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17-Year-Old Transgender Boy Wins Texas Girls' Wrestling Championship

Trinity High School junior Mack Beggs waits for a signal from the referee in the final round of the 6A Girls 110 Weight Class match during the Texas Wrestling State Tournament on Saturday in Cypress, Texas. Beggs, a transgender boy, is required by state policy to compete against girls.

Leslie Plaza Johnson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

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Leslie Plaza Johnson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Texas state wrestling championships aren’t usually national news. But they made headlines this weekend when a 17-year-old transgender boy — barred by state rules from competing in the boys’ league — won his weight class, against girls.

Mack Beggs, the teenage boy in question, hasn’t sought the spotlight. By all accounts he just wants to wrestle.

But media attention found him anyway. In part, that’s because some parents of female wrestlers have vocally objected to the fact that Beggs, who has been taking testosterone as part of his gender transition, is wrestling girls. One parent even filed a lawsuit against the league that organizes public school sports.

The controversy has been heightened because his victory arrived on the heels of President Trump’s decision to rescind Obama administration guidelines on trans students’ rights in school.

Asa Merritt, a reporter in West Texas, spoke to NPR’s Michel Martin about the controversy, and also covered the championship for our Newscast division.

He says Beggs began transitioning about a year and a half ago.

“He wants to compete against boys,” Merritt says. But under Texas rules, boys can’t compete against girls, and students must compete as the gender marked on their birth certificate. That meant if Beggs wanted to wrestle, he had to do it in the girls’ league.

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Which he did, with great success — he had an undefeated season. His triumphs led to impassioned feelings in the Berry Center, just outside of Houston, on Saturday.

Merritt says that every time Beggs won a match in his 110-pound weight class, the audience “erupted in both boos and cheers.”

Family, friends, teammates and trans supporters celebrated Beggs’ wins. But at the same time, “there was jeering and jawing,” Merritt told Michel Martin. “And people said things like, you know, ‘He doesn’t belong there. He should be on a different mat.’ It was really intense.”

Beggs “didn’t speak to anyone during the event,” Merritt says. “He definitely avoided any kind of media presence.”

When he did speak publicly, after the championship was over, Beggs didn’t highlight the rules, the lawsuit or the controversy.

“I wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for my teammates,” the wrestler said. “That’s honestly what the spotlight should have been on, is my teammates. … we trained hard every single day.”

Texas is considering legislation similar to North Carolina’s controversial HB2, that would require trans people in public schools and other government buildings to use the bathroom corresponding to the sex on their birth certificate. Powerful business interests are opposed to the bill, NPR’s Wade Goodwyn has reported, but it’s a priority of the state’s lieutenant governor.

As for the sports requirement that kept Beggs competing with girls, despite criticism from other parents, officials “don’t envision a change,” The Associated Press reports.

“Ninety-five percent of the school superintendents in Texas voted for the rule as it was proposed, which was to use birth certificates,” Jamey Harrison, the deputy director of Texas’ University Interscholastic League, told the AP. “So any rule can be reconsidered, but … given the overwhelming support for that rule, I don’t expect it to change anytime soon.”

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For Basketball Player Quinn Cook, A Big Step Closer To The Dream

Quinn Cook No.15 of the East Team drives to the basket during the NBA D-League All-Star Game as part of 2017 All-Star Weekend at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on Feb. 18, 2017.

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The world of professional sports is a revolving door – athletes come and go.

Sunday, there was an arrival in the NBA that resonated a bit more.

Twenty-three-year-old Quinn Cook signed a 10-day contract with the Dallas Mavericks. For Cook, a personable and popular player, it’s his first regular season call up to the NBA. For the past season and-a-half, he’s been playing in the D League — pro basketball’s minor league.

NPR chronicled Cook’s season last year with the D League’s Canton Charge on the podcast “Embedded.”

Cook, a guard, became nationally known to basketball fans when he helped Duke win the 2015 men’s college basketball championship. He was a senior starter on that team. After winning the title, three members of Duke’s starting lineup were picked in the first round of the NBA draft. Cook wasn’t drafted. In “Embedded,” he talked about breaking down after watching the draft at his mom’s house and not hearing his named called.

But Cook has made the most of his D-League experience. Last year, he was named Rookie of the Year, an honor that earned Cook praise from Lebron James, the superstar for Canton’s parent club, the Cleveland Cavaliers. Cook also had some near, late season call up’s to the NBA. This season, Cook was second in scoring and, at the recent D League All-Star game, he won the Most Valuable Player award.

