Clay Buchholz Battles Through Shaky First Inning to Earn Team-Leading Seventh Win (Video)
Red Sox-White Sox Live: Clay Buchholz Guides Red Sox to 6-2 Victory, Finally Picks Up Seventh Win
Chuck Norris Thinks Tim Tebow Is ‘Ultimate Clutch Player,’ Says Quarterback Should Play for Jaguars
Jose Iglesias Could Be Utility Option for Red Sox Later This Season, But Must Improve Offensively (Video)
Toronto Raptors Lack Draft Pick, So Franchise Must Look Beyond Basketball Court to Remake Brand
Vote: Who Has Been the Bruins’ MVP Thus Far in the Playoffs?
Red Sox Hoping Clay Buchholz Can Play Stopper, But Shouldn’t Make Habit of Needing One (Video)
Whether it be the Gretzkys, the Hiltons or — now — the Jordans, the children of celebrities just seem to have a problem staying out of the limelight for all the wrong reasons.
Early Sunday morning, Marcus Jordan, the younger of NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan‘s two sons, was arrested outside an Omaha, Neb., hotel after allegedly arguing with two women and causing a disturbance. Marcus was booked at the Douglas County Department of Corrections and released.
Jordan is a key member of the University of Central Florida basketball team, but like his older brother Jeffrey did in January, Marcus has considered leaving the team to focus on his life beyond the basketball courts. At the time of the arrest, Jordan was described as “very animated, intoxicated and uncooperative,” according to a police statement.
This also isn’t the first time Marcus has been in trouble with the law, as the two brothers ran up a $56,000 bill in Las Vegas in 2010, which caught the attention of the authorities, given the fact that Marcus was underage at the time.
Picture via Facebook/Marcus Jordan