Thursday, December 25, 2014

Athletes & Their Business Endeavors

By: Candy Man

Michael Jordan is one of the greatest basketball players of all time and also a talented businessman. It is said that his net worth is more than a billion dollars and he acquired that after decades of a Hall of Fame NBA career and a variety of business deals. He’s had sponsorships with Nike, Gatorade, McDonalds, Hanes, 2K Sports, Upper Deck & a host of other corporations. Those sponsorships included shoe deals, commercial appearances, being a spokesperson, & cover athlete of NBA 2K for a couple of years. He also has multiple business investments. He owns restaurants, car dealerships and is also the majority owner of the Charlotte Hornets. He has earned millions on the court and even more millions off of it from his endorsement deals and business interests. More than anything, he made most of his earnings from Jordan Brand & his partnership with Nike. He makes more than $60 million a year from his contract with Nike. Jordan sneaker sales are still growing after all these years and generate more than $2 billion every year. Due to the massive popularity and influence his shoes have had, Jordan Brand owns more of the basketball shoe market in America than Nike itself.

MJ is the most influential example of athletes turning their career success into a profitable business of their own. There are so many NBA players today with their own shoe deals including LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Kevin Durant, Derrick Rose & Dwayne Wade. Damian Lillard & John Wall recently joined the competition with sneakers of their own. Outside the NBA, some of the most popular athlete endorsement deals are George Foreman and his grills, and Tiger Wood’s partnership with Nike. While the highest paid athlete contracts come from baseball, some of the wealthiest athletes in terms of endorsements come from tennis, golf and soccer; Roger Federer, Phil Mickelson, Maria Sharapova, David Beckham, Rafael Nadal, Rory McIlroy, Serena & Venus Williams.
Besides endorsements, another popular option for athletes to increase their net worth is through franchising. Many athletes partner with corporations to own & operate their retail stores. Peyton Manning owns multiple Papa John’s stores in Colorado. Former NBA player, Jamal Mashburn, owns many stores across a variety of businesses including Papa John’s, Outback Steakhouse, Dunkin Donuts & a Toyota dealership in Kentucky. Junior Bridgeman, who spent most of his NBA career with the Milwaukee Bucks, owns about 160 Wendy’s & Chili’s restaurant franchises around the country. Many professional athletes are also franchisees in Wingstop restaurants. Wingstop has become more popular due to Rick Ross rapping about their lemon pepper wings and all that good stuff. He and his sister, Tawanda Roberts, opened 6 new stores across the South and Rozay heavily promotes their chicken wings in his music.
If you’ve seen the ESPN 30 for 30 “Broke” documentaries, you know how fast athletes can make money and how fast they can lose it all. Athletes like MJ realized their power and influence and took advantage of it. With so many athletes going bankrupt and blowing their money away on gambling, splurging, or domestic issues, Jordan is a role model in the business world for developing the knowledge and network to turn his name into a billion dollar company. Many of today’s athletes are following his lead and creating their own brands. I just highlighted a few athletes but there are many more that are successfully building their own companies after retirement.
               


         

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Miramar Patriots Football: Is it the End?

By: Candy Man 

The 2014 Miramar football team was the #1 team in the preseason Class 8A polls & one of the most talented teams in Florida. They were projected to win the Class 8A state championship but soon got off to a disappointing 2-2 start to the season, losing leads late in the game to Plantation-American Heritage & St. Thomas, and another lead later in the year to Flanagan. They finished the year with 8 wins & 3 losses. They also lost their head coach, Matthew Strout, who resigned midway through the season for personal reasons. However, after his resignation, he claimed that several players were academically ineligible to play and others were paid to transfer to Miramar & for their play on the field. 

To provide a little background on the situation, the 2013 Patriots finished the regular season undefeated before losing in a surprising upset to Palm Beach Gardens in the regional finals. Damon Cogdell, the head coach that built Miramar into a powerhouse and won the 2009 Class 6A state championship, left the school to become the linebackers coach for the West Virginia Mountaineers. Strout who was an offensive line coach, got promoted to head coach. This past summer, Miramar received several transfers including highly-recruited prospect, Jovon Durante from Norland. The Patriots got off to a 5-3 start before Strout was forced to resign. Soon after, allegations of ineligible players and impermissible benefits surfaced. Along with his other claims, Strout also claimed that he gave “sports gear, airfare to summer camps, presents for players’ girlfriends, cash incentives for grades, and tickets to USF football games to two teachers,” according to the Sun-Sentinel. Strout also lied about his educational background and job history. 


