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ESPN's Bonnie Bernstein Says Palestinian Kids Want to Be Suicide Bombers, Apologizes

ESPN's Bonnie Bernstein was a guest on Mike and Mike in the Morning Wednesday, and when the subject turned to a high school basketball player who is considering playing professionally in Europe instead of going to college, Bernstein made an extremely odd comparison between American high school basketball players and Palestinian suicide bombers.

I've just reviewed the show in question and transcribed the full text of Bernstein's comments below.
It's sort of like, you know, and this isn't -- I'm prefacing this by saying this is in no way an analogy to sports because I know we live in a hypersensitive society -- but I remember a while ago I was reading an article in the New York Times about Palestinian suicide bombers and I just remember being struck by the notion that from the point of birth, people in Palestine are taught to think that dying in the name of God is a good thing.

They grow up wanting to be suicide bombers. So bringing it back to sports -- and again, I'm not making the comparison or the analogy -- if a young talented basketball player is being told at an early age that they are destined, it is a good thing to focus on basketball and not worry about what's going on in the classroom, why are any kids going to be worried about what's going on in the classroom?
Bernstein seemed to know that what she was saying would offend people, and sure enough, it did.

ACC Shuts Up All That Extra Games Talk



All that talk about the Atlantic Coast Conference expanding to an 18-game basketball season was quickly quieted during the conference's spring meetings. The ACC won't expand to an 18-game hoops season or 9-game football season because of ... what else ... TV contracts.
The conference's TV contracts are in place through the end of the 2010-11 academic year. Any serious tinkering with the ACC's schedules will come when the TV deals expire, so that the conference can maximize the financial payoff of its changes.


The conference feels that they don't want to give away extra games for free.

After all, they know that the ACC is still damn good TV. Five of the top ten college hoops games on ESPN involved at least one ACC team. The second North Carolina-Duke game was ESPN's highest rated game -- ever. As for football, Clemson-Florida State was the World Wide Leader's top rated college game ... while Boston College-Virginia Tech was ESPN's highest rated Thursday game -- ever.

More Hall of Fame Tears From Dick Vitale

ESPN's Dick Vitale was introduced by CBS play-by-play man Jim Nantz when Vitale's induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame became official, and just as he did on Monday morning, he started to cry:

Via Awful Announcing.

Vitale is an emotional guy, whether he's talking about his favorite payers or his favorite coaches or his parents or his own broadcasting career. Sometimes his emotion can inspire and sometimes it can grate, but it's that approach to the game that got him into the Hall of Fame.

I thought it was classy of Nantz to show as much reverence for Vitale as he did, even though it's Nantz's own partner, Billy Packer, whom he wants to see in the Hall of Fame.

Bob Knight's Volkswagen Commercial Is Stupid

Former coach and current ESPN analyst Bob Knight is nothing if not a shill for any company that will pay him to endorse its product, and his latest is this Volkswagen commercial:

I have to say, it sucks, and it's a little embarrassing to watch Knight making a fool of himself like that. Awful Announcing says, "I'm all for people making as much money anyway they can, but this is a little ridiculous." And Sporting Blog says, "this new VW commercial featuring Knight is just not good. Like, at all." I agree. C'mon, Knight. You're better than that.

ESPN's Jay Bilas and Dan Le Batard Get Into It Over Race in Basketball



Hat tip to Awful Announcing on this one.

ESPN's Jay Bilas was a guest on Dan Le Batard's radio show and they got into it. The main topic of discussion was race in basketball (mainly at Tyler Hansbrough's pro prospects).

It didn't seem to be what Bilas wanted to discuss. I mean, it is only the national championship coming up and I'm sure that Jay was prepared to talk about that. Le Batard instead hit him up with weird questions about scenarios if Hansbrough was black or Michael Beasley was white.

After a heated exchange, Bilas got off this classic blast -- "Take offense ... it's stupid"

Bobby Knight Would Like You to Consider Buying a German Automobile

Anyone got a temperature reading from hell? It was totally unthinkable just a few months ago but it seems that Bobby Knight has made a full 180-degree shift from ornery basketball coach to cuddly television analyst and pitchman. Well, he's not actually cuddly but he's doing his best to challenge Dick Vitale, Chris Berman and the rest of his ESPN colleagues when it comes to spreading his seed to corporate America.

