Not in Hall of Fame News
1993 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project Class. Here we are! …
Not in Hall of Fame News
Afrika Bambaataa, the legendary DJ, producer, and widely recognized "Godfather" of hip-hop…
Not in Hall of Fame News
Would you like to know what we love the most about the…
Not in Hall of Fame News
1993 SEMI-FINAL RESULTS: Thank you for your participation in the Pro Football…
Not in Hall of Fame News
Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the…
Not in Hall of Fame News
Last January, the Baseball Hall of Fame announced the Class of 2026,…
The Buck Stops Here
Kirk Buchner and Chris Mouradian dive into the massive list of over…
The Buck Stops Here
Welcome to Season 6, Episode 16 of The Hall of Fame Show…
The Buck Stops Here
The Pro Football Hall of Fame voting process is more complicated than…
From the Desk of the Chairman
Recreational cannabis laws have changed how adults can buy cannabis in many…
From the Desk of the Chairman
Synthetic turf has become an increasingly familiar surface in the sports world.…
From the Desk of the Chairman
Athletic performance is shaped by discipline, training, and resilience, but motivation often…
The Buck Stops Here
The Pro Football Hall of Fame voting process is more…
DDT's Pop Flies
When the veterans committee (VC), officially convening as the Contemporary Baseball Era…
Live Music Head
Project/Objectan interview with André Cholmondeleyby Live Music HeadOriginally published at timessquare.com on…
Visually, it was easy to make that initial comparison. Both teams came out to Rock and Roll Music (not common in the late 80’s), both were relatively undersized, both had similar ring attire and both featured one wrestler who had blond hair and a teammate with brown. As a fourteen year old teenage boy who was in a stage in life where success with the opposite sex was sadly a mystery, identifying with a pair of good looking twenty-somethings who drew the screams of every girl in the audience (seemingly regardless of age) was difficult.Interviewing professional wrestlers is an enjoyable benefit of running this website. Normally, the excitement would center on questions on their in ring careers and backstage stories. This was not the case when we spoke with former ECW and WWE Diva, Dawn Marie; for although she worked with some of the iconic stars of Extreme Championship Wrestling and performed for two and a half years for Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment it was her post wrestling career that we were anxious to discuss with her.
On August 25, 2011, the New York Yankees made baseball history by becoming the first team to ever hit three grand slam home runs in one game. Many people that day would have heard that future Trivial Pursuit question on the radio or maybe by watching Sportscenter. On that day, I got that information from the person sitting next to me who received the news over his I-Phone. The person who shared the news of the Yankees accomplishment with the exuberance of a ten year old boy who had just gone to the see his first Major League Game. That person was the man who has more hits than anyone else in Baseball history, Pete Rose.
I remember as a kid pouring through the statistics on the back of hockey cards. They were fairly simple back then as there were no numbers beyond Games Played, Goals, Assists, Point and Penalty Minutes to look at. They say that numbers never lie, but numbers never tell the whole story. It was natural to look at those with the high points tallies from the year before, or the twenty year veteran whose annual stats were printed so small that even eight year old eyes had to squint to see them. Each one of those players I studied for hours on that 1980-81 O-Pee Chee set took different paths to the National Hockey League and each athlete took on different roles to excel there. A generation later, a new era of statistical analysis has emerged. Constant exposure to media has pulled back the curtain of traditional numbers and appreciation of players who could do the little things that could help win games emerged. We here had notinhalloffame had the pleasure of speaking with Tyson Nash; one of those unsung heroes whose career cannot be judged by a quick look at a hockey card.