Monday, December 8, 2008

Bucks Defeat Team Struggling With Mediocrity



The Milwaukee Bucks beat the Charlotte Bobcat’s tonight in a 101-96 win moving their standings to 9-12 as the Bobcats sink to 7-12. For a team that has been plagued by injuries since the beginning of the season this is a much needed victory.


“You can see that the lineup has changed throughout the course of the year based on the injuries and as we get these guys back we’re getting a little momentum,” Assistant Coach Joe Wolf said.


The Bucks should be glad that 7-footer center Andrew Bogut’s migraine was the only injury going into tonight’s game. With a total of 33:59 of playing time and 10 points, the Australian’s migraine seemed not to have affected his game. Bogut was drafted in 2005 and is the first Australian to be drafted first overall.


On the flip side of ailments is the mediocrity which has shrouded the Charlotte Bobcat’s for the past five years of the franchise’s existence. The ingredients for this recipe of mediocrity are unconventional.


Ask many people if Michael Jordan and basketball equals failure and they will no doubt tell you no. Yet this is exactly what is happening to the former superstar’s team. Jordan, whose Bobcat position is “managing member of basketball operations,” joined the team in June 2006 with a minority ownership stake and the role of über-general manager according to a Sports Illustrated reporter.


Jordan, who primarily manages the team from his home in Chicago, excels in absentee-style managing.


“Michael doesn’t come to many practices,” Bobcat’s head coach Larry Brown told a media source. “And I think it means something to the guys when he does.”


It may not only be Jordan’s absence that is affecting the Bobcats. Brown may need to be reminded that from the book of Proverbs one can read that a kind answer turns away anger. Perhaps too it encourages winning, as evidenced by the phenomenal turnaround of the 2005 Tampa Bay Devil Rays (67-95) after that year’s departure of head coach Lou Piniella. Current head coach Joe Maddon led his renamed Tampa Bay Rays to the World Series this year with positive upbeat sayings and his now famous equation, 9=8.


“Coach doesn’t like telling you something twice,” 6-foot guard D.J. Augustin told a media source. “And he likes it less and less the more he has to tell you.”


Bucks rookie Joe Alexander had 6:47 of playing time and brought in two points and had one blocked shot. Alexander, who was born in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, was the eighth overall draft pick for the Milwaukee Bucks in 2008.


“He’s working hard every day and I think he’s learning the NBA game,” Wolf said of Alexander. “But that’s going to take time and patience is going to be a big key.”


Forward Charlie Villanueva connected on 25 consecutive free throws dating back to the Nov. 21 game against the New York Knicks which the Bucks won 104-87. Villanueva’s streak unfortunately came to an end tonight after going 1-2 on free throw attempts. The free throw was not Villanueva’s only contribution to the Buck’s win as he brought in a total of 8 points over 19:00 of playing time.


“Our first half was a little bit sloppy but we picked up and had a big win today and that’s what matters,” Villanueva said.


With cellar-dwelling standings, much work has yet to be done before either of these teams can be seen as real playoff contenders.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Whitewater's Win-Streak Ends in Sobering Defeat


Homecoming fans left solemnly from Perkin’s Stadium Saturday following a 17-16 loss to University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Point’s offense brought in the win with a touchdown followed by a two-point conversion.
Whitewater scored a touchdown on a 33-yard pass from Jeff Donovan to wide receiver Aaron Rusch with 13:02 left in the first quarter. Rusch made UW-Whitewater player of the week. Stevens Point answered several minutes later with a 20-yard field goal by kicker Ryan Graboski bringing the score to 3-6 Whitewater. With 4:02 left in the first quarter Graboski evened the score with a 43-yard field goal.
Paul Wick, also UW-W player of the week, picked off a pass by Jared Beckwith and returned it to Stevens Point’s 49-yard line. Freshman running back Levell Coppage scored on a 35-yard run and was followed by a one-point conversion by UW-W kicker Jeff Schebler with 7:10 left in the second quarter taking Whitewater to 6-13. This would be the last score of the half.
Graboski once again shined at 12:58 in the fourth quarter with a 22-yard field goal on five plays and 38-yards to bring Stevens Point within four points of Whitewater. With less than five minutes remaining on the clock, Schebler scored on a 19-yard field goal attempt taking Point’s tantalizingly close hope further from them.
Fate would prove to be on Point’s side when, with less than fifteen seconds on the clock, quarterback Jared Beckwith passed to receiver Jared Jenkins for a touchdown. UW-SP brought in another two points with a diving catch by Jenkins on a conversion wining the game at 17-16.
The loss to Stevens Point ended UW-W’s Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference 25 game win-streak and their WIAC home field win-streak of 27 games.
Whitewater’s last two homecoming losses have come at the hands of Stevens Point; the last loss being in 2004 with a 15-12 score.
Whitewater will host UW-Eau Claire Saturday, Nov. 1 at 12 p.m. in Perkins Stadium. UW-W is 6-1 and 4-1 in the WIAC and will end their home field schedule against UW-Stout the following week.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Local College Students Impart Love of Baseball to Youth

