Sports

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Football Fans Call Sunday's Super Bowl Dull, TV Ratings Were Down Too

The two teams combined for 16 points, and the Patriots won. That’s unlike last year when the teams combined for 74 points, and the Patriots lost. TV ratings were down to about 100 million viewers.



STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Good morning. I’m Steve Inskeep. Many viewers called Sunday’s Super Bowl dull. The two teams combined for only 16 points, and the Patriots won, as usual. That’s unlike last year when the teams combined for 74 points, and the Patriots lost. And now we know this year’s TV ratings are down to about 100 million viewers. But if you do the math and count it as TV viewers per point scored, this year’s game was a big success. It’s MORNING EDITION.

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 Real Super Bowl Drama Wasn't During The Game, But The Beer Commercials

There was little drama during Sunday’s Super Bowl. But one ad did start a Twitter war between Bud Light and Big Corn.



MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Last night’s Super Bowl had the lowest score ever, and it was every bit as boring as that sounds. If you wanted drama, you had to turn to the commercials.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

SYDNEY LEMMON: (As Dilly Dilly Queen) My king, this corn syrup was just delivered.

JOHN HOOGENAKKER: (As Dilly Dilly King) That’s not ours. We don’t brew Bud Light with corn syrup.

LEMMON: (As Dilly Dilly Queen) Miller Lite uses corn syrup.

HOOGENAKKER: (As Dilly Dilly King) Let us take it to them at once.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Yes, corn syrup. The Budweiser family of products, famous for Super Bowl ads like the Bud frogs, among others, settled on corn syrup for its major push this year.

KELLY: The implication being that corn syrup, used by rival brands in the brewing process, is not healthy. The response on Twitter was immediate.

SHAPIRO: MillerCoors tweeted, Bud Light uses rice to aid fermentation. We use corn syrup. Interestingly, none of our products use high fructose corn syrup, yet several of Anheuser-Busch’s do.

KELLY: Big corn, meanwhile, was a big mass of hurt feelings. The National Corn Growers Association tweeted, America’s corn farmers are disappointed in you. Our office is right down the road. We would love to discuss with you the many benefits of corn.

SHAPIRO: Corn farmer Kevin Ross wanted in on the conversation, too. He posted a video of him pouring cans of Bud Light down the drain.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

KEVIN ROSS: Bud Light, you’re not standing with corn farmers. We’re not standing with you.

KELLY: Marion Nestle saw the ad, too.

MARION NESTLE: From a nutritional standpoint, it’s absolutely hilarious, and I laughed all the way through it.

SHAPIRO: Nestle is a nutrition expert at New York University. She says that sugar is used to feed yeast during the fermentation process. It doesn’t care where the sugar comes from.

NESTLE: From a physiological standpoint in the body, it makes absolutely no difference at all. The yeast can’t tell them apart.

KELLY: So why call out corn syrup?

NESTLE: Well, they’re trying to say that their ingredients are healthier and more natural than the ingredients in the competitor’s beers.

SHAPIRO: So after millions of dollars spent throwing shade on corn syrup, the difference between Bud and others, according to Nestle, isn’t much of a difference at all.

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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Poor Students More Likely To Play Football, Despite Brain Injury Concerns

Mo Better Jaguars’ coaches and players huddle at the end of practice at Betsy Head Park in Brownsville, Brooklyn in September 2014.

Courtesy of Albert Samaha


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Courtesy of Albert Samaha

Fears of brain injuries has deterred many parents and their children from choosing to play football.

After years of publicity about how dangerous football can be, football enrollment has declined 6.6 percent in the past decade, according to data from the National Federation of State High School Associations.

Those who still play the sport are increasingly low-income students.

Over the past five years in Illinois, the proportion of high school football rosters filled by low-income boys rose nearly 25 percent – even as the number of players in the state has fallen by 14.8 percent over the same period, according to a story out this week from HBO’s Real Sports.

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This doesn’t surprise Albert Samaha, a BuzzFeed News investigative reporter and author of “Never Ran, Never Will: Boyhood and Football in a Changing American Inner City.”

Samaha spent two seasons embedded with the Mo Better Jaguar football program in Brownsville, a small Brooklyn neighborhood overburdened with poverty and crime. The program is for children ages 7-13, who are all aware of the risks of playing football, but play anyway.

“The reason that football is so valuable to them is the fact that it’s still the sport that that’s the most popular in America, that is getting the most money from high schools and colleges in America,” Samaha said in an interview with NPR’s Michel Martin on All Things Considered. “At a time when the educational gap continues to widen between low income, particularly black and brown kids, and higher income white kids, football offers a path to upward mobility that is not really available through any other extracurricular activity.”

