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A Second Can Mean So Much In A Football Game

At Saturday’s Iron Bowl, the first half seemed over. Then officials put a second back on the clock. Auburn used that second to kick a field goal, and they ended up beating Alabama by three.



DAVID GREENE, HOST:

Good morning. I’m David Greene. A second can mean so much in football. At Saturday’s Iron Bowl, the first half seemed like it was over, then officials put a second back on the clock. Auburn used that second to kick a field goal, and they ended up beating Alabama by 3. Now an Auburn dean is rubbing it in. Joe Aistrup told professors they could add a single second to final exams. He wrote, when every second counts, Auburn men and women make great things happen.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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The College Football Game That Put A Dent In Desegregation

Fifty years ago, two football teams tangled in Florida. It was a momentous contest: It helped to change the course of race relations during a difficult Civil Rights period.



DON GONYEA, HOST:

We’re remembering an important football game today on the program. It was 50 years ago that a college game in Tampa served as an important milestone in Florida history. As Kerry Sheridan of member station WUSF reports, it was the first time a predominantly white school played an all-black university in the Deep South.

KERRY SHERIDAN, BYLINE: It was the Saturday after Thanksgiving in 1969. The University of Tampa, a mostly white football team on an eight-game winning streak, was taking on Florida A&M. The Tallahassee team was also winning a lot but was unranked because it only played black teams. Five years earlier, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act, outlawing discrimination and ending public segregation.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: Now, in this summer of 1964, the civil rights bill is the law of the land. In the words of the president, it restricts no one’s freedom so long as he respects the rights of others.

SHERIDAN: The South didn’t change right away. Segregation persisted. In 1967, race riots roiled the nation, including in Tampa, after a white police officer shot and killed a black man suspected of burglary.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: In 1967, 126 cities were hit by racial violence, with 75 incidents classified as major riots.

SHERIDAN: A year later, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy were assassinated. By 1969, tensions remained high. Yanela McLeod teaches history at Florida A&M and is working on a documentary about the school’s football coach, Jake Gaither, who lobbied for years to play a white team.

YANELA MCLEOD: He was a civil rights activist who did not have a contentious kind of methodology, but it was more behind-the-scenes, and one of nurturing and fostering humanity.

SHERIDAN: He was near retirement in 1969.

MCLEOD: The one thing he wanted to do was play a white school because he wanted to show America that black people, coaches, quarterbacks, they didn’t fall in line with the stereotypes of inability and intellectual deficiency in which society claimed they operated.

SHERIDAN: On game day, nearly 47,000 people poured into Tampa Stadium, recalls historian Fred Hearns.

FRED HEARNS: The atmosphere was absolutely electric.

SHERIDAN: At the time, he was a 19-year-old sportswriter.

HEARNS: I had to remain neutral. I couldn’t cheer. But deep down inside, I was pulling for Florida A&M University to win because I felt it would prove to the whole world that African American football players could defeat a white team – a predominantly white team – and that Jake Gaither, who was a legend as the coach of the Florida A&M Rattlers, could out coach a white coach.

FRAN CURCI: I knew they had better players than we had.

SHERIDAN: That white coach was Fran Curci, who still lives in Tampa and is 81. Gaither died in 1994. In 1969, colleges in the north were already luring some of the best black athletes from Florida. Before he was hired as a coach at the University of Tampa, Curci insisted he be able to recruit their first black football players. And he did, signing one in 1968, followed by three more a year later.

CURCI: The name of the game in football is you got to win. And the only way – I wanted to get whatever athlete I can get. I don’t care if you’re white, black, purple, whatever he was. I had to have athletes that we could win with.

SHERIDAN: Inside the stadium that day, McLeod says, by and large, black people sat on one side, white people on the other.

MCLEOD: This is really good college football. And so you’ve got two good coaches, two excellent quarterbacks – Jim Del Gaizo for Tampa and Stephen Scruggs for FAMU. And they get on that feel, and they hash it out in a game that goes back-and-forth, back-and-forth. It’s a nail-biter.

SHERIDAN: Steve Scruggs, the quarterback for Florida A&M, describes the outcome in McLeod’s documentary.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STEVE SCRUGGS: It was a monumental game for A&M and Tampa. It was a monumental game. Somebody had to lose, and thank God it was them this time.

