over Detroit.

CHICAGO (AP) - Former Northwestern receiver Michael Senters pleaded innocent and denied lying to federal grand juries investigating sports betting at the school.

Senters, was one of four former players charged this month, is accused of lying about a $500 bet he is said to have placed on a 1994 game between Northwestern and Ohio State, a game in which he played. OLYMPICS

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The Justice Department is weighing whether it needs to investigate allegations of bribery in the awarding of the 2002 Olympics.

Meanwhile, Salt Lake City officials acknowledged giving a paid internship to the son of an International Olympic Committee member.

Last week, the Salt Lake committee of civic leaders that successfully bid for the 2002 Winter Games said it spent $400,000 on scholarships for 13 student-athletes - six of them relatives of IOC members.

In Washington, Attorney General Janet Reno said the Justice Department's criminal division is considering a formal probe into the allegations. Such reviews are common and fall far short of an actual criminal investigation, which would be undertaken by the U.S. Attorney for Utah. BASKETBALL

NEW YORK (AP) - Commissioner David Stern took his case directly to the players, mailing each of them a nine-page letter outlining the owners' latest collective bargaining proposal.

The letter, complete with charts and graphs, was sent by overnight mail as the opposing sides were deep into another lull in talks. No new negotiations are expected until after Christmas. HOCKEY

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - The New York Islanders ended a long contract battle with Zigmund Palffy, agreeing to a five-year contract.

Mike Milbury, the team's coach and general manager, confirmed the deal, which is worth about $25 million, including a $1 million signing bonus. The Islanders have an option for a sixth season at $7 million.

Palffy, 26, expected to sign the contract today, had 45 goals and 42 assists in 82 games last season after scoring 48 goals in 1996-97. GOLF

HOUSTON (AP) - Dave Williams, who coached the University of Houston to 16 NCAA championships, died late Wednesday in Wharton. He was 80.


Copyright 1998 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved.

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

Sports Shorts - AP Online

The Associated Press
AP Online
09-12-1998
PHOENIX (AP) _ Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Bernard Gilkey will undergo laser surgery Wednesday to correct a vision problem.

Manager Buck Showalter said Friday the surgery will be performed at the Gimbel Eye Centre in Calgary, Alberta, since it has yet to be approved in the United States.

The surgery would require about two weeks of recovery time. Since U.S. approval may not come until October, Gilkey is having the surgery done in Canada so he can test the results in the final week of the season.

Gilkey's vision is about 20/30.

Gilkey, acquired from the Mets earlier this season, is batting .233 and has just one extra-base hit in 27 games with Arizona.

---

MONTREAL (AP) - The Montreal Canadiens signed two of their restricted free agents Friday, forward Scott Thornton to a two-year contract, and goalie Jose Theodore to a one-year deal.

Thornton, 27, had six goals, nine assists and 158 penalty minutes in 67 games last season.

Theodore, who will turn 22 Sunday, spent last season with Fredericton of the AHL, but got into three playoff games for Montreal, posting a 0.50 goals-against average and .971 save percentage.

---

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The Carolina Hurricanes signed defenseman Steve Halko to a multiyear contract Friday.

Halko, drafted by the Hurricanes in the 10th round of the 1992 NHL entry draft, was a restricted free agent.

Halko, 24, played 18 games last season, registering two assists and 10 penalty minutes. He played in the season opener against Tampa Bay but was reassigned to New Haven of the American Hockey League three games into the season. Halko was recalled for the second time in late March and finished the season with Carolina.

---

EMMITSBURG, Md. (AP) - Mount St. Mary's women's basketball coach Bill Sheahan resigned for health reasons Thursday.

Sheahan, 60, who is an insulin-dependent diabetic, said the rigors and uncertain schedules of road travel made it difficult for him to stick to the proper diet and eating schedule necessary to control his diabetes.

Vanessa Blair, who played at Mount St. Mary's and was an assistant there the last two seasons, will replace Sheahan.

Sheahan compiled a 372-104 record in 17 years at the school. He was the Mason-Dixon Athletic Conference Coach of the Year for three consecutive seasons (1985-88) and won Northeast Conference honors three times (1989-90, 1991-92, 1995-96).

Sheahan's teams made two appearances in the NCAA tournament, in 1994 and 1995.

