I can't hear of a newspaper dying without feeling a peculiar kind of pain, followed quickly by a moment of nostalgia.
Before "roster construction" became a buzzword in college sports and long before players were getting salaries, Louisville women's basketball became one of the most consistent winners in the country.
This is a new situation. I never figured I’d be covering a college football national championship game. No offense to Louisville or Kentucky. I guess I never ruled out Louisville getting here one day. I figured they’d make a playoff, and then you never know.
Today, I want to briefly catch up with three familiar voices, who happen to be old friends.
Tuesday was one of those days.
You can't sell a T-shirt that says "Almost Beat Texas." And "Moral Victory Monday" is never going to be a thing.
The game has changed.
Locally, the college basketball luncheon circuit is in full swing. Conference media days are churning out quotes. Teams are holding their own media days.
Coffee with Crawford | In praise of late bloomers: At 64, Indiana's Cignetti is just getting started
Curt Cignetti is 64 years old. That's not a punchline. It's not a caveat. It's a challenge to everything we think we know about success.
According to reports, the longtime voice of SEC football — part broadcaster, part therapist for Southern college fans — is seriously considering entering the Alabama Senate race.