Former 49ers WR Marquise Goodwin failed to move on to the final round of the 2020 US Olympic trials.
Before leaving the 49ers in a 2020 trade with the Eagles, Marquise Goodwin expressed his desire to compete in the 2020 Olympics. The games got pushed back a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but that didn’t stop Goodwin from trying to make his way back onto the United States Olympic team. His dream perished Friday in the semifinal of the US Olympic trials.
After making his way onto the team for the 2012 games in London, he failed to qualify for 2016. His second attempt at becoming a two-time Olympian was squandered during the Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore. when he managed to jump 24-feet-10-inches and finish in 19th place, which is well shy of his personal best 27-feet-7-inches.
Goodwin opted to sit out the 2020 season because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and actually reverted back to the 49ers’ roster in 2021 because of stipulations in the trade between San Francisco and Philadelphia during the 2020 draft that sent the receiver to the Eagles in exchange for a sixth-round pick. He was later released by the 49ers, and eventually signed by the Bears.
Had he qualified for the Olympics, he would’ve likely missed at least part of his first training camp with Chicago. Now he’ll get some time off before camp starts.
Goodwin spent three seasons with the 49ers after signing with the club as a free agent before the 2017 campaign. He played in 36 games and hauled in 91 receptions for 1,543 yards and seven touchdowns.
A former Notre Dame player is not holding back on players getting snubbed from the Olympics.
With the Tokyo Olympics a month away, folks are gearing up to see if the U.S. women’s basketball team wins its seventh straight gold medal. The Olympic roster features some of the most prominent players in the sport. Among the snubs from the team is former WNBA MVP Nneka Ogwumike, who was averaging 16.4 points through five games for the Los Angeles Sparks this season before being sidelined with a knee injury. When asked about Ogwumike, who was expected to have recovered in time for the Olympics, U.S. coach Dawn Staley said the following:
“Breaks my heart that Nneka isn’t on this team. Having to make a decision today, if we had to make a decision a month from now I’m sure she’d be healthy. This was one of the things she wanted to do.”
That explanation wasn’t good enough for two-time WNBA champion and Notre Dame product Devereaux Peters. She was livid about Ogwumike being left off the roster for the third time in as many opportunities. In fact, she took to Twitter and unleashed quite a scathing rant about USA Basketball (Warning: Thread features NSFW language):
Okay so let's talk about bum ass USA Basketball….I'm going to preface this by saying I am happy for the players that made it and I have no issues with them whatsoever. They work their butts off for that opportunity and each of them deserves their moment…..
— Devereaux *casual fan* Peters (@MsPeters14) June 21, 2021
Peters was not even the closest person to Ogwumike to speak out about this. Sparks coach and general manager Derek Fisher made his feelings known, as did Ogwumike’s sister and teammate, Chiney:
✔️WNBA MVP & Champion in 2016 (last Olympic year) ✔️6x All-Star ✔️4x All-WNBA ✔️4x WNBA All-Defensive Team ✔️2x FIBA World Cup Gold Medalist ✔️ No. 1 pick & ROY ✔️Euroleague Champion ✔️WNBPA President ✔️oh, and she is one of few who went to every Team USA camp the last 5 years pic.twitter.com/iEzDduj4Kj
It’s nice to see an Irish alumnus stick up for players in her sport that she feels are getting duped. Even if you don’t agree with Peters using vulgar language to get her point across, you can’t deny that she’s a fighter. Especially these days, there never can be enough female sports figures afraid to speak their minds.
“With the world being the way it is, Adam is gone 4-5 weeks at a time this year during his playing blocks,” Johan Elliot said in a statement to GolfChannel.com. “With three young children at home, this time in the schedule will be devoted to family. It is pretty much the only time up until October when he has a chance to see them for a stretch of time and not only a few days/a week.”
Scott also skipped the 2016 Games. The men’s competition at Kasumigaseki Country Club near Tokyo is July 29-Aug. 1 and falls two weeks after the Open Championship at Royal St. George’s and a week before the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis.
In January, when Scott was asked at the Sentry Tournament of Champions if he would consider playing, he seemed to be leaving the door open.
“I would consider it. It’s still not my priority for the year, that’s for sure,” he said. “But I wouldn’t rule it out because you can never really say never, but it will certainly be something I’ll look at. Who knows where we are in the summertime.”
Well, where he’s at now is to not aim to be one of the two Australians heading to Tokyo.