Many of the 10, 11, and 12-year olds who Samaha reported on told him that they were playing football not just for the chance of getting a college scholarship, but also for the chance to get financial aid for top private high schools in New York City.

Their hopes were reinforced by private high school coaches who attended Mo Better Jaguar football games and told the boys that if they played well enough, they could get a scholarship, and with that scholarship, avoid the student debt and poverty that so many in generations before them faced.

“Kids feel pressured to play football, it’s rooted in the problem of education,” Samaha said.

Kids on the Mo Better Jaguars football team board a bus in Brownsville, Brooklyn to go to a game in September 2014.

Courtesy of Albert Samaha


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Courtesy of Albert Samaha

So why do so many low-income students choose football, and not a different, less dangerous, sport? Why not try for a baseball scholarship? Or soccer?

It’s a numbers game.

The odds of getting a college scholarship for a man playing football at a NCAA or NAIA school is 43:1, according to MarketWatch, and football offers far more athletic scholarships at NCAA and NAIA schools than any other sport, numbering close to 26,000 per year.

At the high school level, schools are investing big money into football as well. One high school in Katy, Texas, just outside of Houston, recently spent over 70 million dollars on a new state-of-the-art football stadium.

“As long as the money is going into this activity this is where the opportunities are going to be,” Samaha said.

Additionally, unlike some sports, football has a relatively low barrier of entry of participation, because there are so many positions that rely on differing capabilities.

“Football unlike other sports doesn’t require you to be a certain size or certain height,” Samaha said. “You can sort of play it whether you’re overweight whether you’re underweight. It’s sort of the most in some ways meritocratic of all the sports available for these opportunities.”

But with the opportunity to achieve affordable higher education, playing football also brings the risk of long-term brain damage.

Boys on the Mo Better Jaguars Pee Wee football team collide during tackling drills on the first full-contact practice of the season in August 2014.

Courtesy of Albert Samaha


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Courtesy of Albert Samaha

A report by the Journal of the American Medical Association, published in 2017, showed that in a study of 111 brains of deceased former National Football League players, 110 had evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).

CTE has been linked with repeated blows to the head, and can result in behavioral changes and cognitive decline.

Some of the behavioral side effects include difficulty with impulse control, aggression, emotional volatility and rage behavior. Extensive signs of CTE has been found in the brains of former NFL stars such as former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez, who hung himself in a prison cell while serving a life sentence for murder.

It’s not just NFL players though. The same study showed that in the 202 brains examined across all levels of play, nearly 88 percent of all the brains, 177, had CTE.

Low-income students who choose to play football know about these risks, Samaha said, but have factored it into a bigger risk assessment calculation. For them, playing football is still worth the risk, because they’re trying to avoid other dangers.

Boys on the Mo Better Jaguars youth football team line up for warm ups during practice in September 2014.

Courtesy of Albert Samaha


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Courtesy of Albert Samaha

“It’s a luxury to worry about these long-term, sort of abstract damages to these kids and their parents,” Samaha said. “The risks are all around them — the risks of not going to high school, the risks of not making it into college, or the risks of of falling into kind of the street path that they’d seen other people around them fall into.”

Football is their ticket out. But Samaha argues that America needs to reckon with the broader ethical implications of the sport.

“America’s dual commitments to football and racial oppression have meant that the danger of the sport will increasingly fall on the shoulders of low income black and brown kids,” Samaha said.

Meanwhile, he says, the money from the sport is mainly going to white coaches and white owners.

Samaha likened the disparity between the people who participate in football and the people who benefit to a “gladiatorial dichotomy.”

Meanwhile, there has been no real decline in viewership for the sport. A 2017 Gallup poll showed that football still leads as America’s favorite sport, with 37 percent of U.S. adults choosing it as their favorite sport to watch.

Millions are expected to watch the Super Bowl on Sunday, including Samaha.

“I feel guilty about it but I watch every Sunday,” he said. “I don’t know how to reckon with that.”

Sunday night, as millions look on, the players will inevitably clash in tangled lines of bodies on the field, perhaps risking a lot for a few yards — risking more to win.

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Barbershop: Super Bowl Politics

NPR’s Michel Martin discusses how politics have seeped into this year’s Super Bowl with Mark Leibovich of The New York Times, Megan McArdle of The Washington Postand Rodney Carmichael of NPR Music.



MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

And finally today, we’re going to head into the Barbershop. That’s where we invite interesting people to talk about what’s in the news and what’s on their minds. And, yes, there’s an awful lot going on in the news today. But we decided to talk about Super Bowl LIII, which is tomorrow in Atlanta.

