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 Subject :he notes golf inv.. 03.03.2015 - 08:17:26 
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Each week, The Reporters put their thumbs out to the good and the bad in the world of sports. nfl jerseys china . This week they discuss the Paralympic spirit, a good day for King James, the future of football in Toronto and one truly ugly game at Staples Center. Bruce Arthur, The National Post: My thumb is up to the Paralympics, which began Friday in Sochi, or, more specifically to the Paralympians involved. There were calls for athlete boycotts after Russia sent troops into Ukraine the day after the Olympics ended, but an athlete boycott was a silly and callous idea; it would have no effect on the invasion except to deprive those who push the edge of human possibility from something they deserve, even in a diminished spotlight. Instead, at the opening ceremony Friday, we saw a significant political statement from Ukraine, which sent just one of its 23 athletes to march in the opening ceremony. We didnt see anything that meaningful two weeks ago; Im glad we saw it now. The Paralympics, and Paralympians, deserve whatever spotlight they get. Steve Simmons, Sun Media: My thumb is up to LeBron James, and not for being the best player in the NBA or for the career-high 61 points he tossed up the other night. LeBron travelled last night to Cleveland, between games and against the advice of the Miami Heat, so he could be part of the ceremony that honoured his former Cavaliers teammate Zydrunas Ilgauskas. LeBron played more games with Ilgauskas as a teammate than anyone else he has played with in his 11-year career and he wanted to be there for his good friend and to see him honoured. In an NBA world in which selfishness reigns supreme, King James showed another side of himself last night. A surprisingly likable side. Dave Naylor, TSN Radio: My thumb is up to the Buffalo Bills who this week pulled the plug - at least for one year - on the Bills in Toronto series. For something that once stirred rabid debate across this country, the Bills playing in Toronto turned out to be much ado about nothing. The product was lousy, the prices too high and – oh, yes - that infamous news conference. But what also became obvious was the disconnect between Torontos sports fans and somebody elses NFL team. I dont know if there will ever be another NFL game played in Toronto, but the only way it makes sense is if one of the teams playing is Toronto. Dave Hodge, TSN: It was going to be "thumbs down" to the LA Lakers for the worst game in their history - that would be Thursdays loss by 48 points to the Clippers - but really, it should be "thumbs up" to the Lakers for their contribution to the anti-tanking movement, which seeks to change the NBAs draft lottery. Theres no proof that the Lakers tanked against the Clippers, except the scoreboard, and the 18,000 eyewitnesses at Staples Center, and the open encouragement of a "Riggin for Wiggins" campaign. The NBA needs to act, and the NHL needs to follow before next season a strategy unfolds that could be known as "Lose honor, get Connor". Cheap Phoenix Suns Jerseys . -- Josh Smith saved his only 3-pointers for when the Detroit Pistons needed them most. wholesale nfl jerseys . #SportingKC pic.twitter.UFC bantamweight Nick (The Ninja of Love) Denis credits an episode of "Star Trek" for his career path. Not fighting, but biochemistry. He started at the University of Ottawa as a math and physics student. But hooked on "Star Trek," he saw an episode where a disease hype-accelerated some on board the Enterprise and Dr. McCoy had to figure it out. "After that episode, I was like Screw physics. I want to do biochemistry. Its cool," Denis said with a laugh. "I based that decision purely on an episode of TV." Denis went on to get a bachelors and masters degrees in biochemistry, electing at the start of 2011 to focus on fighting rather than continue with his PhD studies. On Saturday night, the Montreal-based fighter steps into the Octagon for a second time when he takes on Ronald Delorme in all-Canadian bantamweight battle on a televised UFC card in East Rutherford, N.J. The man event at the Izod Center features lightweights Jim Miller (21-3) and Nate Diaz (15-7). Denis diving into biochemistry illustrates his penchant for setting a goal and accomplishing it. Denis got into MMA at 20, just looking for something different than lifting weights. He joined a gym and got to meet some fighters. "One thing led to another." "When I decide I want to do something, whether its learn about something or accomplish something or whatever it is, I just find a way to do it and I do it," he explained. He set his sights on the UFC when he learned it was adding his 135-pound weight class. Winnipegs Delorme (7-1) is an injury replacement for Johnny Bedford, who pulled out less then three weeks ago. Both men appeared on Season 14 of "The Ultimate Fighter." Denis (11-2 with 10 knockouts) sees them as fairly similar in body weight: tall with long, lanky limbs. "Bedford was like a wrestler with good jiu-jitsu that likes to strike. Delorme is more of a judo guy with good jiu-jitsu and sometimes like to strike." Denis also tried out for TUF, making it to the final stages last summer in Las Vegas where he hung out with Delorme. "Hes an nice guy, for sure." When Denis didnt make the final cast of the reality TV show, he took matters into his own hands. At a Wreck MMA card last October, he finished Nick Mamalis with a devastating suplex slam that knocked his opponent unconscious. The UFC took notice and the colourful bantamweight didnt disappoint in his January debut, knocking out Joseph Sandoval in Nashville with a string of nasty elbows just 22 seconds into fight. Its believed to be the fasted knockout by a Canadian in the UFC since Dave Beneteau stopped Asbel Cancio in 21 seconds at UFC 5 in 1995. The five-foot-seven Denis collected US$45,000 for knockout of the night, which he used some of to take his girlfriend to Cuba for a week and to buy a two-horsepower, top-of-the-line Vitamix blender -- the Rolls-Royce of blenders. Cheap Arizona Diamondbacks Jerseys. It also capped quite a comeback for Denis, who prior to Mamalis had not fought since a March 2010 loss to Yuji Hoshino at Sengoku. In the aftermath of that fight, he was training for a Wreck MMA title bout when he suffered a pinched nerve in training. He shot in on an opponent "and my body went one way and my head turned like the opposite way -- and it just cranked my neck real bad." His arm went numb but he kept training. The next morning, trying to shower or putting on a shirt were impossible. "I couldnt barely raise my right arm. I couldnt even lift a peanut butter jar with my right arm." he recalled. "Not painful, but very weird," he added. Months of physio followed as he waited for the injured nerve to grow back. When he did finally get healthy, several fights fell apart when opponents pulled out. Unable to train immediately after the injury, he and a friend drove across Canada and back -- camping or sleeping in the car. He met new friends along the way, taught a few seminars and tried his hand at surfing in Tofino, B.C. "Lots of good memories," he said of the monthlong trip. A native of Ottawa, he now lives in Montreal where he trains at the Tristar Gym. He made his pro debut in October 2006 and fought most of his early fights at featherweight (145). He walks around at 155 pounds. "I love the freedom it gives me," he said of fighting. " I like doing something physical with my body and its also mentally challenging." Golf may be the one sport that may have won a split decision over Denis. As a teenager, he threw himself into the sport and trimmed his handicap of three. But dreams of a pro career were dashed when he was unable to reproduce that in a tournament setting. He puts it down to youth and inexperience in handling press. Ever the analyst, he notes golf involves "very fine motor skills." "So if you get nervous, just rotating a wrist or anything a degree off course off your normal swing can mean a horrible shot. So nerves really play a huge part. "I guess I just learned to respect professional golfers a lot more because they can handle that." Now he just plays a few times a year for fun. His fight nickname came from one of his coaches in Ottawa. "Fight time Im serious, like a ninja I guess you could say," Denis explained. "But in general Im not a rough guy, Im not a mean guy, Im not going to talk trash. Im just looking to have a good time -- so I guess Im the ninja of love." wholesale jerseys cheap jerseys ' ' '

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