World Fitness Blog : Leading Global Bloggers

June 14, 2021

Celebrating the Return to Sport With Track & Field, the Original Olympic Sport

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:58 pm

Running is the everyman’s sport. It blurs the barriers of age, size, and ethnicity. The barrier to entry isn’t dependent on status or money. You grind in free spaces—back roads and dirt trails—with nothing more than the shoes on your feet. With track and field, those sentiments only heighten. You grow as an individual, but benefit the team. The teachings learned therein transcend sport. You learn where to push, when to stay in your lane, and how to lean into discomfort. And its origins as a spectator sport are far-reaching.

Track and field’s history can be traced back to 776 BCE, when it was helmed as the first Olympic sport—remaining the only event at the Games until 724 BCE. Freeborn Greek men sprinted equivalents of 200 meters and 400 meters; competed in distance events; and duked it out in the pentathlon (discus toss, javelin throw, long jump, sprinting events, and wrestling). Athletes who earned a place on the podium received sealstones—similar to our modern day medals—a gemstone typically bearing an engraving of Nike, a winged goddess that personified victory. In Greek mythology, she was a messenger of the gods, typically shown with a wreath or ribbon with which to crown triumphant athletes.

Nowadays Nike’s a titan in a different sense. The company is a stalwart of speed. Its iconic Swoosh adorns the shoes of some of the fastest runners on Earth hailing from all corners of the globe—from Kenya to Oregon, Nike’s birthplace. The University of Oregon’s Hayward Field is where the origin story begins.

In 1973, the fledgling company signed its first athlete: Steve Prefontaine, a gutsy 22-year-old distance running prodigy. Ancient Greek athletes were valorous in that competing in chariot racing often resulted in being mangled or trampled to death—but that’s what fueled the crowds. They got drunk off the danger. Prefontaine understood the draw. He approached running—or better yet, racing—with a warrior spirit and gave it the same appeal as watching horses thundering around a circus. He wasn’t timid. He went out hard, never doubting his endurance or speed would falter.

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June 10, 2021

The Top 6 Young NFL Quarterbacks to Watch This Season

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 10:39 pm

For most of this century, the same handful of NFL quarterbacks ruled the league. Tom Brady was the biggest star of all, followed by Peyton Manning, Aaron Rodgers, and Drew Brees, while Ben Roethlisberger and (more recently) Russell Wilson rounded out top-five lists of the game’s best passers. Now that dynamic is changing, albeit slowly. Talented young QBs have been the defining story of the NFL in recent years—and more are coming.


 

Brady (last year’s Super Bowl winner) and Rodgers (last year’s MVP) are still mega-elite, and anyone who expects them to fade immediately will likely be disappointed. Even so, the last two MVPs before Rodgers were burgeoning superstars, Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson, who burst onto the scene and asserted themselves as the best in the world. With a new batch of draft picks entering the league and several young QBs finding their footing, this season seems ripe for a reshuffling of the pecking order.

Here are six of those QBs, including rookies and other young passers, ranked (subjectively) by their chances at mounting a breakout season in 2021. Anyone who has already made a Pro Bowl isn’t eligible for “breakout” consideration, because they’ve already broken out. (Sorry, Josh Allen and Kyler Murray.) So, who’s next? These are the QBs we’re watching this season.

1. Baker Mayfield, Cleveland Browns

The first pick in the 2018 draft, Mayfield had his best season yet in 2020. He raised his QBR (an all-inclusive quarterback efficiency stat on a 100-point scale) from 54 to 72. He cut way down on interceptions, throwing them on just 1.6 percent of his passes after hovering around three to four percent his first two years. He also set a career high (7.7) in adjusted yards per attempt, a metric that provides extra weight to touchdowns and interceptions.


Mayfield should also get a lot of help from the guys around him. The Browns offensive line came in No. 1 in a preseason ranking by the game-graders of Pro Football Focus, and Mayfield’s weapons at the skill positions give him an embarrassment of riches: running backs Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt, receivers Odell Bekcham Jr. and Jarvis Landry, and a couple of potentially good tight ends, too.

2. Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals

Burrow, the first pick in the 2020 draft, did some nice work in his rookie season, but the Bengals were so bad that it rarely materialized in the standings or on the stat sheet. Burrow had a 2-7-1 record when an ACL tear ended his season, and his 6.7 adjusted yards per attempt will not impress anybody. Yet even as a rookie he took good care of the ball: He had a 1.2 percent interception rate (five interceptions on 404 throws) that placed him behind only Mahomes and Rodgers. He did have nine fumbles, but those are largely attributable to the Bengals’ lousy offensive line. It’s not clear how much better that line will be in 2021, but Burrow will be a year more experienced, and he’ll get to reunite with his star wideout from LSU, No. 5 overall pick Ja’Marr Chase.

3. Justin Herbert, Los Angeles Chargers

Herbert’s 7.6 adjusted yards per attempt as a rookie are significantly higher than the marks so far for Mayfield, Burrow, and Murray. His 98.3 passer rating also puts him well ahead of anyone else here who has NFL experience. He pulled that off with a subpar offensive line, too. There are lots of reasons to think Herbert will be great, especially given that the Chargers spent a first-round pick on a left tackle, Northwestern’s Rashawn Slater, who can help protect Herbert’s blind side.

Why’s he so low on this list, then? For starters, the two QBs ahead of him were both No. 1 overall picks for a reason. It also won’t help that Herbert’s second favorite target in 2020, tight end Hunter Henry, plays for the New England Patriots now.

4. Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars

With the first overall pick in the 2021 #NFLDraft, the Jacksonville Jaguars select … TREVOR LAWRENCE! https://t.co/aVP2yUSmBy

The 2021 No. 1 pick out of Clemson is the most polished QB to enter the league since Andrew Luck in 2012, and maybe even longer than that. As long as he stays healthy, Lawrence is so good that even the lackluster Jaguars will struggle to ruin his career. He’ll make a handful of “wow” throws each week, giving everyone a regular reminder of why he was such a no-brainer first pick.

But the Jaguars are exceptionally bad. The offensive line will likely be below average. The wide receiving group has some talent (especially second-year man Laviska Shenault) but no clear frontrunner. And the defense will give up so many points that Lawrence will often find himself playing from behind, when he’ll have no choice but to take the kinds of risks that lead to interceptions. Lawrence’s day is coming, but it will take an incredible effort for him to make it happen this year.

5. Justin Fields, Chicago Bears

Fields is a real talent, and he could have easily been the No. 2 pick after Lawrence in the 2021 draft. Instead, he went to the Bears at No. 11, which was great for Chicago. It might also be great for Fields, who’s sliding into a better situation than No. 2 pick Zach Wilson with the Jets or No. 3 pick Trey Lance with the 49ers.

Fields will have a chance to lead a team that made the playoffs in 2020 and still has one of the league’s best defenses. The Bears won’t give up a ton of points, which should result in coach Matt Nagy not demanding too much of Fields right out of the gate. If the Bears can make him comfortable despite an iffy offensive line, Fields’ rocket arm and lightning legs can take over. (He has to win the starting job over veteran Andy Dalton first, but that’s just a matter of time.)

6. Mac Jones, New England Patriots

Jones is the least-proven player on this list, but he posted cartoonish stats while leading Alabama to an unbeaten national championship season last year. At Bama, he had the benefit of arguably the most talented group of receivers in college football history (including two first-round picks in this year’s draft), an elite running back, and the best offensive line in the country.

How will he do without that talent cushion, in a league that has much more parity than the college level? The Patriots took Jones 15th in the draft, and that could work out either wonderfully or terribly. But it’d be silly to leave off a player who will get first-year coaching from Bill Belichick. The Patriots have also added two great tight ends (the Chargers’ Hunter Henry and the Titans’ Jonnu Smith), who should help a great deal.

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Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Is (Finally) Hitting His Stride

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 6:10 pm

When Vladimir Guerrero Jr. arrived in the major leagues in 2019, he was one of the most hyped prospects in baseball history. The Toronto Blue Jays’ wunderkind arrived with a No. 1 ranking on various top prospect lists, of course, but it went deeper than that. Even the MLB’s own writers wondered, “Is Vlad Jr. the best prospect ever?” It wasn’t an unreasonable question, given Guerrero’s dominance of the minor leagues and what scouts like to call “pedigree.” He’s the son of Hall of Fame outfielder Vladimir Guerrero.


 

Despite his talent and family history, Vlad Jr.’s first few years in the bigs didn’t justify the buzz. He wasn’t bad, but he wasn’t setting the league on fire, either. Going by FanGraphs’ adjusted Runs Created stat (wRC+), Vlad Jr. was about five percent better at helping his team generate runs than a league-average hitter as a rookie, then 12 percent better in 2020. In other words, he was a good hitter, but not the kind of smashing superstar people had predicted. At least not yet.

In 2021, that’s all changed. Vlad Jr. is one of the most valuable players in the sport so far this year. He has registered 3.5 wins above replacement (essentially, over what a typical minor league callup would get the Jays). He has reached the league’s most elite tier by doing some of the same things his dad used to do, but also by charting his own course as a hitter. Here’s how the two compare.

Yes, Vlad Jr. has his dad’s pop at the plate—maybe even more.

MLB didn’t have high-tech cameras to tell us exactly how hard Vlad Sr. hit the ball during his career (which lasted from 1996 to 2011), but suffice it to say: He hit it very hard.


In that time, Vlad Sr. made nine All-Star Games, was named the American League MVP in 2004, and established a resume that made him a second-ballot Hall of Famer in 2018. (He finished just 15 votes shy of making it in 2017.) He wrapped up his career with a .318 cumulative batting average and 449 homers, cementing his status as one of the best hitters ever.

Vlad Jr. is continuing that tradition. This year, he has hit 18 homers while posting a .330 average and a 1.089 OPS, a league-leading figure. Compare Vlad Jr.’s numbers to Vlad Sr.’s during his 2004 MVP campaign, and Junior looks pretty good so far. Going by Baseball Reference’s OPS+ statistic, Vlad Jr. has been twice as good as the average hitter in 2021. Vlad Sr. was “only” 57 percent better than the average hitter the year he won MVP.

They’re pretty similar in the field, for better and (mostly) worse.

Vlad Sr. was one of the worst fielders of his generation. During his career, he was worth 10 wins below replacement level as an outfielder. That made him one of the 30 most harmful defenders in baseball during the years he played, despite the fact that he was mostly a designated hitter (and therefore not playing in the field) by the last few years of his career.

Even so, he did make some rifle throws:

Vlad Jr., like his dad, is extremely bad at defense on the whole. He’s been worth -1.5 defensive WAR over his first three years. The Blue Jays played him at third base when he was a rookie, then moved him over to first base the last few seasons. Despite some solid plays, he has been pretty bad without a bat in his hand.

It’s not that his defense doesn’t matter; he’s just such a good hitter that he remains an MVP-caliber player anyway. And by placing him mostly first base and also using him as a non-fielding designated hitter, the Jays are able to ensure that his defensive limitations don’t become too much of a liability.

The big difference between father and son: How they go after pitches.

