Just 14 people were arrested after hundreds of Trump-supporting rioters overran U.S. Capitol and forced members of Congress to seek shelter.
Author: Nancy Armour, USA TODAY
Opinion: Election defeat makes it official, Kelly Loeffler is bad for WNBA’s business
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said last summer that league wouldn’t force out Kelly Loeffler because she’s not involved in day-to-day operations.
Opinion: With jobs opening, will NFL teams do more than talk about hiring head coaches of color?
In a league where more than two-thirds of players are Black, the NFL has only three minority coaches following the Chargers’ firing of Anthony Lynn.
Baker Mayfield, Steph Curry among athletes getting creative with charitable efforts
COVID-19 restrictions mean athletes can’t interact with fans, but many are finding different ways to give back during the holidays.
Opinion: These women changed sports, and the world, for good in 2020
It is not accurate to call 2020 a watershed in women’s quest for respect and recognition in sports, but there is no denying there has been a shift.
Opinion: Sports will never be the same after 2020. Here’s the good and bad
The sports world changed in 2020 largely out of necessity because of COVID-19. Some of it should be kept and other parts left behind.
Opinion: USOPC is right to back athletes who protest for racial equity, social change
Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter prohibits athletes from any kind of “demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda.”
Opinion: Colin Kaepernick’s activism moves to freezer section with Ben & Jerry’s flavor
Change the Whirled is non-dairy, made from vegan, caramel sunflower butter base with fudge chips and swirls of graham cracker, chocolate cookies.
Settlement means U.S. women’s national soccer team will no longer have to play matches on artificial turf
USWNT, U.S. Soccer reach agreement to settle claims of unfair working conditions, including no more games on turf and equal number of charter flights.
Opinion: With Denver QB fiasco, NFL refusing to acknowledge reality of COVID
NFL’s troubles continue as Baltimore Ravens place six more on reserve/COVID-19 list while Denver Broncos will be without all of their quarterbacks.