Crosby and the Worlds

I’m usually the first one to jump all over players who turn down the chance to play for their country, but even I am forced to cut Sidney Crosby some slack on this one.

His Penguins went all the way to the Stanley Cup finals each of the last two seasons.  He played at the Olympics in February.  Is it any wonder the guy needs time off to recover from a couple years of marathon hockey?

For all we talk about the millions of dollars these guys get paid, let’s take into account that they need time off just like anyone else.  Your season wraps up in June, you’re back in training camp in September.  It’s not like you’re sitting around the months of July and August like a school kid on summer vacation — these are professional athletes at the top of their game which involves a ton of training and effort to maintain that condition.

Anyone who calls this decision into question needs to really question why we would expect anyone to work two solid years without a real break.  Crosby got the Gold Medal winning goal; he’s done his bit for the country already this year.  Those Olympics were draining for the players — do you think it is a coincidence that Brodeur and Luongo were out of the playoffs already too?

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It’s Just Too Soon

A few weeks back I wrote on how much I was enjoying the NHL’s advertising campaign “History Will Be Made”.  However, the latest commercial has left me with a bit of a sour taste when it comes to the campaign.

When it comes to history, some moments are legends as soon as they happen.  Ray Bourque winning a Stanley Cup after 22 seasons?  Sure.  Bobby Orr flying through the air in OT?  Absolutely.  These were the climatic moments to playoff marathons and, in the case of Bourque, a career. 

This doesn’t hold true for all moments, however.  Sometimes you need the luxury of viewing a moment through the lens of history before you can truly appreciate it.  I think of Mario Lemieux’s goal from the 1991 Finals.  At the time we knew it was a very pretty goal.  However, now that we can view it through the lens of history we can see it as THE defining moment of the series.  Minnesota as a team was simply going to be unable to stop Pittsburgh and Lemieux beating Shawn Chambers and Jon Casey was the quintessential representation of that fact.  At the time, though, no one could know that.  If Minnesota had found a way to win that series, Mario’s goal diminishes a lot.

“What if Roy played like a rookie?”  Roy’s performance in the 1986 playoffs was remarkable.  But, he went all the way to win the Stanley Cup and become one of the best goalies of his era.  He inspired an entire generation of French-Canadian goalies to emulate his style.  That’s the stuff of legend.

One of those French-Canadian goalies inspired by “St. Patrick” was Marc-Andre Fleury.  Fleury had his career defining moment in the 2009 Finals when he made a last second save to preserve the Penguins one goal lead and win the Cup over Detroit, shedding the weight of some of his performances from earlier in that series.  It was a great moment — exacting revenge and leading a young team to its first championship.

However, that is not the moment that is being immortalized in the latest ad.  No, instead this is what we have:

“What if Flower didn’t come up roses?”

Really?  A performance in the third game of a second round series is worthy of being immortalized with the ranks of Bobby, Mario and Ray?  The Penguins have actually been struggling in the 2010 playoffs — they have a losing record at home and Fleury’s stats are far from being stellar.  And, as the defending champs, they know they haven’t won anything yet.

Perhaps one day we’ll look back on Game 3 of the Montreal series as a pivotal moment in a Penguins run to back-to-back championships.  Maybe it will be the catalyst that inspires Fleury to the heights we know he can achieve but, quite frankly, hadn’t had in these playoffs until that last game.  Until that happens — until we have the luxury of putting the performance into context — we just don’t know.

Even as a Penguins fan all I can say is “It’s just a little too soon, NHL.”

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Cache and Release

What do you get when you take several dozen crazed Geocachers, 59 new Geocaches all released at the same time and add in a dash of sleep deprivation?  You get Calgary’s Cache and Release Winter 2010, officially known this year as “10 Years! Calgary, AB”to help celebrate the tenth anniversary of geocaching as a hobby.

The Official Cache and Release Car Flag For the uninitiated, geocaching is a very simple hobby.  At it’s most basic level it works like this:

Someone hides a container somewhere in the world and the publishes the coordinates for it on the Internet on a website such as Geocaching.com.  Other people then use the coordinates and a handheld GPSr to go out and find it.  Once they find the container they sign the logbook to prove they were there and then they go back online and talk about their experience.

The more experienced cachers will explain there are MANY variations on this theme and all sorts of different rules and community standards, but that is for a different post.

For the last few years the Calgary Area Cachers put on an event twice a year known as “Cache and Release”.  This event builds on the initial geocaching premise by giving people a few weeks to go out and hide the best cache they can.  None of the listings are made public until the day before the event.  On that dayt the caches are published with the caveat that no one is allowed to look for them until the event officially gets underway. 