Speaking Sunday from Dallas, Cook said he “definitely” has played better this season – the result of hard work, a year of experience as a professional and the fact that he didn’t get called up to the NBA his first season. “I had the motivation of not getting where I wanted to,” he said, “and I trusted myself to go back to the D-League.”

Undrafted players like Cook often head overseas where they can make more money than a comparatively paltry D League salary.

But while the wallet gets fatter overseas, the exposure and chance of getting called up to the NBA isn’t as great.

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It was recently reported Cook turned down a $300,000 offer to play in Europe last summer, so he could stay in the D-League. Cook said the story was wrong. “I had [an offer] that was way bigger than that from a team in Russia,” he said, adding, “I didn’t take it because it’s not about the money. When you chase the money, you kind of get off track and lose focus. That’s not why I play the game. I play to have fun and I play for the dream.”

Cook’s NBA dream certainly is a lot closer after signing with the Mavs. But it’s not quite there. If he does well and the team likes him, they can sign him to a second 10-day contract. If, at the end of that, the team still feels the same way, it has to sign him for the rest of the season.

“That’s the main thing,” Cook said, “to make it all the way. So I just take it a day at a time and try to keep advancing. Just keep advancing.”

Cook will suit up for his first ever NBA regular season action Monday, when Dallas hosts the Miami Heat in a nationally televised game.

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Saturday Sports: Possible Changes In Baseball

NPR’s Scott Simon talks to Howard Bryant of ESPN about possible rule changes for Major League Baseball that are designed to make games shorter.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

Now it’s time for sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: It’s spring training time, and Major League Baseball owners say that without major changes in the game they fear the national pastime, it could be a thing of the past. Howard Bryant of espn.com and ESPN the Magazine joins us from Arizona. Howard, out there for that great book festival in Tucson?

HOWARD BRYANT: You know, I did the Tucson book festival a couple of years ago. But no, I’m just here for Giants and Cubs and A’s and Indians…

SIMON: Spring training.

BRYANT: …And all of the great spring training baseball from the Cactus League.

SIMON: The Cubs finally win the World Series and now the owners want to change all the rules. What’s going on?

BRYANT: (Laughter) Well, what’s going on is I can give you – Chicago Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer said it best, right? He said 100 years ago, the most popular sports in America were boxing, baseball and horse racing. And now nobody cares about boxing or horse racing, so we shouldn’t feel like we’re invincible. Baseball is in trouble even though revenues are at $12 billion.

They think – the owners, that is, think that the game is too slow. They think that in an era of people who have short attention spans with small screens that the game needs an interjection, shall we say, of a little bit of pace. And so what they want to do is they already got rid of the time on an intentional walk. No more four pitches…

SIMON: Yeah.

BRYANT: …Go down to first base when you get a signal from the dugout.

SIMON: That’ll save 15 seconds right there, yeah.

BRYANT: (Laughter) Exactly. And there’s a battle going on here. There’s a battle that’s taking place between the owners and the players. That’s something new in baseball, right? And so the – baseball’s not going to look the way we’ve seen it before. And I think that you’ve got the purists who are really upset about it. But the real question that a lot of the baseball people, that the players feel is that – do you want to watch baseball or do you want to watch something else? If – why are we rounding the bases if you want to save time when you hit a home run? Are you here to watch baseball or are you here because you – you know, you want to make dinner reservations after the game?

SIMON: Yeah. What about getting rid of, I don’t know, let’s say a quarter of the ads? That’d speed up the game, right?

BRYANT: That’s the battle, Scott. That’s the one – and it’s really interesting when you parse the words. When you listen to the owners, they’ll tell you that we don’t have a problem with time of game. We have a problem with pace of play. And when you frame it that way you can blame the players. If you frame it in terms of time of game, then you immediately say – which a lot of fans have said – well, why are the commercials so long?

Well, commercials cut into the money, and so far nobody has been willing to cut into the money. Obviously, you’ve got two and a half minutes in between – in between innings.

SIMON: Yeah.

BRYANT: You could shave 25 minutes off of a game, but then you’d also be shaving into profits, and you know what that does.

SIMON: Yeah. I have a problem almost more than the length of the game with how late the games start, particularly in the championship season. And I think it’s hard to get a new generation of fans if most of them have to go to bed before they can see the end of the game in the eighth or ninth inning.

BRYANT: No question. There hasn’t been a World Series day game since 1987. How about some postseason day games? How about making the game a little bit more accessible? But right now what you’re really going to see is battles over mound visits instead of cutting into commercials.

