Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Birth Defect Can't Stop Fighter


For 23-year-old Kyle Maynard, there is no excuse not to fight.

Born with congenital amputation, Maynard has faced obstacles that might stop others. The condition left him without full limbs.

But this past Saturday, Maynard fought a different opponent. The Suwanee, Ga. native took on Wisconsin's Bryan Fry in an amateur MMA fight. 

In a unanimous decision, Fry was victorious, using a strategy that wouldn't allow Maynard to utilize his honed wrestling skills. 

But despite the loss, Maynard was appreciative of the experience.

“It’s one of the best moments of my life going a full three rounds and surviving,” he said in an interview with the Atlanta Journal Constitution. “A lot of people — if you read what they were saying about me [on MMA sites] — didn’t think I’d last 30 seconds." 

Read More on the Maynard match at Yahoo! sports.

*photo from UGA.edu

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Washington Natinals


No, I didn't spell it wrong in the heading. At least not according to Majestic Athletic who made the same mistake on two Washington Nationals jerseys. 

Adam Dunn and Ryan Zimmerman donned 'Natinals' jerseys during the first three innings of their game against the Florida Marlins Friday night (which the Nationals lost 3-2). Eventually, the error was corrected and the guys changed into jerseys with the 'O'.

But this mistake is far from rare. Here are some other great typos. (Why have I been blogging about baseball so much?)

July 14, 1994: Joe Carter
*Photo: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=lukas/071011 






April 12, 2005: Aaron Harang
*Photo: RedsZone.com












Even college football teams aren't immune: Nayv! (*Photo: TodaysACCHeadlines.com)

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Why I Love YouTube

This blogger was having some fun on YouTube, and wanted to share these videos. 


"Korean Baseball Fight" Ummm, what?


Minor League Catcher Gets Owned...





Saturday, April 18, 2009

Walking for a Cause


Every once in a great while, you stumble upon a story that is so powerful it makes you want to be a better person. 

Today, I found this article on NBC Sports. 
Rory Fanning is walking. He has been almost every day since Sept. 17. But this isn't an ordinary stroll in the park. Fanning has a mission: to walk across the U.S. in memory of his friend, Pat Tillman, the Arizona State and Arizona Cardinals star who was killed in Afghanistan in 2004 by friendly fire.

Fanning, a former Army Ranger, began his journey in Virginia Beach, Va. towards his destination--Huntington Beach, Ca.--averaging 20-miles per day. 

Along the way, Fanning stopped in Tempe, Arizona to send off the runners in the fifth-annual 'Pat's Run', a 4.2 mile course which starts outside the Sun Devil Stadium and finishes on the 42-yard-line (Tillman wore number 42 at Arizona State).

Fanning's goal is to raise $3.6 million, the contract amount that Tillman turned down to become an Army Ranger, for the Tillman foundation, while raising awareness about Tillman's story.

*Photo: Mark Wilson/Roswell Daily Record

Friday, April 17, 2009

Mellencamp Knockout


Another Mellencamp may be singing sweet songs in the future. But of a different sort.

Hud Mellencamp, the 14-year-old son of John Cougar Mellencamp, got a little recognition for his 4-1 decision over Cody Bennett of Kentucky's Southpaw Boxing Club to win the 132-pound senior title in the Indiana Golden Gloves boxing competition yesterday.

Hud and nine other open-division winners will represent Indiana on May 4-10 at the national Golden Gloves tournament in Salt Lake City.

In the mean time, let us reflect on some of John Cougar Mellencamp's great hits:




*photo: Boston.com

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

ARE YOU REEEEADDDDYYYY???

UFC 97 is upon us. I know I'm excited to go to B-dubs Saturday night and (if I can get a table) cheer on Chuck Liddell and watch Anderson Silva defend his title....