We decided to focus on that because the Super Bowl is usually the most-watched or one of the most-watched television programs of the year. Usually, more than 100,000,000 watch it along with the halftime show and the commercials. And there have been controversies before about the game or the show, but this year, it seems as though the controversy or controversies are the story, from the officiating in the playoffs to the number of artists who apparently declined to perform during a halftime show in support of former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who hasn’t played in two seasons after setting off a wave of activism and condemnation for kneeling during the national anthem.

We wanted to talk about all of that, so we’ve called three people who’ve thought about the issues that we’re talking about here. And joining us now is Mark Leibovich. He’s the chief national correspondent for The New York Times Magazine. He’s also the author of “Big Game: The NFL In Dangerous Times.”

Welcome.

MARK LEIBOVICH: Good to be here.

MARTIN: We’re also joined by Rodney Carmichael, who reports on hip-hop for NPR and NPR Music.

Glad to have you back, Rodney.

LEIBOVICH: Hey, Michel. Thanks.

MARTIN: And Megan McArdle is with us. She’s opinion columnist at The Washington Post.

Welcome back to you as well.

MEGAN MCARDLE: Thanks for having me.

MARTIN: And Mark, I’m going to start with you because you’re a political reporter first, but you took some time off to report and write a book that looks at the inner workings of the NFL. And guess what? You’re still covering politics.

LEIBOVICH: (Laughter).

MARTIN: So is the Super Bowl more fraught this year than it’s been before? If that’s true, why is that? And is that OK?

LEIBOVICH: Absolutely it is more fraught, just like everything is more politicized. And you’re right. I mean, I decided to take a break from politics to jump into the National Football League for a couple of years, and, like, there is no break whatsoever. Since Donald Trump came upon the scene, everything has been more divided, including the Super Bowl.

MARTIN: And, Megan, you’ve written kind of – I don’t know, despairingly – do you think that’s a fair word…

MCARDLE: (Laughter) Yes.

MARTIN: …About that very issue. I mean, you’ve said that there don’t seem to be any places, safe spaces that don’t have politics attached to them, be it the NFL or the Oscars or any public awards show.

MCARDLE: Yeah.

MARTIN: Is that really a bad thing?

MCARDLE: I think it’s getting more and more like that. I think my favorite episode of this was that after the election, Penzeys Spices, where I buy a lot of spaces – the owner is very anti-Trump, and it turns out that there’s another spice company owned by his brother and sister-in-law, and they came out and said, well, we love everyone. And so now there is a Republican and a Democratic place to buy your bulk cinnamon. And I think that that’s really – it sort of sums up where America is today.

MARTIN: So tell us about the NFL, though. I mean, do you – you know, obviously people have very different feelings about the whole kneeling controversy and what that means and the fact that two years later, it’s still having an effect – the fact that, you know, artists – Rodney’s going to talk more about that – are saying in support of Kaepernick and in support of the idea that he has a right to protest that they decided not to participate in something that would normally be a plum opportunity for them.

MCARDLE: Right.

MARTIN: Is that…

MCARDLE: I mean, look, I think…

MARTIN: …Wrong?

MCARDLE: …That this is incredibly divisive, and people are taking stands on something they feel very strongly about. And I think one of the things that I have observed about all of this is the complete inability of either side of that debate – you know, I see both sides of that to some extent. I think Kaepernick certainly has a right to protest and that the artists certainly have a right to say no. Like, stand up – I admire people who stand up for what they believe in, even at personal cost.

But just the inability to kind of even frame the debate in a way that you can have a discussion about it because people cannot see beyond, I am outraged because he won’t stand for the national anthem. I am outraged because he is being punished for not standing for the national anthem. And there’s just – there’s sort of no in between anymore, and it’s really a sad place that America’s come to.

MARTIN: Rodney, how do you see all this?

RODNEY CARMICHAEL, BYLINE: I mean, I think the thing we have to remember is, you know, there’s really no form of racial justice protest that America has ever been supportive of. You know, in civil rights era, they fought back with dogs and water hoses. In Black Lives Matter, it was rubber bullets. You know, you’ve come to Atlanta with the Super Bowl. It is the black mecca. It’s the home of civil rights. It’s the home of hip-hop. There’s no way that, you know, the NFL isn’t going to be confronted in terms of their stance on racial politics.

MARTIN: And what is your thought about the fact that there could be or should be some place that is devoid of politics – that people could kind of just agree to take off – well, in hockey, take off your gloves has a different meaning…

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: So we’ll…

CARMICHAEL: Right.

MARTIN: …Use the other meaning of take off your gloves – just kind of chill.

CARMICHAEL: Yeah. I mean, the thing is, you have to remember, like, there’s a reason for protest in this country, and it’s because black people, marginalized people don’t have any other means of access in terms of historically being able to get their voice heard in systems of power. So protesting and, you know, at times like this where it seems like it’s comfortable for everybody else – it’s not comfortable for everybody else and for black folks at these other times, so that’s why we’re having protests at times like this.

