Showing posts with label ESPN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ESPN. Show all posts

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Convention recap, Will the "Power 5" doom T&F, The Interview and a bunch of good "R" movies

Even though we’re on a break from practice and competition, there’s still plenty going on in the world of track and field.

Track and Field

Most of my time this week was spent in Phoenix, Arizona, at the USTFCCCA Convention.  It was another good convention where I was able to learn some things, discuss our sport with peers and see lots of coaching friends in a relaxed social atmosphere (and play a little golf).

Here is the day-by-day of what I did at the convention:


Sunday – I arrived around 10pm and hung out with friends from Texas A&M, Pittsburgh and Auburn.  We mostly talked about our head coaches and their unique personalities.

Monday – I played in the coaches’ golf tournament with Coach Rainbolt as well as friends from Stephen F. Austin and Black Hills State.  Our group only managed to place 10th out of 19 teams with an -8 score of 64, but we had a blast and unfortunately it was the only day I played golf this week.  Later in the day I went and saw legendary coach Dan Pfaff talk about sprinting.  Pfaff has coached some of the fastest men in the world and it was a comfort knowing that much of his philosophy is the same as ours at Wichita State.  Also on Monday I listened to well-known recruiting expert Dan Tudor speak about how to brand our program in the recruiting process.  He was very interesting and I plan on using several of his ideas immediately.  I also attended the Hall of Fame dinner and induction ceremony where six coaches were honored.  Our director of operations Ryan Patton arrived very late in the evening after flight delays so I stayed up and socialized with coaches from our staff and many others who passed through the crowded lobby bar until he arrived.

Tuesday – I got up and worked out for a while before heading to what’s called the Opening Session of the Convention, where everyone is welcomed and someone of high regard usually speaks.  The speaker this year was Jeff Schemmel, who is a former track coach and athletic director, who tried to give us some insight on what’s happening at the NCAA level and how it will affect our sport.  As you may know the NCAA will be going through some major changes in the upcoming months.  The “Big 5” conferences have autonomy to make whatever rules they want and the rest of us will have to deal with it.  Much of what they will do will likely result is more spending and thus could affect Olympic sports like track and field.  The one sobering statement Schemmel made was, “Your program might not get cut but you are probably sitting next to someone who will have their program cut.”  I could go on in a lot of detail about this topic but before knowing what the Power 5 conferences are going to do it’s probably a waste of this space.  Check back in a couple months for those thoughts.  I also went to a short session where former Oregon coach and now Tracktown, USA, bigwig Vin Lannana spoke about how to connect our sport better with our community.  I got some good ideas from this session that I hope to use during the track season to get more people interested in Wichita State Track and Field!  We then had a Division I general session and Missouri Valley Conference breakout where we talked about many of the issues facing our sport like possible rule changes, changes to our national meet and how to make our sport more important on our campuses.  The night finished with an excellent barbeque dinner sponsored by Mondo where we all overate and hung out talking about our sport until midnight.

Wednesday – After getting up for another morning workout, this day was filled mostly with being in the Division I general meetings where coaches debated topics from the day before.  Sometimes there can be some very entertaining back and forth discussions but usually we don’t end up accomplishing much.  For me that’s one of the most frustrating parts of the convention because track coaches all want to have their own agendas and often don’t agree with how to move the sport forward.  One good thing that came out of this week is it looks like our NCAA Outdoor Championships will move to separate days for the men and women (men on Wed/Fri and women on Thur/Sat) where it will be much easier to promote the meet and championship storyline.  ESPN will be broadcasting all four days with field event action on ESPN3.  It’s the most live track (12 hours) that the NCAA has had in my lifetime and probably ever.  Now we just need to get some Shockers to that meet and compete well!  The other highlight of Wednesday was the annual Bowerman Awards given to the top male and female track and field athletes for 2014.  It’s often referred to as the “Heisman Trophy of Track and Field”.  It was another first-class affair this year with the winners being Laura Roesler of Oregon and Deon Leondre from Texas A&M.  Good job to the USTFCCCA office for putting together
such a great event!  Afterwards I got to spend some time with our friends from Sacramento State as well as my best friend Kevin Lucas (and his wife), who is the head coach at Mount Union College in Ohio.  Kevin was honored earlier in the week at the Opening Session for winning the 2014 Division III NCAA Outdoor Championships.  It’s pretty cool that two country kids from Eastern High School in Brown County, Ohio, ended up doing ok in the college track and field coaching world.

