Sentinel & Enterprise

HIGHS, LOWS OF STRANGE YEAR IN SPORTS WORLD

Debating the best and worst of the COVID era

- By Jim Like And Tim Dahlberg

The transforma­tion of the sports world began unassuming­ly enough, while Adam Silver sat in a car outside his New

York City apartment making phone calls. With only an inkling of what loomed on the horizon and just one player with a positive test for COVID-19, the commission­er pulled the plug on the NBA season. Soon enough, the lights went out on games around the globe.

By the time sports returned, the roar of the crowd was replaced by canned noise, and fans morphed into cardboard cutouts. Masks were everywhere, even if many on the sidelines and in dugouts never figured out how to wear them.

Viewing schedules had to be rejiggered and sports betting exploded. Anyone who bought stock in DraftKings the morning after Silver’s edict is probably driving a Tesla today. Nothing was the same. Many things won’t ever be — even with the arrival of vaccines.

AP sports columnists Jim Litke and Tim Dahlberg weigh in on the highlights and lowlights of a year in sports few will forget and none want to repeat.

Pandemic MVP (MBE)?

JL: Besides Silver? … Marcus Rashford. The 23-year-old Manchester United star almost single-handedly shamed the British government into extending free school meals for more than a million kids. Then

he reached into his own pocket to set up a task force that enlisted some of the UK’s biggest food brands to help. Queen Elizabeth made him an MBE (Member of the British Empire) in October. A knighthood can’t be far behind.

TD: Not sure who Marcus Rashford is, but if the queen likes him that’s good enough for me. Scratch my Justin Turner nomination.

Ranking ‘Last Dance’

JL: Yes. For a solid month of Sundays with not much else on, we watched him watch old videos of himself scorching one rival after another. Then he’d put down his iPad and cackle, “and I took that personally.” Michael Jordan is exactly who we thought he was.

TD: Can’t say … because I didn’t watch it. Korean baseball — or maybe it was Russian ping pong? — was on TV at the same time and I had money riding on both. Did I miss anything? Did he even mention Scottie Pippen?

Best zoom by athlete

JL: Roger Goodell headlines the NFL Draft from the basement/rec room of his home in New York. What’s great about that? Name another location in North America — even another bunker — where Goodell doesn’t get booed at least once. I’ll wait.

TD: There are none. Zoom is an awful excuse for actually talking to people. But if there were, I’d agree, just because of the sweater. Cuddly Goodell is the best Goodell.

Weirdest moment

JL: When Bryson DeChambeau resurfaced on tour as the Incredible Hulk. He’d already packed on 20 solid pounds since leaving college in 2015. Then he stacked another 20 pounds of muscle on top of that … during the PGA Tour’s three-month hiatus! DeChambeau can play, but that flat cap isn’t doing him any favors. From the neck up, he looks like an anvil.

TD: Andy Reid’s face shield fogging up opening night of the NFL season. Looked like he was smoking something funny inside. Reid got the last laugh, though, because the Chiefs made the Super Bowl and now the shield is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Least impacted sport

JL: NASCAR. Let’s see: Drivers wear helmets, there’s no side windows and they’re roaring along at 200 mph. Pretty sure even when the track is packed, the fans sound like the engine and look like a tarp.

TD: Bass fishing. One person, one boat. Plenty of fish.

Most impacted sport

JL: Any team with a coach. They’re supposed to yell in practice so they don’t have to during the game. But the empty gyms and stadiums proved irresistib­le to that dozen or so coaches who love the sound of their own voice. If you found it aggravatin­g looking in on TV, imagine how the players felt.

TD: Wrestling. The 6foot distancing thing was always a deal breaker, and wrestlers complained the masks made them too heavy.

What change to keep

JL: Players’ requests will be more closely … scrutinize­d. They’ve been breaking curfew forever, but attempts to limit their contacts because of COVID-19 required a whole new level of creativity. Clippers guard Lou Williams got permission to leave the NBA “bubble” for a weekend to attend his grandfathe­r’s funeral and was later photograph­ed at Magic City, a well-known Atlanta strip club. Williams claimed he was there just to pick up an order of wings. That defense didn’t fly (though Magic City is also known for its wings). Williams served 10 days in quarantine.

TD: Not signing autographs. Guys always hated it, now they’ve got an excuse not to pull out the Sharpie. A lot of them don’t like the media, either, and my guess is the days of reporters roaming locker rooms before and after games are over.

Top activity that will eventually resume

JL: I’ll probably regret this, but the Olympics. Great cities have always made for great Olympics and Tokyo did the last time around.

TD: My granddaugh­ter’s softball games.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Fans leave the Golden 1 Center after a game between the New Orleans Pelicans and Sacramento Kings was postponed at the last minute due to the coronaviru­s on March 11, 2020. A year after the worldwide coronaviru­s pandemic stopped all the games in their tracks, the aftershock­s are still being felt across every sector.
AP FILE Fans leave the Golden 1 Center after a game between the New Orleans Pelicans and Sacramento Kings was postponed at the last minute due to the coronaviru­s on March 11, 2020. A year after the worldwide coronaviru­s pandemic stopped all the games in their tracks, the aftershock­s are still being felt across every sector.
 ?? AP FILE ?? Florida State players leave the court after games at the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., were canceled due to the coronaviru­s on March 12, 2020.
AP FILE Florida State players leave the court after games at the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C., were canceled due to the coronaviru­s on March 12, 2020.

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