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Armour: Cute and Cuddly No More, Gonzaga Proves Itself as One of Elite

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Armour: Cute and Cuddly No More, Gonzaga Proves Itself as One of Elite
Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss (5) celebrates after the semifinals of the Final Four NCAA college basketball tournament against South Carolina, Saturday, April 1, 2017, in Glendale, Ariz. Gonzaga won 77-73. Photo: Charlie Neibergall / The Associated Press

Everybody’s favorite outsider is now the ultimate insider.

Eighteen years after it burst onto college basketball’s biggest stage, busting brackets and striking a blow for little guys everywhere, Gonzaga will play for the national title Monday night. Let that sink in for a minute. The small, Jesuit school with the name people still aren’t quite sure how to pronounce is one of the last two schools standing.

“Just ecstatic to be still playing,” coach Mark Few said Saturday night after he’d celebrated his team’s 77-73 win against South Carolina with a handstand in the locker room. “To be playing the last game of the year is just crazy cool.”

And long overdue.

Before there was Butler, before there was VCU, before there was George Mason, there was Gonzaga. Previously known as an answer to a John Stockton trivia question, Gonzaga got the attention of the big boys in 1999 when it made it all the way to the Elite Eight.

These weren’t cupcakes the Bulldogs knocked off, mind you. Second-seeded Stanford had the Collins twins and Mark Madsen. Florida had Udonis Haslem and Mike Miller and would make the title game the next year.

By the time Gonzaga exited, kicking, screaming and scaring the bejeezus out of eventual national champion Connecticut, the Bulldogs had opened eyes around the country. When they backed it up by making the Sweet 16 the next two years, the narrative of mid-majors was forever changed.

No longer were they cute-and-cuddly upstarts destined to be sent off when it was time for the grown-ups to get serious. Get the right coach, the right kids and the right resources, and they could contend with the best of them.

But it would be George Mason, VCU and Butler that would really blur the line between the mid-majors and the power conferences with their Final Four appearances.

Sure, Gonzaga would be seeded No. 1 in 2013 and reach the Elite Eight two years later. But if it wanted to finish what it started 18 years ago, to go from plucky upstart to brass-knuckled powerhouse, it needed to go further.

It needed this night, this game.

Gonzaga forward Johnathan Williams (3) celebrates with teammates after dunking against Xavier during the second half on Saturday. Photo: Ben Margot/AP

Even as they won their first 29 games, the last team in the country with an unblemished record, the ‘Zags heard the knocks. They hadn’t really played anyone (apparently Florida and Arizona don’t count) and would crumble if they ever got tested.

And when they finally broke through to reach the Final Four for the first time, many were quick to point out that it was an 11th seed, Xavier, they’d beaten. As if the Bulldogs had anything control over that.

“We just heard everything this year,” said Nigel Williams-Goss, who scored a game-high 23 points. “We’ve heard the conference, we’ve heard we haven’t played tight games, that we’re not tough, we’ve heard everything.”

But the Bulldogs earned every inch of their spot in the title game.

This was threatening to be yet another Gonzaga runaway when Williams-Goss converted a three-point play to give the Bulldogs a 14-point lead midway through the second half. But the Gamecocks erased the entire deficit with a ruthless 16-0 spurt, taking the lead just three-and-a-half minutes later.

“If I had my choice, that was exactly the game I would have chosen,” Few said. “I envisioned going into this, like, 25-22 at half. The fact that it was going up and down is the way we want to play, and like to play, and when we’re at our best.”

Freshman Zach Collins made a monster three to stop the South Carolina run and steady Gonzaga. Then, after a dunk by Przemek Karnowski, Collins fed the big man again for a layup that put the Bulldogs up 72-67 with 4:48 to play.

Gonzaga would never trail again. Collins, who had to step up with Karnowski missing most of the first half after getting poked in the eye, finished with 14 points, 13 rebounds and six blocks.

