Posts Tagged ‘ESPN’

Leah Siegel ESPN fight against Stage Four breast cancer | Allstate …

Read full“Over the past few weeks a number of ESPN employees have been working to aid Leah Siegel, a producer based in Dallas who is fighting stage-four breast cancer,”

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Leah Siegel ESPN fight against Stage Four breast cancer | Allstate …


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - July 26, 2010 at 6:00 pm

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Sports briefs, July 16

Jurisprudence

ESPN reporter Erin Andrews, who was secretly videotaped nude while staying at hotels, filed a lawsuit Thursday against seven hotels and the suburban Chicago man who admitted making the tapes. Andrews filed the suit in Cook County against the hotels for negligence and invasion of privacy, about seven months after Michael David Barrett, of Westmont, Ill., pleaded guilty in federal court in Los Angeles to interstate stalking. Andrews’ lawsuit alleges the hotels confirmed where she was staying and gave out her room number without her permission.

Oregon hired Rob Mullens as athletic director, replacing Mike Belotti. Mullens, 41, arrives from Kentucky, where he was the Wildcats’ deputy director of athletics. … A second former Kansas athletics official admitted in court he knew about a massive scam that allegedly involved the theft and sale of at least $1million worth of tickets to sporting events. Brandon Simmons, the school’s former assistant athletic director for sales in marketing, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Wichita to one count of misprision of a felony – the same charge his ex-colleague, Jason Jeffries, pleaded guilty to Wednesday.

Defenseman Brendan Mikkelson accepted the Ducks’ qualifying offer and signed a one-year contract that will pay $687,000 in the NHL or $62,500 in the minors. the smooth-skating 23-year-old had two assists and 14 penalty minutes in 28 games last

season for the Ducks. … Captain Mikko Koivu signed a seven-year, $47.25 million contract extension with Minnesota, keeping the center with the team through the 2017-18 season. … Defenseman Brendan Mikkelson accepted a one-year qualifying offer from the Ducks for $687,500.

Andres Olivera’s sixth-minute goal on a nice give-and-go with Gabriel Pereyra helped Puebla to a 2-1 victory over Chivas USA on Thursday night at Home Depot Center to open Superliga group play. Chivas scored its lone goal on a late header by Michael Umana.

Caster Semenya won her first race since being cleared to return to competition after undergoing gender tests. the 19-year-old South African won the 800 meters in 2minutes, 4.22 seconds at the Lappeenranta Games in Finland. … Seven American runners will find out today if they have won back Olympic relay medals stripped from them because of doping by teammate Marion Jones. the Court of Arbitration for Sport says it will issue its ruling on the appeal against the athletes’ disqualification from the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

From staff and wire reports

<a href="http://www.sbsun.com/sports/ci_15529162tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.sbsun.com/sports/ci_15529162Fri, 16 Jul 2010 06:53:52 GMT 00:00″>Sports briefs, July 16


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - July 16, 2010 at 8:00 am

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Bill Cowher officially out of NY Jets coaching job hunt

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Bill Cowher will not be in the running for the New York Jets‘ head coach vacancy.