SHERIDAN: The score – Florida A&M 34, UT 28. Afterwards, Tampa coach Fran Curci sprinted toward the winning coach, and the crowd held its breath.

CURCI: I ran across the field. I headed right for Jake. And both stands were just, oh, my God, now what’s going to happen? And I put my arm around Jake, and I said, Jake, you had the best team. You deserve to win.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SHERIDAN: Author Samuel Freedman wrote about the game in his book, “Breaking The Line.”

SAMUEL FREEDMAN: All these fears that had been whipped up about how it was going to lead to fighting and rioting did not come true at all. So it became this very important emblem of desegregating public space. In fact, this is one of the largest, if not the largest, mass act of desegregation in the South.

SHERIDAN: And 50 years later, historians still marvel at how a single football game in Tampa ended an era of segregation in sports by erasing the myth that white players were superior to black athletes. For NPR News, I’m Kerry Sheridan in Tampa.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Why This Year Promises To Be A Big One For Cross Country Skiers

Jessie Diggins made history winning the first U.S. Olympic gold medal in cross country skiing in 2018. She and skiers at a season kickoff welcome the U.S.’s first World Cup race since 2001.



ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

In Montana, Thanksgiving marks the traditional start of the cross-country ski season. This year promises to be a big one for the sport. For the first time since 2001, the Cross-Country World Cup includes a stop in the U.S. Yellowstone Public Radio’s Rachel Cramer takes us to the annual cross-country ski festival in West Yellowstone, where many athletes are training.

RACHEL CRAMER, BYLINE: Half a block from the west entrance to Yellowstone National Park, a local shop called Freeheel And Wheel is stocked with cross-country skis, poles and hand warmers. Co-owner Melissa Alder is in the back, waxing a pair of skis so they’ll glide more easily over the snow.

MELISSA ALDER: Once the wax has hardened, we’ll then scrape the excess wax off the base of the ski.

CRAMER: Alder is one of the people who helped the weeklong Yellowstone Ski Festival grow from a fall training camp for the U.S. Nordic ski team in the ’70s to a celebration with clinics, skier expos, talks from world-renowned athletes, even a fashion show. The festival now draws more than a thousand people every year.

ALDER: We have many skiers that return every year that are in their 80s. So we know that it’s a lifetime sport, and we really love promoting that and creating that enthusiasm behind it and opening up doors for people that may not have experienced cross-country skiing any other place.

CRAMER: American interest in cross-country skiing got a big boost a couple of winters ago when Jessica Diggins with the U.S. ski team won a gold medal in South Korea. Leveraging that success, she helped draw the Cross-Country World Cup tour away from Europe and Scandinavia, where fans fill stadiums to watch, and to hold a race in her home state of Minnesota this winter, only the third time ever in the U.S.

JESSICA DIGGINS: Skiers at any level can be right up alongside the fence to see their heroes ski in the highest-level competition in the entire world. This would be like – if you’re a basketball player, it’d be like, for $25 dollars, you get a front row seat to watch LeBron James play.

(SOUNDBITE OF SKIS GLIDING)

AMANDA SUSNIK: Now that the World Cup is going to be in Minnesota, it’s going to be so cool. I think everyone’s just, like, hyped about it.

CRAMER: Amanda Susnik is a Nordic skier for St. Olaf College in Minnesota. Beads of ice cling to her eyelashes after she’s just finished her morning workout here in West Yellowstone. She’s one of the hundreds of athletes who came to the trailhead at 8 a.m.

(CROSSTALK)

CRAMER: Rick Kapala, a coach from Sun Valley, Idaho, says a lot of people like cross-country skiing because it gets them out in nature and every trail is different.

RICK KAPALA: The festival sort of has mirrored the growth of cross-country skiing in the U.S. When we first started coming here, they’d be just a handful of people, a few teams. And now there are thousands of people here.

(SOUNDBITE OF SKIS GLIDING)

CRAMER: Kapala says his group alone brought out 60 athletes. He says West Yellowstone is one of the first places in the country to get good snow.

KAPALA: If you’re pursuing the sport at a higher level, you got to go where the best competitions are or where the skiing is.

CRAMER: Skiers don’t seem to mind that the temperature today is -10 degrees Fahrenheit. Gordon Lange, a former head coach for the U.S. Olympic team, is out here with the Park City Nordic Ski Club from Utah.

