MoreRSS

site iconDefectorModify

Defector is an employee-owned sports and culture website.
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of Defector

The Chinese GP Proves Mercedes Domination Might Still Be Fun

2026-03-16 02:26:26

It is difficult to be a conscientious viewer of Formula 1, a sport which occurs in discrete windows, not all that frequently, and on tracks with their own variable characteristics that can skew results any which way. To be specific, any possible conclusion to be made off the back of the Chinese Grand Prix that took place Sunday in the wee hours of Eastern Daylight Time is negotiating a sample size of two races, and should be treated as such. And with that disclaimer disclaimed: Mercedes is running away with the championship.

Spectators who watched F1 prior to 2021 will be familiar with the horrors of watching two Mercedes cars finish a race well over 10 seconds ahead of the nearest car. There was the infamous HAM BOT VER—Lewis Hamilton, Valtteri Bottas, Max Verstappen—podium trio that defined 2020, and then HAM ROS VET—Hamilton, Nico Rosberg, Sebastian Vettel—before that. Worse, Mercedes rarely had or has the decency to be affected by internal beeves with any sort of consistency, especially when the team starts a season firing on all cylinders. Even one of the most noxious teammate pairings in F1 history, Hamilton and Rosberg, couldn't break the stalwart Mercedes winning machine.

If there is potential for some upset to the Mercedes formula, it will be on slower circuits later in the season. And it is not unheard for a team to make major gains even midway through a single season, as McLaren did back in 2023. Indeed, Ferrari look to have a couple of upgrades in the pipeline that the team aggressively trotted out to test during the Chinese GP. But to seriously contend in the championship, those upgrades would have to be fully ready sooner rather than later.

Nobody’s Having More Fun Than The Italians

2026-03-16 00:56:32

The World Baseball Classic plays it fast and loose with nationality, even by the standards of ordinary sporting events. Despite the urge to romanticize each element of baseball, this works out to be a broadly neutral-value statement. Lineage, the possibility of citizenship, and legacies of colonialism are how teams like the Netherlands, Great Britain, and Italy have filled out their rosters. They are also how the viewer encounters such concepts as Team Great Britain captain Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Team Italy captain Vinnie Pasquantino.

Which is to say that loose nationality rules in a baseball tournament don't really matter, but can ultimately be very funny. The plethora of Italian-Americans on Team Italy made the team's surprise 8-6 victory over Team USA that much more amusing. Here are some familiar guys—Italian ace Aaron Nola! Italian up-and-comer Jeffrey Alan "Jac" Caglianone!—putting the beatdown on some superstars. It arguably would've been even funnier if the Italians lost to Mexico on Thursday to eliminate the U.S. from contention entirely, but it is a sporting event, after all.

"You're welcome, USA," Pasquantino, who hit three homers, said after the game, looking directly into the camera. (He also elaborated on what he hoped to receive from Kansas City Royals teammate and Team USA member Bobby Witt Jr. in thanks: "I'm hoping he's got a room key for me at his hotel.") No one can deny Pasquantino's commitment to the Azzurri: He also played on Team Italy back in 2023 and has reportedly been evangelizing the team to all the Italian Americans he encounters in the league, to evidently great success. Not only are they winning, they are also having fun.

Auston Matthews Is Hurt And The Maple Leafs Are Burnt Toast

2026-03-14 01:01:19

This has been in almost all ways a foul season for the Toronto Maple Leafs. They are Canada's daily media poison in the same ways that the Lakers, Cowboys, Manchester United, Real Madrid, and the Dodgers' payroll are America's, and offer similarly scant nutritional value. But clearly, if anyone involved wanted to change our consumption diets, we would have at least stopped eating that second bowl of ice cream by now.

