| | | | | | | | | | | Axios Sports | | By Kendall Baker ·Sep 29, 2020 | | 👋 Good morning! Let's sports. Today's word count: 1,884 words (7 minutes). | | | | | | 1 big thing: 🏒 The Lightning win the Cup | | | | Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images | | | | The Lightning completed the most uniquely daunting gauntlet in NHL history on Monday night, beating the Stars 2-0 in Game 6 to capture the franchise's second Stanley Cup (2004). - Why it matters: It's the first team championship awarded in major North American sports since the start of the pandemic, coming exactly 200 days after the NHL halted play.
- The backdrop: A few months ago, the idea of hosting a "bubble" seemed outrageous, and when leagues unveiled plans to do so, it was met with skepticism. For the NHL to have successfully staged not one but two bubbles — playing 130 games in the process — is worth celebrating.
Notes: - Playoffs MVP: Victor Hedman won the Conn Smythe Award after anchoring Tampa Bay's defense all summer and scoring 10 postseason goals, the third-most ever by a defenseman.
- Testing: The NHL administered more than 31,000 COVID-19 tests, with zero positive cases among players, coaches and staff and just a handful among hotel, arena or restaurant employees.
The big picture: Monday's jubilant celebration capped off a five-year journey for the Lightning, who came up short time and again, with last season's shocking first-round exit serving as the lowlight. - 2015: Lost in the Stanley Cup Final
- 2016: Lost in Game 7 of the Conference Finals
- 2018: Lost in Game 7 of the Conference Finals (again)
- 2019: Swept by the Blue Jackets
- 2020: Bubble champions
Jon Cooper. Photo: Dave Sandford/NHLI via Getty Images What they're saying: Scott Van Pelt noticed Lightning coach Jon Cooper was wearing a Virginia hat postgame and asked if that was a message to his team. The Cavaliers, like the Lightning, won the title a year after suffering a historic upset. - "It was," said Cooper. "I acquired the hat right after we lost [some] 400-plus days ago. I don't know Virginia, I don't know Tony Bennett, but they've been something to hang hope on this whole time."
- "It was funny because Nikita Kucherov just said to me, 'Coop, where's that hat?' He doesn't know college basketball from anything. And I said, 'I've got that hat here with me, I've had it all the time.'"
More from Cooper: - On hoisting the Cup: "I couldn't believe it. I think it weighs like 35 pounds, but when it goes into your hands, it feels like a feather. Aside from my kids being born, it was the most remarkable feeling I've ever had."
- On playing in the bubble: "I missed my anniversary, I missed birthdays ... I missed the opening day of school. The whole baseball season took place during our time in the bubble. ... The 24 teams [that were here] will tell you this was the toughest one to win."
P.S. ... Cooper's story is remarkable. He played lacrosse in college and worked on Wall Street before becoming a lawyer. At age 32, he started coaching high school hockey as a favor to a judge. Two decades later, he's a Stanley Cup champion. | | | | | | | 2. 🚨 Buzzer wants to reinvent live sports consumption | | | | Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios | | | | Buzzer, a mobile technology platform that wants to connect fans through live sports — while helping existing media rights holders maximize value — has raised $4 million in seed funding, Axios has learned. - Investors: Lerer Hippeau and Sapphire Sport led the round, and the cap table also includes Sofi CEO Anthony Noto and former TimeWarner CEO Richard Parsons, among others.
- Founder/CEO: Bo Han came up with the idea for Buzzer after spending over seven years leading sports partnerships and media licensing at Twitter.
How it works: Buzzer's vision is to aggregate sports rights and sends fans personalized notifications to make it easy to pop into a live game, either through their existing subscription or micropayments. - Subscription: Fans can potentially authenticate their various subscriptions (cable, YouTubeTV, ESPN+, NBA League Pass, etc.)
- Micropayments: If fans don't have the subscription required, they can quickly make a micropayment starting at $0.99 to buy only and exactly what they want to watch.
Courtesy: Buzzer The big picture: The sports media business is built around live games. But with many young, cord-cutting fans opting instead to snack on highlights and social media content, the industry is in desperate need of innovation. - Buzzer wants to bring Gen Z back into the fold by essentially building a notifications-based layer on top of the current ecosystem that helps fans more easily jump into live action.
- "We all have those moments of panic where we hear about a close game, and consequently scramble to find the nearest TV," says Han. "This is what Buzzer is aiming to solve: simplifying access to ephemeral live moments in sports."
Between the lines: The key to Buzzer's success will be convincing leagues and the companies that pay millions of dollars to distribute their content that it will complement what's already out there, rather than disrupt the entire landscape. - Buzzer believes it can help cable companies and other rights holders retain customers by giving them more chances to feel the value of that subscription.
