Tag Archive: sports


Betwixt and between

Transition time. Last night, June 9, the Stanley Cup playoffs ended when the Chicago Blackhawks defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in overtime to win the big mug for the first time since 1961.

Tomorrow, June 11, the World Cup opens in South Africa. The world-wide soccer competition lasts for a month and will hold much of the world in thrall. The sports-obsessed, non-American part of it, at least.

I may not exactly be in thrall, but I will be watching the action whenever I can. Where I live (Central Daylight Time, which is UCT-5), the games will be broadcast live in the morning and afternoon. South Africa is seven hours ahead of us.

That’s what I told my wife. We just completed the annual Stanley Cup marathon, which is two months of hockey nearly every night–two games a night during the early stages. I watch as much as I can. Once in a while, she joins me for a little while. Otherwise, it’s Hallmark movies or the History Channel–she was delighted to see that a new season of “Ice Road Truckers” is starting.

I told her the bad news first: As soon as the Stanley Cup ends, the World Cup starts.

Then I told her the good news: The games will be played in the morning and afternoon where we live. So there won’t be live games played during the evening, when we often to sit together and watch TV.

But, in the name of full disclosure, I guess I have to tell her sooner or later the bad news: CBC will broadcast a “game of the day” in prime time. during the evening, and then another game at 11 p.m. (Don’t know if it’s the same game as at 7 p.m.)

ESPN is broadcasting the games live in the States but won’t be having any prime-time replays. A few games will be repeated during late night or overnight hours, as it suits their needs for “content.”

Of course, I will pay special attention to the U.S. team, especially its Saturday game against the U.K.–their most important game of the group stage. The thinking is that the U.S. will get out its group and make it as far as the group of 16 before the water gets too deep.

But once they are eliminated, I will keep watching it to the end. It should be a good show. South Africa is a beautiful country.

****

Betwixt and between, I got out of town two days this week to visit S and her girlfriend. I drove down on Tuesday and returned Wednesday. It wasn’t a long visit, and I went by myself.

We had planned to all go down to visit a wildlife park/farm south of Oshkosh, but it was raining too hard, so we spent Tuesday afternoon at their place, watching several recorded episodes of the “Angel” TV series, about this vampire with a human soul. It’s by Joss Whedon, who made the “Firefly” series–I really liked that. Several hours passed by. Maybe I dozed off. An “Angel” marathon isn’t what I had expected–but I didn’t expect rain, either.

Then it was time to get some supper. We went to Golden Corral for their buffet. While eating, we talked about some plans. I am going to take them to the neopagan camp this year; we are going to stuff everything into my little car and go there during the first days of July. (Last year, B flew down from Alaska to go there with me–but she can’t get away this year.)

S has been there just once–five years ago, which is when I first met her. She has been wanting to go back ever since, but circumstances (her husband) didn’t permit it until now. Her GF, of course, just moved up to Wisconsin this year, so she hasn’t been there. This year’s theme is “deep friendship,” which is a topic that resonates with all of us.

While eating, we also talked about other stuff. They hadn’t yet seen “Alice in Wonderland” with Johnny Depp, which just came out on DVD. So we stopped at Target to get it, went home, popped it on the DVD player and enjoyed that. Then, off to a bar, about two blocks away. It had been S’s birthday the day before, and we had a couple drinks to mark the occasion. I had a rum and cola, which was, eh, OK, and a Smirnoff pomegranate cooler, which I liked much better.

From there, I drove us all home. They saved me some money by putting me up for the night, and the accommodations were very soft and warm and pleasant.

The GF slept in Wednesday morning, so S and I got up and talked for a while before I hit the road for home. I got back about 3 p.m., and my wife and I quickly went out for some shopping.

I made a mistake during the trip, though. I had wanted to call her late that night. I did call after I arrived there (while watching “Angel”). She wanted me to call again between 8 and 10–we were watching the movie then, and I had turned the phone off. Alas, I forgot to turn it back on before leaving for the bar. By the time I remembered, it was nearly 11, and she is usually in bed by then. So I called her in the morning to make sure all was well.

So it goes.

****

Get out the ark! We may need it.

The weather forecast is talking about 1/4 to 1/2 inch of rain tonight … 3/4 to an inch on Friday … and 1/2 to 3/4 inches Friday night. Don’t think I will be driving very far on Friday. (Earlier, they had talked about 1 to 2 inches Friday, but that’s been cut back. One inch is plenty enough.)

