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Los Broncos
06-14-2008, 11:39 PM
The best human train wrecks in sports history
by Jeff Gordon
Frequent FOXSports.com contributor Jeff Gordon is also an online columnist for STLToday (Gordo's Zone), an Internet branch of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Updated: June 2, 2008, 4:00 PM EST 767 comments
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Once upon a time, Jose Canseco was one of baseball's most explosive young talents. He brought power, speed and a strong throwing arm to our national pastime.

But he was a knucklehead, too, and he de-evolved into a parody of himself. His career path turned south. He abused steroids, lived in weight rooms and became comically over-muscled.

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His personal life had an unfortunate "E! True Hollywood Story" feel to it. Marriages ended badly. He played bumper cars with his first wife, the former Esther Haddad, in one particularly expensive outburst. His bid for publicity and post-baseball income became increasingly desperate.

His next stunt will be to box former NFL special teams star (and current sportscaster) Vai Sikahema in a celebrity bout July 12 in Atlantic City, N.J.

"I imagine the reception will be mixed," Canseco told the Philadelphia Daily News. "But the curiosity factor is going to be incredible. Whether people want to see someone kick my butt, or me kick someone else's butt, I guarantee there will be interest."

In short, he became one of the Top 10 Human Train Wrecks In Sports History. The curiosity factor is incredible for everybody on this list:

Mike Tyson

In his prime, "Iron Mike" was one of the most feared boxers ever. But then he got old, blew through his $30 million in earnings (feeding his many exotic animals was expensive!) and got a tattoo covering half his face. His spectacular rise and fall was chronicled in a brutally honest documentary film introduced at Cannes Film Festival.

Personal issues: Alcohol and drug abuse, bankruptcy, divorces, litigation.

Legal woes: Dozens of arrests on assorted charges. Jailed multiple times. Did three years in a federal prison on a rape conviction.

Professional lowlight: Bit off a chunk of Evander Holyfield's ear during a bout.

Cash-in: Threatening to cross over to mixed-martial arts, perhaps to "fight" Tyson wannabe Kimbo Slice.

Dennis Rodman

Dennis Rodman won NBA championships with the Detroit Pistons and Chicago Bulls, but he became better known for his tattoos, body piercings and rainbow hair colors. (Matt King / Getty Images)

This defensive specialist/rebounding champ morphed into a novelty act later in his NBA career. He became better known for his tattoos, body piercings, rainbow hair colors and relentless night-clubbing than his working class basketball skills. He became sort of a male Paris Hilton.

Personal issues: Drinking problems, divorce (Carmen Electra!).

Legal woes: Assortment of alcohol and domestic violence-related beefs.

Professional lowlight: Playing briefly in Finland, for the Torpan Pojat club, in a promotional stunt.

Cash-in: Like Tonya Harding and Pete Rose, turned to professional wrestling. Like Canseco, tried to become an action hero — starring in the unfortunate film "Double Team" with Jean-Claude Van Damme. Colorful personal life was highlighted in a MTV reality show, "The Rodman World Tour," and an autobiography, "I Should Be Dead By Now."

Jose Canseco

His post-baseball dream was to become America's next great action hero. But Chuck Norris he was not. He landed a spot in "The Surreal Life" with other cultural cartoon figures. Acting roles proved hard to come by, though, and he failed to generate Hollywood interest with his life story. Lenders recently foreclosed on his Southern California home.

Personal Issues: Steroid abuse, divorces, financial problems.

Legal woes: Domestic assault, aggravated battery

Professional lowlight: Fly ball caroming off his skull and over the outfield fence for a home run.

Cash-in: Burned former teammates with sleazy tell-all books "Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits & How Baseball Got Big" and "Vindicated."

O.J. Simpson

One of the great running backs in NFL history is remembered for one of the most famous acquittals in United States legal history. A jury found "The Juice" not guilty of murdering ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman in 1994, despite overwhelming evidence against him. Simpson later lost a civil suit filed by family members of the victims. His acting and endorsement deals evaporated. His subsequent quest to "find the real killers" has led him to golf courses from coast to coast.

