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Steve’s Cheers and Jeers

Sportswriter Steve Tietz will use this blog to try to duly reward the great, praise heartily the hard-working, uncover the unsung, and take to task the spoilsport, the foul-mouth and the crass in the local prep sports scene. He’ll try to remember that kids are just kids and that coaches aren’t in it for the money. He’ll try to gently remind parents that the kids are playing for fun, not for profit and that the officials, though occasionally human and therefore prone to error, are there to ensure fair play and not out to get anyone.

Athletes and coaches displayed class and perspective in 2008

By Steven Tietz
Wednesday, Jan 7 2009, 12:49 AM
Professor Randy Pausch died recently of the effects of a fast-moving pancreatic cancer.Before he passed, however, he showed us, as honored National Public Radio commentator Scott Simon said of the late author and historian David Halberstram in 2007: “A grand way to live.”In his now well-known and oft-quoted bestseller about life and how he wished he had more of it: “The Last Lecture”, Pausch has a chapter entitled “I never made it to the NFL” where he touches on familiar themes like teamwork, perseverance, sportsmanship, hard work and of fighting through adversity.He also refers to his old hard-nosed, by-the-book grade school football coach whose thoughts on the concept of self-esteem were summarized this way: “You give them (kids) something they can’t do, they work hard until they find they can do it, and you just keep repeating the process.”In my 27 years of working high school sports, I have run into many variations of Pausch’s old coach. Some were successful, some were not. Most of them usually got at least one important idea through to their charges.Most of the time their points were aimed at the “try-hard” kid who didn’t have all the talent in the world but who benefitted greatly all the same from a no-nonsense approach and a little attention. If the coach and the team were really lucky, the talented kids took some of those lessons to heart too.

And I was greatly heartened in 2008 to find many examples of athletes and coaches who followed these precepts or adapted them well to their given circumstances.

As a result, I'm happy to announce my first annual 2008 Right Perspective Awards for those who did the right thing for the right reasons in area sports. They are listed in no particular order.

KEVIN WILD, BROWN DEER

Being a throwback four-sport athlete (football, basketball, golf and baseball), and a talented team-first type of kid, Wild is an easy choice. What makes his selection even easier is that he led his spirited and senior-dominated basketball team to a share of the Woodland Conference basketball title in a wild and woolly finish that saw four squads share a bite of the championship.

Then he followed that by fighting off arm troubles to lead the underdog baseball team to its first state tournament berth in 26 years by turning himself into a virtual one-man siege gun. Coaches could not say enough about his commitment and sense of self-sacrifice.

"He always put whatever sport he was involved with at the time first and foremost," said former Falcon basketball coach and Athletic Director Mike Novak.

MEGAN PALMER, WHITEFISH BAY

Palmer rode a roller-coaster of emotion from the fall of 2007 to the fall of 2008. Included among those feelings were heartbreak as the Blue Duke cross country team fell just short of a first-ever state team title in the fall of 2007.That was followed by elation in the spring of 2008 as a fresh and rested Palmer won the 800-meter title at the state track meet. But her joy was short-lived, as this past fall, Palmer struggled in cross country as she had to often relinquish her team front-running role to others. No matter, she didn’t carp or complain, but accepted a vital scoring role further back in the pack as the Blue Dukes finally did claim that first state team title.In discussing things with her later there was no talk of the disappointment of the “I” only the joy of the “We”.

CALLIE BURROWS, MENOMONEE FALLS

Taking three runner-up finishes in the WIAA State Track Meet in the hurdles over a two-year span, twice to the same competitor, might make a person feel embittered or frustrated but not the three-time school record-holder Burrows.Especially considering that in 2008, both of her losses were to good friend Lindsay Schwartz of Watertown, whom she saw again and again in both the regional and sectional competition.“She (Schwartz) wanted to know how I felt,” Burrows said. “She pretty much knew what I was thinking and how I felt. ..Winning would have been pretty good, but I just know that I’m a very blessed girl. I really wanted a PR and that’s what I got.”

TORY BAUMAN, NICOLET

Not only did the senior golfer defend her state individual title in classy fashion this past October, she also did two other things to both secure her future and make sure she was living entirely in the present. She looked to her future by accepting a scholarship to the University of Denver and then she made sure she was enjoying her remaining time as a high school student by becoming the only senior on the youthful but blissfully talented girls basketball team. She’s just a role player, but hoops coach Corey Wolf said that Bauman is a tremendous role model to the freshmen and sophomore-dominated squad.

ALY CORAN AND JACKIE EGELHOFF, HOMESTEAD

Yes, the supremely-talented and nationally-ranked freshman Coran dominated the girls state tennis ranks this fall, winning the Highlanders first-ever state singles title and leading them to a first-ever team title, but it was how she did it that makes her worthy of this list.Because among her training partners was four-time state champion from Cedarburg Caitlin Burke. Sessions with Burke taught Coran technique, humility and grace and reinforced what her former Nicolet state doubles champion mother Dr. Judy (Becker) Coran said about tennis:“This sport will keep you humble.”For Egelhoff, the Highlanders long-time coach, it was a time to give thanks to her late father Rollie Mueller. Egelhoff and her sister Barb were groundbreaking players and coaches before there was Title IX and the reason was because their father had the forethought and good wisdom to provide them both with the racquets as well as an undying love for the game.

MARK VAN ALSTYNE AND SAM ISCHE, MENOMONEE FALLS

Both were depth guys “Can-do Charlies” for the boys track team in previous years, but in their senior campaigns of 2008, both Van Alstyne and Ische took leadership roles and led the Indians to the Greater Metro Conference championship.The pair, who have known each other since second grade, made themselves into top-notch sprinters, valuable at all distances up to 400 meters. Furthermore, they were the “glue” guys who never let a junior-heavy team get frustrated when things went wrong. Though both earned medals at state later in the season, the conference title, the team reward, was what was most important to them.“The biggest thing is not the records or the good performances, but the team success,” Van Alstyne said. “..It’s just great to be a part of it all.”

FRITZ RAUCH, TOM FUGATE, JERIDON CLARK, TODD REINEKING, JIM CHOSSEK AND MATT WOLF HOMESTEAD

As lead assistants on the state championship football team for Homestead, this sextet was responsible for a lot of the dirty work in preparing the Highlanders to win their second state title in three years.Rauch, the defensive coordinator and leader of the amazing unit that paved the way for the 2006 championship, created another talented backstop that held powerful defending champion Arrowhead to three touchdowns below its average in the 13-11 finals win.UW-Oshkosh coach Pat Cerroni calls Rauch “a genius, who should have his own head coaching job”.When told of Cerroni’s comments, the hard-charging and cerebral Rauch just chuckled and said “He’s one who should know.”Meanwhile, Wolf and Chossek had to step into a formidable breach. The entire offensive line had graduated and the previous coordinator took another coaching job in the area. No matter, Chossek, the wily old veteran and Wolf, the loud and demanding face of the unit, worked together to rebuild the line, giving an underclassmen-dominated set of athletes the know-how and confidence that helped the offense hold up its end and score more than 34 points a game.

THE FANS, COACHES AND PLAYERS OF THE GERMANTOWN/MENOMONEE FALLS ICE BEARS HOCKEY TEAM

It was a rollicking and fun close to the season last winter as the six-school co-op made an historic first-ever run to the WIAA sectional finals. It included many little grace notes, among them the fact that students at Germantown’s Turnabout dance the night of the sectional final against University School left the event early to get to Brookfield to catch part of the game.Then there was the fact that players from Germantown passed out tickets at school during the season so students would get interested in the sport.Then there was the five-day team bonding session in the summer that turned students from the various schools involved in the program into a tight, cohesive unit. And that came before the unspoken agreement they made to one another to sacrifice free time and jobs to truck all the way out to the Kettle Moraine Ice Arena in West Bend at all hours of the day or night to play and practice in freezing conditions.Given all that, the fact the Ice Bears lost their chance at state to USM by a 3-1 score was almost incidental.

“The pep band was there and the place was practically full,” coach Al Haga said of the sectional final. “It was a real college atmosphere.”