Thursday – The only thing left for the week was to vote on the various topics brought forward so by 10am our convention was over.  We voted to approve text messaging recruits and voted against having volunteer coaches more involved in recruiting (although I voted for that one).  I was traveling back to Wichita with Ryan Patton and our flight didn’t leave until 4:30pm so we decided to take a walk and grab some In-N-Out Burger before we left (those are good burgers man).  We were joined by one of my former Shocker athletes Nate Thiesfeld, who is now the sprint coach at High Point University in North Carolina.  After that is was off to Houston and then Wichita before arriving home around midnight.

So if you were ever curious, that’s pretty much what goes on at the USTFCCCA Convention each year (well at least the stuff I can write about here).

WSU Track and Field

Most of this week was just keeping in touch with our athletes via text messages, Facebook and phone calls about how their training is going.  So far I’d say most of them are doing well but I know some of their individual training situations aren’t ideal.  Hopefully they can stay focused through any cold weather and difficulties they encounter.

We have about two more weeks of “on your own” training left before we are back in the Heskett Center.  And in three weeks from today we’ll have competed in our first meet already!

Academically it looks like our team has come through finals pretty well.  We’re still waiting on a few grades but our men’s team will have around a 3.0 GPA this semester while our women are above 3.2.  On top of that we shouldn’t have anyone come up ineligible.  Hats off to the hard working student-athletes as well as their academic coordinators (Andrew Moses and Sarah Wiley) for keeping them on task.  For a team of 130 athletes, that’s a remarkable feat!

The Interview

Did you hear about how Sony pulled their upcoming movie “The Interview” from theaters after getting threatened that terrorist activity would result if the movie was released?  When I first heard about this I thought it was a clever way to market and would get people talking (and who knows it still might be), but now they have totally pulled the movie from theaters and said it would not be released on DVD or On Demand.  The Interview is a comedy starring Seth Rogan and James Franco where they are trying to assassinate the leader of North Korea – Kim Jong-un.  I can see how the subject matter is controversial but the fact it’s a comedy and obviously a joke makes me worried what will happen in the future to other things regarding our freedom of speech.  I think Sony should go ahead and release the movie and if this somehow puts us in danger (which I don’t think it will) then I would much rather deal with that then bowing down to other countries who don’t like what we do.  Because if we do things will get worse and worse in regards to what “terrorists” think they can do.  I was glad to hear President Obama say that Sony made a mistake by not releasing the movie.

There are all kinds of offensive movies made in the world every year – lots are even about the USA and our leaders – but not letting people have freedom of speech is very bad.  There have been recent movies made about our presidents that were very negative but no one ever thought about denying their ability to be made or released.

Is it possible that a movie could be made that goes too far?  Yes, I’m sure there is, but I’d rather our country decide that instead someone from another country who threatens to harm us.  The proper way for North Korea to have handled this would be for their leader to call our leader and let us know how offensive it is.  But we know that’s not how things work over there.  The worst thing you can do when a bully tries to intimidate is back down.

I feel like there’s been too much politics in this blog recently so let’s take a break from ALL that for a while!

“R” Movies

I don’t have any “Q” movies so we’ll move onto the next letter!

This is the 17th of a 24 part series (are you bored yet?) 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 178 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.

I own 11 “R” movies, one of my most popular letters.  Here’s the list from best to worst …..

Movie Name (year made, length, MPAA rating, IMDB rating, Worldwide box office)

Ringu (1998, 96 min, NR, 7.3, $??) – This is the original Japanese version that inspired the hugely successful American version.  It’s basically the same movie as the American one but done with a little bit less gore.  I really like this movie for how creepy and original it is.  The plot is whenever someone watches a mysterious video they get killed a week later unless they can figure out the mystery.  If you’re into horror movies you should definitely put this one on your list.

