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The remote Swedish town that produced a generational NHL talent

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The remote Swedish town that produced a generational NHL talent

LANDSBRO, Sweden – There are no signs for Landsbro on the long road from Stockholm.

This village in southern Sweden is so remote, so small, I was told, I would pass it if I didn’t keep my head up.

Not a single stop sign. Not a single red light. Small like that.

I was told to take the train from Stockholm if I planned to visit, but, I was cautioned, no train stopped in Landsbro. I would need a rental car to make the last leg of the journey. Why not drive the full four and a half hours instead, I thought? What better way to get a sense for how far out this place really was than by coasting southwest from the largest city in Sweden, with a population of 1.5 million, a place that hums with people and activity, to this quaint village of 1,500 people?

Trees practically swallowed the road as I zipped past farms and vast empty spaces, heading in the direction of nearby Vetlanda. It wasn’t until I was just outside of town that I came across any hint of Landsbro. There wasn’t a soul in sight as I passed a big white church, the only gas station around, and a barbershop that accepted walk-ins. Finally, after more than 200 miles, I came upon the place where the seeds for a historic NHL career were planted — though you would hardly know it.

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Nothing but the GPS told me I was in the right place.

Not until, that is, I pulled into the parking lot of the hockey arena. Scrawled in white paint out front were two reserved spaces for local royalty: One for the No. 93 of Johan Franzén, the first player to make it to the NHL from these parts. The other features the No. 65 of Erik Karlsson, one of the greatest players of his generation, a three-time Norris Trophy winner, 15 seasons, 966 games, 795 points, and one of the best Swedes, period, to play in the NHL.

The snow was starting to fall and darkness was creeping in as I waited for Erik’s younger brother, Pelle, to arrive and show me around. I had only one thought: How the heck did Karlsson make it all the way from here?

It didn’t take me long to figure it out.


This place — just two square kilometers — was tiny.

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There’s the pizza joint, Pizzeria Adonis, where the Karlssons still get their pies and which has been run by the same people for the last three decades. There’s the grocery store, the ICA, which closes at 8 every night of the week. Erik still recognizes the workers from when he was a boy.

There’s a restaurant, Bykrogen, right next to the ICA, which closed after lunch.

There was a bank when Erik was very young, but “it’s long gone now,” he says.

“And at one point we did actually have a small café, too,” Erik tells me. “That didn’t last very long.”

There’s the school, Landsbro Skola, which sits on the main road that winds its way through town, amid the dozens of cozy little bungalows. The school is attached to the arena. The soccer field, where Erik spent most of his time from April to September, sits just down the way.

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Around the corner from there, the lake where Erik, his buddies, and Pelle, would swim on long summer days, where they would nervously stand atop platforms in the water and pelt each other with tennis balls. To grow up in Landsbro was to be active. Swimming, hockey (indoors and outdoors), tennis, soccer, cross-country skiing. “It was never just one thing,” Erik says, adding that as a child of the ’90s, “TV wasn’t really a thing.”

“I think back then, you gave us a ball and a stick or something and we could play with that for weeks because there wasn’t much else,” Erik says. “We didn’t have many toys. We didn’t have a toy store or anything like that.”

It was all they knew.

“It’s not like we were completely isolated,” Erik says, “but we didn’t really have anything (else) and obviously when you were younger you couldn’t really go anywhere on your own until you got a driver’s license. You were kinda confined to where you were.”

Still, the possibilities felt endless as did the freedom.

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This was small-town Sweden. Nobody locked their doors. Keys were left in cars. Kids were free to walk to school with no supervision. All of Erik’s friends lived just around the corner.

Everyone knew everyone in Landsbro, so Erik was free to stay out late, especially in the summer, when the sun hangs into the sky well into the night.

“It just felt like whatever you wanted to do,” Erik says, “you could do.”


The school that helped shape Erik Karlsson’s early years. (Jonas Siegel / The Athletic)

Erik was born on the last day of May in 1990. The population in Landsbro that year was just over 1,600.

That meant no crowds anywhere, ever.

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The arena, with roots in the community that stretch back more than 50 years, was almost always begging for action. Erik, his pals, and his brother were free to pop over for shinny just about any time they liked.

The arena workers encouraged it. They would even flood the ice afterward.