SIMON: Now, you mean you can’t – oh, the number – limiting the number of times that a manager or a coach can go to the mound.

BRYANT: Exactly. The famous scene in “Bull Durham” where they’re all sitting there talking about…

SIMON: Yeah.

BRYANT: …Having dinner and…

SIMON: Candlesticks.

BRYANT: And the rest of it.

SIMON: Yeah.

BRYANT: And candlesticks, they make a nice gift.

SIMON: Howard Bryant of espn.com, thanks so much for being with us.

BRYANT: Oh, my pleasure.

(SOUNDBITE OF RADIO CITIZEN SONG, “THE HOP”)

Copyright © 2017 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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Young Mexican Driver Rises To Top Of NASCAR Ranks

A young Mexican driver is making the leap to NASCAR’s top level this year, and he’s looking to bring more Latino fans with him. Along with the addition of Daniel Suárez, NASCAR is pursuing efforts to become more diverse.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

NASCAR has been trying to broaden its appeal beyond the traditional base of Southern white men. One of its strategies is to put more people of color and women on the race track. Those efforts are starting to pay off. One of the hottest racers at the Daytona 500 this weekend will be Daniel Suarez. He’s from Mexico. And last year, he became the first foreign-born driver to win what is essentially a NASCAR minor league. From member station WFAE, Michael Tomsic has more.

MICHAEL TOMSIC, BYLINE: Daniel Suarez dominated the championship race last year in the series one step below NASCAR’s top circuit.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: As he comes out of turn number four, he will be the first ever international champion in NASCAR.

TOMSIC: Suarez was born in Mexico, and grew up racing there. Last year was only his second in what NASCAR calls its Xfinity Series. And now, at age 25, he’ll compete at the top level for Joe Gibbs’ racing team.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

DANIEL SUAREZ: It is hard to believe that I’m in this position. I feel like I – it’s just a perfect place to be for a rookie like me that is really hungry to learn and to go out there to perform well.

TOMSIC: He came up through NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, which helps develop minority and female talent. It’s already made a significant difference in the diversity on pit crews. This season, Suarez will become its second driver to make NASCAR’s top circuit. His success is helping NASCAR gain fans in the Latino community, says Ruben Garcia Jr., a 21-year-old from Mexico City.

RUBEN GARCIA JR: People are starting to look into the world of NASCAR way more than they used to.

TOMSIC: Garcia is now in Drive for Diversity, and says he’s trying to follow in Suarez’s footsteps. He says the sport’s popularity has also grown among Latinos because NASCAR started a series in Mexico about 10 years ago. NASCAR also has staff dedicated to creating Spanish-language content online and on social media. Jill Gregory is NASCAR’s chief marketing officer.

JILL GREGORY: Any brand that’s trying to make sure that they have growth in their sales or in their consumption, they need to get younger and more diverse. That’s where our country is going. And so that’s why you’ve seen us really make an investment in this area.

TOMSIC: She says Suarez’s success helps. But she emphasizes he does all the things NASCAR needs any successful driver to do, regardless of ethnicity. He’s skill on the track, charming with fans and great with sponsors. He’s also earned the respect of fellow competitors, including Matt Kenseth.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MATT KENSETH: He’s a really hard worker. He asks a lot of questions. He always, you know, wants advice, wants help, puts a lot of time into it.

TOMSIC: Another driver, Kyle Busch, jokes that Suarez may ask too many questions.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

KYLE BUSCH: His rookie season at Xfinity, he came to me every single Thursday. I pretty much knew, it was set on the calendar – Daniel Suarez phone call, 3 o’clock. And we would talk about that weekend’s race track and about what to do and what to expect.

TOMSIC: Busch says it showed how eager Suarez is to succeed. NASCAR has had Latino drivers since its early days. But they’ve been a small minority. And only three have won races at NASCAR’s top level. Ruben Garcia Jr., says he’s heard some trash talk from fans.

GARCIA JR: There is some times where people will think that it’s better to have just American drivers in their sport because they feel like it’s their sport, like they really own the sport. But NASCAR has been growing so much that it – now it is a international sport.

TOMSIC: Garcia says the positive comments he’s heard vastly outnumber the negative ones. And Suarez takes pride in helping the sport grow.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

SUAREZ: It’s amazing to be able to be a role model for so many future new drivers or so many fans. I have seen how a lot of people from the entire Latin-American community follow the sport.

TOMSIC: They’ll see Suarez compete on one of NASCAR’s biggest stages this Sunday, The Daytona 500. For NPR News, I’m Michael Tomsic.