MARTIN: So, Mark, talk a little bit more about where that that whole thing is. It’s not like the main feature of your book about the NFL, but it’s certainly…

LEIBOVICH: It intervened.

MARTIN: …Bubbling under the…

LEIBOVICH: Oh, there’s no question.

MARTIN: It’s infused…

LEIBOVICH: Well…

MARTIN: Right?

LEIBOVICH: Like, the reason I wanted to write about the National Football League is it has become the – just the great spectacle of American life. I mean, something like 48 of the top 50 top-watch shows in America every year are football games. Donald Trump became the other great spectacle of American life, the other great reality show. He’s wanted to end the National Football League for years, and he just sort of belly-flopped right into the middle of this pool. And this becomes a proxy fight for whether you support Donald Trump or not.

MARTIN: And is this still, do you think – you know, it’s interesting because at one point, hundreds of NFL players were kneeling, and then it became very fraught and complicated. Even some of the owners – one owner, let’s say…

LEIBOVICH: Right.

MARTIN: One owner at one point knelt with his team.

LEIBOVICH: Right – for one week.

MARTIN: But has it – has that – is this – is that controversy – so we’re going to talk about the entertainers in a minute.

LEIBOVICH: Yeah.

MARTIN: But is it still something that is very present for the league?

LEIBOVICH: It’s present in that Colin Kaepernick does not have a job, and people are acutely aware of that. But no, protest has not been a big story this year. Donald Trump has essentially laid off, and he was occupied on the midterms and the shutdown and so forth. So – but it’s very much beneath the surface. And, again, the Colin Kaepernick situation is something that a lot of people who are outside the league are very quick to weigh in on, musical acts being a great example here.

MARTIN: Megan, can I just ask you briefly about this? But not to belabor the point, but could you just address Rodney’s point for a minute? I mean, Rodney’s point is that, you know, the idea that some people get to have a safe place where they cannot think about the broader issues in their lives is something that some people never had. I mean, they’re going back to – you know, how many – it was a great writer who said, you know, what is the fourth of July to the Negro? And did you see my point? So…

MCARDLE: Absolutely. No, look, I think that’s an absolutely valid point. And I think there’s kind of two questions you have to separate in that. And one is, does the country need places where it can come together on a non-political footing? And I would say it does. I’m not going to tell a player protesting police brutality no, right? I’m not going to say that. I’m just saying, like, it is sad to watch all of those spaces collapsing at once, and it is sad that the NFL is one of them. I’m not saying that, you know, I therefore think Colin Kaepernick did something wrong or that the players did something wrong.

I think the second question, which is a different question, is, tactically, does this advance your cause? And I’m more skeptical on that front. I’m skeptical that the particular form of protest chosen – it gets a lot of attention. But there’s often in protesting – and I, you know, I did a lot of protesting in college, and I’ve looked at a lot of the social science literature on this – and it turns out that there’s often a direct tradeoff in protesting between how much attention you get and how much good you’re actually doing. The more attention you’re getting, often, that attention is negative.

You have turned off – it’s like closing down highways as a form of protest. Yes, you have attracted a lot of attention, but all of the people whose attention you have attracted hate you, so that, you know, you do have to think about. And I’m not sure that this has actually been a tactically effective protest, which is completely separate from the moral legitimacy of doing it.

MARTIN: So, Rodney, talk a little bit more about Atlanta, if you would…

CARMICHAEL: Right.

MARTIN: …And the significance of this event to Atlanta. And then talk a little bit, if you would, about the calculation, or the – calculation, is that right? – the debate that a number of artists have had about whether or not to participate.

CARMICHAEL: Yeah. Well, I mean, it’s definitely an interesting time to converge upon Atlanta. You know, like I said, it’s the black mecca in a lot of ways, especially in pop culture. You’ve got, you know, hip-hop capital, you’ve got the legacy of civil rights, the home of Dr. King. And so, you know, I think coming to Atlanta made the Kaepernick thing and the NFL that much more impossible for the NFL to escape, you know? And it’s a confrontation in a lot of ways. But I think, for a lot of entertainers, it’s been one of those things where your decision is your politics, and, you know, your politics affect your pocket. And so all of that is in play.

MARTIN: So what about Big Boi, Travis Scott, Maroon 5…

CARMICHAEL: Yeah.

MARTIN: …Gladys Knight, who…

CARMICHAEL: Yeah.

MARTIN: …Are participating. What is it for them? I know that’s a lot of people to talk about. But maybe…

CARMICHAEL: Well…

MARTIN: …Talk about Travis Scott and Big Boi.