COACH SARA PETRIC AND THE GERMANTOWN GIRLS SWIM TEAM

Homeless for years as a result of the complete breakdown and ultimate destruction of the old Warhawk pool, this vagabond 18-person squad turned Homestead into a home-away-from home, car-pooling to their rivals' pool for practice and putting into perspective the fact that they were last on a long list of people who wanted to use the facility.

They had to ask opponents to accomodate them on such usual and matter-of-fact team events as senior night and parents night as they never have a "home" meet. Little matter, as they never complained and remained competitive in every meet they were in, earning many WIAA state qualifiers in the process. All that effort was put in to keep in place and alive a storied history that includes two WIAA state team championships and several individual and relay state titles 

Petric, a Homestead graduate and state champion in her own right, couldn't be prouder of the unit. State meet qualifer Marin Thompson said its simply something that has to be done and opponents have given their profound respect for the sacrifices that are made to keep such a dream alive.

"For them to continue the team like they are is a great thing," Homestead coach Mark Gwidt said, "and maybe the community will see what they're doing (and raise the funds to build a new pool)." 

STEVE O'BRIEN AND THE STAFF BEHIND THE JOHN CHEKOURAS CLASSIC BOYS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT, HOMESTEAD

This one's an easy choice. O’Brien was the long-time assistant and even closer friend to the late Homestead basketball coaching legend Chekouras and he gave an elegant tribute to his friend last fall when he served as presenter when Chekouras was inducted into the WBCA Hall of Fame. It’s also for the Homestead staff, who had the brains and heart to put the holiday-based tournament named in Chekouras' honor, in the old noisy, small gym (as opposed to the large, functional fieldhouse) that was home to most of the games Chekouras when he was head coach. Of the old gym, one tournament ticket-taker said: “It was a place John loved”.There are others of merit I’ve no doubt missed here, but I'll try to do better and be more inclusive in future years. Just remember, I commend all efforts on behalf of fair play, perspective and honesty in sports. With the pro and collegiate ranks filled with $50,000 seat licenses, $160 million contracts, and coaching carousels that have more to do with ego and prestige than with loyalty and winning, they are traits badly in need of buttressing.So do please continue to be role models and remember to be true to yourselves. Also, if you can, please value the important example Dr. Pausch set when he decided to spend his last months living, instead of worrying about dying. As he well knew, it indeed is all about how you play the game.  

 

North Shore hoops races to be harrowing this winter

By Steven Tietz
Monday, Dec 29 2008, 12:59 PM

Between the heart-stopping North Shore Conference win the Germantown boys basketball team had over Whitefish Bay on Dec. 16, and the excitement-filled decision over nonconference border rival Menomonee Falls on Dec. 20, there was supposed to have been another game.

But the blizzard of Dec. 19 got in the way of the Germantown (6-0) and Nicolet (3-3) tilt, and don’t think Warhawks coach Steve Showalter was not grateful for the day off and the extra time to prepare for the Paul Hepp-led Knights, who after a rough start have won three of their last four.

He explained it while he was lifting his tired head up from the training room table he was seated upon after the Warhawks’ difficult two-point win over Falls.

"I will never, ever look past a Paul Hepp-coached team," he said quietly.

And that’s just the way its going to be this winter in the North Shore both on the boys and the girls side. No one is immune to the pressure of holding onto the top spot.

Two-time boys champ Germantown (3-0, 6-0) is currently tied with Port Washington (3-0, 4-0) for the North Shore lead. The Warhawks, which have won their last three games by a total of five points, will host Josh Gasser and the Pirates on Tuesday, Jan. 6.

"It takes a lot of effort to stay on top," Showalter said. "As I’ve told the guys often enough in the locker, I’ve never liked being the guy on top, the guy with the target on his back. We’re learning what it takes to stay there and we’re pulling out tough games, but I’d also like to see a better game from them.

"And I will push them toward that until the last game of the season."

The veteran Warhawks coach has already gone on record saying three or four losses could win the league this season. Hepp and Whitefish Bay (7-1) coach Dave Shaw share Showalter’s sentiments.

"I see the entire season going this way," Hepp said. "There is such a fine line between winning and losing (in the North Shore) this year."

"You’re going to have to be well-prepared and ready to compete every night," Shaw said. "I’m not sure who’ll win or lose the league this season, but I’m pretty sure almost anybody can."

The Blue Dukes suffered their only loss to Germantown in a nail-biter Dec. 16.

Meanwhile, on the girls side, there are all kinds of surprises awaiting people, none more so than early season leader Nicolet (3-0, 4-4), the only team in the league with an unbeaten record.

The young Knights (five sophomores, three freshmen on the roster) had a brutal early nonconference schedule losing to state champion Milwaukee Vincent, state semifinalist Brookfield Central and area powers Muskego and DSHA, but behind solid guard play and imposing 6-foot-4-inch post Alex Cohen, they have fought their way to the top of the North Shore.

"All the games have been big for us," Knights coach Corey Wolf said, "We competed in all of them and they showed us what we needed to work on. It couldn’t get any tougher for us. The girls could have caved or they could have chosen to learn. I’m pleased to say that they’ve chosen to work hard and get better."

The Knights have another pivotal game at defending champion Grafton (6-1) on Jan. 6.

Homestead coach Bill Scasny, whose team made a miraculous rally to beat Grafton last month, got a taste of Nicolet tenacity when the Knights routed the Highlanders (4-1) for their only loss of the year Dec. 12.

"Nicolet is playing the best ball right now of all of us," he said, "but it (the league) is going to be well-balanced."

"I knew it’d be interesting right off the bat."


 

Shorewood/Messmer's Davies knows what finalists Keel and Taraska are going through

By Steven Tietz
Wednesday, Nov 19 2008, 12:02 AM

Veteran football coach Ron Davies belongs to an elite fraternity that Homestead's Dave Keel and Arrowhead's Tom Taraska will gain entry to Friday at 4 p.m. in Camp Randall when the pair send their teams out to do battle for the WIAA State Division I championship for the third consecutive year.

Davies knows where the pair are going and what they're going through. He's been working hard these past seven years trying to bring the troubled Shorewood/Messmer program back to respectability, a task that reached a pinnacle this season at 6-3, but long before that, he led the juggernaut that was Kenosha Tremper to three state Division I finals from 1990-1992. His squads lost to Superior in 1990, defeated Appleton West in 1991 and lost to West in a rematch in 1992. Paul Engen's West team would gain entrance to the elite group of three-time finalists the following fall, where ironically enough, it lost to Taraska and Arrowhead in what would be the first of four titles for the vaunted Warhawk program.

Though he will be sitting for his grandchildren on Friday, Davies, who won three state titles all told at Tremper in 18 seasons, will be glued to the television observing the rubber match between Homestead and Arrowhead. He's gotten to know both coaches and has an infinite amount of respect for what they've accomplished.

"Tom (Taraska) and I were assistants at the Shrine Game in 1993 and already then I could see all the things that were going to make him successful," Davies said. 'He's very driven and Dave (Keel) I've known for most of his time at Homestead. He and his staff have been very helpful to us. In fact, last year I brought a group of our kids over to watch them during a (state) playoff practice. We were just awed at how orderly and well-run the practice was. He (Keel) was nice enough to come over and talk to us too. It really gave us a sense of how a top-shelf program was run."

"And like Tom, he goes out of his way to praise his assistants. To me that's always been the sign of a real good coach. The guys know they're valued and that motivates them to work even harder. It also lets them know that the (head) coach doesn't have a big ego and is willing to delegate authority."

In another touch of irony, the first actual meeting between Davies and Taraska was in 1991 when Davies' Trojans beat the Warhawks in a state playoff game.

"And he came up to us afterwards and talked about wanting to bring his program up to our level," Davies said.

Taraska has, as Arrowhead will be making a record ninth appearance in the finals and will be seeking its fifth state championship. Homestead is making its fourth trip to the finals and is seeking its third title.

Davies understands the motivations that are running through both teams' practices this week.

"I remember after we lost to Superior (in 1990) we so wanted to get back at them (in 1991)," he said, "but when Superior lost to West in the semifinals, we had to move on and accept that. There was no letdown. And the year after we beat West, one of our assistants Tom Follis (who went on to have a successful career at Tremper after Davies stepped down) was at an event where it just so happened there were some West players. And they made it very clear to him that they wanted to beat us this time around."