And because the arena was attached to the school, Erik and his buddies often zipped over with an hour between classes. Their gear was always waiting for them in wooden storage lockers in the arena’s underbelly.

The boys would be back to skate some more when school let out. They would return again on weekends when the ice was free. Erik’s parents would often stop by with snacks. It was the kind of formative hockey experience that just wasn’t possible in a bigger place. Erik could get on the ice for upwards of 10 hours a week, some of that time structured through the various teams he played on, much of it not.

“It was always open doors,” Erik said.

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There was no better place to be — nowhere else really to be — from October until March when the days are crushingly short, the “bad time” they call it.

The seeds of that rink, where Erik Karlsson’s journey began, were laid in 1969. It was a wholly local effort, Pelle tells me as we sit and chat in an employee kitchen where jerseys and life-size pictures of Karlsson and Franzén line the walls. The locals, Pelle explains, assembled the arena piece by piece with wood donated from the nearby lumber mill where Erik’s dad, Jonas, would later work driving a forklift.

They built it on nights and weekends. Spouses would stop by with home-cooked meals.

“Most of the rinks in Sweden are made of concrete and steel. They’re so much colder,” Pelle says. “This is kinda warm because it’s made out of wood.”

It’s still stunning all these years later, almost like a gigantic log cabin with ice in the middle.

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Hanging up top are two banners: One marking Franzén’s 2008 Stanley Cup with the Detroit Red Wings, the other bearing an especially large No. 65 for Erik.

Pelle looks almost exactly like Erik and was even mistaken for his brother during a visit to Pittsburgh last fall.

If Pelle was the good child, Erik was the troublemaker, the prankster always up to something. Erik was the “black sheep” of the Karlsson family, the one who frequently found himself in the kind of mischief Pelle would only hear later from the other kids.

The famous swagger that would one day define a career that will eventually land him in the Hall of Fame, Erik had that from the start, Pelle says, which is odd, “because our parents are kind of modest and quiet.”

Erik, he says, has “always believed in himself.”

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Pelle moved back to Landsbro with his wife and three kids after his playing career came to an end. He led me into the cafeteria, where the wooden walls are dotted with black and white photos of the people who constructed this rink decades ago along with Karlsson-related newspaper clippings from when he starred for the Senators and Team Sweden.

Pelle seems to know everyone working in the arena — still. He played semi-pro for years across Sweden, a defenseman just like his older brother.

These were mostly the same arena workers from when he and Erik were young boys. He led us into the dressing room where Jonas Karlsson once played, the first defenseman in the Karlsson clan, and where Erik and Pelle bopped around as kids.

Jonas retired when the boys were born. A later comeback attempt was thwarted by injury.

“I never really got to see him play, because he retired so he could have us,” Erik says of himself, Pelle, and their younger sister, Mikaela. “But he always brought us around and created the passion, I think, amongst me and my siblings. We lived an active lifestyle, I think, from day one.”

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The Karlssons, the early years: From left, Pelle, Mikaela, Erik and their dad, Jonas. (Courtesy Pelle Karlsson)

Pelle chases down one of the arena workers to see if we can pop into the “gymnastics hall.” “Do you know what floorball is?” he asks. It was here, in a gymnasium with wooden ceilings and walls painted lime green, where the boys were free to play floorball (aka floor hockey) whenever they chose.

There were 10, maybe 15 of them. They would stuff a Bandi Ball with plastic bags to weigh it down. Fights were frequent. Nobody was better than Erik.

Hockey was ingrained in the culture of Landsbro and Erik’s extended family: Erik’s uncle, Thomas Nordh, another local legend, was famed for winning the SHL crown. Daniel Ljungkvist, a defenseman who had a long career in Sweden, was married to a cousin. Pelle still plays in the same beer league as Franzén.

Most kids, if they dreamed of a future at all in hockey, dreamed of doing it in the Swedish Hockey League. “But you always knew you probably would end up a carpenter or a forklift guy,” Pelle says.


For Karlsson, hockey was just one love among many. Something he enjoyed in the winter months. It wasn’t a dream of his to reach the NHL.

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In fact, for a long while, he thought he might actually pursue a career in soccer. “I was at the level where I had to make a decision,” Erik says. “Either I go down the soccer route or I go down the hockey route. My dad played hockey growing up. My brother played it and he was pretty good at it.