Rocky Balboa (2006, 102 min, PG, 7.2, $152m) – This is the final “Rocky” movie which details Balboa coming out of retirement to fight the reigning heavyweight champion in an exhibition fight that gets serious.  I don’t own any of the other Rocky movies because they are so often on TV but this would still be my favorite of the bunch.  I’m intrigued by people who are almost out of the game (or a musician who’s not popular anymore) and how they deal with it.  Also this is the most realistic fighting in any of the series and they basically make it a HBO fight just like they would broadcast it.  Very well done!

Requiem for a Dream (2000, 102 min, R, 8.4, $7.3m) – Ok this is not a movie for the faint of heart but if you can handle uncomfortable scenes and situations it’s well worth your viewing.  Jared Leto is the main star here who plays a guy addicted to drugs.  In fact it follows several people with all kinds of addictions and the director Darren Aronofsky (who also did Black Swan) does visuals that make it seem like the viewer is also on the same drugs so often you don’t know what’s going on.  If you like a movie that will make you feel all kinds of emotions then this is the one for you.

Running on the Sun (2000, 100m, NR, 7.4, $2.4k) – I found this documentary online and took a chance when buying it and am I glad I did!  It follows several runners who are competing in what some call the most grueling race in the world, the 135 mile uphill race through Death Valley and into the mountains.  It's not a big budget movie at all (in fact it only made $2400 in theaters) but what's so good about the movie is how it shows in excruciating detail what these athletes go through to finish the race.  There are elite level runners all the way to people in their 60’s who are just trying to conquer the race and finish.  Very motivating – every time I’ve shown it to my athletes they have no reason to complain about their workouts, haha!

Reservoir Dogs (1992, 99 min, R, 8.3, $2.8m) – This is the first movie the general public ever saw from director Quentin Taratino (Django, Pulp Fiction, etc).  It didn’t make much money but from this came Pulp Fiction and the rest was history.  The plot is simple, a jewel heist goes wrong, but the only thing you see as the viewer is the aftermath inside the hideout afterwards.  Tarantino’s normal signature items are here (great dialogue, brutal violence, unique characters) and there isn’t a moment wasted.  If you are at all a fan of QT then you need to see this movie because this is where it all started!

The Rookie (2002, 127 min, G, 7.0, $80m) – There are some parts of this movie that really hit home with me.  It’s a true story about Jimmy Morris (Dennis Quaid) who makes it to the major leagues for the first time when he’s 36 years old.  Another movie about an older guy trying to see if he still has what it takes to be successful at the highest level (see Rocky Balboa).  It’s a truly remarkable story that is very effective in how Disney put it together.  I’ll admit the part where he finds out he’s finally going to the majors is one of my favorite ever movie moments (and I still get a lump in my throat every time).  I saw it’s rated G, I didn’t know that was still possible!

Running Brave (1983, 106 min, PG, 6.8, 3m) – Another true story turned to dramatic movie about a sports star.  This one is about the improbable life of Billy Mills (Robby Benson).  It follows him through his younger years, onto his college days at Kansas then culminates with his incredible Olympic victory.  It’s one of those movies that if it were fiction no one would think it was possible.  I saw it as a kid in school (my junior high math teacher was the track coach) and now I live in Kansas and have a whole new respect for it.  It’s not the best movie with the best acting but if you’re a track fan you’ll enjoy it.

The Ringer (2005, 94 min, PG-13, 5.8, 40m) – This is one of those movies that you’re not sure you should be laughing at while you’re watching, but can’t help it because it’s funny.  Johnny Knoxville needs money so he plays a mentally handicapped guy so he can fix the Special Olympics.  There are a lot of seemingly insensitive jokes about the handicapped but in the end you realize they were probably in on it and you feel a lot better.  It’s an odd movie-going experience where you feel bad for laughing then feel good for watching the movie afterwards.

The Rocker (2008, 102 min, PG-13, 6.2, $8.7m) – Not many people saw this movie but I think it’s pretty good.  Rainn Wilson (from the TV show The Office) plays a failed drummer who is given another chance at success when his nephew’s band needs another member.  Like I said it’s a funny movie that just never found an audience so if you have a chance to catch it you should.  The video of Wilson that goes viral and makes the band famous is worth seeing the whole movie.