Blair takes over a team that has gone 15-13 each of the last two seasons after going 14 of the previous 15 seasons with nine or fewer losses.

---

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) - A referee is suing Brazilian soccer star Bebeto after he allegedly insulted him during a match, according to a news report Friday.

Alvaro Quelhas claimed the striker called him a ``thief'' after he awarded a penalty shot against his side, Botafogo, last March, the news agency Sport Press reported.

Botafogo lost the game, part of an annual regional Rio tournament, against Flamengo 3-0.

---

MANKATO, Minn. (AP) - Mankato State University will start the 1999 fall semester a week later than previously scheduled, in part to accommodate the Minnesota Vikings' summer training camp at the school.

``The number one priority is for the change in academic issues, but it does affect the Vikings. They were a consideration in this,'' university spokeswoman Shannon O'Neill said Friday.

O'Neill said university president Richard Rush wanted the delay to help students complete summer internships and jobs, and to help the Vikings.

The Vikings wanted to open camp July 30 and break on Aug. 19. But before the schedule was changed, Mankato State students were to begin arriving in their dorms Aug. 18 while the Vikings were still in town.

The faculty unanimously recommended the change and Minnesota State Colleges and Universities chancellor Morrie Anderson approved it.


Copyright 1998 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved.

CU ALMOST GOT MOON WITH HELP FROM THE FBI.(Sports)(Column) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Sam Adams Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer

When Seahawks quarterback Warren Moon walked off the field at Mile High Stadium on Sunday, he shook hands with former FBI agent Bill Malone, who works for NFL security in Denver.

The two met in 1975, when Moon nearly chose to play for coach Bill Mallory at the University of Colorado. Malone showed Moon around the local FBI office during Moon's visit to CU's campus.

``CU wanted to show me during my visit that they had a good criminal justice department,'' Moon said Sunday. ``There was a chance I could possibly do an internship at the FBI office. That was a good part of my visit.'' Moon chose the University of Washington over CU because he didn't want to redshirt his freshman year.

On the day Broncos quarterback John Elway surpassed Fran Tarkenton for second place all-time in passing yards and cracked the 50,000-yard barrier in total offense, Moon - who played his first six years of pro football in the Canadian Football League - reflected on what might have been had he started his career in the NFL.

Moon signed to play in the CFL before the 1978 NFL draft. ``I didn't feel teams were coming at me with a lot of interest to play quarterback,'' he said. Moon's CFL / NFL statistics combined include 5,077 completions for 67,287 yards and 412 touchdowns.

``I enjoyed my experiences in the CFL and wouldn't trade them,'' he said. ``But in hindsight when you look at all the records I probably could be ahead in if I just had maybe three more years - not the whole six - in the NFL . . . I'm satisfied with my career on both sides of the border.''

Tough landing - Saturday's pregame activities for the CU-Missouri football game at Folsom Field included parachute landings from the Air Force Academy's Wings of Blue team. The windy conditions led to a scary landing for Cadet First Class Phillip L. Mallory III. He hit hard off the Astroturf, leaving a mark near midfield that remained throughout the game.

``He's fine,'' Senior Airman Jason A. Wajticzko said. ``As a matter of fact he was at Mile High Stadium (Sunday) and jumped before the Broncos game.'' The group that jumped at the Buffs and Broncos games is training for a jump at the Dec. 31 Fiesta Bowl.

Fast breaks - Actor Stuart Margolin (he played ex-con Angel Martin on The Rockford Files) was seated in the visiting owner's box at Mile High on Sunday. Turns out Margolin is a huge Seahawks fan who often travels to the team's road games . . . Fox Sports Rocky Mountain's 22x10 moving ``good luck'' billboard will be on display for public signing today (11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.) at Writer's Square on the 16th Street Mall. The billboard will be presented to the Nuggets tonight before their game against Washington at McNichols Sports Arena . . . Who said women don't get physical on the basketball court? During the Lasers' win over the Xplosion at the Coliseum on Saturday night, Jennifer Azzi got so frustrated by the antics of pesky Xplosion point guard Debbie Black that she decked Black with a forearm . . . Elway's 50,000th yard of total offense came on a pass to tight end Shannon Sharpe. Elway's 1,000th came Dec. 4, 1983, on a 12-yard pass to tight end Ron Egloff in the first quarter. And wouldn't you know, that day the Broncos were playing Elway's favorite team - the Cleveland Browns.

