Why are college athletes so dumb sometimes?

28 April 2008

I’m sure I’m not the first person to ask this question, but I can’t refrain asking it anyway.  I’m a huge college football fan and I’m coming to realize that there are more than the traditionally thought of two seasons of college football: regular season and recruiting season.  There is also summer season and the mini-season between the end of the regular season and bowl games where incredibly talented athletes do incredibly stupid things to get themselves in trouble with the law or in academic trouble.  This usually ends up with the player ineligible for varying lengths of time or kicked off the team.  This article is the catalyst for this post.  For those too lazy to click: Preston Parker, a rising star athlete, at Florida State just paid a $200 fine incurred in 2006 for trying to steal a $10 DVD from Best Buy, after getting arrested for illegal possession of a firearm and marijuana last week.

Let that sink in for a second.

First, he tried to steal a $10 DVD.  Do you really have to try to steal something that is only $10.  If you can’t afford to spend $10 on a DVD, you probably should be saving your money to buy important things, like food.

Second, it took him at least a year and a half to pay off the fine.  Did he think it was just going to go away if he didn’t pay it?

Third, its kind of funny to me that now that he’s in a whole lot more trouble for possible felony gun possession he worries about paying the fine.

Last, why the hell would you do really stupid stuff like this when you’re on your way to possibly being a star in college football and having a shot at the NFL?  What goes through your head that tells you its a good idea to carry a weapon that’s not correctly permitted, particularly when you have a shot at playing a game for a living?  Is it really hard for you to stop and say, “Hey, I could carry this gun around, but if I get caught I’m probably going to get into a fair amount of trouble and I might not be able to play football anymore.  If that happens, I’ll have to depend on making good grades and getting a degree to get a job after school, which isn’t nearly as cool as playing in the NFL.  Let’s forget about the gun.”

Maybe I’m a jerk, but that doesn’t seem like difficult math to me.  I know this isn’t a question that anyone can answer, and I’m sure I’ll have to watch this happen over and over, but its so angering to see kids throw away the amazing opportunities they get.  I’d kill to go back and re-live my college soccer days, even without a real possibility of playing professionally.  I can’t imagine how someone wouldn’t take better care of their athletic career when they do have a shot of playing in the pros.


Soccer highlights

27 April 2008

I’ve played soccer since I was five. Still love the game and every once in a while I get stuck on YouTube watching highlights of players or just random stuff. Below are two videos of pretty sweet highlights.

The first vid is of highlights of goalkeepers making some pretty incredible saves. Anyone who’s played soccer for any length of time or at a competitive level know that goalkeepers are a little weird in general, and definitely a little crazy. You kind of have to be crazy to throw your body around like keepers do, and to stand in front of a netted rectangle while people rip shots at you. To me, a great save by a fully extended goalkeeper is one of the most beautiful things in sports to watch. The second vid is of some pretty sweet goals scored by bicycle, scissor, and scorpion kicks. Hope you enjoy.

youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPgDHgEmDZE&feature=related (YouTube wouldn’t allow an embed for this link)


Me and Wikipedia

22 April 2008

Okay, I’m about to reveal how much of a dork I can be.  I love Wikipedia.  I know its not the be-all-end-all of information resources, but its great for learning basic information about random stuff you’re curious about.  I’ll see something on the Discovery channel or History, want to know more about it, and then go look it up on Wikipedia.  Yes this is something I do for fun.  It also helped me get bragging rights over my fiancee by correctly naming Gemini as the second manned space program to win Trivial Pursuit.

My friend showed me this comic today, and I had to share, b/c its so true…and sad in a way.  The other comics on there are pretty funny as well, but some of them are a little too computer or math geeky for me to get.  If you look at them, hover your cursor over them and a message pops up that may add to the comic.


Water powered cell phones?

21 April 2008

There are a lot of really smart people in this world.  Article’s like this one, suggest to me that I don’t fit into that category.  Engineers at Samsung claim they’re on track to put a cell phone on the market in the next couple of years that will be powered, essential, by water.  According to the article the water would react with metal to create hydrogen, which would then create the needed power to run the cell phone.  I’m sure someone will find a technological hurdle between now and when they want to have it on the market, but the idea is pretty sweet.  Maybe the research that has gone into this cell technology could be used in other areas to produce hydrogen power.


Simpson’s cast on the Screen Actors Studio

15 April 2008

Was just goofing off on the Internets last night and found these clips. I think the Simpsons is a really great show even thought I haven’t watched it a ton. Its really weird to hear all the voices of the characters coming out of the voice actors that do the voices. Each clip is almost ten minutes long so all together they’ll take a while to watch. Hope you enjoy.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5


Don’t buy appliances from Sears

14 April 2008

If Sears runs their entire business like they run their appliance customer service, there is no way they could still be in business.  In the last couple of months our drier has decided to give up on this cruel world and join the the rest of the aged, overly-used appliances in the junk heap.  It hasn’t completely died yet, but its voicing is lack of desire to go on living by sounding like a bunch of gremlins are wrestling in it whenever we try to dry clothes.