Reefer Madness (1936, 66 min, PG, 3.7, $??) – I can honestly say I’ve never had marijuana in my life but I’d heard this was one of those “it’s so bad it’s good” movies so I bought it on a whim.  It was originally made to try and scare teenagers away from smoking weed by showing all the bad things that will happen if you do it.  It was so bad an ineffective (and not accurate) that it became a cult movie where people actually got high while watching it!  It’s definitely a very bad movie but I laughed a lot and the version I have has a commentary track by the guy from Mystery Science Theater where he makes fun of it the whole time.  I don’t recommend using drugs but feel free to have fun with this one!

Rock of Ages (2012, 123 min, PG-13, 5.9, $59m) – I’ve heard the musical of the same name has been hugely successful and this movie has a lot of big stars and music but for some reason it just misses the mark.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s still quite fun and seeing Tom Cruise go all Axel Rose on everyone is awesome, but at 123 minutes it’s about 20 minutes too long.  Although if you like 80’s rock music you’ll enjoy it for that alone.

What a great list of movies – a little bit of everything.  And who wouldn’t love a list with two running and five sports movies!

Next week

With it being the holidays and all I might take the week off but then again who knows maybe I’ll have another long plane trip to kill some time here with you fine folks!  As a matter of fact I will, I’ll be heading to Florida to see my family so possibly look for a long, long list of “S” movies (15).


Until then, thank you for being such dedicated readers and Go Shocks!

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Shocker XC wins at home, I'm an ESPN hater, and Bull Durham edges Beverly Hills Cop

It was a successful weekend for the Shocker Cross Country squad as we hosted our annual early season meet, the JK Gold Classic.

We had 16 colleges and 11 high schools attend our meet this year and the Shockers came away with the double victory, taking down Division I opponents Kansas St and Oral Roberts.  The DI portion of the meet was scored as duals and our men came away with perfect “15’s” in both meets.  The women’s meet was much closer as we edged Kansas St 28-29.  The difference was getting our sixth and seventh runners in ahead of KSU’s fifth.

Although it’s very early in the season and winning a meet like this doesn’t mean a whole lot in the big picture, I’m sure Coach Hunter and the cross country crew will head to Nebraska in two weeks with a little more confidence.  Being picked fifth (women) and sixth (men) in the preseason MVC poll has motivated our team.  Good job Shocks!

Hosting a cross country meet isn’t nearly as difficult as putting on a big track meet but there is still a lot to do. We have our entire 130 person team out on the course working at 7am.  It’s a good way to do some team building and even though most college kids aren’t that excited to get up early on a Saturday morning and drive 30 minutes out into the country, once they get there they generally have a good time.  It also helped that it was a beautiful morning in the mid 60’s and 70’s – perfect for cross country!

This was our first week of getting our entire group together for track practice as well.  It’s always interesting to see how the first few workouts go.  We get to see who put in work this summer and who did not.  I’d say overall our kids look pretty solid.  Our men probably look a little better than our women but that is to be expected since they are more experienced.  It’s too early to tell how good we’ll be but looking at our groups work out last week reminded me of how talented we are.  Now the grind of the fall has begun and we will try to mold them into a team – getting in shape and teaching them how to work together in search of our goals.

The fall training seems like an endless stage of training because the meets are so far away so you have to try to mix things up to not get bored.  I like to get away from the track as much as possible so we will go off campus for workouts from time to time.  Most of our work on the actual track will be warmups and sprinting.

Our track schedule should be posted on our website this week.  Next week I’ll talk a little bit about how we put our schedule together and where we’re going this year!

I don’t like ESPN anymore

I’m old enough to remember when ESPN got started and for a sports geek like me it was heaven.  Unfortunately I have changed my opinion of the “World Wide Leader in Sports” lately.

Like most sports fans I used to watch SportsCenter religiously and it was always a great place to get scores and see the great highlights from around the world of sports.  A few years ago SportsCenter started turning more and more into human interest stories and accordingly I started losing interest.  This is not why I have now turned away from ESPN, however.