Nothing warm and fuzzy about that.

“Me and Zach are roommates … and he told me before the game, ‘Look, I wouldn’t want to be playing against me today,’ ” Williams-Goss said. “And Coach says it all year that we just can’t talk the talk, we gotta walk the walk.”

Gonzaga did that and then some. The transformation is complete.

By Nancy Armour

This article was republished with permission from the original author and 2015 Ronald Reagan Media Award recipient, Nancy Armour, and the original publisher, USA Today. Follow columnist Nancy Armour on Twitter @nrarmour.

Konta Beats Wozniacki to Claim Miami Open Title

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Konta Beats Wozniacki to Claim Miami Open Title
Johanna Konta of Great Britain kisses her trophy after defeating Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark, 6-4, 6-3, to win the women's singles final at the 2017 Miami Open at Crandon Park Tennis Center in Key Biscayne on April 1, 2017. Photo: Pedro Portal El Nuevo Herald

Great Britain’s Johanna Konta has earned her biggest victory of her career so far after claiming the Miami Open women’s singles title today.

The 10th seed who had seen off the United States’ Venus Williams in the semi-finals on Thursday at the Crandon Park Tennis Center was in fine form again as she beat another former world number one, Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark, in straight sets.

The 25-year-old’s success in Florida is her third Women’s Tennis Association title, but her first Premier Mandatory class victory, the top level of competition of the tour.

Going into the final, Konta had spent two hours longer on court compared to her opponent during the tournament, but the 2016 Australian Open semi-finalist did not let this have an affect on her game.

After her victory, Konta praised the crowd who had supported her during the matches.

“You guys are incredible, not just today, throughout the whole week,” she said.

“Miami is such an energetic city and you guys bring that into these stadiums and it makes it a pleasure to play here.”

Wozniacki was always playing catch-up in the first set, going 2-0 down and then falling 4-2 behind.

The 26-year-old did level matters on both occasions she lost a break, but Konta got the better of the Dane’s serve again to win the first set 6-4.

Konta was 3-2 behind in the second set, but a run of four straight games earned her the title.

Competition will finish in Miami tomorrow with the men’s single final between Switzerland’s Roger Federer and Spanish star Rafael Nadal, who have won a combined 32 Grand Slam titles.

By George Thorpe

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Federer’s Remarkable Form Continues with Miami Open Title

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Federer’s Remarkable Form Continues with Miami Open Title
Switzerland's Roger Federer has won a third title in 2017 after he defeated Rafael Nadal of Spain in straight sets in the final of the Miami Open. Photo: Reuters

Switzerland’s Roger Federer has won a third title in 2017 after he defeated Rafael Nadal of Spain in straight sets in the final of the Miami Open.

Federer, who won last month’s Indian Wells title and the Australian Open in January, beat Nadal for the third time this season.

The 35-year-old, who was seeded fourth in Miami, produced a classy display to claim a comfortable 6-3, 6-4 win at the Crandon Park Tennis Center.

Overall victory for Federer in Miami saw him return to the top four in the world while it was a fifth defeat in the final of this tournament for Nadal.

Federer has returned to the court in sensational form after he took a six-month break last year after suffering a knee injury.

The Swiss managed to break Nadal in the eighth game of the opening set to give himself a chance to serve for it which he took with confidence.

The opening stages of the second set were similar to the first with neither player able to grab an early advantage.

Nadal was forced to save two break points at 3-3 in the second set but Federer eventually got the breakthrough at 4-4, to hand himself the chance to serve for the title which he took.

“Congratulations to you too Rafa on your great comeback to the tour,” Federer said after the match.

“It was a great match and this is where it all started for us back in 2004.

“I said to you after my lucky victory back then that you would win this title and I still believe you will one day win this title, you are too good to not win here.

“The dream continues.

“I had a fantastic couple of weeks in Indian Wells and I’ve been coming here since 1988 when I became the world number one junior.

