logo
#

Latest news with #SportsHistory

Shohei Ohtani and Enrique Hernandez Make Hilarious Dodgers History
Shohei Ohtani and Enrique Hernandez Make Hilarious Dodgers History

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Shohei Ohtani and Enrique Hernandez Make Hilarious Dodgers History

Shohei Ohtani and Enrique Hernandez Make Hilarious Dodgers History originally appeared on Athlon Sports. With Shohei Ohtani returning to the mound for the Los Angeles Dodgers, he broke some records over the past few weeks. Advertisement According to Sarah Langs, Ohtani's 79 home runs were the most in Dodgers history by a player to start at least one game on the mound for them. However, Ohtani and others have now made some other history. According to Langs, only two players in Dodgers history have hit 10 home runs and pitched at least two innings in the same season. That is Ohtani, and none other than the fan favorite, Enrique Hernandez. Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) is greeted by third baseman Enrique Hernandez (8) after scoring a run against the St. Louis Cardinals during the sixth inning at Dodger A. Vasquez-Imagn Images 'The only 2 players in Dodgers history to hit 10 home runs and pitch at least 2 games in the same season: 'Shohei Ohtani and Kiké Hernández,' she wrote. Hernandez has come into games for the Dodgers when the team is either being blown out, or is blowing another team out. Advertisement It makes sense not to chase regular-season wins, and Dave Roberts understands that. In his five outings this year, he's posted a 15.19 ERA in 9.64 FIP. For Ohtani, who will actually pitch when games matter, he's been decent this year. That hasn't been ideal given he's only thrown in 2.0 innings due to just returning from the mound, but he's allowed just one earned run in that span, and has struck out two. If his stuff can continue to play at the level it has, Ohtani and the Dodgers should be just fine over the next few months when games matter most. Related: Shohei Ohtani Ties Dodgers Record Not Seen Since 1955 This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 27, 2025, where it first appeared.

Everyone Has Same Reaction To Sammy Sosa's Appearance At Wrigley Field This Weekend
Everyone Has Same Reaction To Sammy Sosa's Appearance At Wrigley Field This Weekend

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Everyone Has Same Reaction To Sammy Sosa's Appearance At Wrigley Field This Weekend

Everyone Has Same Reaction To Sammy Sosa's Appearance At Wrigley Field This Weekend originally appeared on The Spun. It's been 21 years since Cubs legend Sammy Sosa set foot in Wrigley Field after being the face of the franchise for 13 seasons starting in 1992. Advertisement In that time Sosa racked up 545 home runs, seven All-Star appearances and an NL MVP award when he went toe-to-toe with Mark McGwire and hit 66 homers in the summer of '98. Like many superstars of the steroid era his career ended with questions about PED use and has kept him out of the Hall of Fame — despite being one of just eight players in MLB history with 600 or more long balls. Still though he made his grand return to "The Friendly Confines" on Friday, but fans couldn't help but notice his appearance when he waved to the crowd. "He's black again????" a user exclaimed. "Wait…👀👀" Darius Butler replied. Advertisement "Sammy Sosa is black again and we're close to another conflict in the Middle East-it really is the 2000s again," a fan commented. "Last time I saw this dude he was white as chalk," another person pointed out. "Sammy Sosa not being able to afford his skin bleaching treatments anymore is a recession indicator," another posted. "I was at the game and mfs was distraught that he wasn't Caucasian anymore," a Cubs fan claimed. "Unbleached???" another user asked. "Ok I got questions….." MIAMI BEACH, FL - NOVEMBER 21: Sammy Sosa 18th Annual Best Buddies Miami Gala: Southeast Asia at Fontainebleau Miami Beach on November 21, 2014 in Miami Beach, Florida. (Photo by)After his playing days Sosa's once dark brown skin turned almost completely white from self-described "bleaching cream" that he used to use. Advertisement "It's a bleaching cream that I apply before going to bed and whitens my skin tone," Sosa said back in 2009. "It's a cream that I have, that I use to soften [my skin], but has bleached me some. I'm not a racist, I live my life happily." Whatever it was, it appears to have stopped, and the Cubs great has decided to return to the public eye. Related: Pacers Star T.J. McConnell's Wife Trending During 2025 NBA Finals Everyone Has Same Reaction To Sammy Sosa's Appearance At Wrigley Field This Weekend first appeared on The Spun on Jun 22, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.