Better round up the ice cream buckets. We have a leak in one corner of the attic roof, and the ice cream buckets come in handy.

No more fantasies

I like sports. I think that’s pretty obvious. Last month, I was upset because I didn’t get to see much of the Winter Olympics–only the coverage on NBC. I watch the Red Wings hockey games regularly, and the Stanley Cup playoffs will be my main focus starting in mid-April–whether or not the Wings qualify. (It’s starting to look better.)

But a couple months ago, about the time I passed that “60″ sign along the road, I decided that the time has come for me to get off the field and let somebody else play the games.

I am referring to fantasy sports. I organized a fantasy baseball league in 1989, and the league will be playing in its four different decade this year. I had a team in the league for most of that time, and after a few years’ hiatus, I got back into it in 2009.

This year, I’m getting back out.

Also, I was in a fantasy football league for the last five or six years. It was fun most of the time. But I have told the league organizer that I won’t be back in the fall of 2010. I’ve had enough.

There are reasons. One reason is that it gets very frustrating at times. I would do OK–I usually finished closer to first place than last place–but I couldn’t do well enough to contend for first place. No matter what I’d do, no matter how hard I studied the talent or the different strategies I would try, I would only get so close but no closer. All those hours of research … they never really came to much.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not mourning the lost time. All of us use our spare time in different ways, and who’s to say that it’s time wasted? If it makes you happy or gives you a pleasant evening, what’s the difference between researching baseball players and, say, raptly watching the latest episode of “Lost” or engineering the intricacies of making a quilt or spending time at the local pub or battling three other friends in a no-holds-barred game of bridge … or World of Warcraft? Nothing wrong with any of it.

So it’s not that. But on the other hand … I’ve got a lot of other interests, too. I like to study other topics on the internet. I like to read, fiction and non-fiction. I enjoy movies. I enjoy writing–either to friends or just for my own amusement. I enjoy music. I love photography.

I still like pro sports. But I guess I don’t like them as much. Baseball, my first love, remains incapable of providing a level financial playing field for its teams. Basketball and football are mainly for physical freaks. Auto racing … meh!

I’ll remain an avid hockey fan (It’s the age of specialization, after all), but I plan to take everything else more casually (which may be a challenge when the World Cup takes place in South Africa this summer; I’ll be quite interested in that). I’ll still watch the baseball playoffs, and every Sunday next fall, I’ll make sure to see the Green Bay Packers’ game.

Beyond that, though, I think it’s time for me to let go of TV sports. I have never been an avid fan–I don’t spend money on team jerseys or memorabilia. I’ve got other things to spend my money on. For that matter, I’ve got other things to spend my time on, too.

I’m not that dumb. I know the world isn’t going to stop without me. The economy won’t crash again without me. The sports leagues will get along without my financial aid–they’ve done so all these years, after all. They can go their way. I will go mine.

****
The big news up here has been the weather. Extremely mild for us for mid-March. We have had highs in the low 60s for the last few days. This afternoon, we got to about 67F (19C). That’s warmer than normal. By about 30 degrees.

In a normal March, we usually still have a lot of snow hanging around. Not here. Not now. It’s all melted–except where it had been plowed into piles. The office golf nuts are getting that look in their eyes. The sun has felt pretty good.

It won’t last much longer. A cold front moves down from Canada in another day or two. By Monday, our highs will be back to normal–right around freezing. But it sure was nice while it lasted. I just consider it a down-payment for summer.

A short but glorious run

Just a short update this time. Our home town boy, Nick, did OK for himself at the Olympics in Vancouver … for a while.

There were two qualification runs, which cut the field from 35 racers to 32 and also which seeded the runners for the races that followed–just four racers go at a time.

Nick was 11th in the first run, and everyone here at the office got all excited when he was 1st in the second run … but only three racers had gone at that time. Still, he wound up 6th in the second run and wound up the 7th seed overall.

Ah, but then the races started. He was in the seventh heat. The Detroit News writer said he got off to a bad start. But then he caught up to the other three racers. Then he moved in front! Then he got “squirrely,” went off the course and crashed!

That ended his Olympics. He finished in 20th place.

The qualifications took place during the early afternoon, as we worked on finishing up the paper. Most of the people in the office were seriously obsessing about it, following the results as they come over on the internet. (We don’t have a TV in the office.)