I wanted to let you know something pretty cool that happened after class on Thursday. My Public Opinion professor mentioned that he felt baseball represented everything that is good and pure in America (I agree wholeheartedly). Now, I am always in the mood to play catch so leaving class with that discussion in mind made me really want to play catch when I got home. None of my roomates were home but our friend Joe had arrived at our place about 30 seconds before I did so he and I decided to go play catch.
When we were outside playing, one of the neighbor kids named Roman ( a 7-8-9 year old boy) came by and was watching us. After a little while he decided he wanted to play with us. So there we were playing catch with one of the little neighbor children. After a short while, four of the neighbor girls (aged between 4-7) came by to watch. They too wanted to play. Joe and I stood in the street gently tossing balls to the kids as they threw them to us. Boy did those kids get a kick out of that! Honestly my readers, it's amazing that my professor would talk to us about the importance of baseball for children in class only to be immediately followed by my buddy and I imparting the love of baseball to those kids. In some small way, both of us felt that we made a difference.
I love baseball very much. It means so much to me on many different levels.
May the gods of baseball bless you,
R. Church Donahue

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Adoring Brewers Faithful Send Off Team in Style


In ecstatic roars emanating from the crowd, the 2008 Milwaukee Brewers were sent off as heroes to the team’s first playoff series in 26 years at the Summerfest grounds in Milwaukee yesterday September 29.


"Twenty-six years," closing pitcher Salomon Torres boldly proclaimed to Brewers faithful. "You've waited 26 years, and you can wait no more!"


Torres pitches 3.49 and has gone 7-5 in his last 12 games.


The Brewers have named Yovanni Gallardo as the starting pitcher for Wednesday’s game against the Phillies. This will be game one in the best of five National League Division Series. Gallardo returned from the DL on the September 25 game against the Pirates in which Ryan Braun hit his first game-winning grand slam of his career. The game was tied 1-1 from the fourth when in the 10th inning and bases loaded with two outs Braun hammered the ball high over left field into the jubilant crowd.


Gallardo, who has been kept from pitching with a torn ACL in his right knee will be squaring against Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels who has a 3.09 ERA and 196 SO this season.


"He might be a rookie on paper, but he's not a rookie in his heart," Dale Sveum said of Gallardo. "He's an 'ahead of his time' young man."


The beast himself, Mr. CC Sabathia will take the mound in Thursday’s game. The left-handed pitcher has gone 11-2 with an ERA of 2.7.


"It's the fans here that gave me the motivation for going 'all in,'" general manager Doug Melvin said. "I want to thank CC for that trade. It made up for all of the bad ones I've made."


“It’s unbelievable…the fans have been so supportive of us all year. It just makes you feel that all the hard work you put into this game pays off,” all star Ryan Braun said. “It’s really cool to have the opportunity to sit back and reflect on what we just accomplished and to see how much it really means to this city.”


“It’s a fantastic day for Brewers fans – it’s a fantastic day for Milwaukee. It’s something we’ve waited for for a long time,” mayor of Milwaukee Tom Barrett said.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Sports: A Microchasm of Life


Of all the sections of the newspaper there is only one of any true significance. Sports. Why the sports section trumps all others can be answer in one simple concept-healthy living. To be athletic one must maintain a healthy lifestyle and, arguably, if one is interested in sports, at the very least, a closer attention is paid to what is eaten and done than say, a fat ass slob who's only interested in what time American Idol and the Biggest Looser is on. Make sure you got your cheesy puffs and diet coke.


