For Shannon… “Yes We Can”

Actually, I’m pretty sure that she’s probably already seen this viral video for her candidate. I’m just posting it for those who may not have caught it already. It’s a pretty powerful message.

For those who might not be quite into pop culture, the video was produced by will.i.am the front man for the Black Eyed Peas. It wasn’t commissioned by Obama but once he saw it he recognized its potential impact and he’s put it up on his campaign website.

Golf Followup

It looks like I never followed up on this post from a year and a half ago.

“Two friends of mine are playing in a local first round qualifier at Scotch Valley Country Club in Altoona for the US Open today so I’m headed over to watch them. There are 39 players contending for 3 sectional qualifier spots…

I’ll be back later tonight to fill in details of their rounds.”

The details are – they sucked. They both played terrible, tied for dead last with two other guys (although seven guys didn’t turn in cards so they might have beaten them).

You are probably asking yourself why I’m following up on this now. We’ll there’s a reason. During our friend RJ’s round, word filtered back to us that a guy in the group just in front of us was playing pretty well (it was a brutal day, the wind was blowing incredibly hard and scores were skyrocketing – by days end, only three of the pros managed to break 75 – and the guy in front of us was two under at the time). So my friend Tom Minsker and I decided to move up and watch him (RJ was playing so bad that we felt he was probably self conscious that we were watching).

There really weren’t any people following any of these groups around, just a couple of friends and family. There was no one following the guy that we moved up to watch, so we were able to strike up several conversations with him and his caddy. His name was Brad Adamonis and he was a small time 30-something Nationwide tour player from Rhode Island (he had earned all of $3531 on the Nationwide tour in 2005). He didn’t used a driver but he consistently smacked his three wood 280 or so off the tee. He seemed so much better than any of the other guys that we had seen that day that Tom and I were dumbfounded that this guy was a nobody.

Adamonis wound up being one of the three guys to claim a sectional spot and we kept an eye on him when he went on to the sectionals. At the sectionals, he came in sixth among 33 guys and thus did not qualify for one of the two available slots from his qualifier.

Every now and then though, Tom or I would check up on Brad. He finished 2006 at 71st on the Nationwide tour earning $81,000. In 2007, he won one event and moved up to 33rd on the tour with $170,000. Then this past fall he finished ninth at the Q school to earn his PGA card.

So yesterday, I’m sitting home working on my computer with the Golf Channel’s coverage of the Buick Invitational at Torrey Pines on in the background. I’d occasionally look up to catch one of Tiger’s shots. Tiger finished his round at -5 two shots back of the leader. Shortly after Tiger finishes they flash to this guy whose lining up his birdie putt on eighteen. He drops it to go six under one back of the leader and they flash his name – Brad Adamonis. Whoa – that gets my attention.

Then the announcers talk about how Brad’s made a nice start on his first year on the tour, making the cut at both the Sony and the Hope tournaments and earning $40k to date. His now in a good position to take home a nice paycheck this weekend and to hang onto is card.

At 35 years old, Brad makes a nice human interest story and not surprisingly, the press has picked up on it today. Here are some:

SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports > Golf -- Adamonis in unfamiliar territory – The Spotlight

SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports > Golf — Adamonis in unfamiliar territory – The Spotlight via kwout

Adamonis shoots 66 in Buick Open, bolsters sick father -- South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com

Adamonis shoots 66 in Buick Open, bolsters sick father — South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com via kwout

SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports > U-T Golfblog

SignOnSanDiego.com > Sports > U-T Golfblog via kwout

 

 

Success comes in bunches for rookie

By: DAN HAYES and BRIAN HIRO – Staff Writers

LA JOLLA —- Brad Adamonis couldn’t help but grin after a friend high-fived him following a birdie on the 18th green at Torrey Pines’ North Course.

The 35-year-old PGA Tour rookie has been all smiles recently, especially after a 5-under-par 67 in the opening round of the Buick Invitational on Thursday.

Consider that after eight previous tries at qualifying school, Adamonis finally reached the PGA Tour this season and has made the cut in each of his first two tournament. Then there’s the improved health of his family and friends. And then there’s his beloved New England Patriots, who are headed back to the Super Bowl after last Sunday’s win over the Chargers.

Go to the rest of the article

I’ll be paying close attention to the guy for the rest of the tournament.

PSU vs Stanford for women VB title

These two were probably destined to play for the title. PSU ended the season as the #1 ranked team. But Stanford got the #1 seed in the tournament. PSU has now won 25 straight matches with their last loss coming September 15th against, you guessed it, Stanford. Stanford and Penn State are also the only two teams in the country who have made every NCAA tournament.

