Former undisputed heavyweight champion of the world “Iron” Mike Tyson was recently interviewed by Michael Kay of the Yes Network for a segment of CenterStage that will air on May 26.
Football
7 May 2010
2 September 2009
The United Football League (UFL) is scheduled to begin their inaugural season on October 8, 2009.
The upstart league will have four teams competing in seven cities and games will be played on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings.
Posted by Colin Linneweber | No comments yet
1 September 2009
The United Football League (UFL) is scheduled to begin their inaugural season on October 8, 2009.
The upstart league will have four teams competing in seven cities and games will be played on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings.
Continue reading "The United Football League (UFL) Will Thrive"
Posted by Colin Linneweber | No comments yet
16 July 2009
He’s got 4 World Series rings: 1 with the Mets and 3 with the Yankees. His career was tainted with drug abuse. He’s Darryl Strawberry. He was a special guest on the show “Centerstage” with Michael Kaye on the Yes Network. He was a class act. Whatever questions Michael Kaye had about the negative things that happened in his life, he took full responsibility for it: drugs and tax evasion. You name it! Whatever he did wrong he took full responsibility for it, unlike Roger Clemens, who’s given denial after denial that he did steroids.
Continue reading "Straw Humble on Yes Network's "Centerstage""
Posted by Cesar Valverde | No comments yet
13 January 2009
Will NCAA D1 football get a playoff system?
For me, it's not about the money.
The money that schools and bowls make off of the games isn't relevant for me in any way. I make the journey to Auburn once a year (if I'm lucky), and I fork out the money for the overpriced nose-bleed seats. Sure, I'll buy a pricey hot-dog and soda, but that's about the extent of my monetary investment into the sport. The rest of the season I kick back on the couch and watch from the heated comfort of my home, and I doubt I will ever make that expensive post-season ticket purchase (unless my Tigers go to Nashville, or somewhere like that).
Posted by Burl Bridger | 3 comments
21 August 2008
Just picture it: it’s the top of the ninth inning and the Toronto Blue Jays are holding a slim 2-1 lead over the New York Yankees. Up to bat is Derek Jeter with Bobby Abreu and Alex Rodriguez on deck. Cito Gaston, in order to shut the door on the game and the series gets on the phone and brings in the big gun, Pedro Luis Lazo, winner of two Olympic Gold medals with Cuba and current closer of the Blue Jays. And even if he gives up a run its okay, because leading off the bottom of the ninth for the Jays is Alexei Bell, who hit 30 HR with 100 RBI with Santiago del Cuba last year.
Posted by Karol Kudyba | No comments yet
15 August 2008
Posted by Matt Kopnak | No comments yet
29 July 2008
According to several blogs, including Baseball Digest Daily, Mark Teixeira is headed to the Angels, in exchange for middling 1B Casey Kotchman and minor-league pitcher Stephen Marek, with perhaps others thrown into the mix.
Posted by Street Reporter | 2 comments
28 June 2008
As I sit here and watch Johan shutout the Yankees for first three innings I wonder what it would be like for him to be in the road grey's. Sure it would be nice to have some one of his caliber as a member of the Yankees but I think his performance is season thus far has proven Brian Cashman correct. If the Yankees had traded Melky Cabrera, Phil Hughes, and Ian Kennedy for Johan Santanna, Yankee fans would be asking for more. I know Hughes and Kennedy have no wins this year but Hughes is only 20 years old and has great potential. He needs time to devlop. I am not sure what Kennedy turns into and I would have definetly been fine with trading him in a deal just not packaged with Hughes. It just wasnt fair for the Yankees to give up prospects and a huge contract.
Posted by Evil Empire | No comments yet
25 June 2008
The transition is complete. The new "Joba Rules" are simple: he's a starter working on the same 100-pitch count as most other major league starters. With that process completed (and completed seemlessly), and with the 20-20 perfection of hindsight, is there any more use in debating Joba's best role with the Yankees now and in the future? He's a starter, ladies and gentlemen. And he's going to develop into a damn good one, one that will make Hank's comparison's to Josh Beckett look pretty smart. But he's also so much more than that.
Continue reading "Joba Well By New York Yankees' Brass: MLB"
Posted by Tony D | No comments yet
5 March 2008
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
11 February 2008
Boston and New York have been fighting a sports war on multiple fronts for more than a century. Baseball, football, hockey, basketball: you name the championship, our teams have battled over it. Up until a few years ago, New York seemed to have the edge. Even though the Patriots were winning, their other teams seemed incapable of making the all-important final round of the playoffs. The Knicks were hot throughout the 90’s, while the Celtics were not. The Yankees were World Series Champions, leaving The Red Sox in the Wild Card. I disqualify hockey because both the Bruins and the Rangers stunk for a few years there, but you get the basic gist. New York had the lead. “The curse” kept Boston beneath us in the sports world. Then, everything changed.
Posted by Ian Levenstein | No comments yet
6 February 2008
Make sure to check out my blog 2nite as I give my Big Blue Super Bowl Sendoff
New York Football Giants 2007 Super Bowl Champions........God that never gets old.....
Posted by Michael McDonald | No comments yet
3 February 2008
I have never claimed to be an expert when it comes to predicting outcomes of football games, although last year I nearly predicted the exact final score of the Super Bowl while hitting on seven of my nine prop bets. (My prediction was 26-17, the final was 29-17.) For whatever reason I had a very good feel for that game. This year's Super Bowl, however, remains a mystery to me. Part of the reason I am having trouble getting a good feel for this game is that I am a bitter Jets fan and I can't stand either team. I'm finding it difficult to put my personal feelings aside and look at the game objectively. I think right now I am as close to objectivity as I am going to get, and with that being said, here is my official Super Bowl XLII prediction.
Posted by Mick Ciallela | 1 comment
30 January 2008
Come Friday, Giants fans are going to be pulling their hair. Hopefully, if your not already bald, you'll still have a full head of hair come gameday. It's tough, because you have now waited twelve days since the Green Bay win and you are coming up on 48 hours away from the Super Bowl. Your legs are shaking, you're on your fourth cup of coffee (or Pepsi in my case) and you go to ESPN.com ten times before noon. Not to mention, you have read the sports pages of the New York Post and the Daily News three times each, front to back, strictly Giants coverage. Jeez, will they play this damn game already?!?!?!?
Posted by Michael McDonald | No comments yet
One of the great stories about this New York Giants team is the personality transformation of the head coach. During his first three years Tom Coughlin was known as a hard nosed, no nonsense disciplinarian whose stubborn coaching methods held him back from truly connecting with his players. This season, however, it is evident that Coughlin has become much more approachable, not just to his players, but to the media as well. In interviews Coughlin is much more animated than in past years, engaging reporters in conversation and sometimes even joking around And the players don't have to duck their heads anymore when they pass Coughlin in the weight room.
Posted by Michael McDonald | No comments yet

