AltWeeklies Wire

How They'll Lose: Eagles vs. New Englandnew

All season long, in a bold experiment in reverse psychology, Brian Hickey has predicted losses for the Philadlephia Eagles. They're now going to the Super Bowl. Coincidence? We don't think so.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Brian Hickey  |  02-03-2005  |  Sports

Dania Jai-Alai Faces Extinctionnew

On the eve of a vote on slot machines that could resuscitate this ailing, brutish ballet, both jai-alai fans and gringo Scotty Klier wonder how much longer their love affair with this elegant, 500-year-old Basque competition can continue.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Sam Eifling  |  01-25-2005  |  Sports

Brownie Batternew

Nothing spurs a great rivalry more than location, and the Pittsburgh Steelers-Cleveland Browns Turnpike Rivalry is without equal.
Boulder Weekly  |  Vince Darcangelo  |  11-22-2004  |  Sports

Parcells Cradles Delusions As Cowboys' Season Sinksnew

After a good stretch of summer-like, carefree fun in Dallas -- during which the sun shined brightly on both Parcells and the Cowboys and next to nothing went wrong -- it's gotten a bit chilly out at Valley Ranch. The leaves, it appears, are browning.
Dallas Observer  |  John Gonzalez  |  11-19-2004  |  Sports

Prince Joe's Lamentnew

Where was Joe Henry when Major League Baseball coughed up money for ex-Negro Leaguers? In the dark.
Riverfront Times  |  Mike Seely  |  11-17-2004  |  Sports

Hometown Favorite Becomes NBA Go-To Guynew

Devin Brown played college ball at The University of Texas at San Antonio and clawed his way onto the San Antonio Spurs' roster after a year in the limbo leagues. No one ever expected him to take center stage in the NBA playoffs, much less in a widely anticipated shootout with the Lakers.
San Antonio Current  |  Gilbert Garcia  |  11-04-2004  |  Sports

Dallas Mavericks Try to Build a Winning Team from Scratchnew

The Dallas Mavericks is promoting itself as a new team that since last season has become more cohesive, deeper, tougher and better defensively. This is the image they're selling. Anyone buying?
Dallas Observer  |  John Gonzalez  |  11-02-2004  |  Sports

Fans Chill As the NHL Season Is Icednew

Who the hell cares about the hockey lockout? Not many. Except for the good citizens of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, the people who brew Molson's and 11 hermits in northern Minnesota wearing Elmer Fudd hats who've just hooked up to the Dish Network.
Westword  |  Bill Gallo  |  11-01-2004  |  Sports

Top 10 Colorado Skateparksnew

Even the best skaters don't agree on the best concrete rides. Older "vert dogs" tend to prefer deep bowls and steep transitions, while the younger "street rats" look for stairs, rails and ledges. But both camps can find something to love at these skateparks.
Westword  |  Jared Jacang Maher  |  11-01-2004  |  Sports

Colorado Skaters Head for the Hillsnew

Skater-owned skatepark firms get public-sector business not from big cities with big budgets and big crowds, but from small towns. In Colorado, this means skaters in search of the best concrete rides have to head for the hills.
Westword  |  Jared Jacang Maher  |  11-01-2004  |  Sports

Couple Finds Scarce Ass to Kick(box)new

Kornelija Numic and Doyle Gayler are kickboxing champions who rarely kickbox, because their sport is dying. Now they spend much of their days locking up criminals and investigating crime scenes.
Dallas Observer  |  Eric Celeste  |  10-22-2004  |  Sports

He Writes the Signs in the Ballparknew

Marty Prather's obsession with holding up handpainted signs began during the 1985 World Series, when he flashed a sign that read: "The Fat Lady Is Singing."
Riverfront Times  |  Chad Garrison  |  10-19-2004  |  Sports

Golf Ball Fishing in Americanew

“There’s gold in these waters,” says Michael Aux Tinee. He is part of the secretive world of golf ball retrieval, an industry worth an estimated $200 million a year.
Riverfront Times  |  Malcolm Gay  |  10-19-2004  |  Sports

The Mud, the Blood and the Poopnew

A rodeo insider takes you behind the chutes of America's cowboy sport.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Gavin Ehringer  |  10-07-2004  |  Sports

Zero Gravity Seekers Boldly Go Where Many Have Ralphed Beforenew

A private company called Zero-G offers the public the newest extreme sport. For $3,000, it will take you up past 30,000 feet in a converted Boeing 727-200 to experience weightlessness.
Dallas Observer  |  John Gonzalez  |  10-05-2004  |  Sports

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