Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Wednesday's State Mottos

Washington 
Where Our Governor & Legislature ignore our State Constitution
 
West Virginia 
One Big Happy Family... Really!
 
Wisconsin 
Come Cut the Cheese!
 
Wyoming
Where Men Are Men... And The Sheep Are Scared   
(Home of Brokeback Mountain)
 
The District of Columbia
The Work-Free Drug Place !

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

More Mild Weather

From the Pantagraph:

Normally, the pattern goes that March will come in like a lion and leave like a lamb, but that’s not going to be the case this year, according to Ed Shimon, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Lincoln.

When March arrives on Thursday, McLean County can expect mostly sunny skies with a high of 46. Hardly lion-like.

But not all that unusual compared to the mild winter the Central Illinois area has had so far. And with the exception of some possible thunderstorms Tuesday night, we can expect another mild week, Shimon said.

Sunshine is in the forecast for today, with a high of 43. Clouds roll in Tuesday with the possibility of showers and maybe some thunderstorms Tuesday evening. But the sunshine returns on Wednesday with a high near 56.

So is winter over? By this point last year, we had already had our last measurable snow.

“You can never be sure,” Shimon said. “Just the other day we were talking and someone mentioned we once had a 10-inch snowstorm in April. That’s not likely with the type of winter we have had here, but the winter is starting to wind down and you can probably count the number of measurable snow systems we will get from this point, on just one hand.”

So far, this winter has produced less than 50 percent of normal snowfall while temperatures have averaged four to six degrees above normal, according to the National Weather Service. This is in stark contrast to the last three winters which produced above normal snowfall and below normal temperatures. So far this year, Bloomington-Normal has had 7.8 inches of snow, about 9.9 inches below normal.

Without snow to talk about, and the rain isn’t expected to arrive until tomorrow, many Central Illinois residents did report high winds over the weekend. Wind gusts measured at 45 miles per hour were recorded Sunday in McLeanCounty, although no damage has been reported. Logan County reported wind gusts of 36 miles per hour.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Monday's State Mottos

Tennessee 
Home of the Al Gore Invention Museum.
 
Texas 
Se Hable Ingles
 
Utah 
Our Jesus Is Better Than Your Jesus
 
Vermont
Too liberal for the Kennedys
 
Virginia 
Who Says Government Stiffs And Slack jaw Yokels Don't Mix?

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Sunday's State Mottos

Oregon 
Spotted Owl... It's What's For Dinner
 
Pennsylvania 
Cook With Coal
 
Rhode Island 
We're Not REALLY An Island
 
South  Carolina 
Remember The Civil War?
Well, We Didn't Actually Surrender
 
South Dakota 
Closer Than North Dakota

Terrell Owens Scores Three Touchdowns In Indoor Football League Debut

The last time Terrell Owens scored three touchdowns in a professional football game was five years ago in a nationally-televised game played in front of 63,000 fans at sold-out Texas Stadium. In his return to the sport on Saturday night, the former NFL star matched that scoring feat on a much smaller scale.

The Dallas Cowboys star on his helmet was replaced with a curly W. The opposing team wasn't the hated Washington Redskins, but the alliterative Wichita Wild. And when T.O. celebrated in the end zone three times, he did it in front of 5,700 fans and a few hundred empty seats at the Allen Events Center.

T.O. made his Indoor Football League debut for the Allen Wranglers this weekend, catching three passes, all for touchdowns, in his first professional arena game. Though he was a drawing card for the team -- the 5,711 fans in attendance were said to be more than the team had for their entire home schedule last year -- the lack of sell-out must have been disconcerting for a team that had hoped to make Owens the must-see ticket in town.

Catching passes from a quarterback making $225 per game (and $25 more for a victory), Owens looked at ease on the small, indoor field. He didn't catch a pass in the second half, but the three first-half TDs were enough to earn him player of the game honors.


Owens has a 50 percent ownership stake in the team. The roster is largely made up of former college players, some fairly well-known (quarterback Bryan Randell broke passing records at Virginia Tech) and some less so (Doug Pierce, who lead the Wild in receptions, starred at the NAIA's Friends University).
The 38-year-old missed the 2011 NFL season with an injury. He is hoping to play his way back into the league for the upcoming season. It may be a tall order.

Cowboys Stadium is only 42 miles from Allen, Tex., but as Terrell Owens is quickly learning, it's a world away.

Profile Of A Champion: The Week In Thanks

Yesterday, for the first time in my life, I cried in a locker room. Here's why.

As sophomore tryouts ended in November, Coach Short and I sat down to determine final cuts. As freshmen the boys had only won about six games out of 25. We figured to keep most of that team's starters. But what about the rest? By most accounts that team was filled with great personalities, but struggled scoring the basketball.

The school's basketball program was fresh off of a state finals appearance. It had a promising crop of freshmen (who would go on to win more than 20 games). Would it be best for the program to move lots of them up to our team to advance their development?

In the end we took just two freshmen on, and broke camp with this roster.

Colin Olson - the football quarterback who played ball-hawking defense and enjoyed passing the ball and quietly coaching his teammates more than taking his own shot.

Christian Arjona - the baseball catcher who used his smarts to cut seams in the defense and always managed to get to the right spot on the court.

Kyle Sosa - the point guard and silent leader who set a season record for charges taken (and maybe for dives for loose balls), who played to exhaustion when he was sick or when we were short on back-ups, who guarded opponents like they were trying to break into his house.

