• NHL playoffs: Edmonton Oilers? More like the Oy-lers
    Apr 24 2025

    If you're the type of sports fan who wants to root for the most Jewish team in any given postseason, the Edmonton Oilers deserve consideration for your pick this NHL Stanley Cup playoffs. The Oilers may not be looking great against the Los Angeles Kings so far, having been blown out 6-2 on Wednesday night to fall 0-2 in the series, but they're still sporting not just one, but two Torontonian Jewish players in Zach Hyman and Jake Walman.

    For a stronger Canadian showing, though, you might look to the Winnipeg Jets. Not a lot of Jewish on-ice representation there, but it's the hometown team of former sports radio host and new Jewish podcaster Matthew Leibl. Leibl is one of the three new voices of Not in Heaven, The CJN's podcast discussing the future of Jewish communal life, which launched this week.

    He joins the Menschwarmers to chat about working as a sports journalist in Winnipeg during the Jets' return, what the team meant to his community, why he left the life of sports radio, and why he once embarked on a 77-day roadtrip across North America to visit every major league ballpark in a single season.

    Hear Leibl's stories and what else is new in the world of Jewish sports on this latest episode of Menschwarmers, The CJN's Jewish sports podcast.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    36 mins
  • Baseball's back, so here are the MLB's top Jewish players
    Apr 3 2025

    For many Jews, spring means Passover is coming. For the Menschwarmers, it means baseball season has started—and we're here to take a look at the top athletes in the MLB right now, including some of the league's highest-paid stars and young guys being shuffled around like baseball cards. We'll catch up on Alex Bregman, Max Fried, Spencer Horwitz, Bubby Rossman and many more. After that, we share some listener excitement about baseball being back, and read a poem submitted to us by Henry Schipper, who wrote a book of Jewish baseball poetry called The Ball Dreams of the Sky.

    But to kick things off, we celebrate the four top Jewish NCAA basketball coaches—Bruce Pearl, Todd Golden and Jon Scheyer—who all brought their teams to the NCAA Final Four. If you missed last week's episode diving deeper into their Jewish identities, catch up here.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    35 mins
  • 3 of the 4 top NCAA basketball teams are coached by Jews. Here's our theory why
    Mar 19 2025

    Some might call Purim "March Madness", but in the sports world, that title is reserved for the NCAA men's Division I basketball tournament, when some of the world's brightest young stars prove their worth, with many holding NBA aspirations. And this year, in an unusual twist, three of the four number-one seeds are coached by Jews. There's Bruce Pearl, the storied coach of the esteemed Auburn Tigers since 2014; the Florida Gators' Todd Golden, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Israel; and Maccabi Tel Aviv champion Jon Scheyer, whose Duke Blue Devils include top draft prospects like Cooper Flagg, Khaman Maluach and Kon Knueppel.

    Is there a reason Jews are excelling in college coaching? The Menschwarmers have some thoughts, like maybe it's the fact that a good college coach combines elements of a camp counsellor with a disappointed parent.

    The CJN's sports podcasters dive deep into the many Jewish angles of this NCAA basketball tournament, including Jewish players worth keeping eyes on, like Danny Wolf, Sam Silverstein and Alex Karaban, as well as notable women like Israeli-born Yarden Garzon, touted as a WNBA draft lock in 2026.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    33 mins
  • Country Club Adjacent: One comic's dream to blend comedy, golf and Judaism
    Feb 27 2025

    The pandemic famously sparked new public interest in golf courses, the outdoor sport one could argue was designed for social distancing. It was at that time that Jake Adams, a Jewish stand-up comic, started a new social media channel called "Country Club Adjacent". Leaning into his longtime love of the sport—including its famous exclusion of Jews—he began making videos that blended roast humour, self-deprecating Jewish jokes and actual insight into the game of golf.

    Now Country Club Adjacent has nearly 1 million followers on Instagram, with hundreds of thousands more across YouTube and Facebook. With this surge in popularity has come a podcast, merchandise, invitations to celebrity games and a viable career as a sports influencer for Adams. He joins Gabe and James on Menschwarmers to talk about the long history and intersection of Jews, golf and comedy.