(SOUNDBITE OF JEFF BECK SONG, “ROY’S TOY”)

Copyright © 2017 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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Major League Baseball Poised To Change Intentional Walk Rule

Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Chris Stewart grabs an intentional walk throw in a game between Arizona and Pittsburgh last year in Phoenix.

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Ross D. Franklin/AP

In baseball, if a pitcher wants to intentionally walk a batter, he has to actually lob the four pitches outside the strike zone. It’s a technique often used to bypass a particularly strong batter, or to set up a double play.

But that rule now appears poised to change.

The Major League Baseball commissioner’s office has proposed a rule change to have the pitcher forgo actually throwing four balls — instead, the bench would simply signal to the umpire that the batter will be intentionally walked.

The head of the players union, Tony Clark, has signaled that it is amenable to the change, according to The Associated Press.

“As part of a broader discussion with other moving pieces, the answer is yes,” Clark told the wire service. “There are details, as part of that discussion, that are still being worked through, however.”

Mike Teevan, vice president of communications for Major League Baseball, tells The Two-Way that the change is currently under consideration. Any rule change involves many parties, he explains, and “that process is not yet complete.”

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MLB.com has reported that we could see the change as early as this upcoming season.

This is part of a larger push to ramp up the pace of the game, and it comes after Commissioner Rob Manfred told reporters on Tuesday afternoon that there would be no “meaningful” rule changes for the upcoming season after they were not accepted by the players union.

“We didn’t make a deal; we couldn’t make a deal,” he said, sounding frustrated.

Among the proposed changes: introducing a pitch clock to reduce the time between pitches, and capping the number of times a catcher can conference with a pitcher. Manfred argued that these changes would have “little effect of the competitive character of the game” but would “take dead time out of the game” and “keep fans engaged.” These remain on the table, he said.

The changes would benefit the fans and respond to the ways the game has changed, Manfred said:

“I think it’s a mistake to stick our head in the sand and ignore the fact that our game has changed and continues to change. Since 1980, home runs are up 32 percent. And strikeouts are up 67 percent. Last year, balls in play were at a record low, and we all know that things like the use of relief pitchers has changed dramatically in the last 30 years. I’m firmly convinced that our fans — both our avid fans and casual fans — want us to respond to and manage the change that’s going on in the game.”

Not all fans are happy. As some social media users pointed out, intentional walks are not currently automatic — and that means exciting and unexpected things sometimes happen. For example, a wild pitch over a catcher’s head can provide a memorable opportunity to steal a base. And occasionally, a batter actually manages to hit the pitch. Here’s a compilation posted on Twitter of some of those exciting moments (h/t Washington Post):

•The MLB has approved to change the intentional walk rule. Which now will be granted following dugout signal. Take a look at these classics. pic.twitter.com/g3iyEW5kB3

— Dylan (@DylansFreshTake) February 22, 2017

“You’re changing or altering the essence of the sport under the guise of speeding it up minimally,” ESPN host Michael Smith argued. “The object of the game is to pitch to a batter — you should still have to execute those pitches.”

Some players aren’t happy, either. Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin made this sarcastic point, as quoted by Sportsnet columnist Shi Davidi:

“My thing is, if they really want to speed up the game, then when a guy hits a home run, to speed up the game should a guy, just like in softball, when he hits it, should he just walk to the dugout? It’d be quicker. I’m just wondering, at what point do we just keep the game, the game?”

It’s also worth noting that intentional walks don’t happen all that often. According to statistics provided by MLB, there were 932 intentional walks during the 2016 regular season. That’s about 1 every 3 games.

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NBA Teams Enjoy 1 More Day Off Before All-Star Break Ends

Over the weekend, the NBA held its all-star game — which is the traditional mid-season break. In reality, the regular season already is two-thirds over. It’s now a sprint to the finish.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

All right. The NBA returns to work on Thursday after this past weekend’s All-Star game – the traditional mid-season break for Pro Basketball. NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman hardly ever takes a break. And he’s back with us. Hi, Tom.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: (Laughter) How are you?

INSKEEP: I’m doing fine. Good morning. Good morning. Not such a good start to the season – or first two-thirds of the season almost – for the Los Angeles Lakers. They’re 19-39. What do they do now?

GOLDMAN: Yuck. Well, you know, when in doubt, get Magic back. They got Magic back, Magic Johnson, probably the most popular and famous Laker of all. But unfortunately, they’re going to use him in a suit and tie and not in a jersey and shorts.

INSKEEP: Too bad for them.