And say this much for the latest edition of Leafs Institutional Misery: It has been busy. Toronto's season has been a cavalcade of hope-turned-to-manure almost since Canadian Thanksgiving, to the point where the wheels of their nine-year streak of underachieving in the playoffs had come off the wagon entirely, and in the worst imaginable way. From Jan. 12 through yesterday, they had gone 4-12-4, and hadn't won a single game against an American-based team. Since the National Hockey League is 78 percent American, this presents a real mathematical challenge to glory, with the result being that this Leafs season has been abandoned and the arguments about it have morphed into how many people at multiple organizational levels must be fired for cause, and what specific star they should be fired into. Their talent level has been mocked, their basic team structure besmirched, even their molecular GAF has been shamed. To satisfy an incandescent fan base and begin the desperately needed rebuild, something is going to need to be done, mostly to someone else.

That does not separate the Leafs from any other forlorn team, of course, and as a result Thursday night's game against Anaheim held minimal interest and emitted minimal significance—until it very much did. The unimportant part is that the Leafs won, 6-4, to break an eight-game losing streak, which in its own way is another bad result for those who support the idea of a catastrophic bottom-out for the sake of draft lottery odds and getting a jump-start on the reconstruction work ahead. But under the theory that you can still have your house catch fire when it rains, this win was way worse than that. That's because the team's captain and best player, Auston Matthews, had his knee crushed on an open-ice knee-to-knee hit from Anaheim's notorious troublemaker Radko Gudas. This takes the worst-case scenario and turbocharges it.

Big 12 Pulls Glass Court Following Conference Tournament Fiasco

2026-03-14 00:38:44

Basketball is meant to be played on blacktop or hardwood. But some big-thinking Big 12 dumbass big-thought it was time to give glass a shot.  

That dumbass is conference commissioner Brett Yormark, who installed a high-tech LED court made of glass for the league tournament, which is being contested this week in Kansas City. Turns out glass is fine for backboards, but, as has been clear since the tourney started, not the floor. So now they're uninstalling it: CBS Sports reported Thursday night that the commissioner, who came to the Big 12 after a run as COO of Jay Z’s Roc Nation, decided to yank his avant-garde surface and replace it with "a traditional hardwood court" forthwith. Yormark said he made the decision after talking to “the coaches of our four semifinal teams.” 

Probably could have added “and a personal injury attorney.”

Rickea Jackson Told Court James Pearce Jr. “Will Kill Me”

2026-03-13 23:12:21

Miami-Dade prosecutors filed four criminal charges against Atlanta Falcons edge rusher James Pearce Jr. on Thursday, following his arrest last month. The charges came a few weeks after a Miami-Dade circuit judge extended a temporary restraining order granted to Pearce's ex-girlfriend, WNBA player Rickea Jackson, who told the court that Pearce had physically abused her and threatened to kill her, including a threat "to place a bag over my head." In her request, the Los Angeles Sparks forward told the court, "I am truly in fear for my life."

The four criminal charges are: felony aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, felony fleeing police, felony resisting an officer with violence, and misdemeanor stalking. The charge of aggravated battery, according to the charging document, is for driving his car into Jackson's car, and the stalking charge is because prosecutors said he followed, harassed, or cyberstalked Jackson leading up to the day when she went to the Doral police station, seeking help. The other two charges are connected to the police chase that followed.

Here is what Jackson said happened, as described in her subsequently granted restraining order request.

R&B Wants To Make Pop Music Fun Again

2026-03-13 22:17:38

Welcome to Listening Habits, a column where I share the music I’ve been fixated on recently.

R&B in the 21st century has been in a constant state of flux, tugged between safe traditionalism and blurry attempts at progression. For the last decade-plus, that "progression" has seen R&B music become more indebted to trap records and the moody atmospherics of alternative bands like Radiohead, Coldplay, or My Bloody Valentine. These attempts at innovation and relevance have made for interesting music, but they have also created a lot of stale stuff that has no real point of view beyond the tastes of a particular artist/ producer. Even worse, much of it has been channeled into what has been termed "Toxic R&B," a sub-genre that mostly involves men crooning delicately about their inability to be good partners. In a time when rap has become the center of pop music, it seems to be the easiest way by which men (usually men) who sing can still affect the machismo of rap, despite not actually rapping.

https://youtu.be/6qdk82CUy74?si=Fmw0uyRkp8kl14Vg