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basketball

Big Ten basketball non-conference season awards

The non-conference season for the Big Ten has to be considered a success at this point. The combined record of all the teams is 106-25 as of December 30, 2008, with Indiana (5-7) being the only team below a .750 winning percentage. Because of the hot start, I decided to hand out some awards before the Big Ten gets basketballs deep into conference play.

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11

Deng draws crowds in Britain

chicagotribune.com

Chicago Bulls forward Luol Deng has piqued interest for basketball in the United Kingdom, and he recently led Great Britain over powerhouse Israel, 96-86 in Liverpool.

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Craig Kanalley Made popular 16 weeks 4 days ago

Windy City Roundup: Bulls hit rock bottom, Ex-Bear arrested

In this inaugural edition of the Windy City Roundup, I'll be fracturing the usual spotlight to accommodate a number of different Chicago-area sports stories that I feel are worthy of comment as well as listing a few select national plot lines.

  • Bumbling Bulls: Just because they've lost Luol Deng, Ben Gordon and Joe Smith to various injuries does not give the Bulls license to lose 83-67 to the worst team in the NBA.

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The Bulls’ playoff position exposes Eastern Conference inferiority

The Bulls' playoff position exposes Eastern Conference inferiority

The Bulls have missed the presence of Luol Deng, who enjoyed a breakout season last year.

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Filed by Brad Flora on Jul 10, 2007 12:14 PM

Michael Jordan youtube highlights

Picture via Google Images

In Matt Lynch's spectacular piece about the litigious relationship between professional sports companies and YouTube, "What's mine isn't yours: sports, copyright and YouTube" we meet Han Lee, the man who "discovered" Michael Jordan...and whose rabid enthusiasm for the hoops legend is now giving the NBA a headache.

Lynch reports:

Lee, 34, is a self-described lifelong basketball fanatic who grew up (and remains) a New York Knicks fan. One day in 1982, however, Lee saw a college game on television featuring the North Carolina Tarheels and a young Jordan.

"I just remember noticing there was something different about him," Lee said. "I just kept my eye on him and every single time he was on TV I made sure to record it."

And record he did. Lee now boasts a collection that he estimates contains between 400 and 600 Jordan games, including every 50-point performance except his first one (several of Lee's tapes were tragically recorded over by his mother while Lee was at college).

For a long time, the viewing audience for Lee's collection remained constrained to himself and a group of basketball aficionado friends. But about a year ago Lee, a film major in college, found a path to a wider audience for his lifelong labor. Under the appropriate name "hoopsencyclopedia," Lee began editing together highlight reels of Jordan games and posting them on YouTube.

Lynch goes on to detail the NBA's response to Lee and others like him who have been posting highlight compilations on YouTube. The gist: The NBA's not happy about it. However Lee tells Lynch that only 1 of his 47 videos have been taken down by YouTube so far, Lee believes because it was featured on digg.

[video]http://www.youtube.com/v/66gXIo9ZfJo[/video]

Jordan drops 50 on the '88 Celtics, a Han Lee highlight video on YouTube

Lynch also explores a lawsuit filed by the English Premier League against YouTube for copyright infringement. Unlike most lawsuits in this vein, the Premiere League lawyer says his client isn't just looking to leverage a partnership agreement but instead wants to be compensated for perceived copyright violations. They've filed a class action lawsuit and started a Web site, www.youtubeclassaction.com to encourage others to sign on.

What do you think? Should the NBA and Premier League clamp down on people like Lee who are posting highlight compilations on YouTube? Is the Premier League actually going to prevail? Does YouTube really have a leg to stand on in this discussion?

Here's what Lee said to Lynch:

"Ultimately I'm helping the NBA," he said. "I think sports are a weird area of copyright law. It's not like TV or movie content that's written by writers. That's basically art. Sports are something someone did. They're historical."

Are sports "history," and therefore open to republication and remixing like Lee and others are doing? Or are they the intellectual property of the companies organizing the events?

Thoughts?

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