MARTIN: Yeah. I mean, Big Boi, he’s, you know, home of outcasts, home of Atlanta. He’s done a lot for the city. I think one of the really interesting things about all of the people that are performing that you name – they all have ties to the same manager, Irving Azoff, whose management company has – you know, he’s been a really power player in the music industry for a long time. So, you know, you have this situation where a lot of performers are performing on a stage at a time when a lot of people don’t want them to. And I think you have to kind of look at the machinations of the music industry and how that plays…

MARTIN: Briefly, is it a plus or a minus for these artists? Will it be at the end of this?

CARMICHAEL: It’s a little more nuanced than that, you know? I think – you know, there’s still a lot of black fans of the NFL. A lot of black fans are going to be watching the Super Bowl. I think that you’ve got to be able to use your mike to say something in this country, and, you know, hip-hop has that tradition. So for Big Boi and Travis Scott, I think they’re going to be between a rock and a hard place if they don’t figure that out.

MARTIN: Mark, very briefly?

LEIBOVICH: Well, I would say yes. I mean, I think the racial politics of this are also inescapable. I mean, the Atlanta Falcons have a actually 40 percent black season ticket base, which is just unprecedented in the league. And Maroon 5 made some news this week by refusing to hold a press conference. So there’s speculation they might have a surprise in store. This is very much in keeping with the reality show.

MARTIN: Very briefly – such a cliche – Rams or Patriots? I’m sorry. I have to do it.

LEIBOVICH: You know, I grew up in New England, so I, as a birthright, root for the Patriots. And I know everyone else is rooting against them.

MARTIN: That’s true. Rodney?

CARMICHAEL: (Laughter) I’m going to pick Atlanta. I’m rooting for Atlanta.

MARTIN: OK. Megan?

MCARDLE: I come out – I’m descended from Boston people, so I have to also go with the Patriots, or they will kill me.

MARTIN: OK (laughter). That’s Megan McArdle of The Washington Post, Mark Leibovich, New York Times chief national correspondent, and NPR Music hip-hop writer Rodney Carmichael.

Thank you all so much for joining us.

CARMICHAEL: Thanks so much.

MCARDLE: Thanks for having me.

(SOUNDBITE OF LIL WAYNE FEAT. DRAKE SONG, “RIGHT ABOVE IT”)

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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How Former NFL Quarterback Tony Romo Got His Broadcast Break

Tony Romo never got to the Super Bowl as quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys. But he’s finally going as an analyst for CBS Sports. Romo made a seamless transition to the broadcast booth.



ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

You know those sports fans who like to watch a game on TV and turn the sound down? Well, CBS has a message for those fans. Turn it up this Sunday when the network televises Super Bowl LIII between the New England Patriots and the LA Rams. That’s because Tony Romo’s in the booth. The longtime Dallas Cowboys quarterback is in his second year as CBS’s main NFL analyst, and he’s a hit with his own special skill. NPR’s Tom Goldman reports.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Tony Romo can’t really be a seer of football plays, can he?

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDINGS)

JIM NANTZ: What do you see here, Tony?

TONY ROMO: (Laughter) Well, I thought they were going to run the ball to the right. Now he’s going back left with the run.

NANTZ: There you go. To the left it is. Rashard.

ROMO: The quarterback’s going to roll right and launch the ball out of bounds. It’s going to look weird.

(CHEERING)

NANTZ: Rolling right. Launching out of bounds. And Tony stealing the signals once again. Well done, my friend.

GOLDMAN: That’s a smattering of Romo’s seeming clairvoyance and his partner, Jim Nantz’s, bemusement. This week, the veteran play-by-play man, Nantz, repeated the nickname he’s given Romo, based on the 16th-century seer Nostradamus.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

NANTZ: Romo-stradamus.

GOLDMAN: The sports world has been buzzing about Romo’s ability to predict plays. It prompted The Wall Street Journal to dig in and find out if he’s really that good. The Journal studied every one of the 2,599 thousand plays Romo called this season. He was right on 68 percent of his predictions. Not bad, but not perfect, proving he’s not some soothsaying mystic, rather, a guy with a specific football skill set.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ROMO: I feel like, when you’re broadcasting, for me, it’s like I’m still looking at it from the quarterback’s perspective.

GOLDMAN: And it’s working for him, says Jimmy Traina. He writes about sports media for Sports Illustrated.

JIMMY TRAINA: You know, he went from the field to the booth. So he knows the offenses and defense of all the teams in the league. He knows the players. He knows the schemes. The knowledge is there.

GOLDMAN: But it’s not just the knowledge that made CBS execs take what they say was a calculated risk throwing Romo into the lead analyst’s chair with no broadcast experience. They found in private conversations with Romo that he also was really easy to listen to and had an almost giddy enthusiasm about football. Again, Jimmy Traina.