- And even users who opt for micropayments could grow tired of repeatedly paying $0.99, and ultimately buy a monthly cable or streaming subscription as a result.
The bottom line: Live games are monetized, but inaccessible to many cord-cutters. Highlights are not easily monetized, but accessible to all. Buzzer wants to create a third category somewhere in the middle called "short-form live." "Twitter is the ultimate sports bar. What I noticed, however, is that it's often like being inside of that sports bar, but not having control of the remote. Our mission is to provide all sports fans unmatched access to live action anytime, anywhere — and bring people together in the process." — Bo Han, Buzzer founder/CEO | | | | | | | 3. 📉 Sports has a Gen Z problem |  Reproduced from Morning Consult; Note: Gen Z survey margin of error ±3%, adults and millennials ±2%; Chart: Axios Visuals As I alluded to above, it's becoming increasingly clear that the media model upon which the sports business is built is not just shifting — it's crumbling. - By the numbers: Gen Zers are about half as likely as millennials to watch sports often, and twice as likely to never watch, according to a new Morning Consult survey.
- The big picture: 53% of the 1,000 Gen Zers surveyed considered themselves sports fans, compared with 63% of U.S. adults and 69% of millennials in a subsequent survey.
See the full survey. | | | | | | | A message from Axios | | How cities are dealing with the pandemic | | | | | | | As the coronavirus crisis continues, cities are finding ways to drive new economic growth while controlling the spread of cases. Axios Cities identifies the forces shaping our cities. Read it every Thursday from Kim Hart. Sign up here. | | | | | | 4. ⚾️ MLB playoffs: AL Wild Card preview | | | | Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Getty Images photos: Jonathan Daniel, Timothy T. Ludwig and Ron Schwane | | | | The playoffs start today, with the AL's four Wild Card series kicking off at 2pm ET, Axios' Jeff Tracy writes. - How it works: Best-of-three series, with all three games hosted by the higher seed on back-to-back-to-back days.
- The intrigue: This will be the last round to feature any semblance of home-field advantage (if that's even a thing without fans). The rest of the postseason will be played at neutral sites.
No. 6 Astros at No. 3 Twins (2pm, ABC) - Game 1 starters: Zack Greinke vs. Kenta Maeda. They're tied for second among AL pitchers in WAR.
- Key question: Just how important were those trash cans? In all seriousness, the Astros' team OPS (.720) fell in the bottom half of the league, with the normally-scorching Alex Bregman (.801), Carlos Correa (.709) and José Altuve (.629) failing to produce. Everyone's rooting for them to fail — how will they respond?
- Series odds (per PointsBet): Twins -120; Astros +100
No. 7 White Sox at No. 2 Athletics (3pm, ESPN) - Game 1 starters: Lucas Giolito vs. Jesús Luzardo. The former threw one of two no-hitters this season, while the latter is a rookie with tantalizing but inconsistent stuff.
- Key question: Will Chicago go boom or bust? The South Siders led the AL in HR, but were also second in K's. If the bats go cold early, they'll have to fight back in the latter innings against Oakland's MLB-best bullpen.
- Series odds: Athletics -135; White Sox +135
No. 8 Blue Jays at No. 1 Rays (5pm, TBS) - Game 1 starters: Hyun-Jin Ryu (2019 NL Cy Young runner-up) vs. Blake Snell (2018 AL Cy Young winner).
- Key question: Rays' arms or Jays' bats? Tampa's pitching staff is scary (second-most K's and second-best ERA in the AL), but so are the Jays young hitters, led by Bo Bichette, Cavan Biggio and Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
- Series odds: Rays -210; Jays +170
No. 5 Yankees at No. 4 Indians (7pm, ESPN) - Game 1 starters: Gerrit Cole vs. Shane Bieber. The Yankees' $324 million man vs. the runaway favorite for this year's Cy Young.
- Key question: Will the real Yankees please stand up? They were 26-14 in the first and last thirds of the year, but 7-13 in the middle. They've also had little consistency outside 1B Luke Voit (22 HR), 2B D.J. LeMahieu (.364 BA) and RF Clint Frazier (.905 OPS). To win, they'll need Cole to be excellent and the Indians pitchers not to be too dominant.
- Series odds: Yankees -135; Indians +110
Go deeper: | | | | | | | 5. 🌍 Photos 'round the world | | Photo: Rob Carr/Getty Images BALTIMORE — Patrick Mahomes (31/42, 385 yards, 5 total TDs) put on a show, as the Chiefs dismantled the Ravens, 34-20, snapping Baltimore's 14-game regular-season winning streak while extending their own streak to 12 (including playoffs). - Wild stat: Mahomes is now 10-0 in September during his career, with 32 passing TDs and zero interceptions. The guy is a cheat code.