Which they did.

That idea worked last year for Arrowhead after the Highlanders thumped the Warhawks in 2006. Now that motivation serves Homestead this time around.

Davies, who is stepping down at Shorewood/Messmer to spend more time with his family, was at Homestead's semifinal win over Middleton and was impressed by the effort. He has not seen Arrowhead yet this season, but has no doubt that this championship contest will be much closer than the two one-sided affairs that have preceded it.

"What impresses me about both," he said, "is that though they don't always have the greatest student-athletes, their coaching often makes up for that. They instill in the kids the belief that they can overcome any obstacle."

"That's what we have to do with our kids. Though this year was a breakthrough, we're still a long ways from being competitive in a conference (the Greyhounds played an independent schedule after stepping out of the Woodland Conference for competitive reasons), but I believe we're on good footing. The Shorewood administration has been very supportive and I hope what we've done here will help make the (coaching) job more attractive."

Attractive to the kind of people that will be leading Homestead and Arrowhead into battle on Friday.

"I've gotten to know both of them (Taraska and Keel) and other members of their staff have helped us too over the years," Davies said. "Talk about class people."


 

With HHS-Cedarburg showdown looming, reminders of other epic battles still linger

By Steven Tietz
Tuesday, Oct 21 2008, 10:32 PM

Homestead football coach Dave Keel said recently that he was "absolutely pleased to be playing another game for a conference title" in regards to his team's Wednesday 7 p.m. showdown that will pit his home-bound 8-0 Highlanders against the 7-1 Cedarburg Bulldogs with a share of the North Shore title on the line.

He knows what he's talking about as his eight-time league champion Highlanders, Cedarburg and Germantown have been in this situation before several times over the last decade.

The best time was arguably six years ago, but 2002 might as well have been yesterday as the North Shore gridiron blazed white-hot in terms of intensity and skill as everyone in the league it seemed had a chance at grabbing the crown.

At one point, five teams were tied for the league lead and by the end of the campaign, there was a three-way tie for the title with extremely talented Homestead, Cedraburg and Germantown squads all deservedly locked in union. Both Homestead and Germantown would make deep runs into the WIAA state playoffs, both ending just a game away from the finals.

How the the trio got there involved two of the greatest back-to-back games in modern league history with two of the more astonishing finishes anyone ever saw. Cedarburg defeated Homestead, 21-17, on the Highlanders home turf as Bulldog quarterback Joe Patek led his team an a painstaking 16-play, fourth-quarter drive that saw the lanky 6-6 signal-caller complete critical fourth and six and fourth and seven passes for first downs. He finally hit tight end Mike Drifka with just seconds to go on a six-yard TD pass to secure the win.

"We just didn't finish this one today,"  Keel said at the time.

Ironically, both Patek (seven of 11 passing for 120 yards and two TDs) and Homestead fullback Andy Moriarty (28 carries for 97 yards and a TD) would later become teammates and go on to have record-setting careers at UW-Oshkosh.

Then a week later, Germantown visited Cedarburg with the Bulldogs staring down an opportunity to clinch the league crown outright. Patek (12 of 18 for 188 yards) led Cedarburg to a 15-6 lead early in the fourth quarter, but Warhawk four-sport star and quarterback David Pietrowiak willed Germantown back, scoring on a dazzling 63-yard option play to make it 15-12.

Then a couple of series later, Pietrowiak hit back Willie Albiero on a deep out pattern. Albiero, a star and All-Suburban selection for the 2003 state champion Warhawks, broke several tackles and tumbled into the end zone to complete a 39-yard TD play.

But with the Cedarburg crowd bellowing in the background and with just seconds remaining, Patek almost led the Bulldogs back. Enter, however, Germantown defensive back Jeff Treslley, who put the words "brilliant mistake" into the mouth of his coach Phil Datka as he let Cedarburg halfback Derek Moore get behind him on a post pattern down the middle of the field. Patek threw a pretty, deep-arcing ball which hit Moore perfectly in the hands.

The Bulldog fans were delerious as Moore went flying down the field for what looked like the game and conference-winning TD, but Treslley, a state place-winning hurdler in track and later quarterback of the 2003 Germantown champions, caught up to Moore at about the three-yard line and in one swift move punched the ball out of his hands and sent it sailing out the back of the Warhawk end zone for a touchback.

It took everyone, even the officials, a few seconds to realize what had happened and how Treslley had saved the game and Germantown's share of the league title.

"I just said 'oh no, I have to do something,'" Treslley said.

Datka, always the humble humorist, was grateful to have great athletes save the team this day.

"I was just very impressed at the way we came back," he said. "I did a horrible job of play calling in the first half. I was confused and when I'm confused, everyone's confused."

But there should be no confusion with Wednesday night's latest showdown. The two offenses are potent with the Bulldogs, behind another talented quarterback in Chip Rank, average 37 points per game out of their always dangerous run-oriented double-wing offense. Logan Lauters, in just his sophomore year, has developed into of the area's most effective running backs.

The Bulldogs have struggled on defense as of late, however, as illness diminished their linebacking corps for a series of games. Those players are expected to be back at full strength Wednesday night to fortify a unit that gives up 15 points a contest.

Homestead's offense is a story of tenacity and patience, as the Highlanders had to rebuild their entire offensive line and find new go-to players. But behind veteran quarterback Casey Barnes, and a trio of fleet and strong backs in Aric Daniels, Avery Walker and Bryan Bronaugh they find themselves outdoing the Bulldogs offensively, averaging close to 39 points a contest.

The difference, it seems may come with the high-level Homestead defense, which at times has drawn comparisons to the stout unit that led the Highlanders to a state title in 2006. All-state lineman and Wisconsin-recruit Shelby Harris lines up wherever defensive coordinator Fritz Rauch needs him and the double-and-triple teams he draws opens lanes for a seemingly endless wave of fleet defenders to make plays and wreak havoc. The Highlanders give up less than eight points a game.

Still, the history of this rivalry is a good one, and don't go to the game expecting a blowout. Too much is at stake and look for the Bulldogs to try and end the Highlanders six-year league winning streak and grab a share of the crown with an emotional and intense effort.

For you see, that 2002 epic was the last time Homestead lost a North Shore tilt.

Get there early.


 

O'Brien to bear fond testimony to gone but not forgotten Chekouras

By Steven Tietz
Monday, Oct 13 2008, 04:47 PM

Even though he knows it’s completely illogical to do so, Homestead teacher Steve O’Brien occasionally thinks that he’ll walk around the corner at school one day and run into his late and still badly missed coaching partner and friend John Chekouras.

It’s like an itch he can’t scratch. And now that thought is running through his head a lot these days, as O’Brien, who was Chekouras’ assistant for many of his friend’s 18 years as head boys basketball coach at Homestead, will be responsible for the acceptance remarks when Chekouras is inducted into the Wisconsin Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) Hall of Fame Saturdat, Oct. 18 in Madison.

"This is going to tax my emotional control a lot," O’Brien said. "I’m going to try and focus on the celebratory. Talk about the lives of the young men he’s touched, of all the former players I still talk to. And it’s because of John that we still talk and we still stay in touch."

Chekouras will be part of a 23-person class to be inducted at Madison’s Marriott West Hotel. Included in the group will be coaching contemporaries George Haas of Wauwatosa East, Jim Jones of Milwaukee Hamilton and Dale Walz of Wisconsin Lutheran.

And though his 229 wins, four conference titles, seven WIAA regional titles, nine NCAA Division I players, state tournament berth in 1994 and fast-paced entertaining style of ball should have been enough on the surface to get him into the hall, there was much more behind this selection than just wins and losses.

Chekouras, who passed away very unexpectedly in June 2006, was also well-known for being a love-loving guy who reached out to people. A physical education teacher, he loved working with the special education students he often taught first-thing in the morning. As a result, he was a long-time volunteer for the Special Olympics.