“It really is a beautiful stop on the tour.

“What a start to the year, I can’t believe it.

“Thanks to everyone who has supported me this year and in the difficult times last year.”

By Max Winters

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Nightengale: Bold Prediction: Mets-Red Sox Meet for Another Classic World Series

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Nightengale: Bold Prediction: Mets-Red Sox Meet for Another Classic World Series
New York Mets pitcher Noah Syndergaard. Photo: Arturo Pardavila III via Wikimedia Commons

As the 2017 Major League Baseball season begins, USA TODAY Sports’ baseball staff lays out its bold predictions for the six months ahead:

***

It was arguably the most thrilling postseason in baseball history.

The year was 1986, culminating with the New York Mets’ wacky comeback in Game 6 of the World Series — making Bill Buckner infamous in World Series lore — and the Mets’ Game 7 triumph against the Boston Red Sox.

It would be another 18 years before the Red Sox would end their 86-year World Series drought and then win two more in a nine-year span. The Mets have reached the World Series twice since 1986 but have come away empty-handed, winning two Series games in the process.

Now, three decades and one year later, they will meet again.

This time, with the same outcome: The Mets winning the World Series.

The Mets, after experiencing a World Series hangover in 2016, with three of their starters fatigued after pitching more innings than they ever have in their careers, are prepared with a huge bounce-back year.

They will have the same magnificent four on the mound, Noah Syndergaard, Jacob deGrom, Matt Harvey and Steven Matz, as their vaunted 2015 class, with Robert Gsellman replacing Bartolo Colon. They’ll also have Seth Lugo and Zack Wheeler, a 2009 first-round pick, waiting in the wings.

Boston Red Sox pitcher. Rick Porcello is 22-4 with a 3.11 ERA. Photo: Flickr/Keith Allison.

The Red Sox, who won the American League East last year, will repeat as division champs and be more equipped this time for the postseason.

They’ll have lefty ace Chris Sale, a perennial Cy Young candidate, in their rotation alongside Cy Young winner Rick Porcello, David Price, Drew Pomeranz and Steven Wright, with Eduardo Rodriguez leading a group of stand-bys.

Price is expected to miss the first month of the season recovering from a tender elbow, but the Red Sox are convinced he’ll be fine, without the need of Tommy John surgery.

When these teams meet in October, it should be a glorious, old-fashioned pitching duel, resurrecting memories of 1986, when Boston’s Roger Clemens, Bruce Hurst and Dennis “Oil Can” Boyd took on New York’s Dwight Gooden, Ron Darling and Bob Ojeda.

By Bob Nightengale

This article was republished with permission from the original publisher, USA Today. Follow Bob Nightengale on Twitter and Facebook

IOC, International Federations to Inspect Olympic Candidates at SportAccord Convention

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IOC, International Federations to Inspect Olympic Candidates at SportAccord Convention
Patrick Baumann will chair the IOC inspection. Photo: FIBA

A total of 26 International Olympic Committee (IOC) members are accredited to attend next week’s SportAccord Convention in Aarhus at which the next major milestone is due to take place in the campaign to host the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“Short introductory” presentations are due to be given by both Los Angeles and Paris during the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF) General Assembly on Tuesday (April 4).

Each city is expected to have 10 minutes to formally showcase their bid.

It will be fully open to the media and streamed live on screens throughout the exhibition hall in the Scandianavian Center where the Convention is taking place.

insidethegames revealed in December that the presentations were being added to the General Assembly program following a request by ASOIF to the IOC.

The week-long event in Denmark’s second largest city will also be a major opportunity for the two remaining candidates to showcase their respective bids to an audience of International Federations and wider stakeholders.

Both Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and Parisian counterpart Anne Hidalgo are expected to be present.

Of the 26 members listed as attending, five are affiliated to one of the two bidding nations so will be unable to vote in an election scheduled for September 13 in Lima.

