There’s a
lot happening in Shocker Track and Field so I’ll just get right into it.
I
traveled over to Fayetteville, Arkansas, with my fellow assistant coach Pat
Wilson to watch our cross country teams compete at the Chile Pepper Cross
Country Festival on Saturday. It was the
first time I’ve been to this meet and was quite impressed with how well run and
organized it was. I would estimate there
were around 40 colleges and at least twice as many high schools competing.
On the
track, this past week was our last full week of what we call “pre-season
conditioning” where we are limited to eight hours of practice per week. The next two weeks are “testing and
regeneration”. After a normal Monday
practice and Tuesday off, we will do our annual fall testing on Wednesday and
Thursday. We do this every year to see
how our athletes have improved from year to year. With not having a competitive fall season it
also helps to give our athletes something to look forward to in terms of a
competitive effort. We do this with all
the sprint, hurdle, multi, and jumps athletes – basically everyone except the
throwers and distance runners (the throwers have already done testing of their
own). Our testing goes like this:
Day 1 –
30m fly (with a running start), 30m acceleration (from a 3-point start), and
then a long sprint of 150m, 300m, or 600m depending on what event the athlete
runs. We do all of these tests at our
indoor track so that weather and wind won’t play a factor in comparing times
from year to year.
Day 2 –
Standing long jump, standing triple jump, overhead back shot put, and the
Olympic lift hang clean. We try to do
these at our outdoor track because the weather doesn’t significantly affect
these tests.
A few
years ago I created a scoring system for each event so at the end we have a
total score much like a Heptathlon or Decathlon. I’ve seen all kinds of testing competitions
like this and after many years of trial and error we have landed on this
system. It’s fun for the kids and very
informative for the coaches. We can
narrow down where an athlete needs to make improvements as we head into our
specific preparation phase – which starts October 15.
Besides
our annual Intersquad meet in December, this is one of my favorite weeks of the
fall semester. The upperclassmen, who
have been through our fall testing before, get very enthusiastic and create a
fun atmosphere. The newcomers are mostly
nervous and a little intimidated by the scene – which is usually good, because
it’s an introduction to what will happen when the actual track season begins.
After
testing is over we give our athletes several days off (which coincides with our
fall break) before gathering back up October 15 for our next phase of training.
As for
recruiting, October will be a very busy month. We will have lots of official
visits on campus as we lead up to the early signing period in November. In fact I need to finish this blog so I can
meet a recruit later today!
All of
that and I will be turning 40 Saturday!
The best birthday present I can get will be some great test results from
our athletes! (And I also like cash)
“F” Movies
This is
the sixth of a 24 part series (if I don’t bore you all to death) where I list
movies I own by letter (I don’t have any movies that begin with Q, X or Z but I
do have some that start with numbers). I
currently own a small collection of 157 movies (and growing most weeks) on DVD.
Most of
the movies I own I had previously seen and enjoyed immensely. Some are movies that I had not seen but was
curious about. Some were gifts from
people with bad tastes in movies.
F seems
like a popular letter for movies so here is the list of my 11 “F” movies from
best to worst …..
Movie Name (year made, length,
MPAA rating, IMDB rating, Box office)
Fargo (1996, 98 min, R, 8.2, $60.6m) –
I love the Coen Brothers’ movies and this is one of their best. Fargo is crime drama that shows perspective
from both the criminals and the police trying to solve the crime. Interesting and funny throughout, it won two
Oscars for best screenplay and best actress.
If you haven’t seen it you won’t be disappointed – “you betcha!”
Full Metal Jacket (1987, 116 min, R, 8.4, $46.3m) –
The first 30 minutes of this Stanley Kubrick war movie is some of the most
intense cinema I’ve ever seen. It’s
really two movies, the first part is about basic training and the second part
is the actual fighting in the Vietnam War.
R. Lee Ermey plays the king of all drill sergeants – I would quote him
here but none of his lines are suitable for this blog!
The Fighter (2010, 116 min, R, 7.9, $129m) – Mark
Wahlberg and Christian Bale play professional boxing brothers Micky Ward and
Dicky Eklund in this based on a true story movie about the early years of Micky
Ward’s life. I’ve always enjoyed movies
that are based on a true story and Ward’s life is a more recent version of
Rocky. Great movie and Christian Bale is
pretty incredible as a former boxer turned to a waste of space brother.
Friday (1995, 91m, R, 7.3, $28.2m) – One
of those movies that crosses racial and ethnic lines because it’s just so funny. Chris Tucker and Ice Cube (who also wrote the
movie) star in what happens on a typical Friday in the hood. It spawned several sequels but none could
capture the magic of the original. This
movie is still as funny as ever!
Friday Night Lights (2004, 118 min, PG-13, 7.3,
$61.9m) – Another based on a true story movie about Permian High School (Texas)
football. The book was controversial and
very popular because of all the inside info the author let loose and obviously
it made for a good movie as well. Billy Bob Thornton plays the head coach who
tries to keep his team together through tumultuous times. Really good movie, I imagine it hits home for
many people who look back at their high school athletic career.
Footloose (1984, 107 min, R, 6.4, $80m) – This
is one of those cheesy 80’s movies that just seem to never get old. Kevin Bacon plays a teenager who moves to a
small town where music and dancing have been banned. I’m sure Bacon is embarrassed to watch some
of the scenes nowadays but that’s what makes this movie so enjoyable. And whenever the theme song comes on Coach
Yost starts dancing like crazy.
Fletch (1985, 98 min, PG, 6.9, $59.m) –
One of Chevy Chase’s classic flicks from the 80’s with classic lines and scenes
that anyone my age remember like it was yesterday. Upon more recent viewings this movie doesn’t
stand up as well today so if you’ve seen it before I would recommend just
watching the funny parts on YouTube. “Awww,
come on guys, it's so simple. Maybe you need a refresher course. [leans arm on hot engine part] Hey! It's all ball bearings
nowadays. Now you prepare that Fetzer valve with some 3-in-1 oil and some gauze
pads.”
Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994, 117 min, R, 7.1, $245m) –
This was Hugh Grant’s coming out movie and a very good one at that. The title explains the plot as it follows a
group of British friends one summer.
This is how romantic comedies should be – funny! I think Hollywood forgot the “comedy” portion
of that genre. I think the Brits make
funny movies, I only wish more of them made it over the pond so we could see
them!
The Fall (2006, 117 min, R, 7.9, $3.6m) – I
stumbled onto this movie through one of my weird friends on a weird night. It’s a super artsy film but something about
it kept me intrigued. It’s one of the
most visually appealing movies I’ve ever seen but most of my friends who I’ve
tried to get to watch it usually fall asleep.
That must be why it only made $3 million dollars at the box office.
Friends with Benefits (2011, 109 min, R, 6.6, $149m) –
They took two good looking people (Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake) and had
them try to avoid every Hollywood cliché possible but in the end you knew they
were going to get together. It’s not a
bad movie, I was just hoping they would be more creative with the ending for a
movie with this kind of subject matter.
The Fountain (2006, 96 min, PG-13, 7.4,
$15.9m) – Another super artsy film starring Hugh Jackman and directed by Darren
Aronofsky (who also directed Requiem for a Dream and Black Swan) about death,
love, spirituality, and uhhhhhh yeah I kind of got lost halfway through. It does have a pretty cool ending so if you
can hang in there it’s almost worth it.
There are
a whole lot of great movies up there, you really can’t go wrong with any of
them except maybe The Fountain. I only
have two “G” movies so next week will be a short review.
Until
then have a great week and Go Shocks!
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