Sure there are some who will say that the News section is the most important. Maybe it provides the information that most affects our lives like terrorist attacks, wars and natural disasters but in a day and age like today is it really wise to focus our minds on negative thoughts? Has it ever been wise to focus on negative thoughts? The news section can be summed up by saying, America the world outside is mean and angry.


Especially for the avid news reader who might get a bit fired up over the running presidential race, what better way to vent frustration than sitting back and watching a veritable war unfold in the baseball diamond, basketball court or football field? At least in these wars the soldiers don't die and shake hands like gentleman and ladies upon closing the conflict.

Watching a baseball, football, basketball or any other game for that matter instills in people, at least it does in this journalist, a desire to improve one's own physical abilities. Watching athletes play at the top of their game inspires average Joes and Janes to advance their performance. That can be a strive for more healthful eating or perhaps better accuracy when shooting hoops. Complacency is the anti-sport.


Where does complacency come from? Complacency comes from lack of ambition and lack of positive influence. Complacency comes from idiot reality television which gives Americans a deceiving sense of ineptitude in their lives when they are compared to the lives of those on TV. There is only one true form of reality TV - that is sports and the 10 O'Clock news, yet I reiterate my point about the news. Get off your couch America unless of course you need to catch the last inning of the game.


The sports section has another vital lifeline of healthy living in it's relaying of the weather. How can someone, inspired by their team's victory last night, organize a game to play if the fan doesn't know what the weather is going to be the following day? Sure one can play indoors but they are truly robbing themselves of the greatest gifts nature gives us - freshair and sunshine. Indoor games should be reserved exclusively for rainy days. (We don't say snow anymore ... it's just too evil) Indoor air is infinitely worse for our bodies than outdoor air is. Think about the sunshine; it gives us Vitamin D. Whether one admits to it or not, sun exposure positively affects our moods. When was the last time your light bulb and air conditioner improved your health and mood?


Stop focusing on the negative and start running on those positive vibrations that sports are designed to give us.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Farve


This Farve saga has been quite the ride.

All bribes aside, I am glad to know that Brett Farve is in Green Bay, right now. The Packers Family Night was this evening and it was great watching the scrimmage. It didn't amount to much but just this feeling that Football season is fast upon us is great.

I hope to see Farve back up in green and gold this season, yet at the same time I feel bad for Rodgers who has been kept from realizing what it is he wants to do. The fact of the matter though is Farve is a legend and a god in Wisconsin. The heart of Wisconsin lies in Green Bay and with Farve.

4Lorn-4Sure,
Church Donahue

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Status Update

Hey All,

I havn't put anything up in a little while so I decided I'd drop anyone who sees this a line.

Things are going well. I've been noticing some pretty profound changes going on in my life. Good things. Sometimes the most difficult thing about change is not change but concern about what the change means. It's a matter of readjusting oneself to new order of things.

Don't ever stop believing in yourself and in the ability of others to be true to themselves and you.

Live as One,

Church

Sunday, June 29, 2008

The Times they are A-Changing

This is always understood by those who play the game and by those who have an ear to hear:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-D9S48A81os

Come gather round people wherever you roam
And admit that the waters around you have grown
And accept it that soon you'll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you is worth saving
Then you'd better start swimming or you'll sink like a stone
For the times, they are a changing

Come writers and critics who prophesize with your pens
And keep your eyes open, the chance won't come again
And don't speak too soon, the wheel's still in spin
And there's no telling who that it's naming
Oh the loser will be later to win
For the times, they are a changing

Come senators, congressmen, please head the call
Don't stand in the doorway, don't block up the hall
For he that gets hurt will be her that has stalled
The battle outside ragging will soon shake your windows
And rattle your hall
For the times, they are a changing

Come mothers and fathers all over this land
And don't criticize what you can't understand
Your sons and your daughter are beyond your command
Your old role is rapidly aging
Please get out of the new one if you can't lend a hand
For the times they are a changing
The line, it is drawn, the curse, it is cast
The slow one will later be fast
And the present now will soon be the past
The order is rapidly fading
The first one now will later be last
For the times, they are a changing

Monday, June 16, 2008

An Update



Hey All,

My friend Megan recently mentioned that I haven't posted anything up here in a while. My apologies. I've been busy... and lazy.

