Deron Snyder is an award-winning journalist and Washington Times sports columnist with more than 25 years of experience. He has worked at USA Today and his column was syndicated in Gannett's 80-plus newspapers from 2000-2009, appearing in The Arizona Republic, The Indianapolis Star, The Detroit News and many others. Follow Deron on Twitter @DeronSnyder or email him at deronwashtimes@gmail.com.
Burns retold the history of baseball in a nine-part miniseries in 1994 and returns to the sport to highlight Robinson, whose debut in 1947 played a key role in the civil rights movement.
Hardy tried to defend himself and deflect criticism in a recent sit-down interview with ESPN, but between his wild claims and incoherent rambling, he didn't show the slightest bit of remorse for his behavior.
The Wizards' patch-and-repair effort this season looked promising, but it has resulted in another mediocre season that will likely end without a playoff berth or a draft pick.
UConn's dominance became a source of debate again within the past week, but the increased level of competition between other schools still provides plenty of drama and interest.
A number of cities across the country have banned the use of smokeless tobacco in places such as ballparks, but governing how players adapt to it infringes upon their freedom of choice.
The Terrapins' season would fall short of early expectations with a defeat, but the campaign wouldn't be a true failure. Reaching the second weekend was never a given, regardless of observers' thoughts in November.
The year is 2016 but too many of us are stuck in a time warp, longing for a return to the bygone era when open hostility to women and minorities were the norm. When public indignation was reserved for the moments those groups forgot their place, not when powers-that-be insisted they stay there.
League representatives long denied a link between concussions and neurological disease until a top official acknowledged one this week. Now it's time for the NFL to make up for it.
The NCAA could give even a small part of the $11 billion it will receive to televise the men's basketball tournament to its players, yet chooses to hide behind amateurism rules to exploit them.
Goodell has remained adamant in his pursuit of punishment for Patriots quarterback Tom Brady as a result of the "Deflategate" scandal, which now dates back 14 months.
Drafting Griffin seemed to be exactly what was needed in 2012, but four years later, following the quarterback's release, it's astonishing how quickly the entire saga unfolded.
Coaches at Ivy League schools reportedly approved a rule change that would ban tackling in practices, and if the rule is implemented, it could go a long way in ensuring players' long-term mental health.
Desmond bet on his future in trying to secure a long-term, big-money contract offer from the Nationals, but that worked against him when he was forced to settle for a one-year offer from the Rangers.
The NFL has run a series of commercials as of late, emphasizing that "Football is family," yet everything it does seems to run counter to the idea that everything is done for everyone's benefit.
Players should be applauded for wanting to end their careers on their own terms and not as the result of injury, but we suffer less when they're done gracefully.
The Nationals were fortunate to have back-to-back No. 1 picks in 2009 and 2010 and select Strasburg and Bryce Harper, but it appears, for now, that Harper will be the only one to stick around next season.
Six women filed a lawsuit last week against Tennessee's athletic department, continuing an unbearable and indefensible trend among athletes on college campuses.
One argument is for players to improve their free throw shooting, but the strategy would still ruin a game's flow and rhythm. That's why the time has come to change the fouling rules.
The Broncos' defense punished quarterback Cam Newton and the Panthers throughout Super Bowl 50, tightening the screws on the passing game and yielding few yards in a dominant performance.
The problem isn't recognizing that Newton, the Panthers' quarterback, is black. It's that a series of assumptions, preconceptions and stereotypes typically accompany that label.