6536. PsychProf - 10/31/2010 7:16:33 PM Good luck to your son VK. 6537. judithathome - 11/2/2010 7:13:14 PM I knew the Rangers were out of their depth. 6538. vonKreedon - 5/31/2011 6:37:25 PM Hey all, this the vonKreedon the younger report. Our son successfully defended his state tennis title this past weekend! He ends his HS tennis career winning his League, Distric, and state titles twice each, the District and State titles consecutively. 6539. arkymalarky - 5/31/2011 10:37:52 PM Yay! Congratulations! 6540. wabbit - 6/3/2011 12:20:29 AM Congrats, vonK! Has he settled on UW?
The Bruins lost a heartbreaker last night to Vancouver. Great game.
Federer will lose to Djokovic, but it might be a good match. I'm rooting for Murray to win over Nadal, unlikely as it might be. Francesca Schiavone, in her second French Open final, meets China's Na Li, who is in her second Grand Slam final. 6541. wabbit - 6/4/2011 1:11:20 AM Being a Federer fan, I'm happy to be wrong. He won in five sets over Djokovic and will now meet Nadal, who beat Murray in straight sets, in the French Open final. 6542. vonKreedon - 6/7/2011 1:39:34 AM My son's going to Fresno State rather than UWash. The coach signed a European player and that meant there wasn't a spot for him anymore. He's pretty happy about Fresno, likes both the coaches and the guys on the team at this time. Plus it's got a Sports Marketing specialty in it's school of business, which is right up his alley career wise. 6543. wabbit - 6/16/2011 6:47:57 PM What a great series of games in the NHL finals. The Bruins beat the home team Canucks 4-0 in the seventh game to win their first Stanley Cup since 1972. Bruins goalie Tim Thomas won the Conn Smythe Trophy for the most valuable player in the playoffs. Brad Marchand got a short-handed goal. Boston's 43-year-old forward Mark Recchi announced his retirement on the ice during the Bruins' celebration, winning his third Stanley Cup in his home province, just 160 miles from his hometown of Kamloops, B.C. 6544. wabbit - 7/9/2011 4:20:08 PM Late, I know. A memorable 125th Wimbledon Championships ended with two new names on the singles honours boards. The men's title went, for the first time, to a player from Serbia as Novak Djokovic halted Rafael Nadal's 20-match winning streak at Wimbledon - a run which included the 2008 and 2010 titles - with a merited 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3 victory. It was the Serb's fifth victory over Nadal in a final this year and took his won-lost record for 2011 to an incredible 48-1. Nadal was playing with a pain-killing injection in a sore foot, suffered in the fourth round and was below his best form. Djokovic on the other hand swept all before him, and was justly congratulated by the loser for playing "very, very high level". In the ladies' singles Petra Kvitova upset the form book by outhitting the 2004 champion and hot favourite Maria Sharapova 6-3, 6-4. The 21-year-old lefty added further lustre to the tennis reputation of the Czech Republic as two of her compatriots and former Wimbledon champions, Martina Navratilova and Jana Novotna, looked on from the Royal Box, alongside eight other ladies' champions of yesteryear. Navratilova, now an American citizen and winner of nine Wimbledons, had perceptively predicted that her fellow left-hander's serve and groundstrokes would prove too much for Sharapova to handle and she was proved correct. The tall blonde kept her nerve and emotions in check until she met Novotna and Navratilova afterwards, when the tears finally flowed... 6545. wabbit - 11/12/2011 2:46:07 AM Geez louise, what are the students at Penn State thinking? I am *SO* glad someone had the stones to fire JoPa and am entirely disgusted with the students who think he should be allowed to coach this weekend's game. Hey future leaders of America (now there's a scary thought), I have an idea...go do some volunteer work with abused kids for a year. Get some perspective. A damn football game is NOT more important than these children.
Hard to believe a 28 year old man had to go home and ask his daddy what to do when he saw Jerry Sandusky having sex in the locker room shower with an 10 year old. Did it really not occur to McQueary to get in the shower, save the child and beat the crap out of Sandusky? Really??
And when Sandusky "retired" at what, age 59, and no university programs were knocking on his door, nobody thought that was odd?