These consist of Paris co-bid leader Tony Estanguet and fellow Frenchman Guy Drut.

United States Olympic Committee chairman Larry Probst is due to appear alongside two compatriots who are also members of the IOC Executive Board, Anita DeFrantz and Athletes’ Commission chair Angela Ruggiero.

Of the remaining 21, Thomas Bach will also be expected not to vote in the Peruvian capital because tradition dictates that the IOC President remains neutral.

Others listed as attending include IOC vice-presidents Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spain, Yu Zaiqing of China and World Archery President Uğur Erdener of Turkey.

These three – along with Australia’s John Coates – are co-chairing a special IOC Working Group exploring the possibility of awarding both the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympic Games in September.

Discussions about this proposal are also bound to informally take place in Aarhus.

Taiwan’s International Boxing Association boss CK Wu, Ukraine’s International Association of Athletics Federations vice-president Sergey Bubka, Switzerland’s International Ski Federation head Gian-Franco Kasper and Sweden’s Association of National Olympic Committees secretary general Gunilla Lindberg are other Executive Board members due to attend.

They are expected to be joined by five other International Federation Presidents who are also IOC members: Denmark’s Poul-Erik Høyer from the Badminton World Federation, Spain’s Marisol Casado and José Perurena from the International Triathlon Union and International Canoe Federation respectively, Serbia’s Nenad Lalovic from United World Wrestling and Italy’s Ivo Ferriani from the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation.

Patrick Baumann, the International Basketball Federation secretary general and SportAccord President, who is chairing the IOC Evaluation Commission for the 2024 race, is another notable participant.

Other IOC members accredited are Baumann’s fellow countryman Denis Oswald, Israel’s Alex Gilady and New Zealand’s Barry Maister.

Also expected to attend are Alexander Zhukov and Tricia Smith, President of the Russian and Canadian Olympic Committees.

Completing the list is Britain’s World Anti-Doping Agency President Sir Craig Reedie and Romania’s Octavian Morariu, head of Rugby Europe.

A notable absentee from the list of accredited delegates is Switzerland’s International Ice Hockey Federation head René Fasel.

It is likely that not all of those listed will attend the ASOIF General Assembly, however, with Kasper and Ferriani set to participate at the Association of International Olympic Winter Sports Federations General Assembly scheduled for the same afternoon.

Each candidate city is allowed 12 official delegates.

Paris’ includes Hidalgo, Estanguet and Drut, as well as chief executive Etienne Thobois, French National Olympic and Sports Committee President Denis Masseglia, sports director Jean Phillippe Gatien and international relations director Sophie Lorant.

Co-bid leader Bernard Lapasset is not listed among the delegates, although he is accredited.

Los Angeles 2024 has not yet formally announced its delegation, but those accredited include bid chair Casey Wasserman, chief executive Gene Sykes and vice-president Janet Evans.

Unlike at last year’s ANOC General Assembly in Doha, there will be fewer restrictions on consultants working for a particular bid.

Five people, for instance, are accredited as “Vero Communications & Paris 2024”, while others are accredited via the City of Paris.

Mike Lee, the chairman of Vero and former communications director of London 2012, is a notable absentee.

Five others are accredited via “Jon Tibbs Associates Pacific Inc/LA2024” or “JTA/LA2024”, while three more are listed under “Weber Shandwick/Los Angeles 2024.”

By Nick Butler

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

No Money to be Made in South Korea?

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No Money to be Made in South Korea?
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. Photo: Mark Humphrey/The Associated Press

National Hockey League Commissioner Gary Bettman, the 31 team owners and National Hockey League Players Association Executive Director Donald Fehr may have no interest in shutting down the regular season for two weeks next February so players could compete in the 2018 South Korea Winter Olympics but that does not mean all concerned parties aren’t interested in making money from non-NHL cities.