Everybody had gone for the day by the time the medal round started and Nick crashed. NBC had no video of that during its prime-time program. (Not that I was home–I was away, covering a girls basketball game.) I later saw a picture of him on all fours in the snow.

Tough break, but that’s how it goes in sports. He wasn’t hurt (aside from his pride), and when he gets back home, I’m sure he will get the royal welcome once again.

I like watching the Winter Olympics events–most of them, at least–and was especially looking forward to the ice hockey, both men and women. And also the curling, both men and women. As things turned out, though, I will get to see very little of it.

Most of the hockey and curling is being carried on MSNBC and CNBC in the States, and our cable system here doesn’t carry either channel. It’s a local co-op and doesn’t have deep pockets for programming and technology.

What’s worse, the USA Network does have some Olympic coverage, and we do get USA. But it seems you have to pay extra to get Olympics coverage on USA–without it, you only get to see marathons of some of USA’s top shows, like Monk and House, Law and Order and NCIS.

Good shows, yes. But I wanted to see the Olympics. And I don’t get to see it. And I’m definitely less than happy about it.

By pure good fortune, the snowboardcross competition was carried on the main NBC network–and yes, we do get that. So the folks at home got to see Nick in action during the afternoon. But NBC picked up its “live on tape” coverage in prime-time with the quarterfinals, and Nick didn’t get that far.

Know how much we pay for cable TV here? We get about 60 channels for $37 per month. And that’s the main rate–not some “teaser” rate that jumps up after six or 12 months. My guess is that you are paying a bit more than that.

But then, you will get to see the Olympic hockey and curling coverage live on CNBC and MSNBC. We can only read about it later.

Snow in a suitcase?

To follow up my last post, our snowboarder left town for Vancouver and the Olympics on Monday night.

He was escorted by the local fire trucks halfway across the county. There was a switchover from the West Side departments to the East Side departments at the precise place where their coverage area begins. The East Side departments escorted him south to the state line, where Wisconsin officials took over for a 15-mile segment where U.S. 2 crosses into Wisconsin before crossing back into Michigan–where, of course, Michigan officials again took over.

Even with (despite?) all the official escorts, he managed to get out of town all right. By the way, I promised a picture from the school assembly last week, and here he is …

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Wish him well. Nick is a nice kid. His snowboardcross event takes place on Monday, Feb. 15.

Maybe he should have packed some snow in his suitcase: The reports from Vancouver is that they are transporting snow to the snowboard course by truck and even helicopter because mild temperatures have melted a lot of it away. I even heard they are burying some dry ice under the new snow to keep it from melting too quickly. The Olympics, of course, start this weekend.

I just checked Vancouver’s weather forecast. It says highs in the 50s and lows in the 40s … with rain. If it gets a little warmer, the Olympians could go out and enjoy Wreck Beach.

Then again, there hasn’t been that much snow around here lately, either. We have snow, don’t get me wrong, but the layer of fluffy white insulation hasn’t increased very much for over a month. On New Year’s Day, we got 2 inches. Since then, no more than 1 1/2 inches on any day. December was a good month for snow around here. January, not so much. The snow is still here. We had some temperatures that reached into the 40s in January (as high as 44), but it was still cloudy on those days, so the snow layer mainly just compacted.

Over where N lives, they have a lot more than we do …

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This week, I dared to hope we would get some warmer weather that could prompt some serious melting, now that the sun is getting a little higher in the sky. No way. Not this week. Highs in the 20s all week, with lows close to zero. It’s February, you know, and most of us are getting a little weary of winter.

We live right along the highway passing through town. One day in mid January, I unexpectedly found that the end of the front sidewalk, where it meets the highway–an area I had shoveled out just the day before–was plugged tight with freshly plowed snow.

Believe me, it was densely packed and hard to shovel. I muttered as I grabbed the shovel again and re-opened the end of the sidewalk–by hand, of course. Fortunately, I have a big aluminum shovel, which handles the heavy work well.

After midnight that night, I heard a racket outside; after a few minutes I got up to investigate. Here is what I saw…

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The state highway department had just cut into all the snow it plowed up alongside the highway the night before, arranging it into “windrows” on the roadway itself. I was now watching the third step–the big windrow of snow was being blown into a large dump truck, which rolled with in tandem with the snow blower.

