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- The 1958 National Football League championship game between the Baltimore Colts and the New York Giants is known as "The Greatest Game Ever Played". It was the first (and only) professional football title game to ever result in an overtime, featured 17 men who were ultimately inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and included wild swings of momentum and the Colts execution of their two-minute drill to tie the game in the closing seconds of regulation time. To commemorate the 50th anniversary, ESPN films paired eleven of the games participants with current players from the Indianapolis Colts and New York Giants to compare the nature of the sport 50 years later, as well as sportscasters, reporters, photographers, spectators, cheerleaders, majorettes and marching band members who contributed their reminiscences.
- When Skip Bertman arrived in the summer of 1983 as LSU's new head baseball coach, the program was mired in mediocrity. From those beginnings, he would turn the Tigers into a powerhouse, winning 5 national titles in a 10-year span.
- One hour special of the most exciting and important events in and around the Super Bowl, arranged in chronological order and totaling exactly 40 minutes.
- Every Journey Has a Story. Kate Ziegler swam over 200,000 miles to get there. Tyson Gay ran over 25,000 miles to get there. Donald Robinson broke more bones than he can remember to get there. For America's hopefuls the trip to Beijing began long before this summer. Every night for two weeks leading up to the opening ceremonies, MOJO in conjunction with USA TODAY profiles Team USA's medal hopefuls.
- Rudy Macklin's jersey is hanging from the rafters at LSU's Pete Maravich Assembly Center, and for good reason: Macklin is the school's all-time leading rebounder and second-leading scorer. Macklin led the Tigers to the 1981 Final Four in Philadelphia, where an injured finger hampered him in a semifinal loss to Indiana. Back then, the NCAA Tournament included a third-place game, and that's where the trouble started for Macklin. Just before the consolation game against Virginia, President Ronald Reagan was shot, and after the loss, Macklin was asked if the news might have affected the team. His widely-reported response-"He's no kin of mine"-was so blown out of proportion that he feared for his life. In "No Kin to Me," Macklin talks about the fight to restore his honor.
- Even non-Yankee fans will appreciate the powerful story of one of baseball's silent warriors. A throwback reliever with two calling cards: a cut fastball and abiding faith.
- The NFL's premier quarterback reveals the mental game plan that has made the New England Patriots three-time Super Bowl champions under his inspiring leadership.
- Hours after President Reagan was shot, LSU and Virginia played in the now-defunct Final Four consolation game. After the game, LSU's Rudy Macklin made a comment regarding the president that would put him on a fight to restore his honor.