Vlad Sr. was his era’s defining free-swinger. He rarely encountered a pitch he didn’t like. Across his career, he swung at 58 percent of the pitches he saw, including 46 percent of balls out of the strike zone. Those were by far the highest rates of any of the great hitters of his time, with only a few lesser hitters swinging more frequently overall. Vlad Sr. swung at balls in the dirt and hit them as if he were playing cricket. Sometimes it worked:

Vlad Jr. is much different in this regard. He swings at about 47 percent of the pitches he sees and only 29 percent of non-strikes—career figures that are dropping this season. After not drawing many walks in his first two years, he is now taking a base on balls in about 15 percent of his plate appearances—twice as often as Vlad Sr. took them in his MVP season.

That’s part of the brilliance of Vlad Jr. He’s his father’s son; you can see it in how joyfully he plays the game and how much power he swings with. But he’s following his own path in major league baseball, and it might just lead him to his own MVP season.

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June 2, 2021

Chris Bosh on His New Book and Being a Basketball Dad

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 7:59 pm

Chris Bosh hasn’t played professional basketball in five years, but he still feels the same excitement he felt at game time. The affable 37-year-old has been busy. His first book, Letters to a Young Athlete, debuted on June 1. He’s a father of five and deep into charitable work. He joined The Jump, ESPN’s popular NBA show, and he will be inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame this year.


 

Chris Bosh has entered the next stage of his life, and it’s exciting. We recently caught up with the 11-time NBA All-Star, and he gave us the scoop on his new book and how he’s adjusting to life off the court.

Men’s Journal: In your book, you write that an athlete has to have a “why” beyond wins and losses. Now that you’re retired, what’s your why?

Chris Bosh: My “why” now is passing on knowledge and helping those who are looking for that spark. Making the NBA was my dream and my goal, and there were so many people that helped me along the way. Sometimes you can find help in the unlikeliest of places.

Books were definitely one of so many jewels of information that helped me. I always like to say this book is my memento to the game of basketball, because I’ve sat down and reflected on every aspect and every person that helped me—whether it was a pat on the back, a conversation on the bus ride, a hot meal on the weekend, or just taking me home after practice so I could stay late and get up shots. Hopefully, people can get something from it.


So that’s why I do it now: to help others and to show gratitude by remembering all of those good times and sharing the tools that helped me get over obstacles.

In the book, you discuss how much of an athlete’s success depends on mental prowess. Is that the most overlooked aspect of pro sports?

I think it’s naturally overlooked. The typical fan is not in the meetings. They’re not in the practice sessions. They don’t see the countless hours that go into preparation for a playoff series. With the Heat, we would have a notebook as thick as a book on just one team. And at our practices we would sit down in the theater, watch film, and break these teams down, player by player, play by play.

Fans just see athletes performing on the court. They don’t see the preparation and the intelligence that goes into performing.

It’s tough. It takes a lot of time. We have to make sure that we’re smart with our training, remembering other people’s plays, remembering place options and reads—and being able to make those decisions in a split second.

Was it easy to take the lessons described in the book into retirement?

No. As I’m thinking about all of these things that helped me overcome challenges, I still had to use them as we were writing. I’m telling people they have to fight through bad days, and I just had a bad day. I’m telling people, “Hey, you got to find what you love.” And after basketball, I don’t know what the hell I’m gonna do because all I loved was basketball.

It was really interesting to hear my inner voice and use those tools in real time. As I’m writing to the young athletes, to the CEOs and business people, to the chefs, to the bus drivers, I’m talking to myself as well. These are lessons that I have used and continue to use. Life doesn’t stop.

Was there one lesson in the book that you wish you had mastered before you retired?

All of them. I was one of those crazy players in that I was always trying to get better. It was never good enough, unless we won a championship. Right before I retired, I was in a part of my career where I had evolved. I was a different player than I was in the Big Three era. I felt that I was on the transformative side to my career, and I never really got to dive into it.

That said, writing the book made me appreciate those lessons that I didn’t know and those lessons that I can still get better at. That’s the best part about this book. The books that helped me the most didn’t have anything to do with basketball. So I’m hoping that people will read this book and be like, “Man this really helped me in this.”

As an athlete, what book helped you the most?

I can’t pinpoint one book. I’ve had books that really helped me out in in certain times. One of those is Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. I read it back in the late 2000s, as soon as it came out, and it inspired me to put the work in and think outside the box about how to attain greatness.

Once I became more advanced, one of the books that I read was The Way and the Power. It’s a very dense book on the art of the samurai—their principles on the student all the way up to the master. It broke down how the samurai thought about their way of life.

I definitely have to say Becoming Kareem, by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. It’s great perspective from a great athlete who grew up in the civil rights era and had to deal with much more than just playing basketball. It gave me a lens on what’s important to him and how he became one of the greatest, if not the greatest, players of all time.

Then there’s another one called Grit by Angela Duckworth. I love books that are shared. And [Miami Heat head coach] Erik Spoelstra, he shared that book with me and the team. It explored how you overcome challenges; it was just so interesting.

What’s basketball’s role in your life now?

I appreciate the game. It’s so good to be a fan. I used to look at the game critically and point out flaws immediately and do all this crazy stuff. But now I’m just able to enjoy the game and watch the newer, younger guys come in and have their time. It’s wonderful to see people reaching for goals and trying to do something. I think basketball is in great hands. I had my time. Now the young men and women have theirs.

You’re a dad. What’s the role of a parent in shaping a young athlete?

