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Daily Archives: November 19, 2021
The 2001 Miami Hurricanes are one of college football’s greatest teams ever – ESPN
Posted: November 19, 2021 at 5:45 pm
Nov 18, 2021
Andrea Adelson
David M. Hale
When it came time for the 2001 Miami Hurricanes to do their summer workouts, they had one plan in mind: Make it as grueling as possible.
Nobody really wanted to work out at 1 p.m. in the scorching heat and high humidity in South Florida. But nobody wanted to waste the opportunity in front of them, either: A shot at the school's first national championship in 10 years.
"They were the hardest workouts we ever did," cornerback Mike Rumph said. "But it was crucial to never show how much pain we were in. We used to say that was the easiest workout and we would suck our fingers, like that was pie. It started as a joke first, but it just went to like, no matter what you put us through, we can't be hurt. We're tougher than you think."
Twenty years later, the 2001 Miami Hurricanes are widely regarded as one of the greatest college football teams of all time. Their roster was loaded with future first-round picks -- from Andre Johnson to Jeremy Shockey to Vince Wilfork and at least one NFL Hall of Famer in Ed Reed. They dominated nearly everyone on their schedule, culminating in a resounding 37-14 win over Nebraska in the BCS National Championship Game in the Rose Bowl.
What players and coaches insist set this team apart was their camaraderie, accountability and willingness to do whatever it took to win a championship -- especially those afternoon workouts. "It wasn't about elite, starters, pecking orders, all that other great stuff," center Brett Romberg said. "It was literally, you're doing the same thing that I'm doing. You're sweating, you're bleeding, you're laying everything on the line for the guy next to you, and there was no envy." They were driven by the snub they all felt the previous year, after Florida State got into the BCS national title game instead of Miami -- even though the Hurricanes won their regular-season matchup. From there, this iconic team started its journey toward greatness. In interviews with more than two dozen players, coaches and opposing coaches, here is the story of the 2001 season, told in their own words.
Adversity hit shortly after the calendar turned to 2001, when coach Butch Davis left to become head coach with the Cleveland Browns. Players lobbied then-athletic director Paul Dee to elevate offensive coordinator Larry Coker to become head coach.
Former coach Butch DavisI'd agreed to a contract before Thanksgiving and my plan was to stay at the University of Miami for decades. But there were a few things in the contract we were having a difficult time agreeing on. ... At the very end of January, [my family and I] ended up making the decision to leave. I wanted to be there. We'd been through so much pain. We had a player [backup LB Marlin Barnes] murdered on campus. We had 31 scholarships lost. We gave up the bowl in 1995. We'd just beaten Florida in the Sugar Bowl and gone 11-1. The deck was loaded. We'd signed a great class. It was like, this is going to be outstanding for the next three, four, five years.
OC Rob ChudzinskiButch did a great job recruiting and developing and building the culture. And obviously you can point out all the talented guys on the team, but at the time, they weren't the biggest recruits and the five-star guys. A lot of what we did, Butch should get credit for. It was a competitive culture and accountability was huge and he built a family environment.
CB Mike RumphWhen Butch left, we were kinda stuck, and I remember we all went upstairs to talk to Mr. Dee, myself, Bryant McKinnie, Ed Reed, Ken Dorsey and a couple more guys. There was a rumor that we were going to get that coach from Wisconsin, Barry Alvarez, and we were like, "We don't want him. We want somebody from in-house who knows us, and that's Coach Coker." They listened to us.
Head coach Larry CokerIn my mind, I didn't know if I'd get the job. The players coming to my backing was a big asset in me getting the job. It was a somewhat natural transition because I knew the players.
1 Related
DavisIf Greg Schiano had not left and gone to Rutgers it would've been a potential for him to get the job, but I was glad for the staff and players that there wouldn't be a blow-up. Because when Jimmy [Johnson] left after winning two national championships, they really changed the whole program, and I didn't want that to happen to those kids.
C Brett RombergLarry Coker knew that once that baton got handed off, he wasn't changing anything. We have the recipe, we have the tools, we have everything to be successful. We just hope that this train just doesn't go off the track.
QB Ken DorseyHe was the perfect coach for our team, and his personality just meshed with us.
OT Bryant McKinnieWe didn't want to have to change and have to learn a new offense, defense, or anything. We liked what we had already, and we really wanted to just keep what we had. A lot of us were going into our senior year, and we didn't want to have to risk playing a little slower, still trying to learn something.
ChudzinskiLarry wasn't a sexy hire at the time, and it's rare the players have that kind of influence over who gets hired. Larry coming in, two new coordinators, there were a lot of questions. But Larry was a perfect fit for that team. There were a lot of expectations, and Larry took the pressure off of them. It really gave the players and the coaching staff somebody to rally behind.
S Ed ReedWe [were] truly a team. The individual's put on the back burner for your brothers. I tried to display that my senior year, 'cause I could have left my junior year. I would have got drafted higher and everything. I knew this. But I wasn't leaving these guys. I wanted to win the national championship -- we wanted to win the national championship. And I felt like I was a chess piece to that.
RombergWe all felt that that Sugar Bowl game against Florida, we knew that we should have been playing for a national title.
DavisThe motivation of being upset and disappointed, that played a huge role in going to the Sugar Bowl and what we did against Florida to make a statement that we probably should've been the champs. The one newspaper that I still love to this day is the New York Times because they picked us as national champions at the end of the season.
RombergSo the following year was definitely a salt-in-the-wound, chip-on-the-shoulder type of season where we wanted to obviously take no prisoners and rectify what happened the year before.
CB Markese FitzgeraldRandy Shannon told me, "If you come back to school, I'm not going to promise you or guarantee it, but there's a good chance you will never lose another college football game."
With Coker in place as head coach and key players like Reed and McKinnie returning for their senior seasons, the Hurricanes knew what was in front of them. They made sure their offseason workouts were the most intense of their lives.
DorseyIt pushes you through those workouts and the offseason, and it was a huge motivator for me, because guys like Reggie Wayne and Santana Moss put their heart and soul into the program, to not be able to give them a national championship when you thought you could've -- it's one of those things that sticks with you. I think the next year, we had the mindset that, no matter what happens, we have to take care of business. Not a lot needed to be said. The guys before us set an expectation of how hard you had to work and what that standard was, and we knew we had to live up to that.
RBs coach Don SoldingerThey were all self-directed. They pushed each other to the limit, and the one thing that separates that group, they were super, super competitive. They hated to lose. They would challenge each other to sprints, or whatever it was, and they held each other accountable and would not accept mediocrity.
LB D.J. WilliamsThe heart and soul of that team was our strength coach, Andreu Swasey. He was the guy that really knew how to push our buttons, that knew how to challenge us. He was that father figure we were all afraid to disappoint.
Strength coach Andreu SwaseyI had to challenge them, because if not, they're looking at you like, "What is this?" I had to make it tough tough. They embraced it, and that's when I learned the great ones want to be driven. If you don't drive them, you're going to be in trouble.
OT Joaquin GonzalezIt was a program that was meant to sink or swim guys. ... When I look back at our workouts, and the pressure that we put on each other of not letting each other down, there was so much pressure that I would think twice about skipping a workout, I would think twice about skipping a rep, I would think twice about letting my brother down because there was so much invested into it.
