Resort Sports Network
Skiers of the world unite. Well, skiers, snowboarders, and resort lounge
lizards of the world unite. This site aims to be a one-stop shopping guide
to winter resorts in the U.S. It does an outstanding job. RSN starts with
an ultra-clean front page laced with smooth-stylie graphics (nice icons)
and a comprehensive main menu -- what's new, video clips, a resort locator,
events schedules for the resorts you locate, contests to play, links to
follow, and a series of spy cams to show you what's really happening in
these vacation havens. It's packed.
RSN maintains a huge college students section, and although it has some
cheesy bits and bytes about what is "Rad" and "Raging"
(like the silly little dictionary of "cool" words), it also has
some very useful information. The extreme sports page is great, with a comprehensive
list of trails and runs for the dangerously inclined (the mountain biking
in Maui interview is fabulous). There's a special contest area "for
college students only." The site also helps you organize group trips
and guides you through an events calendar for the various resorts (it's
actually the same as the events calendar linked from the top page, but in
different, perhaps hipper colors). Most impressive, and important for the
budget-minded, the site points you to where to ski for free. RSN lists resorts
that are looking for seasonal instructors and helpers in exchange for free
passes.
The video clip collection, though not huge, has a number of high-quality
action videos of mountain biking, wind surfing, and general extreme sport
goop. You can also view the scenery from one of 14 resort cams (Vail, Tahoe,
Park City, Wildcat, and others), with an updated image every few hours.
RSN sports a Usenet-like, threaded chat section for surfers to converse
about the various hot spots and not-spots, trade skiing tips, and ramble
about whatever else they want to, which may or may not relate to resort
stuff. It's a fairly active list, so definitely check it out.
All the pages load quickly, look great (the creators have mastered their
HTML and Netscape extensions), and have lots of information. It's a great
site.-SK
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Cleveland Indians Home
Page
The Cleveland Indians Page offers much the same as the Seattle Mariners
page, by way of content. You'll find player info, game schedules, online
merchandise sales, and team stats. The difference is that the Indians page
has great graphics, putting it an inch above most other baseball-related
sites. The icons are tasteful, the pages load quickly, and it's overall
just better. And, they promise to add video soon to jazz up the site with
a little multimedia foo foo. Of course, if you aren't an Indian fans, none
of this matters anyway.-SK
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Da Truth
Here you'll find extreme sports and extreme layout, with trendy graphics
and angular construction. Lines and boxes, and it sure does look cool. Unfortunately,
the content is a bit thin and some of the links dead end at error stops.
Sure, the site warns that some areas are still under construction, but why
make a link live if there's nowhere for it to go? Oh well, despite its annoyance
factor, the site has some good stuff for inline skaters, skateboarders,
and snow boarders -- especially nice are the global listings of parks and
resorts.-SK
B-
DansWORLD
Skateboarding
It may not be slickest-looking skateboard page, and it may not even have
the most current content, but nonetheless, I really like this site. It's
got FAQ files, gossip, tons of pictures, a few videos, links, and a super-cool
photo archive of net surfers who also also skate. The Mike Blabac photos
of the San Francisco skate scene are pretty tasty, too.-SK
B+
GT BICYCLES
I ride GT because its bikes are well-constructed and look cool. And, guess
what? Its Web site follows suit with a super-clean layout, mucho information
(e.g., an online catalog of all its bikes and accessories), and valuable
dealer locator searching capabilities. You can type in a zip code, select
what you're looking for (parts, frames, tech shops), and you'll get an accurate
list with addresses and phone numbers. GT also provides updated news, events,
and bike related links. Very cool.-SK
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Influx
Magazine Issues
Influx is a skate zine. Skater this and skater that, but mostly, it's just
photos. Perhaps I shouldn't say "just" photos. The pictures are
RAD, but if you were looking for juicy gossip, tips, or reviews, it's pretty
thin. It does have some video clips, though, and as image-intense as they
are, the pages load fairly quickly. Some of the highlighted images are of
skate icons --Tony Hawk, Mike Judd, and Tim Brauch.-SK
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NBC Golf Tour
At first glance, it's a little busy, but after probing through the golf.com
site, I was left to assume it's cluttered only because it has more golf
information than any sane server could handle. Egads, it's packed. Search
the entire world for gold courses, via a clickable image map, get gold tips
from pro Jeff Maggart, stay in tune with upcoming events and NBC broadcasts
(yes, NBC is a very visible sponsor), or visit local clubs and merchandise
vendors. No corners are skipped: There's contact information for all of
these places. It's perfect for serious golfers.-SK
A+
Seattle Mariners Home
Plate
It's official. (Toyota advertisement and all)! Learn everything there is
to learn about the Seattle Mariners. Did you know that Infielder Rich Amaral
has a degree in business from UCLA and weighs 175 lbs.? Yes, that's the
nitty gritty type stuff you'll have access to. Of course, the site has archived
team schedules, tells you how to contact your favorite Mariner, and contains
"merchandise" to buy (secure only for Netscape users). The layout
is O.K., nothing too special, but die-hard fans will probably like it just
fine.-SK
B+
The Sports Network
O.K., sports fans, if you're looking for an alternative to ESPNet (http://espnet.sportszone.com/),
this ain't a bad jaunt. It's consistently updated with news, events, and
scores, and offers both professional and collegiate coverage. It's got a
nice layout, good enough graphics (though few huge glossy action photos),
and a pretty dang fine searching mechanism. And they don't skip corners.
There's information on just about every team, archived locally on the server.
(Yup, mucho original content here.) It's a winner. (Nice cliche, eh?)-SK
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