Thursday, April 29, 2021
Weed, License Plates and LSD: This Week in Drug News
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Rob Lasso: Episode One
By popular demand (and common sense), we're changing the names of the characters for better readability. For reference, R is now Dutch (her real name is that of a former President's last name), E is Ellie, B is Breezy, A is Ash, K is Kenny, J is Jennie, and O is Ollie.)
“Little girls are mysterious. And silly and powerful. I gave up trying to figure them out years ago.” - Ted Lasso
When we left our squad in the prologue, we'd reached a tentative peace after a bit of intrasquad drama. And goodness gracious if these kids have been anything but supportive of one another. On their own, they:
- organized big/little sister pairings
- designed, collected money for, and had printed custom tie-dyed team t-shirts (Mac, another of our senior captains, spearheaded that effort)
- sorted out a clusterfuck of uniform distribution; trying to outfit 27 kids with uniforms enough for 22 is a test of coaching mettle and patience
Jorge Campos, also a short, quirky keeper |
Lindsey Horan, also a tall, smooth attacking midfielder |
And then, all of sudden, Kenny got to a ball, and found Kenz, a slight freshman winger, who beat her defender with a nifty feint and delivered a sweet return pass that Kenny ripped...just wide of the keeper. We kept the pressure on, pinning the opposition back for a good five minutes, and our nerves abated.
Midway through the first half, Ellie made a spectacular save on a drive from 10 yards out, tipping the ball over the net. On the ensuing corner, our defenders left two opponents unmarked, and one of them toe-poked a ball into the net. 1-0, bad guys.
Just a few short minutes later, Breezy got turned around our opponents' striker - an exceptional player - who lashed a ball into the top of the goal to put us down 2-0 at the break.
We switched from a 4-4-2 to a 4-5-1 after halftime because our midfield was allowing too much space to our opponent, and we controlled the ball for much of the first portion of the last frame. Kenny stripped the ball in midfield, took one touch, and sprung Kenz, who took a sublime first touch and struck a low hard shot to the far post. The keeper got a hand to it, but deflected it directly into the path of Jennie, a diminutive and speedy winger. Jennie slotted it home, and we were within a goal.
Not three minutes later, the referee spotted a foul that I'm still looking for, and awarded a free kick about 30 yards out on the right wing. The kick found its way to the back post and none of our defenders attacked it, giving the other team an easy goal to make it 3-1. Five minutes later, their stud striker turned another defender and rifled a ball to the top corner of the net, and it was 4-1.
That's probably a fair result, all things considered. We emptied the bench in the final five minutes, and got all but 1 active player into the game. Our friend's niece got her first high school playing time, and acquitted herself well, sticking in on a tackle and making a nice pass.
I remain impressed with how much the kids support one another. Ab, our third senior captain, didn't start and didn't play very much, but she sat with a bunch of underclassmen and talked to them on the bench throughout the game. Several kids were pissed about losing, but none of them took it out on each other. We'll get another shot at this opponent next week. We've got some work to do, but I think it'll be a fun journey.
Monday, April 26, 2021
Sugar We're Going Down Swinging
Supporters of the so-called "Other 14" in English soccer watched with a combination of bemusement and horror last week as the "Big Six" joined with three Italian and three Spanish clubs to launch the European Super League. Turned out the ESL owners were flying with waxen wings, and the sun was shining brightly. Karma, as we know, is a bitch.
Rumors now abound regarding the possible penalties the six English clubs (Liverpool, Manchesters City and United, Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur, and Chelsea) might face as they return to the fold, tails between their legs. Some reasonably credible folks have suggested they face as much as a 30-point penalty in the standings. In reality, they wield too much power for the English Football Association (FA) to do much more than slap their greedy wrists. I'm guessing a transfer ban of some sort.