Nick Lanman - who transferred in from Charleston but fit in with an easy joke and a smile like he'd lived here all his life, pushed himself and others in practice to be better with his big body, and never complained.

Grant Donath - the multi-sport talent who drove the lane to find open teammates, slipped into passing lanes for steals, and could dominate a game at either end of the court.

Parker Fields - the soft-spoken mound of rebound who was one who faithfully attended summer workouts and developed into a defensive rock who made several inspirational buckets in traffic down the stretch.

Zach Thompson - the fearless sharpshooting freshman with a 150-pound body who played like he was 225, inviting and absorbing punishment in the lane without changing expression, and a student of defense.

Jerry Patton - the fastest player and part of the life of the locker room, who terrorized defenders in practice and games with his offensive rebounding.

Brandon Nuckolls - the fun-loving powerhouse who, as our tallest post player, routinely matched up against opponents who loomed over him, but attacked them relentlessly and at times dominantly.

Tyler Seibring - the do-everything freshman and tallest player who was as likely to grab double-digit rebounds as he was to make four three-pointers, in no small part because he hung around after every practice for extra shooting and wore out the nets.

Ben Wylde - the unsung glue and blue-collar soul of the team who started every game, drew the toughest defensive assignment whether guard or post player, scored double-digit points or rebounds whenever the team needed it, and made steel-nerved shots in crunch time.

Alex Prus - the emblem of the Ironmen Way. He came to summer sessions, slapped more hands with more enthusiasm than a Catholic nun, coached encouragement from the sidelines as if he were paid to do it, and no matter how how much he played in games.

As part of those final cuts, Coach pulled the sophomores into a room and made it clear that it was likely several freshmen would join the team and play ahead of them over the course of the year, and that if they remained with the team it would be under those conditions.

Every one of them stayed.

What the team lacked in some mainstream basketball skills was generously filled with hustle, selflessness, encouragement, and energy. Sitting next to these guys on the bench was like participating in a yearlong cheerleading competition. The team we chose (or, to give fairest credit, Coach Short ultimately chose) put greater weight on honoring the program's newly minted Ironmen Way, our philosophy that "The secret of basketball is that it isn't about basketball." It's about toughness, practice, killing yourself defensively, ignoring personal statistics. It's about becoming better teammates, better friends, better family members, better men. They had no cliques. Went out socially. Welcomed the freshmen gladly into the fold like big brothers.

We struggled to a 1-2 opening tournament, losing leads to Normal West and Bloomington in the process.

Tyler broke out with six three-pointers against Urbana in a shootout win, and then we had our first convincing victory over Bradley-Bourbonnais. We were rolling.

Adversity struck when Grant went down with an ankle injury that sidelined him for several weeks. We came frustratingly close to overcoming the hole in our scoring and rebounding, losing our next seven. Six of those seven games were decided by either a single missed free throw, layup, or a 3-pointer being called a 2-pointer.

Following one of those bitter last-second losses at Mahomet leading into the Christmas break, we huddled mutely in the locker room as Coach Short gathered us in sitting closely. In his own inimitable way, he spent those seminal five minutes telling us how much he loved us, loved coming to practice with us. We broke the huddle not with the usual fist-bumps, but with grateful hugs.

The post-Christmas Rockton tournament was part of that stretch too. The Ironmen Way includes scheduling the toughest opponents to build the confidence and character of our team. We played three games in a single day in a cold dome, the first against a physically superior Rockford team that we lost to by a point, and the last against a fresh-legged Rockton team in front of their home fans.

We were 4-9. The schedule ahead was filled with big names like Moline, Danville, Champaign Central, Normal West, and O'Fallon. We went a six-week stretch without a home game.

During one of the long, cold bus rides from another loss, Coach looked me in the eye and said "If we want to have a chance of finishing above .500, we have to beat Eisenhower twice."

And though the bus rides were long and cold, they were also upbeat. The doldrums usually roll around in January even on a winning team, the middle of a five-month season. The symptoms of weakness like flagging energy, aches and pains, and grousing emerge. But nothing like that was here.

Our record was poor and laced with heartbreaking losses. And still, we were a winning team.

We beat an inferior opponent to close out the Rockton tournament, in which everyone played, and the starters cheered on their teammates for the entire fourth quarter.

We beat Eisenhower.

We beat Moline.

We beat Danville, on the strength of a brilliant 15-point second half run that eventually turned a 10-point deficit into a 20-point lead.

Watching video was getting to be a lot of fun for Coach and me, the way our offense flowed with sharp passing, our trademark defense suffocated opponents. It was like an Ironmen Way clinic. We were also starting to integrate a few more freshmen into the ranks who were making valuable contributions, which naturally diminished minutes of sophomores, who continued to root them on from the sidelines.

Champaign Central was to be the #1 seed in the year-end sophomore tournament, and they asserted themselves with a handy 15-point win over us at their place.

Normal West nipped us again on the road for the second time of the season.

Next came a mighty O'Fallon squad with a state-ranked program. We traveled 3 hours to their gym knowing that, in this part of the state, junior varsity meant exactly that - they played juniors on their team. And after they manhandled us for the first half, we stormed back magically... only to miss a game-winning fast break layup near the buzzer, give up two rebounds on free throws, and miss one of our own for another tantalizing yet sobering loss.

