Saturday, September 30, 2006

Footprint on the Web



Have you seen this? Supposedly, the football players blog here at NFLPlayers.com.

Team Goes on the Road


A branch-off team of the Piraats (pronounced Pirates) is heading for the World Series. Really. OK, so it's a softball tournament in Colorado.

It's the Sports Illustrated Advertising Softball World Series. The group is called the Coconuts, and they each have jerseys that say "I Got Lei'd by..." and their occasionally riske nicknames.

They're there from Wednesday through Sunday, spending most of the time on the field. Of course, Scott says they party fairly well too. Both he and Mike have been before.

Here are the crucial stats, according to the website:
On the Field
* 10-12 games guaranteed (you determine the number of games)
* Round-robin format, no team eliminated
* All teams compete for 3-6 titles
* All teams seeded into equally balanced divisions
* Competitive and recreational teams
* 6 Coed, 3 men's, 1 women's division

Off the Field
* 4 nights lodging at a fabulous 4-star resort with magnificent views (Cheyenne Mountain Resort)
* Mystery Dinner Party
* 3 Afternoon Beer Gardens
* 4 Evening Beer Gardens
* Jersey Trading and Contests
* 3 Dinner Buffets with entertainment
* 2 Late Night Beer Gardens and Parties
* Tournament Program and Awards Banquet Video
* Newsletters and Prize Drawings
* Survival Kit Bag & Merchandise
_______________________________

Event Schedule:

Wednesday, October 4
• Opening registration at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort
• Team Captain's Meeting
• Afternoon Beer Garden
• Opening Ceremonies DINNER/DANCE PARTY

Thursday, October 5
• Games Begin. EACH TEAM PLAYS APPROX. 4 GAMES
• Afternoon Beer Garden
• A MYSTERY THEME DINNER/DANCE PARTY. Busing included.

Friday, October 6
• EACH TEAM PLAYS APPROX. 4 GAMES
• Evening Beer Garden
• After Hour Parties/Beer Garden

Saturday, October 7
• EACH TEAM PLAYS APPROX. 4 GAMES
• Jersey Trading Market & Afternoon Beer Garden
• AWARDS BANQUET at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort
• After Hour Parties/Beer Garden

Sunday, October 8
• Departure or stay extra days. Guests can extend extra days at the resort, stay in the same room, and qualify for discounted group rates.

Sounds like fun. I'm staying back at the homestead. Besides, I have running to catch up on.

Sweat Equity


My workout today was a bit of a struggle. I'm not sure why, but I'm having some trouble with my breathing. The weight workout went fine. (I could have gone a little heavier, but I'm not trying to look like Lou Ferigno in a bikini, sans green paint.)

It was when I got to what was to be an easy 30-minute run on the treadmill turned out to be a 20-minute struggle. My legs were looking up at me--YES, they can look--as if to say--and YES, they can talk (after a hard run, they scream)--c'mon, let's go! My lungs couldn't even cough up a retort to the eager limbs.

I'm going to give it a try in the outdoors early tomorrow morning. We'll see how that goes.

It's go time now. My running partner and I need to kick it into gear. Both of us have sort of slacked off. The half marathon is in two months!

Oy...
__________

Here's a little something I'm going to try, as suggested on Active.com:

A target pace is an average running pace associated with an event time goal. If your event goal is to run a 3:45 marathon, your target pace is 8:35 per mile. If your goal is to run a 39:59 10K, your target pace is 6:26 per mile. And so forth.

Whenever you have an event time goal, your entire training program should be focused toward achieving the ability to sustain your target pace in that event. This doesn't mean you should always run at your target pace, of course. But it does mean you should include some target-pace running in your weekly training throughout your training program and do a fairly large amount of training at or near your target pace in the final weeks before your event.


More on that here.

Chew on This...


Can you say nail-biter???


Yikes, the run for the NL West couldn't be tighter. LA is now running even with San Diego, making tomorrow's game still relevant in determining who wins the NL West.