A high-ranking Jets official told ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen that the Jets reached out to Cowher on Tuesday about the job, but Cowher’s agent called back to tell the Jets that his client had no interest in the opening.”After reaching out to coach Cowher’s representatives, we were informed tonight that he is not a candidate for the position,” Jets spokesman Bruce Speight told The Associated Press on Tuesday night.Initially, ESPN.com’s John Clayton reported that Cowher told the Jets he was not interested because he wanted his own personnel director. The Jets official’s response indicated the team was willing to let Cowher replace current general manager Mike Tannenbaum with his own candidate.A Jets source also said Tannenbaum said he was willing to adjust his position to accommodate Cowher.Cowher had not given the Jets the impression he must have total control of personnel, a person familiar with the search told AP. still, Cowher took his name out of the running without a formal sit-down.Whoever will coach the Jets, there also is the issue of quarterback Brett Favre. While team owner Woody Johnson and Tannenbaum have said they want Favre back next season, a source familiar with the organization’s thinking told Newsday “while they’re open to Favre returning, Woody Johnson and Mike Tannenbaum believe whomever we hire as the new coach should have significant input on that decision.”Sources told ESPN’s Ed Werder that the 39-year-old Favre has been told by doctors that pain in his right shoulder this season is a result of a torn biceps tendon and some calcification in the area, but Favre would need nothing more than arthroscopic surgery to repair the injury.The sources Tuesday also said Favre might be able to avoid an arthroscopic procedure altogether if he decides to play a 19th NFL season.Cowher originally told friends the Jets’ job interested him for several reasons. First, Cowher would love to coach in the New York market. Second, two of his daughters are either going to school or working in the New York-New Jersey area. If Cowher doesn’t take an open NFL head coaching job this offseason, he does plan to coach in 2010, sources told Clayton. In 2009, though, he is willing to return only if every situation is right for him. he wanted to have a two-year break from coaching to be with family and recharge.

Last weekend, Cowher met with Browns owner Randy Lerner, who asked him what it would take financially for him to be the Browns coach. having a close relationship with the Rooney family in Pittsburgh and still wanting more time with family, Cowher didn’t give Lerner a price, and said no.

Cowher, 51, was 161-99-1 in 15 seasons with Pittsburgh, including a Super Bowl win in 2006.

Cowher recently extended his contract with CBS for another season.

In addition to Cowher, the Jets are also lining up interviews with other candidates, including Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. The Giants have granted the Jets permission to speak with Spagnuolo regarding their opening, sources told ESPN’s Rachel Nichols. New York is also expected to interview a pair of in-house candidates: offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer and offensive line coach Bill Callahan, who also served as assistant head coach under Eric Mangini, who was fired as head coach Monday. Mike Shanahan, fired by Denver on Tuesday night, could also be a potential candidate.Spagnuolo has become a popular candidate given the Giants’success on defense the past two seasons under him. The 49-year-olddefensive coordinator has been mentioned in connection with thevacant Detroit and Cleveland jobs, as well as the Jets.He was hired by the Giants in January 2007 after working eightyears under Jim Johnson with the Philadelphia Eagles‘ defense.Spagnuolo was considered for the Washington Redskins job after theGiants upset the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl lastseason, but he chose to remain with New York.Chris Mortensen is a senior NFL analyst for ESPN. Information from ESPN.com’s John Clayton, ESPN’s Rachel Nichols and The Associated Press was used in this report.

Bill Cowher officially out of NY Jets coaching job hunt


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - June 29, 2010 at 1:00 am

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Lessons from Matt Barnes: How To Boost Your Free Agency Status

RSS stands for Really Simply Sindication. Simply put, it is a way of automatically delivering content — in this case, our blog posts — directly to you.

To use RSS feeds, you need an RSS reader. we recommend Google Reader. This will be where all of your content is delivered, and you can subscribe to as many blogs or websites as you want (whether that be our blog, ESPN.com, or LATimes.com — just about any blogging or news-related website has RSS!). when you get online every day, simply open Google Reader to see any new blog posts. Everything that you have subscribed to will show up in Google Reader, and anything you have not read will be shown as unread — just like email.

How many news or blogging-type sites do you visit each day? five? ten? Maybe even 15 or 20? How great would it be if, instead of having to go to each one of those sites separately, you could make their content come to you in one, centralized location? That’s why RSS Feeds are so great!

We strongly recommend that you subscribe to our RSS feed. that way, you’ll always be up to date on everything we do here at Hardwood Paroxysm. and while you’re at it, you can keep yourself up to date on countless other sites across the internets.