There are so many different ways you can go about it. My dad, he took me to all the games and took me to practice. My mom and dad, they’d sit there while I’m working after the game and getting shots up. I think the role of a parent is just to guide the athlete and be available. Sometimes that means you’re going to be an Uber driver. Or you might have to give your time to help raise money for uniforms. There are so many ways that you can be supportive as a parent.

One of the things that I try to do with my children is just to make sure that I’m in their corner. If they want to do something, I’m going to support them. If they want to play basketball, then hey, you know what, I’ll drive you and your friends to the game.

Just being in the stands and watching, talking to the coaches and getting involved, those things are priceless. That’s what I loved about basketball: I would see a community come together to support the young men and women who are out there on the court.

Now that fitness isn’t a part of your job, is it nice to not have that pressure to work out?

I feel it more than ever. Being an ex-athlete is interesting. You’ll be a demigod walking among mere mortals and then, boy, that belly. Nothing wrong with a belly.

After you’re done, there’s no one telling you, “Hey, you’ve got to do this.” There’s no mandatory workouts. Honestly, it’s more of a challenge. For me, lifting weights and doing all these things, it was work. I want to make sure that I make it a part of my lifestyle, but it’s difficult to work up the habit to say, “This is what I’m going to do. And this is how I’m going to live my life. And this is going to be my lifestyle.” It’s not always fun lifting weights. Sometimes I start having flashbacks to coaches punishing the team with a tough workout.

But I’ve invested decades into my body, and I just want to continue to keep it. I do believe in getting that heart rate up and exercising. If you do that, I think you’ll be a better businessman, or a better journalist, because we all get tired. And even when you get tired, you’re gonna have to meet that deadline. Are you barely making it? Or do you have more energy to finish and then still get the family time? There are major benefits to fitness.

Is there an exercise you can recommend to add a little spice to a workout routine?

You can do so many things with dumbbells. Just start there. I think sometimes we can get caught up in “I’ve got to work this area,” or “I have to have good posture.” Just lift some weights. Get some dumbbells and get going.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

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May 28, 2021

Love the Outdoors and the F-Word? You Should Try Fly-Fishing

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 5:49 pm

My 20s were, as they should be, well spent. Possibly overspent, as I devoted the adventurous decade to creating memories most folks accumulate over the course of a lifetime: skiing snow deeper than I am tall, on mountains as steep as elevator shafts, rafting Class V whitewater, mountain biking at speeds only intended for cars. This concentrated expenditure also created a lifetime’s worth of broken bones, surgeries, scars, bruises, and aches. Now in the shady side of my 30s (though armed with a handful of ibuprofen and a freezer full of ice packs), athletic outdoor endeavors are still a daily must. They just need to be less jarring. So, I’m taking up fly-fishing.

As an outdoorsy sport, it seems a little less risky, and lot less painful than my current pursuits. Last summer I began Phase One of my real-go effort, equipping myself with all sorts of Orvis gear: everything from a 9-foot, 5-weight Recon rod and Safe Passage pack loaded with angler widgets, to ultralight wading boots and the Clearwater Waders. Fancy outfitting made the point clear: I am investing in and pinning my entire life as an aging athlete to this sport.


There is one small, significant issue: I am aggressively godawful.

Fly-fishing is not meeting the meditative, transcendent, connected-to-the-natural-world moments I’d expected. Mostly, I say the F word as often as I breathe and barely stop myself from snapping my rod in half. Who the hell is going to want to hang out with some foulmouthed, belligerent grandpa?

Coordination can’t be the issue. Sports have always come pretty naturally: pick up the ball or the equipment, start doing, and basic competency soon follows. The first day I set out on the river, however, my arms felt backwards and on opposite sides of my body. I looked at my hands and thought, “Why…why aren’t you working?” If the techniques of fly-fishing mastery were written down, it’d create a phone book-thick manual. There is just so much going on, so many things you’re supposed to remember and do, and so much to unlearn, completely forget, and not do.

With other sports, there’s an obvious base to build on. Mountain bikes? I grew up riding bikes. I understand edge control because of hockey. There is also a muscle-memory cornucopia of technique from other sports that is actively making me more terrible at fly-fishing. The snapping of the wrist and high elbows that were drilled into me by lacrosse and baseball coaches makes me a clumsy-armed caster sloppier than a loose meat sammich.


So if you’re thinking, he can’t be that bad, you’re right. I am worse than whatever you’re imagining. Maybe early fishing experience might’ve helped. My sole reference was a Wisconsin dock outing with a Snoopy pole at age 7. It yielded no lasting skills or formative memories—aside from accidentally hooking a kids ear when casting, and, after somehow landing a fish, seeing it poop in my dad’s hand while he jimmied with the hook. (Now that I think of it, my father, all doodoo-handed, chucked that fish into Lake Michigan like it was a tomahawk—an incredible sight.)

Suffice to say, I was not hooked. But there isn’t any other real low-impact athletic option for my golden years in the mountains. I’m not going to take up the glorified yard game of golf, that’s for damn sure. I can barely afford fishing gear, let alone the desire plus bottomless bag of cash it takes to get anywhere near passable golfery, let alone proficient.. I also have no desire to fill my closet with the wardrobe of the links: shiny collared shirts and plaid slacks, referred to by my fish-chucking father, as asshole pants. So for endless frustration, fly-fishing it must be.

I kicked off last season with a day alongside friends in Colorado’s Roaring Fork Valley. I looked up and down our stretch of the Frying Pan River as both my gal and my friends all exemplified the beauty and poetry of rhythmic casts amidst the river’s speckled reflection of the waning tangerine sun. They were on fish, but even if they never had a nibble, they were in tune with their rod and their surroundings. Meanwhile, I was shooting darts in the dark, the “fishing” like standing in a banquet hall darker than a moonless midnight, knowing that somewhere in empty abyss there might be a dart board. Utterly lost, I cast sloppily and tried to get my fly, which I couldn’t see, to land somewhere close to water.