Guess What Their Hobby Is?

This year the event kicked off with a brunch event on Saturday, which ran from 10:30 – 12:00.  Noon marked the start of the cache seeking craziness, which ran for a full 24 hours.  (The caches remain available after the event as well, but the 24 hour period ends with a wrap-up event and a vote on which caches were best in various categories.

This event is really more about the socializing than it is the caching.  Since everyone is really focusing on the caches which were released for the event there is almost always a crowd of people at whatever cache you choose to seek.  This gives you plenty of opportunity to catch up with old friends as well as make a bunch of new ones.  The event has become very popular since being introduced to our area in 2008.  Cachers often will come in from out of town to participate.  There are no limits to the people in this event — young, old, families, singles.  You have people who have just been introduced to the hobby as well as those who have been doing it for years and/or have thousands of cache finds under their belts. 

Some people choose to team up and cache in groups while others will head out on their own and just see who they run into.  This typically leads to a group of vehicles parked at random locations and a whole bunch of really confused non-cachers.

What Could Be In Those Trees That Is So Interesting?

This year’s event was unique in that many of the caches were placed outside the city limits, and mostly to the north and west.  This meant that we were able to accomplish 42 of the 57 new caches in about 12 hours without really rushing too much.  We stopped about an hour for a meal and then pretty much quit caching after the “Crash and Relax” which is a gathering of cachers at a local truck stop at midnight. 

The event officially ended with a wrap-up party at Nick’s Steakhouse which I had to miss.  Votes are tabulated, prizes awarded and the event concludes.  What is left are great memories and a city that has a whole bunch of new high-quality caches.

The more rural nature of the event combined with a snowfall just a couple of days before made for some interesting conditions, such as caches buried under massive snow drifts and very muddy road allowances.  If the smiles in the photos are any indication, everyone had a really great time.

My Flickr Photoset from the Event

 

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My Life In Baseball: Part I

A couple weeks ago some friends and I were sitting around over coffee and talking about how we need to make a trip to Boston to see a Major League Baseball game at Fenway Park.   This must have planted a thought in my head about going to see a game because a couple days ago I purchased a couple of tickets to go see the Mariners plays the Royals at Safeco Field in Seattle in July.

My history with baseball goes back a long way.  Sometime when I was a young child I remember going with my mother to see the Lethbridge Dodgers of the Pioneer League play a game.  It must have done something to me because baseball was the only organized sport I ever played as a child.

I use the term “played” loosely as I was never much of a player.  If the object of the game was to hit into double-plays, strike out with men in scoring position or lose fly balls in the sun I likely would be enshrined in Cooperstown today.   Heck, I had a bad enough time trying to fit into those form fitting uniforms that were in style at the time.  I’m sure if I were to look hard enough I could find an old team photo from my days as a Padre – we wore bright yellow uniforms with green lettering.  I’m sure the people who turned out to watch those games wondered why there was a taxi cab patrolling right field.  I always played right field because most of the batters were right-handed and didn’t have the skills to take the outside pitch to the opposite field so putting me there is where my manager could limit the damage I could do while still staying within the league rules about “everyone must play”.

Knowing that I would never make it as a player I was forced to look

There was a period of time in Junior High where I thought my ticket to the major leagues was going to be as an umpire.  I had great plans of attending umpire school and working my way up through the minors.  Yes, there is nothing like being a young teenager and striving for a career where people will yell at you, kick dirt on your shoes, and swear at your every little mistake all the while suffering along for little pay.  Actually, it sounds a lot like the job I have now – except for the swearing part!   You would think that I would have clued in that wearing super thick glasses would be a hindrance to someone wanting to work as an umpire, but I was bound and determined.

Before entering high school I started out umpiring Little League games.  I’m sure the league organizers had their doubts about me, but at the umpire orientation session I was the only one who actually understood the minutiae of the infield fly rule so they let me in.  I’m sure the fact that they didn’t have enough volunteers to fill the schedule didn’t hurt my chances either.

I remember the first game quite well.  One team was being managed by my principal and the other by my former math teacher – no pressure there!  I had assumed the league would pair me up with a veteran umpire who would show me the ropes.  No such luck!  Being too young to drive I rode my bikes to “the quads” south of town and arrived to find the other umpire was even younger than I was.  Since this was his second game of the season he was the more experienced so he opted to work home plate while I took my position in the field.

Things started out OK.  Every call I had to make was either a clear “safe” or “out”, “fair” or “foul”.  Then, about the third inning, the one manager (my principal) started yelling at us that the opposing pitcher was balking.  Now, in fairness, the infield fly rule was one thing, but to this day the details of the balk rule still escape me.  In fact, I suspect you could quiz most umpires about the rule and while they might be able to recite the wording of the rule verbatim, if you asked them to call it during a game they would tell you they’d rather sell their own mother into slavery.

