Drexel: The worst travel story in history?
For those of you who think you have the worst traveling story in history, hear me out first.
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For those of you who think you have the worst traveling story in history, hear me out first.
The death of former Phoenix Suns coaching extraordinaire "Cotton" Fitzsimmons should come as sad news not only to basketball fans in the Valley, but for basketball fans in the country.
The 2004 college football campaign is still more than a month away, but that is not stopping various media outlets from writing hundreds of pages of analysis about a season that hasn't seen its first snap yet.
Current and former Sun Devil athletes continued to compete last week for the right to represent their country in the Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, Aug. 13-29.
For ASU athletics and our University as a whole, football's senior defensive tackle, Connor Banks, epitomizes the word "embarrassment."
The breakup of the Los Angeles Lakers should ultimately go down as one of the most unfortunate -- and ridiculous -- occurrences in the history of sports.
For the second consecutive year, the ASU women's basketball team will likely take to the court without who coach Charli Turner Thorne calls "our best player."
Seemingly, the worst thing that could have happened to the Arizona Diamond-backs has occurred -- they have lost franchise first baseman Richie Sexson for the season.
The ASU men's golf team did not play up to par at the 107th NCAA National Championships last week in Hot Springs, Va.
Instead of living on a student's budget, he would have at least over $2 million in his bank account right now. He also wouldn't supposedly be risking an injury and walking away from a sure thing. But then again, he would have to leave the school where his parents met and the team he watched as a kid on a very sour note. And then there was that possibility of earning a check up to seven times more than the one he left on the table.
You had to figure it was coming sooner or later. Some-where in the world, somebody would use the tragic death of Pat Tillman as a tool to speak out about the war on terrorism.
After three years of paying off a crippling budget deficit that reached $3.3 million in June 2001, the ASU athletic department hoped to be free and clear of debt this summer.
The news of former ASU star linebacker and Arizona Cardinals' strong safety Pat Tillman's death has made waves on a national level. But the news perhaps carried no more of an impact than at Sun Devil Stadium, where Tillman's football career took off at both the collegiate and professional level and where his name separated itself from other soldiers serving in the Middle East.
While wide receiver was an area that seemed to hurt the ASU football team as much as any last season, if spring football is any indication, the position already seems to have an upgrade with the high-octane play of Derek Hagan.
LOS ANGELES -- What looked to be one very dark cloud of a weekend ended up having a tremendous silver lining for the ASU gymnastics team.
The ASU football team ended its 2004 spring practices much the same way the 2003 season finished up, with the offense clicking and a host of unanswered questions.
After the ASU gymnastics team's experience at the NCAA Championships a year ago, head coach John Spini said his Sun Devils learned that "life is not really fair."
The theme for ASU gymnast Ashley Kelly's balance beam routine, "some people wait a lifetime for a moment like this," may be an inappropriate one. Because Kelly has seemingly already had a plethora of once in a lifetime performances as a Sun Devil.
Of all the ailments the ASU football team had last season, the wide-receiver position may have been the most severe. But if spring football is any indication, the Sun Devils will have some medicine in place come fall.
Unlike the majority of spring practice thus far, it was the ASU football team's defense that dominated during the second scrimmage of the season on Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium.
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