That being said, if you want a good breakdown of the fights and the contenders, check out ESPN's overview

Obama's Chicago 2016 Pitch


This is a video from April 6 (before the IOC visited Chicago to determine whether or not it would be suitable to host the 2016 Olympics).



Video Highlights/Obama's Big Points:
*Chicago as "most American of American cities."
*Cultural richness
*A city of historical perseverence (rebuilding after the Great Fire, home to railroads, the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, and Millennium Park)
*Lives and breathes ideal of excellence
*Legendary sports figures, venues and fans
*Renown Architecture
*Chicago universities unlocking mysteries of science, medicine, and history
*Mayor Daley's pledge to make the city 'green'
*One of the great cities of the world
*"Diversity, Perseverence, Excellence"

I'd be interested to see what you guys think of President Obama's pitch. This man is such a great speaker in my opinion, and the speech really evokes American values and ties in multiculturalism. What I think is lacking (which may have been addressed elsewhere) is the financial plan. Can the government and other agencies offering to pay for this REALLY afford it? 

*Photo: ricelakelibrary.org

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Funny and/or Stupid Quotes from Athletes


On a whim, I made the executive decision to google "funny quotes by athletes." Should I be studying for my Computer Literacy test, which starts in 58 minutes? I think so. But this just seems to be the thing to do at the moment.

So, without further adieu; here are some of the best that I found:

"Left hand, right hand, it doesn't matter. I'm amphibious." -Charles Shackleford

"Nobody in football should be called a genius. A genius is a guy like Norman Einstein." -Joe Theismann

"Pro football is like nuclear warfare. There are no winners, only survivors." -Frank Gifford

"They shouldn't throw at me. I'm the father of five or six kids." -Tito Fuentes after being hit by a pitch

"I may be dumb, but I'm not stupid." -Terry Bradshaw

"These people haven't seen the last of my face. If I go down, I'm going down standing up." -Chuck Person

And I couldn't forget the great SHAQ:
"I made a 1600 minus 800 minus 200 on the SAT, so I'm very intelligent when I speak."



Sources: Bleacher Report

Photo: http://uselessplace.com/


In-Class Column Exercise: The Inevitability of the Baseball's 1994 Work Stoppage

What do you do in the case of an age-old argument where neither side has ever been willing to truly compromise and an entire industry is on the verge of a flop?

You stop working. At least that's what happened in baseball in 1994.

When the big-shot players and uber rich club owners hang everyone else out to dry, the bomb will drop. This is why the work stoppage of 1994 in baseball was inevitable.

Baseball was in a deadly state; small club owners weren't breaking even, while big club owners continued to rake in the cash. There was little authority, seeing as there was no commissioner and plans to find a new head-honcho had been dragging along. Free-agent players were asking for more and more money that many clubs didn't have, and yet they continued to be signed.

The game was no longer about the fans or the love. It was about the green goblin: cold, hard cash. Even Hall-of-Fame players noticed.

"For all the players have gained, the changes took something away from baseball," former Phillies pitcher Robin Roberts said, noting the union's role in the downfall.

The tug-of-war between small club owners and big club owners over revenue-sharing was a major issue that led to the stoppage. The small-city teams were aching for money, many having to cut talent in order to keep from selling teams to bigger cities. The San Diego Padres traded starting-pitcher Craig Lefferts and other key (but expensive) players from its roster in order to keep from going bankrupt or losing its team to another city.

But big-city teams didn't want to share the wealth. The owners didn't think it would be fair to give a large sum of money to a small-city team when they were the ones drawing in the cash.

Salary-capping was another contested issue. The players wouldn't have been happy with having their salaries cut because they didn't fit the budget, but the owners would have recieved some economic security by guaranteeing that the players salaries didn't grow exponentially every year.

One might argue that an essential break-down of the MLB's economic system would have stopped the stoppage. If everyone could have given a little, the game could have continued. If the big teams gave a percentage of revenues to small teams... If the players salaries were lowered, but they were offered other benefits and guarantees...