DC Randy ShannonThe thing that was most impressive about that team is that, at any point in time, a younger player could take your position. It wasn't something given. You had to work. Take Ed Reed. You had Sean Taylor behind him. You had Phillip Buchanon and Mike Rumph, and you had Antrel Rolle behind them. Everyone knew [Clinton] Portis, but you had Willis McGahee and Frank Gore. If you didn't put in the work, there was somebody behind you ready to take over.
FitzgeraldPeople were literally afraid to let the person next to them down. If you weren't doing all the right things, if you weren't going to class, making your grades, if you weren't showing up to work out or something like that, you could easily be cast out.
WilliamsAs a true freshman coming in, I'm all smiles. Happy to be here, want to high-five everybody, and from the moment I walked into the locker room, it was you're gonna work. You're gonna to fight. You're gonna communicate and you're gonna stay together, or you've got to go. We've got one goal in mind. That's to win the national championship. And if you're not on board with this, you got to go.
DT Matt WaltersIf I slacked off at all, I wasn't going to play as much because Vince Wilfork is my backup. That goes for everybody. Does that mean I didn't root for Vince? No. We were all each other's biggest fans, but we all knew that if you went into the week, and you slacked or you wanted to hang out late on a Tuesday night, and didn't bust your ass in practice, you ain't going to be getting the reps.
CB Antrel RolleAs one of the younger players on the team, that competition only made me better. The older guys took us under their wings and helped us. It was always like a family.
RB Najeh DavenportIt was the perfect storm for us. We knew we were good, and when we got out there and played on Saturdays, the people we went against were not as good as the guys we had on our scout team.
ChudzinskiThat 2001 season, it was like the season was already written. We just knew we were going to win it all. It didn't matter who stood in the way, they didn't stand a chance against us.
The season began on the road against Penn State, a matchup Miami viewed as a "statement game."
CokerIt was my first game ever to be a head coach and it was against Joe Paterno. To go and win the game was quite an experience. It really set the stage -- to not only win but be a dominant team like we were. It got a lot of attention.
DorseyThe environment was pretty spectacular. The way we were able to play, come out firing on all cylinders, was huge. We spread the ball around to a lot of different guys because, at that time, Andre Johnson wasn't a proven commodity -- or Ethenic Sands or Kevin Beard. Shockey had been there and done that, but we had new guys stepping in who weren't first-round draft picks yet. We thought we had a great team, but you don't know until the bullets start flying.
WilliamsWe felt very disrespected, for the simple fact that we were coming into the season highly ranked, and they had a White Out game. And whenever you do stuff like that, you believe you're going to win. Not only that, they were honoring one of their past players who got paralyzed, he was able to walk again so they were going to have him run out. I think they added extra bleachers so now they had the biggest stadium in college football. It was a bunch of these things that made us feel disrespected.
McKinnieI went to a JUCO in Scranton, Penn. At the time, [Paterno] wasn't taking JUCO transfers, and that was one of the schools I would've went to, so when I got a chance to play against them I said, "I'm gonna show him."
RumphWe knew what we had on paper, but to see how we were dominating, and the energy we produced in such a hostile environment, it was like, "OK, wow, we are who we think we are."
GonzalezI remember thinking that it was going to be such a difficult game, and we over prepared ourselves so much that the game came easy.
WilliamsWe were just too big, strong and fast, and way too physical. We let the country know what this whole season was going to be about. We dominated those guys from start to finish, and Happy Valley wasn't so happy.
The events of 9/11 caused a pause in college football, with games that weekend either being canceled or postponed, and Miami's game against Washington would be rescheduled for later that season.
On Sept. 27, Miami returned to play at Pitt with a determination to press forward, resulting in a 43-21 win. Its game at Florida State on Oct. 13 took on even greater meaning after what happened in 2000. At halftime, Reed delivered his now famous, "I'm hurt, dog" speech and it was captured by a documentary film crew that was working on an all-access show for ESPN. Reed is seen shouting at his teammates, "I'm hurt dog! Don't ask me if I'm alright. Hell, nah. Joaquin said dominate, and we're not doing it! I put my heart in this (expletive) dog. Let's go, man!"
Gonzalez"Dominate" had started the year before, breaking down the team before going into the locker room right before we came out for the game. If you dominate your responsibility and enough guys do that, then we'll be OK. A lot of people don't understand the context. Most people think that UM must have been losing, but no. We were winning, but we left a lot of points on the field. We let them drive right before the half and Ed Reed wasn't in that drive because he had dinged up his shoulder. ... It's a really tight locker room, we're getting ready to go out, and I absolutely remember it like it was yesterday, and I remember getting chills from hearing his battle cry, just like coming out in the second half, we're putting this away.
FitzgeraldEverything in Ed wanted to destroy Florida State for so many reasons. Our freshman year, we redshirted, but we would go on road trips and have our jerseys on with sweatpants on the sideline. They beat us 47-0, and I remember walking off the field and everyone was celebrating and he said, "As long as I have something to do with it, I will never be embarrassed by Florida State again." And that kind of stuck with me. So a lot of times when I hear his voice, I can sense that disappointment that he felt with that being his last go around. He didn't want it to be close. He didn't want it to be close at all.
CokerWhen he spoke, the team listened. And when he spoke, the coaches listened.
DavisWhen we recruited him in high school, when I actually went to see him in person it was at a basketball game. He was leading stuff, telling guys what to do, up and down the court with the ball in his hands, and you could just see this guy had that magical feel for how to play team games. And then on the practice field, he had that voice. Ed was somebody that would really talk to players. He didn't care about scolding players if they didn't do their jobs. That's what you love about great leaders is they respect their teammates, they love their teammates, but they're going to hold their teammates accountable.
ReedI was hurt before this game. My AC [joint] was sprained, and everybody came and asked me if I'm hurt. Yea I've been hurt. You know I'm hurt, yet we let them score two touchdowns. This team, who kept us out of the national championship, beat us our freshman year ... slammed the quarterback in the goal post ... that's what that was all about.
Miami beat Florida State 49-27 to remain undefeated, but a bigger test awaited Nov. 10 on a cold day at Boston College.
RumphFor whatever reason, we always played them close in my four years there. They always had a good running back and good offensive line, and that is a hostile environment. As I remember, the fans are standing right over the bench and they were yelling at our coaches, and they were throwing Skittles at us. They kept telling us don't listen to our coaches, because we're getting our butts kicked.
RombergWe sucked on offense. We're dead. We were bad that day. We didn't do anything right. Our communication wasn't good. Our physicality wasn't good. I think they might have called us Michelin men because some of the guys when they first put clothes on, they literally look like the Michelin tire guy because they were loading up like they were going into a frickin' blizzard. They're wearing hoodies and sweatshirts and jackets all up underneath their shoulder pads and the coaches were like, "How are you going to function and play football?" That's how comical it became.
DorseyIt was one of those games. But I feel like if you look at the history, every team that's won a national title has had a game like that, where it comes down to the last minute and if you lose, your season's over. Every team has to go through that, because that's how you get calloused to know that no matter what happens, you're going to find a way to win. It's one of those weird ones you can't explain, but you've got to get through.