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An empty dump truck followed–when the first truck was full, it moved off and the next truck took its place. Very slowly, the blower and dump trucks made their way up the highway, removing the snow that had been plowed up along the highway the night before.

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And suddenly, visibility at intersections was greatly improved, and pedestrians didn’t have to walk on the side of the road any more. The snow gets so deep and heavy that few homeowners shovel the walks that run parallel to the highway–they just clear paths to the highway for the mailman and any delivery trucks that don’t use the alley behind the house.

Of course … some critters have this winter thing all figured out …

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Local boy makes good

All of a sudden, in the dead of winter, our old town is having a great time.

Imagine! A rock star in our midst!

OK, he’s not a rock star, but few people expected to have an athlete from out little area going to the Winter Olympics. I mean, what were the odds? There are just 3,000 residents in our city. Just 13,000 people in the entire county. And that population is definitely not going up.

But we have an Olympian who will be competing at Vancouver later this month. The town is all abuzz. A lot of excitement. Many businesses have posted signs wishing him luck. They have put up a banner across the highway entering town, complete with the Olympic rings and the Vancouver Olympics logo. Our paper (of course) put together a special section to try to capitalize–getting local businesses to buy ads wishing him good luck and congratulations.

These have been the final days before he leaves for Vancouver, and it’s been crazy for a little, tiny town in the middle of the woods where nothing ever seems to happen. Early last week, our guy was on NBC’s “Today” show, in New York, modeling the outfits the U.S. Olympians will be wearing during the opening ceremonies.

On Thursday night, back here, they held a benefit dinner for him and his family (as a fund-raiser so his family can go, too). They were jam-packed, and parking was impossible to find. Over 450 people attended, I’m told.

Friday afternoon, they held a pep rally for him at the local high school. I covered that and got some pictures. It was very loud. The band played, all the kids from all the grades filled the gym, they showed a video of his snowboardcross races, and he spoke. The two sides of the gym engaged in a shouting contest, trying to find out which side could yell louder:

South side: “Go!” North side: “Nick!” South side: “Go!” North side: “Nick!”

Then, later on, it was …

South side: “U.P.!” North side: “Power!” South side: “U.P.!” North side: “Power!”

And later still, it was …

South side: “U.S.A.” North side: “U.S.A.!” South side: “U.S.A.” North side: “U.S.A.!”

After it ended, he was getting request after request for autographs … while trying to collect his 5-year-old son for the ride home from school. He promised to visit all the classrooms and answer all the questions after returning from Vancouver.

On Friday night, there was another fund-raiser at a bar just across the state line in Wisconsin (which is only 10 miles away from us). Finally, Saturday night, there was a short parade through town. He was at the front of one of the fire trucks–the procession consisted mainly of fire trucks passing down the main street at a walking pace, making enough noise to wake the dead. A slow procession, but also short. Within 15 minutes, I was on my way home.

I have known him for a long time. He’s about 29 … I covered him when he was playing football and wrestling at high school. Then he got into snowboarding, and he has done quite well at it. I have interviewed him several times about it. In recent years, our talks focused increasingly on his dream to make the Olympic team going to Vancouver. I did a feature last summer, about his training regimen and how he is getting ready.

Then, the qualification races. I did articles about each one (from my little desk back here). In Switzerland, he finished third place, and that visit to the podium made all the difference. It was nip and tuck at the end, and it all came down to the final qualifying event, held in Quebec late in January.

Two days later, he was back home, and I got to talk to him during an elementary school basketball tournament at the high school. He talked about all his emotions and all the tension while waiting at the bottom of the hill–another racer had forced a crash during his qualification run, and he was eliminated. So his Olympic hopes came down to whether another racer would finish in second place in the finals, which would bump him off the team.

The other racer came in third. He made it!

It’s all been very exciting (and a bit exhausting for me). Normally in mid-winter, my life is all about a never-ending series of high school basketball games–some good, some bad, some dreadful. I can take only so much basketball, but I have to take a lot of it. This is a little extra work … but it’s fun, too. This last week was very, very hectic, but I think I got everything done that I had to.

I hope so. I’ll find out for real on Monday, when we put the paper together.

****

In other news …

Winter is moving along. Now that we have reached the second week of February, it’s time to start anticipating the first real thaw. Just checked this week’s forecast: No thaw this week.

While other parts of the country are getting pummeled with snowstorms and heavy rains, the weather has been quiet here. Very little snow for the last month. Of course, the stuff we received earlier hasn’t melted.

