(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:
TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Wisconsin 73, Rhode Island 62 Richmond 78, N. Iowa 68 Baylor 83, Stephen F. Austin 52 Texas 74, Texas State 53 Texas Tech 51, Abilene Christian 44 Florida St. 69, Indiana 67 Michigan St.at Virginia (Postponed) Sam Houston St. at Houston (Postponed) Robert Morris at West Virginia (Canceled) UT Martin at Tennessee (Canceled) Louisville at Wisconsin (Postponed)
(BALTIMORE) — The Baltimore Ravens faced off against the Dallas Cowboys Tuesday night without their wide receiver Dez Bryant, who tweeted he would not be taking the field after testing positive for COVID-19 just minutes before kickoff.
Bryant said he was warming up with the team on the field — with a mask on — when he was pulled off by team officials for further testing.
Fox Sports reported an earlier COVID-19 test came back inconclusive and had to be retested.
Bryant reacted angrily on social media, as the former long-time Cowboys player had been looking forward to facing his former team. He tweeted he had the same routine and the positive test made no sense to him, before saying he was going to call it quits for the rest of the season.
The Ravens went on to beat the Cowboys without Bryant, 34-17.
Two weeks ago, Baltimore experienced a coronavirus outbreak among players and staff. Twenty-three players and staff were put on the COVID-19 list, including reigning MVP quarterback Lamar Jackson.
The team had to postpone its Thanksgiving Day against the Pittsburgh Steelers three times. It also prompted this week’s game to be pushed back to Tuesday.
(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Baltimore 34, Dallas 17
TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Iowa 93, North Carolina 80 Kansas 73, Creighton 72 Tennessee 56, Colorado 47 Ohio St. 90, Notre Dame 85 Illinois 83, Duke 68 Penn St. 75, Virginia Tech 55 Rutgers 79, Syracuse 69 Tarleton State at Gonzaga (Canceled) Nicholls at Baylor (Canceled)
(SAN DIEGO) — Arnie Robinson Jr., an Olympic gold medalist and a track and field Hall of Famer, died after testing positive for COVID-19, his family said. He was 72.
Robinson was “one of the greatest long jumpers in history,” USA Track & Field said in a statement on his Dec. 1 passing.
The lifelong San Diegan medaled in two Olympics in the long jump, taking silver in 1972 in Munich and gold in 1976 in Montreal.
Olympic Champion and Hall of Famer Arnie Robinson passed away Tuesday morning, December 1, at the age of 72.
He was the top-ranked long jumper in the world from 1976 to 1978, the organization said, with a career-best jump of 27 feet, 4 3/4 inches in 1976.
He won the first World Cup long jump championship in 1977, as well as seven national long jump titles.
The Olympics were a highlight, his son, Paul Robinson, told San Diego ABC affiliate KGTV.
“I think that’s one of the big things that drove him — was just wanting to achieve something very, very big, and setting it out there and making it happen,” he told the station this week.
A star at Morse High School in San Diego, Robinson attended San Diego Mesa College and San Diego State University, where he won the long jump competition at the 1970 NCAA Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
He won the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships long jump title in 1971 and 1972, representing the U.S. Army in the latter. He also won a gold medal at the 1971 Pan American Games. From 1975 to ’78, he won four straight USA Outdoor Championships in the long jump.
After retiring from competition, Robinson returned to San Diego Mesa College as a coach in 1982. During his 25 years as head coach, his teams won 15 conference championships and one state championship. According to Mesa College, he also coached six state champion student-athletes, one of whom competed in the Olympic trials, and another — Felix Sanchez — who won a gold medal at the 2004 Olympics in Athens in the 400-meter hurdles.
He also served as a professor in health and exercise science until his retirement in 2010.
In 2013, Mesa College named an invitational meet after the former coach — the Arnie Robinson Invitational is held each April.
Robinson also served as USATF San Diego-Imperial Youth Track and Field chair, where he mentored thousands of athletes. He was inducted into the San Diego Breitbard Hall of Fame in 1984, the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2000 and the California Community College Athletic Association Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2007.
Robinson overcame several health-related struggles over the years, including a serious car accident in 2000 and a glioblastoma diagnosis in 2005.
His son told KGTV he believes Robinson contracted COVID-19 from a caregiver who had tested positive for the virus. He died one week after the diagnosis, his son said.
“You’re just in a state of shock and disbelief over how it happened,” Paul Robinson told the station. “Respect COVID for what it is. Once COVID comes, and it closes in, there’s nothing you can do.”
(NEW YORK) — The University of Michigan said this Saturday’s football game against Ohio State is now canceled due to “an increasing number of positive COVID-19 cases and student-athletes in quarantine over the past week.”
“The number of positive tests has continued to trend in an upward direction over the last seven days,” said Michigan’s Athletic Director, Warde Manuel. “We have not been cleared to participate in practice at this time. Unfortunately, we will not be able to field a team due to COVID-19 positives and the associated quarantining required of close-contact individuals.”
"This decision is disappointing for our team and coaches but their health and safety is paramount, and it will always come first in our decision-making.” pic.twitter.com/IHXOD6lXyj