Sports
Inside life on the Muss Buss: Eric Musselman's drive to transform USC basketball
“Are you gonna wear those?”
Eric Musselman stares down at a pair of beat-up, brown boat shoes with his eyebrows raised. His smirk suggests I’ve chosen the wrong footwear for my first trip on the Muss Buss.
We’re standing in an auxiliary workout room at Galen Center a few minutes after USC wrapped morning practice in late July. And Musselman, a few months short of 60, looks prepared to run a half-marathon.
His first three months as USC’s men’s basketball coach were a full-on sprint, with a new staff to hire, a roster to rebuild and a hoops program to reinvigorate — not to mention roots to set down in the South Bay. But for Musselman, stamina has never been a question. He’s a workout fiend, just like his father, Bill, was before him. Every day, he walks or jogs or runs upwards of 10 miles, no matter where the job takes him or how packed his day is. And he’s never just walking or jogging or running. He’s always multitasking, sending reminder texts or listening to podcasts or highlighting passages from articles he’s compiled and printed.
USC men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman walks on a treadmill at Galen Center on July 31.
(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)
The plan was for The Times to join Musselman during his preferred beachside walk along the Strand, a few blocks from where he lives. But practice was moved to the morning, which meant shifting his required steps to a treadmill.
A treadmill feels like an ironic place to meet Musselman, someone who always seems to be moving towards something. To Muss — which is how his family refers to him — standing still is not acceptable. He is constantly seeking answers to new questions that stretch beyond the bounds of his day job. Working with Muss means consenting to more than the normal share of 5 a.m. text messages.
“If I wasn’t there to put a stop to it, he’d be texting people every night until he fell asleep,” his wife, Danyelle, says. She laughs. “Most people are not wired to that level.”
But if you’re a part of his program, you’re expected to keep pace.
“We gotta keep the coffee running, for sure,” said Anthony Ruta, a longtime assistant. “It’s six, seven, eight cups to keep up.”
Muss, meanwhile, has no use for caffeine. Managing every detail of his hoops program keeps him plenty stimulated. And rest assured, he has thoughts on every detail. Marketing. Social media strategy. Student section morale. Michael Musselman, the head coach’s son and assistant, has found crude drawings of team T-shirt designs left on his desk more than once.
One day, at Arkansas, Muss burst into his son’s office wondering if they could conceive and develop a video game for the team in his spare time.
“I can barely play video games, let alone develop one,” Michael says now. “It might sound crazy. But that — isn’t that what makes great coaches great?”
Since he came to the college game a decade ago, Muss has won 236 games — posting a 69.1% career win percentage that nestles him right between Tom Izzo (70.9%) and Mick Cronin (68.3%) among active Big Ten coaches. Four of his six trips to the NCAA tournament have lasted until the second weekend. At the height of his success at Arkansas, he led a long-suffering Razorback hoops program on consecutive trips to the Elite Eight.
He’s been just as successful in selling programs to the public. At Nevada and Arkansas, attendance and season-ticket sales soared after his arrival.
USC men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman, center, poses with his family: mother Kris, son Michael, wife Danyelle and daughter Mariah. They are joined for a photo with USC mascot Traveler before Eric Musselman’s introductory news conference on April 5.
(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
“Every place he’s coached,” says Todd Lee, his longtime assistant, “they fill the arena. He always has ideas for making it happen.”
With that in mind, you can see the case for bringing Muss to L.A., where USC hoops struggled to translate some deep tournament runs into fan enthusiasm and championships under previous coach Andy Enfield. In hiring Muss last April, USC athletic director Jennifer Cohen handed the program to a coach on the opposite end of the spectrum from Enfield, who never seemed comfortable commanding attention in a crowded hoops scene.
Musselman is more the type to tear his shirt off after a big win. He’s shirtless more than most major college basketball coaches, a fact that he says he’d probably change about himself if he could. But that intensity has another, uglier side. In 2022, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune, Musselman got into a confrontation after a win at the Maui Invitational during which he cursed at a group of opposing fans. He’s no stranger to being held back from confronting referees either.
That level of passion might not be for everyone but for Muss, it is rooted deep in his DNA. His father, Bill, who had a long, successful career coaching hoops, was known for a similar fervor. A book written about him was entitled “Obsession”, and he once famously said that defeat was worse than death “because you have to live with defeat.”
