Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Bigger Than The Game: The Secret Game

Any story that involves punching holes in the Jim Crow laws of the 1950's and 60's will always get my attention. Any story that involves sports and punching holes in the Jim Crow laws of the 1950's and 60's will doubly get my attention. The story of the famed "Secret Game' between the then North Carolina School for Negroes (now North Carolina Central University) and the Duke Medical School basketball teams caught my eye earlier today when researching some things for my classes. I knew right away this was something I wanted to learn more about and put here for all our faithful followers.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Bigger Than The Game: On The Horse That Was Too Small


The Story of Seabiscuit


In the midst of the Great Depression, sports became more than just sports. Fans escaped the drudgery of their daily lives by plopping down a few cents to watch their home team for a few hours forgetting the worries on the other side of the stands. Attendance at sporting events doubled and sometimes even tripled in the midst of the Depression as fans not only got away from their problems, but also got to see some most memorable sporting moments in history. More than baseball, football, or basketball, sports readily bet on were the most popular. Horseracing, along with Boxing, entered into its Golden Age because of its speed, danger and betting appeal. Lured by the thought of quick money or a lucky break, people flocked to the big tracks such as Churchill Downs, Pimlico, and Santa Anita. Aside from the cathedrals, fans could find smaller tracks and open field to bet on the “Sport of Kings.”


Friday, January 10, 2014

Bigger Than The Game: And Forrest Was There

Forrest Gump remains one of my all time favorite movies. Many of the historical events Gump was a part of are easy enough to pin-point. The one event that has long baffled me was his trip to China on the “All-American Ping-Pong Team.” Little did I know, the U.S Table Tennis team actually helped to pave the way for better U.S./Chinese relations at the height of the Cold War.
"In the land of China, people don't ever go to church"
but the did play some serious ping-pong

Long seen as one of the best ways to spread diplomacy throughout the world, table tennis had gain popularity impart from its development by British expatriates on over-seas assignment. The game took hold in China during the early 1900’s thanks to English involvement in the opium trade. It has been said that forces in the Chinese Civil War were so fond of the game that truces were set up so that the opposing sides could pit their best players against each other.