GORDON LANGE: I love it. I complain a little bit because it’s cold and I’m old, but once you’re out there and you’re skiing on good tracks and everything, it’s really nice.

(SOUNDBITE OF SKIS GLIDING)

CRAMER: Dozens of long, lean athletes in colorful Lycra ski wear stride past, pushing forward with long poles, skis whispering as they disappear into the trees. The Yellowstone Ski Festival ends this weekend with races and a party.

For NPR News, I’m Rachel Cramer in West Yellowstone, Mont.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Stephen F. Austin Defeats No. 1 Ranked Duke In Huge Upset

Stephen F. Austin University beat No. 1 ranked Duke in one of the biggest men’s college basketball upsets ever on Tuesday night.



AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Last night, a college basketball game had an ending that seemed pulled straight from your favorite cheesy sports movie. Stephen F. Austin State University, the pride of Nacogdoches, Texas, and ranked 222nd in the nation, faced the top-ranked team, Duke.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Duke had not lost at home to a non-conference opponent in 150 games almost 20 years ago. So this was supposed to be an early season warm-up game against a completely outmatched opponent.

CHANG: Everyone expected the Lumberjacks of Stephen F. Austin to get crushed and then go home. Nathan Bain had other ideas.

SHAPIRO: With seconds left in overtime and the game tied up, Duke lost the ball. The Lumberjacks recovered. And suddenly, forward Nathan Bain had the ball at half court and a clear path to the basket.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED SPORTS ANNOUNCER #1: They’ve got a timeout. They don’t use it – Bain – yes. The Lumberjacks have done it.

CHANG: As you heard on the ACC Network, Bain’s layup with one-tenth of a second left sealed the stunning Lumberjack victory. Duke fans will spend Thanksgiving wondering what the heck happened.

SHAPIRO: And for at least the next few days, Nathan Bain is one of the biggest names in college basketball.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED SPORTS ANNOUNCER #2: Nathan Bain, this is your life. Wow.

CHANG: And about that life – Nathan Bain is from the Bahamas and the son of a minister.

SHAPIRO: His family pretty much lost everything when Hurricane Dorian ravaged the country two months ago. His father’s church was wrecked.

CHANG: Bain had all of that on his mind during a post-game interview.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

NATHAN BAIN: Man, it’s just – I’m trying real hard not to get emotional. You know, my family lost a whole lot this year. I’m not going to cry on TV. My family lost a whole lot this year, and I’m just playing this game for them, you know, just playing for my SFA family, my family back home in the Bahamas. I just want to make my country proud.

SHAPIRO: I just want to make my country proud. A GoFundMe to support his family had about $2,000 in donations before the game. As of this afternoon, not even 24 hours later, it was at $66,000 and counting.

CHANG: To be fair, almost every college basketball fan outside of Duke hates Duke. So at least some of this generosity is coming from a less-than-noble place.

SHAPIRO: One person donated $5 with the message, Duke sucks and nothing else.

CHANG: But even some Duke fans will admit this is sports hate for a good cause.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Rookie Dwayne Haskins Celebrates First Victory As A Pro With A Selfie With A Fan

It didn’t matter if the game wasn’t over, Washington quarterback Dwayne Haskins was ready for his closeup. Haskins missed the final snap of the game because he was taking a selfie with a fan.



MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Yesterday, Washington’s pro football team was just about to clinch their second win this NFL season. The starting quarterback, rookie Dwayne Haskins, just had to run one more meaningless play in what’s called victory formation.

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

But no one could find Haskins. Here’s head coach Bill Callahan.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BILL CALLAHAN: (Laughter) We were looking for him, too.

KELLY: Turns out the 22-year-old quarterback was celebrating his first victory as a pro in a very Generation Z way. He was taking a selfie with a fan in the stands. Dwayne Haskins explains.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

DWAYNE HASKINS: I was so hyped, I think I broke a water bottle. I look up and we’re in victory. Oh, I thought the game was over with already. But I’ll get it next time.

KELLY: Rookie mistake there, Dwayne.

CHANG: The good news for football purists aghast at victory selfies – this is Washington football after all, so next time may not be until next year.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Activists Disrupt Harvard-Yale Rivalry Game To Protest Climate Change

Demonstrators stage a protest on the field at the Yale Bowl disrupting the start of the second half of an NCAA college football game between Harvard and Yale, Saturday in in New Haven, Conn.