Cavaliers president Ted J. Stepien introduces new head coach Bill Musselman during a news conference in Cleveland, Ohio, on June 13, 1980. Musselman replaced Stan Albeck, who was released from his Cleveland contract to become head coach of the Spurs.
(Uncredited / Associated Press)
Ask anyone who has spent time in his orbit — players, staff, even immediate family — and they will tell you that Muss, like his father before him, demands a great deal from those around him.
“The expectations are always super high with him,” says Gus Argenal, who worked with Musselman at Arkansas and now coaches at Cal State San Bernardino. “Everybody is operating in that world where every day is kind of the Super Bowl, right?”
To many who have played with him or coached alongside him, that’s precisely what makes Musselman special. Others feel less warm and fuzzy about it. Whispers about Musselman being hard to work with have followed him since his NBA days.
“It’s not always easy to work for people who push you to do more, accomplish more, be more than you’ve ever done in the past,” Michael explains. “That’s not a comfortable feeling. But we don’t want it to be comfortable.”
That drive guided him back to the game after flaming out as a young coach in the NBA. And at USC, it’s the Trojans’ best hope of jump-starting a program that has never quite caught fire.
“Year 1 is always the hardest,” Muss says. “I don’t know when it will be. But my vision is that this building will be sold out.”
Back at Galen Center, months before the season begins, his treadmill roars to life, and I realize I have no other choice but to step onto the machine next to Musselman.
During the next hour, as he lays out how he made it to USC, Muss talks mid-jog, never once slowing down to catch his breath. Meanwhile, walking alongside him — and failing to keep up — I’ve sweat completely through my polo shirt. The sole of my left boat shoe comes loose.
This is a small sample of life on the Muss Bus.
By late February, it feels like the wheels are falling off at USC.
Musselman sits behind a microphone, frustrated after a fourth straight defeat — this one doomed, the coach says, by “the worst defense I’ve ever had a team play in my college tenure.” He spent much of the loss to Ohio State screaming at the refs or throwing his hands up in exasperation.
It has been that kind of season for USC and its coach. Injuries struck early. The Big Ten schedule wore them down late. There were moments, sprinkled throughout, when it seemed USC found something. But then leading scorer Desmond Claude hurt his knee. Two close losses, to Minnesota and Northwestern, let any remaining air out of the Trojans’ tires.
“I told you guys a long time ago about our team,” Musselman said from the podium. “We have to play near-flawless to win basketball games.”
USC men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman shouts during a loss to UCLA at Pauley Pavilion on Saturday.
(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
It’s true — Musselman was honest about his team’s shortcomings from the start. And now most everything he warned of in July had flared up by February. The uncertain frontcourt. The lack of rim protection. The dearth of point guards. Tonight, he’ll lament their lack of lateral foot speed.
What he didn’t anticipate was the toll that Big Ten road travel would exact on his team. A couple days earlier, their flight from New Jersey didn’t arrive back in L.A. until 5 a.m. It felt, to Musselman, like an NBA schedule. Except, his players had to be back at class by 9 that morning.
Two days later, they’re still exhausted. “I feel terrible today,” said Wesley Yates, the Trojans’ breakout guard. The coach looks just as worn down. It’s been a long few weeks.
He hoped to be further along than this by now.
“We’re building,” he assures from the podium. But on a night like this, it’s hard to feel that way.
“We’re not where we want to be right now,” Musselman said. “We’re not where we’ve been in the past.”
Flying high above Mount Rushmore on a helicopter tour in 1988, Pat Hall was trying his best to woo the 23-year old he hoped would take the helm of his South Dakota semi-pro team, the Rapid City Thrillers.
Eric Musselman had hoped to join his father’s staff with the Minnesota Timberwolves. But Bill Musselman wouldn’t hire his son before he blazed his own path, and his mother suggested he try anything but coaching. Which is how he ended up in the plains of South Dakota, laying out for Hall a step-by-step plan to take his Continental Basketball Assn. team to the top.
Hall, who had worked before with Musselman’s father, was blown away by the presentation, which included plans not only to revamp the roster, but also to inject energy into the whole operation, from marketing and media to in-game entertainment.
“This kid was incredibly organized at 23,” Hall said. “And his energy level was so high. It felt like he must stay up 24 hours a day. So I hired him.”
In Rapid City, Musselman learned how to manage every facet of a basketball operation. He turned a losing roster right away into one of the best in the CBA. Then, to save the team money, he took on coaching duties, too. He was the youngest in league history when he was hired in 1989.