Dodgers now are 87 wins and 74 losses after the 4-2 win today against the SF Giants.



And the Padres are 87 wins and 74 losses after today's 3-1 win against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

But here's the best part. Although the NL West winner is still up in the air, one thing is for sure: The Friars--and the Dodgers--will be in the playoffs this year.


I'm not sure I can watch tomorrow...Well, I know that I can't since the Padres' game isn't televised where I am. Hmpf!

Thank God for football.

Friday, September 29, 2006

Jamaicans in da howz

Dude, it took me a while when I was on our pick'ems home page to remember that "Kevan a cheat" or something of that matter of a post was from a Jamaican. When I imagined the Jamaican accent once I read the post for like the fifth time, it settled in. I loved it! Man, I cannot tell you how lucky I feel to be part of our football pool! What a great experience this is becoming.

I need to ask, do you know what is going on with T. Owens ? I'm seriously confused. Did he overdose or was he suicidal? Is the Dallas coach truly that cold into not caring what happened?

We were talking earlier today about how I came to be a Dallas fan. I've been a fan since 1995. I've seen lots of stuff happen to the players on that team, but this is truly confusing.

Get Out Your Crystal Ball...


There's no clear indication of who will walk with the NL West title--or with the Wild Card spot either. It's a very tight race right now, with EVERY game counting.

Check out this breakdown from MLB.com

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Picks-y Stick?





OK, I've gone and committed my picks--that is until the check right before the games begin. We'll see how well these picks(ies) stick. Here's where I stand so far with mine:

* ARIZONA over Atlanta
* CAROLINA over NO
* MINNESOTA over Buffalo
* SAN DIEGO over Baltimore
* MIAMI over Houston
* DALLAS over Tennessee
* SAN FRANCISCO over Kansas City
* INDIANAPOLIS over New York (Jets)
* ST. LOUIS over Detroit
* WASHINGTON over Jacksonville
* CINCINNATI over New England
* CLEVELAND over Oakland
* SEATTLE over Chicago
* PHILADELPHIA over Green Bay

Sunday, September 17, 2006

I Have A Dream...

...We went to Dodger Stadium yesterday for Game 2 of the series, and it was a dream come true. Well, for Padres fans.
For Dodgers fans, it was a living nightmare. It was a fast-scoring game, with 3 for the Padres and 1 for the Dodgers in the first.

But that third inning was unbelievable. I'm not sure I've seen a higher-scoring inning ever. The Padres snagged 8 runs. And those runs went completely unanswered for the rest of the game. Well, unless you count the Dodgers' 1-run whimper in the eighth.

The silence of the usually cocky and rowdy Dodgers fans was deafening. The one thing you could hear were the cars lining up to leave the park early. That made for our easy exit after the game.

Feats of Foots


It's football season! That means it's time for my friend Khari's fantasy football challenge on Yahoo! Pro Football Pick'em.

So far, I'm doing fairly well this week. I've got 7 of 9--I lost it on Buffalo-Miami (Buf 16, Mia 6) and Carolina-Minnesota (Min 16, Car 13). Just 7 games to go!

This year, Khari also looped many of us in to a suicide pack (intentional)--we're playing survival football.

What's that? Here's what the Yahoo! site says:

The object of Yahoo! Sports Survival Football is to be the last Active member of your individual group.

In order to accomplish this goal, a user must correctly pick the winner of one professional football game each week.

But, to make this somewhat simple task more difficult, each user can only pick each professional football team once during the season (this does not carry across multiple groups).

If a correct selection is made, the user will remain Active for the following week. If an incorrect selection is made, that user will be Eliminated.


I picked Chicago. Da Bears did me proud. Any thoughts on whom to pick next week?

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Oh Father(s), Who Art in Dodgers Stadium...


