I haven’t been editing the mag for THIS long but @Lindyssportsmag has taken on all competition for 46 years and is still going strong. How long is 46 years? Bear Bryant was still coaching ⬇️⬇️
ESPN has turned back the clock and produced a college football preview magazine. Couldn’t be happier. It’s nostalgic. Love poring through them before the season. @lindyssportsmag, too @AGWildcatReport
We are saddened by the passing of former Braves third baseman Bob Horner.
The first overall pick in the 1978 MLB Draft, Horner made the jump straight to the Majors without playing a single day in the Minors.
Just ten days after being drafted, Horner made his MLB debut and homered off future Hall of Famer Bert Blyleven. Horner went on to blast 23 home runs in just 89 games and won NL Rookie of the Year honors.
He went on to top the 30-homer mark three times in the next four years and was a National League All-Star in 1982, when he helped lead the Atlanta Braves to a division title.
Horner spent 9 of his 10 Major League seasons with the Braves. He made history on July 6, 1986 when he slugged a record-tying 4 home runs in one game. It was the only four-homer game of the 1980s.
Horner completed his college career at Arizona State with the most home runs in NCAA history, a mark since broken. He was named MVP of the 1977 College World Series and was the very first winner of the prestigious Golden Spikes Award in 1978.
He was 68 years old.
I was remiss in not posting this yesterday — 7 years since Dick Tomey died. It’s crazy how often I still think about him, something he said, something I wish I could still ask him. Among all my stories, this was the hardest (and my favorite). https://t.co/ECymY5dHek
Who knows which college QB has the record for most rushing yards by a QB in a single game in college football history?
Hint: it happened in the past decade
Every hoops power began somewhere. Carolina with Dean Smith recruiting Charlie Scott. Duke sticking with Coach K.
For Arizona, the origin story is the 1988 Wildcats, from the Alaska Shootout to the Final Four.
The 2026 team stands on that foundation.
https://t.co/8QClchBCvH
Loved the Tommy Lloyd shoutout for the late Lute Olson. He built this whole @ArizonaMBB culture when I was still going to UA. Nice of Tommy to recognise that. BearDown!!
March 28, 1988: University of Arizona guard Steve Kerr greets Wildcat fans in Tucson after the team's return from Seattle—where Arizona had defeated North Carolina to advance to the school's first-ever Final Four.
The senior shot 114-199 (57.3%) from three in 1987-88.
📺WALA-TV