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Boxing's Month From Hell
Boxing's Month From Hell

August 12, 2009
This July, all the boxing news of note has been in the obituaries. Death has visited the sport like a plague, shocking even the most callous observers. The question is, what are we going to do about it?

The Paulsons' Edifice Complex
The Paulsons' Edifice Complex

August 5, 2009
Former treasury secretary Henry Paulson and his son Merritt are still trying to fleece every last dollar from the city of Portland for a new sports arena. The race is on to make sure that - starting in Portland - we lay down the line: multimillionaires must carry their weight and pay for their own stadiums. It also sends a message to Washington: socializing debt and privatizing profit is no recipe for economic recovery.

The Reality of Vick’s Return
The Reality of Vick’s Return

July 29, 2009
Michael Vick has been reinstated by the National Football League. But there's no guarantee that he will ever see the field. Here is why.

The Power of Buehrle’s Perfection
The Power of Buehrle’s Perfection

July 25, 2009
Thank you to Mark Buehrle. Thank you to DeWayne Wise. Thank you to the Chicago White Sox for rescuing all of us from the oozing swamp that dominates sports media coverage during the late summer.

Macalester Today: Can’t Find My Way Home
Macalester Today: Can’t Find My Way Home

July 21, 2009
Some people go to college and become a Wildcat, a Blue Devil, or a Seminole. I was a Fightin’ Scot. But a recent lawsuit is making me ask what happened to the quirky school I once knew.

"Canary in the Mine Shaft"
"Canary in the Mine Shaft"

July 16, 2009
Last Tuesday night, there were as many African-American presidents at the All-Star Game as players in the starting lineups. This may seem like a minor, irrelevant issue in the grand scheme of things, but sports sociologist Dr. Harry Edwards makes the case that it is a "Canary in the Mine Shaft" for a greater sickness ripping across the country.

Sexism on Centre Court
Sexism on Centre Court

July 6, 2009
On Saturday, at Wimbledon's Centre Court, Serena and Venus Williams extended their generational dominance of women's tennis in electric fashion. They went head to head for the twenty-first time and Serena took an 11-10 lead in their sibling rivalry. But amidst the drama of watching two of the finest athletes of their era clash, the specter of sexism haunted the All England Club. Early in the tournament officials blithely admitted that for women players' "physical attractiveness is taken into consideration" when it comes to court assignments.

Who Will Break the Glass Closet... and John Amaechi's Response
Who Will Break the Glass Closet... and John Amaechi's Response

July 1, 2009
As the movement for marriage equality and gay liberation gains momentum, we should peer with heightened expectation toward the world of sports. Yes, sports. Every movement for civil rights over the past century has seen the struggle for equality reverberate in the often quite conservative arena of sports.

Your Stadium or Your Life
Your Stadium or Your Life

June 26, 2009
Who will be the next to die because our cities spend money on sports stadiums instead of basic infrastructure? Two years ago, my former college town, the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul, was the site of thirteen needless fatalities when the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed. The tragedy occurred the same month that ground was broken on a $500 million stadium. Now, a mere ten minute walk from my home, two Washington, DC, Metro trains collided, killing nine and sending more than seventy-five to the hospital.

When Nuance Dies: Sammy Sosa and Phony Outrage
When Nuance Dies: Sammy Sosa and Phony Outrage

June 18, 2009
ESPN’s Howard Bryant is without question one of my favorite sports writers. His book Juicing the Game: Drugs, Power, and the Fight for the Soul of Major League Baseball is one of the finest pieces of journalism I’ve ever encountered. That’s why his frothing take on revelations that retired Major League baseball slugger Sammy Sosa tested positive for performance enhancing drugs in 2003 was both shocking and depressing. Call it “shock-pressing.”