As ESPN started focusing more on “stories” than the actual sporting events I became less interested.  But one moment put me over the top and I have been on an ESPN boycott ever since.

In mid-May, Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban made some comments after all the racist stuff about the Clippers’ owner Donald Sterling came out.  Cuban, not defending Sterling but being honest about himself, basically said all of us have discriminatory tendencies and if it was late at night and he saw a black kid with a hoodie walking down the street he would go to the other side. Then if he saw a white kid who is bald and with tattoos on his head on that side he would walk back to the original side of the street.

It was an honest, straightforward, non-racist answer to a question.  But like so many other things in the sports world today, ESPN turned it into a “Mark Cuban is racist” story and only focused on the images of Trayvon Martin in a hoodie aspect. 

Now I’m not really all that interested in sitting here and talking about racism, but my point is that instead of reporting about sports ESPN decided to take an opinionated stance on this issue and make it out to be more than it was.  And ESPN has consistently done this more and more over the years to the point that I couldn’t take it anymore.

Last year I mentioned how ESPN.com is probably my favorite website and that the information on there is as good as it gets.  Well after this deal I decided only to watch live sporting events on ESPN and only to look at their website for statistical information regarding those events.  Since May, my brain has not been inundated with ESPN’s slant on anything and I have to say I haven’t been more at peace!

I heard people talking about Johnny Manziel and Michael Sam.  I didn’t pay it any attention because neither of those guys are significant in actually playing in the NFL.  They’re just stories.  As I get older I guess I feel like I’ve heard enough of the “stories” and mostly just want to see or hear about the sport – now that I think about it that’s why I fell in love with sports in the first place – the actual competition and the story that evolves from that competition.  There is a place for stories to be told on ESPN and the 30 for 30 series is great – they should leave it to people who know how to tell stories properly.

So if you are a big sports fan and want to continue to love sports for what they are – avoid anything on ESPN that isn’t a live sporting event and you’ll be just fine.  There are plenty of other channels and shows on television for made up drama.

“B” Movies

Last week I gave my best “A” movies that I own, here is my list of 12 “B” movies from best to worst …..

Movie Name (year made, length, MPAA rating, IMDB rating, Box office)

Bull Durham (1988, 108 min, R, 7.1, $50.8m) – The movie that made Kevin Costner famous is one of my favorite movies of all time.  The life of a career minor league baseball player is done about as well as possible.  “Don’t think, it can only hurt the ballclub.”

Beverly Hills Cop (1984, 105 min, R, 7.3, $316.3m) – Eddie Murphy at his peak.  Everything he did around this time was the funniest thing on the planet.

Buck (2011, 88 min, PG, 7.6, $4m) – Documentary about Buck Brannaman, who was the original “horse whisperer”.  Wonderful and inspiring story that will make you feel good about humanity.  I was lucky to have stumbled upon it, if you can find it you should watch it ASAP.

Black Swan (2010, 108 min, R, 8.0, $329.3m) – On top of being just a flat out great movie, who wouldn’t like that Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis make out scene?

Beverly Hills Cop II (1987, 100 min, R, 6.4, $299.9m) – A really great sequel.  1980’s Eddie Murphy could do no wrong.  He even made Judge Reinhold look funny in this one.

Bowfinger (1999, 97 min, PG-13, 6.4, $98.6m) – I’m realizing Eddie Murphy made a lot of “B” movies.  This one with Steve Martin is really, really funny in my opinion.  One of Murphy’s best performances is him playing “Kit”.

Burn After Reading (2008, 96 min, R, 7.0, $$163.7m) – Another quirky, funny, off-beat, and entertaining movie by the Coen Brothers.  Brad Pitt as the over excitable gym trainer is my favorite character in the movie.

Ben-Hur (1959, 212 min, PG, 8.2, $74m) – Charleton Heston as a Jewish prince who becomes a slave and has the most intense chariot race ever!  It’s long as heck but the chariot race towards the end is all worth it.

Bruce Almighty (2003, 101 min, PG-13, 6.7, $484.5m) – Jim Carey and Steve Carrell were hilarious in this funny flick. Lot of other people must have thought so too as it made almost half a billion dollars worldwide!