I think this flustered us a little.  Every time there was a man on base he’d start yelling “Balk!” after every pitch.  Things really started to go downhill from there…

A batter tried to check his swing.  To me, standing down the foul line at first base it certainly looked like he had stopped his swing in time, but my partner behind the plate took a different view.  With all the confidence he could muster he bellowed out “Striiiiiiiike!”  The manager appealed to me.  Now, one of the rules I had learned from reading baseball books was that the umpires always need to stick together.  Show weakness and you’ll never live it down.  So, despite my best judgement I confirmed my partner’s call.  The manager let loose some comments from the dugout behind me about how spineless I was and things. 

Things settled down a little for a couple of innings.  Then my partner messed me up again.  This time he tried to walk a batter after Ball Three.  It’s not even like he messed up the count either – he simply blurted out “Ball three – take your base.”  The batter, not being one to give up a free pass started trotting down the baseline to first.  The manager comes out and questioned me about how that was possible.

Having learned that backing up my partner only got me trouble the first time on the checked swing call, I decided to do what was right.  I stopped the batter before he reached first and sent him back.  I made the right call.  Well, of course, here comes the other manager out of his dugout to berate me for overruling the senior umpire.  I was starting to think that as long as I could piss both sides off equally I would be OK.

I eventually survived that first game.  After the heat of the battle had passed both managers came out and offered me some advice in a constructive way.  (I think they knew if any umpires quit it would put the whole schedule at risk!)  I even stuck around a couple of seasons after that and can say I actually enjoyed myself for the most part.

Of course, there’s no fun in that so one day I’ll relay the story of the time I had an entire team from Medicine Hat waiting around my car to challenge me to a fight after a game. 

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Song Lyrics: Some of my Faves

Running on Empty by Jackson Browne (1977)

Even if this wasn’t already one of my favorite driving songs it would be perpetually on my play list simple for all the great lines it contains.  Seriously, how can you beat these?

Gotta do what you can just to keep your love alive
Trying not to confuse it with what you do to survive.

And:

I don’t know how to tell you all just how crazy this life feels
I look around for the friends that I used to turn to to pull me through
Looking into their eyes I see them running too

 

Finally, this classic verse which is how I actually try to live my life:

Everyone I know, everywhere I go
People need some reason to believe
I don’t know about anyone but me
If it takes all night, that’ll be all right
If I can get you to smile before I leave

Blue Rodeo probably makes my list more than any other group simply because both my wife and I listen to them a lot and go see them in concert any chance we get.  The fact that they are a Canadian band and have seemingly been around forever doesn’t hurt either.  Some classics that spring to mind:

 

Til I Am Myself Again (1990)

But the half-finished bottles of inspiration
Lie like ghosts in my room

This reminds me of my dorm room at university where we would wake up in the morning and there would be beer bottles spread around from a party the night before. 

The night before we were always the coolest people on campus but the next morning we were just tired losers like everyone else. 

 

 

 

English Bay (1993)

And I wonder if you think of me
As I dream of you
Do you hear the song
That I sing from this hotel room

This has an immediate impact on anyone who has ever been in a situation where you have a special someone stuck in your head but you’re not sure whether you ever cross their mind.  Add in the image of the loney hotel room devoid of any personality and you have a mental picture that is hard to shake.

 

 

Last To Know (1992)

Memory works in strange ways
Cuts you down makes you pay
One day you’ll be walking fine
The next day lightning hits you from behind

The contrast in this verse is what gets me.  Look behind you and your memories will cut you down and make you pay, but fail to pay attention and you get hit from behind.  It’s the balance we all need to strive to achieve — enjoying the past while remembering no one knows what our futures hold.

 

And, my last one to add to this list for tonight goes to one of the best heartbreak, drinking, country tunes ever written:

 

Killin’ Time by Clint Black (1989)

You were the first thing that I thought of

When I thought I drank you off my mind

Ask any guy who ever tried to drink to forget a woman and they’ll tell you how true this one is — adding alcohol doesn’t do anything to kill the thoughts you are trying to shed, all it does is intensify the pain. 

(Not that I am speaking from personal experience here, of course!)

 

 

OK, that’s it for now.  I’m sure I’ll do another post with more great lyrics another time.  And, naturally, I’ll also one day do a “worst lyrics of all-time” list too — the ones where you hear them and think “THAT was the best they could come up with for a line?”  Until then, cheers!

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