That day I found myself saying in the locker room that we had taken their best punch without flinching, and fought our way back. The way that men do. This is the reason that we coach.

As we neared the finish line at 8-12, it was decided to return the extra freshmen to their team, which went on to win the freshmen tournament. Grant spent several practices with the varsity. We lost Christian to an ankle injury. Coach and I occasionally found ourselves running the court so that we could have ten bodies in practice (so I guess we can say that everyone on the bench got playing time this year!).

We beat Eisenhower again, and likewise a struggling Mattoon team in its last season in our conference.

All that remained was the sophomore tournament spread over two Saturdays, with a road game at Bloomington in between.

It made complete sense what we were seeded seventh out of eight teams. We'd played five of the teams above us and lost them all, including twice to West.

Coach and I were determined to put the same all-out intensity into our preparation for these final weeks as the players had given so devotedly to the team through nearly fifty practices and twenty games. We scoured video of all the teams that we might play - Bloomington, Mahomet, West, Champaign Central. Went to each other's houses, e-mailed and texted ideas. Made notes of tendencies of every individual opposing player, their set plays, their offensive and defensive patterns. Typed up one-page scouting reports with strategies. At one in the morning. At five in the morning. Toughness matters.
 
Once you've given your very best, the rest is in God's hands. As part of that, this year the tournament happened to be at our gym. For all of our ups and downs, we were undefeated at home. I suppose you could say with a wink that part of the true selflessness of this team was that they made a lot of home fans happy all year long.

The scouting paid off handsomely against Mahomet. They had brought up four freshmen. Our thinking was "If we nearly beat O'Fallon with juniors, we can beat Mahomet with freshmen." And beat them we did, building an 11-point fourth quarter lead and shutting down their top two scorers. The #2 seed fell. 

We had a week of practice to get ready for two different styles - the fast-paced man-to-man slash-and-pressure of Bloomington, and West's trapping zone and catalog of screen plays. We added some new offensive and defensive sets.

In our final non-tournament game, Bloomington drifted out to a 13-3 lead in the first half. We battled back to within 22-20 at half. And then teamwork handed us a smothering victory. Brandon and Parker held their 20-point 250-pound bruiser to zero shots. Zero! In total they had only four shots inside the paint in the second half. They grew increasingly desperate, launching threes and off-balance shots, unable to get rebounds. Meanwhile our offense found its rhythm. We gave up only 13 second half points to win handily.

In the midst of our celebration, Kyle wore a blank expression on his face, unable to remember what had just happened or whether we'd won or lost. He was taken to the emergency room and diagnosed with some concussion-like symptoms. Our point guard and rock was out for tomorrow's tournament finals.

I believe that everything happens for a divine reason, usually for a good reason, even when we can't understand why. In my heart, I believe that it was so that Alex, who had gone entire games without seeing action, could start against West. He did, and he scored, and we controlled the game from start to finish in reaching the championship game.

Champaign Central had an outstanding set of guards, the most athletic in the tournament. How would we counteract it with our guard-depleted roster? As it turns out, we didn't have to. Bloomington beat them in the semifinals. God works in mysterious ways. As fate also had it, Bloomington's big post player had to miss the championship game. Say what you want about the breaks. We spent a season strengthening our character against forces that would crumble a lesser team. Now it was their turn.

Bloomington edged out to another first quarter lead as the stands, normally thin for any sophomore game, began to fill. They hit some three pointers, we missed ours. And then we did what Ironmen do. Grant sliced into the lane for layups. Tyler grabbed rebounds and scored in the paint. Zach broke loose for ten points in the third quarter. Alex played a steadily against their pressure. Ben, Brandon and Parker sealed the lane off from shots and second shots - once-and-done.

We had three players in double figures. And with under a minute left, five substitutes came into the game as the crowd roared in ovation.

Fittingly, Colin held the ball patiently in his arms as the clock expired, and the underdog Ironmen "officially" become champions.

Family crowded the court as a dozen cameras captured our pose with the trophy under the basket.

The team poured into the locker room exuberantly. Coach Short mingled with some fans before entering the locker room. I stood on the court, recalling some of the many things I've shared above. Varsity Coach Witzig led off the post-game team locker room speech with words of congratulations. Then it was my turn.
 
As much as I like to think that I cried because of how happy my departed dad would have been to see us win, it might be more mortal and selfish than that. I'm just going to miss these guys. I'll give thanks to God the rest of my life for having had the chance to be a part of it. I've been on sports and professional teams for 30+ years before finding one as good as this. They'll go into the world, and fifty years from now, have a real chance to look back and see this as the greatest group of men they were ever among. And I told them so.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Cancer-Fighting Teen Invites Taylor Swift To Prom; Gets Surprise Response

Lots of guys want to go on a date with Taylor Swift. So, what makes 18-year-old Kevin McGuire from Somerdale, New Jersey any different from the pack of Swift's would-be suitors?

Well, there are a few things, which I'll go over in a minute. But, suffice to say, McGuire, who recently asked Swift via Facebook to be his prom date in June, stands out for the response he got. Swift declined the offer...but asked him to accompany her to a prestigious awards show in April, instead!


Taylor Swift

How did this all happen? The backstory: McGuire has had a painful struggle with leukemia since he was 13 years old. He went into remission in 2010, but sadly relapsed and is currently battling cancer for a second time.

His older sister, Victoria, impressed with her brother's bravery and character, started a Facebook campaign with the hope of granting his greatest wish--convincing Swift to attend prom with him.