But if I'm wrong, and the FA's righteous fury becomes the worst case for the six traitors, well that's at least an interesting thought experiment. At the moment Man City is coasting to a third league title in four years, ten points clear of Manchester United with five matches to play. Here's what the current table looks like:
Imagine for a moment the seismic reshuffling that would result from a 30-point deduction. The top four would be:
- Leicester (59 points)
- West Ham (55)
- Everton (52)
- Manchester City (47)
Unless something changes, Fulham will be relegated for the third time since I've been a supporter of the club. I'm starting to think those greedy dudes who wanted a guaranteed place in the ESL competition might've been on to something.
Come On You Whites! Let's make a miracle. Or let's listen to Bruce Springsteen sing our 2020/21 anthem.
Saturday, April 24, 2021
I Saw a Rainbow
Thursday, April 22, 2021
Rob Lasso: The Prologue
As most of the G:TB family knows, I was hired recently as the head coach of my local high school's junior varsity girls' soccer team. Our man in the OBX hit me up around that time and suggested that I chronicle the season for posterity. To which I thought, postcount! Also, that's a fun idea.
I've coached girls travel soccer for five years now, always as an assistant. I have a lot to learn about the tactical side of the game, but I think I'm pretty good at the cultural elements, and I like building relationships with the kids and watching them grow as players and people. So when I got the head coaching gig, I spent a good amount of time thinking about how I wanted the team to play, planning practices with the expectation that the team would have a mix of experienced players and kids with some athleticism but limited time in the game.As far as my philosophy goes, I want kids to have fun first and foremost, especially at the JV level. It's not worth putting in the effort five days a week if it isn't fun. And I subscribe to Chris Jones' philosophy, which the writer set forth in a Tweet, "I joke about being a great coach, but of this, I am certain: 90 percent of kids respond to praise. Maybe 10 percent want a fire lit. But the vast majority of kids rise to your encouragement. Correct bad play gently, validate good play wildly. Then watch them be stars."
Tryouts started a week ago Monday. And I realized pretty quickly that my plans weren't worth the paper they were written on. Of the 27 kids that came out, 25 were highly skilled, tactically astute, and far more physical than I expected. The other two...have work to do.
On the plus side, my plans are irrelevant, because 27 kids aren't enough to field Varsity and JV teams, so the head coach of the Varsity team quickly decided that all 27 would make the team, and that he'd like my help as a Varsity assistant. As he told the girls that after the last day of tryouts, he was honest about what that meant for playing time. We want all the kids to be part of the program, to get some much-needed socialization during a really strange time for student, and to grow as a group.
We didn't get off to the best start. Several of the best players on the team are freshmen, and they weren't terribly deferential to their elders during tryouts. As the coach announced the plan to keep all 27 athletes, a senior - we'll call her R, and she's a smart, tough defender with a leader's mien - stepped forward and firmly said, "you may be a great player, but you don't get respect because you can play. You get respect because you give respect. So when we ask you to get a ball, or help out with cones, you do it, because we did it, and because we've earned it."We broke that night unsure of how many kids would come back for the first day of practice.
Twenty-seven girls came back the next day. And with the stress of tryouts gone, the team began bonding almost immediately. The awkwardness of the night before was gone, and 27 kids got after it.
You'll learn more about the kids on the team over the coming weeks, though I won't be using any real names because I'm a public school employee and I don't need someone Ghoogling the name of the school and stumbling on my stories about their kids in a blog about dipshittery, weed, and William & Mary basketball. R was named one of the captains, as voted by the team. The niece of an FOG:TB is one of our freshmen, and I've known her mother since she was a teenager. I've coached B, a junior defender, since she was 12, so I've got a friendly face to vouch for me with the other kids. And since I'm an assistant coach, I get to learn with no pressure, and I get to focus on building relationships and coaching individual kids rather than thinking about the entirety of the program.
In Episode Three of Season One of Ted Lasso, the title character says, "For me, success is not about the wins and losses. It’s about helping these young fellas be the best versions of themselves on and off the field." To which I say, amen. Just don't tell the girls I called 'em fellas.