ChudzinskiKenny was the perfect guy. The intangibles he had. The intelligence he had. The leadership. The ability to handle situations and adversity. The toughness, the mental toughness. Guys rallied behind him. I'll never forget the year before, we beat Florida State and guys were celebrating, and Ed Reed told Dorsey to stand up and told everyone to start cheering for Ken Dorsey. He basically announced to everybody, "This is our guy."
CokerI remember when I recruited him, his coach told me, "You don't really know what you're getting." He was right. Kenny didn't have the strongest arm in football, but he was just a tremendous leader and just a playmaker. He made things happen. He made good decisions and he made everyone around him better. He had the respect of those players. They knew he was the straw that stirred the drink.
ShannonWe all loved Dorsey, but we knew we had other skill sets and talent on that team. If we needed to win it on defense, let's go win it on defense. They had confidence. But there was never any pressure on anybody because they always thought they were going to get it done.
Miami led 12-7 with under a minute to play, but BC had first-and-goal at the Miami 9-yard line.
ReedThey're driving to win, the whole stadium thought they were about to win. We knew that was going to be a tough game. It was always tough.
RumphWe knew what route was coming on that play. It wasn't a surprise. We line up, and Ed goes, "Mike, here comes the slant. Jump inside of it. I got you over the top." Sure enough, they run a slant, I go in to pick it off, and I spread my fingertips, and had my hands below my knee. My knee went between my hands, and hit the tip of the ball and it flipped to Matt Walters.
WaltersI just remember on that play that the offensive lineman tried to cut my knees, and I remember finally getting it right. Coach had taught me for four years to get my hands down, get on his helmet and push his head down on the ground so that he doesn't get to your legs. And I did that, and I was like, "Oh, man, that felt good." I turned around, and the next thing you know, the ball is floating to me in slow motion. I thought to myself, "Oh my gosh, do not drop this." When I caught it, I wasn't thinking about running it back for a touchdown. I was tired. I was thinking in my mind, "There's not a lot of time left in this game. I'm gonna run out of bounds." I started running at an angle toward the sideline. I remember Ed coming up next to me. Ed was definitely yelling my name, "Matt! Matt! It's Ed!"
RumphIf you look at the film, at the last second as he's falling to the ground, he looks up to see if it's Ed, and he lets the ball go.
ReedThat truly goes to show how much trust we had, for him to hear my voice and give me the ball. That's how much we've been around each other.
WaltersI remember four or five guys jumped on me and next thing you know I'm looking at the ground and by the time I roll over and look up, I see Ed going.
RumphI was chasing Ed, and Ed did some little backyard football by running zig zags in order not to get caught, and then he spikes the ball to put the emphasis on that play.
WaltersAt that point, euphoric adrenaline runs over you. I couldn't get off the ground fast enough to go give him a hug. It didn't really hit me until afterward. You look back on it, and man, that was a great play by Mike, by me, by Ed. They could have scored a touchdown or kicked a field goal and that season has an asterisk next to it.
SoldingerI told Mike they ought to bronze your knee and put it in the Hall of Fame, because if that didn't happen, we wouldn't have played for a national championship.
CokerTo win a national championship, you have to win some you're not supposed to win. BC was certainly a good team, and it looked like we weren't supposed to win it, but somehow we did.
Two weeks later, the game everybody in the locker room had circled on the calendar had finally arrived: Washington. The year before, Miami lost at Washington 34-29 -- and that loss ultimately kept the Hurricanes out of the national title game they felt they deserved. As cliche as it sounds, Miami wanted revenge.
CokerAs a coach and players, you don't want to talk about it too much, but it's hard not to.
WaltersWe were pissed. I don't know a single person that wasn't pissed headed into that game.
RumphThat game solidified our quest to dominate. That atmosphere was crazy. There's something about a night game in the Orange Bowl, there's something about that mystique. ... A lot of us came back just for this game.
Washington coach Rick NeuheiselOur team was beat up and tired and the kids wanted to go home for Thanksgiving, and now we're having to go to Miami, a team that I knew was gonna want revenge. I said to our athletic director Barbara Hodges, "Let's reschedule that game for another year," and she was like, "No, We have to go." I don't know how General Custer felt, but I felt like General Custer.
WilliamsWe wanted to beat them for two reasons, right? We lost the year before, and it kept us out of the national championship game. We knew, we got them out here, with the weather, the physicality, they weren't going to be ready for that. It was one of those games where the score just got run up. They should have gone back to high school where they do the running clock. We probably could have scored 80 points. The atmosphere was too much for them. They've never seen an atmosphere like that. I'm talking about the energy, the heat. You could feel the crowd; you could feel the anger that we had, and how bad we wanted to beat them.
Miami needed one more win to clinch an undefeated regular season and a spot in the BCS national championship game: On the road, against Big East rival Virginia Tech. The Hokies, ranked No. 14, proved to be a formidable opponent. After a blocked punt returned for a touchdown cut Miami's lead to 26-24, Virginia Tech lined up for a 2-point conversion to tie the game. But Ernest Wilford dropped it.
DorseyA lot of people don't realize the rivalry between Miami and Virginia Tech. Every one of those games was a physical, physical affair. You were getting into a street fight when you went and played those guys. There's going to be some tremendous 3- or 4-yard runs. There will be unsung heroes picking up blitzes. That's how it goes in those games. A lot of people talk about the struggles against Florida State, but we had those struggles against Virginia Tech.
OL Joel RodriguezOh, absolutely I was scared. At that point, it was like, all right, the last game then we're going to ship. That was the first time, for a portion of the game at least, we let our gaze get to the horizon and not on the task at hand.
RumphIt was intense. The loudest game. It was so scary. We didn't know it was going to come down to a 2-point conversion, but the football Gods were with us on that day, and that kid dropped that ball.
FitzgeraldI mean, he was pretty much automatic for them. When he dropped the two-point conversion, I was like, I need some prayer right now. He was probably the most hated guy in all of Blacksburg that night, but at the same time thank you so much, because you just kind of saved us some heartache.
WaltersThere were moments in that season that we felt we deserved to win those close games, because we outworked those teams in that offseason. Like you knew in your bones that we were going to pull it out. Because we had that extra whatever. It took that extra X Factor. We had it in us, and we knew we had it in us. We were confident. We never got worried.
Virginia Tech coach Frank BeamerWe blocked a kick and a punt and blocked a field goal that day. That gave us a chance. But when you play a team like that, you can't turn the ball over, and I think we ended up throwing four interceptions. That [last] interception was by Ed Reed. And we went into the Hall of Fame together this past year. I'll never forget, he said he really liked our team. Anybody who could block kicks like that, he was a fan of.
ChudzinskiI don't know if this ever got released to the media, but Kenny [Dorsey] got hit and took a hard shot to the ribs. He almost had to come out of the game. I remember the doctor saying he couldn't really throw the ball. And they had a great defense. It was a challenge to figure out how to get through the rest of that game. A lot of people don't know how close that was, but he was a huge leader for us, and he wasn't coming out of that game. It was grit and toughness for him, and it was important he was in there the whole time.
DorseyGoing into the locker room after the win at Virginia Tech, it was special. You go into the locker room and everybody is just elated. To solidify going to a national championship without having to worry about if somebody else was going to lose -- that was special. I think it was kind of a weight off everybody's shoulders at the end.
Miami clinched a spot in the national title game against Nebraska at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., and felt confident this game would be its crowning achievement.
