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World Cup Host Qatar Used Ex-CIA Officer To Spy On FIFA

By AP

“An Associated Press investigation has found that World Cup 2022 host Qatar has for years employed a former CIA officer to help spy on FIFA officials as part of a no-expense-spared effort to win and hold on to the most popular sports tournament.”

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Posted on November 24, 2021

The McEnroes In Antarctica

By Legends Abroad

LegendsAbroad.com will serve you a once-in-a-lifetime Antarctic expedition to the seventh continent. A limited number of lucky travelers will have the chance to spend 11 days with two of the sport’s most iconic legends, and witness history as the game is formally played for the first time on a continent known for geographical isolation and exoticism. The trip is also meant to highlight the importance of conserving this unique region which is jointly governed by multiple nations and has an impact on climate around the world.

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Posted on November 20, 2021

How Sports Can Fight Climate Change

By Patrick Lejtenyi/Concordia University

The past two North American pro-sports seasons have been exceptional in many ways: fewer games played, more regional travel and more same-city “baseball-style” series’ with consecutive match-ups between the same home and visiting teams. It was an unusual experience for everyone involved, but a good one for the environment, writes Concordia researcher Seth Wynes.
In a new paper just published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, Wynes, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Geography, Planning and Environment, writes that the drop in travel among the four major sports leagues in North America – Major League Baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League – had a noticeable effect on their carbon footprints.

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Posted on November 18, 2021

TrackNotes: Modern Games

By Thomas Chambers

Charlie Appelby. The Japanese. A California-made betting scandal. Baffert won’t be going away. Sweet profit. NBC is dead to me.
It could have been a comatose Breeders’ Cup this weekend, but TrackNotes took the road less traveled and ended up on a bouncing buckboard hauled by a runaway team of horses. High highs and low lows.

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Posted on November 7, 2021

TrackNotes: Perp Meets Surf

By Thomas Chambers

Cough-Cough-Cough!
Pardon me. I was just clearing out the chalk dust.
It’s been that kind of year. Top horses don’t battle each other as often, which makes it easier for favorites. However, there are a few dazzling runners taking each other on here and losses by some of them would cost them Eclipse Awards and, translationally, future breeding dollars.
While most of us will plug into the ol’ Telstar, it’s California here we come for the 37th Breeders’ Cup World Championships from the beautiful Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, where The Turf Meets the Surf.

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Posted on November 5, 2021

The Beachwood Radio Sports Hour #381: Cleanse The Blackhawks

By Jim Coffman and Steve Rhodes

New name, new uniform, new players. Plus: A-Robbed; The Rodgers Rate; At Least The Bears Are Consistent; The Bulls Have The Floor; Congratulations, George Sun!; Pretty Soon We Won’t Have Greg Brown To Kick Around Anymore; Kofi Cockburned; Rambler Women Make History; A Goth Ham; and Ryan Field Is Worse Than Ryan Braun.

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Posted on November 5, 2021

Toews & Kane Must Go

By Roger Wallenstein

On their 10th try Monday night, the Blackhawks finally won a game, beating the Ottawa Senators 5-1. Patrick Kane, who had missed the previous four games because of COVID-19 protocol, scored a hat trick, while Jonathan Toews, the team captain, chipped in with three assists.
What a perfect time to dump both of them. Had the sordid sexual assault of prospect Kyle Beach, brought to light last week, never happened, trading the team’s two stars still would make sense.

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Posted on November 3, 2021

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