Our first game is next Tuesday. Tune in here next Wednesday for the next episode, and in the meantime, do enjoy the trailer for the second season of Ted Lasso.
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
Listen Up to What's Down with GTB
Gheorghe: The Musical Forum is a great place to experience the latest and greatest in new music, deep cut diamonds in the rough from yesteryear, and music to which we have personal ties.
To wit...
The new:
Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band... with washboard for Rootsy and a Tally Ho tour date coming up for Rob and Marls...
Dusting off older tunes:
Personal ties:
Monday, April 19, 2021
Gheorghasbord: From Wieners to Cocks
Hope your respective weekends were good. Just a few tidbits to keep the good gheorghies tuning in and the postcount up.
Tubesteaks have dominated the discussion here for a while. Frankfurters, I mean. Question(s)for you...
- Do the meats in the video below count as hot dogs?
- Any interest among the gheorghies?
- Is there some shortage of wiener buns?
On a related note, 6 years ago this article muddied the waters on an ongoing debate of whether a hot dog is a sandwich: National Hot Dog and Sausage Council Announces Official Policy On ‘Hot Dog as Sandwich’ Controversy. The long and short of it was that they claim that hot dogs are in their own category and therefore not lumped into the sandwich category. But check out the USDA Regulatory Definitions of a Sandwich in that link. Thoughts?
30 years ago a few of our guys went through a parallel debate of whether a BLT is a sandwich, with the non-obvious argument throwing its eggs into the "bacon is a topping not a primary meat" basket. This one wasn't and isn't much of a debate, but I certainly enjoyed the ridiculous banter that it offered a while back.
* * * * * * *
It was once written, "Washington: First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League." New York is the epicenter of everywhere anywhere (just as a New Yorker; they'll tell ya). First in business, first in fashion, last in the American League. Meanwhile, rob's Red Sox are in first place, even as he sandbagged our annual case o' beer bet and has the Sox +10 wins versus the modestly Amazin' Mets. Conventional wisdom says those spots will be reversed by Memorial Day, but one never knows...
* * * * * * *
QB Alex Smith retired today. Much will be said about him, and hyperbole will abound, as is de rigueur, but what he did to come back from a gruesome injury and subsequent infections cannot be overstated. He faced amputation and played a couple years later in meaningful NFL contests. His acquisition set the WFT back a costly bit, as it turned out, but the team's fans are Alex Smith fans all the way.
* * * * * * *
Speaking of football, I have twice as much incentive to get to an SEC game this summer. My younger daughter came to the end of her miserable run during the college admission process. It's been a rough road for her and for her peers because of a few factors:
- Would-be rising sophomores from last year who took a gap year and are coming back. According to at least one admission office, one-quarter of their freshman slots were taken by this population, so this year's crop of kids were starting off short-handed.
- The SAT wasn't a requirement this year. My daughter did well (highest in the extended family), so this would have helped her. Instead, it saturated the candidate pool.
- With the effect the pandemic has had on the economy, large state schools (the relative bargains) have been flooded with applications. My girl applied nearly exclusively to large state schools.
- Among other things working against her, some recent grads from her high school were embroiled in a cheating scandal at UVa; that and a progressive push from colleges for DEI and a new era of wokeness did not help the students at this decidedly unwoke preparatory school. Sounds like there's a shake-up a-brewing at Norfolk Academy, though enough of the Board of Trustees all have MAGA stickers on their Bentleys and Range Rovers that it's not a given. I do know that when a high school is more expensive than a number of the colleges for which it offers tutelage and trajectory into, its numero uno metric is college acceptance, and when that ebbs mightily, look the fuck out.
- At least in these parts, it's just been a crappy year to try to get into colleges... and to be a senior. All the fun stuff and privileges have been cancelled, virtual learning sucked, in-person learning was definitely not the same, and now the process of moving forward has been disappointing at best. A friend who's a UPenn alum sits on interview panels for local applicants. He said that they usually have an acceptance rate of 9% to 14% of the kids they see. This year they interviewed 98 applicants. 1 got in.