RumphOne of the things that happened in practice, we caught a few guys in the stadium trying to record our practices, seeing how we were going to stop the triple option. We saw a guy in the 55th row laying down with a camera, and we started pointing him out, and he gets up and runs to one of the exits. It happened twice in the Coliseum.
ChudzinskiSometimes the practices in the bowl games get a little stale or tired. But I remember a few days before the game we did a two-minute drill, our No. 1 offense against the No. 1 defense. I'll never forget the speed and tempo and competitiveness. Shockey was diving for balls, Ed Reed was coming up full-speed, full-tackle. And as a coach, you almost never want that -- guys on the ground, just a couple days before the game. But these guys wanted to win that two-minute drill as bad as they wanted to win the Rose Bowl. That's always what Miami had been about, and what set it apart in my mind.
LB Jonathan VilmaRandy Shannon is giving us every way to run this option, and I was frankly frustrated because it was hard to process it all. And he comes to me when we're in Pasadena, he's like, "Look, don't worry, it's gonna be easier in the game."
ReedBefore we even went to the game, we made "Ballin Boys." We made a song like the Super Bowl Shuffle, letting them know, "We're going to whoop y'all." Years later in the NFL, I'm hearing people like, "Man, I listened to that song."
RombergI played with Richie Incognito with the Rams, and he told me when they saw us get off the bus at Disney [during the week], they started laughing. They thought that we looked like a high school team. They were big boys, all positions, not just the offensive line. They were cracking jokes at us, and they thought that they were gonna just drag us all over the football field and just pound us.
ChudzinskiEverybody's fired up. We're intense, pulling up on the buses. And I'll never forget seeing the wave of red of Nebraska fans pulling up that seemed like it went for miles. And we're in the buses going right through this wave of red, and it seemed like they all flipped us off in unison. And I'll never forget, everybody's fired up, and Larry gets up in front of the bus, and said, "Men, don't worry about that. They're just telling us we're No. 1."
ShannonThe first quarter, we'd always said, once we got the speed of the option down, we'd get it done.
VilmaThe first series, we line up, they run their option, and for as fast as it went for us in practice, it was like they were in sand. We go to the sideline, and Randy Shannon, after the first series he's like, "Hey, how do they look?" I was like, "Coach, call whatever you want, we're gonna win." He was like, "You serious?" I said, "Coach, they're slow as hell."
CokerI'd been at Oklahoma and Oklahoma State for years and we'd never beaten [Nebraska]. To me, it was special, and I knew it was going to be a tough game. I never expected it to be a blowout. They were a good team. But we were a great team.
RombergWhen Vince Wilfork took their All-American guard Toniu Fonoti and threw him five yards in the backfield and made a tackle for a loss, their whole sideline s--- their pants, and then all of a sudden Vilma started decapitating tight ends, and it became a whole different animal, and they weren't aware, used to it, privy to, they literally thought they were going to come in there and mop the floor with us. Incognito told me at halftime, their coach basically said, "Guys let's just try to keep this thing close," and he said that right in front of the athletic director.
WilliamsThey had no chance of winning that game. Like, literally none. I don't want to sound disrespectful, but we were five steps faster than them, 10 pounds hungrier, much more violent, which is a different style of football. I think also, what rattled them was how much fun we had while being violent and being intense. A lot of people doubted if they should have made the championship. I say five minutes into the game, they knew in their hearts that they were going to be outclassed and outmatched.
WaltersThe fourth quarter was fun for us, because at that point, the game was kind of in hand, and everybody got to enjoy and be part of it: first, second, third string guys, everybody was getting in and getting to play. That felt good for all of us.
Miami took a 34-0 halftime lead before cruising to a 37-14 victory, winning the school's fifth national championship.
RumphIt was unreal, just to see the trophy come out.
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Former Caltech Postdoc to Make History in Space in 2022 – Caltech
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NASA has announced that Jessica Watkins, formerly a Chair's Postdoctoral Scholar in the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS), will serve as a mission specialist on the agency's upcoming SpaceX Crew-4 mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Watkins will make history as the first Black woman on the ISS crew.
When Watkins was selected for the 2017 astronaut class, she had just spent two years working at Caltech on the Mars Science Laboratory mission's Curiosity rover withJohn Grotzinger, the Harold Brown Professor of Geology and Ted and Ginger Jenkins Leadership Chair for GPS.
"Working with Jess Watkins was amazing," says Grotzinger. "From the first time I met her she told me she wanted to be an astronaut and she just jumped right into the work, learning all she could about rover operations and Mars, confident that this experience would add to her already strong qualifications that might give her the edge in selection. We are thrilled to see her on the way to the ISS."
Read a 2017 interview with Watkins here.
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Kyle Rittenhouse, the Elaine Massacre and the shameful history of ‘community defense’ – Arkansas Times
Posted: at 5:45 pm
On October 1, 1919, armed white men began streaming into Phillips County, Arkansas, due to rumors of a negro insurrection happening there. Many of them came from nearby counties, but some crossed the river from Mississippi and Tennessee. These folks from off together with local posses and law enforcement and, eventually, federal troops from Camp Pike perpetrated one of the deadliest non-wartime massacres to occur on American soil. Now known as the Elaine Massacre, it entailed the killing of perhaps as many as 200 African Americans there in Phillips County.
These men did not come due to a general fear of an actual insurrection at hand. They came to take advantage of the chaos in order to have some funto hunt. Indeed, the historian Amy Louise Wood has pointed out that lynchings were often conducted like hunts, with packs of dogs, teams of heavily armed hunters, and commemorative pictures with the dead prey. And as Catherine Armstrong notes, in a previous era, the practice of hunting down fugitive slaves contained an element of sport within it, making it akin to the other hunting and blood sports practiced with such fervour in the American South.
No white men were ever charged for their role in perpetrating the massacre at Elaine.
On August 25, 2020, a white teenager named Kyle Rittenhouse illegally carried an AR-15 style rifle from his home in Antioch, Illinois, to Kenosha, Wisconsin, which was experiencing civil unrest following yet another police shooting of yet another unarmed Black man. Rittenhouse later claimed to have done this from a desire to defend the community, but it was not his community. In Kenosha, he openly threatened people with his rifle and eventually shot and killed two men while wounding a third. The police allowed Rittenhouse to leave the scene despite being informed by residents that he had shot people. He turned himself into his local police department the following day.
Rittenhouse was not in Kenosha to protect the community. He had no ties there he was from off. He had only come to take advantage of the chaos in order to have some fun. He came to hunt. And now a Kenosha jury has given license to other white vigilantes to do the exact same thing by clearing this acne-stricken-murderer-turned-Republican-folk-hero on all charges. So more and more white thugs will swarm into Black neighborhoods at the smallest sign of unrest, armed with military weapons and unhindered by the bag limit we place upon the lives of lesser creatures.
Or as Leonard Cohen sang: Get ready for the future: It is murder.
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Provateare: We must honor our American history, even the evil parts – Your Valley
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Letter by Pep Provateare of Sun City
What gives a group of people the right to remove our history from books and tear down statues? History is our past showing how we became the great nation we are.
Times were different, and customs were different, sure we fought the Indians, the British, but it was how life was back then.