Stanford needed five games to win their semifinal match against USC, fighting off a match point in the fifth game to do it. Penn State, on the other hand, swept Cal in three, continuing the roll that they have been on since the start of the NCAAs. PSU got stronger in every game winning 30-28, 30-25, 30-16. Cal was actually the first team in the entire tournament to score 20 points on PSU – they have been that dominant.

The finals will be on ESPN2 Saturday night at 9PM EST. Unfortunately, that the same time that I’m having my fifth annual State College Santa Crawl (poor planning on my part). The good news is that I can maneuver the crawl so that we’ll just move from one bar to another between games so we should be able to catch most of the action anyway (weather permitting, that is, the forecast isn’t too good right now).

On a related side note, I was down at the Tavern last Saturday after watching PSU beat BYU for the regional crown when one of PSU’s players, Kate Price (Kate’s the one who went into the stands for that spectacular save that I mentioned last week), came in with some former players. I’ve known Kate for about three years now (her older teammates corrupted her and used to sneak her into some of the local taverns as a minor).

Kate begged me to show the others one of my tricks that I rarely do. It involves someone freely picking a card out of a deck, signing it, returning it to the deck, then shuffling the deck. After giving the deck back to me, I toss the deck into the air and the signed card winds up sticking to the ceiling. I don’t do the trick very often because it ruins the deck. In addition to the one card on the ceiling, the other fall to the floor and just scatter everywhere. Even if you bother picking the cards up off of the floor, they’re usually too messed up to use anymore. But it was near the end of the night, the deck I had was kind of messed up anyway, and Kate had just won a big match, so I relented.

One of the secrets of doing the trick is to make sure that you put it on a ceiling that’s high enough that someone can’t just pull the card down. The Tavern ceiling is about ten feet high so I figured I was safe. Wrong. I overlooked the fact that while Kate is a girl, she’s also 6’4″ tall and a top caliber NCAA athlete. The card stuck cleanly to the ceiling but as her girlfriends stood there staring at the card, Kate just took a running jump and cleanly picked it off of the ceiling. I was caught red-handed with wax stuck to the back of the card. Of course, they still couldn’t figure out how I found the card and got the wax on it, but a little bit of the awe and amazement was gone. Next time I need to remember not to underestimate my audience.

Good news Ron…

Your story isn’t gone forever.

I was afraid that your Phi Psi 500 moment in the sun might have been lost forever but the Penn State Daily Collegian has just finished digitizing all of their back issues (there was a gap from 1977-87 that was incomplete for the longest while). Guess what made the archives?

From the April 14th, 1986 issue, on page two…

Craziness was the norm at this year’s Phi Psi

For some of the runners the event was a true family affair. Larry Fall, class of 1972, has run in the race approximately 15 times, and has won the masters division in the past (UL note to Collegian writer: I won the hole damn thing too). This year, however, his brother Ron, 14 years younger, ran against him in Saturday’s race.

“I’ve heard about this race for years, now I’m going to challenge him in my first time running it” Ron Fall said.

But experience paid off in the long run as Larry Fall best his brother by about two minutes.

“It’s a pain for about 1o minutes, but from then on it’s great. I’ve met some of my best friends here at the Phi Psi 500” Larry Fall added.

I feel much better now that I know the results of the race are preserved for posterity sake.

BTW – Some added notes culled from the results piece at the end of the article:

My buddy Randy Woolridge (mistakenly spelled Woolrich in the article) won the masters in a pedestrian 8:10 time (when in shape I usually finished around 7:00 with my best time 6:35 recorded as a master).

The third place masters finisher in the race was Dave Barsda, who was a former employee of mine from Harrisburg. Dave came up from Harrisburg to see me (I had moved to CT a couple of years earlier) and run in the race.

The remark about meeting some of my best friends at the rate was quite true and reads even more eerily when I realized that I’m still in touch with three of the students who ran on the team that placed second in the race. Eric Brugel, along with his brother and sister, worked at the Tavern. He comes back to State College for an annual golf tournament that I play in. Tim Flynn, is the wrestling coach at Edinboro University.