The school year is over as of a month ago and I am thrilled by that. It's been a good summer so far. I've moved into an old Victorian house with a few of my friends for the summer. One of my roomates, Max, is a very good cook and I often benefit from his talents.

I've been getting better at the harmonica as well. Last week Max complimented my progress and last night one of my other roomates, Nick, did as well. I'm glad to know that my playing is not bothersome.

I am still very pumped about my prospects as a sports journalist. My mom bought me a subscription to Sports Illustrated for my birthday - my first issue will arrive at the end of this month. The other day I signed up for a sports writing class in the fall. Once I take that I'll be able to freelance sports articles.

I've been shooting hoops a lot lately and just staying active. A few days ago Max and I bought an old skiff, dinghy if you will, for $100. It's an old girl at age 30 and has sailed on such waters as the St. Lawrence Seaway and Lake Mead. Sadly, she doesn't have a name although Max and I are set on calling her the St. Lawrence. We need to give her a new paint job. I figure I'll paint her up like an old liner from the glory days of sea travel. The bottom of the hull up to the water line will be red, the bulk of the hull will be black. Along the top of the hull will be white and seperating the black from the white will be a thin strip of gold. The ship's name will be painted in gold on the bow and stern with Whitewater also in gold beneath the ships name on the stern.

Attached is an image of the paint scheme.

I will post again soon, I hope.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Brewers Game

Man alive, I'll tell you what. I had a blast last night!

We got to Miller Park a solid hour or so before the game started and immediately began tailgating. I tried Land Shark a few days before and it's amazing!

For anyone that doesn't know what Land Shark is, Land Shark is Margaritaville Lager. The label has the fin of a shark cresting the surface waves with a few palms swaying in the background. Around the neck of the bottle is an image of Jimmy Buffett's plane, the Hemisphere Dancer - a Grumman Goose. The bottle itself, when full of beer, gives off the essence of bronzed sun and, when empty, gives it's lucky host a few more ounces of heaven.

At any rate, I was only in my seat for a few minutes when my friend Vanesa and I were sent to get our friend Megan a drink. Four innings and a couple Long Islands later, we we're disrupted by Megan yelling at us for not bringing her her drink. Apparently Vanesa needs proper attention when intoxicated or else she's liable to do something she's not proud of - or is, I dont know.

We left at somepoint in the ninth inning and returned to basecamp for some more tailgating. We grilled some burgers and dogs while putting down a few cold ones. By this point the parking lot had gotten quiet dead so we all decided it was time to head on back.

I called my brother Sam up when I got back to my place and he and I breathed in some good air before passing out.

I had an amazing dream last night although I don't have the slightest idea what it was about. I know there was a lot of randomness in it - more than my usual randomness. For a few hours after waking up, I would be reminded of some glimpse of the dream by sight, passing word or some other sensation.

I watched the game on ESPN today for a few minutes. Only thing I saw was Ryan Braun hitting a homerun. That's all I needed to see.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Sports Journalism


One of my friends is about to graduate. He's graduating with a degree in Journalism just as I plan to be in a couple years. At any rate, he's leaving his job as a sports journalist for the city's local paper and said I'd probably be able to get a job there.

At first I was very apprehensive about the whole idea because I didn't know to what extent I would be qualified to write about sports. I sucked at sports as a kid.

After a talk with one of my good friends in which we were analyzing the last football season I realized, hey I know more than I give myself credit for.

I went to bed that night buzzing with excitement. The next day, yesturday, my friend Megan invites me to see the Brewers play the Dogers tonight because one of her friends received a bunch of free tickets. To me, that was a sign.

I am going to contact my friend's boss at the paper and hopefully start writing sports. That's fitting ... I've always admired Hunter S. Thompson.

Fear and Loathing in Whitewater,
R. Church

A Warm Hello

Hey All,

This is my first blog. Exciting eh? Well right now I am sitting in my bed with our dog Harley at my feet. She's covered up under the covers as usual. This semester is almost over and I couldn't be more excited.

Does that ever bother you guys? Someone saying:

"I could care less" vs "I couldn't care less"

It doesn't bother me that much because I know what they mean but the proper expression is the latter. Anyway, the reason I started doing this is because my uncle has a blog on here and his is really awesome. Everyone should check it out

www.szaboszabo.blogspot.com

Anyway, I'll be updating this as I go on.

R. Church Donahue