Everyone has their beliefs, but let the ones who want to learn and understand how life was then form their own opinion through books and statues. Years from now, generations will look back and see how we treated the people who died to give us freedom and a better life by erasing their names and tearing statues down to make a so-called Better Life.
History will be like when your parents told you stories of their life growing up, with all the interesting, detailed happenings. Once they pass on, the history they told you will be gone and all you will have will be memories.
Eventually all the details will erase as you get older and at a certain time, all will be lost.
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French astronaut’s jaw-dropping photos from SpaceX mission capture bright auroras and raging wildfires – Yahoo News
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European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Thomas Pesquet plays with an arrival of French macarons on the International Space Station (ISS) in 2017.ESA/NASA
Thomas Pesquet, a European Space Agency astronaut, just returned to Earth after a six-month shift on the International Space Station.
Pesquet inside the ISS's cupola window on October 16, 2021.ESA/NASA
He was part of SpaceX's second full crew to the space station a mission called Crew-2.
His crewmates were NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur, and Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide.
The Crew-2 astronauts boarded SpaceX's Crew Dragon spaceship and undocked from the ISS on November 7.
Russia's Soyuz spaceship and Nauka laboratory module on the ISS, on September 15, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Pesquet served as ISS commander for the last month of his spaceflight.
The next day, they plummeted to a splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico.
A Dragon spaceship carrying cargo approaches the ISS on August 30, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Pesquet was "basically the designated professional photographer of this mission," SpaceX engineer Kate Tice said on a livestream, as the Crew Dragon backed away from the ISS.
Pesquet shared the photo above with a caption: "The setting sun gives some beautiful pastel colours to the landscape along the Paran and Uruguay rivers."ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
During his time in space, Pesquet took more than 245,000 photos from about 250 miles above the Earth.
"Karkheh Dam, Iran. I'm blown away by the swirling blues in these pictures and their contrast with the parched earth," Thomas Pesquet wrote in a caption for the photo above.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"I think there's too many pictures," Pesquet said in a NASA Q&A on Monday.
A salt lake in Iran, photographed from the ISS on August 17, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
On one of Pesquet's last days in space, the ISS flew above a highly active, multicolored aurora borealis, triggered by a huge burst of particles from the sun.
A powerful aurora seen from the space station on November 4, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"We flew right above the center of the ring, rapid waves and pulses all over," Pesquet wrote when he shared the photo. Some of the aurora's spikes reach higher than the space station, he added.
"We've been treated with some unbelievable auroras," Pesquet said during the Q&A. "It's sad, because the pictures just don't do them justice."
The aurora, photographed from the ISS on August 20, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Pesquet said he saw about 15 to 20 instances of the aurora during the mission.
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Auroras are just one example of stunning views Pesquet and his crewmates enjoyed as they orbited Earth.
The coast of Namibia, seen from space on September 23, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Among Pesquet's favorite subjects is what he calls "crop art" the colorful geometry of agricultural fields.
Fields of crops in Canada, captured by Pesquet on June 3, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Agricultural areas can make beautiful patterns. While it's hard to pin down exact locations from space, Pesquet said these farms in the desert are somewhere on the African continent.
A desert peppered with blue-and-green circles of growing crops, captured from the ISS.ESA/Thomas Pesquet
"I like how something artistic sometimes comes out of a very practical purpose," Pesquet wrote when he shared this photo on social media.
Pesquet photographed crops somewhere in Mexico or the Southwestern US on August 17, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"Circles, squares, (salt) mines and irrigation are not meant to be pretty from up close, but they dazzle us from above and at a giant scale," he added.
In some places, like Bolivia, pretty patterns and the crops growing within them are due to the clearing of tropical forests.
Pesquet shared this image on Twitter with the caption, "Star-like patterns in San Pedro Limn, Bolivia where areas of the tropical dry forest have been cleared for agriculture."ESA/Thomas Pesquet
But natural landscapes make colorful patterns, too.
Pesquet shared this photo with the caption, "More crazy beautiful landscapes in Australia, I see fractals, watercolours and so much more!"ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Australia has particularly dramatic natural formations, like these salt lakes.
Salt lakes in Australia, photographed from the space station on May 14, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Since the space station orbits Earth every 90 minutes, astronauts see 16 sunrises and sunsets per day. But not all the sights are beautiful.
The light from a sunset falls across the ocean on June 15, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet/A. Conigli
"We see the pollution of rivers, atmospheric pollution, things like that," Pesquet told French President Emmanuel Macron on November 4.
Wildfire smoke covers crops near California's Sequoia National Park on August 20, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
He spoke with Macron on a video call from the ISS, as world leaders met during the UN climate conference in Scotland. Negotiators' goal in Scotland should be to speed up humanity's response to the climate crisis, Macron responded, according to The Associated Press.
"What really shocked me on this mission were extreme weather or climate phenomena," Pesquet told Macron.
Hurricane Elsa photographed from the space station on July 4, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"We saw entire regions burning from the space station, in Canada, in California," he said, adding, "the fragility of Earth is a shock."
Wildfire smoke rises from burning forests in Canada on August 12, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"Year after year, we also know we are beating records for fires, for storms, for floods. And that is very, very visible. I very clearly saw the difference compared to my mission four or five years ago," Pesquet told Macron.
Pesquet captured Patagonia's melting Upsala Glacier in in a collage of photos.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet/A. Conigli
Pesquet also saw comforting sights, like his birthplace of Normandy, France.
Pesquet took this photo of Normandy shortly after arriving at the ISS, April 28, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
Many of his photos feature France's landscapes.
The Gulf of Morbihan in France, on October 8, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"We are in public service. We have a responsibility to do things for the people and inform people of what we're doing," Pesquet said during the Q&A on Monday.
Pesquet shared this photo with the caption, "Kiev, and the beautiful swirls of the river upstream. I remember taking this picture in winter last time, when the river was frozen and all white."ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
"I think there's a responsibility also to share this point of view because you see the fragility of the Earth," he said, adding, "When you see the Earth from space, it's very finite, limited resources."
Clouds moving through Earth's atmosphere on June 11, 2021.ESA/NASAT. Pesquet
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Beto O’Rourke lends support to SpaceX expansion in South Texas with ‘necessary oversight’ – Texas Public Radio
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In a campaign stop in the Rio Grande Valley Wednesday, Texas Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Beto ORourke lent his support to the expansion of SpaceX on Boca Chica Beach a county park 20 miles outside of Brownsville.
ORourke told TPR he has met with local officials, including Brownsville Mayor Trey Mendez and Cameron County Judge Eddie Trevio, and he believes a balance can be struck between economic growth and environmental protection.
Whether it's oil and gas, or even renewable energy, or SpaceX at Boca Chica and in Brownsville, we have extraordinary economic opportunity and job growth opportunities here, he said. But we've got to make sure that we also have the necessary oversight to protect public health, to protect our natural resources, and to make sure that we can pass on to the next generation something just as good or better than what we received in this generation.
SpaceX is preparing to launch the largest rocket in the history of spaceflight. If permitted by federal regulators, it will lift off from the beach-side facility at the southern tip of Texas. But residents and researchers have criticized the permitting process, saying the company has flouted rules at the expense of the environment, and the community.
Local concerns about SpaceX range from blocked access to public parks and beaches to long term ecological damage.