“I think it was just more convenience than anything that I ended up picking hockey instead of soccer.”

Pelle grins when he hears this, Erik becoming a professional footballer. “He says he was better than he was.”

To this day, Erik considers himself “more of an athlete than just a hockey player.”

NHL games were hardly ever on TV, and if they were, they were in the middle of the night. Erik and Pelle knew of the league and its stars almost entirely through video games and, of course, from Franzén, who didn’t make his NHL debut for Detroit until 2005 when Erik was already 15. (Which might explain Erik comparing his game to the hard-hitting Niklas Kronwall on draft day.)

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“I didn’t dedicate myself to hockey fully until I was 16, 17,” he says. “Hockey was just my occupation, or what I did, from October to March.

“Once I became a teenager and started learning about the various options in life, there was a period of my time where I wasn’t really sure if hockey was what I wanted to pursue full time. Obviously, I’m lucky and I’m happy that I ended up choosing that path, but at the time, it wasn’t a given.”


Everyone in Landsbro knew Erik was good, including Erik, but they didn’t really know how good. How could they when Erik was competing only locally?

They found out for sure when Erik went out for the Swedish national team at 15. He was small and skinny, but played like no one else, as Victor Hedman, a teammate and future Norris Trophy winner himself, recalls.

“You were in awe of his skill and the way he played the game,” says Hedman, the Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman. “He played the same way back then that he does to this day.”

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Erik was “very thin” but man, Hedman says, could he skate, make plays, and shoot the puck. Erik played boldly, even then. All that free time on the rink in Landsbro sowed the seeds for the kind of creativity that would one day lead Karlsson to stack up 101 points in a single NHL season, a number that’s been eclipsed among NHL defensemen by only Bobby Orr, Paul Coffey, Al MacInnis and Brian Leetch.

Hedman remembers Erik as a funny kid with “a lot of tricks up his sleeve.” He was outgoing. He could brighten a room. And when they got on the ice, Erik was unafraid to take risks and make mistakes.

“He trusted his talents and he believed in himself,” Hedman says.

It was that swagger that couldn’t really be explained.

“He has that perfect personality,” Hedman says, “when it comes to playing hockey.”

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It’s why, in Hedman’s estimation, Erik was a star almost from the day he entered the NHL with the Ottawa Senators, beating out Nicklas Lidstrom, Shea Weber and Zdeno Chara, among others, for his first Norris Trophy at age 21 in only his third season.

Only Orr has done it younger.


Erik Karlsson, accepting his third Norris Trophy last year in Nashville. (Jason Kempin / Getty Images )

It’s why, as Pelle remembers it, Erik could score an overtime winner in his very first game for Frölunda, and why he always crushes it in the playoffs. (Erik has 34 points in his last 38 playoff games for the Senators and San Jose Sharks.)

Though he hails from northern Sweden, Hedman can tell almost exactly where Erik is from by hearing him speak. “It’s different dialects in Sweden too,” Hedman says.

Hedman had somehow heard of tiny Landsbro, but never visited. Of his hometown, Erik told him simply, “That it’s small, very small.”

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Which made it all the more special that day when Erik was officially welcomed into the NHL in June 2008.

The Karlssons hosted a house party in celebration. It just happened to be the midsummer holiday, which commemorates the longest day of the year. In other words, two celebrations in one.

They pulled up a livestream that night and crowded around the computer to watch as fellow Swede and Senators’ captain Daniel Alfredsson announced to the crowd in Ottawa that Erik — all 157 pounds of him — was the pick at 15th overall.

“We had no idea who would pick him,” Pelle says.

It was a big deal wherever he went.

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“The whole Landsbro, everyone roots for him,” Pelle says. “Obviously Johan, he kinda paved the way. And so everyone followed his journey and then Erik came. It obviously was huge.”

Unlike Pelle, Erik isn’t moving back to Landsbro.

He tries to make it home once every year to see his brother, see his parents, see everything just the way he left it. “It’s easy to come back home and walk in the grocery store and it’s the same family running it, the same people there,” Erik says. “Everybody’s just a little bit older.”

Landsbro felt almost sealed in time that way. The Landsbro I visited almost identical to the Landsbro that made Erik Karlsson.