Jimmy Golen/AP


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Jimmy Golen/AP

The annual Harvard-Yale football game was delayed for almost an hour on Saturday as climate change activists rushed the field at the end of halftime.

Unfurling banners with slogans like “Nobody wins. Yale and Harvard are complicit in climate injustice,” protesters from both schools called on the universities to divest their multi-million dollar endowments from fossil fuels companies, as well as companies that hold Puerto Rican debt.

BREAKING: Over 150 Yale + Harvard students, alumni, faculty stormed the field at #HarvardYale to demand DIVESTMENT from fossil fuels & cancel holdings in Puerto Rican debt. When it comes to the status quo, #NobodyWins. @YaleEJC @FossilFreeYale @DivestHarvard pic.twitter.com/lZAcAxxmYw

— Divest Harvard ? (@DivestHarvard) November 23, 2019

Clad in winter coats and hats, about 150 students sprawled around the 50-yard line at Yale Bowl as loudspeaker announcements and police demanded protesters leave the field. As protesters clapped and chanted “disclose, divest and reinvest,” organizers say several hundred more fans left their seats in the stands to join in. By the time play resumed, several dozen people were issued misdemeanor summonses for disorderly conduct.

Proud mama. That is my kid in the red jacket, protesting #HarvardYale endowment $$$$ invested in fossil fuels and holdings in Puerto Rican debt. #ClimateChange #ClimateJustice pic.twitter.com/bC7ZUYniEk

— Marjorie Ingall (@MarjorieIngall) November 23, 2019

Harvard senior Caleb Schwartz, one of the protest organizers who was arrested on Saturday, told NPR the mood on the field was joyful, despite the possibility of arrest.

“That moment, when we saw people running onto the field was just really incredible,” he said. “I saw organizers around me crying because it was such a beautiful moment.”

“We know that we don’t have a lot of time to act to curb the effects of climate change, and the longer it takes for our universities to acknowledge their role in the climate crisis and accept responsibility, the longer the urgent action we need to take on climate change is going to be delayed,” he says.

Schwartz says the Harvard-Yale rivalry game has been played since 1875, and organizers knew alumni from all over the world would be tuning in.

“Although it was disruptive and some people were not too happy we were on the field, it was really important because our universities are just not listening to our voices and our generation’s calls for urgent climate action.”

In a statement, the student groups behind the protest, Fossil Free Yale, the Yale Endowment Justice Coalition and Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard, wrote:

“Harvard and Yale claim their goal is to create student leaders who can strive toward a more ‘just, fair, and promising world’ by ‘improving the world today and for future generations.’ Yet by continuing to invest in industries that mislead the public, smear academics, and deny reality, Harvard and Yale are complicit in tearing down that future.”

Hundreds of Yale and Harvard students held up the football game for about a half hour to protest university holdings in fossil fuel companies and Puerto Rican debt pic.twitter.com/aX7tOOo1r4

— Marisa Peryer (@marisa_peryer) November 23, 2019

Harvard and Yale are not the first universities to face criticism over fossil fuel investments. The first campus divestment movements started at Swarthmore College in 2011. Harvard has repeatedly said it would not pursue divestment, while Yale has made some moves in recent years to consider climate change in its investment decisions.

Karen N. Peart, director of University Media Relations at Yale, told NPR in a statement:

“Yale stands firmly for the right to free expression. Today, students from Harvard and Yale expressed their views and delayed the start of the second half of the football game. We stand with the Ivy League in its statement that it is regrettable that the orchestrated protest came during a time when fellow students were participating in a collegiate career-defining contest and an annual tradition when thousands gather from around the world to enjoy and celebrate the storied traditions of both football programs and universities.”

Saturday’s protest during a marque rivalry football game attracted widespread attention, including tweets of support from several Democratic presidential candidates including Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders.

I support the students, organizers, and activists demanding accountability on climate action and more at #HarvardYale. Climate change is an existential threat, and we must take bold action to fight this crisis. https://t.co/lm1V6honI4

— Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) November 24, 2019

The protest garnered so much interest, that Schwartz changed his bus ticket back to Cambridge on Saturday so he could stay and field the deluge of media inquiries.

“We will win this fight, and we will get the university to divest,” he told NPR from his bus home. “I truly don’t think it’s a question of if, it’s a question of when. And the more pressure we can put on them, the sooner they will.”

