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Phoenix is paying police officers even more...and Tucson/Pima County is way short of cops.... Wake Up Tucson Sports Intern Ryan Larson joins Chris to discuss a recent Book Richardson interview, LIV golf, college softball, and all things sports.
Former University of Arizona Men's Basketball Assistant Coach Book Richardson chops it up with KJ about growing up in Harlem and The Bronx, his hoop journey, how a job sweeping floors saved his life and the controversy surrounding his involvement in the scandal that shook up big-time college basketball. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Book Richardson, former Arizona basketball assistant coach and current head of NY Gauchos, joins the podcast to talk about his rise from AAU coach to Division I assistant coaching, his role in the FBI/college basketball scandal, his battles with depression and much more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jahvon Quinerly is a current basketball player for Alabama. 1:38 Training for the season 8:52 Getting through the college recruitment scandal 20:35 Indeed 22:44 What to make of Alabama this year 28:37 Making sure my mental health is always right 32:46 BOL 33:21 What would you say to Book Richardson Available for download on iTunes and Stitcher on Friday, September 25th, 2020. Good 'N Plenty is powered by BetOnline.AG and Indeed. Go to BetOnline.AG today for your exclusive sign up bonus! Get a free $75 credit on Indeed today by going to Indeed.com/GOOD.
Jeff and Lawrence talk to former Arizona Wildcat coach, Gauchos legend and NYC's very own Emmanuel "Book" Richardson to discuss the FBI case from his time at the University of Arizona, coaching myths, and the pain of losing it all. Plus, we learn how the game of basketball picked Book and the passion that drives him to pay it forward and help young players and up and coming coaches understand the business of basketball. Book continues to help young players today in the Gauchos gym, and you can connect with him by visiting https://www.newyorkgauchos.org/ today. Connect with Book Richardson:Instagram: @coachbook86Websites: https://www.newyorkgauchos.org/
Coach Book Richardson joins the show to share his story surrounding the scandal, his road to redemption and more.
January 26, 2020 will be one of those unfortunate days in history where everyone will remember where they were when they found out about Kobe and Gianna Bryant's death. On this special episode Manny Digital & Emilio The Poet share their thoughts and recount some Kobe history with the help of some friends, You'll hear about Kobe Bryant while at the legendary ABCD camp, his interactions with Harlem youth via Millbank, the charity he provided the Gauchos program of the Bronx and more. Thanks to our homies Jaime Peterson, Ryan "Special FX" Williams, Jim Sturgis, Book Richardson, Rose Byers and Rich Kosik for sharing with us some of their thoughts/experiences with Kobe Bryant. Opening song on this episode: Brian McKnight - Hold Me ft. Kobe Bryant --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dribblendimes/support
Our guest is a NYC guy all the way through. We claim him in the BX, but he's resided in multiple boroughs and has made a mark everywhere he's set foot. Hanging with older crowds, he fell into the game of basketball and with the help of the "older heads" was put on the path to basketball success. His climb up the hoops ladder landed him at St. Raymond H.S. and into the Raven family. There he quickly formed bonds with his newfound band of brothers and nurtured an adversarial relationship with coach Gary DeCesare. He developed his game and leadership abilities and was able to take them on a multi-stop college tour that culminated in him earning his college degree at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. From there he leapt into a coaching career spanning nearly a decade, across several men's programs around the NCAA. After serving time, as a consequence of an FBI investigation into the NCAA, Book chose Dribble N' Dimes as his first public opportunity to speak since becoming a newly free man. He sits with Manny Digital to walk through his past and share what's in store in his new future with the Gauchos. Listen to the story of Emmanuel "Book" Richardson with special guest Erin Richardson on this episode of Dribble N' Dimes. Be sure to subscribe to the podcast and tell a friend! Mix & Mastering courtesy of DJ Trends --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dribblendimes/support
Sean Miller contract talk, Book Richardson update, and the guys scratch the surface on the 2019-20 campaign by doing a pre-pre season Bball preview. Bear Down!
Sean Miller contract talk, Book Richardson update, and the guys scratch the surface on the 2019-20 campaign by doing a pre-pre season Bball preview. Bear Down!