On the contrary, the league will be holding two regular season games in Stockholm, Sweden on November 10 and 11 featuring the Ottawa Senators and Colorado Avalanche. The league more than likely will be sending two teams to China during training camp and play some games in Beijing. It seems the NHL is not all that interested in promoting the league in South Korea.

The NHL probably does not want to miss out on the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics even though there is scant interest in the game in China. So, it is conceivable that the NHL will just sit out the 2018 Olympics and be content with staging the World Cup of Hockey every four years. But the World Cup of Hockey is not going to reach the same number of people who watch the Olympics. It is strictly a tournament for hard core hockey fans and needs to be expanded beyond the greater Toronto area and into some American and European cities.

The decision on allowing NHL players to compete in the 2018 Olympics in South Korea needs to be made soon. The 2017-2018 schedule is a consideration as dates have to be locked in at various arenas and there are promotional considerations such as outdoor games that have to be scheduled and promoted.

Meanwhile in South Korea there are all sorts of political problems and the Olympics backers are hoping the Games will restore national pride whether the NHL players are there or not.

By Evan Weiner For The Politics Of Sports Business

This article was republished with permission from the original publisher, Evan Weiner.

FIFA Submits Internal Corruption Investigation Reports to Authorities

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FIFA Submits Internal Corruption Investigation Reports to Authorities
Gianni Infantino celebrates after being elected as the new FIFA President during the Extraordinary FIFA Congress at Hallenstadion on February 26, 2016 in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo: Alexander Hassenstein - FIFA/FIF

FIFA has submitted reports consisting of over 1,300 pages alongside 20,000 exhibits to the Swiss Attorney General after they concluded their 22-month internal investigation into alleged corruption within the organization.

American law firm Quinn Emmanuel were hired to handle the probe, initiated in June 2015 after the the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland (OAG) and the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) opened their own inquiries into widespread criminal wrongdoing within world football’s governing body.

In a statement, FIFA said they were unable to release exact details of their findings due to the ongoing criminal investigations of the OAG and DOJ, but confirmed the reports would also be handed over to authorities in the US.

“FIFA committed to conducting a thorough and comprehensive investigation of the facts so we could hold wrongdoers within football accountable and cooperate with the authorities,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said.

“We have now completed that investigation and handed the evidence over to the authorities, who will continue to pursue those who enriched themselves and abused their positions of trust in football.

“FIFA will now return its focus to the game, for fans and players throughout the world.”

The continuing criminal investigation in the US, which has seen more than 40 officials indicted, largely centers on a total of $200 million in bribes and kickbacks related to media and marketing rights for major international matches and tournaments.

Sepp Blatter at the announcement of the 2014 FIFA World Cup host event in 2007.
Photo By Marcello Casal Jr. / ABr – Agência Brasil via Wikimedia

The OAG are also still looking into the way in which Germany won the rights to stage the 2006 World Cup amid allegations a slush fund was set up to bribe members of the FIFA Executive Committee, now called the FIFA Council.

In 2015, Attorney General Michael Lauber opened criminal proceedings against disgraced former President Sepp Blatter for his “disloyal” $2 million payment to ex-UEFA head Michel Platini.

Both men have since been banned by FIFA’s Ethics Committee, but Blatter has claimed he is confident he will not be convicted on any criminal charges.

Lauber is also probing the bid processes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, due to be held in Russia and Qatar respectively.

Former secretary general Jérôme Valcke is also under investigation on suspicion of offences including criminal mismanagement.

The OAG had “acknowledged FIFA’s close and consistent cooperation” after the completion of the internal investigation, world football’s governing body said.

In a statement, they revealed over 2.5 million documents were reviewed and “numerous” key witnesses were interviewed.

Quinn Emmanuel revealed last year that Blatter, Valcke and Markus Kattner, the organisation’s former director of finance, had awarded themselves bonuses and pay rises totaling $80 million over a five-year period.