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Saturday Sports: Simone Biles, Racehorses

Questions about how USA Gymnastics hid the Larry Nassar investigation from one of its top athletes, plus a new coalition focused on safety in horse racing.



SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

And now it’s time for sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: New calls for an independent investigation of USA Gymnastics after they apparently let down their biggest star. Also, a coalition calls to improve safety for racehorses. And Thanksgiving week football highlights, if that’s what they are – Pats vs. Cowboys. NPR’s Tom Goldman.

Hi there, Tom. How are you?

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: I’m good, Scott. How are you?

SIMON: Fine, thanks. Let’s start with this really kind of shocking story broken by The Wall Street Journal. It says USA Gymnastics hid their investigation of Dr. Larry Nassar from Simone Biles, the biggest gymnastics star in America, who was one of the first to raise questions about the doctor and potential sexual abuse.

GOLDMAN: Yeah. And you can tell how troubling this story is, Scott, when you read Simone Biles’ reaction on Twitter, where she says the pain is real and doesn’t just go away, especially when new facts are still coming out. This journal story says although she was one of the first gymnasts to raise concerns about Nassar back in 2015, she didn’t find out about the USA Gymnastics or FBI investigations until she came back from the 2016 Olympics with a huge medal haul, including four gold medals. The implication here is that USA Gymnastics kept her out of the loop, ignored the possibility that she’d been abused – and she publicly revealed in 2018 that she had been abused – because the organization was focused on making her the enormous star that she’s become, which, of course, hugely benefited USA Gymnastics.

And, Scott, one other thing – a related story yesterday. The Orange County Register reported that champion gymnasts who were Nassar victims and their parents are demanding the Department of Justice release a report looking into the FBI’s investigation of the Nassar case. There are allegations that parts of the investigation were slow, incomplete, and that could have allowed Nassar more time to abuse victims.

SIMON: Another jarring story, of course, has been the number of racehorses that have died at the track over the past couple of years. A new group has been created, the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition. What are the odds that they can bring about some change in the industry that the industry will take?

GOLDMAN: Yeah. Well, critics of what’s been happening in horse racing are cautiously optimistic. And the caution is because there have been years of talk about reform and coalitions, but nothing really changes. The one thing that has changed is public opinion. There’s a lot of anger about horse deaths. And it did help prompt the creation of this new coalition. It includes several famous racing entities, including Churchill Downs, home of the Kentucky Derby. And this coalition says they want to have a common and comprehensive set of standards on issues like drugs and the whipping of horses with riding crops during races. And, Scott, it’s considered significant that Churchill Downs has joined. It has lagged behind on reform. So we’ll see what happens.

SIMON: Thanksgiving week, which is big for the NFL, Patriots and Cowboys face off. This is Tom Brady vs. Dak Prescott, the Cowboys quarterback, who’s been leading the league in passing.

GOLDMAN: Yeah. And, you know, during their reign, Scott, the Patriots have loved games like these – at home versus a good opponent and a hot quarterback, as you mentioned, in Dak. The Pats love reminding fans about the order of things, right?

SIMON: Yeah.

GOLDMAN: So for much of this season, the Pats have had the NFL’s best defense, especially pass defense. So it’ll be a challenge for Dak Prescott. The offense hasn’t been very good. New England quarterback Tom Brady’s passing stats are down. He is 42, remember. But if the wind and the rain…

SIMON: I’d still, you know, bet on him in any big game.

GOLDMAN: I know. And if the wind and the rain in the forecast aren’t too bad, I think he’s going to make a statement.

SIMON: Finally, on Thanksgiving, a holiday classic. There’s a slate of Thanksgiving football games on Thursday. The midday game, the first one, is between the Chicago Bears and the Detroit Lions.

GOLDMAN: (Laughter).

SIMON: Tom, has there ever been an NFL game in which neither team scores a single point because I think we could be on the verge of history here?

GOLDMAN: (Laughter) You know, there has. The last time was in 1943. The Lions and the Giants had a scoreless tie. But, Scott…

SIMON: How could the Bears be cut out of that? Yes?

GOLDMAN: Have you no faith?

SIMON: I think, maybe – I don’t know, two-point touchback? Maybe that’s what the defense will get them.

NPR’s Tom Goldman, thanks so much.