Sunday, April 18, 2021
A New G:TB Fave
At 10:00 am EST this morning, Barnsley play Coventry in Matchweek 42 of the English League Championship, the second division of the island's professional soccer pyramid. The Tykes have spent but a single season in the Premier League, going up and down in 1997 and 1998.
Now, though, they're in position to make the four-team playoff for the final Premier League promotion slot. And one of the major reasons comes from Edmond, OK.
Momentary interlude for cultural purposes: Barnsley is a town of 90,000 in South Yorkshire, bang in the middle of England. It's eight miles east of Penistone, if one is juvenile. So, really, all of the male Gheorghies. It's a textile town, historically, but it thrives today because of bakeries and the service economy, as I'm told.
But we're here for the Edmond part.
Barnsley's on the precipice of promotion for many reasons, but there's no question that American striker Daryl Dike has made a huge difference. Since he joined Barnsley on loan from Orlando City in the MLS, he's scored eight goals in 14 games. Dike's headed goals in, he's finished sublime buildups, and he's scored goals like this banger against Birmingham (start at the 1:35 mark):
Dike's story is a uniquely American one. His parents emigrated to Oklahoma from Nigeria in that time-tested pursuit of the American Dream. His older brother Bright played in the MLS and for the Nigerian national team. His sister Courtney also played internationally for the Super Eagles. Dike played two years at UVA (not holding it against him) before turning pro. He got his first two caps for the USMNT this year.
And in addition to his athletic prowess, he's an impressive kid, as this interview with Roger Bennett shows:
I going on record here. Daryl Dike is gonna be a household name, at least amongst those who follow American soccer. He's the next Jozy Altidore, and not just because he's a big, strong, striker of African heritage. This generation of American soccer players is building to something promising, and Dike will take his place alongside Christian Pulisic, Gio Reyna, Sergino Dest, Tyler Adams, Zach Steffen, Weston McKennie, Josh Sargent and a bunch of other talents. The times, they are good.
Friday, April 16, 2021
The Decision
Hi guys and gals. I've been AWOL for a while. Life has come at me hard. I will try to keep this post to a reasonable length. It is a surprisingly fitting follow-up to The Teej's post yesterday on the arbitrary ranking of states (which makes me look smart in this post).
Where to begin? We'll start with the pandemic. As some of you know, I left my last Wall Street job at the start of the pandemic (for non-pandemic reasons). I spent much of the last fourteen months being unenthusiastically underemployed as a fractional CFO for growth companies. I also spent a lot of that time looking for a new gig. I was done with a soulless existence on Wall Street. Better said, Wall Street was done with me. After escaping NJ with the family in May 2020 and riding out some of the pandemic in Hilton Head (three weeks) and the Outer Banks (one week), my wife and I realized we never wanted to go back to NJ.
But we did return to NJ. That's where our all our stuff was! I began to focus on jobs out of the NYC area. In the middle of the pandemic, I decided to pursue a career pivot to another line of work in another city. Even my Polish grandmother would have shaken her head at the futility of that initiative. My list of acceptable cities was eclectic, but not random: Atlanta, Charlotte, Tampa, Austin or Denver. We wanted a better quality of life and/or lower cost of living. Warm weather was a nice kicker, but not a requirement. We began to gravitate to Charlotte. Lots of corporate gigs, lots of financial services gigs, two hours to Asheville, three hours to the beach, lots of pro sports options, cheap-as-hell housing, mild weather and a great state college system. We planned to head there in late March and start inculcating our kids into the prestige of UNC Chapel Hill.
But something else came together in March. I got back in touch with an old friend from my MBA days in February (Never underestimate the power of a good professional network, my friends). I accepted a job offer via that friend in March. I started that job in April. I put my house on the market two weeks ago. I accepted an offer one week ago. I got out of attorney review yesterday. No turning back.