Erik Karlsson was no longer here. But this was still home for him.

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“He’s proud of where he’s from,” says Hedman. “Home is always home. You’re always proud of where you come from.”

I could feel that when Pelle finally led me out of the arena and back into the cold. It was 5:30, fully dark, and entirely quiet. How did Erik Karlsson make it from here? Driving back to Stockholm, I felt like I knew.

(Illustration: Sean Reilly / The Athletic. Photos: Joe Sargent / NHLI via Getty Images, Jonas Siegel / The Athletic, Courtesy Pelle Eriksson)

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Law firm fighting for women’s sports in SCOTUS battle comments on ruling possibly impacting SJSU trans lawsuit

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Law firm fighting for women’s sports in SCOTUS battle comments on ruling possibly impacting SJSU trans lawsuit

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A law firm leading the charge in the ongoing Supreme Court case over trans athletes in women’s sports has responded after a federal judge suggested the case’s ruling could impact a separate case involving a similar issue. 

Colorado District Judge Kato Crews deferred ruling in motions to dismiss former San Jose State volleyball co-captain Brooke Slusser’s lawsuit against the California State University (CSU) system until after a ruling in the B.P.J. v. West Virginia Supreme Court case, which is expected to come in June. 

Slusser filed the lawsuit against representatives of her school and the Mountain West Conference in fall 2024 after she allegedly was made to share bedrooms and changing spaces with trans teammate Blaire Fleming for a whole season without being informed that Fleming is a biological male. 

 

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Meanwhile, the B.P.J. case went to the Supreme Court after a trans teen sued West Virginia to block the state’s law that prevents males from competing in girls’ high school sports. 

The Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is the primary law firm defending West Virginia in that case at the Supreme Court, and has now responded to news that Slusser’s lawsuit could be affected by the SCOTUS ruling. 

“We hope the ruling from the Supreme Court will affirm that Title IX was designed to guarantee equal opportunity for women, not to let male athletes displace women and girl in competition. It is crucial that sports be separated by sex for not only the equal opportunity of women but for safety and privacy. Title IX should protect women’s right to compete in their own sports. Allowing men to compete in the female category reverses 50 years of advancement for women,” ADF Vice President of Litigation Strategies Jonathan Scruggs said.

Slusser’s attorney, Bill Bock of the Independent Council on Women’s Sports, expects a Supreme Court ruling in favor of the legal defense representing West Virginia, thus helping his case. 

(Left) Brooke Slusser (10) of the San Jose State Spartans serves the ball during the first set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on Oct. 19, 2024. (Right) Blaire Fleming #3 of the San Jose State Spartans looks on during the third set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym on October 19, 2024 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. ( Andrew Wevers/Getty Images; Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

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“We’re looking forward to the case going forward,” Bock told Fox News Digital. 

“I believe that the court is going to find that Title IX operates on the basis of biological sex, without regard to an assumed or professed gender, and so just like the congress and the members of congress that passed Title IX in 1972, allowed this specifically provided for in the regulations that there had to be separate men’s and women’s teams based on biological sex, I think the court is going to see that is the original meaning of the statute and apply it in that way, and I think it’s going to be a big win in women’s sports.”

The Supreme Court’s conservative majority appeared prepared to rule in favor of West Virginia after oral arguments on Jan. 13. 

Slusser spoke on the steps of the Supreme Court on Jan. 13 while oral arguments took place inside, sharing her experience with a divided crowd of opposing protesters. 

With Fleming on its roster, SJSU reached the 2024 conference final by virtue of a forfeit by Boise State in the semifinal round. SJSU lost in the final to Colorado State.

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Slusser went on to develop an eating disorder due to the anxiety and trauma from the scandal and dropped out of her classes the following semester. The eating disorder became so severe, that Slusser said she lost her menstrual cycle for nine months. Her decision to drop her classes resulted in the loss of her scholarship, and her parents said they had to foot the bill out of pocket for an unfinished final semester of college. 

President Donald Trump’s Department of Education determined in January that SJSU violated Title IX in its handling of the situation involving Fleming, and has given the university an ultimatum to agree to a series of resolutions or face a referral to the Department of Justice. 