I don’t know if Miramar football has a history of academic misconduct & giving illegal benefits to athletes under Coach Cogdell or if this all started when Matthew Strout was named the head coach but it’s unfortunate that the football team had to lose their whole season and a shot at the state championship because of a few bad people in the program. It is said that more than 20 student-athletes were implicated and some ineligible athletes even had their grades fixed so that they can continue playing. Others were paid for making big plays on the field. After the team learned that it would lose its spot in the playoffs, athletes, parents, & coaches protested in front of the Broward County School Board building but the school board was firm & steady in their decision. Hopefully, Miramar will find a coach that can clean up the program, be a leader to the young men and help the team bounce back from this controversy in 2015.


Miami’s Urban Dance Scene Influence the NFL

By: Jimbo Brown 


“Its peanut butter jelly time, its peanut better jelly time,” came blasting through the speakers during my 4th grade dance. If you are from Miami you know that this is one of the dances of our generation. If your not…you maybe know the song from different commercials or that one episode of Family Guy when Bryan had on the banana suit. LOL! This dance and others was the best part of elementary school dances, birthday parties and family events. The Ice Cream and Cake, Do-Do Brown and the Cry Baby are just some of the dances created in the inner city of Miami. You eventually seen the dances being done in the pop warner games growing up. As the times and the dances changed, the kids in the middle of the dance circle grew up to play sports and never to forget their roots. 

As a child, I used to day dream about playing in the NFL (when that was a thought), I envisioned myself scoring a touchdown and doing the Drop for about 15 yards. Thinking how cool that would be to put my Hometown on the map. Even though thats not my reality right now, I still seen my vision come to life. During the 2014-15 NFL season we have seen the evolution of the celebration. The Smurda Dance is the newest one that has emerged onto the NFL stage. Since entering the league, Pittsburgh Steelers own Antonio Brown has done exactly what I day dreamed about. Around that time a popular dance called the Beanie Biggle Wiggle was created by a security guard at Norland High School named DJ PA Teezy. This was the school Brown career began and ended. Since the first time he touch the end zone Brown did this dance for his celebration. More Miami dances have gotten exposure this year by William Gay, a cornerback for the Steelers. The Bobble Walk the hottest dance in Miami is getting all type of national love. He even gained the attention of Super Bowl champion Terrell Davis, who did the dance on NFL Network. Miami players shedding light to their hometown of Miami. 


It feels good to know that I probably wasn’t the only one who had those visions. To see them come true is the biggest pleasure of it all. Every time I see one of the dances it reminds me of when life was so innocent. Nothing mattered but playing football and having a good time with your peers. Thats what motivated me to do this tribute to Miami. Ricky Jean Francios aka Freak, former LSU Tiger and Carol City Chief, won Dancing with the Starters this morning with his celebration after a sack. Guess what dance it was? “Its peanut butter jelly time, its peanut better jelly time."

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Carol City Football was Everything: The Dynasty that Never Happened

By:Jimbo Brown 

It's the 1st day of summer practice at Miami Carol City High School and your a freshman trying to find your way on a talented JV roster. The year is 2005 and I was that freshman in high school who didn't know nothing about Carol City football besides they won state a few years earlier. If it wasn't for my mom I would have been at Miami Northwestern. Schools outside of Carol City was the landing spots for most of its talent from 2005-2012. Due to the old school mentality of legendary coach Walt Frazier and the dictatorship of his predecessor Harold Barnswell,  the football program at CC hasn't returned back to their once elite status. 

From the class of 2009 and up Carol City has seen talent come in and out of the school and having success in other programs. NFL stars such as Kayvon Webster and Stedman Bailey both were freshmans with me. Webster who later became a dual threat for Pace was tricked into helping the team by being stuck in a position he didn't want to play. This lead to him transferring to neighborhood rival Miami Norland. Norland that year and helping them end our 6-year streak of undefeated seasons. Stedman on the other stayed at CC until the end of his incredible sophomore year. He left to join Geno Smith at Miramar High School, a school that inherited a lot of the talent from Carol City. The youth had a bad stigma about CC that made them run away and find homes elsewhere.

If I told you guys that we had Teddy Bridgewater for a hot minute, would y'all believe me? Yeah he was practicing but because of an executive decision from moms he headed to Northwestern where he became arguably the greatest quarterback in their history. That happened a lot with the talent at Carol City. Either the off-season workout was too much for them, the philosophy was to demanding or other schools was a better destination. A big part of the problem was that Carol City wasn't putting their players in college. Even the talented ones who stayed was looked over because the coaches didn't do their jobs. 

