USA TODAY z FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2019 z SECTION C
FIRST WORD
He wasn’t on the team. You’ve
gotta be on the team to get a
ring. I love Kelly and appreciate
what he did for us, but he decided
to move on.”
Clemson coach Dabo Swinney on why
former starting quarterback Kelly
Bryant, who led the team to four vic-
tories at the start of last year’s title
campaign, would not be getting a
ring. Bryant left the team in midsea-
son and transferred to Missouri.
NOTABLE NUMBERS
10
Wins for the Yankees with no
losses this year versus the
Orioles at Camden Yards, the second
team since 1955 to go 10-0 against an
opponent on the road (Red Sox at
Tampa Bay in 2002).
16
Home runs hit by the Yankees
this week versus Baltimore,
tying an MLB record in a three-game
series (Red Sox versus Yankees in
1977).
LAST WORD
‘Field of Dreams’ captures the
uniqueness of Iowans’ can-do
attitude, and there’s no better
place to host our state’s very first
major league game than this leg-
endary baseball field in Dyersville.”
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds on the an-
nouncement the White Sox and Yan-
kees will play Aug. 13, 2020, at the
farm site where the film was shot.
From staff and wire reports
SWINNEY BY KELVIN KUO/USA TODAY SPORTS
SPORTSLINE
© 2 019 CDW®, CDW•G®and PEOPLE WHO GET IT®are registered trademarks of CDW LLC.
For a faster path forward, you need VMware®
and IT Orchestration by CDW™.
WE GET THAT BUILDING A
GATEWAY TO THE FUTURE WON’T
PREPARE YOU FOR TOMORROW.
CDW.com/vmwarehci
Operate in the data center, in the cloud or on the edge —
today and in the future — with VMware Cloud Foundation™,
designed and implemented by CDW experts.
FOR A FASTER
PATH FORWARD,
YOU NEED VMWARE®
AND IT ORCHESTRATION
BY CDW™.
Learn more below.
Shoe designer Salvador Amezcua
knew something was up. His phone
was blowing up – he was getting non-
stop texts from NBA stars.
“Yo, have you seen the rule
change?” they asked Amezcua.
Amezcua, a custom shoe artist bet-
ter known as “Kickstradomis,” was
confused, until he flipped on his TV
and learned that the NBA had lifted
team color restrictions on players’
shoes for games.
“My face lit up, because I already
knew that next season was going to be
crazy,” Amezcua said.
With the restrictions officially lifted
last August, dozens of NBA players
turned to designers like Kickstradomis,
and many players are already planning
shoe designs for this season.
From depictions of TV or movie char-
acters, tributes or unique color
schemes, players came up with endless
ways to show their personalities with-
out being limited to team colors. Player
style that used to center around tunnel
entrances quickly turned to footwear.
“People want to be able to express
themselves,” newly signed Minnesota
Timberwolves forward Jordan Bell said.
“It’s such a team sport, and you want to
The Pistons’ Langston Galloway wore a custom pair of shoes for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.TOMMY GILLIGAN/USA TODAY SPORTS
Custom kicks are more
than fashion statement
Lila Bromberg
USA TODAY
See KICKS, Page 8C
Salvador Amezcua, better known as
Kickstradomis, preps a pair of
sneakers for painting in his Los
Angeles studio.
SANDY HOOPER/USA TODAY