"All throughout Kevin's treatment he kept his character intact, remained playing basketball, and even started varsity football as a freshman," Victoria McGuire explained on Facebook. "Kevin is the kindest, most noble 18-year-old a person could even fathom meeting, and through out his ups and downs Kevin never even questioned 'why me?'

"Nothing, and I mean NOTHING brightens Kevin's day more than Taylor Swift," she continued.

"Kevin DESERVES more than anyone a special event in his life."Kevin McGuire's photo on the Facebook campaign

Victoria's idea caught the attention of local news, who interviewed her about it. "[Kevin] said 'who would want to go to the prom with me? I am going to be bald, my appearance is going to change,'" she told an NBC affiliate.  "We both looked at each other and I said, 'What if I got Taylor Swift to go to the prom with you?'"

After the campaign attracted responses from nearly 90,000 people, Swift herself responded to McGuire's sister's plea on her own Facebook account Friday afternoon. She politely declined his offer to go to prom, but asked, "I was wondering, the ACM Awards are coming up.. Would you be my date?"

The startled teenager told local news after reading the post in a bed at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia that he didn't know what to say. "I was just trying not to throw up." (He recovered enough composure to accept the invitation, provided he's feeling well enough when the date arrives.)

The Academy of Country Music Awards will take place April 1 in Las Vegas. Kevin, you're not old enough to gamble yet, but you're already a big winner.

Saturday's State Mottos

New York 
You Have The Right To Remain Silent,
You Have The Right To An Attorney...
And No Right To Self Defense!
 
North Carolina 
Tobacco Is A Vegetable
 
North Dakota 
We Really Are One Of The 50 States!
 
Ohio 
At Least We're Not Michigan
 
Oklahoma 
Like The Play, But No Singing
 

7th Seed Normal Community High School Ironmen Win Sophomore Tournament

(Photo courtesy of Brendan Short Photography)

There will be more to come on this story. What a weekend!

Friday, February 24, 2012

Soccer Miss At Wide Open Net

"What Coach? Oh... INTO the goal? Heh heh... thought you said..."

7 Things That Will Be Cheaper In 2012

From Amanda Greene Kelly
 
While it's true that prices usually go up, not down, 2012 does have quite a few deals in store for you.
Save Money in 2012
Photo: Thinkstock / Shutterstock / iStock
Thanks to a slow economy, a surplus of inventory and plenty of competition between brands, everything from used cars to eReaders will be cheaper than they were in years past. Read on to find out how to save on seven big-ticket items.

Homes

In the market for a new house? This year may be the time to take the plunge.
“Housing is an area that will continue to favor buyers in 2012,” says Jim Sloan, wealth manager and author of The Financially Informed Woman. Thanks to historically low interest rates and a depressed market, Sloan says it will be “much cheaper than normal to purchase a home.” And according to Andrew Schrage, consumer expert at the personal finance blog Money Crashers Personal Finance, rampant foreclosures mean that banks will be willing “to let go of properties for less than market value.” This trend is solid across the board: “Whether the house costs $50,000 or $3 million, the buyer is in control,” says Sloan.
Used Cars
Photo: Thinkstock

Used cars

If you’re buying a car in 2012, consider getting a used one, suggests Sarah Lee Marks, automotive consumer advocate and founder of car-buying guide MyCarLady.com.
As new cars and money for auto loans become more accessible, people will be dumping their current cars. This will cause the used car market to spike by 20%, says Marks—and the extra inventory will drive down prices. But beware of used cars that seem much cheaper than similar models on the pre-owned market—if it seems too good to be true, it probably is, warns Marks. And always ask to see the car’s original title; if the seller is hesitant to show you it could reveal that the car is re-salvaged or a buy-back, both of which mean that there’s a problem with the vehicle. It’s also a red flag if the seller won’t let you take the car to an independent inspector, which is something you should always do as a prospective buyer.
Travel
Photo: Shutterstock

Travel

Depending on where you’re headed, 2012 can provide plenty of flight and hotel deals.
Though warm-weather destinations like Florida and California will remain popular and unaffected by price drops, getting to and staying in other locales will become more affordable, says Subodh Karnik, Chief Commercial Officer of CheapOair.com.
“The economic woes in Southern Europe—think Spain, Greece and Portugal—will likely drive a lot of deals,” he explains. “Even Italian and French wine country may have less sticker shock than last year!” Also, because many airlines have expanded their service to the Caribbean, Mexico and Central America, there are more flights and seats to fill—which ups the chances of last-minute fare sales.
Wine
Photo: Shutterstock

Wine

Your favorite bottle of red or white may cost you less green for two main reasons.
“Competition in the wine market is huge at the moment, and since wine aficionados are spending less due to the lagging economy, inventory needs to be moved,” says Schrage. Proof that significant discounts exist: Schrage, a wine connoisseur, ordered 24 bottles of wine for $96 from ZagatWine.com. “The retail value on each of these is usually closer to $15 or $20 a bottle!”
Flat screen TVs
Photo: Thinkstock