He also made sure his players coached youth basketball, volunteered at soup kitchens and otherwise became role models in the community. Chekouras coached WBCA all-star games, worked on the event’s selection committee and was a meticulous statistician, keeping detailed records for not only his own team but also for the North Shore Conference.

Current Homestead coach and former Chekouras player Ray Curry said Hall of Fame Committee Chairman and long-time record-holding Cuba City coach Jerry Petitgoue helped fast-track Chekouras’ selection for a number of reasons.

"I’m honored to be part of this," Curry said. "I expected it to happen some time but just not so soon. John did nothing for himself. Everything he did was for someone else. So for him to receive this honor from his colleagues, his peers, well, he would just hold this honor in the highest regard."

"I know he would love to be there."

O’Brien knows that well as he and Chekouras and other coaches at Homestead made it habit to go to weddings, baptisms, and other events celebrating the lives of their players. Chekouras was very popular as a groomsman. There was a famous picture of O’Brien and Chekouras attending one of those weddings mounted on a board at the touching and well-attended wake two years ago.

Their arms are slapped across each other’s shoulders and they’re grinning like happy fools, thinking that the world was their oyster simply because of their deep and abiding friendship.

"Like I said, the speech is going to try and be celebratory," O’Brien said. "Celebratory and sorrowful. The sorrow is mostly for us, because selfishly we still want John around because of the terrific things he did as a coach and a teacher."

"Real kudos to the association for doing this, to recognize someone for more than just their wins and losses."

Based on the press release that accompanied Chekouras’ announcement, the WBCA apparently thought this decision was an easy one.

"Yet it is not his coaching for which Chekouras will be remembered," said the release. "Like so many other high school coaches, his greatest thrills were watching the boys he coached become men and although he would never admit it, he was influential in this process for many that he coached. ..His career may have ended too soon, but the lessons he taught and the legacy he left are eternal."

O’Brien is heartened by the fact that about 30 people have already said they’d attend in Chekouras’ honor.

Long-time Athletic Director and coach Phil Puerling read the acceptance for Chekouras when he was inducted into Homestead’s first Athletic Hall of Fame class in 2007 and Curry thinks its appropriate that O’Brien gets those honors this time around.

"He was the first and only choice," Curry said. "The logical one."

Which is just going to ratchet up the pressure as O’Brien looks out onto the crowd, which will likely include a lot of Chekouras family and friends, and remembers.

Remembers everything.

"I think about John everyday," he said. "I wear his ‘Team Together’ (Chekouras’ favorite huddle breaking statement) bracelet, my family too. ..We’re only now realizing what kind of man he was."

 

 


 

Amazing all-around athlete Bahlman heads up HHS Hall inductees

By Steven Tietz
Friday, Oct 3 2008, 04:22 PM

There were good, comforting and familiar stories all across the board when Homestead High School inducted its second class into its Athletic Hall of Fame, Sept. 28.

Athletic director, coach and all-around servant to the school Phil Puerling; legendary baseball coach and ground zero for a large family of successful Homestead athletes Don Rennicke; basketball scoring machine Larry Hisle Jr.,and all-around stars Dallas Kroll and Dennis Quinlan.

But the most interesting person to be inducted was the man who wasn't there, the late Bruce Bahlman, who may have been as gifted an all-around athlete as has ever graced the school.

"All I know about his is what I learned the last few months," Homestead boys track coach Dan Benson said. "Everyone I talked to said 'Oh my God what a tremendous natural athlete.' He could pick up anything and do it well. I talked to Andy Friesch and Jim Klug (former Homestead stalwarts in their own right) and they went on and on about what he did in the one year he went out for track (set a Braveland Conference record in the high jump at 6-6), and then I talked to the Rennickes about his exploits in baseball (he was a shortstop and pitcher, who once struck out 17 in a game for the 1974 state champions)."

"Just amazing."

Athletic Director Charlie Gross said Bahlman was an easy choice, but finding recent information about him was difficult at best. There are few or no relatives remaining in the Mequon/Thiensville area, and Gross had to track down a brother using an old obituary.

A relative was on hand to collect the plaque for Bahlman, who also led the 1974 basketball team to an 11-8 record while leading the team in scoring and rebounding and who also played football.

Benson grew more and more astonished each time he discussed Bahlman with coaches, competitors and classmates.

"You look around at the other schools who are doing this (Halls of Fame) and you try to find people who pop out at you," Benson said. "You find your one-sport wonders and then you look around some more and find people like him."

That was also the case for Quinlan and Kroll. Kroll, famous for his horn-rimmed glasses and red and white striped knee socks when he led the boys basketball team to a share of the Braveland Conference Northern Division title in 1963 (he's still the school's fifth all-time leading scorer with 1,085 points and still holds school records for games played and career free throws made), was also an all-around star in his own right.

He earned 11 letters in four sports including football, track and baseball. He looked as natty and prim as ever when he was introduced with the others on the track at halftime of the Highlander football team's victory over Port Washington on Sept. 27.

Quinlan cut an even more amazing figure. One of two state champion wrestlers in school history (2007 inductee Vince Farina is the other), he came out to the track in his 1970 letter jacket, looking like he could still get down on the mat and hit someone with a headlock.

He went 30-0 in 1970 and was 96-13 overall in his career, but that was part of his story. He was also a member of the 1967 state cross country championship team and he still holds the school record in the 800 meters in track (1:56.5). He was team captain for cross country, wrestling and track.

And the others in the class were just happy to smile and wave to the overflow homecoming night crowd and to be acknowledged and remembered. Hisle Jr., who averaged 28 points a game his senior year in earning the AP's state player of the year honor in 1989 (he is the school's all-time leading scorer) tousled his small son's hair and laughed when his name was called.

While Rennicke and Puerling could also stand tall. Rennicke has 321 career baseball wins to his credit as well as state titles in 1974 and 1978, not to mention that little storied field with his name on it on the border of Mequon and Thiensville.

While Puerling, whose honor came under the well-earned title of distinquished service, well, describing all the things he did in 31 years and still continues to do in retirement would take more space than reasonably allowed. Suffice it to say that his 14-year career as athletic director was a productive one and included vast renovations to the athletic plant, new standards for athletes to aspire to (and not just athletically) and just a few moments of success.

Such as 14 state team titles and 94 conference championships for the school.

It's like Benson said about Bahlman, you look for people who pop out at you. 


 

Deford talks of America's sports obsession with candor and elegance

By Steven Tietz
Friday, Sep 19 2008, 12:42 AM

Award-winning sportswriter Frank Deford keeps only one work-related picture on his desk.

And it's not him at a Super Bowl, or a Final Four or a World Series. Heck, it's not even with his dear departed (and still badly missed friend) Al McGuire sitting at some fine Milwaukee-area greasy spoon enjoying a lunch.

No, it's of him dancing in a bar during the 1999 soccer World Cup.

Deford takes up the story thusly while making his incisive and occasionally sentimental speech at Marquette University the afternoon of Sept. 17. He had gone to Cameroon, home of the fabled "Indomitable Lions", during the World Cup to see if he could juxtapose the reality of the poverty and despair the people of the country face against the sheer joy they express in watching their team play in such a prestigious event

"And they score the first goal of the game," Deford said, "and this short, little fat lady who was standing next me just grabs me and starts dancing with me. My photographer was with me at the time and was able to catch the image. ..It was such a picture of unbridled joy. .. and I was so sad when they later lost knowing that they may never have a chance like that again, while we here in the states can always look forward to next year for our team."

"It was at that moment that I fully understood the power that sport has."

And with that Deford deftly linked Cameroon's obsession with one sport and one team with America's multiple allegiances and multiple obsessions and how it affects education and this country's future. He was speaking as part of the Axthelm series of lectures that Marquette sponsors annually. 

He effectively mixed drama with humorous asides such as when he pointed out that such is America's emotional entanglement with sports that: "It is reported that 81 percent of golfers would rather shoot par than spend a night with the most beautiful woman in the world. ..what a sad commentary."

Among other issues that he addressed were:

*An open concern about the boys of America, as more and more they are pushed into sports earlier and earlier ("By adults who should know better"), much to the detriment of their schooling.

He reported that at some point in the near future that nearly 67 percent of all college students will be women, a trend he viewed with horror.