Among the department’s findings, it determined that a female athlete discovered that the trans student allegedly conspired to have a member of an opposing team spike her in the face during a match. ED claims that “SJSU did not investigate the conspiracy, but later subjected the female athlete to a Title IX complaint for ‘misgendering’ the male athlete in online videos and interviews.”

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SJSU trans player Blaire Fleming and teammate Brooke Slusser went to a magic show and had Thanksgiving together in Las Vegas despite an ongoing lawsuit over Fleming being transgender. (Thien-An Truong/San Jose State Athletics)

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SJSU Athletic Director Jeff Konya told Fox News Digital in a July interview that he was satisfied with how the university handled the situation involving Fleming.

“I think everybody acted in the best possible way they could, given the circumstances,” Konya said. 

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'Horrible' moments exposed for UNR volleyball players when they were roped into the SJSU Title IX scandal

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Myles Garrett cited for speeding a ninth time, an elite pass rusher seemingly always in a rush

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Myles Garrett cited for speeding a ninth time, an elite pass rusher seemingly always in a rush

Myles Garrett is in a hurry to become the greatest pass rusher in NFL history. The Cleveland Browns All-Pro defensive end set the single-season sack record in 2025 and has cracked the top 20 career leaders after only nine seasons.

“I’m going to take that down, and I prefer I take it down in the next five years,” Garrett told Casino Guru News last month.

Off the field, however, his urgency to get from point A to B is a problem. He’s accumulating speeding tickets at an alarming rate.

On Feb. 21, Garrett was handed his ninth speeding ticket since his NFL career began in 2017. He was cited for driving 94 mph in a 70-mph zone on Interstate 71 between Cleveland and Columbus, Ohio.

The citation from the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office says Garrett was driving his green 2024 Porsche at 1:35 a.m., returning home after attending a Miami of Ohio basketball game in Oxford.

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Body cam footage shows the officer telling Garrett that she kept the charge under 100 mph so that a court appearance wouldn’t be mandatory. Garrett reportedly still holds a Texas driver’s license — he attended Texas A&M — and told the officer that he did not have an Ohio license.

Cleveland Browns’ Myles Garrett wears a jacket displaying his girlfriend Chloe Kim before the women’s snowboarding halfpipe finals at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Livigno, Italy.

(Lindsey Wasson / AP)

The officer wrote that the famously affable Garrett was “kind and cooperative,” and that drugs and alcohol were not a factor.

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Garrett’s need for speed flies in the face of his persona. He has written poetry since high school, peppers social media with inspirational sayings and donates time and money to several charities.

His girlfriend is two-time gold-medal-winning U.S. Olympic snowboarder Chloe Kim, for whom he wrote a poem he shared on social media: “You enrapture fools to kings, and exist without a peer, put on this Earth for many things, but our love is why you’re here.”

Verse hasn’t slowed his roll. On Aug. 9 he was cited for ticket No. 8, clocked at 100 mph in a 60-mph zone in a Cleveland suburb a day after the Browns returned home from a preseason game at Carolina.

Garrett’s seventh ticket followed a frightening crash in 2022. He flipped his gray 2021 Porsche 911 Turbo S off State Road in Sharon Township and he and a female passenger were injured. He was cited for failing to control his vehicle due to unsafe speeds on what had been a slick roadway.

A witness told a responding police officer that Garrett’s vehicle went airborne, took out a fire hydrant and rolled three times. Garrett sustained shoulder and biceps sprains and was sidelined for the Browns’ game that week against the Atlanta Falcons. His companion was not seriously injured.

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Cleveland television station WKYC reported that in September 2021 Garrett was stopped twice in a 24-hour period — for driving 120 and 105 mph. The infractions occurred on Interstate 71 in Medina County, where the speed limit is 70 mph, and he paid fines of $267 and $287.

A year earlier, Garrett was cited for driving 100 mph in a 65-mph zone of Interstate 77 — again while driving a Porsche — and paid a $308 fine. He accumulated his first batch of speeding tickets in 2017 and 2018, and the police reports recite similar circumstances: Garrett driving well over the speed limit, cited without incident, paid a nominal fine.

The piddly fines certainly aren’t a deterrent. Garrett, 30, and the Browns agreed to a four-year contract extension in March 2025 that made him the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history at the time. The deal pays the seven-time All-Pro more than $40 million a season and includes more than $123 million in guaranteed money.

