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Running with bulls constitutes bad look for Norman

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

If you’re a fan of Washington’s NFL team – or one of its executives, coaches, or players – you can’t be thrilled after viewing a recent video clip from Pamplona, Spain.

There was starting cornerback Josh Norman, whose $14.5 million salary cap number is the team’s third highest, engaging in behavior that’s downright dangerous and arguably reckless. “I had to face the bull straight on,” Norman said on Instagram. “It was fun. It was worth it.”

Running with the bulls seems hazardous enough by itself; hurdling the bulls seems like a borderline death wish.

In case you missed it, Norman was at the famed San Fermin annual festival that draws hundreds of thousands of international visitors. They run through the city streets, with fighting bulls alongside or behind them, for what surely must be a massive adrenaline rush.

Norman was recorded leaping over one of the animals in a bullring.

Not once, but twice.

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Baseball’s problem isn’t the rash of homers. It’s everything else

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

There’s nothing wrong with home runs, per se.

Even pitching legends Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine agreed during a 1999 Nike commercial that featured Mark McGwire hitting prodigious moon shoots during batting practice, drawing oohs and aahs from dreamy-eyed admirers including Heather Locklear.

The Cy Young winners and eventual Hall of Famers hit the gym in an effort to add muscle. They ran the stadium steps to improve their conditioning.  They hacked away at balls on tees to refine their batting stroke.

“Chicks dig the long ball,” Maddux surmised correctly.

The gender specificity was unnecessary.

Spheres traveling a great distance through the air have always been certified crowd pleasers in sports. Long home runs in baseball. Long passes in football. Long three-pointers in basketball. Long drives in golf.

What’s not to like about majestic flight paths that result in runs, touchdowns, swishes or a hole-in-one? They’re veritable things of beauty.

However, a sport can’t survive on long balls alone. Too many, especially at the expense of medium and short plays, would make the game monotonous. There needs to be a variety of actions, with singles, screens, lay-ups and putts added to the mix.   

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Flexing new muscles, NBA stars take control of career paths

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

An NBA superstar can drastically change a team’s fortunes all by himself. The same isnt’ true of elite players in football and baseball.

Star quarterbacks and pass rushers are on the sideline for nearly half the game. They’re among 22 starters (not counting specialists and special teamers). In baseball, aces’ contributions are limited to roughly three games every two weeks, while sluggers get about four at-bats per contest. They’re among nine starters (10 in the American League).

But top NBA players are just one-fifth of their starting lineups. They have the ability to be on court for 80 percent of the game, or more. Their impact is clear, significant, and immediate.

Rookie LeBron James led Cleveland in scoring and minutes played – and was second in assists – in 2003-04, when the Cavaliers won 35 games after winning just 17 the year before. Last season, Dallas won nine more games than the previous campaign, paced by NBA Rookie of the Year Luka Doncic, who merely led the team in scoring and assists, while ranking second in rebounds and minutes.

We’re accustomed to the outsized power and influence NBA stars wield on the hardwood.

But we’re just getting used to the command they can exert in a front office, essentially wresting their career paths from general managers.

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Rendon doesn’t ‘owe it’ to baseball to attend All-Star Game

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

After playing at an All-Star level throughout his career, Anthony Rendon is finally an All-Star. But he might choose to stay home instead of participating in the All-Star Game.

No problem here if he does.

The Washington third baseman has been overlooked and underrated despite ranking 12th among major-league position players in Wins Above Replacement since his first full season (2014).  Fans have never rewarded him in the popular vote, hardly a surprise considering he draws attention to himself like the Miami Marlins draw fans to their ballpark. It’s harder to explain why he wasn’t named as an All-Star reserve before this season.

MLB’s silly rule that every club must be represented – baseball’s equivalent of participation awards – certainly hasn’t helped.

Yes, the recognition would be nice, as everyone wants to be respected by their peers. However, the four-day break has been wonderful to Rendon, a chance to escape the grind for rest, relaxation and recovery, far from adoring fans and inquisitive reporters with no requests for autographs, photos or interviews.

Earlier this season, Rendon said he’d “love to be an All-Star, but without going, if that’s possible.” He was half-joking and half-dead-serious.

Well, it’s quite possible. And if his preference is another mini-vacation opposed to his first Mid-Summer Classic, he should go for it, though his manager begs to differ.

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Like modern society, NBA free agency is go, go, go

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

Toronto won the NBA championship, but that’s nothing compared to what Brooklyn just pulled off. Someone needs to call the Guinness Book of Records.

In what must to be the fastest negotiations in pro sports history, the Nets acquired Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving as soon as the clock struck 6 p.m. on Sunday, when teams were given the all-clear to strike deals with free agents. Durant’s and Irving’s reported four-year contracts fell into place so quickly, the ink was still wet at 6:01 p.m.

If we didn’t know better, we’d think the parties had worked out the details prior to the negotiation period.  But that’s not possible (wink-wink). By league rules, teams are permitted to communicate with free agents and their representatives beginning at 6 p.m. on June 29 – solely for the purpose of scheduling a meeting to take place at or after 6 p.m. on June 30.

NBA teams often set speed records when free agency begins, and Brooklyn wasn’t the only example Sunday. In a flash, Kemba Walker was donning Celtics green, J.J. Redick was looking at property in New Orleans, and Terry Rozier taking Walker’s place in Charlotte.