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Lessons from Matt Barnes: How To Boost Your Free Agency Status


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - June 13, 2010 at 5:00 pm

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World Cup Kicks Off With South Africa Mexico Tie

World Cup Kicks Off with South Africa Mexico Tie

Sports BlackState.com

11 June 2010Posted on BlackState 11 June 2010

South Africa and Mexico kicked off the World Cup soccer tournament with an exciting 1-1 tie. Both teams had their chances to put the game away. Mexico was the aggressor in the first half and was denied a goal with an offside call. South Africa the bafana bafana relaxed in the second half and broke open a scoreless game with a strike by the awesomely named Siphiwe Tshabalala. Mexico on its heels followed with a game tying goal by Rafael Marquez. the goal deflated the South African home crowd a bit but the celebrating continue as South Africa kept the home country not losing the first match streak alive.

The World Cup is being broadcast live by ESPN and online at espn3. This probably the best outlet to watch world cup 2010 online. ESPN3 is formerly espn 360. Most Americans are at work and in need of world cup live steaming. Univision deportes univision futbol is also a great way to watch the world cup no matter what language you speak. the excitement in the game, players, and match comes through the broadcast.

ESPN ESPN3 and Univision will broadcast France versus Uruguay live from Cape Town, South Africa in the second game of an exciting opening day in the World Cup. Univision will also broadcast the

ABC will broadcast the rivalry born in 1776, U.S. versus England live at 1:30 pm eastern 10:30 am pacific.

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World Cup Kicks Off With South Africa Mexico Tie


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - June 11, 2010 at 3:00 pm

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USC football program receives two-year bowl ban; NCAA rules that …

LOS ANGELES — Southern California has received a two-year bowl ban and a sharp loss of football scholarships in a report on the NCAA’s four-year investigation of the school.

The NCAA cited USC for a lack of institutional control Thursday in its long-awaited report, which detailed numerous violations primarily involving Heisman Trophy-winning tailback Reggie Bush, now a star tailback for the new Orleans Saints, and men’s basketball player O.J. Mayo.
The NCAA found that Bush, identified as a “former football student-athlete,” was ineligible beginning at least by December 2004, a ruling that could open discussion on the revocation of the new Orleans Saints star’s Heisman.
Members of the Heisman Trophy Trust have said they might review Bush’s award if he was ruled ineligible by the NCAA.
The NCAA also ordered USC to vacate every victory in which Bush participated while ineligible. USC beat Oklahoma in the BCS championship game on Jan. 4, 2005, and won 12 games during Bush’s Heisman-winning 2005 season, which ended with a loss to Texas in the Rose Bowl.

“I have a great love for the University of Southern California and I very much regret the turn that this matter has taken, not only for USC, but for the fans and players,” Bush said in a statement, according to an ESPN report.
“I am disappointed by (Thursday’s) decision and disagree with the NCAA’s findings. if the University decides to appeal, I will continue to cooperate with the NCAA and USC, as I did during the investigation. In the meantime, I will continue to focus on making a positive impact for the University and for the community where I live.”
The ruling is a sharp repudiation of the Trojans’ decade of success under former coach Pete Carroll, when USC won seven straight Pac-10 titles and two national championships. Carroll left the school for the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks in January.
While the bowl ban is the most damaging to new coach Lane Kiffin, USC also will lose 30 scholarships over a three-year period, 10 annually from 2011-13. The Trojans received four years of probation.
The Trojans have been under a growing cloud of suspicion since Bush’s apparently shady dealings with aspiring sports marketers and sketchy businessmen were first revealed. The NCAA, the Pac-10 and even the FBI conducted investigations into the Bush family’s business relationships and USC’s responsibility for the culture around its marquee football team.
USC is the first Football Bowl Subdivision school to be banned from postseason play since Alabama served a two-year ban ending in 2003. The NCAA issued no bowl bans during the tenure of late president Myles Brand, but the NCAA reportedly regained interest in the punishment over the past year.
Read more of the story here in it’s entirety:
USC football program receives two-year bowl ban; NCAA rules that Reggie Bush was ineligible in Heisman Trophy-winning season | NOLA.com

USC football program receives two-year bowl ban; NCAA rules that …


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - at 12:00 am

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LPGA Tour's season continues on somber note

You probably remember him as the little kid stealing the scene at his father’s inauguration speech after being elected mayor of new York City.