Just as quickly, Muss managed to turn the Thrillers into a must-see spectacle. That’s what still sticks with Hall most 40 years later. He was as good at capturing attention as conceptualizing a roster. Maybe better.
“He was just like a bolt of lightning,” said Hall, who still works in real estate in South Dakota. “There was electricity wherever Eric Musselman went.”
So much of what Muss learned about entertaining crowds came from his father, who famously staged his own Harlem Globetrotter-style warm-ups. Following his lead, Muss flew in big-name acts to Rapid City, like the Laker girls or Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders, to perform and came up with outside-the-box promotions to get fans in the door. Before long, they were coming en masse. Muss was always there to greet them.
“People were literally scalping for Thrillers tickets,” he says.
Sacramento Kings coach Eric Musselman talks to Ron Artest during a game against the Golden State Warriors in 2006.
(MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / Associated Press)
A few of his promotions made headlines. Once, Hall got a call from NBA commissioner David Stern, whom, he says, was “hotter than a pistol.” Word of Michael Jordan’s gambling habits were circulating, so Musselman put together a “BE LIKE MIKE” promotion: The team would give away season tickets to fans who were still gambling at the local casino at 1:30 a.m.
The league wasn’t happy. Neither was Jordan’s agent. “He called and said the only thing that was going to be left of me when he was done was a pair of cowboy boots,” Hall recalls.
Hall ran to Musselman’s office. The coach started laughing.
“I guess we got the publicity we wanted,” Musselman told him.
Musselman left the CBA with the second-highest winning percentage in league history. But the goal had always been to make it to the NBA. He coached briefly on his father’s staff in Minnesota, only for the Timberwolves to clean house soon after. Bill Musselman spent the rest of his life longing to be an NBA head coach again, while his son chased the same dream, bouncing between Rapid City and another semi-pro league before Chuck Daly hired him to join his Orlando Magic staff in 1998.
Bill died from heart and kidney failure in 2000, two years before his son got the chance both of them were waiting for.
Musselman was only 37 when he was hired to coach the hapless Golden State Warriors. It wasn’t like turning around Rapid City. But he still managed to lead the Warriors to 39 wins in his first season, their best record in a decade. He even finished second in NBA Coach of the Year voting, behind Hall of Fame coach Gregg Popovich.
But the situation went sideways in Year 2. Players clashed with him over playing time. Then, the situation with upper management soured. “Chris Mullin was being groomed to take over [as general manager],” Musselman says now. And Mullin, the recently retired franchise star, had a different vision.
“In the NBA, if you talk and act a certain way, you won’t last a season,” Musselman says. “You want to push and get the most out of your guys and their potential. But there’s a delivery and a way that has to be of a certain temperament.”
Kings coach Eric Musselman leans his head against his hand in the closing moments of the team’s season-ending loss to the Lakers on April 18, 2007.
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)
He figured that when he got another opportunity as a head coach, the circumstances would be easier to navigate.
Instead his one season in Sacramento, in 2006, proved to be the most stressful of his coaching life. Several Kings players still wanted to play for the previous coach, Rick Adelman, while the general manager, Geoff Petrie, didn’t agree with ownership’s decision to hire Musselman. Then, in the preseason, Musselman was arrested for DUI. All the while, Musselman was navigating a divorce, driving back and forth in traffic to see his kids, who were living with their mother in the Bay Area.
For the first time in his career, he felt worn down. All he ever wanted was to be an NBA coach, but when the Kings fired him, after a 33-49 season, he was certain he needed to step away.
So at 42, for the first time in his life, he set basketball aside. He focused on spending time with his two sons, Michael and Matthew, instead. He married Danyelle, and together, they had a daughter.
Still, he couldn’t stay away. He found his fix in the form of his son’s AAU team. He told Michael that he’d only coach the team until they lost a game … not expecting that they’d win 59 straight.
“By the end, he was working every night, trying to recruit the state’s best talent to his team,” Danyelle says.
He was so caught up in the competition by that point that it took another parent pointing it out to notice his son was no longer cracking his own rotation. It was an eye-opening moment; he never coached another AAU game after that.
He was sitting in the carpool lane at Michael’s school, when he says it hit him like an epiphany. He came home and told Danyelle it was time to get back to coaching.
Musselman wasn’t sure then where that instinct would lead him. At one point, he and Danyelle even found themselves contemplating a new life in Russia.