He set the NFL single-season sack record with 23.0 last season, surpassing the 22.5 accumulated by T.J. Watt and Michael Strahan. Garrett has 125.5 career sacks, averaging 14 a season, a pace that would enable him to break Bruce Smith’s career record of 200 in five years.

“That is definitely on my mind to go out there and get,” Garrett said. “That’s a goal I’ve had for years now since college.”

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Garrett has declined to discuss his driving habits.

“I’d honestly prefer to talk about football and this team than anything I’m doing off the field other than the back-to-school event that I did the other day,” he told reporters after ticket No. 8 in August, referring to a charity appearance.

“I try to keep my personal life personal. And I’d rather focus on this team when I can.”

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Keith Olbermann under fire for calling Lou Holtz a ‘scumbag’ after legendary coach’s death

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Keith Olbermann under fire for calling Lou Holtz a ‘scumbag’ after legendary coach’s death

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Former ESPN broadcaster Keith Olbermann once again incited backlash on social media Wednesday after he called late legendary college football coach Lou Holtz a “legendary scumbag” in an X post on the day Holtz was announced dead. 

“Legendary scumbag, yes,” Olbermann wrote in response to a clip of Holtz criticizing former President Joe Biden in 2020 for supporting abortion rights. 

Olbermann received scathing criticism in response to his post on X.

 

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“You’re a scumbag that needs mental help,” one X user wrote to Olbermann. 

One user echoed that sentiment, writing to Olbermann, “You’re the real scumbag here. Lou Holtz had more class, integrity, and genuine decency in his pinky finger than you’ll ever show in your lifetime.”

Another user wrote, “You’re a grumpy, lonely, Godless man. All the things Lou Holtz was not.”

Keith Olbermann speaks onstage during the Olbermann panel at the ESPN portion of the 2013 Summer Television Critics Association tour at the Beverly Hilton Hotel July 24, 2013, in Beverly Hills, Calif.  (Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

Olbermann has made it a pattern of sharing politically charged far-left statements that are often combative and ridiculed on social media, typically resulting in immense backlash.

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After the U.S. men’s hockey team’s gold medal win, Olbermann heavily criticized the team for accepting an invitation from President Trump to the State of the Union address. Olbermann wrote on X that any members of the men’s team who attended the event were “declaring their indelible stupidity and misogyny,” while praising the women’s team for declining the invitation.

In January, Olbermann attacked former University of Kentucky women’s swimmer Kaitlynn Wheeler for celebrating a women’s rights rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court during oral arguments for two cases focused on the legality of biological male trans athletes in women’s sports.

Former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz listens before being presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House in Washington, D.C., Dec, 3, 2020.  (Doug Mills/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“It’s still about you trying to find an excuse for a lifetime wasted trying to succeed in sports without talent,” Olbermann wrote in response to Wheeler’s post. 

In 2025, Olbermann faced significant backlash after posting (and later deleting) a message on X aimed at CNN contributor Scott Jennings, that said, “You’re next motherf—–,” shortly after the assassination of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk. 

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Holtz was a stern supporter of President Donald Trump, even saying in February 2024 that Trump needed to “coach America back to greatness!”

Near the end of Trump’s first term, shortly after former President Joe Biden defeated him in the 2020 election, Trump awarded Holtz with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award of the United States. 

After Holtz’s death was announced Wednesday, several top GOP figures paid tribute to the coach on social media. 

Those GOP lawmakers included senators Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala.; Todd Young, R-Ind.; Tom Cotton, R-Ark.; and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; representatives Greg Murphy, R-N.C.; David Rouzer, R-N.C.; Erin Houchin, R-Ind.; and Steve Womack, R-Ark.; and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis; Indiana Gov. Mike Braun; U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon; and Rudy Giuliani.

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Lou Holtz, former Notre Dame football coach, addresses the America First Policy Institute’s America First Agenda Summit at the Marriott Marquis July 26, 2022. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

At the time of publication, prominent Democrat leaders have appeared silent on Holtz’s passing, including prominent Democrats with a football background. 

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who worked as an assistant high school football coach; Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who was a recruiting target for Holtz in 1986 as a college prospect; Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, who played in the NFL; and Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Ill., who played football for the University of Illinois, have not posted acknowledging Holtz’s death. 

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