And then I thought of my father. He’s not an angler, but he is a lifelong athlete. His exploits in the fathers-versus-sons Turkey Bowl football games of my youth are still legendary in our neighborhood, including a diving catch he made while wearing his signature red sweat pants. I think it made SportsCenter’s Top 10 in 1991. When I was a kid, returning his serve on the tennis court was like trying to stop a runaway tractor-trailer. But it didn’t look as fast or as powerful the last time we played doubles. I could tell that the surgeries on his C-spine, meniscus, the spinal fusion, and the ever-present aches and pains of 60-plus years of using your body as an athletic tool had accumulated. It was different, but that doesn’t mean it was bad.

My pop and I took on his friends, who, between the two of them, had at least seven knee braces and four pairs of Rec Specs. The match was admittedly slower, but I noticed something of my father’s game that made me smile: While he dialed down of power, he dialed up of smooth technique, most notably an incredible drop shot so aggravatingly sinister it’d make McEnroe head-butt a line judge. His skills had the duo across the net faked out of their jockeys. Good thing they had all those knee braces.

Fly-fishing is my drop shot: my quiet, humble athletic repose of finesse over power. My entire adult athletic life has been a series of using the clout of my larger-than-normal body to battering-ram my way past technique and into the experience. But there’s just no room for overpowering a fly. It’s soft and subtle, and a true fisher needs to be gentle to be any kind of catcher at all. Maybe that’s what I was wading around looking for—that sense of peace and calm where brute calamity lived for so long.

So I’ll trudge the fly-fishing path of sucking harder than an industrial strength vacuum, until that day when I can cast and drop the fly with precision, mend the line upstream as I bait a fish to rise, and let all of it just float down toward and past me at the river’s pace, at whatever speed the blue-green water deems.

Until then, I’ll be puffing out expletives. But hopefully, they’ll be strewn from behind a smile.

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May 27, 2021

The Pittsburgh Pirates Have Reached a New Low

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 9:02 pm

In the early afternoon on Thursday, I was out for a run. I got a phone call from my father, who was sitting in the stands at PNC Park, watching the hometown Pittsburgh Pirates play the Chicago Cubs. My dad was in a huff. He needed to tell me that he had just witnessed “one of the worst baseball plays I’ve ever seen in my life.” I was skeptical, but then I pulled up a video of the play. He wasn’t exaggerating. You need to see what the Pirates did to believe it:


With two outs in the top of the third inning and a man on second base, the Cubs’ Javier Báez hit a routine ground ball to third base. The Pirates’ third baseman, Erik Gonzalez, threw slightly off line to first base. No big deal, ordinarily. First baseman Will Craig caught the ball and went to tag Báez out. It happens all the time. Báez, not content to be tagged out, stopped and turned back toward home plate.

“This is pretty cute,” you might think while watching the whole thing unfold.

 


The logical next step would be for Craig to simply turn around and touch first base, which would end the inning. Báez was running back toward home plate, where a runner cannot be safe.

While all that was happening, the runner on second base––the Cubs’ catcher, Wilson Contreras––kept chugging around the bases and made a break for home. While Craig stalked Báez back toward the plate, he noticed Contreras sliding into home and threw the ball just too late to get him out. Báez even took the time to make an emphatic “SAFE” motion with his arms.

Of course, Contreras had crossed home plate, but he hadn’t actually scored yet. There were two outs in the inning, and Báez still hadn’t reached first base. If the Pirates would simply get the ball to first base and touch the base before Báez arrived, the run wouldn’t count, and the inning would still be over. It would be kind of embarrassing, but the Pirates would be saved by the rules of baseball, which state that a runner can’t score when the third out is made on a force play.

Unfortunately, that is not what happened. The Pirates’ first baseman, Craig, had left his station, and there was nobody there to catch a throw from catcher Michael Perez. Second baseman Adam Frazier ran to the base, and Perez lobbed a ball in his direction, but it went into the outfield. That gave Báez not just first base, but time to run to second base and put himself in scoring position while the Cubs’ dugout laughed hysterically. In this moment, the whole world was Anthony Rizzo:

If you didn’t see whatever the hell that play just was in the Cubs game, please let Anthony Rizzo’s reaction sum it up for you: https://t.co/pZFVDAkXxW

With the inning extended, Báez scored on the next at-bat, when the Cubs’ Ian Happ knocked him in with a single. The Pirates wound up losing by a final score of 5-3, meaning the two runs resulting from this fiasco were decisive. To rub even more salt in the wound, Happ is a Pittsburgh native (and my old high school classmate!) who grew up a Pirates fan.

I’m a Pirates fan myself. This team has been horrendous for most of my life, but the last week sums up the Pirate experience better than any other. Last Friday, I went to a game in Atlanta, where the Pirates were playing the Braves. I witnessed my hometown team lose by a whopping 20–1. A bad game, but not rock bottom: I’d actually seen the Pirates lose by a wider margin (20–0) in 2010, when I was in high school. Nothing could be more embarrassing than that.

Until the Pirates outdid themselves yet again.

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These NFL Rookies Are Ready for Breakout Seasons in 2021

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 2:42 pm

The NFL Draft is a long-term proposition for the league’s 32 teams, who are mostly looking years down the road when they pick a new batch of prospects. But for the NFL rookies themselves, there’s no better time than the present to start making an impact. In fact, most good teams rely on rookie contributors during their first seasons in the league.


