• WWW.BBC.COM
    Bayern strike late to beat Real Madrid in seven-goal thriller
    Bayern Munich leave it late in a back-and-forth classic to beat Real Madrid 4-3 to set up a meeting with Paris St-Germain in the semi-finals of the Champions League.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 18 Views 0 Anteprima
  • WWW.SPORTSCHAU.DE
    Eberl ber Kompany-Sperre- "Gerade erst erfahren"
    Bayern-Trainer Vincent Kompany wird im ersten Halbfinalspiel gegen PSG aufgrund einer Gelb-Sperre fehlen. Fr Max Eberl steht die Euphorie und das positive Gefhl dennoch im Mittelpunkt des Abends.[mehr]
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 18 Views 0 Anteprima
  • WWW.OURSPORTSCENTRAL.COM
    Sr. Loggers Club Returns for Fans 60+
    The Williamsport Crosscutters have announced that membership in the popular Sr. Loggers Club is now available for the 2026 season.Membership in th... - MLBDL Williamsport Crosscutters
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 18 Views 0 Anteprima
  • WWW.OURSPORTSCENTRAL.COM
    ESPN Delivers Second Most-Watched WNBA Draft Ever
    ESPN today announced that the 2026 WNBA Draft delivered the second most-watched WNBA Draft ever, averaging 1.50 million viewers, according to Nielsen ... - WNBA
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 18 Views 0 Anteprima
  • RMCSPORT.BFMTV.COM
    Bayern-Real: "Larbitre a tu le match", Arbeloa furieux aprs le carton rouge contre Camavinga
    Le Bayern Munich affrontera le PSG en demi-finale de la Ligue des champions aprs avoir cart le Real Madrid au terme dun match retour superbe (4-3). Une rencontre qui a notamment bascul aprs lexpulsion controverse dEduardo Camavinga.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 17 Views 0 Anteprima
  • WWW.SMH.COM.AU
    Saudi Fund set to back away from LIV Golf under mounting financial pressures
    Saudi officials have said the kingdom is reevaluating its priorities amid mounting financial pressures, including the cost of its pledges to host the 2034 FIFA World Cup.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 17 Views 0 Anteprima
  • Susan Shelley: Could Los Angeles back out of the 2028 Games?
    the 1976 Winter Olympics? In 1970, the International Olympic Committee chose Denver as the host city
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 17 Views 0 Anteprima
  • 0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 16 Views 0 Anteprima
  • WWW.FOXSPORTS.COM
    Inside Dave Roberts' Growth: How the Dodgers Manager Learned To Handle Stress And 'Enjoy Moments'
    DODGER STADIUM (Los Angeles) As Miguel Rojas rounded third base after his improbable season-saving World Series Game 7 home run last October, the cameras cut briefly to his manager. Dave Roberts, who decided to ride with the light-hitting veteran infielder with the Dodgers season on the line, screamed in excitement before briefly raising his arms in the air. He then immediately placed his hands on his head, closed his eyes and exhaled. The emotional gamut Roberts experienced elation, disbelief, relief, all in a matter of seconds offered a glimpse into the pressure of his high-stakes job, though Roberts believes he has gotten better over the years at handling and masking the stress. Deep breathing exercises and an unwavering belief in his process have helped. So has golf. He takes his clubs on the road and tries to sneak in time to play during the season as a way to "balance out this crazy life of managing the Dodgers." Of course, winning three championships in six years has also lightened the load that once existed, quieted the criticisms that were once pervasive and helped the man with the highest winning percentage of any manager in modern AL/NL history find more delight in a journey that was once, amid unfulfilled October expectations, less joyful. "I can honestly say that, at times, the joy has been taken out because of the cynicism from the eyes looking in at my job or the job Ive done," Roberts told me last weekend during a reflective 12-minute conversation from his office at Dodger Stadium. "But I do think that that has considerably dissipated after winning in 2024." Even before that World Series victory earned Roberts a four-year extension, the 2024 triumph brought more jubilation than the championship four years prior, when a 2020 pandemic-shortened World Series title snapped a 32-year drought for the Dodgers but failed to stifle the noise around their manager. "2020 was just a relief," Roberts explained. "I still felt that, I dont know, whatever, the unease, or just kind of not as joyful, and it was unfortunate because I love this game so much. I love our city. I love our players. But unrealistic expectations are hard to kind of realize all the time, right? "And thats the job I signed up for, which I completely understand, but it did at some points take away the joy. So Ive had to intentionally, consciously, enjoy moments. Because the question is, if you cant enjoy moments, then what am I doing this for?" After back-to-back World Series wins, he no longer has to question that. Just trying to slow down time Roberts has grown accustomed to short offseasons after leading the Dodgers to the World Series in five of the last nine seasons. So when the pressure of October gives way to a calmer November, he tries to take advantage of every second, detaching from the game and keeping a busy itinerary. "I think Ive done a very good job of getting away," Roberts said, "and our front office does a great job of kind of letting me get away." This winter, Roberts took a couple of trips to Maui. He played more golf. He went to Japan and visited his birthplace of Okinawa. A week after celebrating his third World Series win as the Dodgers manager (and fourth overall, including his 2004 win as a player in