*He also lamented and linked the declining state of serious journalism with the rapid downfall of newspapers. He talked about who will be out there to do the "gumshoe" investigative reporting that is needed to keep the powers that be that run our world honest.

"Sure, blogging is great, it's the return of the diary," he said, "but who's going to do the hard stuff (journalism) that gives the bloggers something to write about? I couldn't do what I do without them (investigative reporters). What's going to happen when they're gone?"

 *And the hypocrisy of college athletics.

"It (the tremendous emphasis colleges put on their sports teams) has grave and negative effects," he said. "Coaches and alumni lobby so hard on the behalf of their recruits. You don't see them do that for music majors."

And as added emphasis to that point he noted the Alabama football coach Nick Saban makes more in a year than all the scholarship money the state gives out in a year.

"Sports has two great myths," Deford said "The first is that of 'next year', there's always 'next year' and the second is that university presidents will finally clean up the mess that is college athletics... We're (the fans) all unindicted co-conspirators."

*And he also noted that the emphasis America gives to sports reaches all levels, including the White House, where on one occasion in the 1990s, he and his wife were at a reception where they were to meet President and Mrs.Clinton, but in a curious turn of events, it was First Lady Hillary Clinton who said "I'd know that voice anywhere."

But as Deford noted to great laughter: "The President didn't know me for jack".

His speech was not all doom and gloom. He ingratiated himself easily with the near-capacity crowd at Weasler Auditorium. Erudite and natty as expected in a black suit with a lavender tie, Deford acted every bit the Princeton man that he is but wasn't afraid to let out the slovenly sportswriter in him on occasion.

"I'm always intimidated to be in the bosom of academia," said the man who has been honored by close to a 100 universities for his award-winning commentaries, books and detailed reporting, "As one legendary coach who has been exiled to the wilds of West Texas said: "The best time in any sportwriter's life is the three years he spends in second grade.'"

He was of course referring to the well-known "friend" of media, national-championship winning basketball coach and noted chair-thrower Bobby Knight.

Deford also recalled loving details of his favorite interview McGuire, noting that Al always got interested in a story "like a car slowly coming to rest" and that no coach ever had a better exit (the national title in 1977) than he did.

And he linked this obsession to the rise and fall of sportswriting in this country. How it's been looked down upon by "serious" journalists as nothing but "play", but noting that that scorn was filled with envy because sportswriters can do away with some basic journalistic morays and develop their own strong narrative voice.

He spoke of the stereotypes that fill our minds when it comes to sportswriters and points out that some of them are dreadfully true.

"We are horrible dressers," he said. "You see us en masse and you are looking at the 'anti GQ'".

But sportswriters do serve a purpose, he said, as he sees the members of his profession helping make sense of the vast continuum that is the field itself.

"It's fun," he said. "People want to read it. It has competition, a denouement and a climax. Someone wins, someone loses. It's done by the young and the strong and because they are young they often say things that are the dreams of every journalist. ..It (sportswiritng) has even begun to affect political and entertainment writing."

And because sports is so universal, everyone in this country knows who you're talking about when you refer to Yogi (Berra: who famously responded to a friend he was driving with one time who said they were lost "Oh that's too bad, we were really making good time too.").

Or Ali (As in Muhummad, the world's most famous athlete) who Deford was with as part of a photo shoot of the champ a few years ago at the Vietnam Memorial in Washington D.C. Acknowledging that Ali was such a lightning rod during the Vietnam War, Deford was unsure of the response Ali would get from all those visiting the site with its long, striking black wall covered with the names of the fallen.

"But women ran to him and embraced him," Deford said. "They asked me to take their picture with him. I knew at that point that the war was finally over."

Moments like that Deford noted make sports "A unifying agent." Something that people can cling to when all else is going wrong.

 "For all its abuses," he said. "It is the ring that holds us together."


 

Area passers start prep grid season with high-flying fun

By Steven Tietz
Friday, Sep 5 2008, 12:42 AM

Give Wisconsin prep football coaches credit for something.

They may be slow to change sometimes, but when they see something work they copy it faster than Kinko's on an express delivery.

And if what we witnessed on opening weekend Aug. 28-29 was any sign of a trend, prepare for more passes, more strange formations, more wide receivers and more high-scoring games this fall than in the last five seasons combined, because the spread formation and all its wildly combustible variants have come to southeastern Wisconsin.

It was on the cover of Sports Illustrated a few weeks ago in its college preview issue.

"If it's good enough for Sports Illustrated, it's good enough for us," quipped 40-year veteran Germantown coach Phil Datka whose team is trying it out for the first time this fall. Datka, who started out in the run-based wishbone all those years ago, has adapted more than a few times in his illustrous career and it appears more than a few of his coaching comrades in southeastern Wisconsin have joined him in taking on some form of the high-speed confusion and entertainment that is the spread.

We got the first warning signs of this on Aug. 28, when Greendale and Milwaukee Lutheran, no strangers to the concept of the forward pass, filled the skies with 53 attempts. The Panthers' Chris Ridgway was almost crazy efficient as he hit 16 of 19 passes for three TDs and 214 yards as the Panthers pulled away for a 57-21 win.

But Community Newspapers-area aerialists were just getting started. In a high-powered non-conference match-up the next night that wasn't decided until almost the last play, New Berlin Eisenhower senior Niko Koshak completed only 13 of 36 passes, but they went for 258 yards and four TDs in a 38-35 defeat at the hands of the more ground-based D.C. Everest.

Then there was the latest quarterback du jour at Franklin, a team that has been pass-happy for years, and which showed the state an offense that is not "three-yards and a cloud of dust" can succeed when it beat Brookfield Central two years ago for a state division 2 title in what is now commonly referred to as the best championship game in the 32 years Wisconsin has been sponsoring football playoffs.

Saber triggerman Lance Baretz debuted with 349 yards and four TDs in Franklin's 58-26 rout of Burlington.

And there were others. Cudahy's James Hellmich completed 15 of 20 for 264 yards and a TD, while St. Francis' Cory Knapp was only eight of 11, but went for 185 yards and three scores and Whitefish Bay's Jimmy Sherburne completed 24 of 35 for 300 yards and two TDs. West Allis Central's Ryan Barwick also lit up Watertown for 267 yards and four TDs in a 40-6 rout for the Bulldogs.

Even traditionally ground-based powers as returning state runner-up Homestead have adopted some bits and pieces of the attack, as veteran quarterback Casey Barnes hit 10 attempts in 14 tries for 212 yards and two scores, including a 99-yarder to Mike Collins on the Highlanders first series of the season.

Then there was the tumult you heard out in Kettle Moraine as Cedarburg, which has made a very high living this past decade torturing the opposition with the "now you see it, now you don't" run-based double-wing attack went all pass-crazy. Quarterback Chip Rank threw three count-'em three TD passes as reciever Joey Fazio caught two of the scores and seven passes all told for 132 yards in a 45-38 free-for-all Bulldog victory.

Times were in the recent past, where the Bulldogs wouldn't throw for 132 yards in a season.

In short, if the ground is shifting in Cedarburg, then chances are there are going to be a lot more skyscrapers in football around here this season than earthmovers.

Prepare for some fun.

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Jeskewitz pulls out the old playbook to provide moms with gridiron guidance

By Steven Tietz
Tuesday, Sep 2 2008, 07:37 PM

Many, many years ago, early into my first season working with state Hall of Fame football coach Jim Jeskewitz and his fine Menomonee Falls gridders, I wandered over to the high school cafeteria for a little event that he and assistant coach, business partner and old friend Bob Hessler were putting on.

They quaintly (and not without a substantial boulder of truth behind it) called it the "Mother's Football Clinic" and they told me they'd been doing it for years.

In short, it would help the parents of their players understand the basics of the fine manly art of knocking the other guy on his butt. From formations to positions, to why helmets are the way they are, to the nuances of the jockstrap (that alone could take hours) and right up to the arcane jargon and outright nonsense that sometimes goes into the quarterback's signals, Jeskewitz and Hessler went through it all.

Mothers, grandmothers, sisters, aunts and even some fathers and uncles who wanted to fine-tune their gridiron knowledge attended the affairs. Jeskewitz and Hessler would patiently explain things and no question was too basic or too silly to not be greeted with a polite and thoughtful answer.