They flew to St. Petersburg in 2009 for an interview with BC Spartak, a professional team in the Russian Super League. It had been almost three years since he last coached. When they offered him the job, he seriously considered it.
Then, on their last day in Russia, they tried to go out to dinner. The night was a disaster. They couldn’t communicate their order at the restaurant. They could barely get around in a cab. Danyelle, who was pregnant at the time, worried about what that might mean in a totally new world. We can’t do this, they decided.
He wasn’t sure where to turn next. Was the NBA even a real option? Recent history wasn’t exactly encouraging.
“I researched how many coaches got third opportunities,” Musselman said. “It’s not many.”
He took the job in 2011 as head coach of the Reno Bighorns in the NBA’s D-League, hoping it might be enough just to be adjacent to the NBA. And when the Lakers called the next season, asking him to coach their affiliate, the D-Fenders, he wondered if he was getting closer. The D-Fenders set a league record for wins, Musselman was named coach of the year and still no NBA teams came calling.
College basketball had never really been on his radar, even as friends tried for years to convince him he’d be a natural. He’d spent his life laser-focused on the NBA. But the universe was telling him to pivot. He listened.
He took an assistant job at Arizona State in 2012 and moved into a furnished place in Tempe, with only his clothes in tow. He expected to land a head job right away.
“I’m thinking, I’m a two-time NBA head coach, let me get some experience recruiting, and some AD will hire me,” Musselman said. “Never happened.”
Nevada coach Eric Musselman speaks with his players during a game against Tulsa on Nov. 22, 2018 in Las Vegas.
(John Locher / Associated Press)
His resume wasn’t convincing any athletic directors. He couldn’t understand why. Neither could Hall, who tried pleading with the AD at South Dakota, a school with zero NCAA tournament appearances, to consider him.
“He carried this cloud with him,” Hall says. “People were looking for reasons not to hire him.”
One athletic director, Musselman recalls, fell asleep during his interview. But at least that school gave him an interview. Minnesota once canceled his plane ticket the day of his flight. When San Jose State had a vacancy in 2013, he offered to drive over and wait outside of the AD’s office. They told him not to bother. That same spring, he was so desperate that he wrote a letter to the athletic director at Campbell, inquiring about the Camels’ open job. He never got a response.
It was, Musselman admits, “a super humbling time for me.”
“The lack of respect was just mind-boggling,” he said.
After two seasons at Arizona State, he moved back to the Bay Area, unsure of where his career was headed. Then, an old friend called. Flip Saunders, who played for his dad and worked for him in Rapid City, wanted Musselman to join him on the Timberwolves staff. Louisiana State , meanwhile, wanted him as its top assistant, working closely with future No. 1 pick Ben Simmons.
It was a difficult decision. Here was a chance, maybe his last, to return to the NBA ranks. But Musselman chose the college route, hoping a head job would follow close behind. This time he was right.
He returned to Reno a year later as head coach at Nevada. He’d spent his entire coaching career bouncing around, never staying in one place too long. But now the timing felt perfect. His youngest son, Matthew, was just starting high school in the Bay Area.
“Within a year and a half at Nevada, the building was being sold out,” Ruta said.
The one college job he’d always wanted, at his alma mater San Diego, came open around that same time. But he chose to stay in Reno. He’d end up staying four years, longer than any of his previous stops. His son joined the staff, and Nevada made the tournament in three straight seasons. Along the way, he says, he turned down other bigger programs to stay.
“I think about it all the time,” Musselman says now, “What would have happened if I stayed married to my career for those eight years?”
His final season in Reno, one of his star players, Cody Martin, mused about Musselman becoming an NBA coach again. He found himself wondering more and more about it. He still had a chip on his shoulder, from over a decade earlier.
“I didn’t prove what I wanted to prove in the NBA,” Musselman said, “and I thought then if somebody gave me a chance, I’d be so humbled by it, so motivated.”
Arkansas coach Eric Musselman celebrates with fans after a second-round NCAA tournament game March 18, 2023.
(Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press)
But the call never came. He left for Arkansas, where the basketball program had languished for years since winning a national championship in 1994, and in Year 2, Musselman took the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight. Once again, ticket sales soared. When his last season at Arkansas went awry, it felt like a sign. So he canvassed the available jobs last spring.
“I talked to Louisville, talked to DePaul,” Musselman said. “But the minute [USC] came open, if they had interest, we were taking it.”
It felt, to the entire family, like a perfect fit. His mother was already living in Southern California. His daughter, Mariah, was about to start high school. “We didn’t care about years, money,” he says. “We wanted that job.”
It was also another program in desperate need of a spark, struggling to sustain interest. The circumstances felt familiar.
The process moved quickly. Cohen, USC’s athletic director, even made a point to involve Danyelle in the process.
“Within a week, they were at our house picking us up,” Danyelle says.
As far as she is concerned, it’s the last time that they’ll be moving. Their daughter, Mariah, started her freshman year at Mira Costa High in the fall. They have no intention of switching her schools during the next four years.
Though, Danyelle takes it one step further: “I told [Muss], ‘This is it!’” she says. She bought new furniture for the house, just to hammer the point home.
Eric Musselman and USC athletic director Jennifer Cohen hold up his jersey during Musselman’s introductory news conference on April 5.
(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
“The stuff she’s doing to the house, I’ll ask her, ‘Why’d you get that?’” Musselman said. “And she’ll say, ‘Well, because we’re not going anywhere.’”
Musselman doesn’t seem to mind that idea. His assistants insist, too, that he fits well in L.A. He loves waking up to walk the Strand. Loves the city’s pro sports scene. Loves the USC brand. Consider then that the area is overflowing with young talent. You can see how someone might settle in. Michael, his son, calls it “a dream job.”
What a dream job means for Musselman has changed considerably since he started coaching, yearning to make it to the NBA. But he’s not chasing the league anymore. His last NBA job in Sacramento was almost 20 years ago. And he has been on this treadmill long enough now to know how valuable it is to find the right job.
It’s a rainy night in Los Angeles, the last at Galen Center this season. The Trojans are limping into March, losers in seven of their last eight games. A month ago, they stood firmly on the NCAA tournament bubble. Now they were tiptoeing along the cutline for the conference tournament.
This, needless to say, is not where Musselman intended his team to be by the end of his first season. All Wednesday night, he seemed to wear that frustration. Even as USC rolled to a much-needed 31-point win over Washington, saving its season for at least a few more nights, Musselman paced the sideline with his arms crossed and his brow furrowed, looking unsatisfied. With 45 seconds left and USC up by 30, he shouted at a walk-on for taking an ill-advised, step-back three-pointer.
USC coach Eric Musselman reacts in the closing moments of the Trojans’ 68-60 loss to Oregon at the Galen Center on Dec. 4.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
Asked about his mood later, Musselman said: “I wear my emotions on my sleeve. Pretty evident.”
“The people I’ve worked for and worked around “you try to coach for perfection every possession.”
That notion has driven Eric Musselman all his coaching life, just as it drove his father before him. Nothing has come easy at USC so far. But it didn’t at other stops, either. He has built programs with far less at his fingertips.
“I’ve been through it,” Musselman said. “You can’t let the team see you flinch.”
But there’s no mistaking Musselman’s frustration at the hand he’s been dealt this season. He can’t help but wonder aloud what might have been different if Claude hadn’t gotten hurt. Or Terrance Williams. Or Matt Knowling. What if their travel schedule was more efficient? He says he doesn’t want to make excuses.
But as the season enters its final stretch, he laments not doing enough to energize USC fans. Fewer than 6,000 were in the stands Wednesday night.
“I don’t know if there was much progress,” Musselman said. “There will be next year.”
USC coach Eric Musselman poses for a portrait at the Galen Center on July 31.
(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)
A top-10 recruit, Alijah Arenas, will join USC then, giving Musselman a star to build around. Rising star Yates said last week that he’s “locked in” with Musselman, while Claude could also return.
“There will be a lot of effort put in by all of us,” the coach promises. “We want to grow next year.”
Building a program, he knows, takes time.
But standing still, for Eric Musselman, is not an option. And at USC, there’s still a lot of ground to cover.
Sports
Former NFL Players Of Iranian Descent Speak Up For Freedom From Islamic Regime
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Ali Haji-Sheikh and Shar Pourdanesh share the fact they are retired NFL players living beyond the glow of the NFL spotlight. But they also share another distinction tying them to current events: They are part of the Iranian diaspora hoping for the downfall of the Islamic revolution.
They make up part of a small group of men who played in the NFL – along with David Bakhtiari, his brother Eric Bakhtiari and T.J. Housmandzadeh – who are decedents of Iranians.
Washington Redskins kicker Ali Haji-Sheikh (6) talks to reporters at Jack Murphy Stadium during media day prior to Super Bowl XXII against the Denver Broncos. San Diego, California, on Jan. 26, 1988.(Darr Beiser/USA TODAY Sports)
Haji-Sheikh: Self-Determination For Iranians
Haji-Sheikh, 65, played in the 1980s for the New York Giants, Atlanta Falcons and Washington Redskins. He was a first-team All-Pro, made the Pro Bowl and was on the NFL All-Rookie team in 1983 for the Giants and, in his final season, won a Super Bowl XXII ring playing for the Washington Redskins and kicking six extra points in a 42-10 blowout of the Denver Broncos.
Now, Haji-Sheikh is the general manager at a Michigan Porsche-Audi dealership and is like the rest of us: Keeping up with world events when time permits.
Except the war the United States is currently waging against the Islamic Republic of Iran is kind of different because Haji-Sheikh’s dad emigrated from Iran to the United States in the 1950s and built a life here.
And his son would like to see freedom come to a country he’s never visited but has a kinship to.
“It’s a world event,” Haji-Sheikh said on Monday. “I am not a big fan of the Islamic revolution because I am not Islamic. I would like to see the people of Iran be able to determine their own future rather than it be determined by a few people. It would be nice to see them having a stable government where the people can actually decide how they want it to go.
Green Bay Packers kicker Al Del Greco (10) talks with New York Giants kicker Ali Haji-Sheikh (6) on Sept. 15, 1985, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. The Packers defeated the Giants 23-20.
Iranians Celebrating And Americans Protesting
Haji-Sheikh hasn’t taken to the streets of his native Michigan to celebrate a liberation that hasn’t fully manifested mere days after the American and Israeli bombing and elimination of the Ayatollah.
“I’m so far removed from that,” Haji-Sheikh said. “My mom is from Michigan and of Eastern European background. My dad is from Iran. But it’s like, he hasn’t been back since I was in eighth grade, so that’s a long time ago. That was when the Shah was still in power, mid-70s, ‘74 or ’75, because if he ever went back after that he never would have left. They would have held him, so there was no intention of going back.
“But if things change he might want to go, you never know.”
Despite being removed from any activism about what is happening in Iran Haji-Sheikh is an astute observer.
“My favorite thing I’m seeing right now on TV is the Iranians in America celebrating because there’s a chance, a glimpse, maybe a hope for freedom,” Haji-Sheikh said. “And you have these people in New York protesting. What are you protesting?”
Pourdanesh Thanks America, Israel
Pourdanesh retired from the NFL in 2000 after a seven-year career with the Redskins and Steelers. The six-foot-six and 312-pound offensive tackle was born in Tehran. He proudly tells people he was the NFL’s first Iranian-born player.
Pourdanesh is much more visible and open about his feelings about his country than others. And, bottom line, he loves that President Donald Trump is bombing the Islamic regime.
“This is a great day for all Iranians across the world,” Pourdanesh posted on his Instagram account on Saturday when the war began. “Thank you, President Trump, thank you to the nation of Israel. Thank you for everybody that has been standing up for my people, my brothers and sisters in Iran across the world. This is a great day.
“The infamous dictator is dead – the one person who has contributed to deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iranians and other people around the world, if not more. So, congratulations to my Iranian brothers and sisters. Now, go and take back the country.”
This message was not a one-off. Pourdanesh has been posting about what has been happening in Iran since January, when people in Iran took to the streets demanding liberty and the government’s thugs began killing them, with some estimates rising to 36,500 deaths.
Offensive lineman Shar Pourdanesh (68) of the Pittsburgh Steelers blocks against defensive lineman Jevon Kearse (90) of the Tennessee Titans during a game at Three Rivers Stadium on Sept. 24, 2000, in Pittsburgh. The Titans defeated the Steelers 23-20. (Photo by George Gojkovich/Getty Images)
‘Islam Does Not Represent The Iranian People’
“[The] Islamic Republic does not represent the Iranian people,” Pourdanesh said in another post. “Islam does not represent the Iranian people. For almost 50 years, the Iranian people and our country of Iran has been taken hostage by a terrorist regime, and it’s time to take that regime down.”
Pourdanesh was not available for comment on Monday. I did speak to a handful of other Iranian-Americans on Monday. They didn’t play in the NFL, but their opinions are no less valuable than those of former NFL players.
And these people, some of them participating in rallies on behalf of a free Iran, do not understand the thinking of some Americans and mainstream media.
One complained that media that reports on reparations for black Americans based on slavery in the 1800s dismisses the Islamic takeover of the American Embassy in 1979 as an old grievance.
Another said his brother lives in England, where Prime Minister Keir Starmer immediately called the American and Israeli attacks on the Ayatollah’s regime “illegal” but, as the head of the Crown Prosecution Service took years to do the same of Muslim rape (grooming) gangs in the country.
(Starmer announced a national “statutory inquiry” in June 2025).
Offensive lineman Shar Pourdanesh of the Washington Redskins looks on from the sideline during a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium on Sept. 7, 1997, in Pittsburgh. The Steelers defeated the Redskins 14-13. (Photo by George Gojkovich/Getty Images)
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Pourdanesh Calls Out NFL Silence
And finally, Pourdanesh put the NFL on blast. He said in yet another post that during his career, the NFL asked him to honor black history, asked him to stand for women’s rights, asked him to fight for equality for those who cannot defend themselves.
“I did everything they asked, and now I ask the NFL this: Where are you now? Why haven’t we heard a single word out of the NFL? NFL, Commissioner Roger Goodell, all the NFL teams out there, all the players who say they stand for social justice, where are you now?
“Why haven’t we heard a single word out of you with regard to the people who have been killed as of today? The very values you claim to espouse are being trampled right now. Why haven’t we heard a single word?”
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Sports
Commentary: Will Klein isn’t surprised he saved the Dodgers’ World Series dynasty
The day after he saved the Dodgers’ season, Will Klein was hungry. He ordered from Mod Pizza.
He drove over to pick up his order. The guy that handed him the pizza told him he looked just like Will Klein.
“You should just look at the name on the order,” Klein told him.
Chaos ensued.
“He actually started screaming,” Klein said. “He just started flipping out, which was funny.”
Thing is, if it were two days earlier, the guy would have had no idea what Klein looked like. Neither would you.
On Oct. 26, Klein was the last man in the Dodgers’ bullpen, a wild thing on his fourth organization in two years, a last-minute addition to the World Series roster.
On Oct. 27, the Dodgers played 18 innings, and the last man in the Dodgers’ bullpen delivered the game of his life: four shutout innings, holding the Toronto Blue Jays at bay until Freddie Freeman hit a walk-off home run.
Dodgers pitcher Will Klein celebrates during the 16th inning of Game 3 of the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 27.
(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)
When Klein returned to the clubhouse, Sandy Koufax walked over to shake hands and congratulate him.
That was Game 3 of the World Series. The Dodgers, the significantly older team, slogged through the next two games, batting .164 and losing both.
If not for Klein, that would have been the end. The Blue Jays would have won the series in five games, and there would have been no Kiké Hernández launching a game-ending double play on the run in Game 6, no Miguel Rojas tying home run and game-saving throw in Game 7, no Andy Pages game-saving catch and Will Smith winning home run in Game 7, no Yoshinobu Yamamoto winning Game 6 as a starter and Game 7 as a reliever.
There would have been no parade.
When Klein rescued the Dodgers, he had pitched one inning in the previous 30 days.
“You can never take your mind out of it,” he said. “You’ve got to stay prepared. Something might come up, and you don’t want to be the guy that gets thrown in the fire and just burns.”
The Dodgers are not shy about grabbing a minor league pitcher, telling him what he can do better and what he should stop doing, and seeing what sticks. If nothing sticks, the Dodgers are also not shy about spitting out the pitcher and designating him for assignment.
In his minor league career, Klein struck out 13 batters every nine innings, which is tremendous. He walked seven batters every nine innings, which is hideous.
The Dodgers scrapped his slider, mixed in a sweeper, and told him his arm was so good that he should stop trying to make perfect pitches and just let fly.
“A lot of times, pitchers are guilty of giving hitters too much credit, and hitters are guilty of giving pitchers too much credit,” said Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations.
“Part of our job is to show them information that helps instill some confidence. I think that really landed with Will.”
In his four September appearances with the Dodgers — after a minor-league stint to apply the team’s advice — he faced 17 batters, walked one, and did not give up a run. That’s why he isn’t buying the suggestion that something suddenly clicked in the World Series.
“Things were incrementally getting better,” he said, “and then you add that to the atmosphere. It amplifies it to 100. All the prep work and mental stuff that I had been doing, I finally got a chance to shine.”