On the inside - A bat used by Rockies All-Star Larry Walker during the 1997 season will on display at the baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.

INFOBOX

CHANGEUPS

четверг, 20 сентября 2012 г.

Chief on inquiries: 'Get the facts right'.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

By Howard Fendrich

The Associated Press

Washington

The new head of college sports thinks investigations such as that of Auburn quarterback Cam Newton should be done as quickly as possible - as long as the NCAA gets the facts correct.

'I want our people to be as efficient and expedited in the way they manage these things as possible, but at the same time, you've got to get the facts right. The burden of proof is higher than what it is for somebody who's writing in a blog,' NCAA president Mark Emmert said Friday while taping a TV show that will air Monday on the Big Ten Network.

'You can write in a blog that, 'Gee, I think everyone knows that if there's smoke, there's fire.' Well, that's a great thing to say,' Emmert continued. 'But we have a burden of proof to demonstrate what are the real facts before we take to an infractions committee ... a recommendation that says, 'We think this has happened.' '

Emmert did not specifically address the case of Newton, a leading Heisman Trophy contender for the No. 2-ranked Tigers.

Newton's father, Cecil, reportedly sought money from Mississippi State when his son was being recruited.

Asked about a series of recent high-profile cases involving college football players and improper contact with agents, Emmert wondered aloud about the possibility of allowing 'interaction with agents in a way that's aboveboard, monitored by institutions.'

Emmert made an analogy to doors opened for a college student who wants to be an accountant - summer internships, for example.

'But if a student comes to us and says, 'I want to be a professional athlete,' we immediately say, 'Well, you can't talk to anybody in that profession.' I'm not sure that makes a lot of sense,' said Emmert, the former president of the University of Washington who took over as head of the NCAA last month.

During his appearance on the show, Emmert touched on a variety of topics, including:

* He said student-athletes 'will never be paid as long as I'm president of the NCAA.'

n\He called 'creeping commercialism' the biggest ethical issue facing college sports and noted: 'We don't want intercollegiate athletics to just become the minor leagues for the professionals, as many people see them today.'

n\He said he'd be willing to work with school presidents if they decided to change from the Bowl Championship Series format and move to a playoff .

CAPTION(S):

Mark Emmert said the burden of proof is higher than that of blogs. associated press file photo

среда, 19 сентября 2012 г.

LEADERSHIP: The Mission and Media of Jose Masso; Antioch graduate takes on teaching, radio, politics and now sports - The Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education

LEADERSHIP: The Mission and Media of Jos� Mass�; Antioch graduate takes on teaching, radio, politics and now sports.

His resume reads like the cast of a Hollywood movie. The political liaison on the presidential campaign trail. The investigative TV journalist. The innovative high school teacher who makes learning fun. The late -- night disc jockey. The high -- powered sports agent.

Jos� Mass�, senior associate director at Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society, has led a vastly varied professional life, one that has taken him from his native San Juan, Puerto Rico, to his home today in Boston, where he and wife Didina (also a native of Puerto Rico) have raised four children.

But for every quirky twist and turn that the 47-year-old Mass� has taken professionally, there has been one steady light guiding his way-a need, a resolution, to empower others. Whether it was motivating young Latino families to join the local political process in the early '80s, or helping young baseball prospects from the Dominican Republic adjust to life in the U.S. in the '90s, Mass� has always looked for ways to improve 'human capital,' as he calls it.

'That's why the work here for me is so important,' Mass� said in a recent interview at the center's Boston office, where he has been since last June. 'It provides the opportunity to really focus in on what are the life skills that our athletes need, either in college, high school, or junior high school, and what are the life skills professional athletes need.'

Through outreach programs and training workshops, the Center for the Study of Sport in Society trains former athletes to spread messages of cultural diversity, conflict resolution, gender violence and prevention, and the importance of academics. The center's director, Richard Lapchick, recently established a branch at Walt Disney World Sports in Orlando, Fla., creating Mass� opening.

