Monday, November 29, 2010

Entertainment...This Had It All

Okay, lets get the bad jokes out of the way. The East Coast fans are either asleep, drunk or both so they cannot watch late night West Coast Football. The Boise kicker tried to hang himself, but he couldn't kick out the chair. And so on. My apologies and sympathy for the kicker. Kicking is not as easy as it seems. I held for a professional kicker at a workout one day...he was a friends son...and I gained a newfound respect for kickers.
Now for the scenario: Nevada is a very good team. Oregon beat Cal by a whisker in the closest of calls. Nevada beat them by about 50 something. Nevada is a team with a sophisticated offense and a very good coach. Nevada is a top 3 team in the Pac 10 if they are in that conference.
As for Boise, you can count on them being in about the best games you would ever want to watch. Remember Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl with the gimmick plays? This game did not have gimmick plays. This game did cost Boise about fifteen million dollars.
When the game was tied and there were nine seconds left, Kellen Moore found his receiver for a long bomb that left one second on the clock. The look on the Nevada coaches face was priceless. It was the classic "if looks could kill" expression. He was ready to pounce on someone. Then the Boise kicker missed a twenty something yard chip shot. Another big swing in emotions. Now the Boise coaches face said it all. This is a kicker who was a record setting kicker.
Of course in overtime he misses again and Nevada takes it all on a chip shot of their own when they take over. There were four swings of emotion in this game that were very incredible.
Earlier in the week Ohio State President Gee said Boise or TCU did not belong in a BCS game. He also stated that the Bowl system was perfect. It made me wonder if the big money the Bowls generate finds its way into these presidents pockets.
Boise's President responded that the formula big conferences have for winning is playing their in conference games and scheduling three or four cupcake teams. How True! To Ohio States credit, they did schedule Miami this year. Miami had a ton of talent, but a very erratic team. You never know when you schedule these games a few years out. A team Miami dominated, Pitt, may end up in a BCS game because they are in a really weak conference, The Big East. Funny.
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You can't be undefeated and a dominant team every year, and two teams found that out this year, Texas and Florida. When I was watching Texas A and M play the Horns, I kept thinking a few thoughts. Why don't the Longhorns have at least one draftable running back and receiver. Granted they have a ton of players that went to the pros, but that is a job that is one of the best in the country in terms of being surrounded by talent. They must have recruited Houstonian Oliver Luck. Luck is the best quarterback in college, but he probably didn't want to sit behind Colt McCoy. (Besides, if you are smart enough to be offered by Stanford, you are probably smart enough to accept. Stanford is uncompromising on their academics.) They probably recruited the Oregon QB, but maybe wanted him at another position. They probably did the same with Oregon RB La Michael Thomas.
Next year Texas has the number one running back in the country committed. He chose Texas over Alabama. The recruiting gurus say Bama was a better fit for his running style. Here's hoping Texas can coach him up. That has been the big question...are they really recruiting the right players and are they coaching them up. They seemed to with Colt McCoy after his sophomore season. Time will tell.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Grateful Thoughts of Some Grizzled Veterans

When growing up, a natural Saturday rite of passage was going to the barbershop with my father. While he was in the chair, some of the reading material would include "Men At War" and other magazines. Generally they would show a muscled up Sargeant Rock type of guy with no shirt running in the Phillipines with a machine gun in one arm and a nubile woman being rescued from harms way in another arm. It was sort of an at war version of Tarzan and Jane. My dad caught me reading that when he got down from the chair, jerked it from my hand and said it was all bull%$!*. I didn't ask what it was all about and he wasn't telling.

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Charles "Bud" Bowman was my grandfather. He gave me more than I could ever repay. Not money, just guidance.

When I was young, the world was being reshaped and driven by the WWII veterans. Hitler was still very much in the forefront of newsreels and history lessons and combat movies did well at the box office.

My Grandfather was a World War One vet. When I would go through his drawers I would find medals from his service. The closest I could ever get to any mention of this service or combat was watching the annual Army-Navy game. And combat was never mentioned. I was very curious about the combat thing as a child because it seemed to be lurking in the background. I never pushed the envelope with Bud. I was at the Rodeo Parade in Phoenix as a very young kid and wanted him to buy me a poppy from a street vendor, and I was told in no uncertain terms that he did not approve or want anything to do with a poppy plant or its byproducts...which at the time confused me. After all, it was just a flower. I had no idea of the relationship between the poppy and heroin.