Blatter and Valcke are serving six and 10-year bans respectively from all footballing activity, while Kattner was sacked for “financial breaches” linked to his job.

FIFA’s law firm shed light on a series of poorly-timed contract extensions and bonuses, including for the World Cup, among the three officials.

By Liam Morgan

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

NBC to Screen Coverage of Pyeongchang 2018 Live in All Time Zones

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NBC to Screen Coverage of Pyeongchang 2018 Live in All Time Zones
Krystof Kryzl of the Czech Republic competes in the downhill run of the men's alpine skiing super combined event at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, February 14, 2014. REUTERS/Ruben Sprich

American broadcaster NBC will show coverage of next year’s Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang live in real time across all time zones, it has been announced.

The company have been criticized in the past for screening many of the top events at the Games, such as the Opening Ceremony and men’s 100 meter final, on time delay to maximize the audience.

But the network has confirmed that will not be the case at Pyeongchang 2018, scheduled to run from February 9 to 25.

According to Jim Bell, President for NBC Olympics production and programming, the move was made to ensure people following the action on social media platforms do not witness the event before it is shown on television screens.

“That means social media won’t be ahead of the action in any time zone, and as a result, none of our viewers will have to wait for anything,” he said in a statement published in the New York Times.

“This is exciting news for the audience, the advertisers and our affiliates alike.”

In November, it was revealed figure skating finals in Pyeongchang, which usually take place in the evening, would be held in the morning session to suit television audiences in the US.

Pyeongchang, located around 130 kilometers from South Korean capital Seoul, is currently 13 hours in front of New York, which would mean competitions staged in the morning would fit in with American evening television schedules.

NBC, which paid a sum of $7.65 billion to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for exclusive rights to broadcast all Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, enjoys large influence.

According to the draft schedule of events at the 2018 Winter Olympics, the first-ever edition of the event to take place in South Korea, figure skating would start at 10 a.m. local time and conclude at 2 p.m.

Snowboarding is among the other sports likely to take place earlier in the day to appease the American viewers.

Prior to Rio 2016, NBC reportedly asked the Organizing Committee to change the order of the Parade of Nations at the Opening Ceremony so that the US appeared later in the broadcast.

The Portuguese name for the US – Estados Unidos – meant the country appeared early on as the nations march in alphabetical order.

By Liam Morgan

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Academy Pursues Grant to Expand Concussion Awareness, Prevention in Youth Sports

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Academy Pursues Grant to Expand Concussion Awareness, Prevention in Youth Sports
Photo: http://calnorth.org/concussions/

The United States Sports Academy is working to expand its efforts to address the growing issue of sport-related concussions among youth in coastal Alabama by seeking a $1.6 million grant from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in partnership with the University of South Alabama (USA).

The grant would allow the Academy to build on the work it has already done to increase awareness and reduce the impact of concussions on young athletes in the Mobile, Ala., region and beyond.

Over the past year, the Academy has partnered with USA and the Mobile County Public School System (MCPSS) to provide the Concussion Awareness Program (CAP), funded in part by a grant from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) to USA, to reduce the frequency and impact of concussions on high school athletes in Mobile, Ala. The Academy and USA developed procedures for use by the school system to better protect student athletes from the negative health consequences of concussions.

“Last year with the NCAA grant, we went to every Mobile County high school and tested every football player through the Concussion Awareness Program,” said Dr. Vincent Ramsey, Academy chair of sports exercise science.  “Athletes would take a questionnaire, then watch a video with information about concussions and how they would report, then they would take the quiz again. The results showed a significant positive influence of the program.”

Dr. Vincent Ramsey, United States Sports Academy chair of sports exercise science.

Currently, the first aspect of the program is educational. The program also provides student athletes, coaches, trainers and parents with an online tutorial application to evaluate and build upon their knowledge of concussion. Student athletes are required to complete the tutorial as part of the program.