The Summer Games were pushed back a year because of the global coronavirus pandemic. The Games are less than 100 days away but organizers still haven’t ruled out the possibility of cancelling them altogether, should health concerns become a major factor once again.
Scott tied for 10th at the Farmers Insurance Open, his lone top-10 in 11 starts on Tour this season.
The latest Olympic Golf Ranking has Cameron Smith (12) and Marc Leishman (17) as the highest ranked Australians. Smith and Leishman are teammates at this week’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans.
The NBA is hoping to start the 2020-21 season a little before Christmas, considerably earlier than projections for late January being discussed previously.
The NBA offseason might ending sooner than many of us expected.
For the basketball fans among us, this is an definitively positive development; multiple sources report that the Board of Governors meeting held today by the league has created a consensus to start as close to Christmas as can be accomplished safely.
The Athletic’s Shams Charania shares the season is also planned to end before the July 23rd start date projected for the Tokyo Olympics, allowing players to participate and pushing the schedule of the season back towards its usual range.
Charania relates the NBA will plan for a 72-game schedule beginning on December 22nd, with a potential plan to reduced travel via scheduling multiple games per trip between teams.
Beginning 2020-21 around Christmas Day means return to semi-normal schedule, significant financial ramifications, potentially allowing stars to play in Olympics, sources say.
The play-in tournament model used for determining eighth seeds in the Disney bubble will likely be used as well.
While the fewer games might otherwise be helpful for older players like Philadelphia 76ers big man Al Horford, it’s not improbable the frequency those games will negate any benefit of having fewer games to play.
Numerous details still need to be addressed regarding the coming season, and much will likely change between now and the end of December.
For now, we are starting to see the first real shape of the 2020-21 season come into focus.
If you were to gather a group of former athletes who might be able to shed some sort of light on the current path-altering squeeze the coronavirus has put on young athletes, then-to use to swimming analogy-you’d want Rowdy Gaines in the center lane …
If you were to gather a group of former athletes who might be able to shed some sort of light on the current path-altering squeeze the coronavirus has put on young athletes, then—to use to swimming analogy—you’d want Rowdy Gaines in the center lane of that pool.
Gaines, a three-time Olympic gold medalist and U.S. Olympic and International Hall of Famer, understands better than most the moments that seem like an end-all blockade in a young athlete’s career. And not just understands, like in the manner of older generations equating the general ups and downs of life, while fidgeting to convey it in the present landscape.
To the current USA Swimming ambassador and NBC television analyst, he can point to one glaring moment in history that carries a lot of unwanted similarities.
One of the top swimmers in the late-70s, Gaines had catapulted up the ranks. And the first few months of 1980 were progressing for the then-21-year-old talent—who would earn Swimmer of the Year for the effort, which included world records in both the 100m and 200m freestyle.
But suddenly, Gaines found his path halted in the fateful spring months of 1980 as talks of boycotting the Olympic games seemed more like a reality.
Like so many young athletes focused on achieving their goals and dreams, though, it was not Gaines’ reality.
But the tone shifted from defiant to a reserved contemplation, one that typically accompanies something lost—the one that got away—as he continued about the 1980 boycott: “And then, it was anger, and then an incredible depression and sadness. It was an overwhelming grief,” he paused…
While listening to that progression of feelings, some, if not all of it, evoked the now-expected phrasing “that’s just 2020 being 2020″—even though Gaines’ reflection was four decades old.
It makes sense, though. The athletic world has been an unwanted reality of the “‘unknown” in sports (and yes, life), where people have struggled since March to face hypotheticals that asked for concrete answers, all while being shadowed by a new term: COVID-19.
As the cancelations grew this past spring and summer—including the 2020 Olympics—it left athletes in the same uneasy dilemma of having their goals, hopes and dreams abruptly halted as Gaines experienced in 1980.
“The Olympic hopefuls and the high school and even college kids—they have literally lost this year. I have so much empathy for all of them, and what they’re going through right now,” he told me, while also explaining that the circumstances surrounding each event—a pandemic (the health components) versus a political statement—are not an apples-to-apples comparison.
Still, not getting to play means not getting to play. Simple as that.
“That was my best year swimming, and it just disappeared,” he added. “So I feel their pain.”
Possibly the most significant part of Gaines’ story, however, is that he considers his missed opportunities nothing more than a “chapter” in his overall tale. And, as many people witnessed or have since read or heard about, the accomplishments after 1980 are what makes his journey so incredible.
But it almost didn’t happen—not without a little boost.
He went back for his senior year at Auburn University in 1981, not because of unfinished business or a motivational fire, but for a more straightforward reason: it was his senior year.