GOLDMAN: Yeah. He was named as the team’s new head of basketball operations. He’s replacing Jim Buss, who said three years ago he would resign in three years if the struggling Lakers didn’t turn things around. Well, they didn’t. And his sister Jeanie, the team president, didn’t wait for him to walk away. She fired him.

INSKEEP: Wow.

GOLDMAN: Yeah.

INSKEEP: (Laughter) That is hardcore.

GOLDMAN: Thanks, sis. Although he’s still part-owner. There’s hope that Magic can help lead the Lakers back to greatness from the front office the way he led them to five titles in the 1980s on the court. Now, I should say he’s never really run a team. And he and Jeanie Buss warned this isn’t going to be easy or quick, but at least there’s a little hope in Laker land.

INSKEEP: So they’re not really hoping to salvage this season, but maybe in a future season they hope his – Magic can bring back magic?

GOLDMAN: Very good, yeah, absolutely.

INSKEEP: OK. All right. So tell me, Tom, we’re in this break, we’re about to get out of the break, isn’t this the last moment for teams to shuffle their lineups to get in some new talent and go for the playoffs?

GOLDMAN: Yeah. The trading deadline is coming up. And the biggest trade to date is a coveted center – DeMarcus Cousins – was traded to New Orleans and giving the Pelicans – the New Orlean (ph) Pelicans, New Orleans Pelicans – incredible potential. Both DeMarcus Cousins and Anthony Davis, who he’s joining in New Orleans, they’re called generational talents. Kind of like you, Steve, a generational talent. Once every generation, you come along.

INSKEEP: (Laughter).

GOLDMAN: But in the basketball world, these are guys that are big and skilled and versatile and they don’t come around often. And now they are playing together. Right now, New Orleans is outside the top eight teams in the Western Conference. The top eight from each conference go to the playoffs.

But if they can gel, if these two guys can work together, this team could be very interesting. And they could give the Warriors a little trouble. Because for all the Golden State Warriors do well, matching up against two active big men might be a weakness. Golden State doesn’t have the big guys to match. So it’ll be fun to watch.

INSKEEP: Well, when you talk about generational talents, Tom Goldman, once every generation it seems we have an Isaiah Thomas in the NBA. And literally another Isaiah Thomas in the NBA, short of six feet but making a big impact. Could he actually have an effect on the playoffs here?

GOLDMAN: I think he certainly could. He certainly had an effect on the regular season so far. He’s an amazing phenomenon. He’s listed at 5’9″. But I’ve heard that’s generous. He’s the second leading scorer in the league. He’s a deadly three point shooter. He drives to the hoop with a vengeance, which, Steve, is how you have to drive to the hoop when you’re 5’9″ and seven-footers are waiting at the hoop for you.

INSKEEP: Yeah. But he’s doing well for the Boston Celtics here. And he’s – what the namesake of the original Isaiah Thomas, I guess we should say.

GOLDMAN: Exactly, the original from Detroit. The current one is from Boston. And he is must-see NBA action.

INSKEEP: OK. Tom, thanks very much.

GOLDMAN: You’re welcome.

INSKEEP: That’s NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman.

(SOUNDBITE OF DJ SORAMA’S “LOVE PROJECT – ADULT SWIM BUMP”)

Copyright © 2017 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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NBA Players More Confident To Speak Out On Political Issues Than Other Sport Leagues

Recently the players, coaches and staff from the NBA have been politically and socially outspoken. Dave Zirin, sports editor of The Nation, talks about the activist culture of national sports leagues.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Basketball’s biggest stars take the court tonight for the NBA All-Star Game in New Orleans. Now, you might remember that the game was supposed to have been in Charlotte, N.C., this year, but the league moved the festivities because of North Carolina’s controversial state law known as HB2 that limits anti-discrimination protections for LGBTQ people. It was, perhaps, the most visible example of the NBA’s willingness to be outspoken on political and social issues, especially when compared to other sports leagues like the NFL.

Now, that league faced questions of its own when San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick refused to stand for the national anthem. We wanted to get a better sense of this so we called Dave Zirin. He’s sports editor at The Nation and the host of the Edge of Sports podcast. And I asked him why NBA players seemed so much more willing to speak out than their NFL counterparts.

DAVE ZIRIN: It’s such a terrific question, Michel, and I’ve been asking players, former players, coaches and sportswriters over the last several weeks why the NBA? Why is the breadth and width of speaking out in the National Basketball Association so much broader and deeper than other sports? And what I’ve come up with is that it’s a perfect storm of factors.

