Word: heatedly
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...deep; you will not find one at Wal-Mart. That's why the Houston Rockets' pivotman, Hakeem Olajuwon, got a $55 million, five-year contract extension and another African-born center, Dikembe Mutombo, signed with the Atlanta Hawks for a five-year, $50 million deal. The Miami Heat is on the verge of re-signing playoff flop Alonzo Mourning for $115 million over seven years rather than lose...
...nuts and bolts of many events; while in Atlanta he will cover baseball, basketball and field hockey. "I expect that these games will be terrific," he says. "At a certain point, track and field will take over." And how will the athletes cope with Atlanta's heat and humidity? "I think there will be a lot of world records," says Wulf. You heard it here first...
...tonight's finals. Evans, who finished ninth was visibly disappointed after the race. "I've learned that life's not fair and today proves that point," she said, tears welling in her eyes. Evans, an historically slow morning swimmer, miscalculated the field, believing a second-place finish in her heat would place her in the finals. She was wrong -- by 20 hundredths of a second. "I felt I made a mistake by not going out fast enough," Evans said. "When I was watching the last two heats, I said 'Gosh, that's really fast.'" Evans has one last shot...
...very first race in the 1896 Athens Olympics was a preliminary heat of the 100. The eventual winner of the race was a Bostonian named Thomas Burke, who after winning the final in 12.0 sec. went on to become a lawyer and a journalist; he was also the official starter for the first Boston Marathon in 1897. Americans have long dominated the event, winning 14 of 22 Olympic 100s, finishing one-two seven times and sweeping the medals twice. Interestingly enough, three of the first seven winners acquired law degrees, including Abrahams, the Brit whose 1924 race against anti-Semitism...
...tonight's finals. Evans, who finished ninth was visibly disappointed after the race. "I've learned that life's not fair and today proves that point," she said, tears welling in her eyes. Evans, an historically slow morning swimmer, miscalculated the field, believing a second-place finish in her heat would place her in the finals. She was wrong -- by 20 hundredths of a second. "I felt I made a mistake by not going out fast enough," Evans said. "When I was watching the last two heats, I said 'Gosh, that's really fast.'" Evans has one last shot...