Personal Issues: Financial bankruptcy, moral bankruptcy.

Legal woes: Acquitted of double homicide. Currently facing multiple felony charges in Las Vegas from his ill-conceived bid to regain stolen memorabilia.

Professional lowlight: A pay-per-view reality show, "Juiced with O.J. Simpson," where he played practical jokes on unwitting subjects. Practical jokes did not include partial beheadings.

Cash-in: Co-authored a book, "If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer," explaining how he would have committed the murders had he, you know, actually did. With the Goldman family still trying to collect its judgment, a Florida bankruptcy court awarded it the rights to this book.

John Daly

The long driver continues to make a nice living as the PGA Tour's lone duffer. He chain smokes cigarettes on the course. He pounds beer, despite his long struggle with alcoholism. He travels to events in a recreational vehicle. Recent video footage of the porcine Daly playing shirtless furthered his Hillbilly image.

Personal issues: Alcoholism, divorces, gambling, obesity. Allegedly attacked by his fourth wife, Sherrie, with a steak knife.

Professional lowlight: Suspended by PGA Tour after walking out of 1993 Kapalua International.

Legal woes: Domestic skirmish with ex-wife Bettye. Sherrie Daly did time on a money-laundering beef.

Cash-in: Participated in a reality show chronicling his unconventional lifestyle. Performed on an autobiographical album, "My Life." His book, "My Life In and Out of the Rough: The Truth Behind All That Bull(bleep) You Think You Know About Me" was a New York Times bestseller.

Tonya Harding aspired to be a U.S. Olympic figure skater, but her hit on Nancy Kerrigan in 1994 left her disgraced by many prior to her infamous "Celebrity Boxing" bout. (Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

Tonya Harding

Like Daly, she was a blue-collar kid starring in a white-collar sport. She dreamed of making the U.S. Olympic figure skating team in 1994, but Nancy Kerrigan stood in her path. So her ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, hatched a plan with Shawn Eckhardt and Shane Stant to literally put a hit on Kerrigan at the '94 U.S. Figure Skating Championships.

Kerrigan suffered a minor leg injury in the assault but skated on to a stellar career. Harding soldiered on as a "disgraced figure skater." Gillooly added to her notoriety by selling a sex tape of their honeymoon high jinks. Neither proved especially photogenic.

Personal issues: Divorce, financial difficulties, reporting unverifiable crimes against her to police.

Legal woes: Copped a plea to hindering the investigation of the Kerrigan assault. Charged with domestic violence assault for allegedly beating her then-boyfriend with a hubcap.

Professional lowlight: "Fought" Paula Jones on "Celebrity Boxing." (At least she won.)

Cash-in: Dabbled in professional wrestling as a manager. Then turned to professional boxing. Released an autobiography, "The Tonya Tapes," earlier this year.

Pete Rose

During a recent radio interview, baseball's "Hit King" clarified facts regarding his obsessive gambling while he managed the Cincinnati Reds. He bet up to $2,000 per game, up from the $1,000 per game he admitted to betting earlier. So that cleared things up. He has turned a negative — being banned from baseball for wagering on games while managing — into a second career. He is a walking, talking memorabilia machine.

Personal issues: Gambling problem, divorce.

Legal woes: Did time for tax evasion.

Professional lowlight: Getting "chokeslammed" by Kane in World Wrestling Entertainment "matches."

Cash-in: Baseball's all-time hits leader (4,256) does very well on the autograph circuit. Was a successful sports talk radio host. Released an autobiography, "My Prison Without Bars."