Flat-Screen TVs

Extra inventory is also why once-pricey TVs became about 30 to 40 percent cheaper in 2010 and 2011—and the trend is expected to continue into 2012, according to Yung Trang, president of TechBargains.com.
“Retailers overestimated the TV demand for the past holiday season, forcing them to sell many models at clearance prices,” explains Schrage, who took advantage of the situation. He bought a 46-inch LCD TV for $250, and it wasn’t even Black Friday! The model could have gone for between $1,000 and $1,200 as little as six months earlier. LED TV sales have been sluggish, and people are still deciding if smart TVs (those with wireless capability) are here to stay or just a passing fad, so prices will keep plummeting.
eReaders
Photo: iStock

eReaders

Amazon started a massive trend with their Kindle eReader, and now the market is flooded with options.
“Just about every company out there is getting in the eReader game, which has pushed down prices across the board,” says Schrage. “
Another Kindle upgrade is expected in 2012, which will lower prices on some of the earlier generation eReaders,” he adds. But, Schrage urges, it’s important to do ample research so you buy the best eReader for your lifestyle, since they vary “considerably” in capabilities.
Tablets
Photo: iStock

Tablets

The iPad isn’t the only tablet in town anymore. With competition from Dell, Lenovo and even Amazon (the newest eReader, the Kindle Fire, is technically a tablet), all tablet prices are decreasing.
Trang expects prices for the iPad 2 to drop 20%—from $499 to $399 once the iPad 3 is introduced this year. Though features on the latest iPad haven’t yet been announced, Trang suspects that they will include a higher resolution camera, better video recording, and Siri, the electronic personal assistant that’s available on the iPhone 4. And for many consumers, “the iPad 3 features won’t be necessary, so the 20% savings will really be a deal,” he says.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Thursday's State Mottos

Nebraska 
Ask About Our State Motto Contest
 
Nevada 
Hookers and Poker!
 
New  Hampshire 
Go Away And Leave Us Alone
 
New Jersey 
You Want A ##$%##! Motto?
I Got Yer ##$%##! Motto Right here!
 
New Mexico 
Lizards Make Excellent Pets

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Wednesday's State Mottos

Michigan 
First Line Of Defense From The Canadians
 
Minnesota 
10,000 Lakes... And 10 Zillion Mosquitoes
 
Mississippi 
Come Visit And Feel Better About Your Own State
 
Missouri 
Your Federal Flood Relief Tax Dollars At Work
 
Montana
Land Of The Big Sky, The Unabomber, Right-wing Crazies, and Honest Elections!

$30 Down, $11,970 To Go

About three weeks ago I took some certification tests to become enrolled in a paid tutoring web site.

Two weeks ago I got my first contact. A mother had a son in junior high who had been promoted to skip a math class, and now was struggling somewhat in algebra.

We exchanged information, and she established a PayPal account through the web site as required.

By last night I was in their kitchen, meeting the parents and the son.

The son was delightful. Very bright, engaging, confident, truly an ideal student. He was able to pick up several concepts and do math in his head.

For my part I was able to pick up some tendencies that were holding him back, and we drilled those.

It was a happy home. Mom, Dad and sister were there, all in good spirits as I met them... clearly having fun together quietly in another room while we worked.

By the end of the hour we'd made strong progress and we were all pretty fired up.

As I was leaving I asked her about how she got to the site. She explained that it had taken weeks of trying to connect with tutors recommended from school counselors and a district tutoring list, with no luck in finding someone who was available. Or in too many cases, who would even return a phone call.

So here we were, a fitting marriage of their needs and my interests. It's such a wonderful thing about teaching. There are no losers by nature. Both sides can win every time.

Oh, and she said that she's prepaid the account with $500.

As long as I'm charging $30/hr I'll need about 400 tutoring hours annually to get to my goal of $12,000 a year. As usual it's all in God's hands, but for all of my shortcomings, the wind feels strong at my back right now.

Inflated Thoughts

The other day I was in a management meeting at work when one of my ideas started to be discussed. It just so happened that no one in the room knew it was my idea, except the person who brought it up for conversation.

The gist of the conversation was "Such-and-such idea was recently implemented. Was it the right decision?"

Some of my brightest peers argued against the idea.

One of the vice presidents listened for a while, and affirmed my idea as the right one.

Another peer proposed a second line of logic against the idea.

Another vice president spoke up in favor of mine.

My idea stuck.

There were a couple of occasions in there where I could have made it clear that the idea had been mine. Or merely pointed out some of the logic behind the idea, as if I'd come up with it just now.

But why?

The idea was already winning. It had been immensely satisfying to feel as if I had the intuition of vice presidents. It had been a great affirmation and confidence booster.

All that would've been achieved by my piping up now would be a temporary ego boost. It wouldn't have changed the desired end results. It might have rubbed the wrong way the person who knew the idea had been mine.

Plus, the idea of "mine" is a little silly anyway, trusting that creation of any kind is in God's hands. If I was destined to be credited with the idea, it would have happened without my need to push it.

The balloon of my spirit was already filled and floating. It's funny to me how often the temptation arises to wave a pin around to draw selfish attention, rather than simply basking in the moment with a sense of gratitude.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Tuesday's State Mottos

Maryland 
If You Can Dream It, We Can Tax It
 
Massachusetts 
Our Taxes Are Lower Than Sweden's And Our Senators Are More Corrupt!
 
Michigan 
First Line Of Defense From The Canadians
 
Minnesota 
10,000 Lakes... And 10 Zillion Mosquitoes
 
Mississippi 
Come Visit And Feel Better About Your Own State

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Sunday's State Mottos

Kentucky 
Five Million People; Fifteen Last Names

Louisiana 
We're Not ALL Drunk Cajun Wackos, But That's Our Tourism Campaign.
 