GOLDMAN: You’re welcome.

(SOUNDBITE OF GINGER BAKER’S “INTERLOCK”)

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Anti-Doping Agency Cites Russian ‘Non-Compliance’ With Olympic Testing Procedures

Russian National Anti-Doping Agency head Yuri Ganus speaks to reporters in Moscow in January.

Pavel Golovkin/AP


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Russia could find itself barred from the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games after international anti-doping regulators concluded that it has failed to comply with testing procedures by tampering with laboratory data and samples.

The World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, issued a statement late Friday, saying that it has sent a recommendation to its executive committee about Russian “non-compliance” with international testing standards. The executive committee is scheduled to meet on Dec. 9 to discuss the findings.

If the committee agrees Russia’s anti-doping agency, RUSADA, is non-compliant, the country could be banned next year as it has been for the past two games. However, Russia could appeal a decision made by WADA to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

NPR’s Tom Goldman reports that RUSADA was declared non-compliant before, touching off a long-running doping controversy:

“In 2015, the country’s drug testing lab was closed amidst revelations about a widespread state-sponsored doping system. RUSADA was reinstated in 2018. It was required to turn over data and samples for further drug testing. Two months ago, WADA found evidence some of the data was manipulated.”

At the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, 168 Russian athletes who passed anti-doping tests were not allowed to compete under the their country’s flag, but rather a banner saying Olympic Athlete from Russia.

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Jake Burton Carpenter, The Godfather Of Snowboarding, Dies At 65

The man known as “The Godfather of Snowboarding” died Wednesday at the age of 65. Jake Burton Carpenter brought the sport to the masses, through the company he founded.



AILSA CHANG, HOST:

The man called the soul of snowboarding has died. Jake Burton Carpenter was the founder of the iconic Burton Snowboards company. And as Vermont Public Radio’s Liam Elder-Connors reports, he helped open up the ski slopes to a whole new crowd.

LIAM ELDER-CONNORS, BYLINE: Fischer Van Golden is working at a ski and snowboarding shop in South Burlington. The store is buzzing as customers look through the dozens of brightly colored snowboards leaning against the wall. Van Golden says the store is close to the main Burton headquarters, which means it sells a good amount of the company’s gear. He reaches over and takes a board down.

FISCHER VAN GOLDEN: So the Burton Custom is probably one of the most iconic snowboards in the whole sport. It’s the one board they always continue to have in their line.

ELDER-CONNORS: Van Golden says he’s been working in the snowboard industry for a while, and Burton products have been a big part of his life. Even as a kid, he used to eagerly wait each year for the new catalog of Burton products.

VAN GOLDEN: And then just, like, obsessing over all the different products that were in it and, like, memorizing everything.

ELDER-CONNORS: Burton Snowboards was founded by Jake Burton Carpenter in 1977. According to the company, Carpenter worked as a bartender by night. And during the day, he built snowboards in his Vermont barn and tested them on nearby hills. Carpenter didn’t invent the snowboard. A similar device, called the Snurfer – think snow surfer – was invented about 10 years before Carpenter started his company. But Van Golden says Carpenter revolutionized the design of snowboards.

VAN GOLDEN: He sort of pioneered the sport itself and came up with the idea of strapping your feet actually to the board rather than just, like, surfing on top of the board with no binding. He created, you know, bindings that attach you to the board so you can actually, like, carve and control the board much better.

ELDER-CONNORS: While Carpenter is widely credited with popularizing the sport, it wasn’t his first thought when he started the company. In a 2016 StoryCorps interview, Carpenter said at first he thought of the company as a get-rich-quick scheme.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

JAKE BURTON CARPENTER: It became much more than that because I didn’t get rich quick.

ELDER-CONNORS: Carpenter says his focus soon turned to nurturing the sport. In the early days of the company, many ski resorts didn’t even allow snowboarders on the mountains.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BURTON CARPENTER: After a couple of years, it became much more important to me that I was right about the decision that there was a sport there. And I focused not about my own material needs or accomplishments or whatever; I just thought about the sport.

ELDER-CONNORS: Now, thanks in part to Carpenter’s work, when you go to the slopes, you can’t miss the groups of kids on snowboards who fly off big jumps, trying to land complicated tricks.