First and foremost, it’s the influence of the Black Lives Matter movement over the last several years. It’s made players more confident to speak out. Second of all – social media, the fact that players can reach directly to their fans with how they feel. That’s been a huge factor in the NBA. Another factor, Gregg Popovich, without question the most respected coach in the NBA, LeBron James, Steph Curry – these are the platinum standards for NBA players. And the fact that they’re speaking out has given cover to a lot of players that I bet many of your listeners have never even heard of who have also been very outspoken on these issues.

Another issue that people bring up all the time is the global question of the NBA. The NBA has players from roughly 36 different countries. So this idea that somebody in the White House is saying that immigrants are the problem or Muslims are the problem, that is going to rankle players who, you know, that’s just not part of their lived experience. So that is very important. But there’s another aspect, too, and it has to do with the league’s corporate reaction to Colin Kaepernick’s anthem protest.

When Colin Kaepernick took that knee, and when it spread in what is the traditionally very conservative, very locked down National Football League, the question across the sports world was, like, whoa, if this is happening in NFL games, what are NBA games going to look like? And so Adam Silver, who’s the commissioner of the National Basketball Association and a very committed politically liberal person – he made a strategic move to say to players, look, we want you to speak out all you want. We’ll even do public service announcements about the importance of bringing people together and standing up to not just police violence, but gun violence, violence in the community. The NBA can be the peacemakers league.

We don’t want racial radicalism, but we’ll give you political liberalism, basically. Just don’t kneel during the anthem. Don’t pull a Colin Kaepernick, and we will make sure that no one says to you just shut up and play. We will make sure that there will be no blowback on you for speaking out. We will make sure that the NBA is the, quote, unquote, “woke league” for you. And then a funny thing happened on the way to this political liberal kumbaya, and that was the election of Donald Trump.

And all of a sudden, these players, who have been empowered to speak out, they’re speaking out about Trump. And they feel like they have cover from the league. I think it’s making the league offices very nervous, the sheer number of players who are taking to the mike and speaking out about this presidency. But it’s sort of like you can’t put that wine back in the bottle. You can’t undunk that basketball. So I would describe all of this as the unintended consequences of attempting to head-off the racial radicalism of Colin Kaepernick. That’s how I would describe it.

MARTIN: That was Dave Zirin. He is sports editor of The Nation magazine. He’s also the host of the Edge of Sports podcast. He was kind enough to join us in our studios in Washington, D.C. Dave Zirin, thanks so much for speaking with us.

ZIRIN: Thank you.

Copyright © 2017 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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Saturday Sports: A Winning Streak And A Losing Streak

A weekly update on the world of sports! This week, a look at the women’s basketball team with the most wins, and the team that hasn’t won a single game all year.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

And now it’s time for sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: It’s the NBA’s All-Star Weekend, and once again, BJ Leiderman, who writes our theme music, has been left off of both teams. Will either team play defense in tomorrow’s game? Spoiler alert – no. Will former teammates and current adversaries Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook – both playing for the Western Conference – pass to each other or will they hire lawyers to do it? NPR’s Tom Goldman is here to ignore those questions, but he’ll talk about some other real basketball stars. Tom, thanks for being with us.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: (Laughter) My pleasure, my pleasure.

SIMON: Tonight, UConn – University of Connecticut – women’s basketball team goes for win number 101 in a row. They hit that 100-straight victory milestone earlier this week – an extraordinary accomplishment, but there have been some dissonant voices, too, haven’t there?

GOLDMAN: There sure have because we’re talking about women’s sports. There always are. Those doubters minimize the streak, Scott, because the Huskies are so absurdly dominant. The average margin of victory for the 100 wins – 38 points. They minimize what head coach Geno Auriemma does because he has the best players. But like any great head coach with great players, it’s what he does with those players, right? He fits them into a system. He pushes them to be even greater. He’s a great coach, and he certainly got that message from his university with a reported new five-year contract worth at least 13 million bucks.

SIMON: I want to mention a women’s college team that’s – you know, it is as far away from UConn as you can get, except maybe in that indefinable element of character, and that’s Chicago State. The Cougars are in the midst of an epic losing streak, and I know you talked to their head coach this week.

GOLDMAN: Yeah, I did. We talked about her team being 0 and 24. We talked about the difficulties at Chicago State. It’s a public university that serves a lot of low-income students, and it’s been in dire straits recently. State funding is way down as it is with all public universities in Illinois. They’ve had a woeful graduation rate, but the Cougar – and the Cougars are struggling like their school. Zero and 24 is the longest current losing streak in Division I women’s basketball. But there are some positive things going on. That head coach, Angela Jackson, she’s now in her 14th year at Chicago State, and she’s impressed by her players’ attitudes as the losses have mounted. Here she is.

