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World Series Game 6 Preview New York evens the series and heads to Philly for Game 3 English Premiere Soccer Week 11 Preview NFL Week 8 Preview 2009 World Series Preview Phiilies still waiting for outcome of ALCS NFL Week 7 Preview Angels try to stay alive in Game 5 NFL Week 6 Preview NFL Week 5 Preview August 08 September 08 October 08 November 08 December 08 January 09 February 09 March 09 April 09 May 09 June 09 July 09 August 09 September 09 October 09 November 09 Ex-NBA star Jayson Williams allegedly trashed a suite in a suicidal rage and was subdued by a stun gun and taken to a psychiatric clinic, New York police said. Police used a stun gun and two sets of handcuffs to subdue Williams. They allegedly found suicide notes and empty bottles and vials of sleeping pills, antidepressants and human growth hormone, police sources told the New York Post. The Award is shared this week by Williams for being Williams and the NYPD for using a stun gun on a suicidal man.
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Lucky charms or bad habits?
A shot of rum, a boa constrictor and an African voodoo doll named Jobu may be a bit of an exaggeration, but to the Indians Pedro Cerrano it was a religion. “That was just a movie,” you say, “no one in a real-life locker room would behave that way.” Or would they? How about chicken, the same athletic supporter since high school, the color red and odd numbers? Some of the world's top athletes are a quirkiest bunch when it comes to superstitions, and bizarre rituals. Many athletes feel obliged to perform these strange rituals before competing, believing that they will in some mystical way improve their performance, or change the outcome of the game. Sometimes these behaviours borderline obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and has even forced some players out of competition. Superstitions rule the minds of many athletes, both on and off the field. These are just few examples of some of the sports worlds most bizarre rituals past and present. 1. Wade Boggs, former third baseman for the Boston Red Sox, had an array of rituals, including eating chicken before each game, and writing the Hebrew word Chai, meaning "living", in the dirt before each bat. 2. NBA basketball superstar Michael Jordan always wore his North Carolina college shorts under his Chicago Bulls uniform. 3. Golf sensation Tiger Woods is also a little bit superstitious. He usually wears red on Sunday. Red is his lucky color, he has said; it's a belief that comes from his astrology-believing mother. 4. Soccer star David Beckham has admitted that he suffers from OCD, which may explain the obsessive practice that underpins his prowess with free kicks. He hates the asymmetry of odd numbers, and will throw away one can of Diet Pepsi if he has three in the fridge. 5. Former Montreal Canadiens and goaltender Patrick Roy during the pre-game warm ups would skate out to the blue-line and stare at the net, envisioning it shrinking. He would also consciously never step on the blue-line or redline. 6. Marshall Faulk, former running back with the Indianapolis Colts and the St Louis Rams, habitually wore all black on the way to the stadium. 7. Mark McGwire wore the same cup from his high school playing days. That same cup was later stolen, forcing him to find other means of protection. What's more disgusting, the cup itself, or the fact that someone coveted it enough to steal it? 8. Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard might just have the crappiest pre-game ritual in the league. Howard claims that he always visits the toilet before a game, a ritual he started in high school. He says, “It is a natural release of all the bad stuff, so all the good stuff comes out when I am on the court.” In the end, all that really matters is the outcome of the game. Superstitions are replaceable and easily discredited when they don’t work. If eating chicken, wearing a certain color or article of clothing, or making a trip to the nearest restroom are a part of the winning formula, they become ritual. If not, they fall into oblivion, never to be thought of again. So the next time you see an MLB pitcher hopping over a baseline or an NHL goalie talking to a goal post, you decide. Lucky charms or bad habits? 0 comments from 0 users
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