The World Cup is upon us, and ESPN just released the first ad of what to expect to go down in Brazil.
The ad looks back on iconic players and teams from past World Cups, juxtaposing that history with current Brazilian stars and street scenes from the soccer-obsessed country.
While playing doubles for the the Australian Open at the Brisbane International, Federer and his partner Nicolas Mahut nearly lost a point while taking on Grigor Dimitrov and Jeremy Chardy.
At one point during the match, Federer completely mishit an overhead. Luckily for him, the ball deflected off the frame of his racket with such backspin that it landed on Dimitrov/Chardy's side of the net, and then spun back over the net.
He had all the time in the world to do any dunk he wanted. LeBron James went with the classic windmill dunk.
With five minutes left in the first quarter of last night's Heat-Kings game, Mario Chalmers got a steal and threw an insane no-look backwards pass to LeBron James who did the deed.
Being this talented at the age of 15 is practically God sent. Seung Woo Lee was first spotted by Barcelona scouts in South Africa. He later went on to impress them while playing for his Elementary school in Korea by scoring 29 goals in 16 games. That was when he was at 13.
What better way to train your reflexes than by catching balls being fired by live cannons? Here's hoping that other teams don't decide to copy this method.