Andrew Giuliani has done a lot of growing up in the past 15 years, though.

Winner of last year’s Met Open, a new York-based tournament for pros and top amateurs, Giuliani is now competing on the mini-tours with an eye toward reaching the PGA Tour through Q-school.

He recently sat down on the ESPN.com Hot Seat to discuss the journey.

Q: Has it been difficult to shed the image of being the little kid behind your dad at a news conference in exchange for one as a serious competitive golfer?
A: I don’t know if I’ve really tried to shed it. All I’ve really tried to do is just continually work on my craft and become better at it. That’s part of my past and part of who I am, so I certainly don’t try to shy away from it.

As a 7-year-old who was pretty rambunctious, especially considering it got on the best of Chris Farley’s stuff, it’s tough to shed that, so I’m just trying to work hard, get better and make it to the show. Hopefully, if we’re at the show, then maybe one day people will think of me as a major champion rather than something like that.

Q: Since you brought it up, do you ever go back and watch those Chris Farley sketches?
A: Absolutely. I think he’s one of the best comedians of all time. I think most people think that. I really wish I would have had the opportunity to meet him before he passed away, because he was just a genius and could make everybody laugh.

Q: Tell me about the circumstances under which you left Duke University. Looking back, what are your feelings about what happened?
A: Well, I made a lot of very good friends there. obviously, the way we left the golf team, it was bittersweet, because the first couple of years were amazing.

The head coach, Rod Myers, was just an amazing guy. He was there for 34 years. And, you know, it just didn’t end the way that we would have wanted it to. but without some of the stuff, I wouldn’t have been able to turn pro early and I might not have been a professional for the Met Open, so there were some good things that turned out from it, too.

It definitely made me tougher and made me focus on what my goals were. it really made me understand what I wanted to do with my life.

Q: For those who don’t know the story, what happened?
A: Well, a lot of that stuff is in the court documents, so I really don’t want to go over it again. but the head coach, Rod Myers, was out there for about two years when I was there. He was the one who recruited me and just a great guy. He was there for 34 years.

Unfortunately, he passed away from leukemia my sophomore year and we got a new head coach [O.D. Vincent]. To say the least, we didn’t see eye to eye. I played pretty well my junior year, but some actions were taken against me and the rest is in the court documents.

(Editor’s Note: Giuliani sued the school for breach of contract after being kicked off the team, but the case was later dismissed in court.)

Q: You were depicted on “The big Break” as having sort of a me-against-them mentality. How much of that was creative editing and how much of that was your attitude?
A: Well, I’ll tell you what. The two questions I’ve been asked most about the show are: 1. are those guys really like that? and 2. did you have a plan against them?

And honestly, I didn’t. I was just playing my game out there, doing what I was doing. I think when you’ve got 12 guys out there together for two weeks and you’re up 22 hours a day, you kind of get at each other’s throats. I didn’t get along with a couple of the guys, but there wasn’t anybody who got along with everybody.

I became really good friends with a bunch of the other guys on the show. Sean [Kalin], who’s from Florida, I’ve stayed at his place a bunch of times this year. been very lucky to meet a lot of really good people from that show and look forward to working with the Golf Channel in the future.

Q: How much did winning last year’s Met Open mean for your career?
A: It was awesome. obviously, your first professional victory you’re going to treasure no matter what, but to win it at Ridgewood, only five minutes from where I went to high school, with my family and friends out there, it was incredible.

And then when you think of the history of the Met Open and you see Walter Hagen’s name on there and Gene Sarazen and Byron Nelson — just tons of Hall of Famers that are on the trophy — it really is special. I love going back and just looking at the names on that trophy, because you realize that you’re part of elite company. It’s pretty cool.

Q: What are you doing now? Where are you playing? what are your plans?
A: I’ve been down in Florida working very hard on my game, making a bit of a swing change, trying to get a little better. I’m trying to hit the ball a little higher and longer and get my game suited for the tour.

