Heavy security was in force Friday afternoon as the national news-media obsession with Terrell Owens and the Philadelphia Eagles focused on the latest installment of the drama at a hotel here: the arbitration hearing.
I was met at an upstairs entrance by a hotel employee and escorted down to another security chief, who took me to the front desk to make certain that I had a room reservation.
The lobby was filled with reporters and attendees of a convention who seemed happy to be caught in the T.O. crossfire. Outside, rows of photographers shivered in the cold as they waited to get shots of Owens entering and exiting.
The football news this week is that Jeremiah Trotter, the Eagles' star linebacker, wants Owens back. Defensive end Jevon Kearse, trying to be diplomatic, said: "We're cool if we do get him back. That would be special. But if it don't happen, we got to keep going."
The Owens-Eagles drama has involved a ferocious debate over the past few weeks about the erosion of sportsmanship, the death of values. The argument has raged for a number for years, but this situation has illuminated a deep division.
This week, it became clear to me that members of the news media, the image-makers, had lost their way. The cat-and-mouse game we play of building up and tearing down has created a schizophrenic sports culture of reporters and fans. We no longer know who or what we want our heroes to be.
For all of the talk about players and money and priorities, the fans and the members of the news media are the ones in the wilderness, not the athletes.
On Monday, the Yankees' Alex Rodriguez was announced as the American League's most valuable player. I was flabbergasted by the critical reaction to A-Rod's selection. This was his second MVP award. He won his first as a hard-hitting, slick-fielding shortstop. He won his second as a hard-hitting, slick-fielding third baseman.
I think we gloss over A-Rod's accomplishments.
Rodriguez was the best shortstop in baseball when he joined the Yankees. Then, in an act of selflessness, he made the ultimate team gesture: In deference to Derek Jeter, he agreed to play third base.
The next thing we know, A-Rod is one of the top third basemen in baseball. The MVP again.
Rodriguez kept the Yankees afloat. He was great at shortstop. He is great at third. And I suspect that if you put him in the outfield, he'd be the great there, too.
But we ignored his body of work, focusing instead on a two-week window during the playoffs, and came down hardest on him when the entire team crashed.
The persistent criticism of A-Rod is that he is dull, disingenuous, never rocks the boat, too corporate. He is too polished, trying too hard to cultivate a pristine image.
Those may be legitimate criticisms. At the same time, virtually in the same week, we vilify Terrell Owens for representing traits that, as it turns out, are the opposite of those we dislike in A-Rod.
Owens is a media hog. Owens shoots off his mouth. Owens criticizes teammates and is impudent toward his superiors.
T.O. is the anti-A-Rod and A-Rod is the anti-T.O., but both of them get blasted in the same week. I'm baffled.
What do we want from our superstars? Performance, behavior, fantasy? Is the model the 6-foot-5 quarterback with blond hair and blue eyes? The Rhodes scholar who married his high school sweetheart and landed in a suburb near you?
I'll be in Louisville, Kentucky, today for the dedication of the Muhammad Ali Center.
For many too young to remember, Ali is the former boxing champion who has waged a valiant fight against Parkinson's disease. For many others, Ali is the embodiment of courage and living proof of the idea that time heals wounds and opens eyes.
Ali was the T.O. of his time in terms of rubbing the public the wrong way. Then he was the A-Rod of his time in terms of being the master of his craft. He became larger than his sport because of his refusal to serve in the Army during the Vietnam War and his various stands on principle.
The Muhammad Ali you see revered now was reviled by many of the same people. That was even before he refused to serve in the military. They despised Ali because he talked too much, because he was a pretty boy, because he was too flashy, because he was too flamboyant. Ali pricked the same nerve in the 1960s that Terrell Owens has pricked in 2005.
What if Ali were Floyd Patterson? We may have liked him more, but we wouldn't be dedicating a museum in his honor.
A-Rod and T.O. will never reach that pinnacle -- A-Rod precisely because he does not take chances, Owens because he is absorbed with himself.
We have to stop inventing role models and pariahs on the fly. We have to give events time and space to play themselves out.
Revelations of positive doping tests for nearly two dozen Chinese swimmers that went unpunished sparked an intense flurry of accusations and legal threats between the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and the head of the US drug-fighting organization, who has long been one of WADA’s fiercest critics. WADA on Saturday said it was turning to legal counsel to address a statement released by US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) CEO Travis Tygart, who said WADA and anti-doping authorities in China swept positive tests “under the carpet by failing to fairly and evenly follow the global rules that apply to everyone else in the world.” The
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