But there was a history behind the system. It had been broken in the past, and nobody was willing to budge.

Lords of the Realm author John Helyar put it well by comparing the players to the pigs from Animal Farm. They had been struggling to reform a system that kept them down, as the players had in the earlier days when Marvin Miller struggled with the owners to raise the minimum salary for players. But after a while, the players let it get to their heads and wanted more more more money, and pretty soon they appeared as greedy and indistinguishable from the Lords as the pigs were from the humans they struggled against. And what pig would want to go back to living in a mud-filled pen?

The small teams couldn't fiscally afford decent players, but without decent players, they couldn't make money. The big teams wouldn't give them money because they didn't think they deserved it, some arguing that certain small-teams had been poorly managed.

At the same time, there was noone to rule over the league. After Fay Vincent resigned as commissioner in 1992, no commissioner had been instated. It was in a state of political chaos, as Henry J. Aaron of the Economic Study Committee put it in his report in 1992.

So what else could baseball have done to prevent the stoppage besides going back in time to repair its torn roots?

Everything looks different in hindsight.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Chi-Town: 2016 Olympics? PLEASE NO

The chairwoman of the International Olympic Committee came away from inspection of Chicago for the 2016 Olympic bid saying, "We are leaving with a very strong impression that the bid is a strong one," according to the Associated Press.

The IOC was impressed with the support that Chicago 2016 is receiving from all areas of government, including that of President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Apparently, the worldwide economic crisis isn't throwing up too many red-flags. Of course (well, hopefully) it won't last forever.

It would be nice to bring the Olympics back to the U.S., but I really don't want them to be that close to home. Yeah, they would bring in thousands and thousands of jobs and tons of money, but I hate the idea of not being able to drive down I-90 to get anywhere around Rockford, Belvidere, Wisconsin, etc. 

Also, I'm sure the Chicago 2016 committee has all the answers, but I'd like to know where they're going to put all of the facilities. I love the lake front area in Chicago, and would hate to see it all developed into buildings that won't get much use after the Olympics.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Bad Lance!

I love hearing about Lance Armstrong in the news. I have no idea why because I have never really been interested in cycling, minus the few vomit-inducing spin classes I've done over the years.
So Imagine my delight today when I saw this story by Reuters on the NY Time's website.
An unidentifiable French Anti-Doping Agency (AFLD) employee approached Armstrong last month, while Armstrong was training in France, requesting blood, urine and hair samples to test for illegal drug-use.
The AFLD filed a complaint to the International Cycling Union (UIC), saying that Armstrong behaved oddly when the samples were requested.
Lance told authorities and the press that he did not know who the guy was.
"I had never heard of labs or governments doing drug testing and I had no idea who this guy was or whether he was telling the truth," said Armstrong.
Naturally, he was skeptical of a random dude asking him for his pee. Who wouldn't be?
Armstrong requested that the man show him identification.
The tester did, but Armstrong and his team manager got no real evidence from the papers he produced.
"I was there with (team manager) Johan Bruyneel and two other people," Armstrong said in a statement. "We told the tester we wanted to check with the UCI to confirm who he was and to make sure he wasn't just some French guy with a backpack and some equipment to take my blood and urine."
As creepy as that would be, I'm sure it has been done.
Once Armstrong received confirmation of the tester's authority, he immediately complied, making this the 24th drug test he has taken since his return from retirement. (Uhh, how long has it been? A few months?)
It is only natural for the host country of one of the world's biggest cycling races to question a man who has won it a billion times (or seven times...but who's counting), especially when he's coming off of a very recent collarbone surgery and is still looking good to compete this year. But, without having been there, it seems a little shady for someone to approach him without immediately supplying documentation of authority.
I'm not saying the French are weirdos or anything like that...

Lucky-Tequila Custody Battle



A heated four month custody battle was settled Monday by Palm Beach Co. Judge James Martz.