ANGELA JACKSON: That’s the amazing thing about this group. It hasn’t been, oh no, here we go again. You know, I don’t see the shoulders slumping. I don’t see the heads going down. They’re still up. They’re still clapping. They’re still fighting. We’ve just come out on the losing end of it.

GOLDMAN: Yeah, now Angela Jackson’s really proud of her players, but she doesn’t treat them like heroes. I asked her if she gets mad at her team. Here’s what she said.

JACKSON: Every day (laughter) – I’m still a coach, and I’m still competitive. You don’t, you know, go out there and come out on the short end and your competitive nature doesn’t kick in, so absolutely.

SIMON: Tom, why can’t they seem to win a game?

GOLDMAN: You know, you would think maybe it’s because they’re not talented. That’s not it. Coach Jackson says it’s mainly about numbers. The Cougars started the season with nine players, then one transferred, one blew out her knee, one got a concussion. So for 18 of their 24 games, they have played with six players. The coach says they’ve been close in a lot of games, but, you know, when the fourth quarter comes around, they simply run out of gas.

SIMON: Yeah. Coach Jackson has a lot of admirers. She could get a job at a lot of other places, right?

GOLDMAN: Yes, she could, yeah, but she really doesn’t think about that right now. See, she says if she gives up, her kids are going to give up. And she says they don’t want to, you know, they don’t deserve to be shortchanged, but it’s not all doom and gloom. She says the team has improved during the season, although the record doesn’t reflect that. She talks about individual players who’ve improved. Chicago State plays today, Scott, against Missouri-Kansas City. The Cougars will try to get that first win.

SIMON: Tom, I went on their website last night, and I ordered a sweatshirt.

GOLDMAN: (Laughter) All right.

SIMON: I got to tell you, Chicago State sweatshirt – had to, good colors…

GOLDMAN: The fan club grows, yeah, excellent.

SIMON: NPR’s Tom Goldman, thanks so much for being with us.

GOLDMAN: You’re welcome.

Copyright © 2017 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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Recipe For New Sports? Just Add A Drone

Snowboarders are pulled by a drone on a lake near Cesis, Latvia, in January.

Ilmars Znotins/AFP/Getty Images

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Ilmars Znotins/AFP/Getty Images

You may have heard of drone racing, but people keep coming up with new ways to enjoy these flying machines.

One of the latest twists on drone sports comes from Latvia.

A company called Aerones has developed a drone to use for droneboarding, a new sport that’s just what it sounds like — a snowboarder being pulled through the snow by a powerful drone.

When the company first tried droneboarding last year, as a way to test the strength of its drones, the sport didn’t even have its name. “We didn’t call it like that in the beginning, but somebody, somewhere said droneboarding, and that’s how it took off,” Aerones CEO Janis Putrams says.

The company posted a video online, which Putrams says had 5 million views in the first couple of weeks.

He says the company wanted to use drones to wakeboard as well, so it built a larger, more powerful drone capable of lifting 145 kilograms (about 320 pounds).

So when the AFP news agency approached Aerones about a year later and asked to do a story on the sport, the company decided to go big — four times bigger.

“When we do this kind of a test, we want to do something new — something that we haven’t done before,” Putrams says. “So we thought, ‘Well, the drone is four times bigger than last time, so let’s try four snowboarders.’ “

AFP and Aerones released videos of the feat.

Latvian engineers have developed a giant drone able to tow snowboarders and lift people pic.twitter.com/1YlE5iR2G7

— AFP news agency (@AFP) January 23, 2017

Putrams helped to pilot the drone using remote controls, but he said the professional snowboarders who were towed were very excited about the way it felt.

Article continues after sponsorship

In another instance of droneboarding caught on camera, a child in a January 2016 video gives it a try, albeit at a much slower pace. And if you want to feel like you’re really a part of the action, take a look at this 360-degree video of droneboarding.

[embedded content]
YouTube

Putrams says droneboarding — and the use of drones in sports — probably isn’t going away. “In terms of sports, I think it’s here to stay for sure,” he says. “We did it last year, and it went viral, and we did this winter, and it went viral again.”

He says the company may try to integrate the control in the handlebar so there would be no need for a pilot to operate the drone.

Drones have been used for other sports too.

The Drone Racing League has attracted participants from around the world. Using remote controls and virtual reality glasses, pilots race drones through courses with a variety of obstacles. In September, the league signed a deal to be broadcast on ESPN.

