ESPNEWS (a portmanteau of ESPN and "news", pronounced "ESPN News"), launched on November 1, 1996, is a 24-hour-a-day sports news television channel. It airs news, highlights, press conferences, and commentary by analysts all in relation to sports.
ESPNEWS is typically offered on the digital tier on United States cable systems, and in some areas it is considered a premium channel. Satellite carriers offer it on their standard package Some regional sports networks not connected to Fox Sports Net also air ESPNEWS overnights or in the mornings to provide a pseudo-national sports report to their viewers, and fill time that would otherwise be taken up by paid programming or other low-rated shows. If a national ESPN broadcast is blacked-out in a particular market, the ESPN broadcast will usually be replaced by ESPNEWS.
The network was formerly simulcast on ESPN during coverage of major breaking sports news before the expansion of SportsCenter in daytime on ESPN in 2008, and a highlights rundown with the network's overnight anchor is one of the segments on ABC's early morning newscast, America This Morning.
Dave Feldman is currently the sports anchor for WTTG-TV, the Fox Washington, D.C. affiliate. He joined the affiliate in August 2000 and has been its sports director since January 2001. Feldman also announces college basketball for MASN. Previously, he was an anchor and reporter for ESPN. Among his responsibilities: SportsCenter, College Hoops 2Night, and ESPN News. While at ESPN Feldman did play by play for College Basketball where he worked with Jay Bilas, Bill Raftery, and Brad Daugherty. Feldman has won 5 local Emmy Awards for his work at WTTG, including 3 for Best Sports Anchor. His broadcasting career starting in 1989 at KTIV in Sioux City, IA and included stops at KMST in Monterey, CA and the Orange County NewsChannel in Santa Ana, CA before heading to Bristol, CT in 1996 for the launch of ESPN News.
He is originally from Palo Alto, California and graduated from Tufts University, where he played two years of varsity basketball. Before entering broadcasting, he was assistant basketball coach at Stanford.
Betsy Ross (January 1, 1752 – January 30, 1836) is widely credited with making the first American flag. There is, however, no credible historical evidence that the story is true.
Betsy Ross was born Elizabeth Griscom to Samuel Griscom and the former Rebecca James in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 1, 1752, the eighth of seventeen children. She grew up in a household where the plain dress and strict discipline of the Society of Friends dominated her life. She learned to sew from her great-aunt Sarah Elizabeth Ann Griscom. Her great-grandfather Andrew Griscom, a Quaker carpenter, emigrated in 1680 from England.
After she finished her schooling at a Quaker public school, her father apprenticed her to an upholsterer named William Webster. At this job, she fell in love with fellow apprentice John Ross, who was the son of Aeneas Ross (and Sarah Leach), an assistant rector at (Episcopal) Christ Church. The couple eloped in 1773 when she was 21 at Hugg's Tavern in Gloucester City, New Jersey. The marriage caused a split from her family and meant her expulsion from the Quaker congregation. The young couple soon started their own upholstery business and joined Christ Church, where their fellow congregants included George Washington and his family. Betsy and John Ross had no children..
Mike Lonergan (born January 28, 1966) is the head coach of the George Washington University Colonials men's basketball team. He replaced Karl Hobbs. He was formerly the coach of the University of Vermont Catamounts and the Catholic University of America (CUA) and before that a point guard for CUA.
Lonergan grew up in Bowie, Maryland and attended Archbishop Carroll High School in Washington, D.C.. Lonergan's late mother and first coach, Maureen, was coach and athletic director at Bladensburg's Elizabeth Seton High School. His father, Jack, was a successful college baseball player, gaining national attention for pitching a one-hitter for Holy Cross in the 1952 College World Series. Lonergan holds a B.A. in History from CUA and an M.S. in Criminal Justice from American International College.
In 12 seasons at CUA, Lonergan guided the Cardinals to nine NCAA Tournaments, and an overall record of 251-88, a school-best .740 winning percentage. The Cardinals won seven straight regular-season conference championships (1997–2004). No other college coach in the nation during that time – at any NCAA division – accomplished that feat. Lonergan was recognized for the achievement during the 2004 NCAA Division I Final Four. The team won the 2001 Division III National Championship during that run.
Dustin Kendall Keller (born September 25, 1984) is an American football tight end for the New York Jets of the National Football League. He was drafted by the Jets 30th overall in the 2008 NFL Draft. He played college football at Purdue.