TRAINA: He’s sort of a combination of a football idiot savant and the drunk guy at the end of the bar during a football game.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ROMO: Oh, boy.

NANTZ: Yup.

ROMO: Field position, everything, points – this is huge, Jim.

GOLDMAN: That savant drunk-guy duality mirrors, a bit, his life on the field. He was a really good quarterback, but also one prone to injury and blunders, none more infamous than in a 2007 playoff game when Romo was the holder as Dallas prepared to attempt what should have been a game-winning field goal.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: Romo holds.

(CHEERING)

UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: Nineteen-yard field goal attempt. And it’s fumbled by Romo. And then Romo’s going to…

GOLDMAN: Ten years after that moment, heard on NBC, Romo retired and began a broadcasting career that so far has hit all the right notes. Although, one is never safe from the snark. The Onion posted an article last week with the headline, “Tony Romo Realizes He Should Have Used Ability To Read Defenses Back When He Was Still Playing.” Romo tamped down his play-predicting this season. CBS denies it told him to. Romo says he doesn’t want to do the same thing over and over again. But this week, there was a hint of what may be in store Sunday. A reporter asked Romo to predict a Super Bowl score, and he didn’t dodge.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ROMO: I’m going to go 28-24. And I think the team who has 24 has the ball at the end, and they don’t score.

GOLDMAN: He didn’t predict a winner because even Tony Romo-stradamus is only willing to go so far. Tom Goldman, NPR News.

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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What's Your Superstitious Sports Ritual? Tell Us About It

Fans cheer at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., on Jan. 13. What stuff do you do to help your team?

Stan Grossfeld/Boston Globe via Getty Images


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What’s your superstitious sports ritual?

Is it a prayer, wearing a special T-shirt, not washing your socks or eating a special sandwich? With the Super Bowl this Sunday, we’re looking at you Patriots and Rams fans in particular. What are you doing to help ensure your team wins?

NPR’s Weekend Edition wants to hear from you. Fill out the form below, and a producer may get in touch.

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Athletes Kick Off Ultramarathon In Minnesota Despite Extreme Cold

Endurance runners, skiers and cyclists in Minnesota haven’t let extreme cold get in the way of competing in the Arrowhead 135 ultramarathon. The race kicked off Monday in International Falls, Minn.



AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Officials in the Midwest are warning many residents to limit their time outside due to the extreme cold. But a group of racers in remote northern Minnesota are seriously bucking that advice.

(CHEERING)

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Dozens of skiers, runners and cyclists set out yesterday morning to run a 135-mile race.

KEN KRUEGER: It’s 22 below with a wind chill of 46 below.

CORNISH: That’s Ken Krueger. He directs the Arrowhead 135 race.

SHAPIRO: Participants head from International Falls on the Canadian border to the small town of Tower, Minn.

KRUEGER: The whole course is wooded. You don’t see a house until you get to the finish line.

CORNISH: Now, if that doesn’t already sound hard enough, the runners also pull sleds behind them with emergency supplies – a stove, sleeping bag, matches.

KRUEGER: And they weigh approximately 35 pounds.

SHAPIRO: Some years, only 20 percent of the racers finish, but that’s all part of the draw.

KRUEGER: Maybe some people want a warm race, but most of them want a tough race. They want the challenge. They want the bragging rights. And if they get a, quote, “easier year,” it’s almost like they were cheated out of a race.

CORNISH: Already, a number of this year’s racers have dropped out.

RUSSELL LOUCKS: A variety of reasons. We did have one drop because of frostbite.

SHAPIRO: That’s Russell Loucks. He’s a race official. Racers have also quit because their drinking water froze or because of mechanical issues.

LOUCKS: Tires go flat or something breaks or something and it’s 22 below, and you really can’t take your gloves off for more than 30 seconds.

CORNISH: Loucks himself hasn’t participated in the race.

LOUCKS: Oh, hell no. (Laughter) These people are crazy.

SHAPIRO: But cyclist Leah Gruhn just finished the race for the seventh time.

LEAH GRUHN: Once you finish something like this, you kind of look, you know, into the rest of your life and ask yourself, oh, what other things are out there that I don’t think that I am able to accomplish but maybe with some planning and work I actually could? So I think it’s really empowering.

CORNISH: The bikers and skiers have mostly finished by now, but most of the runners won’t wrap up until later tonight and tomorrow.

SHAPIRO: Expected lows tonight at the finish line – 30 below zero.

(SOUNDBITE OF THE PIANO GUYS’ “LET IT GO”)

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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South Korea Will Interview Thousands Of Athletes After Rape And Abuse Allegations

Shim Suk-hee (front left) races during the women’s 1,500-meter finals at a World Cup short track speedskating event at the Utah Olympic Oval on Nov. 13, 2016, in Kearns, Utah.

