The top 10 most minutes anyone has logged in an NBA Finals game
Gm7 1958
Bob Cousy- 58
Gm6 1974
John Havlicek- 58
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar- 58
Oscar Robertson- 58
Gm 5 1976
Gar Heard- 61
Jojo White- 60
John Havlicek- 58
Gm 3 1993
Kevin Johnson- 62
Dan Majerle- 59
BJ Armstrong- 58
Dear @AaronDonald97
Hey it’s me again. Remember when you said if we got Micah Parsons you’d consider coming out of retirement? Man that was crazy right? Woulda been dope.
Anyways now we got Myles Garrett. So I think we should be a hair above “consider” no? Anyways. I hope this message finds you well.
I’ll be telling people all 2026:
1-2 servings of Air Fried Potatoes a day keeps the excess body-fat away
They might literally be the greatest hunger hack in the history of hunger hacks
Only a FOOL would fail to include them as a STAPLE in their diet
I've had some time to consider yesterday's Senate hearing on the Protect College Sports Act.
It framed robust #NIL and collective activity as threats to competitive balance and Olympic sports.
But NIL is not the crisis. It's not the culprit of "chaos." It doesn't require anyone to "save college sports."
It is the market correction to decades in which institutions and the NCAA profited from athletes without providing them meaningful compensation.
Any federal legislation must strengthen, not constrain, athlete NIL rights and mobility.
Preempting strong state laws, imposing artificial distinctions between "legitimate" deals and market arrangements, or layering new transfer restrictions cannot and must not be done in the absence of bargaining with athletes.
Athletes built the value. People seem to be missing that point. They believe coaches deserve riches and athletes should be pleased with whatever pittance they're provided. No. Athletes deserve a framework that treats them as the principal stakeholders and not as afterthoughts.
The worst narrative in sports right now is that the Vegas Golden Knights don’t have passionate fans.
Vegas LOVES the Golden Knights,
Vegas is an ELITE hockey city.
They have done everything right since joining the NHL. This city rocks. This team rocks.
For years, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti told Congress that federal legislation was essential for college sports.
They lobbied on Capitol Hill alongside other Power conference leaders for federal NIL guidelines and national standards.
They aren't refusing to support the Protect College Sports Act because they care about athletes. They're doing it because they care about the bill’s media rights pooling provisions. They're looking out for their best interests. Who can blame them?
But it further proves that earlier calls for Congress were less about "saving college sports" or curing "chaos," and more about preserving power.
To be clear, I'm happy to read that the SEC and Big Ten do not support the Protect College Sports Act. But it has nothing to do with "lasting stability for college athletics."
God keep our Caribbean islands safe during this hurricane season. Cover us and may no wave, depression, storm or any category of hurricane touch our shores, Amen.
I serve as legal counsel for many agents. Let me explain why the 5% agent cap in the Cruz-Cantwell Protect College Sports Act is bad policy.
It's a price control that fails to distinguish between lower-effort school or collective agreements and the far more labor-intensive work required to source, negotiate, and service genuine third-party brand deals.
Most true #NIL endorsement opportunities are modest in value. At 5%, an agent's compensation on an $8k deal would be $400. After accounting for the time spent identifying the opportunity, conducting due diligence on the brand, negotiating the terms, and providing ongoing fulfillment support, that figure doesn't come close to covering legitimate overhead or rewarding the expertise that separates competent representation from amateur efforts.
Agents who specialize in this space routinely operate at commission rates between 10-20% on brand deals because the work is closer to traditional talent or entertainment representation than to the union-capped commissions on multimillion-dollar pro player contracts.
A flat statutory ceiling also interferes with the freedom of contract that should govern the relationship between the athlete and advisor of his/her choice. If a high-profile QB with significant national-market potential wants to pay a premium for an agent who can deliver blue-chip corporate partnerships and manage a personal brand across multiple platforms, the market (not Congress) should set that price.
The cap risks driving experienced agents out of the NIL space altogether, leaving athletes to either go unrepresented or turn to less reputable operators who may skirt the rules.
Registration, mandatory disclosure of all material terms, fiduciary standards, and a robust private right of action against fraudulent conduct are legitimate tools for preventing exploitation. But the % cap misses the mark.
On April 3rd, Milwaukee was 5-22 and one of the worst teams in the country.
Some of their losses:
Run-ruled 21-7 by LSU
Run-ruled 20-3 by Duke
Run-ruled 14-4 by Minnesota
Run-ruled 12-2 by SEMO
Run-ruled 17-1 by Purdue
Run-ruled 14-1 by NKU
Run-ruled 13-2 by Wright State
Run-ruled 16-2 by Notre Dame
Run-ruled 14-4 by UNLV
They finished the regular season 22-31, but won the Horizon League tournament and earned an autobid to the NCAA tournament.
Milwaukee beat #4 Auburn 13-8, beat UCF 13-6, and is now in a regional final, one win away from going to supers.
College Baseball.
SAINT MARY’S HAS PULLED OFF ONE OF THE MOST HISTORIC WINS IN COLLEGE BASEBALL HISTORY.
#1 OVERALL SEED UCLA GETS ELIMINATED BEFORE EVEN MAKING IT TO THE REGIONAL FINAL.
UNBELIEVABLE.