Champions


8:00 pm - 11:00 pm, Today on USA Network (West) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Contending with misdemeanor charges, disgraced minor league basketball coach Marcus receives orders from the court to take a team of players with intellectual disabilities under his wing. Longing for the skills of his former team, Marcus initially struggles to connect with his new team, given the variety of challenges their diagnoses present. Yet the athletes' continued perseverance against the odds inspires Marcus to change his ways, in turn helping the team reach new heights.

2023 English Stereo
Comedy Drama Basketball Coming Of Age Other

Cast & Crew
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Woody Harrelson (Actor) .. Marcus
Kaitlin Olson (Actor) .. Alex
Ernie Hudson (Actor) .. Coach Phil Perretti
Matt Cook (Actor) .. Sonny
Cheech Marin (Actor) .. Julio
Madison Tevlin (Actor) .. Cosentino
Joshua Felder (Actor) .. Darius
Kevin Iannucci (Actor) .. Johnny
Ashton Gunning (Actor) .. Cody
Matthew Von Der Ahe (Actor) .. Craig
Tom Sinclair (Actor) .. Blair
James Day Keith (Actor) .. Benny
Alex Hintz (Actor) .. Arthur
Casey Metcalfe (Actor) .. Marlon
Bradley Edens (Actor) .. Showtime
Barbara Pollard (Actor) .. Dot
Alexandra Castillo (Actor) .. Judge Mary Menendez
Scott Van Pelt (Actor) .. Scott Van Pelt
Jalen Rose (Actor) .. Jalen Rose
Alicia Johnston (Actor) .. Coach Maya
Seán Cullen (Actor) .. Frank O'Connolly
Jacob Blair (Actor) .. Blake Lassiter
Ryan DeLong (Actor) .. Headband
Cory Wojcik (Actor) .. Bus Driver
Lauren Cochrane (Actor) .. Mother on Bus
Eddy Norman (Actor) .. Child with Mother on Bus
Stephanie Sy (Actor) .. Reporter
Alex Hannah (Actor) .. Jimmy
Champ Pederson (Actor) .. Peter the 'Ringer'
Aaron Hughes (Actor) .. Opposing Coach
Joanne Rodriguez (Actor) .. Group Home Counselor
Lois Brothers (Actor) .. Referee
Brian Dobson (Actor) .. Announcer
Vance Halldorson (Actor) .. Cheering Spectator
Ward Keith (Actor) .. Spectator
Jim Kirby (Actor) .. Curler
Cindy Myskiw (Actor) .. Spectator
Mike Smith (Actor) .. Attorney McGurk
Clint Allen (Actor) .. Shakespeare Actor

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Woody Harrelson (Actor) .. Marcus
Born: July 23, 1961
Birthplace: Midland, Texas, United States
Trivia: Known almost as much for his off-screen pastimes as his on-screen characterizations, Woody Harrelson is an actor for whom truth is undeniably stranger than fiction. Son of a convicted murderer, veteran of multiple arrests, outspoken environmentalist, and tireless hemp proponent, Harrelson is colorful even by Hollywood standards. However, he is also a strong, versatile actor, something that tends to be obscured by the attention paid to his real-life antics. Born in Midland, TX, on July 23, 1961, Harrelson grew up in Lebanon, OH. He began his acting career there, appearing in high-school plays. He also went professional around this time, making his small-screen debut in Harper Valley P.T.A. (1978) alongside Barbara Eden. While studying acting in earnest, Harrelson attended Indiana's Hanover College; following his graduation, he had his first speaking part (one line only) in the 1986 Goldie Hawn vehicle Wildcats. On the stage, Harrelson understudied in the Neil Simon Broadway comedy Biloxi Blues (he was briefly married to Simon's daughter Nancy) and at one point wrote a play titled Furthest From the Sun. His big break came in 1985, when he was cast as the sweet-natured, ingenuous bartender Woody Boyd on the TV sitcom Cheers. To many, he is best remembered for this role, for which he won a 1988 Emmy and played until the series' 1993 conclusion. During his time on Cheers, Harrelson also played more serious roles in made-for-TV movies such as Bay Coven (1987), and branched out to the big screen with roles in such films as Casualties of War (1989) and Doc Hollywood (1991). Harrelson's big break as a movie star came with Ron Shelton's 1992 sleeper White Men Can't Jump, a buddy picture in which he played a charming (if profane) L.A. hustler. His next film was a more serious drama, Indecent Proposal (1993), wherein he was miscast as a husband whose wife sleeps with a millionaire in exchange for a fortune. In 1994, Harrelson appeared as an irresponsible rodeo rider in the moronic buddy comedy The Cowboy Way, which proved to be an all-out clinker. That film's failings, however, were more than overshadowed by his other film that year, Oliver Stone's inflammatory Natural Born Killers. Playing one of the film's titular psychopaths, Harrelson earned both raves and a sizable helping of controversy for his complex performance. Following work in a couple of low-rated films, Harrelson again proved his mettle, offering another multi-layered performance as real life pornography magnate Larry Flynt in the controversial People Vs. Larry Flynt (1996). The performance earned Harrelson an Oscar nomination. The