Rick Bowmer/AP


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Rick Bowmer/AP

South Korea’s human rights commission is launching a sprawling investigation into sexual abuse and violence in sports, following multiple allegations that coaches mistreated and attacked athletes.

The National Human Rights Commission of Korea plans to interview thousands more athletes, including children and adults, about possible mistreatment.

“Physical and sexual harassment in the sports community take place repeatedly within a structured system, rather than accidentally,” the commission’s chief Choi Young-ae told a news conference in Seoul last week. “Violence is exonerated in the performance-centered culture.”

The commission, an independent body set up by the government, says it is assembling a team to carry out the interviews for one year, after which it might recommend further investigation and possible prosecution.

Earlier this month, three government ministries in charge of gender equality, education and sports pledged to coordinate action to make sure offenders, and those who ignore or cover up abuse, are prosecuted.

“From now on, we will make sure that victims of sexual abuse can call on the authorities without having to fear backlash,” Lee Sook-jin, vice minister of gender equality and family, told reporters on Thursday.

South Korea’s Olympic medal counts have ranked in the top 10 in recent years. But the new abuse accusations reveal entrenched problems in the competitive training culture of one of Asia’s rising sports powers, sports and human rights experts say.

The first case that appeared to lead a series of survivors to come forward was short track speedskater Shim Suk-hee, who went missing from the national team’s training camp in early 2018 — weeks before she competed in last year’s Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.

A Sports Ministry investigation found that Shim, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, was beaten by her coach Cho Jae-beom the day she went missing. Cho was fired and convicted of abusing four athletes, including Shim. He was sentenced to 10 months in jail last September.

Shim testified at Cho’s appeal hearing last month. Speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, she said, “I mustered my courage to come here today because I hope there will be no more victims like myself in the sports world and because I want to do what I can, not just for myself, but for the future.”

This month Shim went further, accusing Cho of repeatedly raping her since she was 17. She’s now 21.

Cho, who is 37, has denied the sexual abuse charges through his lawyer but admitted to physically abusing Shim and three other athletes.

As the scandal grabbed headlines, a petition on the presidential office’s website calling for harsher sentencing of Cho got more than a quarter of a million signatures.

Government officials and lawmakers promised to get tough on sexual abuse in sports.

“Recent allegations of physical and sexual violence in sports reveal a shameful side hidden beneath the shiny facade of South Korea as a sports powerhouse,” President Moon Jae-in told his aides in a speech this month.

Also in January, a former judo athlete as well as a taekwondo trainee stepped forward to accuse their coaches of physical and sexual violence.

But some observers say the recent series of accusations are just a drop in the bucket.

“Still, the numbers are low, and we all know why,” says Chung Yong-chul, a professor of sports psychology at Seoul’s Sogang University and an activist against abuse in sports. “Because of all the threats, [abused athletes] are afraid to talk about it.”

Sports and Olympics authorities say the government has taken disciplinary action in 124 cases of physical, sexual and verbal abuse against athletes in the past five years, including 16 incidents of sexual abuse.

Chung says the government has been promising to crack down further on abuse for the past decade, but because of a culture of impunity, little has changed.

Some of this culture, he notes, has roots in South Korea’s Confucian traditions, in which a teacher’s authority is just like a father’s: It must be obeyed and not challenged.

“That’s part of the reason why it’s so hard for athletes to speak out,” he says, “because you’re actually accusing a father-like figure, accusing him as an aggressor.”

That’s also why sports authorities who have the power to punish abusers often shield them, Chung says. He adds that athletes are suspicious of the help centers and hotlines set up for them, and that they fear the services may be working against them and protecting coaches and trainers.

Athletes also face limited educational and career prospects after they retire from sports, Chung notes, so they are often afraid of risking their futures by speaking out.

He acknowledges that the current scandal in South Korea bears some superficial resemblance to the case of Larry Nassar, the former USA Gymnastics national team doctor.

But Chung points out that Nassar was sentenced to a total of more than 300 years in prison for multiple sex offenses. In addition, USA Gymnastics’ entire board of directors resigned, as did the interim president of Michigan State University, where Nassar worked as a physician.

“That didn’t happen in Korea,” Chung says. Although the head of the Korean Sport and Olympic Committee apologized to victims and the public, officials have not resigned or lost their posts as a result of the allegations.

Chung adds that if the snowballing scandal and public outrage don’t force an overhaul of a system that has allowed such abuses, then perhaps nothing will.

“So I think this could be the last chance for Korean sports to actually eradicate all the problems,” he warns.

He hopes South Korea will accept a reduced gold medal haul at next year’s Tokyo Olympics, in exchange for an increase in athletes’ human rights.


NPR News Assistant Se Eun Gong contributed reporting.