"He should meet with the residents of the Rio Grande Valley who have expressed deep concern about the impacts of SpaceX on people, gentrification, indigenous sacred sites, and endangered wildlife habitat," said Dave Cortez, director of the Sierra Club Lone Star Chapter, after the campaign event. "He should take the time to consider the vast negative impacts posed by the industrialization of some of our last pristine coastline in Texas."
"Beto stood with fronterizas who were concerned about pollution from the Asarco Copper smelter in El Paso, and we call on him to do the same for the people of the Rio Grande Valley," added Cortez.
Related: SpaceX prepares to launch largest rocket ever despite ongoing FAA review
The Federal Aviation Administration said it will complete its environmental assessment of the SpaceX expansion in the Rio Grande Valley by the end of the year.
Several environmental advocacy groups have criticized the draft version of the FAAs review, which was released in September. Texas Parks and Wildlifes Chief Operating Officer Clayton Wolf was concerned with SpaceXs plans, writing in a Nov. 1 letter that the site expansion plans were unclear and they would impact federally protected species.
Related: FAA says it will finish environmental assessment of SpaceX facility in South Texas by years end
We've got to make sure that industry does not run roughshod over the people of Texas, ORourke told TPR. Thats ultimately what happened with the power grid, where we allowed industry to call the shots because of the campaign contributions they made. And we never forced them to weatherize the grid or protect the public health or to ensure that the grid would not collapse and we wouldn't lose hundreds of lives. So, lesson learned for sure for all of Texas in February of 2021. Let's not repeat the mistakes in that or any other industry.
Dominic Anthony Walsh and Gaige Davila contributed to this report.
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Non-Alc Spirit Brand Earns $360 Million Valuation, Landing Backing From SpaceX Investor – Forbes
Posted: at 5:45 pm
While many of Lyres peers focus on replicating bar well staples: gins, rums, vodkas, etc, Lyres ... [+] goes beyond, crafting no-ABV options of a full portfolio of spirits, from sweet vermouths to Campari swaps to absinthes.
As demand for no-ABV drink options continues to skyrocket, one non-alcoholic spirits producer has hit a major milestone. Lyres has just wrapped a major funding round, valuing the UK-based company at 270 million pounds ($360 million USD). This is a jump from a valuation of 100 million pounds ($134 million USD) earlier this year.
The funding round was led by D Squared Capital and Morgan Creek Capital Management, an early investor in Drizly, AliBaba, and SpaceX
Founded in 2019, Lyres quickly gained a following by producing out-of-the-box spirits, like absinthes, rums, Campari-alternatives, and more, all sans alcohol. In two and a half years of trading, the brand had expanded to more than 60 countries.
The pace of growth were seeing is exceptional. We sold our first bottle in 2019 and today were selling one at least every 30 seconds, says Mark Livings, the brands CEO and founder. On our current trajectory, Lyres is set to become the fastest independent beverage brand to reach Unicorn status.
With this valuation, Lyres now sits as the most valuable no- and low-alcohol spirits brand in the world. The business is on course to be annualizing 50 million ($67 million in USD) in revenues by December this year.
We saw early on the potential of the brand and its products to capture market share in this fast-growing consumer category, describes Mark Yusko, CEO and Founder of Morgan Creek Capital Management. With a footprint now established in 60 countries, we are excited to see the impact of increased investment in sales and marketing facilitated by this capital injection.
The new investment of 20 million pounds will finance marketing expenses and fund the hiring of new employees, creating more than 50 new jobs in sales and marketing, production, logistics, finance and e-commerce.
While many of Lyres peers focus on replicating bar well staples: gins, rums, vodkas, and the like, Lyres reconsiders the full back bar, crafting no-ABV options of a full portfolio of spirits, from sweet vermouths to Campari riffs to alcohol-free absinthes. Currently, the portfolio spans 14 different products, including gins, bourbon-style bottles, triple sec, white rum, amaretto and coffee liqueurs.
The brand recently launched Classico, an alcohol-free Prosecco, to complement spirits range, and introduced a series of no-alc RTDs: Lyres American Malt and Cola and Lyres Dark n Spicy.Many of these innovations helped Lyres succeed in the Middle Eastern market, one of the worlds closely regulated markets for beverage alcohol.
Millennials and older Gen Zs are drinking less alcohol than any generation before them, but the mindful drinking movement transcends generations and cultural borders. Were not only growing our business were expanding the whole category, entering territories like the Middle East and the Far East virtually uncontested, said Livings.
Lyres seemed to step into the NA space at the right moment. In the last year, global off-premise sales have skyrocketed, hitting $3.1 billion across low-alcoholic and non-alcoholic categories. This is a jump from the categorys $291 million in off-premise sales the year prior.
The market is still small less than 5% of household penetration but non-alcs are outpacing the growth of low-alcs, according to NielsenIQs SVP of Account Development Kim Cox. NA sales totaled $331 million (up +33.2%) in the last year, while low-alcohol sales rose 8.1% to $2.77 billion. Brands saw a 315% increase in low- and no-alc beverage dollar sales.
By category, NA beer and cider grew 31.7%, wine increased 39.4% while zero-ABV spirits saw sales grow 113.4% over the last year.
The no/low alcohol beverage market is one of the fastest-growing markets in F&B and is showing similar characteristics to plant-based milks, meats, and other mindful consumer categories, describes Daniel Grossman, Managing Director of D Squared Capital. Lyres leading product, brand, and range of award-winning SKUs have proven that they are the industry leader and we are excited to be backing the best in class company.
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Non-Alc Spirit Brand Earns $360 Million Valuation, Landing Backing From SpaceX Investor - Forbes
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Nadine Seiler Black Lives Matter Fence Preserving …
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Nadine Seiler poses with a piece of artwork that was once displayed on the Black Lives Matter fence near the White House. Seiler is working to find new homes for the 700-plus artifacts left by protesters. Jonathan Franklin/NPR hide caption
Nadine Seiler poses with a piece of artwork that was once displayed on the Black Lives Matter fence near the White House. Seiler is working to find new homes for the 700-plus artifacts left by protesters.
Nadine Seiler has an activist spirit very "noisy," she says, but always "in the crowd."
"I'm the voice that you hear that you don't know where it's coming from," Seiler says.
The Waldorf, Md., resident is stepping forward this time as one of several people preserving protesters' artwork from the Black Lives Matter memorial fence that stood between protesters and the White House. The displays bore the faces and names of Black people who died from police violence.
As authorities took down the fence earlier this year, Seiler made it her mission to preserve every artifact that she could knowing that each sign represents a part of the nation's history.
Seiler is working with fellow protester Karen Irwin from New York to find new homes for what Seiler estimates are more than 700 items.
Signs on the fence surrounding the White House during the 2020 Presidential election. The fence, which came down in January 2021, once served as home to nearly 700+ signs and artwork during the course of the racial protests in D.C. following George Floyd's murder. Probal Rashid/LightRocket via Getty Images hide caption
Signs on the fence surrounding the White House during the 2020 Presidential election. The fence, which came down in January 2021, once served as home to nearly 700+ signs and artwork during the course of the racial protests in D.C. following George Floyd's murder.
Protesters came to Lafayette Square Park next to the White House following the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 and federal authorities quickly put up metal barricades to block off various entrances to the site.