The second element of the program relates to ensuring that athletes with concussions are given proper medical treatment and not allowed to resume competing until medically cleared. This is achieved by medical intervention and by standardized neurocognitive testing, a component achieved by each player taking two tests before the start of the season — an online neurological assessment and a balance test — which establish the athlete’s normal neurological function. After suffering a concussion or suspected concussion, the tests are taken again.

Under the protocol, players suspected to have suffered concussions cannot resume competition unless released by Dr. Anthony Martino, chairman of the Department of Neurosurgery in the USA College of Medicine. Martino has practiced neurosurgery for 25 years and has been actively involved in championing head injury prevention programs.

If awarded, the grant would be for $1.6 million per year for three years, which would include $410,000 for the Academy to use for its part of the study each year. Ramsey said he hopes the grant would allow the program to be expanded into the Baldwin County Public School System, as well as youth sports leagues in the area. The program would also study socio-economic and cultural data, which could shed light on concussion awareness in different communities in coastal Alabama.

“If we get the CDC grant, we want to look at racial and ethnic breakdowns, household income breakdowns, rural vs. urban breakdowns,” Ramsey said. “We want to look at these factors as we collect the data to see what the data shows about concussion awareness in different areas.

“Instead of just looking at high school students, this grant would also allow us to look at the 13-and-under age group, youth sports and elementary schools,” Ramsey said. “We would modify what we did previously to fit that age group. It is in the first phase of review and we should hear something in April. The final review is this summer. In the meantime we have secured letters of cooperation from MCPSS, who we’ve worked with before, as well as the Baldwin County schools, local youth sports programs in Fairhope and Daphne and a youth football organization in Mobile. We are ready to kick this off.”

Currently, Martino is the program’s co-principal investigator, along with Dr. Ashley Marass, an assistant professor in USA’s College of Nursing, and Ramsey. Dr. Brandon Spradley, Academy director of sports management, as well as USA Professor Dr. Benjamin Hill and Mary Wilstrup, USA pediatric clinical nurse, are also involved in CAP.

Dr. Brandon Spradley is the Director of Sports Management at the United States Sports Academy.

“It has been great working with the team at the University of South Alabama,” Spradley said. “Dr. Anthony Martino and Dr. Ashley Marass have both demonstrated great leadership in the development and implementation of concussion awareness programs in the area. My primary role with this project would be to serve as an education facilitator, assisting with the implementation of the concussion program into youth and interscholastic teams.”

Eventually, Ramsey said he hopes the program can be expanded statewide with the help of the grant.

“The results show a statistically significant improvement in the athletes’ levels of knowledge of concussions, as well as their perception of what a concussion is and what they should do to report it and recover,” Ramsey said. “What’s next?  We now we need to move forward and be able to implement some kind of a three-pronged program geared toward the athlete, the coach and the parent.”

“Our hope is that this program will educate thousands of young athletes about the signs and symptoms of concussion,” Spradley said. “Our goal is for young athletes to have the right attitude and mindset towards concussion and improve their behavior and willingness to report concussion symptoms.”

“Concussion education is very much needed, especially at the youth and high school levels,” Spradley said. “Much of what we hear about concussions come from sports media covering the NFL and other professional sports. Sometimes young athletes are forgotten about and neglected. This grant would be a tremendous benefit in addressing the needs of young athletes who live in Mobile and Baldwin County.”

Based in Daphne, Ala., the United States Sports Academy is an independent, non-profit, accredited, special mission sports university created to serve the nation and world with programs in instruction, research, and service. The role of the Academy is to prepare men and women for careers in the profession of sports. For more information about the Academy, call (251) 626-3303 or visit www.ussa.edu.

By Eric Mann

Eric Mann is the communications assistant at the United States Sports Academy. Reach him at [email protected]

Evaluation Commission Praises Los Angeles and Paris After Initial 2024 Review

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Evaluation Commission Praises Los Angeles and Paris After Initial 2024 Review
Photo: LA 2024/Paris 2024

The “creativity and strong legacy focus” of both Los Angeles and Paris has been praised by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Evaluation Commission for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games after they completed an initial two-day review.