As for Paterno, it's remarkable to me that someone who took pride in keeping tabs on how his players were doing in class did the absolute LEAST when told about what Sandusky had been seen doing to a child. It makes me wonder if Paterno really gave a crap about how his players were doing beyond making sure they didn't fail out of the football program. And now he says "If this is true..." WTF? Now he's playing the I-had-no-clue card?
If this was happening at Penn State, a university that was considered golden, imagine what is going on at schools without the halo. Where is our moral compass pointing?
Sorry for rambling, I am seething. 6546. arkymalarky - 11/12/2011 5:02:23 AM I say amen to your whole post. I know this is the sports thread but academia forced into worshipping at the altar of sports needs to stop. Bob's idea for public schools is intramural only. 6547. wabbit - 11/12/2011 4:42:36 PM Penn State gets to play today, then loses the rest of the season. Wow. SMU lost their program for a year because boosters were giving money to players. Notre Dame lost a head coach because he lied on his resume (you have to chuckle at this one - did nobody bother to check his resume? sheesh). Various schools have been found guilty of point shaving in football and basketball. None are as bad as what has happened at Penn State, not even close. Maybe they need more than a half year break from football.
As for the bystanders, if you drove the getaway car or provided the safe house, it doesn't matter whether or not you pulled the trigger. Paterno may have been a great coach, but it seems he was a small man. 6548. wabbit - 11/12/2011 4:46:17 PM A bright spot of sports news - kidnap victim Wilson Ramos, the Washington Nationals catcher, was rescued by Venezuelan police commandos after being held for two days. The commandos exchanged gunfire with the kidnappers and arrested five alleged abductors. 6549. judithathome - 11/13/2011 9:09:09 PM Since 1984, the salaries of college football coachs have risen by 750%...professors? A mere 34%.
That says it all.... 6550. wabbit - 11/16/2011 5:37:09 PM We are a nation of idiots - entertainment is far more valuable than actual knowledge or education. You should see the anti-Warren ad running on TV here in MA. We don't need no stinkin' intellectuals.
And I was wrong about Penn State's last game being the end of their season. Evidently, not only will they finish the season, they will accept a bowl invitation. 6551. wabbit - 11/16/2011 5:40:02 PM JoPa transferred complete home ownership into his wife's name a few months ago. Hmmmm... 6552. vonKreedon - 11/16/2011 5:43:59 PM I'm glad that Penn State will play out the season and post-season. To not do so would punish the players to an extraordinary degree, those of them with NFL/CFL aspirations, specifically the Seniors and Juniors, would have their career dreams negated because of bad actions and inactions on the part of the coaches and administration, actions/inactions that had nothing to do with the team unlike recruiting and cheating violations that can get a team sanctioned by the NCAA. The Juniors and Senior players are already pretty screwed, particularly the Juniors. 6553. judithathome - 11/16/2011 9:19:58 PM Well, I think it's fine that everyone is so concerned about what this scandal will do to the innocent bystanders: the football team...I sort of feel like "poor them".
I'll tell you who probably feels their pain vis a vis "unfairness": the victims of that pervert. Yeah, the kids who were allowed to be abused while that pervert cut a swath through their ranks.
6554. vonKreedon - 11/17/2011 12:50:10 AM I'm certainly not arguing that the pain of the rape victims is equivilant (sp?) to the pain of the football players, I'm only arguing that the PSU administration and staff have already inflicted pain on both the victims and the players through their repugnant and unethical responses to Sandusky's crimes and that there's no reason to inflict yet more pain on the players by suspending the program. 6555. judithathome - 11/17/2011 5:48:07 PM I understood what you meant. Just making a statment.
I come from a state where football is more important than anything...when high schools with crumbling infrastructure and a roster of teachers who have been let go because of funding will spend millions on state-of-the-art football stadiums that rival any college campus. Where TCU is rebuilding a new stadium that will make Jerry Jones envious...the entire town is draped in purple until after the college bowl games.
It gets a little old, That's all...and those students last week, rioting to KEEP Paterno rather than rioting because of what was done to those kids...it was bizarro-world to me.
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