In a company-wide email this morning, Burton told its employees that Carpenter, the, quote, “soul of snowboarding,” died Wednesday night from complications due to cancer. And they urged their employees to honor Carpenter by going snowboarding.

For NPR News, I’m Liam Elder-Connors in Colchester, Vt.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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In ‘Canyon Dreams,’ A Navajo Town Struggles To Survive In An Often Hostile World

College and professional sports have a way of dominating the national headlines. But in some parts of America, high school athletics have become local obsessions.

In Pennsylvania, fans flock to school wrestling matches, while in Texas, high school football teams routinely sell out some of the state’s biggest stadiums.

In many parts of the western U.S., though, it’s the game of “rez ball” that has sports fans enchanted. As Michael Powell writes in his wonderful new book, Canyon Dreams, rez ball — so named because it’s played on Native American reservations — is a unique spin on basketball, “a quicksilver, sneaker-squeaking game of run, pass, pass, cut, and shoot, of spinning layups and quick shots and running, endless running … Play was swift and unrelenting as a monsoon-fed stream.”

And not many teams play it better than the Wildcats of Chinle High School, located in the Navajo Nation in northeastern Arizona. Powell, a New York Times columnist, spent a season in the small town of Chinle, watching the Wildcats take to the hardwood, and spending time with those who call the reservation home. Canyon Dreams is the product of his time in and around Chinle, and it’s a remarkable achievement.

Powell focuses heavily Raul Mendoza, the school’s “respected, although perhaps not beloved” basketball coach, whose career leading teams in the Southwest spanned decades: “He had lived a dozen lives in seventy years of wandering.” Mendoza is an old-school coach who’s determined to take Chinle to the state championships; he loves telling “corny jokes and he could name no rapper, past, present, or future.”

At the beginning of the season, Mendoza’s Chinle team has the potential to be a powerhouse, though you wouldn’t know it to look at them: Only three of the players on his team are over 6 ft. tall; the Wildcats’ point guard, Josiah Tsosie, stands at 5 ft. 4 in. Still, they’re scrappers in the rez ball tradition, which puts a premium on pugnacity and physicality: “Custom dictated that players help their opponents to their feet. They as quickly knocked them down again.”

Many of Mendoza’s players aren’t quite sure what to make of their laconic, reserved coach; some resent him for leaving them on the bench, while others don’t appreciate his often caustic assessments of their on-court performance. Despite his hard edges, though, Mendoza clearly cares for his players, especially those who have had to endure difficulty:

“Mendoza harbored special affection for the lost. … To take a well-adjusted kid and train and mold him was rewarding; to break through to the desperate, to give hope where there was none, was another mission entirely.”

And none of the players on the team have had easy lives. Chinle, like many nearby towns, has been beset by poverty, unemployment, domestic violence and alcoholism: “I knew of no player on Mendoza’s team whose family had not lost a relative to the bottle and fetal alcohol syndrome deformed some infants,” Powell writes.

He spends time with a wide array of people who live on the reservation, and presents their stories with a sympathy that’s never condescending. The results of his interviews can be heartbreaking: At one point, he takes a walk with a Navajo jeweler who used to play rez ball as a teenager; the next day, Powell learns that the man passed out the night before, the result of drinking too much, and froze to death.

Canyon Dreams is a book about basketball the same way that Buzz Bissinger’s Friday Night Lights is a book about football — while sports are the ostensible focus, Powell’s real interest is the community that drives the team. That’s not to say Powell’s coverage of Chinle’s games isn’t fascinating; indeed, he recaps the matches with an expert pacing, and creates an atmosphere of suspense as the Wildcats’ season progresses. He’s an excellent sportswriter with an obvious love for the game, and he does a great job explaining what makes rez ball so unique.

But it’s his deep dives into the lives of those associated with Chinle and its high school that sets Canyon Dreams apart. He profiles not just the players and coaching staff, but also teachers, townspeople and activists, and the result is a moving portrait of what it’s like to live on the reservation. Powell even incorporates memoir into the book, writing about his own explorations of the town, and how he came to be so invested in its people.

Canyon Dreams is difficult to categorize, but it’s unmistakably beautiful. Powell is a gifted and giving writer, and his book is at once a reflection on youth and ambition and a fascinating chronicle of a town’s struggle to survive in a world that’s often cruel and hostile. “Nothing about a basketball season is easy,” as Mendoza says. “Neither is life.”

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