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  • Jordan Clarkson First Jazz Player to Win Sixth Man Award

    Source: ESPN "Jordan Clarkson first Utah Jazz player to win NBA Sixth Man award; teammate Joe Ingles 2nd in voting"

    Utah Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson was named the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year on Monday night, edging out teammate Joe Ingles and New York Knicks guard Derrick Rose for the award.

    With the unique circumstances of both Clarkson and Ingles being among the finalists for the award, TNT used Ingles to help give his teammate the award. After going through a couple of trivia questions about the history of the award, host Ernie Johnson asked them both how many members of the Jazz had won the award before.

    Clarkson said zero -- while Ingles, who knew this year's results, held up his index finger and then grabbed the trophy, handing it to a stunned Clarkson as he accepted the award.

    Clarkson, who has played for the Los Angeles Lakers and Cavaliers in addition to the Jazz over the course of his seven-year NBA career, averaged a career-high 18.4 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.5 assists in 26.7 minutes in 68 games during the 2020-21 regular season. He received 65 of the 100 first-place votes cast by the global panel of 100 sportswriters and broadcasters who vote for all of the league's various season-long awards.

    Clarkson's 407 points put him significantly ahead of Ingles, who had 34 first-place votes and 272 total points. Rose had the remaining first-place vote and finished with 77 total points, slightly ahead of Dallas Mavericks guard Jalen Brunson (67 points) in fourth.

    Utah, meanwhile, will try to even its first-round series with Memphis on Wednesday night, after the top-seeded Jazz lost at home to the eighth-seeded Grizzlies on Sunday night in a game Donovan Mitchell missed after the team's doctors held him out because of a sprained ankle.

    Jordan Clarkson's accolade, though, is just a testament to the depth of Utah's line-up. According to Clarkson, the team is undeterred in its chase for a different trophy -- the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy -- over the next couple of months.

     

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  • The Lakers vs Warriors was a Nail-biter Game

    Source: ESPN "NBA playoffs 2021: LeBron James and Stephen Curry's play-in performance was the playoff prelude everyone hoped for"

     

    By all accounts, the play-in tournament has been a resounding success for the NBA this year. It created exciting new scenarios toward the end of the regular season and mostly stemmed the widespread tanking that had made a mockery of the final month of play for the 14 teams that weren't making the playoffs.

    And it gave us a delicious matchup between the Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors on Wednesday night at Staples Center.

    The game was an instant classic, with two of the league's brightest stars, Stephen Curry and LeBron James, matching each other with brilliant performances and clutch shot-making that felt more like one of their classic NBA Finals matchups than the play-in game to get to the actual playoffs.

    James got the better of Curry on Wednesday, hitting a 34-foot 3-pointer over him to seal the Lakers' 103-100 win. The trey was the longest go-ahead shot in the final three minutes of a game in James' career, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

    James finished with 22 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for his 128th career triple-double (including regular season, play-in and playoffs).

    The Lakers' win gives them the No. 7 seed in the Western Conference and a first-round playoff matchup against the second-seeded Phoenix Suns. And it drops the Warriors, now fighting for the 8-seed, into an elimination game Friday against the Memphis Grizzlies (9 p.m. ET on ESPN).

    It's fair to question if the reward for all that excitement is worth the risk of potentially losing one of the league's marquee franchises before the playoffs officially begin. The Warriors now have less than 48 hours to regroup before facing the Grizzlies in San Francisco. It is a bit redundant from the Warriors' regular-season finale win over Memphis on Sunday that determined the eighth seed in the play-in tournament.

    In any other year, that win would have sent the Warriors into a first-round series against the top-seeded Utah Jazz. But this year, they'll have to play two extra games, one of which is an elimination game, just to advance to the same series.

    When considering this, it's easy to see why some fans may have gripes about this new format. Even LeBron himself has stated that whoever came up with the play-in tournament "needs to be fired". Like all new things, it will take a while to get used to this new format, but when we do, assuming it's permanent, it has the potential to be an exciting and suspenseful prelude to the post-season. It's already showing signs of that, as shown by this game.

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  • Olympic high jumper pressured to 'perform better' and lose a few pounds

    Female athletes are being pressured to loose weight and to look good for the camera in order to get and keep their sponsorships.  Here is a story about  Olympic High Jumper Priscilla Frederick-Loomis and her challenges with expectations and eating disorders.

    The rejection was brutal. At the age of 16, Priscilla Frederick-Loomis attended a model agency casting session in New York City where she was told that she was "too heavy."

     

    Even now at the age of 31, those two words still play on the Olympic high jumper's mind. Raised by a single mother in New Jersey, Loomis also toyed with the idea of becoming an actor and that's a dream she hasn't given up on as she has pursued her athletics career.