Diego Maradona may be a soccer star to many around the world, but he's had to deal with his own issues of drug addiction, alcohol abuse, obesity and divorce during his life. (JUAN MABROMATA / Getty Images)

Diego Maradona

This global soccer star is best known in the U.S. for, well, hating the U.S. He lived extensively in Cuba earlier this decade at the invitation of Fidel Castro. He has railed against President Bush. He even has a Che Guevara tattoo. He has gone through rehab repeatedly, attempting to control his cocaine addiction. To control his weight problem, he underwent a stomach-stapling procedure.

Personal issues: Drug addiction, alcohol abuse, obesity, divorce.

Legal woes: Tax evasion, drug possession, alcohol-related incidents.

Professional lowlight: Paced himself carefully during a 2005 charity match, then asked friends for a cigar after leaving the pitch.

Cash-in: Became a popular television host in his native Argentina. Released an autobiography, "Yo Soy El Diego."

Denny McLain

Life after baseball has been unkind to this former 31-game winner. When authorities recently came to his foreclosed Michigan home to evict him, they also nabbed him on an outstanding warrant related to a civil case. The twice-imprisoned McLain can't avoid calamity. His stellar pitching career was cut short by arm troubles and suspensions (gambling, gun possession) from Major League Baseball.

Personal issues: Gambling, massive financial problems.

Legal woes: Did time for drug trafficking, embezzlement, and racketeering. That conviction was reversed, but he did more time for embezzlement, mail fraud and conspiracy for a pension-gutting scheme.

Professional lowlight: Finished his baseball career, mostly as a position player, for the semi-pro London (Ont.) Majors.

Cash-in: Recorded two albums of organ music for Capitol Records. Worked as a radio talk show host. Released his autobiography, "I Told You I Wasn't Perfect," in 2007.

Tommy Morrison earned a co-starring role in Rocky V, but his boxing career was hampered by a HIV positive test along with drug and weapon convictions. (Al Bello/Allsport / Getty Images)

Tommy Morrison

He always looked the part of a boxer, which is how he landed his co-starring role in Rocky V. But his actual boxing career was checkered, as was his life away from the ring. He tested HIV positive and lost his boxing license. Later, he attempted a comeback while claiming that he wasn't HIV positive after all. (Shockingly, it appears that his blood tests may have been doctored). Morrison is still out there looking for fights, either in mixed martial arts or off-radar boxing venues.

Personal issues: Alcohol, drug abuse. Also suffering from Hepatitis C, according to a former agent.

Legal woes: Did time for drug and weapon convictions. Drunk driving.

Professional lowlight: At the height of his career, losing to somebody named Michael Bentt.

Cash-in: Still trading off his name as best he can; $16 million in career earnings is long gone.

http://msn.foxsports.com/boxing/story/8195818/The-best-human-train-wrecks-in-sports-history?MSNHPHCP&GT1=39002

TexanBob
06-15-2008, 03:26 PM
Must-read:

* Kahn: Celtics' Allen shakes off slump
* Spencer: Newman's Father's Day gift?
* Vote for your favorite Yankee moment

Must-see:

* Latest video reaction from U.S. Open
* Video central: Lakers-Celtics finals

View more videos >>
Top headlines:

* Tiger hits miracle shots for Open lead
* Teen Logano youngest N'wide winner
* Kobe on Lakers' deficit: 'It ain't over'

All of today's top stories >>
Worth a thousand words:

* Day 3 of U.S. Open tournament
* NBA Finals: Game 4 action

View more photos >>


It's always a good idea to edit out the rubbish when you cut and paste.

Spider
06-15-2008, 04:14 PM
I would agree with that list ......
Riddick Bowe needs to be on there

Los Broncos
06-15-2008, 05:26 PM
It's always a good idea to edit out the rubbish when you cut and paste.

Sorry sir, it was late.

Houshyamama
06-15-2008, 06:29 PM
Diego Maradona

This global soccer star is best known in the U.S. for, well, hating the U.S. He lived extensively in Cuba earlier this decade at the invitation of Fidel Castro. He has railed against President Bush. He even has a Che Guevara tattoo. He has gone through rehab repeatedly, attempting to control his cocaine addiction. To control his weight problem, he underwent a stomach-stapling procedure.