next year, he earned further praise for his portrayal of a psychotic military prisoner in Wag the Dog. He then appeared as part of an all-star lineup in Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line (1998), and in 1999 gave a hilarious performance as Matthew McConaughey's meathead brother in EdTV. That same year, he lent his voice to one of his more passionate causes, acting as the narrator for Grass, a documentary about marijuana. In 2000, Harrelson starred in White Men collaborator Ron Shelton's boxing drama Play It to the Bone as an aspiring boxer who travels to Las Vegas to find fame and fortune, but ends up competing against his best friend (Antonio Banderas). The actor temporarily retired from the big screen in 2001 and harkened back to his television roots, with seven appearances as Nathan, the short-term downstairs boyfriend to Debra Messing's Grace, in producer David Kohan's long-running hit Will and Grace (1998-2006). After his return to television, Harrelson seemed content to land supporting roles for several years. He reemerged in cineplexes with twin 2003 releases. In that year's little-seen Scorched, an absurdist farce co-starring John Cleese and Alicia Silverstone, Harrelson plays an environmentalist and animal activist who seeks retribution on Cleese's con-man for the death of one of his pet ducks. Unsurprisingly, most American critics didn't even bother reviewing the film, and it saw extremely limited release. Harrelson contributed a cameo to the same year's Jack Nicholson/Adam Sandler vehicle Anger Mangement, and a supporting role to 2004's critically-panned Spike Lee opus She Hate Me. The tepid response to these films mirrored those directed at After the Sunset (2004), Brett Ratner's homage to Alfred Hitchcock. Harrelson stars in the diamond heist picture as federal agent Stan Lloyd, opposite Pierce Brosnan's master thief Max Burdett. Audiences had three chances to catch Harrelson through the end of 2005; these included Mark Mylod's barely-released, Fargo-esque crime comedy The Big White , with Robin Williams and Holly Hunter; Niki Caro's October 2005 sexual harrassment docudrama North Country, starring Charlize Theron; and the gifted Jane Anderson's period drama Prize Winner of Defiance Ohio. In the latter, Harrelson plays, Leo 'Kelly' Ryan, the drunken, increasingly violent husband of lead Julianne Moore, who manages to hold her family together with a steady stream of sweepstakes wins in the mid-fifties, as alcoholism and the financial burden of ten children threaten to either tear the family apart or send it skidding into abject poverty. Harrelson then joined the cast of maestro auteur Robert Altman's ensemble comedy-drama A Prairie Home Companion (2006), a valentine to Garrison Keillor's decades-old radio program with a strong ensemble cast that includes Meryl Streep, Lindsay Lohan and Kevin Kline. He also works wonders as a key contributor to the same year's Richard Linklater sci-fi thriller Through a Scanner Darkly, an adaptation of Philip K. Dick's 1977 novel that, like one of the director's previous efforts, 2001's Waking Life, uses rotoscoping to animate over live-action footage. It opened in July 2006 to uniformly strong reviews. As Ernie Luckman, one of the junkie hangers-on at Robert Arctor's (Keanu Reeves) home, Harrelson contributes an effective level of despondency to his character, amid a first-rate cast. After Harrelson shot Prairie and Scanner, the trades announced that he had signed up to star in Paul Schrader's first UK-produced feature, Walker, to co-star Kristin Scott-Thomas, Lauren Bacall, Ned Beatty, Lily Tomlin and Willem Dafoe. Harrelson portrays the lead, a Washington, D.C.-based female escort; Schrader informed the trades that he envisions the character as something similar to what American Gigolo's Julian Kaye would become in middle-age. Shooting began in March 2006. He also signed on, in June of the same year, to join the cast of the Coen Bros.' 2007 release No Country for Old Men, which would capture the Academy Award for Best Picture. Harrelson showed off his versatility in 2008 by starring in the Will Ferrell basketball comedy Semi-Pro as well as the thriller Transsiberian. He continued to prove himself capable of just about any part the next year with his entertaining turn in the horror comedy Zombieland, and his powerful work as a damaged soldier in Oren Moverman's directorial debut The Messenger. For his work in that movie, Harrelson captured his second Academy Award nomination, as well as nods from the Golden Globes, the Independent Spirit Awards, and the Screen Actors Guild - in addition to winning the Best Supporting Actor award from the National Board of Review. In 2012, the actor appeared as the flawed but loyal mentor to two young adults forced to compete to the death in the film adaptation of author Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games.