And following that, he quit. “Back then, there was no money in swimming,” he explained. So Gaines, at 22, left the pool and decided to face the unknown…
His decision to hang up the goggles would not be a permanent one, though.
“My dad came to me about six months later, and said ‘Are you going to be able to look at yourself in the mirror for the rest of your life and not say what if? Are you going to have regrets?'”
From that moment—and then Gaines’ decision not to give up or in so quickly—he would go on to win 16 total medals (12 gold) for U.S. Swimming, including those three gold at the 1984 Olympics, at age 25.
At the time, he was the third-oldest athlete ever to win gold at the Olympics.
He would fight and overcome beyond that, too. In 1996, following a battle five years prior with Guillain–Barré syndrome that left him with temporary paralysis, he qualified for the Olympic trials. Again. At 35 years old!
Now, all of that might seem like a super-specific and extreme case to try to use as present-day motivation—in truth, 320 Olympic athletes who made it in 1980 didn’t make it in 1976 or 1984.
But while many today are left wondering how to best approach “this” specific part of the 2020 timeline, what Gaines expresses makes a lot of sense. And it was the same thing he said to himself after his father had laid out that “what if” scenario—which commonly most young athletes would simply roll their eyes at.
“You say, ‘OK. I accept this, and now I need to get motivated to move toward the next chapter of what my life is going to be in the athletic world.'”
A father of four, he also understands that an adult introducing this route might cause a few a head-tilting squints from athletes in their late teens or early-20s. “They’re all about ‘right now,'” he chuckled, “and they want to know, right now, ‘how this is going to be solved?'”
While the answers to that question are still elusive at best, the fall has brought with it a more promising outlook. High school sports are occurring. College sports have made an effort to resume. And the Olympics will happen in 2021—something that Gaines, who will be there as part of the broadcast team, is optimistically excited about, saying that the pro leagues such as the NFL, NBA, and MLB are the perfect study for what to do (and not to do).
Of course, that won’t make up for the time lost, nor will it guarantee every athlete’s story becomes the next Rowdy Gaines tale of perseverance.
But Gaines sees common ground with the athletes dealing with the roller-coaster experience that many can’t relate to.
“With this current situation, they’ll learn to look at the longterm of their life, which is something that I learned at 22,” he explained. “And in the long run, they’ll see it’s a small bump in the road, and it’s going to be OK.
“So don’t give up hope because it will never be too late. I am living proof of that.”
The NCAA takes a big step toward allowing athletes to earn income, the LPGA pushes back its restart date and we celebrates All-Americans.
A change is made to the qualifying system for Olympic golf, the NCAA takes a big step toward allowing athletes to earn income off endorsements and social media content, and the LPGA pushes its restart date.
Take a look at the week’s top stories on the latest episode of Golfweek Rewind featured below.
[jwplayer tJdBUO9n-vgFm21H3]
After the 2020 Tokyo Olympics were postponed, qualifying for Olympic golf was extended. Golfers now will accumulate Olympic Golf Rankings points through June 2021 for the Games set to begin July 2021. Field sizes for both the men and women remain at 60 players.
The LPGA won’t resume its season until mid-July at the earliest. The tour, previously slated to resume its season in June, released its latest revised schedule with the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational restarting its season July 15-18 in Midland, Michigan. Commissioner Mike Whan’s thoughts on the new schedule can be heard on the latest edition of Golfweek Rewind featured above.
For more on the move the NCAA made toward allowing college athletes to earn income and how Golfweek recognized the nation’s top college golfers despite their short seasons, watch the latest episode of Golfweek Rewind.
The golf qualifying system for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics was extended after the games were moved to 2021. Here’s what that means.
Tiger Woods was on the outside of making the U.S. golf team for the Tokyo Summer Olympics when the sport spectacle was postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic.
But Woods has plenty of time to make the team.
The International Golf Federation and International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday an adjustment to the qualifying system that will accommodate the new dates. Golfers now will accumulate Olympic Golf Rankings (OGR) points through June 21, 2021, for the men, and June 28 for the women. Field sizes for both the men and women remain at 60 players.
The Tokyo 2021 Summer Games have been rescheduled for July 23-Aug. 8, with the golf competitions scheduled to be held at Kasumigaseki Country Club.
The Olympics Golf Rankings are based on the men’s Official World Golf Rankings and the Women’s World Golf Rankings (WWGR). On March 20, however, both rankings were frozen and it has yet to be determined when each will resume.