    "I'm going to use track and field as a way to make a name for myself," Loomis, who is a two-time Pan American Games silver medalist and competed at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, tells CNN Sport from her home in the US. She represented Antigua and Barbuda, where her father is from.

    Pursuing a career in track and field hasn't been easy.

    "When you are trying to be an elite athlete, on top of trying to get signed on, on top of dealing with coaches, you also have, the pressures, one for me, of being an African-American female representing a Caribbean island. And you're adding on top of all that body shaming."

    Even though she never thought she had an eating disorder, Loomis remembers a conversation she had with her college nutritionist, asking: "'How can I be anorexic and be an athlete?'"

    "When I said to my nutritionist that I want to be anorexic, never did I mean I want to have an eating disorder. The power of the word wasn't apparent to me.

    "Now, I look back like and think, 'What the hell was wrong with me? I didn't even realize a lot of female athletes have eating disorders."

    But at that point in her career, that's what Loomis felt she had to do to be successful given she was 158 lbs and is 5 ft 10 tall, which she noted is six inches shorter and at least 20 pounds more than her rivals.

    "In my head, it was common sense: don't eat a lot, look better, jump better," said Loomis, who remembers a time at college when her then coach Richard Fisher advised her to grab something to eat after a training session.

    "I wanted an ice cream, a little ice cream," she says as she demonstrated how small the size was.

    Except another coach told Loomis to put the ice cream down.

    According to US-based eating disorder expert Dr. Gayle Brooks our culture emphasizes and overvalues thinness as the health and beauty ideal.

    "When this cultural value system is combined with the pressures of athletic competition, which places an emphasis on diet, appearance, size and weight to achieve peak performance, it places some athletes at high risk of developing disordered eating and possibly eating disorders," Dr. Brooks told CNN Sport.

    Dr. Brooks is the vice president and chief clinical officer for the Renfrew Center, a US-based clinic specializing in eating disorders treatments. Over Brooks' 30 year career, she has treated many patients who suffer from eating disorders and acted as the eating disorders specialist in the HBO film Thin.

    According to a US study -- Prevalence of Eating disorders among Blacks in the National Survey of American Life -- anorexia was the rarest eating disorder among African American adults and adolescents, while binge eating was the most prevalent eating disorder among adults and adolescents.

    "We are really understanding more and more that eating disorders are not just a White, suburban women's disease, and that, you know, for a long time the belief was that women of color, particularly Black women, were protected culturally from developing eating disorders," said Dr. Brooks.

    As she trained for her first Olympic appearance in 2016, Loomis adhered to a strict diet.

    "I would eat super healthy and super clean, be on it for a month. One time I was just like, 'I really would love a donut, or I really would love a cupcake' and I have a sweet tooth."

    However, according to then-coach Richard Fisher, Loomis wasn't eating enough.

    "We started working together, she was eating maybe three meals a day tops. Everything was low and minimum.

    "She would be so hungry, she would eat unhealthy things as anyone, and her lack of nutrition was hindering her from performing the correct way that she needed to."

    The track and field coach adds: "A lot of coaches look at, I would say the average high jumper who's professional and look at their height and their weight ratio.

    "They use that as the standard for what they believe an athlete should be, which in reality is not true all the time. Yes, it might be the perfect standard of what you want. But a lot of these athletes, you have to realize, are one a billion.

    "Priscilla always used to say to me, 'I'm the shortest, fattest high jumper out there.'"

    According to World Athletics, in a statement sent to CNN: "There is no one kind of body measurement requirement to qualify for the Olympics. That is not the case. There is no such requirement. The qualifying standards are all based around performance."

    Last year World Athletics released a Nutrition Consensus Statement providing the latest research and guidance around nutrition to athletes, coaches and administrators.

    In a statement sent to CNN Sport, the International Olympic Committee also said it "stands for non-discrimination as one of the founding pillars of the Olympic Movement, which is reflected in the Olympic Charter, Fundamental Principle 6.

    "The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Olympic Charter shall be secured without discrimination of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, sexual orientation, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.

    "Furthermore, athletes' safety and wellbeing is a priority and a core value for the IOC, which is committed to leading and supporting the Olympic Movement in the implementation of safeguarding measures, in line with its mission stated in the Olympic Charter to promote safe sport and the protection of athletes from all forms of harassment and abuse."

    Even Loomis' teammates were all too quick to chime in with disparaging comments about her appearance.

    After Loomis' appearance at the 2015 Outdoor World Championships in Beijing, she says she was called "thick" and "heavy" by her teammates from Antigua and Barbuda. And that was after she had just competed on the track.

    The Antiguan and Barbuda Olympic Committee did not immediately respond to CNN Sport's request for comment.

    Three years later she placed fifth in the high jump at the Commonwealth Games in Australia. She went to the bar to grab a beer to celebrate when a man, who recognized Loomis from her famous purple hair, came up to her and said, "Oh, I saw you on TV. If you would drop a few kilos, you would have performed better."