I'm moving to the Denver in July. Come visit. It's tough to leave an area where my wife and I have so many friends, and Zman and Juan Carlos are each a world class mensch. But the opportunity to experience something new, while selling my house at an inflated price, is too good to pass up. As I told my wife, whose heart is set on retiring in Hilton Head, this will be the next chapter, but not the last chapter, in our lives, and we will be empty nesters in less than eight years. Go Nuggets.
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Folks, you know what to do*
This list, it is...incorrect. I know the Jersey guys will agree, and why the fuck is the meth lab of democracy ranked 7th? Bump Oregon and Vermont, and drop Texas waaaaaay down. Mississippi, you seem good right there, no no put your hand down, we're not listening.
And Hawaii we see you... nice.
Methodology: 1,211 US adults were asked to choose the better of two states from a list of the 50 US states and Washington, D.C. in a series of head to head match-ups.
*bitch about this in the comments
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Back to School II: The Quadruple Lindy
I've got a few weeks left in my modern version of the old classic, Back to School. (Yep, I'm Rodney, and by the way, that seemingly innocuous film is totally polarizing among people I know. Teej and I love it, many folks detest it. And don't know the first thing about Kurt Vonnegut.)
Anyway, I'm slated to graduate next month. Just 25 years after my buddy rob did so with the same degree from the same school.
Last week, we had yet another group assignment. This is the first class I've taken in my 3+ years of this program that interspersed students from the full-time MBA program with our program -- a program that I simply call "night school." And calling it night school, of course, can only make me think of one show, one episode, and one glorious scene that will remain close to my conscious for all my days:
But anyway, our group project was based on one of the many Harvard Coursepack cases that we've studied throughout the program. This one is about a guy named Dave Carroll. The basic story is here, encapsulated as such:
"United Breaks Guitars" documents the incredible viral power of social media, analyzing the reach and impact of a clever customer complaint music video produced by Canadian musician Dave Carroll when his attempts to recoup the value of his guitar (broken in transit) are stonewalled for over a year by United Airlines. Posted on YouTube on July 6, 2009, the video was tweeted by Carroll's friends, posted on social news sites, shared with Facebook friends, and picked up by bloggers. From there it was a quick hop to the mainstream media; by the end of July, the video had been viewed 4.6 million times, with external references expanding that audience by many more millions.
The video in question for United Breaks Guitars:
We, Team 7 of the Customer Experience Management class, were assigned this case and took on the role of United after this thing went kablooey, tasked with a 45-minute virtual presentation to the class last Thursday. My four teammates from the full-time program, each of whom was born during the Clinton administration, set about creating a slide deck and talking points. I, meanwhile, with their blessing as the old guy, took on a tangential task of what I figured was the no-brainer inclusion for any presentation on this subject: our own music video.
And then I got some sort of bronchial infection about the same time my second COVID vaccine shot was being sunk into my upper arm. And lost my voice entirely. And was down for the count. Bad times, and my part of this project was certainly in jeopardy.
I was able to rally, write some related lyrics, set some chords to it, and spend some time on my third floor (Les Coole Studios) hastily laying down the track. Gravelly (at best) voice and all. And then winging my way through iMovie, creating some visual accompaniment. We presented it to the class to modest fanfare. Here it is, just for kicks.
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
The Mad Wiener Grab of 2021
Nearly 3 million people have been lost to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Global economies have been disrupted, many industries have been hammered, and the state of the world is, even as we crawl out of this morass with vaccinations, fraught with uneasiness and anxiety.
But we will be fine.
Except . . . wait, what??
"Hogs have been in short supply since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic more than a year ago. Now analysts are predicting higher prices and a short supply of pork for foods like hot dogs and bacon as restaurants re-open and summer barbecues resume as vaccinations in the US pick up pace."