Formal inspections of the two cities are due to take place in May.

“The Commission’s work is just beginning, but it is already clear that both candidates have embraced the spirit of Olympic Agenda 2020,” Patrick Baumann, the Swiss IOC member who replaced Frankie Fredericks as chair of the Evaluation Commission earlier this month, said.

“Both proposals incorporate well-known locations in these two great cities, and would deliver an excellent experience for athletes, spectators and other Games participants.

“We are looking forward to taking a closer look at these two strong candidates during our site visits, to see in more detail how these well-developed plans would come to life at Games time and leave sustainable legacies.”

Paris 2024 have presented their technical plan at the MIPIM property exhibition. Photo: Paris 2024

Paris today unveiled a “detailed legacy vision” designed to take effect regardless of whether the bid is successful.

They claim to have three broad aims: ensuring a “better, more inclusive society through sport,” “infrastructure regeneration” and a “Games for the environment.”

“From the beginning of our bid, our ambition has been to offer a project that will leave a sustainable legacy for the 2024 generations, in France and worldwide,” said Paris 2024 co-chairman Tony Estanguet.

“We want our Games to be first and foremost a legacy for the future.

“Organizing the Olympic and Paralympic Games would enable us to use sport as a vehicle for social change, by developing sports facilities nationwide and by embedding Olympic values in the next generation of athletes.”

Los Angeles 2024’s legacy is focusing more on intangible factors such as the “financial responsibility” of a bid with no new venues.

They claim their bid offers the “lowest-risk and truly sustainable solution for the future of the Olympic Movement in 2024 and beyond.”

Casey Wasserman, chair of the LA2024 candidature committee speaks at a news conference to annouce the city’s final approval to bid for the 2024 Olympic Games, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., January 25, 2017. Photo: REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

“The world is changing, and so are the needs of the Olympic and Paralympic Movements,” said Los Angeles 2024 chairman Casey Wasserman.

“This calls for new thinking, and that is precisely what the diverse group of 117 leaders and innovators on LA 2024’s Board of Directors brings to LA’s bid for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“LA 2024’s low-risk proposal has earned 88 per cent public support for the Games and does not require building any new permanent venues.

“That means that instead of focusing on complex and costly construction projects, we can dedicate this group’s incredible energy and creativity to connecting the Games to the future.”

More members of Los Angeles’ Board of Directors were also unveiled today.

Latest names include New Zealand’s windsurfer turned former IOC Athletes’ Commission member Barbara Kendall and 21st Century Fox chief executive, James Murdoch.

Others include Spanish-born Plácido Domingo, the opera singer who is conductor and general director of LA Opera, and Walt Disney Company chairman and chief executive, Bob Iger.

The IOC Evaluation Commission are due to visit the Californian city from May 10 to 12 before they travel to the French capital for an inspection between May 14 and 16.

They will then report to the whole IOC membership at a Candidate City briefing, scheduled to take place in Lausanne on July 11 and 12.

A choice is then expected to be made between the two at the IOC Session in Lima on September 13.

It is ultimately possible, however, that both cities will be awarded a Games.

An IOC Working Group chaired by the body’s four vice-presidents is currently considering the possibility of awarding both the 2024 and 2028 editions in the Peruvian capital.

Both Los Angeles and Paris, though, are publicly insisting that they are only interested in the earlier edition.

The cities are the only candidates for 2024 in what was originally a five-horse race before the withdrawal of Hamburg, Rome and Budapest.

Fredericks was replaced by Baumann after the Namibian was accused of accepting suspicious payment allegations before Rio de Janeiro were awarded the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

He denies any wrongdoing but has stepped aside from sporting responsibilities as an investigation progresses.

By Nick Butler

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz