Connect with us

Sports

Serena Williams throws shade at Harrison Butker while celebrating women's sports at ESPYs: 'We don't need you'

Published

on

Serena Williams throws shade at Harrison Butker while celebrating women's sports at ESPYs: 'We don't need you'

Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

Just as the media storm on Harrison Butker cooled off, the ESPYs made it rain all over again.

The Kansas City Chiefs kicker drew controversy when he gave a commencement speech at Benedictine College that included encouraging female graduates to embrace being a “homemaker.” The note received tons of backlash, as it almost became a rallying cry that women should pursue professional opportunities and shouldn’t be afraid of doing so.

Advertisement

At the 2024 ESPYs on Thursday night, tennis legends Venus and Serena Williams, and actress Quinta Brunson, were on stage in celebration of women’s sports, which have risen drastically in popularity.

“You can enjoy women’s sports, just like any other sport, because they are sports,” Venus quipped on the stage.

Tennis superstar Serena Williams threw shade at Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker during the ESPYs on Thursdays while on stage to celebrate women’s sports. (Getty Images)

But, while Venus was speaking, her younger sister seemed like she couldn’t hold back laughter.

Advertisement

“Except for you, Harrison Butker, we don’t need you,” Serena said, with the kicker in attendance.

Added Brunson, “At all. Like, ever.”

The jab got a pleasant reaction from the crowd.

He also criticized the LGBTQ community and President Biden for his stance on abortion, while adding, “Things like abortion, IVF, surrogacy, euthanasia, as well as a growing support for the degenerate cultural values and media all stem from pervasiveness of disorder.”

Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker

Butker remained unapologetic for his remarks during his commencement speech at Benedictine College, despite receiving a lot of backlash. (Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Butker remained unapologetic for his speech when he made another public appearance a couple of weeks later, saying it was “not people, but Jesus Christ who I’m trying to please.”

Advertisement

“If it wasn’t clear that the timeless Catholic values are hated by many, it is now,” Butker added, noting he had become a “more polarizing” figure due to his loud beliefs.

Harrison Butker warms up

Harrison Butker #7 of the Kansas City Chiefs warms up prior to Super Bowl LVIII against the San Francisco 49ers at Allegiant Stadium on Feb. 11 in Las Vegas. ( Perry Knotts/Getty Images)

Butker’s jersey sales have since skyrocketed on NFL Shop, while many in the media remain split about the speech.

He played in his third Super Bowl this year with Kansas City, helping the Chiefs win back-to-back titles in February.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Advertisement

Sports

Behind McKenzie Long's Olympic moment, a mother's love and a profound grief

Published

on

Behind McKenzie Long's Olympic moment, a mother's love and a profound grief

The fabric was so soft and official. The polyamide-spandex blend hugged, yet still breathed. The speedsuit’s pink piping and yellow Adidas logo practically glowed against the kit’s deep purple, a color Adidas dubs “preloved fig.” McKenzie Long put it on and modeled in the nearest mirror, seeing how it complimented her skin tone, her muscles, the tattoo sleeve covering her right arm.

This speedsuit could be bought for about $300. But her cost was much more. Her price was all of her discipline. An untold number of brutal workouts. The pain in every defeat. The hunger remaining after victory. A life devoid of typical indulgences. But her reward, one of them, came shortly before the U.S. Olympic track and field trials. Long turned pro and signed an endorsement deal with the sports apparel giant. The inaugural donning of her speedsuit punctuated the milestone.

Oh, what she’d have given for her mother to lay the first eyes on it, have the honor of first reaction.

But Tara Elizabeth Jones, neé Murphy, died on Jan. 29 of a heart attack. She was a little over two months from her 46th birthday. When Long left her mother’s home in Hawaii over Christmas break, they both envisioned the success Long would capture. Mom spoke her Olympic dreams into existence, breathing confidence into her daughter’s hidden areas of doubt. Mrs. Jones earned this breakthrough as much as her daughter.

“When I first put this pro uniform on,” Long, 24, said last month. Her voice trembled until it cracked. Tears welled to the brim of her mascara. “I was like, ‘I really wish you could see me in my pro uniform.’”

Advertisement

Grief is reputed for its sucker punches. A master in the art of unbeknownst, its specialty is sneaking up on the grieving, pouncing on the smallest triggers. A song. A piece of candy. A similar laugh. A certain word or how it’s delivered. A random gesture.

Long is increasingly familiar with grief’s stealthy ways. Just before the women’s 100-meter final at trials, she waited in a designated area before the race. One of the officials at Hayward Field, on the campus of the University of Oregon, used the opportunity to gift Long a bracelet. This unknown person learned of Long’s story, how she’d sprinted into notoriety despite the recent death of her mother, and was moved to kindness. The bracelet she gave Long included an encouraging message and was delivered with comforting words.

Suddenly, Long’s focus shifted from pre-race intensity to a brewing sadness she struggled to suppress.

“It was a stone bracelet, and it had a meaning behind it,” Long said. “And I was reading it. … It was, like, an empowerment bracelet. She said, “You’re in my prayers’ and all this sentimental stuff. I was like, ‘Dang, I’m trying to lock in.’”

But grief is also bold enough to show up in significant times. To wait in the open. To stare its targets in the face, challenging them to handle the deluge of emotion.

Advertisement

“When I first put this pro uniform on,” Long said last month, “I was like, ‘I really wish (my mom) could see me in my pro uniform.’” (Patrick Smith / Getty Images)

It sure keeps meeting Long in her biggest moments. At the 2024 NCAA outdoor championships, where she became a hot name in the world of track and field by winning a national title in the 100 meters, the 200 meters and the 4×100 relay. In her room in Eugene, Ore., after she missed making the women’s 100-meter final at trials (by .07 seconds) and could’ve used a bosom on which to collapse from the disappointment. After she’d taken third in the 200-meter final, beating out Sha’Carri Richardson for a spot on her first Olympic team.

The next climax of Long’s journey is upon her in Paris. This is the part carved from her fantasies, what’s been driving her on this incredible run. It’s full of monumental occasions. Arriving at the Olympic Village. Putting on her red, white and blue uniform with “USA” across her chest. Stepping to the blocks on this most massive stage, against the best in the world.

“That’s gonna be another monumental moment,” she said. “Another hard-reality moment.”

Grief will certainly stalk her in those times, prey on her desire for her mother’s presence and anchoring voice. Mom always knew just what to say to calm Kenzie down when she was going haywire before a meet.

Or turn her up.

Advertisement

“You’re McKenzie Long. They should be afraid of you.”

“Piece of cake” has become their mantra. That’s how mom classified her favorite sprinter’s lofty ambitions.

That’s why Long is so determined to make sure her mother is with her. Every step of the way. She’s been known to find a private spot in the stands before the race so she could talk to her mom. The conversation continues at the starting block.

“Let’s do this, mom.”

“You got this baby girl.”

Advertisement

When Long crosses the finish line, she’s got more words for the maternal spirit she keeps close. Then in interviews, she speaks of her freely, though it may hurt. Because keeping her mother present is preserving a critical element of how she made it here.

Grief can be a consumer of energy, a larcenist of zeal, powerful enough to buckle the strongest. Many people need it to run its course and vacate before resuming their usual excellence. Long, though, is among those who can forge through grief and emerge better than ever. A heavy heart hasn’t slowed her down.

She’s been nothing short of spectacular the last couple of months. She had a dominant final season at Ole Miss, capped by a performance at the NCAA championships that put her name on the marquee. Then she was one of the darlings of the Olympic trials. She is convinced it’s with the aid of her mother. She can hear her voice in the wind. Feel her like a sensation.

It seems, for Long, the same thing that makes you fast makes you cry.

“Going into these past couple months,” Long explained, “(I’m) just not separating my mom, including her in everything that I do. … Doing the little things that remind me of my mom and include that into the track and field world. And, honestly, that’s helped me so much. Letting me feel her. Letting me include her. Hearing her voice play back in my head. It pushes me through.”

Advertisement
Gabby Thomas

Gabby Thomas and McKenzie Long embrace after the 200-meter at U.S. Olympic trials. Both qualified for Paris, where competition begins Sunday. (Patrick Smith / Getty Images)

Jones’ death has been a crushing blow for many in her circle. In addition to her four children — Jake, Isaiah, McKenzie and Karmen — Jones spent her life helping people, including the most in need. As a psychiatric travel nurse, she provided care and support for people struggling with mood and psychotic disorders, substance abuse and even dementia. Travel Psych RNs work everywhere from hospitals to homes, clinics to schools.

Jones’ career matched her reputation as empathetic. It was reciprocated in February as 92 people donated towards her funeral expenses, raising more than $6,700 for her service back in Ironton, Ohio.

“Tara was a cherished friend whose infectious laughter and genuine empathy brightened the lives of those around her,” her husband wrote. “Whether lending a listening ear or offering words of encouragement, Tara’s presence had a profound impact on everyone she encountered.”

No one mistook her kindness for weakness, though. Jones was a straight shooter with little to no hesitancy speaking her heart. She celebrated her ninth wedding anniversary with a transparent post to listeners of the Cup of Jones podcast with her husband about the hurt she’s endured in her marriage. She talked openly about having bariatric surgery — an operation that alters the digestive system to induce weight loss — last August and what she deemed a harmful relationship with food. The surgery seemed to be a physical and emotional success. She created a playlist for her workouts — “Don’t Be A Lazy B—” is what she titled it — including songs by Lizzo and Cardi B. Long was listening to it during trials.

The jewels of a queen’s crown are her children. Jones’ oldest, Jake Long, played football at West Virginia, and now he’s an entrepreneur. Jones moved the family from Ironton to Columbus so he could train at a higher level. Isaiah is a dancer and rave thrower who openly talks about thriving with autism. Karmen, the baby, is a burgeoning model.

Advertisement

And, of course, the nation now knows her beloved Kenzie.

Her explosion onto the scene wasn’t a fluke. It’s been a slow grind. Steady progression made sturdy by adversity. Long spent four years in North Carolina State’s prestigious program, working her way into an All-American. In May of 2021, she had hip surgery to correct an issue bad enough for hip replacement to be considered. A year later, she set North Carolina State’s record in the 200 meters (23.00 seconds). But she didn’t qualify for NCAAs.

With two years of eligibility remaining, Long left NC State — with two bachelor’s degrees, one in psychology, the other in communication. She transferred to Ole Miss as a graduate student.

As a Rebel, she grew into elite.

Her best 100-meter time at N.C. State: 11.49 seconds. At Ole Miss, she dropped it 11.00 in 2023. In the 200 meters, she never posted a time below 23 seconds time at N.C. State. But in 2023 at Ole Miss, she got it down to 22.31.

Advertisement
McKenzie Long

Running for Ole Miss, McKenzie Long was 2024 NCAA outdoor champion in the 100- and 200-meter. She’ll run the 200 in Paris. (Morgan Engel / NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

Then came the NCAA championships. Long looked like a future star, best in America. She won a national title in the 100 meters (with a personal best time of 10.91 seconds) and in the 200 meters (another personal best, 21.83 seconds). She also ran the anchor leg for Ole Miss’ national title in the 4×100 relay. All of this went down in about 90 minutes. Piece of cake.

Suddenly, Long — who is also leaving Ole Miss with two master’s degrees, one in criminal justice and one in public health — emerged as one of the fastest women in the world and was named a semifinalist for the coveted Bowerman Award.

“I have to do a double take,” Long’s dad, Michael, told WSAZ News in their hometown. “Because, like, that’s my daughter. It absolutely blows my mind. … She really didn’t have a lot of time to grieve and go through the grieving process. To push through that, I just look forward to seeing her compete with those Olympians.”

Something’s revealing about her best event being the 200 meters. Speed with a shot of endurance. Long’s fast enough for the 100. Her personal best time would’ve gotten her to the final at trials, where anything is possible. She was so close, she spent the next day or so crying from the letdown.

But the 100 was just the appetizer for her main course. The 200 also requires elite speed, but something more. Running the curve demands additional technique and makes lane position more relevant. But the 200 can also be more forgiving. Rough starts aren’t quite as punishing. Because the 200 is about finishing. Exploding out of the turn. Digging deep for the final stretch. Hitting top speed and holding it. The last 100. The last 60. The last 20. It’s a test of strength and will, to be fast farther.

Advertisement

The finish is when Long’s potential becomes visceral. Determination chisels her jaw. Power concentrates in her eyes. Sometimes, you can see her dig deeper. Summon something extra.

She knows from where that extra comes. Whenever she grabs her phone, she kisses the picture of her mother on the screen before unlocking it. Mrs. Jones looks so happy in that picture, smiling on a beach in Hawaii.

“Mom, I made a commitment to you, and as the strong woman you raised, there is no excuses,” Long wrote on Instagram a week before her mother’s “Celebration of Life” service. “I got a very powerful guardian angel by my side through it all and I know you will never fail me. I live through you. I got you. I got us.”

An open book like her mother, she’s talked of her bouts with anxiety, and how overwhelming the transition to professional has been. Not to mention the daunting prospect of running against fellow American Gabby Thomas, Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson, Saint Lucia’s Julien Alfred and Great Britain’s Daryll Neita.

All of this while grief nips at her heels.

Advertisement

“I’m so inspired by her story,” Gabby Thomas said of Long. “I watched her at the NCAAs. There are so many amazing female athletes in our sport, and some of them just really stick out and stand out. And she’s one of them. I’m so touched by her season and how hard she’s worked and what she’s overcome. … She has something. She has something really special.”

She could very well earn her first Olympic medal. At a minimum, her story will be told to millions while she’s in Paris, her name increasingly known in the track and field world and in her home country.

Long could be one of the star American women in track and field. She’s got the talent for it. She’s got the drive for it. She’s got the resilience for it.

She’s also got the mom for it. Piece of cake.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Gabby Thomas, Olympic 200-meter favorite, is firmly in the spotlight — and ready for it

Advertisement

(Top photo of McKenzie Long during U.S. Olympic trials: Charlie Neibergall / AP)

Continue Reading

Sports

Man who stole Jackie Robinson statue from park sentenced to nearly 15 years in prison

Published

on

Man who stole Jackie Robinson statue from park sentenced to nearly 15 years in prison

Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

The Kansas man who stole a Jackie Robinson statue from a park has been sentenced to 15 years behind bars.

A judge sentenced Ricky Alderete Friday. Most of that jail time is related to another burglary that happened days after the statue theft.

Advertisement

Alderete was involved in a burglary on Feb. 1 he says was fueled by a fentanyl addiction, and 13½ years of the sentence is related to that burglary.

The statue was snatched in January.  (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

“I let fentanyl take over me and made a lot of poor decisions. I am not going to deny that. I never meant to hurt anybody,” he said in court Friday. “I am embarrassed, I’m ashamed. Whatever you do today, I accept. I am ready for that. I believe I am where I am supposed to be right now because, at the rate I am going, I might have been dead.”

In May, Alderete pleaded guilty to aggravated burglary, aggravated criminal damage to property, interference with law enforcement, criminal damage to property, theft, making a false writing and identity theft in the statue heist.

Advertisement

The statue was snatched from McAdams Park in January and was later “dismantled and burned,” according to authorities.

The Wichita Fire Department was called to a trash can fire at Garvey Park around 8:30 a.m. Jan. 30, where firefighters discovered remnants of the stolen statue.

Site of Jackie Robinson statue in Kansas

Police announced Feb. 13 the arrest of a man in the theft of the Jackie Robinson statue that later was found dismantled and burned.  (Travis Heying/The Wichita Eagle via AP, File)

REIGNING CY YOUNG AWARD WINNER BLAKE SNELL THROWS NO-HITTER

The statue was cut from its base, leaving only bronze replicas of the legendary baseball player’s cleats behind. Robinson broke the Major League Baseball’s color barrier when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. The franchise moved in 1957 to California, where it continues as the Los Angeles Dodgers.

After the original statue was stolen, donations to replace it rolled in, including $100,000 from Major League Baseball. The new statue will be unveiled Monday, with Joe Torre and CC Sabathia expected to be in attendance.

Advertisement

The bronze cleats that were left behind when the original statue was stolen are now on display at the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.

Jackie Robinson watching on the field

This March 4, 1946, file photo shows Jackie Robinson of the Montreal Royals in Sanford, Fla. (AP Photo/Bill Chaplis, File)

In the majors, Robinson hit .313, won an MVP in 1949 and was named an All-Star six times. He also was a Negro League All-Star, giving him seven all-star nods in professional baseball.

Robinson died in 1972 at the age of 53, and it is widely thought that the stress he endured throughout his playing days contributed to an early death.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Rams will return to Cal Lutheran after new Woodland Hills training facility is delayed

Published

on

Rams will return to Cal Lutheran after new Woodland Hills training facility is delayed

The Rams were supposed to break training camp and head to their new facility in Woodland Hills.

Not so fast.

The Rams are returning to Cal Lutheran in Thousand Oaks because the Woodland Hills site is not ready, coach Sean McVay said Saturday.

“The most important thing was making sure that when we do move into Woodland Hills, our players have everything that they need so that it doesn’t take away from our preparation,” McVay said after the final training-camp practice at Loyola Marymount, adding, “As long as we got the film and the guys have everything that they need, that’s all we really care about as coaches.”

Advertisement

On Sunday, the Rams are scheduled to have a joint practice with the Chargers at their new facility in El Segundo.

Plans to begin practicing in Woodland Hills next week were scrapped because the Rams are still awaiting permits that will probably be in place in five or six days, Rams president Kevin Demoff said.

But with the Rams scheduled to have joint practices with the Dallas Cowboys, another one with the Chargers and another before the final preseason game against the Texans, the team is now scheduled to move to Woodland Hills after the game against the Texans on Aug. 24.

“It’s as much whether it’s ready versus when it’s optimal for the team to move,” Demoff said, adding, “We just made the decision that was least disruptive to the team.”

The change of venue could be a distraction for a Rams team that is expected to build on last season’s better-than-anticipated 10-7 record and playoff appearance.

Advertisement

The Rams will move from Loyola Marymount to Cal Lutheran to Woodland Hills as they prepare for a Sept. 8 opener at Detroit.

“It’s as big a deal as we make it,” McVay said, adding, “I don’t worry about it. … I don’t anticipate it being anything that will affect us.”

In Cal Lutheran, the Rams are going back to what was supposed to be a temporary situation after they moved back to Southern California from St. Louis in 2016.

In the near-decade since, they have thrived, making two Super Bowl appearances and winning one, despite operating out of the 53,000-square-foot facility that resembles a trailer park with 75 modular buildings and two fields.

Those fields have been maintained, Demoff said. Arsenal practiced there before matches in Southern California last week.

Advertisement

Etc.

Starting right tackle Rob Havenstein is sidelined because of an ankle injury suffered on Thursday and is week-to-week, McVay said, similar to starting left guard Jonah Jackson (shoulder). Left tackle Alaric Jackson (ankle) also will not participate in the practice with the Chargers. … Defensive lineman Desjaun Johnson returned an interception for a touchdown.

Continue Reading

Trending