Apparently America's "pent-up demand for meat" will have trouble being met due to "lower production last year and higher disease losses." In case you didn't know, "the number of market hogs, piglets, and future piglets, dropped 1.8%, 1.4% and 2.5%, respectively." Damn the future piglets, I always say.
What does it mean?
- higher prices on these meats
- fewer discounts
- more people stocking up
- people bargain hunting
- barbecuing being impacted
- people being sad
- people starting to be vegetarian
- no, not really
Also, I got my vaccination shots at/courtesy of Smithfield Foods. Coincidence?
Monday, April 12, 2021
A Quick Hot Take on COVID Vaccine Passports
Some people don't like the idea of COVID vaccine passports because it somehow infringes on liberty or human rights or something like that. This includes Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida and an alumnus of Yale and Harvard Law School and a former JAG Corps officer at Guantanamo Bay (which is to say a smart guy who knows a thing or two about liberty and human rights).
I think this position is wildly overblown.
If you want to attend public schools you have to show proof of vaccination. Yes, you can obtain a waiver in many states for religious or philosophical reasons, but either way your local school district knows whether your kids have or haven't been vaccinated for various things.
Many other countries require visitors to get vaccinated for Yellow Fever before they can enter. So, for example, if you want to visit Angola or Benin you have to show proof of vaccination. To make this easier, WHO even has an international certificate of vaccination or prophylaxis, or ICVP, to carry with you to these places. A vaccine passport, if you will. So when you go to these places their governments know you've been vaccinated for various things.
If you want to leave the US and go to another country, you need ... a passport! I have one and you probably do too. Getting it required a bunch of paperwork, a photo, a fee, and an inordinately long wait but now I can leave the country and get back in. As a result, the government knows a bunch of things about me and so do the governments of the foreign places I visit. That's just the cost of travel.
Sharing information about yourself with your government is the cost of citizenship. We share health information all the time (see my school example above; see also anyone over 65 who uses Medicare). This circumstance shouldn't be any different.
At the end of the day which is worse: a bunch of bureaucrats knowing that you got the COVID shot, or dealing with more masking/distancing/shutdown precautions? So lighten up Ron.
Saturday, April 10, 2021
Gheorghasbord: What the Kids are Doing
Odds and ends, as usual, inspired by a couple of things I heard from my kids this week.
We have a family friend who attends the College of William & Mary. She's a freshman this year, and she loves it in the Burg. She's a perfect fit: earnest, smart, dorky in a good way. Just a neat kid. My 17 year-old came to me a few days ago and asked, "What did you call the Sunken Garden when you were in college?"
Puzzled, I responded, "The Sunken Garden. Why?"
"Because Tiernan called it Sunky G's on Insta."
"Get the fuck out of here. Sunky G's?"
"Yep. Sunky G's."
And as it turns out, kids at W&M have been calling it that since at least 2015, according to a Google search. I weep for the youth. It's no Tinee Penis, that's for certain.
That same 17 year-old texted our family thread this morning at around 8:00. In and of itself, that's an amazing fact, as she is never awake before 8:30 when she's rousted into surly half-consciousness by whichever parent has girded their loins to face her. The text itself was a doozy:
"taylor swift killed prince phillip"
and we were off.
Sunky G's, man. Shaking my damn head.
Thursday, April 08, 2021
This Week in Wrenball: The Counterfactual
Nerrrrrrds |
Wednesday, April 07, 2021
Stick Around Laugh a While
Monday, April 05, 2021
Music Monday
This one's a little different. Got a text from my college-aged kidlet last night with a Spotify link to this song, with the description, "this song goes crazy". With some trepidation, I clicked the link. It's hard to describe. And a fun band name to boot. Dig on it.
Friday, April 02, 2021
Back in Purple
"Yip, yip yip yip" is amusing when it comes from the Martians of the Muppetverse. It's less fun when it describes a professional baseball pitcher who - inexplicably and suddenly - can't throw strikes.