Maine 
We're Really Cold, But We Have Cheap Lobster
 
Maryland 
If You Can Dream It, We Can Tax It
 
Massachusetts 
Our Taxes Are Lower Than Sweden's And Our Senators Are More Corrupt!

NCHS Senior Night 2012

Congratulations to our seniors!

Anthony Beane
Tyler Bixby
Steven Crawford
Adam Gerard
Chase Robbins

Scout BHS 2012

Pretty sure only one person in the blogosphere will be interested in this random clip.

Enjoy, Coach Short.


Couldn't Have Happened To A Nicer Guy

You don't come across too many situations where an athlete plays hard all season without complaint, and even though he'd not scored a point all year, continued to pass up layups and open shots to feed teammates.

Colin Olson earned this free throw with a role model's hustle.

Hearts And Haikus: A Lovely Week Of Thanks


Dena and I enjoyed our 17th Valentine's Day together this year.

A poem of thanks!

How about haikus instead.

Thanks God, you da man
I am so much better now
With Dena around

Thanks Mom and Dad M.
My genes must be attractive
Or her eyesight's bad

Thanks Mom and Dad F.
You taught her how to handle
A guy growing up

Thanks little bro Jack
Absorbing all my torment
Out of my system

Thanks ISU
You brought us all together
Then bulldozed my dorm :(

Thanks prior girlfriends
Putting up with my blunders
Till I got it right

Thanks trusty Saturn
I drive her around a lot
And we haven't crashed

Thanks John and Rosann
Guess you were right after all
Blind dates ain't too bad

State Farm Insurance 
Thanks too. Unemployed people
Make lousy husbands

Oh, thanks God, again
We're both healthy and happy
That's no accident

Thanks local Kroger
Scented candle, candy hearts
Good call on that one

As Good As Your Last Game

"Last season was a tragedy. I don't want that to be my legacy when I leave her. They say you're only as good as your last game." - Draymond Green, Michigan State

This may be why I find it so re-energizing to do little positive things to help turn the mood around. Even getting a hair cut can do the trick. Or reading something funny. Or paying a bill or two. Take the mind off the doldrums and on to something purposeful. Sure beats lying on a couch and brooding!

5 Ways To Find Cheaper Gas

After this I might consider buying my gas on Wednesday.

My corner Qik-n-EZ station is the second cheapest in town!

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Basement Basketball (Circa 1990)

You know what's really fun? Having a younger brother a head shorter to do this stuff on.

“Don’t Let Anyone Write Your Obituary...": The Butler Way

CLEVELAND — The darkest moment of Butler’s stunning run to the national title game last season came in the parking lot of a CVS in Youngstown, Ohio.

Point guard Ronald Nored cut his lip and broke a tooth in an on-court fall several days before Butler's trip.

The Bulldogs had just squandered a 10-point lead in the second half against the conference doormat Youngstown State, and a freak hand injury to point guard Ronald Nored added to the insult of their third consecutive defeat. Nored had ripped open his hand on a metal placard on the scorer’s table in the final seconds, and the Youngstown team doctor quickly stitched him up, without anesthetic, after the game. “He literally just started sewing,” Nored said.

Nored still needed an antibiotic, though, which was why the team bus idled for a half-hour while the trainer Ryan Galloy fetched Nored’s medication.

“That was the lowest moment of my 11 years at Butler,” Coach Brad Stevens said. “No question. I felt like we had a team that was in the mix for an N.C.A.A. tournament at-large berth, and when you know that’s gone, that’s a hard deal.”

The Bulldogs and Nored recovered, however, and did not lose again until they were defeated by Connecticut in the national championship game two months later. Butler entered last week’s two-game trip to Youngstown State and Cleveland State in worse shape than last season. The Bulldogs’ record — 13-12 over all, including 7-6 in the Horizon League — put them in the same predicament as hundreds of other teams: trying to secure a decent seed for their conference tournament and figure out a way to start playing their best basketball once they get there. The difference is that Butler played for the national title the past two seasons.

That success has made Butler an underdog favorite across the country and a Horizon League bully. The bookish Stevens now finds himself searching for a way to bring his team together, to begin playing the style that those around the program call the Butler Way.

Butler officials allowed a reporter and a photographer an all-access look at the team while it made its way from Indianapolis to Youngstown and Cleveland for two recent games that loomed ever more important as the end of the regular season approaches.

“These guys aren’t robots, they’re humans,” Stevens said. “What we’ve achieved the last five years makes it more difficult. That’s O.K. That’s what we signed up for.”
 
Wednesday, Feb. 8: Leaving Home

The Bulldogs operate on Butler Standard Time. With a philosophy that would make Giants Coach Tom Coughlin smile, Butler’s meetings, meals and trips all begin five minutes before they are scheduled. Coughlin once sent Stevens a congratulatory note after one of the team’s Final Four appearances.

“It’s a culture thing,” Stevens said. “We rarely, rarely have anyone late for anything.”