Buss family sale of Lakers signals a new dawn for the franchise — and NBA ownership
Buss family sale of Lakers signals a new dawn for the franchise — and NBA ownership

New York Times

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

Buss family sale of Lakers signals a new dawn for the franchise — and NBA ownership

The Buss dynasty has reigned over the NBA since 1979, when Jerry Buss bought the Los Angeles Lakers in what has proved to be one of the shrewdest deals in sports history. Since then, the Lakers have won 11 NBA championships, employed several of the league's most valuable and iconic players, and become the NBA's most glamorous franchise, a magnet for ritz and success. Advertisement It was bound to end at some point, but that future seemed far away. Wednesday, however, it struck like a thunderbolt. Jeanie Buss, the daughter of the family patriarch, will sell the Lakers to Mark Walter, a prominent financier, in a shocking deal that values the franchise at $10 billion. It is the largest sale in sports history, a number with the kind of sticker shock to match the franchise it involves. The sale, when it goes through, will not only end to the Buss family's hold on the Lakers, but might turn the page on a new era for the league. The NBA has long been run by voluble owners, including Buss, but the last half-decade has brought enormous change. One third of the league has taken on new ownership since 2019. In a matter of months, the Boston Celtics and Lakers have been sold, each setting new records and sending two of the NBA's historic teams into new hands. The small-scale style of ownership seems to be on its way out and no longer feasible. Their replacements have come in with audacious plans and ever-wealthier backgrounds, ready to spend to contend. Walter, if his time running the Los Angeles Dodgers is any indication, may be the apotheosis of this model, even if it will have to wait. He will not take over immediately after the sale is final. The Buss family trust, which currently owns a little more than 60 percent of the franchise, will still own 18 percent when the deal goes through, according to a source briefed on the sale, and Jeanie Buss will continue to serve as the team's governor. That matter has been written into the agreement, the source said. 'This cannot be Mark Cuban,' they added, referring to the Dallas Mavericks former owner who wrongly expected to maintain a key role in the team's decision-making tree. 'She will continue to run the team for a significant number of years after the deal closes.' Advertisement The Buss family's control over the team, unlike other estates, was not permanent. The trust says that the team would not pass down to the next generation and would end with Jerry's six children. Now, they have chosen when it will sunset, and taken a hefty profit on the $67.5 million investment their father made. Walter, a minority owner for the last four years, bought a right of first negotiation when he acquired his share in 2021, then made the family an offer they couldn't pass on. For all the Lakers' success under Buss and, in recent years, with Jeanie in control, the franchise was still flawed. The Lakers sometimes felt as if they were backed by a manifest destiny more than ruthless competence. They fell into a half-decade swoon as Kobe Bryant's career ended and through the first year of LeBron James' tenure in Hollywood. They were not known as one of the league's most aggressive investors into front office and coaching talent. Their basketball operations department lagged behind in size and spending behind small-market franchises like the Oklahoma City Thunder. They have not waged an all-out war against the league with the benefits of the economic inequality that being in L.A. has brought them. When Walter takes over, that could be different. It is what he has done in Major League Baseball, where the Dodgers have shown that the best part about being rich is acting like it. GO DEEPER How will Mark Walter impact the Lakers? Here are 5 key tenets of his Dodgers reign The Dodgers have won 100 games in five of the last seven complete seasons and two World Series trophies (2020, 2024). They are seen as the best organization in baseball, with its best front office. They have invested in development and innovation and, yes, talent, and found the right way to marry it all together. This season, the Dodgers will spend $476 million on player salary and luxury-tax payments combined. While that may not be possible in the NBA, where the new collective bargaining agreement is meant to suffocate its biggest spenders with punitive tax payments and roster-building restrictions, the Dodgers have not been cowed by the limits MLB has tried to set on them. They signed Shohei Ohtani to a $700 million contract but structured it so they only pay him $2 million a season. The money they deploy toward the roster is only part of their success. The Dodgers hired the best general manager in baseball away from another team. They recognize there is only a salary cap on players and nowhere else in the organization. 'A key difference between baseball and basketball is that you can't simply outspend everyone on payroll the way the Dodgers do,' an NBA executive said. 'But what most people overlook is how much the Dodgers invest beyond just players. They spend at an elite level on infrastructure: front office talent, analytics and player development. Each area is essentially run by a GM-level executive, enabling them to retain top-tier personnel across the board.' Advertisement Under Walter, the Lakers could become the best of both worlds, combining a small-market ingenuity with big-market largesse and press the advantages they already have. At a time when the local TV market is in flux, the Lakers have one of the best local broadcast contracts in sports. While other contenders scramble for stars, the Lakers traded for Luka Dončić under the cover of darkness. One thing that could get in the way of a decade of Thunder dominance is if an organization began to operate like Oklahoma City while playing in the second-largest market in the country that has also been a main attraction for the NBA's biggest stars. 'I think (Mark Walter) does everything he can to provide resources, support,' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. 'He wants to win. He feels that the fans, the city deserves that. I think that's never lost. It's more challenging us always to, how do we become better and not complacent or stagnant to continue to say competitive with the market and the competition to win not only now but for as far as we can see out.' The Lakers have always had swagger, now they could have a systemic approach to go along with it. How Walter changes the Lakers remains to be seen, but it could continue to help change the NBA, too. He is soon to join a new cast of owners who have not eased their way into the league. Phoenix's Mat Ishbia has discarded any concerns about going above the second apron. Ryan Smith has dreams of turning Utah into one of the country's sports hubs. Joe Tsai's Brooklyn Nets signed Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving in his first year in control. Steve Ballmer, now a veteran, has paid for a sprawling front office for the LA Clippers. It is no coincidence, either. Valuations have skyrocketed for NBA teams over the last 15 years and the people who have bought them have come in with immense wealth and perhaps even larger aspirations. Sports teams may still be public trusts, but they are no longer just toys for the uber-wealthy. Every franchise is a multi-billion dollar business, and the people who own them are coming in from finance and tech, and turning the organizations they've bought to mirror the companies they run. Walter could make the Lakers a part of that arms race. He has already shown how he can in another sport. In Los Angeles, his purchase signals the end of one era and the dawn of another. After 45 years of Buss control, the Lakers might never be the same again. Fabian Ardaya contributed to this report. (Photo of Jeanie Buss: Will Navarro /NBAE via Getty Images)