This summer we’re going to do a lot of Monday qualifying and really get ready for Q-school. last year, I was 2 shots away from getting through second stage, so that was a little difficult to swallow, but it just shows how close you really are. so just going to continue to try to get better and bridge that gap.

Q: Monday qualifying for PGA Tour or Nationwide events?
A: I’ll do both.

Q: And are you playing on any of the mini-tours right now?
A: Yeah, played on the Florida Pro Golf Tour, playing a few Egolf Tour events, a few Hooters Tour events. so I’m really not limiting myself to one tour or another. And up [in the new York area] I’ll play the Met Open again, State Open, Westchester Open, maybe a few of the Northern Opens up in Maine and Vermont.

Between those, that will pretty much fill up the schedule. should be pretty busy.

Q: For the people out there who aren’t die-hard golf fans and don’t understand how the whole process works and just think that you turn pro, join the PGA Tour and make millions of dollars right away, can you talk about how difficult it is to come up through the ranks and try to make a living being a professional golfer?
A: Yeah, I think I really relate it a lot to baseball. You look at baseball, a lot of times people focus on prospects and think it’s a little two-year track to get into the majors when the reality of it is maybe 98, 99 percent of the people who turn professional in baseball never make it to the show — and if they do, it’s for a quick stint.

You realize that when you get out on the mini-tours. You see your lifers out there, you see guys who are giving it a year or two and that’s it. You need to stay focused and continue to focus on your plan in terms of how you’re going to continually get better.

I mean, I love looking at guys like Tom Lehman, who didn’t reach his peak until his late 30s, early 40s. Or Olin Browne, guys like that who focus on continually working hard and trying to get better and find ways to really improve. when you get the best player in the history of the game, Tiger [Woods] talking about continually getting better and improving, you realize that’s what this game is all about.

Q: Is there a long-term plan? if you’re still kicking around on mini-tours and Monday qualifiers five or 10 years from now, at what point do you say, “It’s not for me”?
A: I really haven’t looked at it like that. a lot of people have asked what my backup plan is. I don’t have any intention to fail, so my plan is to make the PGA Tour and win out there. if that situation does come up — and hopefully it doesn’t — we’ll analyze it when it does.

But right now, my plan is to make the PGA Tour and win out there and win major championships.

LPGA Tour's season continues on somber note


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - May 17, 2010 at 9:00 pm

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Memories of Personal Ensign

By Paul Moran
Special to ESPN.com
Archive

Thousands of races are run during the course of a lifetime but the most vivid memories are isolated moments frozen in time that take the breath away. Personal Ensign ran a dozen races after winning a maiden race in the mud at Belmont Park by almost 13 lengths on Sept. 28, 1986, and stamped herself as a champion for the ages — among the best of her sex ever to wear a bridle. but the announcement of her death on Friday, perhaps for all who watched her career unfold as she carved a deep niche in history, brought back the last day on which she ever graced a racetrack.