And in activities leading up to this year’s NFL Pro Bowl, players participated in a “drone drop” skill challenge — catching a football dropped by a flying drone.

Check out the Drone Drop at the #ProBowlSkills Showdown!

Thursday night at 7 pm ET on @ESPNNFL. https://t.co/0kjPPJDonW

— NFL (@NFL) January 25, 2017

It’s worth noting that for recreational use, the Federal Aviation Administration restricts drones from flying above 400 feet as well as flying over sporting events or stadiums.

Putrams says his company isn’t just interested in drones for sports. Aerones’ biggest goal, he says, is to use them for firefighting and human rescue. The company has figured out a way to have a drone pick up a hose and point it toward a burning building, reaching areas too high for a ladder. A power cable can be added so the drone is not limited by time or batteries, Putrams says.

And because of the lifting power of the drones, Putrams says they could be used to rescue people trapped on a roof or on an icy lake.

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NFL Players Union Works To Block Illinois Workers' Comp Bill

The NFL players union says it will tell members not to sign with the Chicago Bears if a state workers’ comp bill passes. The bill reduces benefits for professional athletes injured during a game.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Here are two things you can count on in professional sports – careers on average are very short, and within that small window of time athletes get hurt. Those two realities have collided in the Illinois legislature on the issue of workmen’s compensation. Lawmakers are considering a bill that would reduce workers’ comp benefits for pro athletes in the state. NPR’s Tom Goldman reports.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Illinois is a place of distinction. It has the most nuclear power plants of any state. Twinkies were invented in Illinois. And it’s the only state in the union where professional athletes can claim a workers’ compensation wage differential until the age of 67. OK, about that last one. Here’s what it means.

In Illinois, if you get injured on the job and you’re forced to take a lower-paying job, workers’ comp law says you can collect about two thirds of the difference between what you made before the injury and after. That’s the wage differential. Illinois allows injured workers to claim it until the age of 67. That’s considered the average end to a working life – most working lives.

PATTY SCHUH: Everyone knows a professional athlete does not work in that career till the age 67.

GOLDMAN: Patty Schuh is a spokeswoman for Illinois Republican Senator Christine Radogno. Radogno is sponsoring Senate Bill 12. It singles out pro athletes and says sorry, guys. Since you don’t work in your job until 67, we’re not going to pay that wage differential until you’re 67. We’ll pay until you’re 35. The major pro sports teams in Illinois, all in Chicago, wrote a letter supporting the bill and noting that pro athletes in the NFL, NBA, baseball and hockey play on average three to five years.

This means many are done well before 35, which makes the proposed cutoff at 35 seem kind of generous until you talk to the NFL Players Association. The NFLPA hates Senate Bill 12. Remember, football players are very likely to get injured and need workers’ comp. George Atallah is a union executive.

GEORGE ATALLAH: Let’s just call it what it is. They are trying to set a limit on the ability of professional athletes to gain and earn a benefit for an injury that they suffered at work. And that’s not something that, frankly, the union takes kindly to.

GOLDMAN: The union is ready to act on its anger. Here’s NFLPA President DeMaurice Smith on Chicago’s “670 The Score.”

(SOUNDBITE OF RADIO SHOW, “670 THE SCORE”)

DEMAURICE SMITH: I will tell you from the bottom of my heart that this union will tell every potential free agent player, if this bill passes, to not come to the Bears.

GOLDMAN: Smith and the union say Senate Bill 12 will cut off injured athletes’ medical benefits at 35. Not true, says Chicago Bears general counsel Cliff Stein. Injury care will not change. But Stein says reducing the wage payments to athletes will tighten up an overly generous workers’ comp system.

CLIFF STEIN: Since 2005, no other teams in any other state have paid more money in workers’ compensation claims, settlements and awards than the teams in the state of Illinois.

GOLDMAN: Adding to this, some athletes who play and are injured in Illinois but don’t live there still make workers’ comp claims in the state. Cliff Stein can’t provide an exact number, but he says it’s been growing. Reducing workers’ comp wage payments for pro athletes will save teams money. The Chicago Tribune reports it could be as much as $1.7 million per athlete. But the Bears’ Cliff Stein says if the teams only cared about that they’d push to completely get rid of the athletes’ payments. Michigan did that. A handful of other states set workers’ comp limits for athletes.

Senate Bill 12 remains a work in progress, a small part of a comprehensive package of proposed reforms. NFL teams can start negotiating with free agents next month. Tom Goldman, NPR News.

Copyright © 2017 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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