After getting postponed three times (since late November), we finally visited S and her husband last week. The usual regimen: We went to Golden Corral for dinner and then to the motel pool to relax in the whirlpool. Ah, that was nice. She gave me some Christmas cookies and treats she had made for me (for the late December visit that was postponed by a snowstorm). They were put in the freezer, and they still taste good.

I visited N a few weeks ago. It’s hard to get away for mid-winter visits, though, because of all the nights I spend at basketball games. After the season ends (in March), it should get easier. She lives in an area that normally gets lots of lake-effect snow, but the weather behaved that day.

My wife and I are looking forward to the end of basketball, too. There is a Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit at the Milwaukee museum, and she wants to see it–the exhibit continues into summer. Other summer plans are still in the incubator. Nothing planned yet with B.

I ordered my new computer. It will be a Windows 7 desktop. It was supposed to come this week, but now Dell is telling me I have to wait another week. Well, OK. It should be worth the wait. Meanwhile, I have been working to get rid of old files, such as old mail files or old downloaded programs. I get an extra week to do that.

The newest news: I found a new theme that I actually think looks cool. So how cool is that, anyway?

Back in the lineup

I am going to do something I really didn’t want to do, that I didn’t plan on doing.

I am going to resurrect my fantasy baseball team this year. This weekend, as a matter of fact.

I am doing this despite the fact that I really don’t follow baseball very closely any more. I don’t really follow which players are on which team, who the hot new players are, which long-time stars really aren’t worth the trouble any more. I watch the playoffs and the World Series. Beyond that …

But I have been running a fantasy baseball league for many years, and I run the draft (an auction-type draft) at the start of each season. I had a team in the league for many years, too. I let the team go a few years ago. I really wasn’t following baseball that closely any more. I kept running the league, though.

My reasons for getting back into it are complex and probably don’t make a lot of sense to anyone. What happened is that one team dropped out of the league, and I had commissioner’s access to the stat website through that particular team. I can’t see a way for me to delete that team from the server without creating lots of problems.

Part of me, of course, wants to get back into it. The stat website has lots of services, and it would be fun to run a team using those services. But the fact is, I’m “off” baseball now. Exhibit A is the neglect and mishandling of the entire drug/steroid situation, culminating in Barry F—ing Bonds taking the all-time home run record from Hank Aaron, a decent, noble man and my favorite player since I was 7 years old.

That and the total helplessness/cluelessness the gods of baseball regarding the income disparities between rich and poor teams. Being a Milwaukee Brewers fan for many year, I feel it keenly. The Brewers got C.C. Sabathia in a trade from Cleveland last summer, and his pitching led the Brewers into the playoffs for the first time in 2o-some years. But Sabathia was at the end of his contract, and he signed with the New York Yankees for almost as much money as Bernie Madoff stole from all those people in his Ponzi scheme.

Like my dad was fond of saying, “Them’s that has, gets.” He never had. Neither have I.

The “owners’ meeting” was Friday night, where some of the guys in the league meet and renew acquaintances at a local bar and then head off to a strip joint. Been there, done that. I stayed home. Well, OK, I went to the bar for a soda pop or two, but then I went home.

I’m not against strip clubs, mind you. It’s just … they’re fun for maybe a half hour, but I don’t drink beer, the girls are just after your money, at my age I prefer older women anyway, and it gets to be a bore after a while. You know what happened last year? When I decided I had enough, I walked over to the bar next door, where I got a drink and watched a basketball game on TV. I was gone for about an hour, and everybody was wondering what had become of me. I spared them the drama this year.

The real drama starts in less than two weeks, when the Stanley Cup playoffs start. Oh, boy. They will have doubleheaders on TV almost every night, and I watch as much as I can take. Last spring, when games went into overtime and beyond midnight, Charlie sat with me on the couch and we both tried to stay awake till the game was over. Of course, Charlie was there to get her tummy rubbed and her ears scratched.

I follow the Detroit Red Wings, of course, and they have one of the best records in the league this season. But they have been giving up too many goals in the last couple months, and I’m wondering whether it will be a short, unpleasant postseason for them.

Of course, I remember having similar fears last spring … and they went on to win the Stanley Cup. As I am fond of saying, time will tell.

Meanwhile, I have no illusions about this baseball team I’m going to draft Saturday, though. It could be ugly.

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