What I did find out from my mom years later was that Bud was gassed in the trenches in France and was buried alive. The WW One was the great coming out party for nerve gas. I guess that would explain Bud was a tad high strung. How could you not be from that experience? It has to be hard to shake the memory of being buried alive with hundreds of your dead and dying friends while you are suffering from nerve gas. That is dead center in the smell of death. Yet he always had patience with me and taught me so much. He basically said in so many words that war sucked and that there was no romantic part of the Army during intense combat.

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My Father, Richard, graduated from High School at age sixteen. He went to John Carroll University in Cleveland on a Mathematics scholarship. He grew into his frame that year and was tired of going around having people call him a slacker for not being in the service. At seventeen he had his mom sign his enlistment in the Navy.

Richard went to the Pacific Theatre of the second world war. As opposed to the European War, this part of the war did not get the publicity or at least as much publicity. When the war was over he played on the all Navy football team featuring Hall of Famer, Joe the Jet Perry. They beat Doc Blanchards' all Army team. This was a period when your best players were all in the service. Richard went on to star at Arizona State with another great, pro football Hall of Famer John Henry Johnson, and was drafted by the Green Bay Packers.

Dad never mentioned war and made it very clear that he wasn't going to. One day I pushed him and he said "How would you like to be blown out of the water and have to retrieve both halves of your best friends body? How would you like to go to his house and tell his parents while you transport his remains?"

Dad didn't think there was anything cool about combat, never walked in a Veterans parade and avoided a return trip to the San Diego Naval Yard like the plague, even though our family was on the west coast. His bumper sticker on his truck read "Send Batman to Vietnam." Dad helped Veterans on a one on one basis but never went to the VA for medical help. He never let me know about the help.

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Who are the angels that come into our lives and give us something and disappear? I was stuck in the middle of a very busy intersection at LeJeune Road and Highway 101 in Miami. Severe Traffice was all around. This young lady came up and gave me a push. During the push, my car knocked out two of her headlights. I offered to repay after she pushed me out of harms way. I never saw her again.

In 1969 I was going to enlist and go into the Army. My friend, Bob made a pact and we were going to go down to the recruiter and sign up in the morning. My boss at the pool I worked as a lifeguard was named Ralph.

Ralph was from New York City. He asked me if I was nuts. He told me before I gave up a scholarship to Miami, to stand over by a six foot block wall. He would be right back with some pistols and rifles. He would shoot at me and just barely miss. He said if I enjoyed that to go and enlist. I went to Miami.

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Eddie Morton will never come back to the high school re-union. Eddie and I jumped off roofs onto the grass while our parents were working. Eddie lost his life in the jungles of Vietnam fighting for the US Army.

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The EMT's were a band we put together at a car dealership (Emergency Musical Technicians). Sugar Bear, a Vietnam Amputee, asked us to play on memorial day at the Houston VA compound. We agreed to play for free. After Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee spoke, we came on a played a good hour set before a few thousand. For a change we were really on and the crowd liked the stuff like Hendrix's "Hey Joe". It will blow your mind how many Vietnam Vets are still mentally still over there. The Vietnam Vets and the volume of them with alcohol and substance problems blew my mind. The next time you see a guy who is a vet living on the street old and grizzled, salute him. If you can spare some money, give it with no stipulations or ego involved. Our government has thrown these guys to the curb.

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Fast forward. James said yesterday in a meeting I was at "If God comes back right now as a human being I will kick his a#%. I had two kids I know well yesterday burn to death in a fire yesterday. I knew those kids and their family well. And if somebody tells me it's Gods' will I will kick their a#%. Anger is how I deal with these kinds of problems. It brings me back to Southeast Asia and all the things that shouldn't have happened. Don't come up here and tell me it's God's will."
Have mercy on our veterans and all the traumatic experiences they have experienced.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Football and the Heat Lose to Utah

I am not a fan of either team, but tonight I thoroughly enjoyed the Heat losing to the Jazz in Miami. My son yelled it was over time and I went down and caught the last 3 minutes.

