Time Out With Jenn & Lisa
Two women talk sports: podcast and blog.
Time Out With Jenn & Lisa
Beginning in November 2020, Jenn and Lisa decided to start a podcast, a sports podcast to be exact. Both long time sports enthusiasts, they decided to break the pandemic blues with some sports chat. Football, baseball, hockey, basketball, are all part of the discussion. Predictions along with some random discussions are sure to entertain even the most non-sports person in your life. Join us, each week, for some living room sports chat.
Latest Podcasts
Latest Blog Posts
- 9.8 Mile Closer SwapThe Yankees and Mets need to swap closers. This is why.
- This Week in Sports History: July 18, 1922. Thank you, Toughie!When I was a kid I am fairly certain I would have given away all my worldly possessions to snag a foul ball at a baseball game. I even would have given up my lefty softball glove, my Garbage Pail Kids trading cards or all my Transformers for that scuffed, dirtied orb of greatness. ToContinue reading “This Week in Sports History: July 18, 1922. Thank you, Toughie!”
- GOAL!!!! The EuroCup Final Has Set Up a Fun, In-House Rivalry.All over the world, soccer is immensely popular. In fact, it is the most popular sport worldwide. This is a hard fact for Americans to swallow when we have the greatest sporting event of them all; Super Bowl Sunday. I will admit; soccer is not in my top five of favorite sports. I couldContinue reading “GOAL!!!! The EuroCup Final Has Set Up a Fun, In-House Rivalry.”
- Happy Bobby Bonilla Day!Happy July 1st, dear readers. For our northern friends today is Canada Day; on this date in 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of Great Britain and a federation of four provinces: Nova Scotia; New Brunswick; Ontario; and Quebec. Canada Day is like our own Independence Day coming up in a few days. July 1stContinue reading “Happy Bobby Bonilla Day!”
- This Week in Sports History June 27, 1891: Ireland’s Greatest and Most Tragic Tennis PlayerOn June 27, 1891, Irish woman Mabel Cahill beat defending champion Ellen Roosevelt 6-4, 6-1, 4-6, 6-3 for the United States Women’s Tennis National Championship at the Philadelphia Cricket Club. Mabel became the first foreign woman to win a major tournament with her victory. If you are wondering, Ellen Roosevelt was a cousin ofContinue reading “This Week in Sports History June 27, 1891: Ireland’s Greatest and Most Tragic Tennis Player”
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