Said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts: “He’s done it in the highest of leverage. You can’t manufacture that. You’ve got to live it and do it. So, since he’s done it, I think he’s got a real confidence.”
Dodgers pitcher Will Klein speaks during DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium on Jan. 31.
(John McCoy / Getty Images)
Klein last started a game three years ago, at triple A. After making 72 pitches in those four innings of Game 3, did he entertain the thought that maybe, just maybe, he was meant to be a starter after all?
“No,” he said abruptly. “I hate waiting four or five days to pitch and knowing exactly when I’m going to pitch.
“When I did, the anxiety just built. I want to go pitch. I hate sitting there and waiting. That kind of eats at you. I like being able to go out to the bullpen and have a chance to pitch every day.”
The Dodgers are so deep that Klein might not make the team out of spring training. Whatever happens, he’ll always have Game 3.
In the wake of that game, a fan wanted to buy a Klein jersey but could not find one. So the fan made one himself before Game 4, using white electrical tape on the back of a Dodger blue jersey. I showed Klein a picture.
“That’s cool,” Klein said. “That’s pretty funny.”
Dave Wong, a Dodgers fan living in San Francisco Giants territory, also wanted to buy a Klein jersey.
“They didn’t have a jersey for him,” Wong said.
He settled for the Dodger blue T-shirt he found online and wore it to last Friday’s Cactus League game against the Giants, with these words in white letters: “Will Klein Appreciation Shirt.”
This, then, would be a Will Klein Appreciation Column.
Sports
NBA player calls for Hawks to cancel their ‘Magic City’ strip club promotional night out of respect for women
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An NBA player has taken exception to an Atlanta Hawks promotional night, which is a nod to a famed strip club in the city.
The Hawks have “Magic City Night” scheduled for March 16 against the Orlando Magic, but a player for neither team isn’t too fond of paying tribute to a strip club, which has been famed for its late-night stories involving athletes, celebrities and more.
While the Hawks call it an ode to a “cultural institution,” San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet shared his displeasure in a letter posted on Medium.
Luke Kornet of the San Antonio Spurs reaches for the ball during the third quarter against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on Feb. 26, 2026 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Ishika Samant/Getty Images)
Kornet, a nine-year veteran and 2024 NBA champion with the Boston Celtics, called for the Hawks’ promotional night to be canceled later this month, saying that it is disrespectful to women to honor the strip club.
“In its press release, the Hawks failed to acknowledge that this place is, as the business itself boasts, “Atlanta’s premier strip club.” Given this fact, I would like to respectfully ask that the Atlanta Hawks cancel this promotional night with Magic City,” Kornet wrote in his post.
“The NBA should desire to protect and esteem women, many of whom work diligently every day to make this the best basketball league in the world. We should promote an atmosphere that is protective and respectful of the daughters, wives, sisters, mothers, and partners that we know and love.”
The Hawks boasted about the theme night in its press release, including a live performance by famous Atlanta rapper T.I., a co-branded, limited-edition hoodie and even the establishment’s “World Famous” lemon-pepper chicken wings in the arena.
A general view of signage with the State Farm Arena logo on Nov. 14, 2025, outside State Farm Arena, in Atlanta, GA. (Erica Denhoff/Icon Sportswire)
“This collaboration and theme night is very meaningful to me after all the work that we did to put together ’Magic City: An American Fantasy’,” said Hawks principal owner, filmmaker and actor, Jami Gertz, said in a press release. “The iconic Atlanta institution has made such an incredible impact on our city and its unique culture.”
Kornet wrote that allowing the night to continue “without protest would reflect poorly on us as an NBA community, “specifically in being complicit in the potential objectification and mistreatment of women in our society.”
Kornet wrote that “others throughout the league” were surprised by the Hawks’ decision to have this promotional night.
“We desire to provide an environment where fans of all ages can safely come and enjoy the game of basketball and where we can celebrate the history and culture of communities in good conscience. The celebration of a strip club is not conduct aligned with that vision,” he wrote.
Luke Kornet of the San Antonio Spurs defends against the Charlotte Hornets during their game at Spectrum Center on Jan. 31, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images)
The Hawks have seen good reception for the promotional night, as Tick Pick reported a get-in price was initially $10 for the game and has since skyrocketed to $94.
Kornet is in his first season with the Spurs, his sixth NBA team, where he has played mainly in a bench role. He averages 7.1 points and 6.5 rebounds per game across 50 contests.
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