He played high school football at Jefferson High School in Lafayette, Indiana. While at Jefferson, Dustin was a three sport standout in football, basketball, and track. During his senior year at Lafayette Jefferson High School he was the state's leading wide receiver in football, was second team All-State as a small forward in basketball, and he was the high jump state champion in Indiana, clearing 6'9" in a steady rain after coming second to Philadelphia 76er's Rodney Carney with a jump of 6'10". Keller was named one of top 50 receivers in nation by Street & Smith's and first team all-state as senior after setting state records with 113 receptions and 1,804 yards (16.0 average) with 22 touchdowns. He was a finalist for Mr. Football.
Keller was expected to sign with the University of Toledo and had actually verbally committed. Purdue's then-head coach Joe Tiller went to Keller's high school to attain Keller's cell phone number. Tiller called Keller shortly after and scheduled a meeting in Tiller's office. Tiller offered Purdue's last scholarship. Being Dustin's hometown school, Keller chose Purdue over Toledo.
ESPNEWS - 'What A Year!' - BLOOPER REEL - Revisiting the First Year Back From 1996
1999 - Sports - ESPNews - NHL Highlights w/Dave Feldman & Betsy Ross
Baseball 2004 on ESPNews
ESPNEWS Top 10 Premature Celebrations
Men's Basketball: Mike Lonergan Discusses NCAA Berth - ESPNEWS (3/14/10)
ESPNews Song
Daron Bryden was on ESPNews on Friday night! (Feb. 2011)
General ESPNews Open for 2-20-2011
Musikmesse 2012: ESP News
Dustin Keller ESPNews
1999 - Opening - ESPN National Hockey Night and ESPNews
ESPNews Hotlist
LeBron or Kobe - Jalen Rose Picks His Superstar - 2/20/09 ESPNews HD
2002-03 Round 4/Game 7: ESPNews Highlights
ESPNEWS - 'What A Year!' - BLOOPER REEL - Revisiting the First Year Back From 1996
1999 - Sports - ESPNews - NHL Highlights w/Dave Feldman & Betsy Ross
Baseball 2004 on ESPNews
ESPNEWS Top 10 Premature Celebrations
Men's Basketball: Mike Lonergan Discusses NCAA Berth - ESPNEWS (3/14/10)
ESPNews Song
Daron Bryden was on ESPNews on Friday night! (Feb. 2011)
General ESPNews Open for 2-20-2011
Musikmesse 2012: ESP News
Dustin Keller ESPNews
1999 - Opening - ESPN National Hockey Night and ESPNews
ESPNews Hotlist
LeBron or Kobe - Jalen Rose Picks His Superstar - 2/20/09 ESPNews HD
2002-03 Round 4/Game 7: ESPNews Highlights
Coach Cal on ESPNews
The Duck and Dana Guthrie interviewed on ESPNews The Beat
ESPNEWS Todd Grisham is a Dick
ESPNews Gametime
1999 - Sports - ESPNews - MLB Playoffs: Astros vs. Braves
ESPNEWS 12 05 2013 19 44 37
Kobe Bryant Scores 81 Points (ESPNews Coverage)
ESPNEWS ON THE 617 with RAFAEL CASTRO 07.24.2012
CAA Commissioner Tom Yeager on ESPNEWS - 03/28/11
Tragedia en News Divine. Video sin editar
Video Censurado Por Seguridad Publica News Divine
Dentro de la discoteca News Divine antes de la tragedi
Letra y MÇsica: M.Escobar
ESPINAS. ESPINA CLAVADA SANGRANDO
RECUERDOS DONDE VIVE EL RENCOR.
LOS HIJOS NO PUEDEN SUPERAR
LA TRISTE SOLEDAD, DESAPARICIñN.
LA MUERTE ES PREGUNTA SIN RESPUESTA
DEJANDO UNA ESPINA EN EL CORAZñN.
VENGANZA ENEMIGA QUE ATRAPA Y ENCIERRA
A LA LIBERTAD.
NUNCA OLVIDAR, NI PERDONAR.
LA HISTORIA VIVA DEL SETENTA
SIGUE BUSCANDO.
NUNCA OLVIDAR ESA TRAICIñN,
ENCUBIERTA POR LOS SINIESTROS PODERES
POSTMILITARES.
NADA QUEDARà. SñLO TU VERDAD.
MATAR AL COBARDE
MORIR POR TU SANGRE.
NADA QUEDARà DESIERTO DE ESPINAS.
RENDIRSE ES PERDER