The team’s bus to the airport was scheduled to leave at 2:45, and the players had all boarded by 2:35. The players were clad in what Darnell Archey, the team’s director of basketball operations, calls restaurant dress — slacks and a collared shirt. (The freshman Jackson Aldridge lost his dress pants halfway through the trip, forcing him to awkwardly tuck his Butler polo shirt into his warm-up pants.)
Butler travels in the manner of a high-major team, which means it avoids the interminable bus trips, the stops at Old Country Buffet and the smoky motel rooms that many midmajor teams must endure.
For the 350-mile trip to Youngstown, the Bulldogs chartered a flight, cutting the travel time from six hours to less than one. Butler was chartering flights before its back-to-back Final Four appearances, but the program’s recent N.C.A.A. tournament success has significantly altered its financial reality.
Butler commissioned a study that, it claimed, found that the publicity stemming from its Final Four appearances was worth more than $1 billion to the university. Applications to Butler, a private university of about 4,600 students, rose by 42 percent and are projected to remain at that level this year. 

The number of Butler games on TV increased more than 200 percent, and its licensing revenue grew by more than 400 percent. Its income from corporate partners and ticket sales doubled, as did donations to the athletic department, to $4 million from $2 million. 

 
Coach Brad Stevens before a win at Youngstown State two days earlier. Butler has hovered around .500. 

After Butler lost in the 2010 title game, the star sophomore Gordon Hayward left for the N.B.A. and was drafted by the Utah Jazz. The junior guard Shelvin Mack declared for the draft after last season’s run and was picked by the Washington Wizards. But time marches on for Butler, and the team continues to show up early, eager to make the most of it.

“There’s not a resignation to this season by them or by Brad,” said Athletic Director Barry Collier, who coached Butler from 1989 to 2000. “I think Brad is doing a really good job with what’s his most difficult challenge.” 

Thursday, Feb. 9:
Game Day

Butler awoke at a Hampton Inn to its obituary. On the front page of USA Today’s sports section, an article headlined “At Butler, Glass Slipper Cracks”  greeted the team.

Stevens would not normally address an article, but it is impossible to avoid free newspapers in hotels. Stevens sent a text message to the assistant Terry Johnson and told him to put together a highlight reel of Butler’s 20 best plays this season. In the team’s game-day film session, Stevens sounded more like a shaman than a coach, stressing the importance of a clear mind and about not thinking twice about shots.

“Don’t write our obituary until we’re dead,” Stevens said. “That’s one thing that our team has that a lot of other teams don’t have. We still have time left.” 

While Butler’s game day did not begin until 10 a.m. —  after a meeting with a sleep expert, Stevens has shied away from the morning practices he favored the past few seasons —  its most endearing player was up three hours earlier.

Nored, Butler’s senior captain and an elementary education major, sat in a conference room to participate, via the Internet, in a meeting for his role as a student teacher. His first lesson? How to tell time.

As Butler has slogged through this season, Nored’s fat lip and capped front tooth from a gruesome on-court fall are indicative of the team’s struggles. He remains relentlessly optimistic, Stevens’s on-court counterpart. Minutes before tip-off in a locker room that lacked hot showers, Stevens passed out Butler’s season statistics to his players. 

“What you did yesterday has no bearing on today, unless you let it,” he said. “This is your first make tonight; wad that up and throw it in a trash can and let’s get in a line and get out of here.”

Nored yelled, “We’re getting buckets.” Other players joked about dunking on Archey and the manager Jared Todd, who was standing next to the trash can.

Butler did not call to mind Jimmy Chitwood, but the Bulldogs made 5 of 16 shots from 3-point range in a 68-59 victory. More important, Youngstown was 3 for 17 because of Butler’s tenacious man-to-man defense.

And for Nored, with time running out on his senior season, the 60-mile bus trip to Cleveland went by a lot faster without a pit stop at CVS.  
 
Friday, Feb. 10:
The Day Between
Brad Stevens claims to not be superstitious. Except when he is. The Bulldogs stayed in a different hotel in Youngstown after losing there last year. After Butler lost at Detroit this season, Stevens got on the bus and immediately barred the radio analyst Nick Gardner, a former Butler player, from taking halfcourt shots at the end of shootarounds. (Butler was 0-3 when he made one.) Stevens did not even mind a pedestrian shrimp pasta dish the night before the Cleveland State game, saying that Bulldogs had a good record when he had bad meals. (The team’s best superstition belongs to the assistant Michael Lewis, who keeps an index card in the pocket of his suits with their record. A loud, pinstriped brown one improved to 1-1 at Youngstown.)

When Stevens walked to the bus after the win, he declared, “That Hampton Inn just got some points.” 

But at his core, Stevens relies far more on analytics and film study than karma. That is why he relished waking up at 6 a.m. to prepare for the one-day turnaround before playing Cleveland State. He brewed two cups of coffee in his room and drank it black, joking that cream and sugar were a sign of youth and weakness. He called ups all the relevant statistics, relied heavily on the analysis of kenpom.com, and lost himself in figuring out a game plan.

“That’s one of my favorite times in all of coaching,” he said of the quiet morning in his hotel.
Stevens, 35, has a story so corny that it is almost hard to believe. He quit a high-paying job working for the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly in 2000 and became essentially a volunteer manager at Butler. One day before Stevens was scheduled to start a job at a local Applebee’s for supplementary income, a Butler assistant coach was arrested for soliciting a prostitute and Stevens became the full-time operations assistant under the former coach Thad Matta.

When Matta left after one season, Stevens became an assistant to his replacement, Todd Lickliter. Stevens became the head coach six seasons later and led Butler to its first Final Four appearance in 2010.