The fencing went up Jun. 4, 2020, and came down on Jan. 30, 2021.
Seiler and others had spent long hours at the fence on what is now called Black Lives Matter Plaza.
"Whether it was going to rain, snow or ice, we lived at the fence," Seiler says. "There was somebody on that fence or within a few feet of the fence, wherever the police pushed us."
Signs on the fence surrounding the White House on Nov. 4, 2020. The majority of the artwork featured on the fence will be preserved in an archive in partnership with Baltimore's Enoch Pratt Free Library. Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images hide caption
Signs on the fence surrounding the White House on Nov. 4, 2020. The majority of the artwork featured on the fence will be preserved in an archive in partnership with Baltimore's Enoch Pratt Free Library.
As the group stood guard, the artwork on the memorial became a symbol for the movement, a place where people stopped and took pictures, honoring what the fence and its signs stood for.
The drive to save the artwork was inspired on Oct. 26, when demonstrators saw counterprotesters tearing down the signs displayed on the fence.
"Because people would come by and vandalize this stuff, part of me felt disrespected," Seiler says. "I made sure the stuff wasn't going to get torn down."
Seiler made it her mission to pick up and save as many signs as she could.
Thanks to her and others, the artwork is being housed in a storage unit as it waits to be scanned by archivists at Baltimore's Enoch Pratt Free Library, a joint project with the D.C. Public Library.
"The collection serves as part of the record of one of the most important social justice movements of our time," says Jodi Hoover of Enoch Pratt Library.
Hoover, who serves as the library's digital resources manager, tells NPR that preserving and documenting historical events in real-time is not only incredibly important but is also a rare opportunity.
A steel fence at Lafayette Park was turned into a makeshift memorial after DC Mayor Muriel Bowser renamed that section of 16th street "Black Lives Matter Plaza" near the White House in June 2020. The artwork that was once displayed on the fence is currently being digitally archived for a future visual collection. Anadolu Agency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images hide caption
A steel fence at Lafayette Park was turned into a makeshift memorial after DC Mayor Muriel Bowser renamed that section of 16th street "Black Lives Matter Plaza" near the White House in June 2020. The artwork that was once displayed on the fence is currently being digitally archived for a future visual collection.
"By working collaboratively we are able to preserve and provide access to this collection for years to come. It is my hope that it will be of use now and in the future," she says.
The signs are being driven to Baltimore by Seiler in batches of 100 and nearly 300 signs have already been digitally archived.
But according to Seiler, four more batches are still left to be scanned.
"I don't expect this process to be over before the end of 2021, given it takes six to eight weeks to scan a batch," she says.
Once the items have all been scanned, Seiler says the gifting process for the artwork will then begin.
Ideally, she says organizers with the D.C. chapter of Black Lives Matter would like for the pieces to stay in the hands of Black organizations but mentions that wherever the pieces may land, she hopes people would recognize their worth and the messages behind them.
"I don't know what it's going to take, but whoever takes some has to agree to care for them," Seiler says.
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An update on the use of credit cards to gamble online in Australia – Lexology
Posted: at 5:43 pm
In this article we provide an update on recent developments on the status of parliamentary and industry reviews considering potential prohibitions on the use of credit cards for gambling purposes. The importance of such reviews has been heightened by the recent COVID-19 influenced growth in online gambling as a form of accessible entertainment, with funding by credit card being a convenient and popular method for making deposits into gambling accounts.
A recent submission by the Australian Banking Association (ABA) stated that online gambling now accounts for 55 per cent of all gambling, with 25 per cent of Australian adults having gambled online in the past 12 months.1
Current status
Currently, Australians cannot use credit cards when gambling in terrestrial licensed venues, casinos and TAB outlets. However, the same cannot be said for online gambling where credit card use is currently permitted.2
Some bank issuers have already independently moved to prevent their customers from transacting with gambling companies using their credit cards. This includes American Express, Bank of Queensland, Bendigo Bank, Citibank, Macquarie Bank, Suncorp Bank and Virgin Money.
There have recently been a number of bodies considering whether the use of credit cards for gambling purposes remains appropriate, particularly following high profile moves in other jurisdictions to prohibit the use of credit cards. For example, in April 2020, the Gambling Commissions ban on gambling businesses allowing consumers in Great Britain to use credits cards to gamble took effect.
Among the entities considering the issue, the ABA delivered a Report in December 2020. The ABA received submissions from 40 parties, including gambling industry participants, member banks and other interested stakeholders. Although the ABA did not ultimately recommend a particular course of action due to concerns regarding coordinated conduct under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), the Report examines pros and cons associated with proscribing the use of credit cards for gambling services. We outline some of their findings below.
A Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services has also been undertaking an inquiry into regulation of the use of financial services such as credit cards and digital wallets for online gambling in Australia. The terms of reference include, among other things, assessing the extent of consumer detriment, the potential for a mandatory industry code, regulatory approaches used in other relevant jurisdictions and the level of existing voluntary bans by Australian financial institutions. Submissions to that inquiry closed on 25 June 2021 with public hearings in August and September 2021.
Most recently, the Environment and Communications Legislation Committee (Committee) has been considering the Interactive Gambling Amendment (Prohibition on Credit Card Use) Bill 2020 (Bill) introduced by Senator Stirling Griff and referred to it by the Senate on 18 March 2021. The Committee delivered its report in October 2021. We examine their key findings below.
The ABA Consultation Report - Use of credit cards for gambling transactions
In November 2019, the ABA utilized the independent research agency YouGov to conduct a survey asking whether Australians agreed or disagreed on using credit cards for gambling. A key finding of the survey was that 81% of Australians thought that the use of credit cards for gambling should be restricted or banned.3 Another finding of the report was that 30 of the 40 submissions supported the view to prohibit credit card use for gambling. Some of the main reasons behind such a stance is to reduce problem gambling and to ensure for consistent gambling regulation across Australia.
The report also contemplated the reasoning for those who had the opposite opinion. Respondents against such a ban argued that it imposes on personal freedom and that it punishes individuals who are not problem gamblers. Submissions and feedback from the survey also revealed the opinion that banning the use of credit cards does not address the underlying gambling addiction, will not reduce the risk of problem gambling, and in some circumstances may cause more harm as gamblers move to illegal offshore gambling websites.4
Additionally, it was argued that newsagents and lottery charities could be negatively impacted by such a ban. Tabcorp estimated that a ban could reduce the incomes of lottery agents and newsagents by between $17 million and $44 million per year.5 Lottery West, the Australian Lottery and Newsagents Association, Tabcorp and some registered lottery charities put forward submissions explaining that lottery products cause minimal harm, and for this reason, should be excluded from any ban on using credit cards for gambling transactions.6
Overall, as mentioned above, the ABA did not recommend a particular course of action.
The Interactive Gambling Amendment (Prohibition on Credit Card Use) Bill 2020
The Bill would amend the Interactive Gambling Act 2001 (Interactive Gambling Act) to implement a ban on the use of credit cards for betting using certain regulated interactive gambling services. Senator Griff explained that the main purpose of the Bill was to:
The Bill would have created civil penalty and criminal offence provisions for a person who accepted, facilitated or promoted credit card payments for interactive gambling services after the six month transition period, with significant financial penalties of up to $166,500.