I'm not really feeling it. Doesn't Knight strike you as the type who would only ever buy an American car?

Knight's no stranger to endorsements, of course, as his increasingly NASCARish sweaters at Texas Tech made quite clear. Nor is he actually a stranger to the world of television commercials. After the jump, check out a vintage ad from the General.

Dick Vitale Cries on ESPN as He Reveals He's in the Basketball Hall of Fame

ESPN college basketball analyst Dick Vitale appeared on Mike and Mike in the Morning today and revealed that he's been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame

The news, which comes on the heels of yesterday's announcement that Vitale is in the less prestigious College Basketball Hall of Fame, will be announced officially today at noon at the Final Four in San Antonio.

"I get so emotional because I can't believe that I'll be there with those people that I used to go to Madison Square Garden and watch," Vitale said.








For Dick Vitale, One Basketball Hall of Fame Down, One Basketball Hall of Fame to Go

ESPN basketball analyst Dick Vitale has been inducted into the National College Basketball Hall of Fame, it was announced today. He's also a finalist for the more prestigious Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. He'll find out if he got into that one tomorrow.

Vitale released the following statement:
"I can't begin to describe how honored I am to be included with the greatest minds and athletes of this sport," said Vitale. "College basketball has given me a life I didn't dream was possible. After nearly 30 years at ESPN I still can't believe I'm getting paid to be a part of this game I love. I just wish my mom and dad were here to share in this accomplishment with me."
Vitale will be inducted in the College Basketball Hall of Fame, in Kansas City, in November. Although Vitale was a college and NBA coach, this induction is for his 29 seasons of work as a broadcaster, and for the work he's done as an all-around ambassador for the game.

ESPN's Steve Lavin, Brad Nessler Drool Over Jimmy Dykes' Wife

Awful Announcing presents this video from ESPN's coverage of the College Slam Dunk and 3-Point Shootout Contest. The camera pans on the wife and daughter of Jimmy Dykes, who was working the event as an ESPN broadcaster, and then things get awkward:

First one of Dykes' ESPN colleagues, Brad Nessler, referred to Dykes' wife as "gorgeous." That might be crossing the line a little bit.

And then the other ESPN broadcaster, Steve Lavin, went well past the line: "Wow. That is impressive, Jimmy. That is clearly Exhibit A, B and C for one, overachieving, two, playing outside your league, and three, what do they call it, out-punting your coverage in football? I think that's what it is. Impressive"

OK, Steve, we get it. You think Dykes' wife is attractive. You can stop now.

Dick Vitale Advocates Eliminating Fouling Out

Davidson eliminated Georgetown from the NCAA Tournament yesterday in large part because Georgetown center Roy Hibbert fouled out after playing just 16 minutes.

On ESPN Radio this morning, Dick Vitale made an impassioned plea for a rule change that would keep that from happening: Vitale wants the NCAA to get rid of the rule that says a player is disqualified from the game after five fouls. Here's what Vitale said:

"I really think basketball, we're the only sport where a player is penalized, and put out of a game with a whistle. And you take your star player who you prepare all week with, you work, you develop your offensive, defensive schemes, all of a sudden, boom boom, two fouls, he's out of the game.

"Hibbert played 16 minutes in the game. Vital player for Georgetown. I'd like to see a rule where a player can stay on the floor, at the coach's discretion, and every foul after the fifth is two shots and the basketball if he fouls, you get two shots and the basketball. ... Think about it. Basketball is the only sport where a guy is disqualified because a guy blowing a whistle controls the whole scenario."

I dunno. The rule that says players foul out after five (or six) fouls is so ingrained in the way I think of the game of basketball that I feel like there must be some good reason not to get rid of it. I wouldn't mind seeing some teams experiment with this rule in early-season games, but I'm not convinced that we want to eliminate something as fundamental as fouling out.