The most successful of the bunch though is Chris Bevilacqua, who went on to make millions in the sports and TV business. Chris went to work for Nike out of college – he’s the one that started the first Nike shoe and apparel contracts with college programs. He left Nike to work for Major League Baseball for a while, then started his most successful venture College Sports Television, aka CSTV. CSTV was eventually bought out by CBS which put considerable coin in Chris’s pocket. He worked for CBS for a while as the head of the regional sports programming but then left to go out on his own. He’s currently working on some soccer/TV startup deal but I’m not privy to the details. However, on that spring Saturday, some 21+ years ago, Chris was just another beer jugging, pavement pounding College student out to have some fun.

PA vs Utah

Not the school but the state.

Penn State hosts BYU tonight in a regional women’s volleyball final with the winner advancing to the Final Four next weekend in Sacramento. The #17 ranked Cougars (24-7) will be looking to pull off a huge upset over #1 ranked Penn State (31-2).

Penn State has now won 33 consecutive matches on their home floor and look to be prohibitive favorites to make it the the NCAA championship semifinals for the fifth time in the last 15 years. Penn State is one of only two schools to play every NCAA tournament in the 24 years the NCAA has been hosting the VB championship. Stanford is the other and looks to be one of two schools with a chance to derail the Lions championship express (Nebraska is the other – Neb and Stan are the two schools the own a victory over PSU this season).

As good as Penn State is, they actually look to be a year away from putting their best team on the floor. They lose only one player who is a factor on this time, part-time starter and defensive player Kate Price, and have a very capable back-up already in place.

Hall of Fame coach Russ Rose has been building an incredible juggernaut here at PSU. He’s upgraded the talent on the team every year for the last five years (while winning the B10 title every year too). Penn State has now claimed the freshman of the year in the B10 for six years running. The absurd thing about it is that many of these freshman award winners have found themselves on the bench the following year because the incoming freshman have been even better. For example, the aforementioned senior Kate Price was named the B10 freshman of the year as a front row blocker in 2004. She was out of the starting lineup the next year and didn’t work her way back to the starting lineup until the second half of this season (and she’s only starting because she changed positions to a defensive specialist – she couldn’t break into the front row).

PSU’s starting line-up is now:

6’2″ Sr Kate Price – B10 Freshman of the Year (2004)

6’4″ Jr Nicolle Fawcett – National Freshman of Year (2005), 1st team All American (2005), Big Ten Freshman of the Year (2006), 1st team All Big Ten (2006, 2007)

6’2″ Jr Christa Harmotto – B10 Player of the Year (2007), 1st Team All B10 (2006, 2007)

6’3″ So Megan Hodge – National Freshman of the Year (2006), 1st team All American (2006), B10 Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year (2006), 1st team All B10 (2006, 2007)

6’0″ So Alicia Glass – 1st Team All B10 (2007)

6’2″ Fr Arielle Wilson – B10 Freshman of the Year (2007)

Coming off the bench is Sr Mellisa Walbridge who was 1st team All B10 and a 2nd team All American in 2005 but cannot break into the starting lineup now.

These girls have a good shot at a national crown this year and, barring injuries, should be an odd on favorite to win it all next year.

I’m looking forward to running between Rec Hall where the volleyball battle starts at 6:30 (ESPNU coverage for those who would like to watch) and the Bryce Jordan Center where the basketball team takes on Seton Hall at 8:00 PM (coverage on the Big Ten Network for those who might get the channel).

It seemed like a good idea at the time

New Coke, 20 years later, and other marketing fiascoes
New Coke
AP file
What are they laughing about? Roberto C. Goizueta, chairman and CEO of Coca-Cola, left, toasts New Coke with Donald R. Keough, the company’s president, in 1985. Celebration would turn to defeat within months as Americans rejected the tweak on the classic drink.

Read the rest of the article

This 2005 MSNBC article takes a look at some historic, seemingly good, ideas that just didn’t work out. The most famous, of course, being New Coke.

Others that make the list include:
– rabbit jerky
– clear beer
– the eight track tape
and so on.

So why am I publishing this two year old article. Well, because I have one more to add to the list – this blog.

Gary and I clearly misread how the rest of the family would embrace it. We thought it would be an excellent vehicle for all of us to keep up on what the rest of the family was doing. Quite apparently now, that wasn’t a vision shared by the rest of you.

I’ve pretty much refrained from posting over the last couple of months just to see if the lack of content might prime someone to try to fill the void with something. It didn’t. Obviously, the value just isn’t there for most. I see that now.

The renewal date for the WeAreTheFalls.com domain name comes up for renewal in a couple of weeks. There seems to be little reason for continuing this experiment so I’m going to let the domain expire and pull the plug on the blog.

Hope you at least enjoyed it some while it lasted.