The only thing that awaits California college athletes the inalienable right to make money off their name, image and likeness -- and not face the threat of losing eligibility or a scholarship -- is the signature of state governor Gavin Newsom. It's led to a fascinating showdown between California and the NCAA. There are big-picture consequences that could alter the pillars of amateurism. Matt Norlander and Gary Parrish spend the first 40 minutes of the podcast explaining the actual law at stake, what the NCAA has said, what it can do and how things will play out in the years to come because of all of this. From there, they discuss Wednesday's report (40:20) that former Arizona assistant Book Richardson was willing to pay $40,000 to have a former Arizona player's high school transcript falsified to get him into school. They wrap with the somehow-still-ongoing recruiting of No. 2 2020 recruit Cade Cunningham (56:00). Oklahoma State hired his brother months ago, yet he's still being courted by Kentucky, UNC, Florida and Washington. Uh-oh? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As the Power House series continues, Episode 3 of the series has Millennium star and ESPN's number 51 ranked player in the class of 2021 DaRon Holmes as he hit's up his recent Kansas offer, why he decided to play at Millennium, what he loves about playing for Power House, his thoughts on the NBA Finals, free agency and so much more. Then SchuZ hit's up his thoughts on what the Brooklyn Nets will be doing this summer after Sean Marks pulled the trigger on moving Allen Crabbe and two first's to Atlanta for Taurean Prince and a future second. Following that Zach Schumaker gives his thoughts on the recent coaching moves that have been going down across the league. Zach then gives his thoughts on the incredible NBA Finals going on as the injuries continue to pile up for the Golden State Warriors, Part Owner Mark Stevens shoves Kyle Lowry and so much more. Finally fan favorite SchuZ Zone hits up the revealing of the Paul Pierce injury in the finals against the Lakers ten years ago, DeMar DeRozan's thoughts on the Raptors success, the new rule change to the 3-point line in the NCAA and former SchuZ Views guest and University of Arizona assistant coach Book Richardson gets charged with one count of conspiracy to commit bribery and so much more. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/SchuZViews/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/SchuZViews/support
On Thursday, Book Richardson was sentenced to three months in federal prison. It was a history-making decision by U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos. Matt Norlander was in the courtroom, as he has been throughout both trials, and brings perspective and details from Thursday and beyond. He and Gary Parrish spend the first 40 minutes of the podcast discussing Richardson's sentence, Arizona's next steps, the NCAA's unfolding investigation and why Richardson said he didn't believe Sean Miller paid for players. After that, the guys touch on the new NCAA rules for 2019-2020 (48:30), most notably the extended 3-point line. They wrap by hitting on the 10-15 teams with the best odds to win the 2020 national title (58:30). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Is your garden new to you this year? Recently at a garden center, I ran into a woman who had just moved. She was tentatively buying just a few plants - curious to see what would work in her new space. One of the things we ended up talking about was the micro-climate she had enjoyed living in an inner-ring suburb of the twin cities - one with milder temperatures thanks to the heat island from the buildings but also helped greatly by the older, dense tree canopy. Even little moves can be big moves when it comes to a new garden space. Just as with the interior spaces, figuring out what you want to do with your exterior space - your garden - takes time. Remember - it's a garden. There's no rush. Brevities #OTD It's the anniversary of the death of the botanist and Scottish explorer Sir John Richardson who died on this day in 1865. Richardson explored with his friend, John Franklin. Their first expedition to Northern Coast of Canada was disastrous. After they were shipwrecked, the men split into groups, attempting to get back to civilization. Richardsons group were forced to survive by eating lichen from rocks and even the leather of their boots. After hearing a gun shot, Richardson and others found one of the men, named Terohaute, standing over the dead body of another group member. Terohaute claimed the other man had accidentally shot himself ... Richardson didn't buy it after examining the man. He'd been shot in the back of the head. Even worse, the men believed that Terohaute had resorted to cannibalization to help keep them alive. Convinced Terohaute was about to kill the rest of the group, Richardson shot Terohaute dead. Richardson is commemorated in the names of numerous plants, fish, birds, and mammals (including Richardson’s ground squirrel and Richardson's owl). In his work as a naval physician, he collaborated with Florence Nightingale. As his biographer David A. Stewart said: "[Richardson] ....was perhaps a life of industry more than a life of genius, but it was a full, good life, and in many ways a great life. It is not every day that we meet in one person - surgeon, physician, sailor, soldier, administrator, explorer, naturalist, author, and scholar, who has been eminent in some roles and commendable in all." #OTD It's the birthday of British civil servant Allan Octavian Hume born on this day in 1829. Hume had worked in India for more than three decades. Hume said, "I look upon myself as a Native of India.” Hume was a lifelong naturalist. In his late twenties, Hume began to accumulate materials for his dream: a masterwork on the bird of the Indian Empire. Hume's job with the Customs Department of India provided exceptional opportunities of collecting birds. called the ‘Pope of Indian Ornithology’. Hume had set up enthusiastic ornithology assistants all over India. As his team of volunteers