Boiler Room (2000, 120 min, R, 7.0, $28.7m) – Basically a lower budget version of the Wolf of Wall Street with Vin Deisel and Ben Affleck.  Great little movie that if it was made today would’ve made a lot more money.

Black Sheep (1996, 87 min, PG-13, 6.2, $32.4m) – Underrated follow-up to Tommy Boy by Chris Farley and David Spade.  Who would ever forget the RO-AAAAAAAADS scene?  “Sir you were driving 7 miles per hour.”

Beverly Hills Cop III (1994, 104 min, R, 5.4, $119.2m) – Luckily Eddie Murphy has announced Beverly Hills Cop IV will come out in 2016 so we can all forget #3 ever happened.  I only own this because it came in the 3-pack with #1 and #2.

Lots of great movies here!  I would say all of them except the last one are worth a viewing!


See you next week!  Go Shocks!

Monday, March 3, 2014

MVC Indoor recap, RIP Harold Ramis, and will Shocker Basketball ever lose?

Track
It was another exciting weekend at the MVC Indoor Championships, I’ll try to document some of the things that the typical fan or parent might not be aware of during the very important week.

If you’ve been reading this blog with some regularity, you’ll know that we were decisive underdogs heading into the MVC Indoor Championships this past weekend at Northern Iowa and the pre-meet coaches poll had our men picked second and our women third – and on paper that appeared to be accurate.  We are always very honest with our team so they knew what a steep hill there would be to climb to have a shot at a championship or even a trophy (top 2 finish).

The first thing we noticed when we got to Northern Iowa was the weather!  Wichita is not exactly Phoenix when it comes to heat and humidity but it’s quite warmer than Northern Iowa.  We experienced double digit negative temperatures for multiple days while in Cedar Falls.  Now you might be saying it’s an indoor meet and how does that make any difference?  Well the way we are setup at this meet our kids have to walk to their breakfast/lunch/dinner locations so the frigid temperatures were something we had to be prepared for.  I don’t remember any of our kids complaining about the weather, they seemed tough all weekend.

One of the best parts of our championship tradition is traveling as many people as we can.  We like to refer to it as our “Bowl Game” and in that regard we want to have as many non-competing athletes and staff members there as possible to support the team who is competing and learn about what it takes to be successful at this meet in the future.  We always have a huge travel party and are very lucky our administration supports us in this philosophy.

After a light practice on Friday at the beautiful UNI-Dome, we had our first team meeting back at the hotel later that night.  This meeting serves two purposes.  The first is for logistics of the meet, general announcements and to hand out bib numbers and passes.  While these things aren’t very exciting, they are necessary so the athletes know what to expect during the weekend and can be totally focused on the competition.  The second part of the meeting is to talk about the meet, where we stack up, and how we can try to win the championship.  We set up a projector screen with event-by-event analysis of how our team is projected to score (along with all the other teams).  I know some teams don’t talk about their championship meets in such detail because they fear it will add too much pressure to the athletes but in our culture of track and field it’s something we talk about often and the kids are all very keyed into what we expect.  They want to know this info and use it for motivation no matter if it appears good or bad.

So on Friday night in our women’s team meeting (we have separate meetings for men and women), our projection had a tight battle between Indiana State (136) and Southern Illinois (135).  We were down in third place with 84 points with Illinois State (77), Loyola (69), Northern Iowa (65), Missouri State (58), Bradley (35), and Drake (7) behind us.  All indoor season this is how it has looked as our women are a very young team (only 4 seniors in the group of 32 competitors) and, even though we didn’t like it, had sort of mentally been settling into the fact it might be a “rebuilding” type of season.  Luckily our women’s team didn’t look at it like that – more on that in a bit.

In the men’s team meeting we were in second place behind Indiana State (167-110) with Northern Iowa (89), Loyola (87), Illinois State (86), Southern Illinois (76), and Drake (55) trailing.  On both sides we were a little over 50 point underdogs on paper.  Only one time, the men’s indoor championship of 2010, have we ever turned around a deficit that large.  To win either meet would require us to have an extraordinary meet and for one of the top teams to struggle significantly.