- Advantage, Patrick: Lamar Jackson has four career regular-season losses. Three are against Mahomes.
- Go deeper: Andy Reid is an unstoppable magician (SI)
Photo: Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images PARIS — Serena Williams and Rafael Nadal eased into the French Open second round, as they chase their 24th and 20th Grand Slam singles titles, respectively. Photo: Etsuo Hara/Getty Images TOKYO — All Japan Pro Wrestling's Champion Carnival is the longest-running singles tournament in pro wrestling, having been held annually since 1973. | | | | | | | 6. 😷 Global COVID-19 death toll crosses 1 million |  Data: Our World in Data; Chart: Sara Wise/Axios Confirmed deaths from COVID-19 crossed 1 million globally on Monday, per data from Johns Hopkins, Axios' Dave Lawler writes. - By the numbers: More than half of those deaths have come in four countries: the U.S. (204,762), Brazil (141,741), India (95,542) and Mexico (76,430). The true global death toll is likely far higher.
- Worth noting: Adjusted for population, Peru, Belgium, Bolivia, Spain and Brazil have had the world's deadliest outbreaks to date. The U.S. is eighth and Mexico is 10th.
| | | | | | | 7. 📊 By the numbers | | Giphy - ⚾️ 21 years, 338 days: Nationals star Juan Soto (.351 average) is the youngest player to ever win the NL batting title, passing Brooklyn Dodgers outfielder Pete Reiser, who hit .343 in 1941 at the age of 22 years, 192 days.
- 🍻 29,000 lost bars: At the end of 2019, there were ~95,000 sports bars in the U.S. By the end of 2020, that's expected to drop to ~66,000 due to pandemic-fueled closures, The Athletic's Bill O'Shea reports (subscription).
- 💵 $3.7 billion: Caesars has made a $3.7 billion offer to takeover U.K.-based William Hill, WSJ reports (subscription). Caesars currently owns 20% of the two companies' joint U.S. venture.
- 🏀 4 Black coaches: With Doc Rivers out in L.A., there are now just four Black NBA head coaches: Lloyd Pierce (Hawks), J.B. Bickerstaff (Cavaliers), Dwane Casey (Pistons) and Monty Williams (Suns). That's down from eight when bubble play began and a far cry from the high-water mark of 14 back in 2012.
Screenshot: @DocRivers (Twitter) | | | | | | | 8. Sept. 29, 1954: ⚾️ "The Catch" | | Photo: NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images 66 years ago today, Willie Mays made the most iconic catch in baseball history — an over-the-shoulder grab in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series. - Mays' New York Giants were tied 2-2 with the Cleveland Indians in the eighth inning, with two on and no outs, when Vic Wertz crushed a fly ball to the Polo Grounds' uniquely deep center field.
- Mays tracked down the 425-foot drive to stop the go-ahead run from scoring, and the Giants hit a walk-off HR two innings later before going on to sweep the series.
Diagram of Mays' catch. Photo: Bettman Archive/Getty Images Go deeper: | | | | | | | 9. 🍿 Movie trivia | | | | Photo: Dave Sandford/NHLI via Getty Images | | | | The Lightning last won the Stanley Cup in 2004. - Question: What was the top-grossing film at the global box office that year?
- Hint: Animated sequel.
Answer at the bottom. | | | | | | | 10. 🚪 Three doors | | Giphy Pick a door, any door. | | | | | | | A message from Axios | | How cities are dealing with the pandemic | | | | | | | As the coronavirus crisis continues, cities are finding ways to drive new economic growth while controlling the spread of cases. Axios Cities identifies the forces shaping our cities. Read it every Thursday from Kim Hart. Sign up here. | | | | Talk tomorrow, Kendall "Cord-cutting millennial" Baker Trivia answer: "Shrek 2" | | Invite friends to follow Axios Sports Use your personal link to track how many readers you bring into the community You currently have 00 referrals. Share with a friend For questions email referralsupport@axios.com. Participation in the Axios Sports Referral Program constitutes your acceptance of the Axios Terms and Conditions of Use, which can be viewed here. | | | | Axios thanks our partners for supporting our newsletters. Sponsorship has no influence on editorial content. Axios, 3100 Clarendon Blvd, Suite 1300, Arlington VA 22201 | | | You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from Axios. Change your preferences or unsubscribe here. | | | Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up now to get Axios in your inbox. | | | | Follow Axios on social media: | | | | | |