American Morning

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December 21st, 2010
08:21 AM ET

NFL greats tailgate, play ball with troops in Iraq

College football post-season and bowl game season is well underway. Over the next month you will see some of the best college teams match up across the country. Bowl games are usually highly publicized, commercialized and televised events. There is one unofficial bowl game, though, that you probably have never heard of.

That's because this game, the "Connect to Home" Bowl, is being played at an undisclosed location in Iraq with NFL and college football greats of the past and American troops currently stationed there.

This morning on American Morning, AM's Kiran Chetry talks to Hall of Fame quarterback with the Buffalo Bills Jim Kelly and former NFL quarterback Rodney Peete, who are helping lead the event. Kelly and Peete will play quarterback on opposing teams. Catch the sneak peak practice video here. And, be sure to watch highlights of the game during halftime at the 2011 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl on January 1, and at www.facebook.com/Tostitos.


Filed under: American Morning • Iraq • Military • Sports
November 23rd, 2010
09:36 AM ET

AM Series: Hard Hits – Slam leaves linebacker brain damaged for life

Seventeen-year-old Max Conradt is viciously slammed down by a 280-pound linebacker during a high school football game. He continues to play and by the end of the game, after many punishing tackles, Conradt collapses into his stepmother's arms. Underneath his helmet, Conradt's brain was swelling.

He was dying - fast.

He was in a coma for two months with a catastrophic traumatic brain injury and had three operations to relieve the pressure on his swelling brain. Max's father Ralph is coming unglued, because doctors say his son probably will not make it.

Did Max live?

In the end we find out he did, but it’s not much of a life. Max lives in a home for brain damaged adults. He will never hold down a job, he will never function independently.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta tells Max's story on American Morning.


Filed under: American Morning • Health • Sports
November 19th, 2010
06:06 PM ET

Extended interview with surfer Kelly Slater

CNN's Jason Carroll sat down with 10-time world champion surfer Kelly Slater for a story on American Morning. Here's the full interview.

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Filed under: American Morning • Sports
November 19th, 2010
07:32 AM ET

Kelly Slater: The best athlete you've probably never heard of

In the world of sports icons, there's Ali, Navratilova, Jordan. But do you know...Slater?

CNN's Jason Carroll sits down with Kelly Slater, 10 time world champion surfer, who is at the top of his game at 38 years old.


Filed under: American Morning • Sports
November 19th, 2010
07:30 AM ET

Forever stoked: What it's like to interview Kelly Slater

By Stephen Samaniego, CNN Producer

Kelly Slater is just another surfer. Sure, he has surfed the best waves this planet has to offer while being paid lots of money to do so, and in the process he’s become the best surfer this world has ever known. "

But...he's still just a guy who loves to surf.

I arrived to Mollusk surf shop the morning of the shoot and started to set up without really knowing what kind of Kelly Slater was going to show up.

Slater had spent the entire night flying from Puerto Rico and landing in beautiful Newark, New Jersey at 6:00am. I'm not sure if you're familiar with either Puerto Rico or Newark, New Jersey but I can promise you that no matter who you are, the chances of you being in a good mood after a journey like that on a red-eye are slim.

With this in mind, we worked hard to make sure that when Slater arrived, we would be ready to go so that he could be in and out quickly if he wanted to. The shop’s owner, Chris Gentile, had already given marching orders to his employees to make coffee and bagel runs so that Slater would be well taken care of.

We had scheduled the interview for 10:00am. When Slater's people contacted me at 9:00am to say they were on their way, things went into overdrive. We had an hour with the star surfer and we wanted to make the most of it.

A white van with tinted windows pulled up and out came Slater. Dressed in jeans with layers of clothing and a hooded sweatshirt pulled over his head, he looked like a guy who had just flown overnight and had 15 minutes to freshen up in a hotel room. He walked up the stairs and into the shop, stopping to greet everyone he came across.

Once he stepped into the shop though, Slater’s eyes lit up. His formality disappeared and he bolted straight for the wall lined with boards. He grabbed board after board, pulling each off the rack to hold it in his hands, feeling its body and imagining how it would ride. You could feel the intensity this man has for riding waves. He pulled almost every single board in the rack with the enthusiasm of a grom (an excited newbie surfer).

We started the interview, and Slater talked about his passion for wave riding. It was a point he couldn't make enough. He LOVES to ride waves and be in the ocean. It’s an unexplainable connection that only people who do it can feel and can't fully explain. As the interview progressed it was the one thing that he kept coming back to. The more he talked about it, the more I began to see him not as 10-time world champion Kelly Slater but as another surfer. As someone who was born in Guam and grew up by the ocean, I connected with Slater’s special bond with the surf.

And that feeling you get after an amazing session or dropping into the biggest wave of the day? That surging energy? That stoke? Slater still feels it. He's practically dripping in it

Kelly ended up hanging out with us for more than two hours at the shop. His passion for all things surfing is beyond words. Kelly Slater, the guy who's surfed all the best waves and should be the most jaded one among us, is the most stoked.


Filed under: Sports
November 11th, 2010
08:48 AM ET

Coach whips teen basketball players, parents fight back with suit

A shocking cell phone video shows a high school basketball coach using a weightlifting belt to whip one of his players.

More players at the school, Murrah High School in Jackson, Miss., say they have been whipped too. The coach, asst. coach Marlon Dorsey, admitted to paddling the boys and is now reportedly on leave. Some of the parents have filed a lawsuit against the school district.

This morning, one of the fathers, Jason Hubbard, Sr., tells Ali Velshi what happened to his 15-year-old son, who is not the player in the video but was allegedly hit.

Also, Lisa Ross, the attorney representing the parents of three players in the suit against coach Dorsey, Principal Frederick Murray and the Jackson School District, details the laws at play in the case.


Filed under: American Morning • Education • Justice • Parenting • Sports
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