Stevens cares so little about self-image that he took only one suit to the Final Four last year, just as he does on every two-game trip. He said he was reluctant to accept free suits because he did not want to pay the taxes. In a coaching scene filled with slicked-back hair and Armani suits, Stevens does not know what brand he wears. He pulls his jacket off the hanger and shows the label: it reads, Versini, made in Vietnam. 

Stevens eats Raisin Bran. His players can count on one hand the number of times they have heard him swear, and his assistants have never seen him drink more than one beer in a sitting. Jars filled with bubble gum and chocolate-covered almonds sit atop the desk of the basketball office secretary, Donna McCleerey. Butler’s reserves have a tradition of playing hangman in the locker room during N.C.A.A. tournament news media sessions.  

“We really are hokey,” Matt Graves, the associate head coach, said with a laugh. “It’s true.” 

That lack of pretense, though, cannot mask the team’s competitiveness. Stevens has driven his team hard this season. The veterans Garrett Butcher and Emerson Kampen said he had been more animated and agitated this season, as the young roster — Butler has seven new players — has struggled with what Stevens calls controllables: free-throw rebounding, loose balls and plays in which toughness makes the difference. Nuances like defensive rotations that were second nature to last season’s team seemed like calculus in the early going.

And Butler, a team that desperately needs a shooter, is surrounded by them. Archey and Graves were two of the best shooters in Butler history, and the local star Kellen Dunham, Butler’s second top-100 recruit, is among the best among current high school seniors. Rotnei Clarke, considered one of the best shooters in college basketball, is sitting out this season after transferring from Arkansas. 
Meanwhile, this year’s team ranks last in the Horizon League, and 337th out of 344 Division I teams, in 3-point accuracy (27.7 percent).

“We’re statistically one of the worst 3-point shooting teams in the country, and every day you see the best shooter in the country,” Kampen said of Clarke.
 
Saturday, Feb. 11:
Game Day
Everyone uses something different to help him wake up. Graves and Johnson, the Butler assistants, enjoy a morning Mountain Dew as much as Stevens loves black coffee. The Dew-versus-coffee dynamic is so prevalent on the staff that the former Butler player Drew Streicher conducted a mock study of which was healthier. “Coffee might as well be green tea and Mountain Dew might as well be sugar cubes,” Stevens said, pithily summarizing Streicher’s findings.

Butler needed caffeine for its 11 a.m. start at Cleveland State. Stevens noticed center Andrew Smith and guard Chrishawn Hopkins both appearing to zone out during a pregame meeting about inbounds plays. 

So in the minutes before tip-off, Stevens had half of the team memorize a group of five numbers on the board in seven seconds. He had the other players scream numbers at them, an effort to both sharpen focus and communication while waking his players up a bit.

“You can create chaos,” Stevens said. “You can yell your phone number, you can yell your girlfriend’s phone number. You can do whatever you want.”

The freshman Roosevelt Jones calmly recited the numbers — “4-10-13-5-8” — which left Stevens momentarily dumbstruck. He had planned his pregame lecture around his players’ inability to correctly memorize the numbers.

He recovered.  “If it’s quiet or loud, focus on your task at hand,” Stevens said. 

He complimented Jones before adding with a laugh that the other players were not very good at yelling numbers.

Jones has been Butler’s best player, and he epitomizes both the promise and the struggles of the program. He has giant hands, so big that in third grade his teacher drew an outline on the board and had his classmates put their hands up to compare. “I haven’t even tried to put gloves on,” Jones joked.
On the court, his hands act like catchers’ mitts laced with pine tar, as he locks down seemingly every loose ball and rebound.

 “If the ball is there for the taking,” he said, “I’m going to make sure I can take the ball.”

Jones also has arguably the most artless shot on the team, an awkward push that can make better players wince.

Cleveland State Coach Gary Waters also pointed out that Jones is unable to drive left. Still, despite his lack of a jumper and a predictable move —  to the right, toward the basket —  Cleveland State couldn’t stop him.

He finished with 17 points on nine shots, and after Butler squandered a 10-point lead, Kameron Woods, a lanky freshman dripping with potential, made one of the game’s biggest plays. He kept a rebound alive with two tips, his extra effort leading to a Hopkins jumper for the winning shot. (Butler’s three leading scorers Thursday and its two top scorers Saturday, including the sophomore Khyle Marshall, were underclassmen.)

Butler won the Cleveland State game the way it won so many N.C.A.A. tournament games the past two years —  with a key defensive stop. Hopkins stripped Tre Harmon in the waning seconds when he rose for a 3-pointer and Butler held on to win, 52-49, despite making no 3-pointers.
In the locker room, the players belted out their fight song and projected their confidence. The wins pushed Butler’s record to 15-12 with four games left.

Winning is the Butler way. And Stevens knows that his team still has the precious present to forge a future long into March. The Bulldogs still have time.

“Don’t let anyone write your obituary,” he reminded them in the joyous postgame locker room, “until you’re dead.” 

Deafening Actions

"What you do is so loud people can't hear what you say. Actions speak louder than words." - Anonymous

Saturday's State Mottos

Idaho 
More Than Just Potatoes...
Well, Okay, We're Not, But The Potatoes Sure Are Real Good
 
Illinois 
Please, Don't Pronounce the "S"
 
Indiana 
2 Billion Years Tidal Wave Free
 
Iowa 
We Do Amazing Things With Corn
 
Kansas 
First Of The Rectangle States