In short, the programs were big hits.

Now more than 10 years into his retirement, village trustee, county supervisor and now "Grandpa" Jeskewitz has hauled out the old playbook and dusted off his charm to come up with a new set of "Mother's Football Clinics". Version 2.0 "hut-hut" of it will be held Monday, Sept. 8 at 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria and all are welcome.

"We're going to try and keep it very basic," Jeskewitz said. "We did it for about 15 years until I stopped coaching and I've had a number of requests to bring it back. Mothers heard I did it and now a new generation of Moms want some help."

Jeskewitz will get help from former player and now current Falls assistant coach Erich Rutsch. Part of the incentive for Jeskewitz to do this again is that he's now helping out coaching with the fifth grade Junior Indians for whom his grandson is playing.

He's looking forward to the session in a big way.

"They're wiping off all the cobwebs," he said with a laugh, "and bringing back the old guy!"


 

A letter to Usain Bolt

By Steven Tietz
Friday, Aug 29 2008, 01:22 AM

This last Olympic blog of mine was going to focus largely on the inadequacies of the US track team (What, is the 400 meter length the only thing anyone can do correctly over here?) in comparison to the brilliance of the swim and even the fencing and target shooting squads (Davy Crockett would be jealous of the latter!), but the veteran, jaundice-eyed reporter in me called out to do something more important, more urgent than that.

I wanted to send an open letter to the world's fastest human: Usain Bolt of Jamaica.

So here goes:

Dear Mr. Bolt,

Please be clean, please be real.

And please don't view that opening line as a criticism, as a smack-faced, cynical, contemptuous slap in the face of your brilliance.

Just hear me out.

To say I was astonished, amazed, astounded and simply overwhelmed by your feats in the 100 and 200 and then again as part of an almost letter-perfect record-smashing 400 relay team was to say something like Van Gogh's "Sunflowers" is a nice painting. It just doesn't do any justice to you or your unparalleled talent. As a track junkie and a sprint relay disciple (Too many years being spoiled by Germantown, Nicolet, Homestead, Brookfield Central, Franklin and Menomonee Falls units at the WIAA state track meet made me thus) I was in seventh-heaven at your sheer, unbridled ability, which included casting aside rock-solid records like they were so many candy wrappers.

I, like many, didn't like your showboating at the end of the 100, but that was all right, you were just showing off to the world, but when you hammered your way through the finish line in the 200, taking down what my friend Homestead boys track coach Dan Benson said "was the one record he was certain would still be around when he died" (He was at the Atlanta Olympics when Michael Johnson set that coveted mark in 1996), all I could do was stand and clap quietly in front of my television in amazement.

Truly, you made yourself one for the ages.

Then you took several steps beyond even the historic, into the "once-in-a-lifetime" category. You deigned to run the third leg on Jamaica's 400 relay, not taking the coveted anchor spot, which was your right and the world's expectation. Instead, you gave it over to former world record holder in the 100 and your elder, Asafa Powell, whose history in big meets was not special, not very big at all.

You gave the stick to Powell with a huge lead and Powell exorcised a series of perplexing demons by carrying you and your teammates home, taking with him a strong 16-year old world record by an impressive .3 of a second. You chased Powell down the straightaway, your youthful exuberence combining with great national pride as your bounding, joyful steps fully confirmed what you had done.

Three races, three world records, three pieces of history that anyone who witnessed them could hardly ever forget.

Then in a final piece of simply perfect serendipity, you showed your heart to be even larger, by donating $50,000 to the victims of this spring's devastating Chinese eathquakes, which killed many 10s of thousands of people. You told everyone that you had had such a good time in China that you wanted to give back a little.

Amazing and utterly sublime!

So, Mr. Bolt with all this good will and grand endeavor firmly in hand and with many pocketfuls of money surely coming your way, I ask you again, please be clean. No steroids, no EPO, no human growth hormones. Remain unspoiled and break as many records as you can for as long as you can. Do many more good deeds and spread the good word about track, reminding people of its elegance, its simplicity and its sheer transformative powers when done at a fever pitch in the cauldron of marvelous competition.

Because the sport needs it.

Track, particularly in the US, has done everything it can to shoot itself in the foot in recent years. I remembered ruefully my astonishment at the grace and determination that a very young Marion Jones demonstrated in the 1992 US Trials in New Orleans. I thought she was for real: Smart, pretty and talented, only she was exposed this past spring as a fraud. She was found to be craven, small-minded and greedy as hell as her Olympic medals were stripped from her for rampant drug use. With disdain from the track world, hissing disgust from former teammates (who also lost medals as a result) and bankruptcy and jail staring her squarely in the face, many of us who once cheered her were forced to squirm through our own "Say it ain't so, Marion" moments.

So please Usain, I know it's a lot to ask, especially as you get older and the inevitable injuries come. Pressure from faster and younger people will force you to make hard decisions, but stay strong, be righteous. Not for me, not for the sport itself, but for the legions of fans you created in this fortnight of uncontained excellence. Do it for all the little kids who will have Usain "Lightning" Bolt posters on their walls in the coming next few years.

For them, be good, for them, be strong because they will follow your example.

For your current feats make you an icon of your age at the present moment, but you could be one for the history books if you are truly as grand, as true, as real as you appear to be.

Sincerely and with many thanks for a grand performance,

Steven L. Tietz

Track fan and student of history


 

NBC's coverage of the Olympics was astonishing, but not perfect

By Steven Tietz
Thursday, Aug 28 2008, 01:20 AM

Give NBC credit for its comprehensive coverage of the Beijing Olympics.

It used an array of satellite networks (Anyone for soccer on Telemundo? Cycling on MSNBC?), an army of technicians and almost everyone who's ever held a microphone in their hand and stood in front of a camera to cover the events as well as they could.

And they pulled it off largely without a hitch. Yes, there were limitations both subtle and overt placed on them by by the Chinese government and the IOC but the peacock network still gave us great stories, great material, and by gosh, if you wanted to see the fencers in their biological lab/spacesuit get-ups, well you were able to find them (love the red and green beeping lights on the helmets indicating a hit!).

We also got to know everything about Michael Phelps, his eating habits, his mom and his dog. Yes, he is the All-American superstar who lived up to all his hype and deserved every last sentence, paragraph or in the case of the wonderfully prepared and exuberent swimming colorman Rowdy Gaines, every marvelously hysterical exclamation. I tell you, because of Rowdy's enthusiasm and energy, no one will ever forget what it was like to watch the thrilling 400 freestyle relay or 100 butterfly races that were the most dramatic parts of Phelps' record gold medal sweep.

In fact, the swimming coverage was excellent from beginning to end, letting us in on the nuances and difficulties of being a swimmer from war-torn Zimbabwe, or the complicated love lives of swimmers from France and Italy, all without being smarmy or overly intrusive. We saw the wonderful Chinese reactions as they won their first gold medals in the sport, we saw every astounding nook and cranny of the amazing Water Cube itself. Excellent work indeed!

Not so the case in the hopelessly overexposed women's gymnastics programming. Yes, I know it's a ratings winner for NBC each and every time but did we really have to see endless minutes of faux warm-ups or gold medalist Shawn Johnson repeatedly wiping her hands with chalk? And please, please will NBC fire analyst Tim Daggett or stuff him in a sack or at least just get him to tone down his jingoistic paranoia that had everyone in the viewing audience thinking that there was a conspiracy theory out to deny the overprivileged Americans their rightfully and tearfully earned gold medals.

Look, I commend the gymnastics coverage team for its constant questioning of whether the Chinese gymnasts were indeed old enough to compete (honestly, some of those girls looked to be no more than 12 years old) and NBC central, led by the steady hand of lead broadcaster without peer Bob Costas, was right on top of things when breaking news was being relayed late in the second week highlighting possible discrepencies in the passports of those athletes supplied by the Chinese government.

But when it was all said and done, it was all just overkill, downgraded further by Daggett's endlessly shrill declarations. We would see what looked to be a perfectly executed stunt only to have him exclaim "Oh, that's a huge deduction!" without explaining what it was the person did wrong, or by getting an explanation that was hopelessly jargon-laden and confused.