Since we still rent we assumed a quick call to our landlord would get the problem taken care of in short order.  Oh if it were only that easy.  Our landlord was great and put in a call to Sears since that’s where he’s typically purchased his appliances in the past and set up a service appointment to have someone come out and check the drier.  Given the age of it, we all assumed that it would need to be replaced, but he wanted to do the repair call just to be sure.  The appointment was set and everything was great until Sears didn’t show up and they didn’t decide to call until 45 minutes after the back end of their 10:00 to 12:00 time frame was past.  And when they did call, they called the wrong contact number and then told us it was our fault and they couldn’t get anyone out for another week at least.  Always nice to be told its your fault that they didn’t show up or call.

So fast forward to the service appointment and the drier is, in fact, on its last legs.  A call back to the landlord to let him know the situation got him to Sears that evening to purchase a new drier for us.  He gave us the number to set up the delivery appointment so we could fit it around our schedule as we needed.  This was a great idea, until we discovered that Sears wasn’t interested in actually making what people typically think of as an appointment.  They could only schedule the appointment for a day, but no kinda of time frame.  They didn’t even want to say morning or afternoon delivery.  They just wanted to say, “Sometime on Tuesday.”  After significant diplomatic efforts we were able to get the customer service rep to agree to put a note saying we’d greatly prefer a morning delivery on the order, but we wouldn’t know if they were actually going to deliver in the morning, much less deliver at all, until the night before the scheduled date.

The final kicker came two days later when we received a call from Sears telling us that they didn’t actually have the drier that was purchased in stock and they wouldn’t be able to deliver it until sometime next week at the earliest.  Now I can understand selling an appliance that’s not in stock, but it would probably make sense to let your customer know that its not going to be available for a couple of weeks when they purchase it.  What gets a little beyond my understanding is setting a delivery date for an item that you won’t even have in your possession until a week after the delivery is supposed to occur.

Worst experience in the world?  Definitely not.  Frustrating?  I’d have to say yeah.  Will I ever buy an appliance from Sears? Nope.

Instant Update: As I was a writing this, my friancee told me that our landlord canceled the order with Sears and bought a new drier from Home Depot.  My fiancee spoke to Home Depot delivery to schedule the appointment and they told her the washer would be ready for delivery later this week or early next week.  Now its just getting funny.


Pearl Jam’s Release

10 April 2008

I pretty much listen to music all day. Some of the music that I listen to is crap (guilty pleasure) and some of it is great. This post is about what I consider to be one of the greatest rock bands to ever record music. I really liked Pearl Jam’s music in the early and mid-90s through their first three albums or so. I had wandered off the PJ path when my brother convinced me to go to one of their shows in Atlanta, and even though I didn’t know a fair number of the songs they played, they impressed me as one of the best live bands I’d ever seen. So when I heard they were going to play a concert here in DC in 2006 it was an easy decision to get tickets to go.

That concert changed my musical life. They solidified themselves as the best live band I’ve seen with an incredible 2.5 hour show. My friend that went with me, who really isn’t a PJ fan, said something that simply stated one of the reasons I love to see PJ play live. He said “They play like they truly appreciate their fans. They put everything they have into it.” PJ is now a bit of an obsession for me music wise, which is really saying something considering I don’t really have an obsessive personality.

All of that being said, I like to share music and will share the lyrics, and when possible clips, of some of my favorite songs. Release is my favorite PJ song. The emotion that went into the song and the emotion Eddie puts into it when he sings is incredible. Though I don’t believe the song’s true meaning has ever been officially stated, I agree with the common belief that the song is to his biological father. Eddie was lead to believe his stepfather was his biological father until after his biological father had died and the truth was revealed to him. With that in mind, take a look at the clip below.

Release

Written and performed by Pearl Jam

I see the world
Feel the chill
Which way to go
Windowsill
I see the words
On a rocking horse of time
I see the birds in the rain

Oh dear dad
Can you see me now
I am myself
Like you somehow
I’ll ride the wave
Where it takes me
I’ll hold the pain
Release me

Oh dear dad
Can you see me now
I am myself
Like you somehow
I’ll wait up in the dark
For you to speak to me
I’ll open up
Release me
Release me
Release me
Release me


My State of the Men’s National Team Address

7 April 2008

This “address” is partially in response to this post over at Soccerlens.com. (good site for lots of random soccer news by the way) I posted a comment stating that while I agreed with the general point, I disagreed with the arguments made and some of the supporting evidence. I didn’t feel like a full response was warranted in the comments section, but offered the admins of Soccerlens a full response if they would like. They replied in the affirmative, so here it is.

