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WWE Says Halftime Heat A Success After Long Absence

“The event streamed live from the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, on Youtube, Facebook Live, Twitter and the WWE Network.”

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While millions tuned into the Super Bowl’s halftime show Sunday, the WWE saw an opportunity to revive a fan favorite idea to showcase the future of sports entertainment.

The WWE presented Halftime Heat for the first time in nearly 20 years with a six-man tag match featuring NXT’s brightest stars as Ricochet, Aleister Black and Velveteen Dream were victorious over Adam Cole, NXT North American Champion Johnny Gargano and NXT Champion Tomasso Ciampa.

The event streamed live from the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, on Youtube, Facebook Live, Twitter and the WWE Network. Excluding the WWE Network, the other streaming options brought in just under 90,000 viewers. Network numbers would understandably help that number drastically, though they are not yet available.

WWE executive Paul “Triple H” Levesque fostered the idea to bring back the event and ran it by Chairman and CEO Vince McMahon who embraced it and set it in motion.

“Vince is focused on showcasing the future, and he pushed to make this happen,” Triple H told Sports Illustrated. “He was the most supportive one. This is a big opportunity to go out, in essence, and perform in front of the world.”

The first Halftime Heat was in 1999 and featured The Rock defending his then WWF Championship against Mankind in an Empty Arena Match. That event drew an astounding 6.6 rating as Mankind won his second WWF Championship. The following year didn’t take advantage of the previous year’s success, showing highlights from the 2000 Royal Rumble event and an interview with the injured Stone Cold Steve Austin. Halftime Heat wouldn’t return again until last Sunday.

Triple H said the WWE was open to Halftime Heat sticking around in the future.

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Dave Portnoy Accuses Washington Post of Tortious Interference

Jordan Bondurant

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Dave Portnoy
Courtesy: Emmy Park

Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy went viral on Twitter Wednesday after posting video of him confronting a Washington Post reporter over the phone and accusing her and the newspaper of tortious interference.

Portnoy called Post food writer Emily Heil after he learned that she had been contacting advertisers of his pizza festival in Brooklyn this Saturday. Heil sought comment from those advertisers about doing business with Portnoy, who she wrote in one particular email that Dave “has a history of misogynistic comments and other problematic behavior.”

Heil said she was working with fellow food writer Tim Carman on a piece about the festival, which will feature over 35 pizzerias – all of which Portnoy has featured in his “One Bite” reviews at one point or another. But Portnoy felt like there was more to what she and Carman were up to.

“To me, it’s kind of like tortious interference,” Portnoy said. “Like we’re doing an event. Everyone’s happy about the event. I’ve raised $50 million for small business, I’ve helped pizzerias, none of that. It’s ‘Dave’s misogynic and problematic.’ And I’m happy to talk about it! Because to me nobody would like if someone’s going around sending that email to their sponsors. And again, you’re not questioning it. It’s almost like a statement of fact. This is what I am.”

“You said it in a way that is putting sponsors on the defensive!” he added.

Portnoy felt like Heil and Carman were going to publish something similar to what was posted on nj.com Tuesday calling out sponsors for working with Portnoy. He didn’t believe Heil and Carman would give him a fair shake, that they already had their minds made up about him and that they were only going to contact him after they’ve compiled a mass of negative topics to discuss.

“It seemed like you were going to try to shame sponsors for being associated with me and put them in a box when I know they all love me,” he said. “But nobody wants the Washington Post writing an article, ‘Sponsor associated with misogynic, racist piece of shit.’ Nobody wants that and that’s what you’re trying to do. And even on this call it’s pretty clear that’s what you were trying to do.”

“I’m afraid with what I’m seeing already here all it does is it validates a hit piece,” Portnoy added.

Dave challenged Heil further, who said the one particular email Portnoy was referring to was the most pointed of the emails sent to festival sponsors. She said it was worded that way to try and get a response.

“Sometimes you have to say something like this,” Heil said. “It’s like it’s sort of a reporting tactic. When you want someone to respond, you kind of have to indicate that there might be something negative and then you get them to engage. That’s all I was trying to do.”