A number of free agents quickly re-signed with their current teams, including Khris Middleton (Milwaukee), Nikola Vucevic (Orlando) and (Sacramento). But maybe they shouldn’t count here. You can’t tamper with your own player, right?

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Let’s just enjoy this QB competition as it plays out

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

Training camp starts in five weeks for Washington, but we can’t help looking ahead. Speculating isn’t just fun, it’s also a terrific way to kill time and feed the media beast. Insatiable NFL fans would die of hunger without the year-round buffet of opinion, conjecture and guesswork.

The main course in D.C. is rookie Dwayne Haskins, whose position in the draft and on the field make him the subject of national attention. The clock for first-round quarterbacks starts ticking the moment they shake hands with commissioner Roger Goodell, commencing a start-or-sit debate that can continue through the entire regular season.

Consider two rookie QBs in 2017.

Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes didn’t play until getting the start in Week 17, a meaningless game for the Chiefs’ playoff standing. Mahomes then started every game last year and won the league’s MVP award. Conversely, Houston’s Deshaun Watson was slated for bench duty but entered the season-opener at halftime.  He threw 19 touchdown passes in his first seven games, immediately raising doubts about coach Bill O’Brien’s thought process.

Reducing Mahomes to a spectator his first year worked out pretty well.

Allowing Watson to play from the get-go netted positive results, too.

The right course of action for teams and rookie QBs – including Washington and Haskins – isn’t one-size-fits-all. But that doesn’t stop us from sharing hunches.

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MLB shouldn’t wait to extend safety efforts

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

Maybe someone else has to die.

Maybe another fatality would give baseball the kick-in-the-pants it needs to require protective netting that extends down the foul lines in every ballpark.

Clearly, it’s not enough that a 4-year-old girl was struck and injured by a foul ball last month in Houston, a frightful experience that left Cubs outfielder Albert Almora Jr. visibly shaken. If that horrific accident didn’t inspire a new policy from commissioner Rob Manfred, you have to wonder if anything will do the trick.

Anything short of another death.

Sunday at Dodger Stadium, a young woman was struck in the head by a foul ball and taken to the hospital. Dodger Stadium happens to be the venue where a 79-year-old woman was struck by a foul ball in August and died from her traumatic head injury four days later.

On Sunday, Dodgers outfielder Cody Bellinger placed his hand on his head and gasped as he stared into the stands where the young woman sat, just beyond the protective netting. “I saw it literally hit her face,” he told reporters afterward. “It was tough.”

Tough.

That’s essentially what MLB tells fans who might be struck by projectile travelling over 100 miles per hour.

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Wizards’ looming decisions on Beal, GM, already look iffy

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

The Washington Wizards have been wrong more often than not in the 40 years since they last won 50 games.

They were wrong in letting Michael Jordan run the operation. They were wrong in replacing Jordan with Ernie Grunfeld. They were wrong in trusting Gilbert Arenas to be a leader. They were wrong in betting on John Wall, Bradley Beal and Otto Porter as a Big Three.

The Wizards’ track record inspires little confidence and less faith. But that’s exactly what owner Ted Leonsis is asking for as Washington enters Thursday’s NBA draft: “Trust me.”

Goodness knows we’d love to.

We want to believe that the same steady hand behind the Washington Capitals can similarly guide the Wizards to being perennial contenders, if not hang a championship banner from the rafters. But at this moment, that vision seems as far-flung as ever under Leonsis’ watch.

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NBA fortunes changed in a blink for players, teams

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

Six days. That’s how long it took to turn the entire NBA upside down.

Six days. Plus one ruptured Achilles tendon, one torn ACL and one blockbuster trade.

Uncertainty was rampant as the offseason neared, even before the sudden turn of events that included Toronto ending Golden State’s reign. Plenty of intrigue still exists – especially around the decision facing Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard. But new, unimaginable questions have surged to the fore.

Instead of simply wondering where Kevin Durant will go if he leaves the Warriors, we also must ponder his likely drop-off as a 31-year-old returning from Achilles surgery. Instead of just weighing the odds that Klay Thompson would re-sign with Golden State, we’re also forced to consider the ramifications created by his knee injury.  

And instead of mulling whether the Warriors should be favored or merely co-favored to reach a sixth consecutive Finals next season, we have to contemplate them possibly missing the playoffs altogether … while the Los Angeles Lakers make a title run?

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Pressure to play, win, is ever-present part of pro sports

By DERON SNYDER (as published in The Washington Times)

Even if no one leaned on Kevin Durant, of course he felt pressure.

Internally, he was itching to get back, to resume his torrid affair with the game. He was convinced he could help his teammates rally from a 3-1 series deficit, just like the Warriors did in 2016 against him and Oklahoma City. He was determined to prove – to himself and his critics – that he’s as strong as he’s skilled.

Externally, he knew Golden State was on the verge of losing the NBA Finals. He heard media suggestions that his absence with a calf strain was due to a lack of toughness and commitment. He saw an injured Klay Thompson return with a vengeance after missing Game 3.

Golden State officials were successful in sitting Thompson for a game after the sharpshooter suffered a strained hamstring. They endured his impassioned plea to play but let caution rule. “The risk (of re-injury) was too great and being down 2-1 is not the end of the world,” Thompson told reporters prior to returning for Game 4.

Being down 3-1 wasn’t doomsday, either.

But being on the verge of elimination created a greater sense of urgency for Durant and Golden State, whether anyone admits it. The questions are how much pressing came from the player, how much came from the team, and did the doctors/trainers shirk their responsibility?

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