 

Every team hopes their top draft pick makes a mark sooner rather than later, but jumping into the NFL and contributing from day one is no easy feat. Nevertheless, these six rookies seem poised to be really good, really quickly in the upcoming 2021 season.

Kyle Pitts, Atlanta Falcons tight end

The highest-drafted TE all-time 👏 Florida’s Kyle Pitts is headed to the Atlanta Falcons with the No. 4 pick. #NFLDraft https://t.co/P0MBC2u2D5

The No. 4 overall pick was one of the most dominant college tight ends ever. His numbers in 2020––43 catches for 770 yards and 12 touchdowns––are impressive, but they don’t quite capture how big a problem he can be for an opposing defense.


At 6’5” and 245 pounds, he has a receiver’s ball skills and a tight end’s ability to play on the line of scrimmage and create matchup nightmares with linebackers. He’s entering an offense with a solid quarterback in Matt Ryan, at least one talented receiver in Calvin Ridley (we’ll see about Julio Jones), and a handful of quality linemen who can facilitate a good passing game. It wouldn’t be surprising if Pitts starts racking up touchdowns in his first season in the NFL.

Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver

Chase has just about everything he needs to put up big numbers right away. His quarterback will be Joe Burrow, who’s a year removed from being the No. 1 overall draft pick. The two have history: They last played together during the 2019 season at LSU, when they combined to form one of the deadliest QB-receiver pairs in college football history. (Something the Bengals considered when drafting Chase fifth overall.)

Penei Sewell, Detroit Lions offensive tackle

A generational talent. Congrats to OT1 Penei Sewell on being selected by the @Lions with the No. 7 overall pick. #GoDucks x #NFLDraft https://t.co/roY9T63YEb

The Lions are likely in for another season of mediocrity, but Sewell is talented enough to manhandle NFL edge rushers right away. The seventh overall pick opted out of the 2020 season at Oregon, but he didn’t have anything to prove. He’s incredibly athletic, having run the 40-yard dash in 5.09 seconds (at 6’5” and 331 pounds). His highlight tape from his college career makes clear that he has the physical skills to beat up on NFL defenders right now. He’ll be a welcome presence on The Lions’ offense: Quarterback Jared Goff has struggled, and he’ll need all the time Sewell can give him.

Patrick Surtain II, Denver Broncos cornerback

Surtain has all the technical skills needed to follow in the footsteps of his father, who made an All-Pro team and three Pro Bowls in an 11-year career as an NFL corner. He was one of the most hyped cornerback recruits of all time when he arrived at Alabama in 2018, and he more or less validated all of that buzz during a dominant three-year career.

He’s also sliding into a good situation in Denver. According to Pro Football Focus, the Broncos had a top-10 pass rush in 2020, and they achieved that rank despite having the best player on the team, edge rusher Von Miller, miss the entire year. Assuming the Broncos can hassle quarterbacks again, Surtain’s job will be a lot easier.

Micah Parsons, Dallas Cowboys linebacker

Parsons is incredibly gifted. In a pre-draft workout, he ran the 40-yard dash in a reported 4.39 seconds while measuring 6’3” and 246 pounds. He was a productive player at Penn State despite low sack totals (just 6.5 across 2018 and 2019 before an opt-out in 2020)—mostly because of how the Nittany Lions deployed him. Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn has a track record of letting edge rushers roam free and go after opposing QBs. When Quinn coached the Falcons in 2016, Vic Beasley had 15.5 sacks. When Quinn was the Seahawks’ defensive coordinator before that, his edge rushers generated all kinds of havoc.

The Cowboys also have a number of defenders who can handle coverage duties, which should free up Parsons to do more pass-rushing than he did in college.

Najee Harris, Pittsburgh Steelers running back

The Steelers have no choice but to lean on Harris right away. The team’s former starting running back, James Conner, left for the Arizona Cardinals in free agency, and aging QB Ben Roethlisberger is not nearly the passer he used to be. That means Harris is going to get the ball a lot, which may or may not be great for his long-term career growth but should be awesome for his 2021 fantasy football numbers.

Of course, fantasy isn’t real football, but Harris should play well IRL, too. He already has the physical traits of an experienced NFL running back and should be able to handle a heavy workload.

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May 21, 2021

Damian Lillard on Shooting Threes and Why He Feels Like Forrest Gump

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 1:38 pm

Portland Trail Blazers legend and six-time NBA All-Star Damian Lillard is arguably the NBA’s most clutch player and best rapper. He also happens to be an endorsement magnet who made as much money as Oprah and Paul McCartney in 2020. We caught up with Lillard to talk basketball, tattoos, movies, and more.


 

Men’s Journal: When did you decide to start bombing from way behind the three-point line in games?

Damian Lillard: In (2018), New Orleans swept us in the playoffs. It was an embarrassing series. I got with my trainer to address things I could improve to make the game a little bit easier for myself. I’ve always been able to shoot deep, but we took it to another level. Our training was there’s the NBA three-point line, then we had the four-point line. We would do a whole workout from the four-point line. We just kept building it up, and over the years it’s become easier and easier. Here we are now.

What’s the secret to coming through in the clutch?

A lot of people train during the offseason to get ready for the season. Then we play so many games, the time that you put into keeping yourself sharp kind of goes away. For me during the season, I’m still getting those sharp reps in. Even when my mind is tired, my body’s a little bit tired, I’m telling myself I have to do this. Over time once you know you’ve fully prepared yourself, I just think you feel different in those situations.

You and Steph Curry have been called the most exciting players in the NBA. Do you feel more rivalry or camaraderie with Curry?