Call me biased, but I found the disciplined and intense work of the Chinese men's gymnastics team endlessly fascinating and far more interesting. Fortunately, in this regard, the NBC crew did give them neccesary and well-deserved credit. Let's face it, with their coach saying he'd all but throw himself off the Great Wall if they didn't claim every medal in sight (and they nearly did!), the pressure was on those guys and they came through!

Oh and one more thing in the gymnastics arena. I still continue to find rhythmic gymnastics utterly and completely ridiculous. Ribbons? hoops? Uh-uh, no sir! An art-form it may be, but this ludicrous demonstration by girls wearing more hairspray and makeup than Joan Rivers has used in her life is nothing resembling a sport.

If the IOC can dump softball and baseball, then it can dump this too!

Onto more pluses. Kudos and big hurrays to the track coverage team. Though they were constantly bumped around, delayed and truncated by NBC's endless attempts to wring every last second of ratings victory out its gymnastics coverage long after that competition had ceased, the track coverage team, paced by the brilliance of analyst and former medal-winning sprinter Ato Boldon, was superb in its determination to provide us with the broadest possible array of events.

Boldon was spot-on time and again, both praising and berating record-setting sprinter Usain Bolt after his zephyr-swift 100 meters triumph. Boldon was then dead-on enthusiastic about Bolt's ecstatic 200 showing saying "That the record I thought would be there when I die has now been broken!" And it was skill, blended with personal experience that allowed Boldon to make such incisive and precise comments.

Because Boldon was in that historic 200 race back in the 1996 Atlanta Games when Michael Johnson and everyone in the track world thought Johnson had buried the record in the event for all-time. I'll never forget Boldon, walking off that track in disgust after the race, thinking that he had run so poorly, only to glance at the reader-board sign announcing Johnson's Herculean feat of a new world record. Boldon just stared and stared at the sign. It was then that he realized that he had not run so badly, but that Johnson had run so well.

That kind of insight is worth its weight in gold and Boldon used it to frame historic moments in a manner both impassioned and artful.

It was another good catch by NBC officials to cut over to Johnson, who was doing some broadcast work of his own for another agency, and get his astonished but almost laughing in disbelief response to Bolt's feat in the 200.

Boldon and the team also did very good work in detailing the sub-par efforts of the US track squad, including its twin debacles of having both the men's and women's 400 relay teams dropping the batons in the preliminaries.

Some quibbles in the track arena, however, included the endless teasing of the finals of the 1,600 relay races on Saturday night. NBC kept saying they were coming up soon from about 6 p.m. on only to run them at close to 10 p.m. If I really wanted that kind of teasing I'd relive my childhood memories. And I know the decathlon was delayed by weather problems but we could have given more than just snippets of Bryan Clay's workmanlike excellence in claiming the gold in that event. He deserved better than just an exhausted rendering of his last race 1,500-meter efforts.

Onto the studio itself. Bob Costas just continues, with every eloquent utterance, to prove himself the rightful heir to the late Jim McKay, as the only man who should be allowed to head up an Olympics broadcast. He is class personified, with a wit and a sense of gravitas befitting someone who got far more sleep and rest than he probably did. He could slide from sharing laughs and indignities with Bela Karoyli to talking with compassion and grace with the coach of the US men's volleyball team, whose father-in-law was killed in a random and senseless act of violence at the start of the games. 

Costas makes doing the hard things look as easy as us pouring a cup of coffee in the morning. Don't ever get old Bob!

Also, Costas' late-night replacement Mary Carillo should get points from everyone who stayed up with her. She didn't get the glamour events but she had a dignity and a sense of humor about her that was a welcome breath of fresh air. Besides, no one should ever question her courage again after watching her try to eat the scorpion on a stick that she got from a street vendor. Gnarly heavyweight wrestlers would have fainted at the prospect!

And one last final round of applause for any number of the small, funny, lovely things that NBC did well over the 17 days of coverage.

From the touching but unsentimental story of the South African free-water swimmer with only one leg, to the heartbreaking tale of the winning German weightlifter, who touchingly displayed the picture of his late wife on the medal stand, there were far more many things done right than wrong in the 17 days of broadcasting.

No more so than the mention of the hilarious television watching escapades of everyone in Iceland come that country's participation in the team handball final. Every television in the country was apparently glued to that last match with France (and NBC had the statistics to prove it).

Alas, the men of ice and volcanoes lost to the men of fine cuisine and transportation strikes.

Better luck next time gentlemen, and see you in Vancouver!


 

The Olympics: One world, many questions. What to be concerned about and what we can do better

By Steven Tietz
Tuesday, Aug 26 2008, 11:17 PM

After the amazingly dramatic Beijing Olympics, the one of Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Shawn Johnson and the wonderful polyglot, record-setting number of nations and cultures that won medals (87), it's time to take stock and reflect on the cultural and political impact of these astonishing games.

Plus maybe discuss a little sports too.

Over the next few days, I want to put together a series of postings listing my hoorays, my concerns and flat-out astonishment at some of what went on over those remarkable 17 days. First of all, I'd like to take a look at the cultural, economic and political impact of what a large chunk of what the world bore witness to.

First of all, I'd like to congratulate the Chinese people themselves for the expansive range of energy and emotion that they put into these games. On top of the $43 billion that was invested, the displacement of people left, right and center that made possible the creation of astounding venues like the Water Cube and the Bird's Nest, and the virtual army of translators, volunteers and vendors who put their life and their hopes on hold, there was a nation collectively holding its breath in anticipation.

For how would the world, sitting in front of televisions, computers and cell phones from Australia to Iceland view them? Would it be the traditionally narrow and closed society that we would see or would we see the energy, the vision and the potential only a nation of 1.3 billion people can provide? It was decidedly the latter, as area and national and international media reported the people they encountered on the street were only helpful, enthusiastic and eager to show the pride they have in their nation and to make their visit more expansive than it was expensive (a neat trick indeed).

Well, hooray for them. China is truly the engine that will drive the world in this century and from the resplendent and imaginative opening and closing ceremonies, it is clear that this vast turbocharger of a country will only continue to push the edge of the envelope in so many ways in terms of science, economics and culture. It is so much more of a nation than just cheap, leaded toys, pollution and a repressive government.

The world can only benefit from an inclusive and visionary view of China. It needs to be embraced, to be treated as an equal among nations and be given a seat at the table, to show that it can truly be a leader in a century where the world will have to urgently deal with the extremely difficult problems of global warming, over-population and religious and ethnic intolerance.

And these games were the formal opening of the door, the proper first salutations in that process. The possibilities are endless.

But only if certain things start to happen. First, the Chinese government and the global system of business have to start acting like responsible grown-ups. For all its so-called "flexibility" the Chinese government showed far too much of the tight-fisted, narrow-minded zenophobia it has been known for over the past 60 years. Press freedom was reduced as websites concerning Darfur and Tibet were shut off. An "offical protest" area was set up (well away from any public venues) but none of the 77 requests for protest permits were granted. And anyone caught trying to enlighten people on the streets about concerns ranging from religious freedom to political prisoners was promptly arrested and deported.

Promises were made by the Chinese government - only to be broken.

And the worst thing about it was, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) largely looked the other way. It took the money, the great ratings and the amazing athletes and ran like hell. It did not hold the government's feet to the fire and force it to try and do better, to rise above the paranoia and need for control.

That lost opportunity is almost a tragedy.

The door was open, but all we saw of China's house was the foyer. And the business community was a complicit watchman. Yes, corporate responsibility is first to the shareholder and to the profit motive. Our own nation would not be the great place it is without that idea firmly in place. And don't even mention the exorbitant fees the companies had to pay to the Chinese government for the right to operate during the games.

Yes, they had money to recoup.

But that being said, powerful international sponsors and advertisers like Visa, Coca-Cola and McDonald's (among many) could have helped force our way into China's house a little more. They could have used their significant economic clout to wedge the door open a little wider to let us have a more inclusive look: fading paint, cracks in the ceiling, squeaky floors and all. They could have showed that they got the message that Bill Gates and other titans of industry are trying to promote: that capitalism can truly be compassionate and visionary.