I have always loved these pre-meet team meetings.  There is such a great team spirit and focus on the overall success of Wichita State by all the athletes.  It’s truly a unique experience to be part of, one I cherished as an athlete and one I continue to love as a coach.  I’ve always wanted to do a documentary style overview of the MVC Championships weekend but, alas I’m usually a little too busy - maybe someday when I retire (never).

The MVC Indoor Championships is only a two-day meet so things happen very quickly once the meet starts.  Our goal in the first day was to try and cut into the lead by about a third.  There are 17 events in our meet and on day one there are 6 finals and lots of preliminaries.  If we were going to have a chance at a title (or second place on the women) we would have to have some massive “point swings”.  The one event on the first day that was a big swing was the women’s Pentathlon where we scored 24 points instead of the projected 14.  Mission accomplished, so to speak.

In our final team meeting on Saturday night we gave the team an update on how the meet is going.  Overall the first day went pretty much according to the projections with the exception being the Pentathlon.  After day one we had Indiana State and Southern Illinois tied with a projection of 134 points, so they were pretty much in line with what we thought.  We had moved up from 84 to 97 so instead of being down over 50 points, now it was 37.  Even though that is still a very large margin our women had cut into the lead by about the third that we had needed.  It was still a long way to go for a trophy.

On the men’s side, we pretty much held form and I had us projected for 109 points.  Indiana State had a very good day and moved up to 179 points in our charts.  A 70 point deficit was going to be very tough to overcome, especially since our top athlete, Austin Bahner, would not contest the rest of the meet with a hamstring injury.  We had Bahner penciled in for 18 points so our message to the team would be we need to really pull together in order to finish second.  There were four teams lurking behind us by about 20 points and any of those teams had the potential to beat us if we didn’t finish strong.

The final day of a championship meet is full of excitement and intensity.  We needed some big things to happen, and happen quickly!  Right away we had two big things happen.  Our best triple jumper Shanice Andrews hit a huge personal best to win the event and Southern Illinois had an 11 point fall in the Shot Put.  So with nine events left the projected margin for second place went from 37 down to 18.  Those results seemed to kick-start our women’s team and they proceeded to have an incredible day.  By the middle of the final day our women had surpassed SIU on the projection and looked in line for a second place finish.  Indiana State’s women appeared to be too tough to catch and they were having a good day as well.  There were lots of very close finishes in several events and at the end of the day our women ended up in second place, losing to Indiana State 130-116.5.  We had gone from over 50 points down to losing by 13.5, as well as beating SIU by 19 points in the process.  We outperformed our pre-meet chart by 32 points – the highest total for our women in the eight years I’ve been at WSU.  A terrific accomplishment given that it was done with only 4 seniors (who scored a total of 18 points).

While we never seriously threatened Indiana State for the title, here’s how close we came to winning.  In the Pentathlon we had two girls lose spots by a total of 18 points (about two seconds in the final event, the 800 meters) and in the hurdles we finished a close second and third place.  If we would have scored those 18 points and went 1-2 in the hurdles it would have been a 14 point swing and we would’ve won the meet by a half of a point.  So often you can find things like this all over the place and to think we were that close to a championship after where we started was a remarkable feat.  We were very proud of our ladies and this should give them confidence heading into the outdoor season.

The men’s side, unfortunately, wasn’t as close.  Without Bahner we were doing everything we could to scrape together points as best we could.  Indiana State did come back to us a bit but they finished with 151 points to our 105.  We held off a strong charge by Southern Illinois, who scored 95 points.  Our men had been very determined to win a championship this year but this one was not to be.  We think our outdoor team is better than our indoor team with the addition of the Javelin and a few other events.  We will also add a couple of redshirted athletes that should make our team better.

On the way up to the meet our coaching staff had decided finishing second (men) and third (women) would have been a pretty successful meet.  On the drive home after exceeding those predictions, we were happy but not satisfied.  Overall it was a great weekend of track and field for the Shockers!

Today (Monday) has been mostly spent sleeping.

Last week I mentioned I would probably talk a little bit about recruiting and our class of signees but since we are off this next weekend I figured next week would be a better time to talk about it.  And you’re probably ready for me to stop talking about track at this point anyways.