While Mass�'s present niche is sports, that hasn't always been his calling. He originally saw himself in journalism but chose to major in secondary education while studying at Antioch in Yellow Springs, Ohio, where he earned a B.A. in 1973. As part of Antioch's work/study program, Mass� worked in admissions in 1971, traveling around the country to interview prospective students. 'When I went to New York or Chicago, I had a good number of Latino students wanting to go to school, but in Boston that wasn't the case,' he said. 'So that piqued my interest. I wanted to know why in Boston 1. Latino students were not interested in furthering their education, and 2. why there were fewer Latino students.'

When it came time for Mass� to complete his student -- teaching internship, he did so in the Boston Public School system, teaching bilingual education and quickly getting to know the city's Latino community. Like many teachers fresh out of college, Mass� soon realized that motivating kids to learn was no easy task. Given the choice between a textbook and a movie on a Friday night, Mass� knew which his students would choose. He saw how the increasingly tantalizing forms of media were grabbing kids' attention. 'I found that many of my students were much more familiar with, and products of, media -- without them knowing it,' he said. '[A] host of different homework assignments would be part of the subject matter we were discussing, but...on Monday, their weekends were very much related to either movies, music, dances, parties, or socializing, where the media...played a role.'

Mass� started writing grants to use film in the classroom. 'I would bring films in Spanish from Puerto Rico and use them as the hook for particular subjects in classes,' he said. 'And the attendance went up.' And so Mass� wrote more grants, and soon his students were filming their own life stories, going into their neighborhoods and exploring their family roots. With a massive record collection at home, Mass� began to use music in the classroom as well, having students translate lyrics. While his students were more motivated than ever, a funny thing happened to Mass�'s teaching aspirations.

'The more I did with video, film, and audio, they suggested that maybe I was in the wrong field,' he recalled with a laugh. 'They said, `You're a good teacher, we like you as a teacher, but maybe you should be doing radio or television.''

And along came one of Mass�'s many 'breaks.' In 1975, he bumped into an old Antioch classmate who needed a ride. The friend worked at a public radio station in Boston, WBUR. The two had coffee, and Mass� learned that the radio station was looking for someone to do a show in Spanish. 'Wow,' Mass� said. 'My kids are always suggesting that I do radio.'

Mass� con Salsa

Soon after, Mass� began a one-hour pilot program at WBUR, a flagship for National Public Radio. When the 'On Air' sign lit up for the first time, Mass� leaned into the microphone and said, 'Buenas noches y bienvenidos...Good evening and welcome to Con Salsa.' Now -- 23 years later -- Mass� is still doing Con Salsa, the station's longest -- running music program, heard every Sunday morning from midnight to 5 a.m.

Mass�, broadcasting live from the empty studio, surrounded by stacks of his CDs, features Afro -- Latin music and strives to keep the format bilingual. 'My thought, being on a National Public Radio station, was that you wanted folks who speak English to be able to tune in and not tune out,' Mass� said. I wanted the same folks...to hear a native Spanish speaker speaking their language. That way I would at least start breaking down the stereotypes with regards to language.

'But I also wanted the Spanish -- speaking community to hear its own language,' he added. 'They could hear someone who is native to Puerto Rico but yet has the ability to speak English, and therefore see that there's a reason and a rhyme to acquiring a second language and not losing your primary language.'

Mass�'s radio exposure inevitably led him to television, where he began doing a show called La Plaza for public station WGBH in the early '80s. Produced and co -- hosted by Racquel Ortiz, it was the station's first Spanish -- speaking program. That led to a weekly public affairs show on WCVB, where Mass� began a series exploring the growing Latino communities throughout Massachusetts. Through the documentaries, Mass� saw first -- hand how the minority communities were being overlooked outside of Boston.

'Everywhere we went, even though the percentage of Latinos was the largest minority community, the city leaders -- i.e., the mayors, police, fire departments, superintendent of schools -- they saw the Latino community as an invisible community because they were not taking part in the political process,' Mass� said. 'And when I would then speak to the Latino community, they would say the reason we don't participate is we don't have people who are articulate in the English language who can serve as the liaison, the leaders, the bridge to the institutions. There was a dire need for leadership development.'

Mass� knew he was just the person for that type of job. All he needed was the chance to break into politics. That break came when his general manager at WBUR, Bonnie Cronin, asked if he would be willing to join the lieutenant governor's staff. 'I was thrilled,' Mass� said. 'I had no experience in politics or in government, but I was thrilled....'