Instead, all we got was a high-powered official from McDonald's on the ABC Evening News on the eve of the games saying nothing more than they're out there to applaud the sportsmanship and of course "promote their brand". In short, don't ask us to think too hard or risk our economic necks.

It was a few more "Happy Meals" sold and one great big opportunity at vision and creativity lost. One can only hope that the Chinese government will see beyond its own small-mindedness and with or without international prodding, come to address the great problems it does face, like economic inequality, pollution and general environmental degradation.

We probably won't have these kinds of problems at the upcoming winter games in Vancouver or the 2012 summer games in London. Those will be held in  democratically-elected regimes and it will be relatively easy for media and protest groups to spread their wings and be creative.

But it probably won't be long again before a questionable government with doubtful tactics and policies gets ahold of an Olympic Games. The lure of exposure, national pride and rejuvenation is just too strong and even notably secretive regimes (Russia anyone?) will find the chance of people opening some of their dusty closets a small price to pay for an opportunity to soar with the eagles of the world for a few weeks.

Before that happens, however, it would be nice to see the IOC and world business show a little imagination and backbone and give those governments marching orders about what is expected from them in terms of freedom, opportunity and access before they even think about being awarded a Games.

Because as these recent Olympics show, it's much too late in the world game for business as usual.

****Wednesday****

-The highs and lows of the coverage itself.

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Cross was a friend to track, will be missed greatly

By Steven Tietz
Friday, Jul 11 2008, 11:40 AM

To find the memorial honoring the life of the late track official, coach and well-known state meet announcer William H. "Bill" Cross on July 9 at St. Matthew's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wauwatosa, all one had to do was follow the laughter.

And that came as no surprise to anyone who knew Cross, who passed away on July 1 at the age of 84, because from listening to the people who were in attendance and looking at the photo montages honoring all that he was, he took joy in everything he did.

Cross spent many years as a teacher, coach and administrator in various Wisconsin high schools but is best known for his work at Whitefish Bay and Oostburg (he also spent some time at Menomonee Falls North in the late 1970s). It was during this time that the Milwaukee Washington High School graduate (his letters for basketball, football and track were put on prominent display) developed his reputation as a man who would do anything to promote the sport of track.

From leading the Whitefish Bay boys team to the state Class A title in 1962 to his founding of the now ubiquitous state honor roll where fans can see how their local heroes rank with the rest of Wisconsin's best, he was easy to find and a welcome face in the track world.

He also served as an official, making sure that meets were fairly and efficiently run, but it was his many years time serving as public address announcer at the WIAA State meets each June that most will remember him by. His careful pronunciations in a smooth baritone voice were always welcoming and reassuring grace notes. This was the case even when he was asking people to squeeze in a little tighter in the grandstand because seating was getting scarse or when he kindly requested fans not to open up their umbrellas in the rain because it would block the view of those behind them.

His love affair with track started in high school when he was a tall, strapping athlete at Washington, where he was a key member of the Purgolders quick sprint relay teams. In his memorial, a fabulous and very large newspaper photo of the day shows him as part of a 220 race coming around the turn, determination and effort written all over his face.

But there was much more to Bill Cross than his love for track. His memorial board was littered with photos of he with his late wife Ginny as well as their children Nancy (Daniel) Herrell, William R. Cross and Jill (Duane) Du Mez and grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Friends said he and Ginny always enjoyed the scarier rides at the state fair midway each summer.

There was also a carefully folded American flag and a citation honoring his service in the Army Air Force during World War II. He was also a man who liked to stay current and so a July 9 Journal-Sentinel paper and a recent Sports Illustrated magazine were also on display.

But to the end, he was a man of the track, sometimes running in circles, but always making it to the finish line. A small, but telling photo in the memorial telegraphed that point clearly. It was taken in his front yard by the mailbox, obviously well into his retirement. A home-made wooden sign near the driveway said "The Last Lap".

Even in his passing, Cross is still giving to the sport. Memorials to the Zilber Family Hospice or the Oostburg High School Track Boosters are welcome.


 

Austin and Senaya's swan song a highlight of area athletes' hopes this weekend at state track

By Steven Tietz
Thursday, May 29 2008, 12:52 AM

Together Brown Deer sprinters Justin Austin and Kaya Senaya have 12 WIAA state Division 2 track titles and four division records.

Senaya has also posted the fastest 100-meter time ever by a Wisconsin girl when she turned in an 11.78 second-clocking at a Junior Olympics meet last summer.

Both have secured high-profile NCAA Division I scholarship offers, Austin to Kentucky and Senaya to Wisconsin.

So what are the motivations of these two once-in-a-lifetime athletes as they approach their final WIAA State Meet in La Crosse on Friday and Saturday, May 30 and 31?

To be known as the best in the division anyone has ever known.

"I still want the records," Austin said. "That's what I'm praying for. That's what I've been working for. Man, I can't believe I'm already a senior. It's all gone by so fast I can hardly remember that trip four years ago (when he was part of a record-setting 400 relay team)."

Both Austin and Senaya will defend their titles in the 100 and 200 dashes and anchor their respective 400 relay teams (the girls are defending champions). They will also compete in the long jump. Austin will enter healthy after an injury-plagued junior campaign, while Senaya is running her best times of the year after battling illness and back problems.

"I'm the defending champ and I would like to finish my career as a champion," Senaya said. "Other people's opinions don't really concern me all that much at this point, so I'm going to do what I need to make myself and the team successful."

And success is on the minds of a lot of North Shore, Menomonee Falls and Germantown area athletes as they enter the annual test.

Among the most compelling, is three-time state runner-up Kate Lydy in Germantown. the senior earned silver medals in the state 1,600 last spring and then book-ended that with a similar finish in state cross country last fall. She, like last year is doing a heady triple with the 1,600 and 3,200 open races and the 3,200 relay on her docket. The school-record relay will be the seventh-fastest going into state and she has the fourth-fastest 3,200 time, but like last year, she'll have to sneak a top slot in the 1,600 coming out of the slow heat. Warhawk assistant coach Andy Bavlnka is known for training his athletes very hard in the regular season and bringing them down for a fast taper like Lydy's exceptional 1,600 time last season. Competitors would be unwise to look past her.

A similar story is coming out of Whitefish Bay. A year ago, Megan Palmer took the state by storm with a great cross country season and a solid track campaign. Last fall, she helped lead the Blue Dukes cross country team to a heart-breakingly close runner-up finish at state but the end of her campaign was marked by fatigue and slightly sub-par (only by her extremely high standards) performances in the sectional and state runs

She has come back in track with a vengeance  this spring, looking fresh as a daisy, using a devastating kick to dominant opponents in the 800 and 1,600 races. She will look to lead the school-record (and that's saying something) Blue Duke 3,200 relay to a medal as well as earning a medallion herself in the 800, where she has the second-fastest time going in.

"We're going to taper a little and then get ready to finish strong," said the mature-beyond-her-years sophomore. "We're ready to go."

Also ready to go and breathing a sign of relief is the boys 800 relay team at Menomonee Falls. The Indians have had an amazing record of success in the event since 2003. They've posted superior sub-1:30 times in five of the six seasons (four of which have landed in the state's all-time top 50) and have earned three state meet medals for their efforts, but going into last week's sectional meet at Germantown, the Indian relay has also had disconcertingly bad luck at sectionals in even numbered years, not being able to finish races due to bad hand-offs.

But the Falls team anchored by three-event state qualifier and two-time medalist Washington Farrington broke the jinx last week at sectional by using safe but aggressive passes to finish with the state's second-best time (only behind peerless Milwaukee Vincent). Both Farrington and Indian relay ace Mark Van Alstyne noted that coaches never told them of the bad karma surrounding the even-numbered years but still grinned at their good fortune.

Falls coach Mike Burling said he's debating whether to try and stretch the passes further in an effort to pass Vincent. He's unsure whether it would be worth the effort, losing out on a chance at any kind of medal with a mistake.

Meanwhile, Indian girls hurdler Cally Burrows is hoping to improve on last year's state runner-up finish in the 300 lows. But to do