Boston), he was on the sidelines in Tuscaloosa taking in his first SEC football game in an Alabama rivalry clash against LSU. "Coach [Kalen] DeBoers a good friend of mine," Roberts explained. "I saw some UCLA games football games, a basketball game spent time with the family, and I think when you have two short offseasons in a row, youre just trying to slow down time." He has found that to be more challenging than slowing down a game, which has gotten easier with more experience and success. Roberts isnt on social media, which protected him from some of the vitriol spewed by fans after the Dodgers lost back-to-back World Series in 2017 and 2018 and were stunned by the eventual champion Nationals in the 2019 NLDS. More acrimony followed after the 2020 success when the Dodgers were bounced in the 2021 NLCS before suffering consecutive NLDS exits against division rivals in 2022 and 2023. Beyond the boos from his own home crowd, he would get wind of fan sentiment another way. "You know how you hear about it? Is when I get texts from good friends saying, Hey, we still love you, and, Its not that bad," Roberts recalled. "Im like, shoot, it must be really bad." Those messages arent as prevalent anymore, not after becoming the first manager to lead his team to back-to-back World Series titles since the 1998-00 Yankees. The jeers at home have turned to cheers every time Roberts is introduced. His Dodgers are the odds-on favorites to three-peat, and theyve started the 2026 season with 13 wins in their first 17 games. "The thing is, theres no better teaching tool than experience," Roberts said. "There really isnt. You can always say, Just enjoy it, right? But when youre hearing all this stuff and the expectations are almost unrealistic, thats hard to enjoy. But youve got to kind of wrap your head around that to then say, The worlds not going to end, the sun is going to come up." If that goes wrong Roberts prefers to think forward, not dwell on the past. He hasnt even taken his 2024 World Series ring out of the safe in his house, though he knows what that postseason run meant for his career. "If that goes wrong," Roberts said, "theres a chance that I could not be out here. I could not be in this job." Roberts understood that at the moment, but he projected confidence despite the beleaguered state of the Dodgers rotation, the two elimination games his team faced against the Padres and the bullpen games that would be required to ultimately prevail. With the season on the line in San Diego, he told his players he believed in them more than any team he had ever coached. "Everyones aware of the noise and narratives out there," Roberts recalled, "but I didnt want anyone to feel that." That postseason was Roberts masterpiece. He pushed all the right buttons as the Dodgers rebounded to shut out the Padres in Games 4 and 5 in an NLDS victory that many on the team considered a turning point in the franchises history. On a personal level, it was around that time when Roberts felt the full buy-in and trust of his players, which he credits in part to the support of veterans Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Blake Treinen, who has found it easy to open up to Roberts. "As a manager, there are times where hes in the right and he could easily come in barking at people, but he doesnt," Treinen told me. "He meets them where theyre at, gains understanding, and hes willing to listen to people. Thats why hes such a great leader." Roberts doesnt think much about the "what-ifs" from that 2024 run unless someone else brings them up. But the widespread criticisms of his past October bullpen decisions ended with that potentially make-or-break postseason. "No one likes to hear bad things about them," Roberts said. "No one does. Every single day, youre opening yourself up to criticism with my job. And its hard not to take things personal, but Ive realized as time has gone on, its like, its really not about me. Theres a lot of miserable people in this world with a platform. Anyone that has a phone or some account, they have a voice. And a lot of people are never around, have their own issues personally, and theyre lashing out. For me, its like, I actually have grace for them." Who helped him get to that place? "More self-reflection," Roberts said. Winning didnt hurt, either. Roberts has led the Dodgers to the postseason in each of his first 10 years as the teams manager, something no other National League skipper has done before, but the postseason success of the last two years has put him on a different pedestal. In 2024, his prudent bullpen decisions shielded a shorthanded rotation. Last year, he leaned on his starting pitchers to protect a shoddy bullpen and relied on the players he trusted with the season on the brink. The result, one of pure elation, put him on a track toward Cooperstown and helped remove any doubt that might have existed before about why he's doing this. "Not everyone thats involved in this game loves it," Roberts said. "I love this game. I feel like I want to be a steward for this game, and I love players, and I feel like thats what keeps me joyful because I feel like Im impacting the game in a positive way." Rowan Kavneris an MLB writer for FOX Sports. He previously covered the L.A. Dodgers, LA Clippers and Dallas Cowboys. An LSU grad, Rowan was born in California, grew up in Texas, then moved back to the West Coast in 2014. Follow him on X at@RowanKavner.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 2 Views 0 Anteprima
  • "Very Questionable Tactics": Captain Ajinkya Rahane Grilled By Ex KKR Star
    The former opener also questioned how the team uses its key players, especially in their batting positions, given the experience within the squad.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 3 Views 0 Anteprima