Movies
A sad event occurred this week as writer and director Harold Ramis passed away at the age of 69.  Ramis was involved
with many of my all-time favorite movies like Caddyshack, National Lampoon’s Vacation, Animal House, Stripes, and Back to School.  I’ve always enjoyed seeing him in interviews talking about these movies and he was, obviously, a major influence on the film industry.  RIP Harold, you will be dearly missed!

With the business of this week’s MVC Championships, there was no way I was going to be able to get out and see any movies.  I did catch a few on cable and online though before and during the trip.  I watched a movie called This Film Is Not Yet Rated, made in 2006 about the MPAA ratings systems for movies (R, PG-13, etc).  I found it on YouTube and thought it was a very interesting documentary.  Because of the subject matter it was rated NC-17, which is kind of funny when you consider what the movie was about.  It has a lot of adult material but I’d recommend it.  I’ve always respected movies that were original and took risks.

I watched most of the movie Road House, starring Patrick Swayze.  The fact that is was being played on the American Movie Classics channel makes me chuckle, because Road House is not exactly considered the best film in the world.  Is has a certain kind of cult charm though, and has developed a great following over the years.  I have to admit I got drawn into it.  On the road I watched the movie Election with Matthew Broderick and Reese Witherspoon about a high school presidential election and the teacher who is involved with organizing it.  It was directed by Alexander Payne, who later in his career directed movies Sideways and Nebraska, which I’ve talked about here before. Obviously I enjoy his movies very much and this early version of his work is good as well.

Right now I’m watching the Rocky marathon on AMC.  The Rocky movies are always great entertainment.  I was also happy to hear Matthew McConnaughey won an Oscar this week, he definitely deserved it for his role in Dallas Buyer’s Club.

DVD Choice of the Week (from my collection):  In honor of Harold Ramis, this week’s movie is Caddyshack.  The classic 1980 comedy is one of my all-time favorites, starring Chevy Chase, Rodney Dangerfield, and Bill Murray.  If you get a couple of guys together who are at least 30 years old you will probably hear several quotes from this movie in their general conversation.  “So I got that going for me, which is nice” is usually one of our favorites.  No need to talk about the plot here, if for some reason you’re one of the 1% of Americans who’ve never seen this movie then you can’t be helped.

Everything Else
The only bad thing about being out of town for the MVC Championships was that we weren’t able to be in Wichita Saturday for the regular season finale of what has been one of the most remarkable seasons of college basketball ever.  If you’re not aware, Wichita State finished the regular season with an undefeated record of 31-0.  It’s the first time a school has won that many games and gone undefeated in the regular season – ever.  Bobby Knight, the former Indiana coach, was in town to do the ESPN broadcast and, from what I’ve been told, the game
was awesome.  It was a blowout win for the Shockers over Missouri State and an epic celebration afterwards.  The next goal for this team is to win this week’s MVC tournament, something WSU has NEVER done before.  If that happens they will be 34-0 heading into the NCAA Tournament.  Really?  No words can really describe this.  Wichita State is on television more than President Obama at this point.  It’s a wonderful thing for everyone at Wichita State and we’re gonna ride this wave as far as it goes!

The only other thing I was going to mention was about the new Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon.  I can remember growing up and every once in a while getting to watch Johnny Carson’s monologue before falling asleep, and while I’ve enjoyed Letterman and Leno over the years I am really impressed by Jimmy Fallon so far.  He was the host of the Late Night Show for a few years and has been awesome to watch in his new gig.  It’s a fresh take on the late night talk show circuit, one that I think is worth checking out.  All of a sudden David Letterman looks very old compared to Jimmy Fallon.

Website of the Week
Since the Shockers are on ESPN every day it seems like, I thought I’d drop their website on here this week.  I’m not the biggest fan of ESPN these days because it seems like they are more about stirring things up with controversy but their website is second to none in my opinion.  I probably visit it several times a day and if I’m going to get anything about professional or major college sports it’s the first place I look.  I hope they don’t change it in the future because it’s as good as it gets for sports news and information.

Interesting articles and videos to waste some time with