This is awesome: Tom Brady was asked to narrate the Top 10 greatest American sports moments for America's 250th birthday.
One of the best videos you will watch all year.
God Bless America 🇺🇸
Happy 250th birthday to the best country on earth! I was reading a book the other day and was struck by this paragraph. I don’t know who the author was but I thought it was brilliant and perfectly said…🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Laughable, man.
“Hey, kid. Can you play third? Actually, second? Actually, go back to short. Also, we hate you. You’re 23 and we don’t have much veteran leadership but we’re going to single you out instead when you’ve been one of the most available players this year.”
EXCLUSIVE: Former Government Employee CONFIRMS The DNC "Set You Guys Up" On January 6th With Federal Agents Acting As Agitators
He Says The Goal Was To Distract From The Riots Happening Across The Country & Cover Up Their Rigging Of The 2020 Election
⬇️WATCH/SHARE THE LIVE X STREAM⬇️
https://t.co/ZVfu6WxWMO
13 years ago today, April 20, 2013, Neil Diamond made a surprise, unannounced appearance at Fenway Park to sing "Sweet Caroline" during the 8th inning of the Boston Red Sox game against the Kansas City. It was announced later that he would donate all royalties from the song to the One Fund Boston to benefit Marathon Bombings victims.
John O’Keefe was not hit by a car. This is an indisputable statement of fact.
John O’Keefe is a homicide victim, whose body was found on Brian Albert’s front lawn. This is an indisputable statement of fact.
John Okeefe hit his head on a rigid surface, causing a 2 inch gash on the back of his head, and his right arm was bit by a dog. These are indisputable facts.
The people inside Brian Albert’s house were never treated as potential suspects, and many of them were never even interviewed. Those who were had hours alone together to get their story straight. They never came out of the house to help, and didn’t offer their home up to first responders throughout the day. None of them saw his huge body 10 feet away from the curb when they drove by him. None of them were checked for scratches, bruises, or cuts. They sold the home that was never searched, but only after they were accused of being involved in the murder in court filings. The aggressive dog slept through the whole thing and then they got rid of her. They got rid of their phones the day before a preservation order. They called each other when they were sleeping and blamed it on butt dials. They butt answered during sexual intercourse. They monitored police activity and directed each other to stick to the story that the guy never came in the house. They called and answered calls at 5:07, 6:07, and 6:08 when they were sleeping. They never went to bed and were awake at 4:30 AM after a night of drinking. They moved suspicious bags from car to car at the police station at 2 AM while drunk. They coached Kerry Roberts through a timeline and lied to her so much that she repeated those lies to the grand jury. They explained boxing scars by lying under oath about falling on ice and bracing themselves with fists. Chris Albert’s testimony destroyed his son’s timeline and proved that he lied. They offered bribes to the lead detective who never questioned their son, who was in his sisters wedding party. They never spoke to the most important non-house defendant witness - the plow driver - until I made them. They left the house in a blizzard to do their unrecorded interviews across town. They didn’t find any taillight until 3 guys Lt OHarra didn’t recognize started to help them search. They Googled “how long to die in cold” at 2:27 AM when it made no logical sense to google that unless they were plotting to murder someone, and then erased that google search. They made sure that an innocent woman was arrested, and then they pressured the DA to arrest an innocent man for doing what the police wouldn’t and investigate this murder properly.
Karen Read did not and could not have killed John Okeefe, which means someone else did. We all know who did it Steve. The jury that acquitted her knew. We all know.
Jayson Tatum: “When I was in elementary school, my teachers would go around the classroom asking kids what they wanted to be when they grow up. Most of my classmates would say something about how they wanted to be doctors or lawyers or teachers. I would always say, ‘I want to be a professional basketball player.’ Usually the teacher would just smile and say, ‘That’s inspiring, but think of something more realistic.’
Then I’d tell those student-athletes what my mom told me.
‘Don’t let anyone tell you what you can or can’t be. No matter what.’
‘I’m just like you,’ I would say. ‘I’m from these blocks, I played in these rec leagues, my family has had its struggles the same way yours do. There’s no special secret. Just work hard and push yourself. (And if you’re lucky, you’ll have a mom who will push you even harder.)’
When scholarship offers started arriving, every letter would make Mom cry. The call from Coach K was a dream come true — a dream she had been preparing me for these last couple of years, even if I wasn’t so sure that it would ever happen myself.
I thought the lessons were over, but I was wrong. Even when I knew I was going to Duke, Mom kept pushing me.
She’d come into my room when I was watching TV, grab the remote and ask, ‘Jay, if a news reporter came up to you after a game and asked you, ‘What were you thinking, coming down the stretch?’ What would you say?’
At the time, I really didn’t get what she was doing. I just wanted to watch TV.
‘Mommmmmmm! Nobody’s going to come up and ask me these questions.’
But she would persist, so I ended up playing along. She’d be holding the remote in her fist under my chin, like an imaginary mic.
Looking back, it’s pretty funny, but I think it helped me prepare. Now I never get nervous when I have to talk to the media.” https://t.co/ESGDQokanP
@jaytatum0 | @celtics
Nick Saban: "We need to come up with a system... to allow student athletes in all sports, including women's and olympic sports, to enhance their quality of life, while going to college — but still provide opportunity to advance themselves beyond their athletic career."