    As a result of those comments, Loomis says she would drink a pot of coffee to dehydrate herself to appear slim on screen.

    Loomis is currently working with a female coach, Lauren Biscardi, a former New York state champion in high jump, who the 31-year-old athlete says has "changed my professional career. She has helped me love training, love myself and has allowed me to feel."

    Loomis competed at Rio in  2016 and has ambitions  to compete at the Tokyo Olympics and at Beijing 2022.

    You can the rest of the article Here

    Source:  CNN

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  • Isha Johansen's rise to FIFA's corridors of power as an African woman

    For Isha Johansen, a journey that began by helping to give kids displaced by war a semblance of a normal childhood, has led her to become the first West African woman elected to soccer's world governing body's FIFA council.
     

    Well, it seems like FIFA has been one step ahead, dipping their hands right into the core. FIFA together with UEFA and  IMD formed the Women in Football Leadership Programme. The aim of this program being to empower women to take up leadership positions.

    This great initiative by the trio has already inspired some women to assume leadership positions from all over the world. 

    The 2019 edition of the program brought together 24 participants in Zurich from 18th to 20th of November 2019. FIFA along with other governing bodies have been continuously working on a common aim. The aim has been to enrich the industry with different and valuable opinions as well as backgrounds and experiences. With the achievement of this aim comes the ability to make the game as inclusive as possible to women as well as embracing diversity in gender, perspective, race, religion, and social status. The most essential goal for the achievement of the prior mentioned aim is, therefore, the representation of women in football leadership.

    You all know how men always say “women are complex creatures,” which applies in football as well. No man in power can fully understand the needs of women, only a woman can. Therefore, women play vital roles in the success of organizations where women are involved, especially if the aim is to be diverse and inclusive. The genesis of this program is a win-win situation for both male and female organizations. As much as the program provides a platform for women to grow and improve their decision-making skills, it also allows them to create a balance, allowing maximum sharing of ideas and progress.

    The Women in Football Leadership program seeks to use a powerful leadership training week to support the careers of women who have a great influence on the today and tomorrow of football as a game and an industry. The program allows participants to work on and discuss aspects of leadership for continual career development. At the end of the WFLP, every participant takes home leadership skills, extended networks and strong links with other women in positions of authority as well as the confidence to set and pursue career goals. 

    The program includes plenary discussions, role-playing, and one-on-one coaching. Teaching and professional skills development, as well as team dynamics, are also part of the package. The training week creates a good training environment, conducive for personal, professional growth and promotion of self-awareness and team spirit in a bid to enhance leadership skills.

     

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  • 2021 NBA Play-In Tournament - The Mix

     

    With yesterday being the last day of this year's 72-game NBA season, the next thing fans have to look forward to on the schedule is the play-in tournament, which officially starts tomorrow, May 18th. This is the first season where they're implementing this format, which grants an extra opportunity for teams who would ordinarily be out of the playoff picture by now.

    Here's how it works: the 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th seeded teams for each conference will compete for the last two spots in this year's postseason. The 7th seed and the 8th seed will play each other, with the winner claiming a spot in the playoffs, and the 9th and 10th seed will play each other, with the loser being eliminated. The loser of the first game and the winner of the second game will then play each other for the eighth and final spot.

    For the Eastern conference, the teams who wound up in this year's play-in tournament are the Charlotte Hornets at 10th, the Indiana Pacers at 9th, the Washington Wizards at 8th, and the Boston Celtics at 7th. The Celtics in particular are a surprising addition; most fans certainly wouldn't have expected them to land the 7th seed with a .500 record at the beginning of the season, just coming off a conferences finals appearance, but here they are. Meanwhile, the Hornets and the Wizards also have a shot at making the playoffs, for the first time in quite a few years.

    For the Western conference, the teams who made the tournament are the San Antonio Spurs at 10th, the Memphis Grizzlies at 9th, the Golden State Warriors at 8th, and the Los Angeles Lakers at 7th. The Warriors missed last year's playoffs due to Curry and Klay Thompson being out with injuries; Klay is still out, but the team has bounced back with Steph at the helm. The Lakers, on the other hand, were by no means expected to be here – the defending champs with a roster straight out of 2k who debatably got a better roster in the off-season, at least on paper, are now fighting just for a playoff appearance. But things happen – injury, chemistry issues – especially since both LeBron and AD were out extensively this season. Portland's win against Denver last night was what ultimately cemented them in the play-in tournament.

    Everyone has their predictions, but what this season has taught me, with the Knicks in the fourth seed and the Jazz with the best record in the league, is that anything can happen. The play-in tournament starts tomorrow evening with the Wizards @ Celtics and the Hornets @ Pacers.

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