Upstairs/Downstairs

On the day Mass� went to the statehouse to accept the position, he was first asked to meet not with Lieutenant Governor Kerry but with Governor Michael Dukakis, who offered him the state's job of director of community services and Hispanic liaison. 'I was given an offer I couldn't refuse,' Mass� said, 'so I had to quietly say to the lieutenant governor, `I'm sorry, but I've got an offer upstairs.''

Mass� worked 'upstairs' for six years, bringing together those Latinos working in state government to give them a presence and bringing the Spanish -- speaking community inside the statehouse. He helped formulate the governor's civil rights agenda, wrote speeches for him in Spanish, and helped find bright and gifted Latino lawyers who could become good judges. 'It was rewarding,' Mass� said. 'It allowed the Latino presence to be seen statewide. It allowed me to see...how activism can pay off.'

And when Dukakis won the Democratic primary and made his run for the White House in 1988, Mass� was alongside him on the campaign trail. 'Because of the presidential campaign, I was able to travel and expand my network,' Mass� said. 'That network grew and opened my eyes to the fact that what I was experiencing in Boston was not just here, it was everywhere -- the growth of the Latino community, but also the isms that existed: the stereotypes, the sexism, the racism, the classism. I knew I had an opportunity to play at a different platform.'

But seeing the underbelly of politics also turned Mass� off. When George Bush made an issue of Willie Horton, Mass� saw how easily the public was swayed by the media's message, be it right or wrong. 'They painted the governor as someone who was soft on crime, but that wasn't the case at all,' Mass� said. 'But once that stuck, that was the image.

'What I came away with was that, unfortunately, a good number of us citizens...are not as aware or cognitive of what is the role of government...and that shocked me,' he added. 'But it also motivated me to see how I could play a role in educating people in being good citizens, and it also shaped my thinking toward the power of media, both electronic and print.'

In 1989, Dukakis invited Mass� to join him for the Boston Red Sox Opening Day at Fenway Park. There Mass� met lawyer and sports agent Bob Woolf, a legend in the industry. 'What he spoke of interested me, and what I spoke of interested him,' Mass� said. At the time we made a silent pact.'

Mass� went on to work as deputy director of marketing for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority and continued his work in radio. But in 1991, Mass� was ready to revisit Woolf.

The Sports Agenda

'I walked into baseball with an agenda, a mission statement,' Mass� said. 'Up to then, my life had been very much what you could consider a public service. I had been a cross -- cultural educator at the state level. I had been an educator using arts and media. In radio, television, promotion, and marketing, all these things always used the fundamental base of bilingualism, bi -- culturalism, cross -- culturalism as a bridge, and I wanted to take that same kind of mission in sports.'

As executive director of Latin sports and entertainment at Bob Woolf Associates, Mass� clients included Roberto Alomar, Juan Gonzalez, Bernie Williams, Ruben Sierra, Ozzie Guillen, and Sandy Alomar. The baseball world was booming in the early `90s, and Mass� was riding the tide.

But Mass� also had an epiphany. 'It had dawned on me during the six years I was working as a sports agent that as gratifying as it might be to negotiate contracts on behalf of baseball players, there seemed to be a dynamic that was missing,' he said. 'I wanted to create opportunities for the ballplayers so that they could grow as good human beings and earn human capital, and I didn't have the forum to do that as an agent because as an agent I was seen as, `What can you do for me that's going to enrich my pocketbook?'...Just like in Jerry Maguire, the bottom line is, `Where's the money?''

The point was hammered home three years ago when major league baseball went on strike, paralyzing the entire business. 'Here you have a body of people who are playing and a body of people who own, and they're all making a lot of money. But because of their differences, the little people are the ones who are suffering -- the fans, the vendors, the part -- time workers, anyone involved with the game. The players and the owners might say they're losing millions, but what's that compared to the person who is losing the amount of money that will help them put their son or daughter through school?'

And so Mass� finds himself today at the Center for the Study of Sport in Society, where he combines his talents in public relations, politics, athletics, and education. One of his first projects was organizing a forum last fall called 'Latinos in Beisbol.'

'We see sports as a safe house, if you will, where kids get nurturing, get educated, learn teamwork, learn discipline, camaraderie, dedication -- all the things that are important and that can be applied to other aspects of society and life,' Mass� said. 'And that's why I think we will play a very important role in the years to come.'