Angela Colicheski lost someone near to her three years ago.

And Sarita Lytell found him, and had been taking care of him for nearly three years until, by chance, she met Colicheski at a Dunkin Donuts and began discussing her love of parrots.

Wait, what?!?!?

That's right. The women were in a custody battle over a $2,000 African Grey parrot named Tequila...or Lucky...

Friday, April 3, 2009

April Fool's Pranks in Publications????

Car and Driver Magazine ran a story on Tuesday hoping to fool NASCAR fans.

Apparently, they did. But the fans weren't laughing.

The magazine ran a Web story that said President Obama had order Chevrolet and Dodge out of NASCAR if they wanted to keep their federal funds, according to Yahoo! buzz.

The story was taken down after a brief Web frenzy from NASCAR fans.

Denny Darnell wasn't laughing either.

According to USA Today, Darnell, who does public relations for Dodge's motor sports program, wrote in an e-mail, "I've been in this business more than 30 years and I have never seen a story so irresponsible." 

April Fool's pranks are better left to school children. I agree with Darnell. It's irresponsible of any publication with a desire for credibility to run a prank story, whether it's April 1st or any other day. 

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Skateistan

These past two weeks have been a whirlwind. My fiance was at Ft. Benning in Georgia for a week, training for his deployment to Afghanistan. After a week of training and a four day stay in Kuwait, he finally flew to Afghanistan yesterday.

Needless to say, it's been on my mind a lot.

So when I saw this video on NYTimes.com, I was particularly interested.

Skateboard-loving Australian native Oliver Percovich was warned of the dangers of skating in Kabul.

"When I got to Afghanistan, people told me not to skate with girls because it might attract criticism, not to skate in the streets because it might be dangerous, not to skate with poor kids because they would steal my stuff," Percovich said in an interview for The Guardian Weekly. "But none of that happened; I haven't had any problems with the kids at all."

In 2007, with a budget of about $1,000, Percovich started 'Skateistan', a skating school for Afghan youth.

But for Percovich, the school means more than simply teaching Afghan youth how to skate.

"I feel that this skate park helps to build trust between Afghans and westerners," Percovich said.

An established trust between two different cultures is a necessary condition for success in other programs, such as "healthcare, education and the rule of law," he said.

While it may be a lofty mission in a war-torn and class divided country, the Australian said one of his goals is to allow children from different social classes, ethnic and religious backgrounds to skate together in one place.

"I want them to learn that they're all the same on a skateboard," Percovich said.

Young girls--who would otherwise have little opportunity to play sports--have been especially encouraged to participate in the school and are given priority on skateboards.

But above all of the goals that Percovich has had for the school, the most important has been providing a positive place for the kids to be kids.

"They live in quite a complicated environment in Kabul," he said. "And it worries me that I see them copying the negative behaviour they see around them. We try to provide them with a safe and positive environment, and I think it's working."


*Link to Skateistan website

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

McCain seeking pardon for deceased boxer


I thought this was a pretty interesting story.


Sen. John McCain is seeking a posthumous pardon for Jack Johnson, America's first African-American heavyweight boxing champion who died in 1946. 

In 1913, Johnson was convicted of violating the Mann Act, which stated that women could not be transported across state-lines for immoral purposes. Johnson had a relationship with a white woman at the time--a woman whom he later married. 

Johnson fled the United States, but came back to serve a 10-month sentence. He was never able to regain his title.

Although posthumous Presidential pardons are rare, McCain and other supporters say that this will heal old wounds and send an important message to the sporting world.

Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., said a pardon would "remove a cloud that's been over the American sporting scene ever since [Johnson] was convicted on these trumped-up charges."

This request for a pardon has been shot-down by Congress twice before, in 2004 and again last year.

But McCain and King both said that the pardon would carry important symbolism coming from Obama, and that it would show U.S. progress over the last century.

What do you guys think? 


*photo: Britannica.com; Britannica Blog