collected specimens, they were thoroughly debriefed. Hume recorded decades of data and interviews in notebooks and journals in his home, called Rothney Castle, at Shimla. When Hume was 55 years old, he experienced a devastating loss that would spell the immediate end of his work in ornithology. Over the winter, Hume had left Shimla only to return in the Spring to find Rothney Castle ransacked by a disaffected servant who stole and destroyed all of his written manuscripts. Just like that, his dream was gone. All of it. A Lifetime of work. It took the starch right out of him. There would be no master book by Hume on the birds of India. Thankfully, Hume’s specimens were spared. But his passion for ornithology had vanished with his papers. Heartbroken, Hume offered his entire collection of over 82,000 birds and eggs to the Natural History Museum in South Kensington. The Museum's curator Richard Bowdler Sharpe went to personally pack up the collection. He was blown away by Hume and his staggering collection. He wrote, "It did not take me many hours to find out that Mr. Hume was a naturalist of no ordinary calibre, and this great collection will remain a monument of the genius and energy of its founder long after he who formed it has passed away." Hume returned to England as well. He turned his sharp observation and exploration skills to the field of botany. For the remainder of his life, he found solace and purpose in the garden. He went on expeditions annually and created an impressive herbarium. He designed custom cabinets to store his specimens. He was especially interested in seeds and seedlings - showing the progression of early growth in plants. Hume was a fanatical collector. In the months before he died in 1910, Hume finalized plans to transfer his botanical library and his herbarium to his lasting legacy and gift to the world: The South London Botanical Institute. Btw - There is a lovely Gingko biloba tree standing tall in front of the Institute and it is also in their logo. #OTD Today, June 5th is World Environment Day. One of India's most famous living environmentalists is 107 years old this year. Her name is Saalumarada Thimmakka. When she was a young girl, she married a local herdsman. When, at the age of 40, she realized they would never have children, Thimmakka wanted to die. But then, she and her husband came up with their own way of adding life to the world; they began to plant banyan trees. Thimmakka reasoned, "Banyan trees offer shade and the fruit is food for several creatures.” Thimmakka and her husband cared for the trees by carrying water to them after working in the fields; all 384 of them - planted along a 4 km stretch of highway. After Thimmakka's husband passed away in 1991, Thimmakka carried on with her work. It's estimated she and her husband planted over 8,000 trees during their lifetimes. In India, Thimmakka is known as theMother of Trees. Unearthed Words The poet Alice Mackenzie Swaim was born on today in 1911. Though she moved to America and settled in Pennsylvania, she was born and raised near Aberdeen Scotland, and of Scotland she wrote, "My soul still, returns like a bird to its nest To those distant islands Eternally blest, Where poet and seer and lover are one And life a new challenge Beneath an old sun." When her children were little, Swaim experienced periods of invalidism. Writing poetry became a balm for her. She is best known for this verse: “Courage is not the towering oak that sees storms come and go; it is the fragile blossom that opens in the snow.” For My Remembering I need no rosemary nor rue for my remembering, No faded flower, no lock of hair, Not even spring. When all the wind is your sweet voice And all the rain, your tears, There's no way of forgetting Immortal, radiant years. Old garden chair sagging with the weight of a single leaf. (First Place: 1994 Henderson Memorial Haiku Award) Today's book recommendation: The Gardener's Bed-Book: Short and Long Pieces to Be Read in Bed by Richardson Wright First published in 1929, The Gardener’s Bed-Book is a much beloved gardening classic by the renowned editor of House & Garden magazine in the 1920s and ’30s. This book is a compilation of 365 little essays. One word to sum it up: charming. You can click on the link above to get a used copy on Amazon using the link above; they sell for as low as 99 cents. I kid you not. Today's Garden Chore Prune your Spring Flowering Shrubs like Forsythia and Lilac when they are done blooming. Remove a third of the branches to the base of the plant. Then prune to shape the rest. Something Sweet Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart When I was researching Sir John Richardson, I learned that on the last day of May in 1865, just days before he died, he and his family went to visit some old friends. There was a standing joke that Sir John, "never left their garden empty-handed, and that evening he carried off a plant of Forget me-not". He placed it in his favorite border when he returned to his home. Richardson is buried at Grasmere cemetery near William Wordsworth. One of the verses of Scripture inserted on his tombstone is from the twenty-seventh Psalm. During times of great duress on their expeditions with Franklin - times when they were starving, facing certain death, when they were too weak to hold a bible in their hands - Richardson and Franklin had repeated this psalm to each other - this was Richardson's favorite verse: "I had fainted, unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living." Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
Co-hosts Christopher Boan and Tyler Vondrak are back to cover the gamut of sports topics from the week. First off, the duo discuss the federal investigation into disgraced sports runner Christian Dawkins and the wiretapped conversations between Dawkins and former Arizona assistant Book Richardson. Then, the two cover the Arizona softball team and its chance of making it to the Women's College World Series for the first time in nine years. Finally, the duo cover Saturday's Kentucky Derby, and whether Bob Baffert can win it once again.