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Kendall Coyne Schofield Makes History As First Woman To Compete In NHL Skills Competition

Kendall Coyne Schofield became the first woman to compete in the NHL All-Stars Skills Competition this past week. She subbed in for Nathan MacKinnon who couldn’t compete because of a bruised foot.



LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST:

It all began with a tweet. Colorado Avalanche Center Nathan MacKinnon was all set to compete in the National Hockey League’s All-Star Skills Competition, but he got a bruised foot. So he had to pull out. But McKinnon had another player in mind to fill in. And his team tweeted out an invitation to Kendall Coyne Schofield. She’s a forward for the U.S. women’s national team, which took the gold medal at last year’s Olympics. Her first thought, she said, was, I can do this. And so she did. In the fastest skater event, she posted a time of 14.346 seconds, which placed seventh among some of the NHL’s top players. And it made her the first woman to ever compete in the NHL All-Stars Skills Competition. Obviously, I was a little nervous, Coyne Schofield told ESPN. But she said, I knew it was a moment that was going to break a lot of barriers and a moment that would change the perception of our game.

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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Naomi Osaka Of Japan Secures Her Second Grand Slam Title With Australian Open Victory

Japan’s Naomi Osaka reacts to her victory over Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic in the women’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne.

Mark Schiefelbein/AP


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Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Naomi Osaka walked off the court at the Australian Open with her second consecutive Grand Slam victory, cementing her rise to the top of the women’s tennis world.

She defeated Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic on Saturday, edging out a victory after losing the second set — a hitch that nearly derailed the 21-year-old player.

After winning the first set 7-6 (2), a visibly frustrated Osaka put her face in her hand during the second set, then covered her head with a towel as she walked off the court after losing 5-7. But she returned with renewed determination, sealing her victory with a 6-4 win in the third set.

“I felt like I didn’t want to have any regrets,” the Japanese player told reporters in Melbourne. “I think if I didn’t regroup after the second set, then I would have looked back on this match and probably cried or something.”

Saturday’s victory in the women’s singles final will catapult Osaka, ranked 72nd in the world this time last year, to number one in the Women’s Tennis Association rankings.

Naomi Osaka and Petra Kvitova embrace following Osaka’s victory in the match.

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That will make her the first Asian woman to top the rankings, according to the Australian Open, and the first Japanese player of either gender. She’ll also be the youngest woman to reach No. 1 in nearly a decade, following then 20-year-old Caroline Wozniacki’s rise to the top in 2010, the Associated Press reports.

Osaka’s last Grand Slam win — her defeat of Serena Williams at the U.S. Open in September — stirred controversy among fans. The referee issued a point penalty for Williams after she broke a racket, then a game penalty for arguing with him. Spectators booed.

Although that win marked the first Grand Slam singles victory to go to a Japanese player, the victory was bittersweet for Osaka, who idolized Williams. (Williams was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open last Wednesday, dashing hopes of a rematch with Osaka.)

This time around, there were no jeers. ESPN’s Howard Bryant says Saturday’s contest saw a meeting of two champions.

“This was a match that … you didn’t want to see anybody lose,” Bryant told NPR’s Scott Simon.

Kvitova, who was playing in her first Grand Slam final since surviving a knife attack in her home in 2016, delivered a gracious and grateful speech during the trophy ceremony.

Petra Kvitova plays against Naomi Osaka in the Australian Open.

Kelly Defina/Getty Images for Tennis Australi


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Kelly Defina/Getty Images for Tennis Australi

“To my team, thank you for everything, but mostly thank you for sticking with me even [as] we didn’t know if I would [be] able to hold a racket again,” she said, fighting back tears amid booming applause.

“We didn’t even know if I would be able to hold the racquet again.”@Petra_Kvitova‘s comeback story is one in a million ?#AusOpen pic.twitter.com/XLz2tc703i

— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 26, 2019

“You’ve been through so much,” Osaka told Kvitova in her address. “You’re really amazing, and I’m really honored to have played you in the final of a Grand Slam.”

Osaka broke the top 10 in the WTA rankings just last September and made her top five debut the next month. The Florida-based player’s meteoric rise has been met with enthusiasm from Japanese fans, who see her as an inspiration.

“I never imagined in my lifetime that a Japanese player would reach No. 1,” one fan, Daisuke Aizawa, told the AP. “Tennis is already popular here, but this will just add to its popularity and I’m sure more young people will take up the sport now.”

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe even tweeted his congratulations, along with a picture of the victorious player.

Osaka was born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Haitain father and moved to New York at age 3, the AP reports. After her win, she laughed with reporters and admitted to being shocked by her own victory, but said she’s not focused on the ratings.

“Maybe if I see my sister, you know, I can be like, guess who’s the number one tennis player? Me,” she joked.

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