On an autumn afternoon enveloped in a damp cold that numbed the bone, splattered by mud, she lagged beneath the weight of perfection toward the quarter pole at Churchill Downs. she needed a miracle.The brilliant filly Winning Colors, running freely on the lead as she had on the day she won the Kentucky Derby six months before, had a clear advantage entering the Churchill Downs stretch with the 1988 Breeders’ Cup Distaff squarely in the crosshairs. Personal Ensign, who had been neither defeated nor threatened in the previous dozen races over three seasons, had apparently fallen too far behind the filly to salvage her perfect record. It was to be her final start.Personal Ensign’s fans were dumbfounded. this was far from her typical effort. Her style was stalk and pounce, almost predatory, and once she pounced, the only question was her margin of victory. no one had ever seen Personal Ensign as far behind the pace as she was on Nov. 5, 1988. perhaps, they thought, she was injured. Clearly, she was uncomfortable racing over the slick Kentucky mud. Suddenly, though, leaving the stretch turn, Personal Ensign revealed a quality that she had never been called upon to explore, and revealed a courageous determination owned only by the truly great racehorse.A furlong from the wire, her head lowered and stride lengthened in the glistening mud; Personal Ensign remained four lengths behind Winning Colors, who ran on beneath the sting of Gary Stevens’ left-handed whip, repelling a challenge from Goodbye Halo before a second threat appeared. Randy Romero, his head down, goggles caked with mud, the crop in his right hand applied intermittently, pleaded for more from Personal Ensign, who had never been asked for everything until that moment. who knew how much was there or if it would be enough? At some point in the last sixteenth-mile, every person in a packed house that witnessed the first Breeders’ Cup run at Churchill Downs came to the simultaneous realization that the miracle rally required of Personal Ensign to salvage perfection was indeed possible. Inches at a time, Personal Ensign cut into Winning Colors’ advantage, stride by stride the Derby winner’s lead became more tenuous until, with the last lunge Personal Ensign hit the wire a nose in front, still undefeated. As one unit, 71,337 people exhaled and a roar of approval enveloped Louisville that lingered for a long time as she returned, covered in mud, to be unsaddled.Her undefeated career was the longest since Colin retired unblemished with 13 victories in 1908 and was not threatened until the emergence of Zenyatta, who extended her own undefeated career to 16 victories at Oaklawn Park on Friday. this is indeed rare and exclusive company.Personal Ensign, a daughter of Private Account, was bred and raced in the colors of the late Ogden Phipps. she was named champion older female in 1988 and went on to produce eight winners including three — my Flag, Miner’s mark and Traditionally — Grade 1 champions. a daughter, Our Emblem, produced 2002 Kentucky Derby winner War Emblem. Personal Ensign was also named Broodmare of the Year in 1996, a distinction she had earned for her own dam, Grecian Banner. During a career interrupted by a fractured pastern that ended her 2-year-old season after two starts and required five screws to repair, Personal Ensign won eight Grade 1 races and defeated males in the Whitney Handicap at Saratoga. but it is that last relentless furlong at Churchill Downs that is remembered most vividly, even by those who saw every race she ran. It remains the race that defines the Breeders’ Cup for many.The Phipps family announced on Friday that Personal Ensign, who was pensioned in 2006, died of natural causes at age 26 on Thursday at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., where she was born in 1984. she is buried at the Marchmont Cemetery, along with Easy Goer, Private Account, Numbered Account and Relaxing, all stars who raced in the Phipps colors.”She was a wonderful filly who overcame injury to win 13 straight races,” said Shug McGaughey, who trained Personal Ensign, her offspring and a long list of major stakes winners bred by the last of the old-line, family-owned racing stables. “She certainly was one of my all-time favorites. she was a career-maker.”"Personal Ensign was the first Breeders’ Cup winner for my grandfather and for Shug and she was just a very special horse to everyone in our family,” Daisy Phipps Pulito said. “It’s a very sad day for all of us.”Personal Ensign, her legacy still a work in progress, will rest in peace. The rest of us will revel in the memory of a legend.Paul Moran is a two-time winner of the Media Eclipse Award, and has received various honors from the National Association of Newspaper Editors, Society of Silurians, Long Island Press Club and Long Island Veterinary Medical Association. He has also been given the Red Smith Award for his coverage of the Kentucky Derby. Paul can be contacted at pmoran1686@aol.com.

Memories of Personal Ensign


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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - April 10, 2010 at 12:00 am

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Pro Wrestling Report on ESPN Radio – March 22, 2010


A review of TNA Destination X and Week 4 of TNA vs WWE on Monday Nights!

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25 comments - What do you think?  Posted by admin - April 6, 2010 at 5:06 pm

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ESPN Sports Shows to Join ABC Lineup

ESPN Sports Shows to Join ABC Lineup
ESPN this weekend will begin making good on a promise to provide its corporate broadcast sibling ABC affiliates with sports programming, when it gives them two hours of sports-themed shows.

Read more on AdWeek



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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - April 4, 2010 at 9:06 pm

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