More camaraderie. This day and age everything is a comparison. I can’t have a good game without them saying, “Oh, but Steph is better.” If I shoot a deep three and people are like, “Oh, that’s Logo Lillard!” then it’s like, “Nah, Steph started doing it first.” People make it a rivalry. But when me and Steph speak we cool, you know? I appreciate him, I think he appreciates me. And that’s that.

You got your first tattoo in a mall in Utah. Where’s the next one?


I don’t know if I got much room left. I don’t want to tattoo my legs and I don’t want to tattoo my neck. And my back, that’s a painful spot, so I might be done.

Have you ever personally sold a car at Damian Lillard Toyota?

I sold my first car yesterday, actually.

What kind?

A Prius.

Favorite movie?

Forrest Gump definitely had an impact on me.

Favorite old school rapper?

Tupac is my favorite rapper of all-time.

It’s your funeral, which Tupac track do you play: “Life Goes On” or “Picture Me Rollin’”?

“Life Goes On.”

First concert?

I went to a Hot Boys concert in Oakland when I was like 11.

Your GOAT Spirit rap video shows your home gym, but do you mix any outdoor sports into your fitness routine?

Last year during quarantine, me and my fiancée bought bikes and started going on rides. When she said, “Let’s get some bikes” I was thinking, like, Mongoose bikes. But we went to this bike store. I didn’t know bikes were this expensive.

How much did you spend?

My bike was $2,500. It’s an electric bike. It’s crazy because I didn’t even know these kind of bikes existed, but I like it a lot.

Who’s the greatest Blazer: Bill Walton, Clyde Drexler, or you?

Walton won MVP, won a championship. Clyde is one of the greatest players of all time, and went to two Finals. [The Clyde Drexler-led Trail Blazers lost in the NBA Finals to the Detroit Pistons in 1990 and Chicago Bulls in 1992.] So, it’s great company to be in. I always say I don’t think anybody that’s played here has taken more pride than me in putting on the Trail Blazers uniform, and wanting to get it done for this city and our fans. And the numbers are there. I think by the time I’m done, I will be the greatest Trail Blazer of all time.

Do you have fun when you’re playing? It’s hard to tell.

I have a lot of fun, and I really enjoy the game. I enjoy the ups and downs of it, the challenges, the excitement. But I take it serious, you know? I laugh about the game a lot in the locker room—then the joy comes out. But on the court, my expression doesn’t say so.

Your loyalty to small markets—Oakland, Ogden, Portland—has made you beloved nationally. Do you carry that small-town chip on your shoulder?

I do, but it’s not like I’m doing it on purpose. What it comes down to is I don’t view myself as a big deal. I’m aware of everything that’s happening—the endorsements, playing in the All-Star Game, and being on the cover of video games. But it’s hard to look at that and be full of myself when my relationships and people around me all feel normal.

Like Forrest Gump?

I feel like Forrest Gump! This dude was an all-American football player, came up with “shit happens,” and invested in Apple in 1994—but he just wanted to mow the lawn for free, you know what I’m saying? And it wasn’t like he was trying to play no role, it was just like this is who he is. He didn’t view himself like everybody else did. And I think that’s what it is for me.

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May 19, 2021

2021 PGA Championship Preview: The Players to Watch This Year

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , — admin @ 5:37 pm

The PGA Championship, the second major championship of the men’s professional golf year, runs May 20–23 at the famed Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, South Carolina. Golf-watchers sometimes consider this tournament to be the “other” of the sport’s four majors, with less institutional prestige than The Masters, the U.S. Open, or the Open Championship. But it has produced some of the most enjoyable majors in recent years, usually with raucous crowds and entertaining finishes.


 

This week should bring more of that, as fans return to the course after being absent for the 2020 PGA Championship at Harding Park in the Bay Area. The Ocean Course is also one of the most stunning settings in golf—an added bonus for those of us watching. The first two rounds, on Thursday and Friday, will air on ESPN. The tournament shifts to CBS for the weekend’s third and fourth round broadcasts, and it concludes on Sunday evening.

The three questions below will shape how this year’s PGA Championship shakes out. Here’s who (and what) to watch this year.

Is Rory McIlroy back on track?

The most talented player in the world (apart from Tiger Woods) was playing well below his standards in the first four months of 2021. In his first nine events, McIlroy missed the cut three times—including at March’s Players Championship, a prestigious event he won in 2019—and didn’t even get to play the third and fourth rounds. He also finished in the top 10 three times but didn’t come particularly close to winning anything. McIlroy talked openly about how he tried to speed up his swing to match long hitters like Bryson DeChambeau and saw the mechanics of his swing suffer as a result, leading to ugly results.


But a switch flipped earlier this month, when McIlroy won the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, his third victory at that course. The key for McIlroy was a brilliant week on the putting green, though on the final hole of the tournament, he hit this tremendous shot out of the rough on his way to closing out the win:

If McIlroy’s troubles are behind him, he might be the favorite at the Ocean Course. He has won the PGA Championship twice, in 2012 and 2014. The 2012 event was held at––you guessed it––Kiawah Island, where McIlroy blew away the field and won by eight shots at 13 under par for the week. McIlroy likes certain courses and plays them well, as he showed with his third win at Quail Hollow. If he takes to the Ocean Course like he did in 2012, watch out.

Who will emerge as a first-time major contender?

Each year at just about every major, a relative unknown challenges the bigger names on the course. At The Masters in April, it was Will Zalatoris, the heavy-hitting 24-year-old who finished one shot behind winner Hideki Matsuyama.