Submissions in support of the Bill
Many associations such as the Alliance for Gambling Reform, Customer Owned Banking Association, the Australian Institute of Family Studies, Centre for Health Equity Training, Research and Evaluation and the Salvation Army, have made submissions supporting the Bill with their reasoning aligningwith the argument to protect Australians from problem gambling and to also make the rules and regulations for land-based gambling the same as online gambling.8
Submissions against the Bill
A number of parties cited concerns with the Bill including Responsible Wagering Australia (RWA) and Tabcorp. RWAs arguments against the legislative change stem from their main position that there 'is no compelling evidence to indicate links between the use of credit cards across online betting platforms and the incidence of problem gambling'. Additionally, arguments were put forward that safeguards are already in place with major online wagering operators and card issuers themselves to protect Australians and that these could be strengthened. 9
Tabcorp cited concerns within their submission regarding the definition of credit card in the Bill being too broad and recommended that betting vouchers and bonus bets be expressly excluded from the definition of credit card. 10 Tabcorp also identified concerns that the Bill would extend the prohibition to apply to newsagents and lottery agents and their sale of lottery tickets and that such a change could reduce the incomes of lottery agents and newsagents by approximately $44 million per year. 11
The Committees findings
The Committee considered all the submissions and ultimately came to the recommendation that the Senate should not pass the Bill. Though the Committee recognized that individuals using credit cards for online gambling can experience harm, they reported that there is limited research into the drivers and the extent of the potential harm. 12 Correspondingly, they argued that such a legislative change could impact an individuals choice and autonomy. The Committee further stated that as there are still several unintended consequences identified in the Bill, such as the definition concerns pointed out by Tabcorp, these issues should be resolved before passing such an amendment. Aiding their decision against the legislative change was the argument that financial institutions already play a major role in issuing and operating credit cards in accordance with legislation such as the National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009.
It also should be noted that the dissenting reports from the Australian Greens' and from Centre Alliance Senator Stirling Griff both recommended that the Bill be passed.
Conclusion
Judging from the Committees recommendation, it is far from clear that legislative change will occur in Australia in the near future regarding the use of credit cards to deposit funds into online gambling accounts. We await the outcomes of the Parliamentary Joint Committees inquiry with interest.
At this stage, and given indicated industry support, a voluntary industry approach in combination with action by credit card issuers appear more likely to bring about change in this space in the short to medium term.
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An update on the use of credit cards to gamble online in Australia - Lexology
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Danske Spil, Gamingtec, and ComeOn: on the move – Casino Beats
Posted: at 5:42 pm
With comings and goings commonplace across the industry, the Canadian Gaming Association, PlayStar, and Danske Spil, all feature in our latest rundown of a number of recent manoeuvres.
Danske Spil
The board of Danske Spil has elected Karsten Fogh Holanng as inbound chief executive of licensed games, the sportsbook and online gambling unit of Danske Spil, Denmarks state-owned operator.
Holanng, who has served as chief information officer of the division since 2016, will take leadership of Danske Spils online gambling unit in February of 2022.
The appointment will see Holanng replace Niels Erik Folmann, who announced that he would be ending his nine-year tenure as CEO earlier this month after choosing to join Danish theme park operator Tivoli as the companys CCO.
Karsten has in-depth knowledge of the business and our partners, and he has delivered great results as IT officer at Danske Spil, Nikolas Lyhne-Knudsen, Group CEO of Danske Spil, noted.
I am pleased that we can draw even more on Karstens extensive commercial and managerial experience in the role of director of Danske Licens Spil.
ComeOn Group
ComeOn Group has reorganised its C-level leadership team after announcing the appointment of three new executives to lead its product, technology and performance marketing units.
This has seen gaming director Cristiano Blanco gain promotion to chief product officer, where will be charged with directly overseeing the combination of product operations, product development & design, and roadmap management for the groups multi-brand portfolio.
A further internal appointment sees Mikael ngman promoted from director of technology and products to chief information officer, with Efi Peleg, the former director of performance of marketing at William Hill, to join the ComeOn executive leadership team.
Our leadership team is now complete with both new and existing executive team members, adding on to that we have our hybrid office approach that is pioneering and will set us apart making sure to keep and attract talent in our industry, Juergen Reutter, ComeOn CEO, stated.
ComeOn has a history of innovating in this exciting industry for more than 12 years and we have a solid growth strategy in place, in which product, tech, and marketing play a key role. The recent launch of WeSpin is one of many examples where our organisation keeps innovating with Product, Tech and Marketing coming together and driving our differentiating edge.
Gamingtec
Andrei Beu has been appointed as commercial director for B2B at Gamingtec, where he will be tasked leading the division as well as gaining responsibility for new sales and marketing initiatives that will drive brand awareness and strengthen the companys position.
He will also manage Gamingtecs presence at industry events, especially with the return of live events following the COVID-19 pandemic, and in particular coming up with concepts and strategies to better engage with potential new partners while also staying connected with existing clients.
Sapar Karyagdyyev at Gamingtec, explained: In Andrei we have a talented and experienced sales manager that has a comprehensive understanding of the industry. We look forward to being able to leverage this, along with his passion for sales, to take awareness to the next level and engage with new customers.
We are entering a hugely exciting chapter for the business with ambitious growth plans and a product pipeline packed with innovative features and cutting-edge tools. Andrei is absolutely the right man for making operators aware of what we have to offer.
PlayStar
PlayStar has added Gustav Vadenbring to its senior management team as chief financial officer, effective January 10 2022, with the group planning ambitious growth plans for the US market.
Vadenbring joins PlayStar from gambling affiliate Acroud (formerly Net Gaming) where he has served as CFO since 2018. He has previously held senior financial roles at Actic Group, Deloitte and SEB.
In this latest role he will be responsible for overseeing the financial operations of the business as it embarks on its journey from start-up challenger brand to being a major player in the fast-growing online casino market in North America.
Per Hellberg, CEO of PlayStar, explained: Gustav is a major coup for PlayStar. He brings with him unrivalled experience in corporate finance and mergers and acquisitions which will prove key to us achieving our goal of becoming the preferred online casino brand in New Jersey and beyond.
As a challenger brand it is important that we maintain tight control over our finances while also securing additional investment as and when required, and in Gustav we have someone that is beyond qualified for the job.
I would like to officially welcome him to PlayStar and look forward to working closely together, and with the rest of the hugely talented team we have assembled, as we get ready to take the market by storm when we make our imminent debut.
Canadian Gaming Association
The Canadian Gaming Association appointed four new members to its board of directors during its annual general meeting last week.
This saw Scott Burton, CEO of FansUnite Entertainment; Neil Erlick, chief corporate development officer of Nuvei; Jeffrey Haas, SVP of international strategy of DraftKings; and Chuck Keeling, EVP of stakeholder relations and responsible gaming at Great Canadian Gaming, each become appointed.
Carrie Kormos, chair of the board, said: That the CGA Board added four new members is a testament to the Associations exponential growth in 2021. We welcomed 18 new members and diversified by adding sports betting and eSports operators, payment companies, and many non-gaming suppliers.
This will provide the CGA with an opportunity to act as a convenor for the industry as a whole and build collaboration during this exciting period in Canadian gaming.
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Danske Spil, Gamingtec, and ComeOn: on the move - Casino Beats
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