For the pass decade Carol City football program has been in the middle of the pack. How potent of an offense we would have had with Teddy at QB with Sted and Allen at receiver. Or think about how many shutouts we would have had with Kayvon and Robert Sands on our defense. Class of 2009 had the best chance to make some noise but was oust from the playoffs by one of the luckiest catches in football history. Carol City is heading back in the right direction. With the help of the flakey business with Miramar head coach. Talent will be returning back to its home and hopefully we can get back to a national powerhouse. Chief Pride! 



F5: Win Forever

By: Candy Man 

40 consecutive wins (Dade County record)4 straight state championship appearances. 3 straight state championship titles.1 National Championship. Numerous Division 1 athletes. You could say Booker T. is currently in the middle of one of the greatest runs in Miami high school football history. While facingsome of the toughest competition in Dade County, the state plus around the nation, it is a major accomplishment to win 40 straight games & a testament to the year-round attitude of the program. With some of the best football talent in Miami coming out of Overtown & the best coaches around, the Tornadoes have a bright future to continue their streak of wins & state titles.

There was talk of 2014 being a down year for Booker T. Coach Ice left for the University of Miami along with many players that received scholarships to play at the next level including Treon Harris, Lamar Parker, Nigel Bethel II, Chad Thomas, Deltron Hopkins & Krondis Larry. But one thing about Booker T.; we don’t rebuild, we reload. With the son of Ice, Tim Harris Jr., now taking over the reign, underclassmen stepping up to bigger roles, and a few key transfers from Homestead High School including Maurice Alexander, Antonio Callaway & Davante Davis, Booker T. had no problem repeating as state champions again. Alexander, committed to FIU, did a great job replacing Treon (who many consider the best QB to come out of Booker T) & keeping the wheels rolling in the Tornadoes fast-paced, high scoring offense. Mark Walton, a UM commit, was the leader of the squad this year & definitely led by example in the state final, scoring a total of 5 touchdowns. And as always, the defense held up their end holding all of their opponents except Jacksonville Bolles to less than 21 points. 

I still keep my eyes on the high school football scene & still go to gamesI’m proud to see the same coaches (s/o to Coach Bean) and new players have continued the success and tradition from our first state championship in 2007. I remember all the years we lost in the semifinals not being able to reach the big game before winning it all in ‘07. Now to see the success of the program, so many athletes getting the opportunity to go to college, and the brand being elevated into a national powerhouse, there is a lot of pride & joy that comes with being a Tornado. The coaches & staff are a big part of that success and they should receive recognition for putting the kids in the best possible position to achieve their goals & keep the consistency of winning year in & year out.  
“Not the Largest, but the Best.”

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Rams Silent Protest

By: Candy Man


This past Sunday during the St. Louis Rams & Oakland Raiders game, five Rams players (Stedman Bailey, Tavon Austin, Kenny Britt, Jared Cook & Chris Givens) walked out the tunnel during pregame introductions with their hands up in support of Michael Brown. People all over the nation have protested with the phrase “hands up, don’t shoot” after witnesses claimed Michael Brown had his hands up when he was shot & killed. Despite that, the cop that murdered Brown wasn’t indicted by a grand jury. The decision not to indict him led to more protests around the nation & riots in Ferguson.


Not only did the Rams players show their support, fans of the team have also been vocal. There was another protest during a Monday Night game against the 49ers where fans protested with chants & signs and their hands up. The five players made a silent but major statement through a simple gesture. African-American athletes in general have been criticized for not taking a stand and speaking up on certain events that have affected the Black community so this was encouraging and shows that they are actually paying attention. Athletes are subject to harsh criticism, fines, suspensions and threats to their brand & image if they say or do the wrong things under the eyes of the media. I respect them for taking a stand and a sacrifice that other athletes won’t take. There are many instances in sports where athletes took a stand on issues in our society such as the Miami Heat posing in hoodies in support of Trayvon Martin, the black power salute in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics when Tommie Smith & John Carlos raised their fists in a silent protest against racism in America, and Muhammad Ali’s refusal to be drafted to fight in the Vietnam War in the 1960’s.


Despite their courageous act, there have been organizations that opposed the Rams protest and want the NFL to punish the players such as the St. Louis Police Officers Association and a local bar that decided to boycott the NFL and are no longer serving happy hour during Rams games. The NFL recently came out publicly with a statement saying the Rams players won’t be fined. The country is divided on the grand jury decision and there are many people and organizations that are still pushing for an indictment of the officer and felt that that the grand jury process was unfair.

I applaud Bailey, Austin, Cook, Britt & Givens for their demonstration and hope to see more athletes be more vocal about issues that affect them and their communities. As role models and popular public figures, they have the influence and spotlight to have an impact and enforce change with their actions and opinions.