College basketball has maybe never been as newsy and buzzy on the first day of May as it is this. That's because the second of three scheduled federal trials is providing a lot of allegations, evidence and more against prominent names and schools. But nothing's hit as hard as the stuff attached to Arizona. Gary Parrish and Matt Norlander open this episode by discussing what the trial is really getting at and what the government is trying to prove, then move on to Sean Miller and the pivotal calls played in court Wednesday (8:30) that have his former assistant, Book Richardson, alleging Miller was paying Deandre Ayton and Rawle Alkins. Norlander and GP close out the pod by hitting on Texas Tech ponying up huge money to pay Chris Beard (41:15) and get into some of the leftover stuff reported this week about UCLA's search. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Episode 4, former University of Arizona assistant coach Book Richardson joins the show to discuss Made Hoops, his coaching career, how college coaches identify talent, the NBA playoffs and much more. Then Zach Schumaker hits up topics pertaining to the Portland Trail Blazers, March Madness, my grades on how all 30 NBA front offices handled their 2019 NBA trade deadline along with the buyout market and of course SchuZ Zone brings the spotlight to some of the under the radar storylines from the past week in the NBA. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/SchuZViews/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/SchuZViews/support
In Episode 35 the gang covers the Book Richardson plea deal, the blowout losses in So Cal, the upcoming rivalry game against the scummies and Damon Stoudamire's questionable Twitter admissions. Bear Down!
In Episode 35 the gang covers the Book Richardson plea deal, the blowout losses in So Cal, the upcoming rivalry game against the scummies and Damon Stoudamire's questionable Twitter admissions. Bear Down!
On this episode of Brody and Erik's Super Sports Radio Show, an off-the-cuff discussion spirals through the sports world starting in the Book Richardson trial, moving to NFL Playoffs and a live Costco pizza review!
Breakdown (56 Minutes) Ralph Amsden talks about the news that Larry Fitzgerald will return to the Arizon Cardinals for his 16th NFL season. The Hot List (12:00) The Arizona Cardinals add passing game coordinator Tom Clements to the staff The Baseball Hall of Fame chooses not to include Curt Schilling in its 2019 class (15:24) N'Keal Harry's early NFL draft projections have him on the bubble of the first round (19:27) Former Arizona basketball assistant Book Richardson pleads guilty to a Federal Bribery charge (24:00) Brophy football head coach Jon Kitna takes a job with the Dallas Cowboys (30:00) How Noa Pola-Gates' commitment to Nebraska might change prompt an NCAA rule change (33:55) Arizona now has an open-division high school football playoff (39:15) Five Good Minutes (44:40) What was Devin Booker doing when he tried to fight Gorgui Deng during a blowout loss to the Timberwolves? Tweet of the Day (50:55) Dana Scott of AZCentral.com writes about the top 10 in-game dunks in Arizona Sports history.
Book Richardson agrees to a plea deal, the Cats sweep the mountain schools and find out how you can add a Damon Stoudamire collectible to your Arizona Wildcat collection. Bear Down!
Book Richardson agrees to a plea deal, the Cats sweep the mountain schools and find out how you can add a Damon Stoudamire collectible to your Arizona Wildcat collection. Bear Down!
Wildcat Radio discusses former Arizona Basketball assistant Book Richardson’s plea deal, ties a bow around the 2018 Arizona Football season, and goes through the final Wildcat Radio Football contest results. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Red/Blue game sells out McKale Center once again. Ryan Luther has range, Chase Jeter crashes the boards, Jerryd Bayless and Deandre Ayton join the Ring of Honor and Brandon Randolph wins another slam dunk championship during the festivities on Sunday afternoon. The F.B.I. trial continues in New York but is the Book RIchardson trial the one Arizona fans need to be worried about?
The Red/Blue game sells out McKale Center once again. Ryan Luther has range, Chase Jeter crashes the boards, Jerryd Bayless and Deandre Ayton join the Ring of Honor and Brandon Randolph wins another slam dunk championship during the festivities on Sunday afternoon. The F.B.I. trial continues in New York but is the Book RIchardson trial the one Arizona fans need to be worried about?
We explore the timeline of UA asst. hoops coach Book Richardson and his nefarious dealings. Will it sink Zona? Is the whole NCAA rigged? Get ready for a D’backs special episode live from Chase Field!