In last year’s event at Harding Park, it was Collin Morikawa, a 23-year-old playing in only his second major. Morikawa went on to win the whole thing. He is now widely regarded as one of the best players in the world and is, of course, the defending champ this week.

Fearless shot on the par 3, 17th sets up birdie for Brian Harman. He’s -12 and one shot back of the lead with one hole to play at The Players Championship! #DawgsOnTour https://t.co/6yENl7oXtv

A couple of candidates stand out as possible Cinderellas this week. One is Brian Harman, who has risen from the 91st-ranked player in the world at the end of 2020 to 48th today. The 34-year-old tied for second in the 2017 U.S. Open at Erin Hills, and he hasn’t won a tournament since that year’s Wells Fargo at Quail Hollow. But he’s finished in the top 18 in his last five tournaments, including top-fives at the highly competitive Players Championship and Dell Technologies Match Play. Harman has also emerged as one of the best putters on the PGA Tour.

Another possible breakout is Daniel Berger. He has won twice in the last year and seems primed to finish near the top of a major leaderboard. Berger missed the cut at The Masters but has otherwise been excellent lately; he nabbed a win at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am and a top-10 finish at The Players. Berger has been somewhat close a few times before, and he made a strong Sunday run at the AT&T Byron Nelson in Texas just this past weekend. Maybe it’s his moment.

Will the real winner be the golf course?

The PGA Championship isn’t the most difficult of the major tournaments. Truthfully, it’s closer to the easiest. It lacks the long distance and thick rough of many U.S. Open setups, the brutal weather of Open Championships in Britain, and the scary aura of being The Masters.

But the Ocean Course is different. When the weather isn’t ideal, it can be one of the hardest courses in the world. In the second round of the 2012 tournament held there, the field averaged 78 strokes (six over par) and only three players did better than par, an incredibly low number when the field is packed with the world’s best golfers.

The course is a product of famous designer Pete Dye. It sits right next to the Atlantic Ocean, which invites wind that affects the flight of the ball differently on each hole. Many greens are elevated on perches, which makes it difficult for players to get away with misses that might simply run onto the putting surface on other courses. There are also plenty of water hazards and dune areas to punish players who aren’t accurate.

If you enjoy watching the best golfers in the world hit great shots, you’ll enjoy this tournament. If you enjoy watching them melt down under difficult circumstances, there’s a good chance you’ll see that at the Ocean Course, too.

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May 17, 2021

Watch the Formula DRIFT Competition Heat Up at Orlando Speed World

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 6:47 pm

Formula DRIFT—America’s fastest-growing motorsport—heads to Orlando Speed World on May 21-22 for the second round of the premier PRO Championship and the first round of the PROSPEC Championship.


 

Many of the PRO teams didn’t get to return home after a punishing opening round at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta on May 7-8. With almost six months elapsing since the end of the 2021 season, Round 1 saw some teams overcome technical issues, as the drivers were thrown in the deep end with the challenging Road Atlanta drift course, making it an extremely exciting weekend.

The event was won by fan favorite, Aurimas “Odi” Bakchis (Lithuania), driving his V8-powered Falken Tires/Feal Suspension Nissan S15. Second place went to Matt Field (USA) in the Falken Tire/Drift Cave Chevrolet Corvette in an incredibly hard fought Final, which saw these close friends repeat their runs before the judges could separate them.

With Nitto Tire dominating the 2020 season, it was interesting to see the two Falken Tire competitors rise to the top. However, third place went to 2010 reigning FD PRO Champion Vaughn Gittin Jr (USA). The title defense began in his Nitto-shod 1200hp Monster Energy Ford Mustang RTR Spec 5-D, and with all five of the Formula DRIFT tire suppliers represented by the Top 16 drivers, rubber will continue to play an important part in the sport.


The uninitiated might assume tire performance isn’t that important in a motorsport series defined by wheel spin and smoking tires, but they couldn’t be more wrong. The drivers need consistently high levels of grip to perform the maneuvers, particularly when they transition from one direction to another. With higher steering angles than conventional race cars, Formula DRIFT drivers depend on front grip to tackle the course and massive horsepower to overcome the rear grip, getting the wheels spinning in order to slide through the turns.

With most Formula DRIFT cars developing more than 1000hp, every qualifying run and competition heat is an assault on the senses—screaming engines, cars sliding door-to-door, smoke filling the air. This is what attracted a capacity crowd to Road Atlanta for the opening round after fans had been heavily restricted throughout the 2020 season. And fans will next flock to Orlando Speed World on May 21-22, where attendees will not only witness the PRO teams dance with the devil, but witness the opening round of the 2021 FD Link ECU PROSPEC Championship.

PROSPEC is a feeder series for the PRO Championship, allowing up-and-coming drivers to learn the skills to compete at the highest level. Most PROSPEC cars have slightly less power but are no less spectacular to watch. And for the new drivers in both categories, Orlando will be their first experience of a banked track. The banking creates a unique challenge, as drivers have to apply more power to climb the bank, then control the speed as they accelerate off it, all while maintaining a consistent drift inches from the door of another car.

The banked Orlando track gives the best drivers the chance to shine, so we’ll see which of the FD ATL teams continue their momentum, and who rises to the top.

Visit the Formula DRIFT website for event details, ticket purchases, COVID requirements, and more. If you can’t attend in person but want to catch the action, Formula DRIFT has an extremely popular free-to-view livestream broadcast. Available for both Friday qualifying and Saturday elimination heats, the livestream is available via the Formula DRIFT website, the FD YouTube page, or FD Facebook page.

Formula DRIFT is an all-weather event: A wet track won’t stop the drivers and adds another variable to keep everybody guessing who will win. Rain or shine, we send it!

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