Kaitlin Olson (Actor) .. Alex
Born: August 18, 1975
Birthplace: Tigard, Oregon, United States
Trivia: A native of Portland, OR, who honed her passion for the stage by studying theater at the University of Oregon, Kaitlin Olson moved to Los Angeles after earning her degree and quickly aligned herself with the improvisational comedy specialists at the Groundlings Theater. A coveted spot in the Sunday Company proved the catalyst that would help Olson to secure roles in the hit HBO series Curb Your Enthusiasm (in which she played Cheryl's sister Becky), and the hit sitcom The Drew Carey Show (in which she played Mimi's nemesis Traylor). Later, after joining Carey's "Who's Line Is It Anyway?" troupe at the Melrose Improv, Olson joined her bespectacled co-star for a USO tour and entertained troops in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Norway. While The Drew Carey Show would go off the air in 2004, Olson wasn't out of work for long, and next turned up as part owner of a popular Irish pub in the twisted FX series It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. In 2007, Olson remained busy on the small screen with a recurring role on the Emmy-nominated series The Riches.
Ernie Hudson (Actor) .. Coach Phil Perretti
Born: December 17, 1945
Birthplace: Benton Harbor, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Actor Ernie Hudson received his training at Wayne State, Yale School of Drama and the University of Minnesota. Following a hitch with the Marines, Hudson appeared in such stage productions as The Great White Hope, The Cage and Daddy Goodness. He made his earlier film appearance in 1976's Leadbelly. Most of us know Hudson best as Winston Zeddmore in the two Ghostbusters films, a role he repeated in Ray Parker Jr.'s "Ghostbusters" music video. His best--and most controversial--screen assignment was the The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992); Hudson played retarded handyman Solomon, virtually the only character in the film who doesn't buy into the "perfect" facade of homicidal baby-sitter Rebecca DeMornay. On TV, Ernie Hudson has been seen as Smythe in Highcliffe Manor (1977), undercover officer "Night Train" Lane in The Last Precinct (1986), and kleptomaniac cop Toby Baker in Broken Badges (1990). He had a memorable supporting part in the 1992 thriller The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, and appeared in Heart and Souls as well as the comedy Airheads. In 1994 he was cast in a prominent role in the action film The Crow, and followed that up in 1995 with part in Congo. In 1997 he started work on the HBO drama Oz, playing the warden of the meanest, cruelest inmates imaginable for six seasons. He co-starred with Sandra Bullock in the 2000 comedy Miss Congeniality. He continued to work steadily in projects as diverse as Snoop Dogg's Hood of Horror, The Ron Clark Story, and 2010's Smokin' Aces 2: Assassin's Ball.