The top 15 players at the end of the qualifying period will be eligible for the Olympics, with a limit of four players per country. After the top 15, there will be a maximum of two players per country that doesn’t already have two or more players in the top 15. The host country will be guaranteed a spot.
As it stands on the men’s side, the U.S. is one of three countries – the others being England and Australia – with two or more players ranked in the top 15.
The USA would be represented by No. 3 Brooks Koepka, No. 4 Justin Thomas, No. 5 Dustin Johnson and No. 7 Patrick Reed. Johnson, however, said he wouldn’t participate in the 2020 Summer Games, although he might change his mind after the postponement.
The next in line are No. 8 Patrick Cantlay, No. 9 Webb Simpson and then No. 11 Woods, who went to the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles when he was 8 and has spoken often of his desire to play in the Olympics. He’ll be 45 next summer so he’s eyeing it as his last shot of making the squad.
No. 12 Xander Schauffele and No. 13 Bryson DeChambeau are also ranked in the top 15. The USA is so loaded that No. 16 Tony Finau, No. 17 Matt Kuchar and No. 18 Gary Woodland are also within grasp of a berth.
Currently on the women’s side, the most notable name not eligible for the Olympics is Inbee Park, who won the gold medal at the 2016 Rio Games when golf returned after a 112-year absence. Park is at No. 11 in the rankings but sits as first alternate behind South Koreans Jin Young Ko, Sung Hyun Park, Sei Young Kim and Jeongeun Lee6.
The American team would be represented by Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Lexi Thompson. The host country, Japan, would also have three players: Nasa Hataoka, Hinako Shibuno and Ai Suzuki.
“The fairest and most equitable way to determine the qualifying athletes was to align the previous qualification system with these new dates,” said Antony Scanlon, IGF executive director. “The IGF will continue to work closely with the IOC and Tokyo 2020 to address the other areas that the postponement of the Games affects our sport and our athletes, to develop the necessary plans.”
The president of the Olympics organizing committee says if the coronavirus pandemic is not under control by next year they won’t postpone the Olympics again — they’ll cancel them.
The president of the Olympics organizing committee says if the coronavirus pandemic is not under control by next year they won’t postpone the Olympics again — they’ll cancel them.
A poll by Seton Hall University revealed some telling information about how sports handled COVID-19 and what to do going forward.
In the midst of the COVID-19 epidemic there are so many questions and variables to when the country can go back to functioning as normally as possible. Seton Hall University took a poll recently asking 762 people across the country a series of questions regarding some very large pressing issues in the sporting world.
The NFL has continued to do business as usual. Free agency has been going on while the draft will happen in two weeks as planned, albeit a virtual one, which led SHU to ask if social distancing was still in effect when the NFL season was to start, should the season actually start? The majority said no, 70% of the polled believe that the players safety is more important than getting back on the field for their viewing pleasure.
Many leagues have kicked around the idea of having games, but no fans in the stands, as the people polled were asked if they would watch if this were to happen. More than 3 of 4 people would, 76% answered yes, that they would be just as interested as before the social distancing went into effect.
The majority of people believed that the leagues shut down in the correct time frame, as 76% said that sports were canceled at the proper time, while another 16% said it wasn’t fast enough. The Olympic committee was one of the last to cancel their athletic events and once again the overwhelming majority believe this was the right thing to do, with 88% of people polled agreeing with the committee.
We are in the middle of unprecedented times, and with no clear end point, no one really knows the direction we will take as a nation. I personally would love to see sports return, but only with the safety of the players and staff put first. If this is unable to happen, postponing or canceling seasons might just be in the best interest for everyone, even if it means not seeing our favorite pastimes anytime soon. How do you feel about this? Would you return to sporting events if a cure hasn’t been found? Do you feel comfortable for athletes to return to empty stadiums?
Not even a week after the 2020 Olympics were postponed the International Olympic Committee has finalized new dates for the Tokyo games.
About a week after the 2020 Olympics were postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic, the International Olympic Committee has set new dates for 2021.
The Summer Games will start with opening ceremonies on Friday, July 23, and conclude Sunday, August 8.
From an IOC release sent Monday:
“These new dates give the health authorities and all involved in the organization of the Games the maximum time to deal with the constantly changing landscape and the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.”
IOC president Thomas Bach said last week that all athletes who have already qualified for the Summer Games will remain qualified for 2021. Per Bach, about 43% of the qualifying spots are still up for grabs.
The global event will still be formally referred to as the Tokyo 2020 Games.