First, Deron Williams fouled out on a terrible call. So little Ronnie Price was in the game and the deck was stacked. I have a little history with these players. Ronnie Price was in my son's district in high school. He was five six and went to McNeese State and transferred after one year. A funny thing happened after that year...he grew 8 inches!

Deron Williams played with my son in an all star game in Texas his senior year. I was always very impressed by Deron Williams, but in highschool and college he was overshadowed. In high school, Bracey Wright was his team mate who later played for Indiana and was the Texas player of the year. Bracey had major knee problems or more people would know about him. At Illinois, Williams was overshadowed by the in state guys. Now he is the best point guard in basketball. I always like the concept when you can get a guy about 6 five or taller to run point. Alot of coaches nip that concept in the bud because they have a smaller player who is fast and put the taller player on the wing.

Anyway, Kirelinko hit a big 3 pointer and Elston hit 2 free throws and the heat lose at home. One thing I thought was interesting....this was Wade's team in overtime. I don't think LeBron scored, although in fairness he was the point guard. Still, he appeared to fade into the background when it counted. Miami will have a target on their back all season.

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Last week, four of the top 5 BCS teams were from the West: Oregon, TCU, Utah and Boise State.

Boise appears to be getting more of the shaft by the minute. Last year they beat Oregon and they have 22 starters back. Now for fairness, they did play them on that blue field at home. Still, I think they win again in Boise, and Oregon wins at Autzen Stadium. Who wins at a neutral site? We may never know. Oh yeah, they beat TCU as well last year. Yet they are slipping.

A team that could be the best in the USA may not even get to play in a BCS game. Go figure. If I was at a big school I would be afraid to play them as well. Still, a David vs. Goliath matchup is always intriguing.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Best Team to Watch In the Last 25 Years

The phrase they keep saying repeatedly about the BCS bowl rating system is "the computers can't see them play."

You and I can see them play. Oregon is the best team to watch that I have seen in soooo many years. I am saying 25 years, but I honestly cannot remember when I have seen a more intriguing team. I didn't say they were the best, just the most fun to watch. Also add unique to that description. The motion they run. On one play alone La Michael James went in motion and switched positions 4 different times before the snap. Their coach is like a mad scientist. He adjusts to what the other team gives and then its over. They score so fast that their defense is on the field a ton, so they tend to give up points. I have noticed in the second half, the defense does not give up many points and the offense turns the game into a rout. They are the point a minute Ducks and are must watch if you like exciting college football.

Someone brought up a good point. How do you prepare for this team. Every team I have seen them play was gassed by the second half. They are not the fastest, but the fastest tempo ever played for sure.

La Michael James is very fast but small. Don't let that fool you, he is really strong as well. He's another Texan, along with their quarterback, that got away from Mack Brown. They may be the most well coached offensive team in the past 25 years.

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My heart goes out to all involved at the tragic incident at Notre Dame this past week. It was one hellacious storm...it was even a problem flying around it as I had to do. I am not going to point any fingers because all parties feel extremely bad and I am sure they are second guessing themselves.

Not to sound like a broken record, but in a normal Notre Dame atmosphere, Tulsa is down 40 at the half. I am not a Notre Dame homer. I was when I grew up Catholic. I watched them routinely kill us when I was at Miami. We never said anything bad about it, we sort of expected the result. Where I drew the line was when Golden Domers said it was unfair when Miami did the same to them. The Irish throttled teams for years and when you have a talent laden team like Miami used to field, you can't tell your players to go half speed. That's a certain recipe for injury. They cancelled the Miami series, but recently re-signed a new series with the Irish. It's great to see this ferocious rivalry renewed. Now I sort of wish the Irish would be a power again. The world of college football is really much more intriguing when they are in the mix. Hopefully they figure it out sooner rather than later. Again, my condolences to all involved.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Notre Dame: Now those Were the Days

Long ago and far away many, many years ago, young men would get in their cars with their dads and listen to the golden voice of the Real Dan Patrick, the voice of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. The Irish were on every radio station that mattered and if you didn't see the game, no problem. The Sunday after we could tune into Lindsey Nelson on the Notre Dame highlight show. Every week Walt Patulski or Jack Snow would beat almost all comers. Every year Ara Parseghian would sign a bumper crop of players...big strong boned kids from the Midwest up front, a killer QB and backs and receivers that could run over you or around you.

