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Stephen A. Smith's cover-up may prove more telling than his crime of playing solitaire during Game 4 of the NBA Finals on ...
Smith, who earlier this year signed a $100million ESPN contract, was at first only pictured playing on his phone during the ...
Nearly 2,700 players entered the transfer portal prior to the April 22 deadline, more than 100 players entered their names ...
“Calm down, Stephen ... college in North Carolina. When an injury sidelined him, Mr. Smith found his way to writing, once authoring a school newspaper column — while still on the basketball ...
Stephen A. Smith dooms the New York ... to play an efficient brand of basketball. Even if Jaylen Brown is currently the only Celtic to average at least 20 PPG this series, they have a deep roster ...
However, Stephen ... Smith doesn't believe Riley should be back in Miami. He said on First Take Tuesday that Riley should retire and Spoelstra should be the Heat's new president of basketball ...
1990-1991 Winston-Salem State University (WSSU) Rams Basketball Team photo featuring Stephen ... Whitlock’s eyes, Smith was an industry plant who played just one game in college, averaging ...
ESPN’s star personality and recurring “General Hospital” actor Stephen ... it all Smith says his distaste for Lebron Sr. goes way back. But it really started to heat up when the basketball ...
Stephen A. Smith serves as a Swiss Army knife for ESPN in terms of the kinds of topics he discusses on the network. But according to one longtime college basketball analyst and former colleague of ...
All four No. 1 seeds and all but one No. 2 seeds remain in the Sweet Sixteen and Stephen A ... ESPN's "First Take," Smith expressed his concerns for the future of college basketball if this ...
And according to ESPN analyst Smith, that can only be bad for college basketball. "If this continues, it will be the death of college basketball," he said on Monday, after the Sweet 16 bracket was ...
On "First Take," Stephen A. Smith stated that the absence ... "If this continues, it will be the death of college basketball,” Smith said. "March Madness owns sports for those four weeks.