(Did I just sneak a Muppets reference into a post where it had no business showing up? Yes. Yes, I did. It's the little things that make this place genius, friends.)
As I sit in my living room watching the Red Sox host the Orioles in the season's first game at Fenway Park, I'm as far removed from my rabid baseball fandom as I've been in years. But the game (and that place) still bring a smile. And the first week of the season still heralds spring and summer, which my toes - frozen from walking my dog in 25 degree temperatures this morning - desperately need.One of the best stories from yesterday's MLB Opening Day happened in Denver, where the Colorado Rockies took on the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers. Colorado beat the Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers, 8-5. That's interesting, but the cool part of the story was the way the game ended. Daniel Bard struck out two and pitched a scoreless ninth inning to record the save for the Rockies.
Bard quietly pitched pretty well in 23 games with the Rockies during last year's bizarro season, posting a 3.65 ERA and striking out more than a batter per inning. Quietly for me, I guess (see above), since he did win the 2020 MLB Comeback Player of the Year award. Before that, you have to go back to 2013 to find evidence of Daniel Bard's baseball career. And therein lies the story.
The Red Sox drafted Bard out of UNC in 2006 after a stellar college career. He reached the majors in 2009, and played a key role as a setup man as the Sox won the World Series. Bard struck out 63 in 49.1 innings that season. He was even more effective in 2010 and 2011, appearing in more than 70 games each season with a sub-1.00 WHIP. Bard looked for all the world like the heir apparent to the mantle of next great closer.
Until he stopped being able to throw strikes. He lost his control, and the Sox spiraled themselves in 2012. Bard walked more men than he struck out that year. He pitched twice in Boston in 2013, and was out of the game - seemingly for good.
Anna Katherine Clemmons wrote a terrific feature on Bard's comeback yesterday for Charlotte Magazine. It tells the story of the time Bard spent away from the game. Or at least off the mound. While he battled mental challenges, he used his experience to mentor players in the Arizona Diamondbacks system. When the players he was coaching saw him throw, they wondered why he was coaching and not on the mound.Finally, he decided to give it another shot. At the time, his wife Adair was nervous, “I knew it was a serious thought, which made me excited and terrified at the same time.”
The Rockies signed him, and Bard showed that the electric stuff of his youth was still there. And he showed that he could control it. I'll give Clemmons the final word, "However this season unfolds, Bard has his family, his comeback, and his shift in perspective. One key to control, it turns out, is letting go of it. It’s a game, he tells himself nowadays. Just go throw the ball. If you enjoy it, keep doing it. If not, do something else. “For a long time, I put a lot of pressure on myself that I had to live up to this expectation,” he says. “But life in general—baseball especially—only has as much meaning as you assign to it.”
(Okay, not exactly the last word. As I posted this, I noticed that we already had a 'daniel bard' label. I found that odd. So I searched it, and found this post from 2014. In it, I lament Bard's painful fall from grace, and hope that he finds a way back to the bigs. And so he did. Right on, Daniel Bard.)
Also, I did want an excuse to post this:
Thursday, April 01, 2021
April Fool's Gold
It's been a cow's age since an April Fool's joke really hit home for me. Might have been as long ago as 1982, when Jimmy Damron showed up for pregame warmups for the Alabama state championship soccer game with a walking boot on his foot. Jimmy was one of our best players, and we were fucked without him. He took the boot off to much amusement. We lost in a shootout. Good one, though, Jimmy.
So we won't be trying to pull any of that nonsense on a crowd as discerning at this one. Instead, we'll celebrate some stuff about fools.
Like the Stone Roses song Fool's Gold. Classic late 80s/early 90s British Madchester alterna-dance. I won this CD from the campus radio station at W&M. It's not exactly a banger, but it's got a funky vibe and you can nod your head to it.
Well, there's the premier episode of Yacht Rock, entitled "What a Fool Believes," if anyone still... still hasn't watched it.