Last week All American Quarterback candidate Ricky Dobbs of the Naval Academy ran over under around and through the Irish. This would never have happened in the good old days. But now something else is happening.

  • Most 18 year olds don't know of the Notre Dame Mystique.
  • ND's admission department will not let in the marginal academic qualifier. Most of their competion does, even the good academic schools.
  • Younger players are going down to Southern schools more than ever. Most of the talent is concentrated in a Sun Belt state. Dallas had 4 of the top ten Draft Choices in the NFL in 2009. The top 3 producers of talent for college and the NFL are Texas, Florida and California.

Brian Kelly has one great Track record everywhere he has coached. If he can get the players, the Irish will return. Because once upon a time if the head coach of the Irish came knocking on your door, you signed on the dotted line, no questions asked. Now, the youngster may not understand what Notre Dame has been all about. It's been a long time.

They're Out Of Here! Audios Yanks and Phils

Every Week during baseball season you tune in Espn and hear the announcers melodious voice "And this Sunday night from BEE-yooo-teee-fulll Fenway Park (Drumroll Please) Its the Yankees at the Red Sox." Like I would have never guessed right? What they should say is "Ladies and Gentlemen, let's see if they can buy another pennant...yes its the boys from the Bronx coming up to Beantown for some of the same old thing." These are the last teams I want to see...(in fact if I watch more than 2 innings of televised baseball I consider that labor). The Sox and Yanks are the last 2 teams I want to watch. And the beauty of this whole deal is that we have eliminated two of the most obnoxious fan bases in the world.
Now the TV boys on Madison Avenue hate this, but I think it's pretty cool. We get to see two teams that actually built themselves through drafted homegrown talent.
The Rangers are sort of interesting. They tried to go the Yankee route and went bankrupt doing it. Then they rebuilt through the draft.
They also have one of the most interesting stories in the last decade. Josh Hamilton. You would have movies about this guy if he played in the big Apple. He was hopelessly addicted to drugs. He had all the things that plague a drug addict...weight loss, loss of family and friends as well as a promising career. His talent level is amazing because after dropping out of the game he has made an exceptional comeback. He posted MVP numbers this year. So check out the series this year and get hip...and take that California trip.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Musings

Last time out I wrote they are dropping like flies. NFL Players who are sustaining tough injuries are all too common. Today a recently retired player from the NFL said that if the season is increased to 18 games, people would lose their lives and get even more time taken off their time here on the third stone from the sun.
These players have to bulk up in size more than ever. When they are done the smart/lucky ones drop the weight. Others keep on eating like they were when they played and their bodies balloon. That coupled with the collisions make for some real damage. Check out poor Earl Campbell . He can barely make it down the stairs. That's just sad.
A friend wrote the following. I hope he wasn't talking about me in the last few sentences. Check out our writer below.

Maybe the solution is to go back to leather helmets with no face masks.

I remember my dad telling me when I was in HS that he believed the increase in head injuries was actually due to the evolution of helmet design. When they went from leather and no face guards to plastic ones with cages, the head became a weapon. Kids used to be taught to tackle by sliding their head off to the side and letting their shoulder take brunt of the impact. By the time I was in high school, we were taught to lead with our heads and plant our face in their chests, and wrap up. The result was an increase in neck and head injuries. With leather helmets and no facemasks, you might see a rise in broken noses, but they will be more likely to think twice about leading with their head in a violent collision.

At least they are making spearing and helmet-to-helmet tackling illegal. But there is still the problem of QB’s as sitting ducks being drilled by 300-llb lineman onto their backs while their heads bounce off the artificial turf. Not much you can do about that. Ever look at Danny White’s eyes? Something not right there. And we had a classmate who got a severe concussion in HS who was never the same after that. And, sadly, there were other HS classmates who never changed . . . . but that’s for a different blog, eh?
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If you are looking for an article about a boxer you may never have heard of but will exemplify courage and get to your heart, click the story below by Jerry Crowe, a fantastic writer. Click to Page 2 when you are done with the first page of the article. Click below

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/mar/01/sports/la-sp-crowes-nest1-2010mar01

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Artis Gilmore is connected in many ways with a few of us. Click below for a great article on how he is being shafted for the basketball Hall of Fame. Again, Jerry Crowe picks up the human side really well. Click Below

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/mar/14/sports/la-sp-crowe-20100311