In many ways US soccer remains a bastard child. Unwanted by many sports fans in the states, and scoffed at by much of the rest of the world as second class. I generally try to ignore my countrymen who hate soccer. For the rest of the soccer world, I try to present a realistic picture of the current state of things to show they may not be as right as they think they are. This is my attempt, in writing, to show that US soccer may not be there yet, but is heading in the right direction.

I’ll start with the bad news. We still have a long way to go. These are the areas where I think the US is still lacking.

The most obvious and problematic is the lack of dangerous attack. I believe sub-par attacking can be attributed to a few key things. We don’t have a pure scorer to run up top for us. None of the strikers that we’ve run up front in the last couple of years have shown a consistent ability to get into or around the box and create quality shots on goal. Although, we’ve had some strikers that showed a great deal of promise, such as Eddie Johnson, they are still a long way away from being considered a favorable strike option at the international level. We have at least one prospect the US can be hopeful about in Jozy Altidore, but he still fits into the “loads of potential” category until he establishes himself with the full national side and scores some goals for us.

Altidore’s ability to prove himself is going to be hindered by the other two things that I feel are leading to a less than dangerous attack. The first is that we still don’t have someone that consistently adds creativity to the attack. Landon Donovan has gained a lot of attention for his attacking dynamism, but I have to be honest and say I don’t see it. He has shown the ability to be dangerous and create build-up to an attack, but he’s too inconsistent. He disappears from games too often. We need need a player who will make his presence felt every time he steps on the field. Something akin to a quarterback or a point guard. We need a player who controls the middle of the field and has the soccer IQ to know when to break quickly on a counter and when to slow the ball down and possess and build to an attack. In either instance, that player needs to have the surgical precision to play the killer pass that puts the defense in real danger.

The second thing is pretty a simple one. Our service into the box from the wings is too often lacking. We don’t do well enough at finding players in the box to take advantage of good effort getting down the wings or the efforts of strikers or backside wingers who have made their way into the box. Not much more to say than that; its just bad.

There are other holes that need to be filled, but for the most part I think those are the biggest shortcomings right now. Moving on to the positives I see in the direction of US soccer.

The primary thing that gives me hope for the future is the change of mentality that I’ve seen in US soccer since the conclusion of the debacle known as World Cup 2006 for us yanks. I don’t know how much credit should be given to Bob Bradley, but I definitely think he deserves some. I also think some of the folks behind the scenes running the program should get some credit as well.

I think Bradley was very smart to start off his tenure with the MNT by trying out everyone he had available in the player pool to see what he had to work with. His willingness to try new players, unusual combinations of players, or players in unusual positions helped to shake things up enough that it breathed a new life into the program.

There is a new, more assertive mentality about the program in general, as well. We have made a real effort to go out and find competition that is going to make us work for wins, and make us improve. Instead of beating up on CONCACAF teams, we’ve sought out matches with much stronger teams in general, and have scheduled matches in Europe, where we’ve had serious problems in the past, against respectable European countries. Our past FIFA rankings have been inflated by consistently winning against weaker nations. Any positive moves in the rankings will have been more well-earned than in the past.

In addition to the more aggressive schedule, Bradley has also changed the team’s mentality on the field. Against stronger competition we would often bunker in defense and try to win on counter attacks. The Mexican national team fell victim to that on more than one occasion. The last two years, Bradley and the other staff have instilled a belief in the team that we are good enough to play with some of these stronger countries and we don’t have to try to win through counterattacks. Though it may have been a bit brazen at the outset, I think the success we’ve found through playing more aggressively will build even more confidence for us going forward. A bit of a self-fulfilling prophecy in the positive sense that belief in ourselves will lead to better play.

My last thought is one that is both a drawback and a positive. There are a good number of positions that are unsettled and the team is relatively green at some key positions. Bocanegra and Onyewu bring seasoned leadership at the center back position and seem to have found a good chemistry between them, and Tim Howard is a standout at goalkeeper. Beyond that, there are a number of questions regarding who will play what position. Donovan and Dempsey seem to be a lock to play whenever they’re available, but its hard to say in what capacity. The center of midfield is chocked full of young talent in Michael Bradley, Ricardo Clark, and Maurice Edu who show a great deal of promise for the future, but can’t be considered seasoned international veterans yet. Besides those already mentioned, Beasley seems to be the only position lock on the left wing when he’s healthy. This will allow for a great deal of competition at each position, hopefully bringing out the best in each player, but it will likely make for some growing pains until we figure out who is going to play where.

As I stated at the outset, the US isn’t there yet. Given the sports culture in this country, we may never make it to the top of the mountain. That being said, the program is doing the right things to move us in a positive direction to gain more respect and more success in the soccer world.