    And before that, the boys catch up on other Jewish sporting news, including:

    • Noteworthy Jewish players from the 4 Nations Face-Off
    • Alex Bregman's new $120-million, three-year contract with the Boston Red Sox
    • Spencer Horwitz's wrist surgery

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    34 mins
  • The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame wants to resonate with younger audiences. Here's how
    Feb 5 2025

    The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, with an accompanying museum in Israel, recently announced their inductees for 2025—including former NBA star Amar’e Stoudemire, soccer announcer Andrés Cantor, Canadian cyclist Leah Goldstein and many others. But they're not just honouring veteran Jews—they're also trying to attract younger ones. With a rebrand and plans for an enhanced digital presence, the prominent Jewish sports institution is aiming to showcase generations of Jewish athletic accomplishments to teenagers and kids growing up in a post-Oct. 7 world.

    To discuss the evolution, the Menschwarmers are joined by president Jed Margolis and vice-president Lenny Silberman, who also leads the digital youth-oriented Jewish sports organization Lost Tribe.

    And before that, the hosts recap the latest news in Jews and sports, including how billionaire casino magnate Miriam Adelson, who owns the Dallas Mavericks NBA team, has become the target of virulent online antisemitism in the wake of the bombshell announcement that her team was trading away young superstar Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    34 mins
  • Israel Baseball back in the spotlight with a new documentary
    Jan 15 2025

    On Jan. 21, the Prosserman JCC in Toronto will host the Canadian premiere of Israel Swings for Gold, the documentary sequel to the sleeper hit Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel, which followed the team's assembly and Cinderella run at the 2017 World Baseball Classic.

    Reunited for the Tokyo Olympics, the Israeli baseball team—a hodgepodge of Jewish American rookies, former MLB players and native-born Israelis—wound up disappointing Jewish fans worldwide with an early loss to the Dominican Republic. But the story of the team's coming together, educating Israelis about a sport that Diaspora Jews have excelled at for decades, makes the thrust of this new documentary worthwhile.

    To chat about the film and the important of bringing it to Canada, The CJN's sports podcasters invited on Alex Voihanski, chairperson of Unity Through Sport, which is sponsoring the premiere, and communications consultant Alan Hudes.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • The Blue Jays traded their only Jewish player and we've got mixed feelings about it
    Dec 11 2024

    On Dec. 10, news broke that the Toronto Blue Jays were trading Jewish first baseman Spencer Horwitz to the Cleveland Guardians in exchange for second baseman Andrés Giménez and right-handed reliever Nick Sandlin. The CJN's sports podcasters, the Menschwarmers, have some mixed feelings about that: on the one hand, Giménez is an elite middle infielder; on the other hand, it's never easy to see your hometown Jewish player leave town.

    Horwitz—who came on this podcast in March 2023, in between suiting up for Team Israel and his breakout debut with the Jays—started making a name for himself in Toronto, with a .265/.357/.433 slash line, 12 home runs and 40 RBIs in 97 games played during the 2024 season. He was drafted in 2019 but only recently began making a name for himself on the field.

    And while we recorded today's podcast episode mere hours after Horwitz was traded to Cleveland, it would be another couple hours until Cleveland turned around and traded the Baltimore native to the Pittsburgh Penguins. So you won't hear any reference to that subsequent trade in this episode. But you will hear the Menschwarmers discuss other major Jewish-adjacent deals in the MLB, Timothée Chalamet's surprise appearance on College GameDay, and the Israelis who've secretly raced in the infamous Dakar Rally.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    34 mins
  • Game-changer: Two Jewish founders are creating a new pro women’s baseball league
    Nov 12 2024

    Professional women's sports are having a banner year in 2024. The new pro women's hockey league welcomed record-breaking numbers in January; the WNBA has produced bona fide basketball stars like Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese; and now, just last month, news broke that a Women's Pro Baseball League will launch in 2026—and it's being spearheaded by two Jewish industry vets.

    One is Justine Siegal, who has racked up a Wikipedia page full of "firsts", most prominently as the first female coach hired by an MLB team. She's also coached Israel's national baseball team and founded Baseball For All, an organization that provides opportunities for girls to get involved playing baseball. Her co-founder of the WPBL is Keith Stein, the Canadian owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball club, which plays in Christie Pits.

    But how exactly does one start a new league from scratch? How will they find the players—and inspire young girls to take up baseball instead of softball? Justine Siegal joins the Menschwarmers for a candid conversation about her goals and challenges in starting the WPBL and shares a bit about what her life was like growing up as a Jewish girl—often mistaken for a boy.

    And before that interview, the hosts chat about the soccer riots that erupted in Amsterdam last week. Was it a pogrom, simple soccer hooliganism, or something in between?

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
    Show more Show less
    33 mins
adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_webcro768_stickypopup