Matt Cook (Actor) .. Sonny
Cheech Marin (Actor) .. Julio
Born: July 13, 1946
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: The son of a Los Angeles police officer, American actor/director Richard "Cheech" Marin earned his nickname through his fondness for the Chicano food, specialty cheecharone. An excellent student (if something of a class cutup), Marin entered California State University, only to drop out and hightail it to Canada to avoid the draft. While working as an improvisational comedian with Vancouver's City Work troupe, Marin teamed with Tommy Chong; the Hispanic/Asian duo created the characters of Cheech and Chong, a pair of zoned-out dopers ever in search of the "perfect joint." On the strength of their bestselling record albums, Cheech and Chong were signed for the inexpensive comedy film Up in Smoke (1978), which wound up as one of Warner Bros.' highest-grossing films (not to mention one of its highest, period). As the drug culture lost its momentum, so did the film career of Cheech and Chong, with each of the team's subsequent films making less money than its predecessor. By the time C & C headlined the atrocious The Corsican Brothers (1984), the jig was up. Cheech and Chong split up in 1984 (though they remained friends) and went off to their own projects. While it was Chong who directed many of the team's features, Marin sat in the director's chair for the best of his post-team projects, the 1987 film Born in East L.A, inspired by Cheech's own parody music video. Marin's starring film is Shrimp on the Barbie (1990) contained no drug jokes and fewer laughs (an indication of its quality is the fact that the director had his name removed from the credits in favor of the pseudonymous "Alan Smithee"). Lately regarded as an elder statesman of the counterculture, Marin has kept busy with cameo roles, cartoon voice-overs (Oliver and Company, Ferngully, The Lion King), and a brief stint as a costar of the 1992 TV sitcom "Golden Palace." In 1996, he began co-starring opposite Don Johnson in the television drama Nash Bridges. Around this time he began a fruitful collaboration with independent filmmaker Robert Rodriguez. Marin had a part in Desperado, and played multiple characters in the vampire film From Dusk 'til Dawn for the Austin based maverick. Marin was cast as Kevin Costner's best friend in the golf comedy Tin Cup in 1996. The beginning of the next decade brought Marin an unexpected new audience as he began a series of humorous appearances in family films and lent his vocal talents to a number of animated films. He appeared in all three segments of Rodriguez's Spy Kids series, did vocal work in Good Boy, and voiced one of the Cars in Pixar's film. He also played small parts in John Sayles Silver City, and Bob Dylan's Masked & Anonymous.
Madison Tevlin (Actor) .. Cosentino
Joshua Felder (Actor) .. Darius
Kevin Iannucci (Actor) .. Johnny
Ashton Gunning (Actor) .. Cody
Matthew Von Der Ahe (Actor) .. Craig
Tom Sinclair (Actor) .. Blair
James Day Keith (Actor) .. Benny
Alex Hintz (Actor) .. Arthur
Casey Metcalfe (Actor) .. Marlon
Bradley Edens (Actor) .. Showtime
Barbara Pollard (Actor) .. Dot
Alexandra Castillo (Actor) .. Judge Mary Menendez
Born: June 14, 1971
Scott Van Pelt (Actor) .. Scott Van Pelt
Birthplace: Brookeville, Maryland, United States
Trivia: Offered a walk-on position on the Univ. of Maryland basketball squad by coach Lefty Driesell, but the six-foot-six Van Pelt never played for the Terrapins as Driesell resigned following the 1986 death of Len Bias. Emerged as a sports reporter and anchor on The Golf Channel, which Van Pelt joined shortly before its launch in 1995. Station wasn't originally available on cable in his home county in Maryland, forcing his mother to purchase a satellite dish to watch him. Anchored SportsCenter after moving to ESPN in 2001, adding work as host of the network's on-site coverage of golf's major championships. Developed numerous catch phrases and other humor in writing for his SportsCenter highlights, often inserting Baltimore, Boston and Philadelphia accents when covering each city's teams. Talks sports on an afternoon ESPN Radio show with Ryen Russillo, having originally co-hosted with Mike Tirico and hosting a solo hour as well.
Jalen Rose (Actor) .. Jalen Rose
Born: January 30, 1973
Alicia Johnston (Actor) .. Coach Maya
Seán Cullen (Actor) .. Frank O'Connolly
Jacob Blair (Actor) .. Blake Lassiter
Born: January 26, 1984
Birthplace: Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
Trivia: Lived at a farm until the age of 4.Played soccer, volleyball, and hockey during his school years.Discovered his passion for acting when he enrolled in drama classes during his first year of college.In 2004, he enrolled in the Studio 58 in a professional theater training program in Vancouver, Canada.Is a skilled guitar player.Is skilled at piano.
Ryan DeLong (Actor) .. Headband
Cory Wojcik (Actor) .. Bus Driver
Lauren Cochrane (Actor) .. Mother on Bus
Eddy Norman (Actor) .. Child with Mother on Bus
Stephanie Sy (Actor) .. Reporter
Alex Hannah (Actor) .. Jimmy
Champ Pederson (Actor) .. Peter the 'Ringer'
Aaron Hughes (Actor) .. Opposing Coach
Joanne Rodriguez (Actor) .. Group Home Counselor
Lois Brothers (Actor) .. Referee
Brian Dobson (Actor) .. Announcer
Born: May 07, 1973
Vance Halldorson (Actor) .. Cheering Spectator
Ward Keith (Actor) .. Spectator
Jim Kirby (Actor) .. Curler
Cindy Myskiw (Actor) .. Spectator
Mike Smith (Actor) .. Attorney McGurk
Clint Allen (Actor) .. Shakespeare Actor
Born: January 06, 1961

Before / After
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