Oh no!!!

BroncoBuff
06-16-2008, 11:41 AM
Hard to see how Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire and Roger Clemens did not make the list. In my opinion, all three of those guys are worse train wrecks than Canseco. I don't think Madonna and Jose's wives and even the handguns are much really, and the ball hitting his head doesn't even belong here. At least he came clean about his cheating.

I NOMINATE: Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire, for having intentionally shat all over the record books of America's pastime and the storied history of this beloved game, then befriending the Maris family whose patriarch you defiled, then lying to the public, and then McGwire making a fool of himself before Congress.

Roger Clemens, even worse: He went from having a shelf full of Cy Youngs and an express ticket to the Hall of Fame ... to being a steroid cheater, perjurer, libelous betrayer of a friend, and statutory rapist - all in less than 9 months. Now THAT'S a train wreck.



Even worse: Bonds and Clemens, the best pitcher and the best hitter of our era ... both can still play and play well, but nobody wants 'em. Thas's a train wreck all on its own.

Smiling Assassin27
06-16-2008, 02:32 PM
Dexter Manley
Steve Howe
Billy Martin
Floyd Landis
The Vick Boys

Jason in LA
06-16-2008, 03:22 PM
Where's Lawrence Phillips?

Oh wait, he's in prison.

I answered my own question. ;D

Mountain Bronco
06-17-2008, 09:53 AM
Will we be adding Walker to this list?

Jason in LA
06-17-2008, 11:45 AM
Looks like it. He's wasting big time talent.

BroncoFanatic
06-17-2008, 12:03 PM
Where's Lawrence Phillips?

Oh wait, he's in prison.

I answered my own question. ;D

Ditto on Ray Caruth (sp?)

Mountain Bronco
06-17-2008, 12:05 PM
My question is, Do you have to be an actual star to be train wreck or just a recongnizable name? Ray Caruth, while good wasn't a star. Lawrence Phillips was a star in college, but never in the pros.

lex
06-17-2008, 12:21 PM
Good call on Rae Carruth.

Also, what about:

Mike Webster
Len Bias
Bam Morris
Art Schlichter
Maurice Clarett
Barrett Robbins
Big Daddy Lipscomb
Magic "I have attained" Johnson
Baskerville Holmes
Darryl Strawberry
Dwight Gooden

BlaK-Argentina
06-17-2008, 12:35 PM
It's weird seeing Maradona there. I hate his guts... makes me ashamed.

c_lazy_r
06-17-2008, 01:35 PM
LT could also be there, IMO.

2KBack
06-17-2008, 01:51 PM
Pete Rose was still my favorite Baseball player growing up

BroncoBuff
06-17-2008, 02:29 PM
Rae Carruth
Mike Webster
Len Bias
Art Schlichter
Maurice Clarett
Barrett Robbins

Wow ... powerful arguments. Those are all world-class train wrecks.

Clarett's actual football finale was in retrospect a storybook finish. Do you guys realize the last play HE WAS EVER ON A FOOTBALL FIELD FOR, he ran for a TD to win the national championship? True story. They showed that Miami-Ohio State Orange Bowl replay recently, and sure enough, he scored that TD in overtime, and the Buckeye offense was done, as was Clarett. He never played another play anywhere - not even pre-season.

Ambiguous
06-17-2008, 03:14 PM
Travis Henry anyone?

Jason in LA
06-18-2008, 01:20 AM
My question is, Do you have to be an actual star to be train wreck or just a recongnizable name? Ray Caruth, while good wasn't a star. Lawrence Phillips was a star in college, but never in the pros.

Phillips had the talent to be a star in the pros. He wasted it, so I'd put him on the list.

Ray was going to be average at best, so I wouldn't put him on the list.

bowtown
06-18-2008, 08:52 AM
Brian Bosworth
Todd Marinovich

Bronco Jamus
06-18-2008, 09:08 AM
Poor Len Bias.