“That is a sad state of journalism if that’s a tactic you have to, what I would say is make up something about somebody,” Portnoy responded.

Eventually they settled on a time of 10 a.m. today to conduct an interview. Portnoy said he would be recording the conversation like he was the one on Wednesday, and Heil didn’t have issues with that.

But later Wednesday, Portnoy tweeted that the interview had been cancelled. He said Heil attempted to reschedule for 5 p.m., but since Portnoy had previously agreed to 10 a.m., he stuck with that or nothing at all.

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Dan Le Batard: ‘ESPN Got Mad at Me’ For Giving HOF Vote to Deadspin

“I didn’t like the sanctimony and so I just made a cartoonish exit.”

Ricky Keeler

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Dan Le Batard
Courtesy: Meadowlark Media

A recent ESPN investigative report by Mike Fish looked back at the Biogenesis scandal that rocked the sports world a decade ago and involved the likes of major stars in baseball such as Alex Rodriguez and Ryan Braun. 10 years later, it is still talked about, but is the outrage about PEDs and steroids still the same?

Pablo Torre, Dan Le Batard, and Katie Nolan talked about that story on an episode of Torre’s podcast, Pablo Torre Finds Out. Torre remembered his days at Sports Illustrated where two highly acclaimed investigative reporters dedicated that time in their career to the scandal’s most high profile target.

“I remember being at Sports Illustrated and there was a beat. Selena Roberts and David Epstein, two great investigative reporters, were on the A-Rod beat. This was a thing we would crusade about morally. It felt important. All I can think about now is how we just had a conversation about all of the weird shit we are doing to improve ourselves. I don’t know if our tolerance for this stuff has changed consciously, but it just feels like we care less in general about the weird things we all try to do to get an edge to improve our performance on the field, as human beings.”

This story allowed Le Batard to relive the time in 2014 when he gave his Hall of Fame vote to Deadspin

“I just wanted to make the moral stand of you can’t keep these guys out of the Hall of Fame because you sportswriters are suggesting to me that if I gave you the ability to write better and make more money by smearing some cream on your muscles that you wouldn’t do it. I didn’t like the sanctimony and so I just made a cartoonish exit.

“ESPN got mad at me and were like why didn’t you do it on ESPN. Because then it wouldn’t have worked. I had to do it with an entity that was trying to make fun of the whole cathedral of sports.”

During the segment, Le Batard called the Biogenesis story “one of the most Miami sports scandals you will ever see” and reflected on how things have changed for A-Rod. 

“All of us were pissed off because he lied to us and the betrayal and all he had to do to erase all the outrage and get every sports broadcasting team to want to employ him is date J-Lo and he fixed all of it.”

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The Volume Partners With VLTED For Content & Social Media Challenge

“We’ve built our content at The Volume around people who are willing to make bold predictions and strong statements.”

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VLTED & The Volume

Colin Cowherd has never made it a secret that he is wrong a lot and he doesn’t care. He has even turned it into content for his show. Now his podcast network, The Volume, is taking predictions and turning them into a chance for the audience to win money.

The Volume is partnering with VLTED, a social networking sports platform that keep receipts on predictions. Each month, Cowherd and Richard Sherman will host The VLTED Challenge on their respective shows. They will challenge a guest to a series of predictions.

Listeners playing a long as part of The Volume’s Cash Promotional Pool can win up to $10,000 each week.

“We’ve built our content at The Volume around people who are willing to make bold predictions and strong statements,” Colin Cowherd said in a press release. “This is why I felt partnering with VLTED fit perfectly with our strategy.”

The VLTED segments began on Cowherd’s show in Week 1 of the NFL season. They will begin later this month on Sherman’s show.

“We view the Volume Network, Colin Cowherd, and Richard Sherman as the perfect fit to communicate the benefits of VLTED to the community of sports enthusiasts,” Paul Staubi, CEO of VLTED said.

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