NHL's Wayne Gretzky recounts unreal story how he got ‘Great One' nickname.
NHL's Wayne Gretzky recounts unreal story how he got ‘Great One' nickname.

Yahoo

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

NHL's Wayne Gretzky recounts unreal story how he got ‘Great One' nickname.

The post NHL's Wayne Gretzky recounts unreal story how he got 'Great One' nickname. appeared first on ClutchPoints. Before he was an NHL Hall of Famer, Wayne Gretzky was just 10, missing teeth and lighting up the scoreboard with 400 goals. But the nickname that would follow him forever came from a single line in a local newspaper, and his dad wanted nothing to do with it. Advertisement Gretzky recently shared how the iconic 'Great One' nickname originated. It wasn't a planned publicity move. A reporter from the London Free Press came to write a story after Gretzky's amazing season. At the end of the article, the journalist made a bold suggestion: if legends like Gordie Howe were 'Mr. Hockey,' maybe the 10-year-old sensation should be called 'The Great One.' As soon as the article was printed, Gretzky's father pushed back. He didn't want his son carrying that kind of title at such a young age. But no matter how hard he tried to stop it, the nickname wouldn't fade away. It kept coming up until eventually, even Wayne had to accept it. 'We're going to have to live with it,' he remembered thinking. The name came after an almost legendary season—400 goals in a single year. For most kids, that number might sound impossible, but for young Wayne, it was just another chapter in a journey that had barely started. That stat alone had reporters and fans scrambling to find words big enough to match his performance. That same year brought a rite of passage. Wayne Gretzky took a hit, lost some teeth, and burst into tears. His father didn't coddle him; instead, he offered a sentence that stuck just as much as the nickname: 'Well, now you're a real hockey player.' Advertisement Between the missing teeth and the 400-goal season, it was a year that shaped a legacy. 'The Great One' wasn't created in the NHL spotlight; it started in the pages of a local paper, with a kid who couldn't stop scoring and a name too fitting to ignore. Related: NHL fan goes viral for Oilers-Panthers jersey change during Stanley Cup Final Game 5 Related: 3 best destinations for Stars' Jason Robertson amid growing trade buzz

The 'Don Bradman of football' is inducted as 33rd Legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame, as greats line the red carpet for glitzy ceremony
The 'Don Bradman of football' is inducted as 33rd Legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame, as greats line the red carpet for glitzy ceremony

Daily Mail​

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Daily Mail​

The 'Don Bradman of football' is inducted as 33rd Legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame, as greats line the red carpet for glitzy ceremony

South Australia legend Ken Farmer has been announced as the 33rd legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame. Once dubed by The Advisor as 'the Don Bradman of Football', Farmer enjoyed a glittering career in the SANFL, booting an outstanding 1417 goals across 224 appearances. A South Australian great with over 1400 career goals. Ken Farmer is the 33rd Legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame. — AFL (@AFL) June 10, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store