Women’s Tennis Embracing Inclusion
By Freddie Brown
When teenagers Leylah Fernandez and Emma Raducanu met at centre court to touch rackets (thanks to COVID-19) at the end of the 2021 U.S. Open Finals, the two unseeded teenagers were part of an historic moment in Women’s Tennis.
Fernandez, a 19 year-old Canadian, and
Protests: The Rich Tradition of the Olympics
By Freddie Brown
According to rule 50.2 of the Olympic Charter, “It is a fundamental principle that sport at the Olympic Games is neutral and must be separate from political, religious or any type of interference.”
The history of the Olympics says otherwise as the Games have consistently
NCAA v Alston Antitrust Lawsuit Challenges the Definition of Amateurism
By Freddie Brown, Columnist
The first time the National Basketball Association (NBA) held their annual draft outside of the United States was in 1995 in Toronto. It was the inaugural year of the Toronto Raptors and the Vancouver Grizzlies. Then NBA commissioner David Stern threw the Raptors a bone
To Play or Not to Play?
By Freddie Brown, Sports Contributor for The Progressive Column
The Spanish Flu and Covid-19. What we’ve learned since the 1919 Stanley Cup series about continuing to play sports amid a pandemic.
I am a writer. But, I have coached basketball at the youth level for 30 years. I have