I'm treating last night's game as a bad dream. The "dream" went like this:

The Dodgers scored 3 and the Padres none, giving the Dodgers a 1 1/2 game lead in the NL West. It still sends shudders down my spine.

Well, I have a feeling that tonight will be different. It'll be different in at least one regard: We'll be watching the game from the stadium and not the living room.

That's Why They Call It Work

Today was a really difficult workout for me. I'm not exactly sure why. I guess I've been doing subtle battle with a cold in my chest, and the war waged on in the 24S.E.T. class today.

I don't usually go to the smaller of the two 24 Hour Fitness clubs in my 'hood, but the class I wanted to do at the larger club was canceled. (The two clubs are literally a block away from each other.) The smaller club's aerobics room feels to me as if the air isn't circulating.

Well, I was fine and energetic with the warmup, which included football runs using a step. But after that, I was struggling to keep up. I had to put the weights down, stop and sit down at points.

I'm still battling a headache from it. I think I'll just take it easy today...

Friday, September 15, 2006

Sixth Inning



This game has been moving rather quickly, but not yet in the preferred direction. Now, when the Padres and Dodgers aren't playing, I'm not exactly anti-Dodger. At this point in the season, though, with the standings so close, I'm having a hard time wishing the team a good season.

Game On...

Just a reminder that the Padres have won 11 of 14 games against the Dodgers,
and of that a punishing 6 in a row this season.

A few LAT stories on the series starting today:

Dodgers' Lead Nearly Gone


Bill Plaschke: Dodgers-Padres Rivalry Changes

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Today's Workout

Treadmill run for 30 minutes
Moderate pace

78 days until the Reggae Half Marathon

Dodge This...

Get on your knees, Dodgers. The Padres are coming to town.

This weekend's four-game series at Chavez Ravine will prove crucial to SD's standing. Right now, the team is trailing LA (the real one, not the orange one) by half a game in the NL West. And the Pads lead the NL Wild Card race.

Here's hoping the momentum the Padres gained in Cincinnati will carry them through Los Angeles to Arizona next week.

____________________

Hoffman inches closer to Lee Harper's record, at 474 saves just four away.

More game details here from MLB.com

It's Gotta Be the Shoes


Last week's game was a relative disaster, for the team and for me. But this week was a whole different ball game.

We brought in our third baseman to pitch this week. Mike took his first try on the mound. With a few warmups, he found his pace.

Now this is slow-pitch co-ed softball. It allows for unlimited arc, but you have to pitch underhand at least over the batters head. No simple task. I recall one team's pitcher, a large football lineman-looking guy with a short ponytail, could get a wicked bit of spin on his throws.

As usual, we had to borrow a couple of girls from another team--we never seem to have enough. (We have to have at least four men and four women to play.) So Tracy and Sharon joined us.

The starting lineup:
* Pitcher: Mikey
* Catcher: Me
* 1st: Tracy
* 2nd: Katie
* 3rd: Chris/Mike
* SS: Scott
* LF: Bill
* LCF: Royce
* RCF: Sharon
* RFL: Barb


We were the home team this time, so we were in the field first. Mike's first pitches set a nice rhythm for the game.

The Diamond Diablos were ahead for awhile. The turnaround came in the top of the 6th inning. With 2 outs, a strong left-handed male hitter came up to the plate. Now, generally speaking, any of us girls in the outfield has meant that the hitters that can smack the ball out there get at least 2 bases as we chase the balls.

But this time, that script was rewritten. I watched this from behind the plate in slow motion. The ball soared out to right field, practically down the line. It was heading for Barb. She instinctively reached out her glove. And wouldn't you know it. That obedient ball nuzzled right into her hand, and she snagged that probable home run from Mr. Lefty.

I think we were so high from that moment, we weren't ready to land. The Diablos were leading 9-5. But our offense just went into overdrive. Batter after batter made it on base.

Now, last season, I hadn't been hitting very strongly. Yeah, I made it on base, but my hits were lingering in the infield, dropped just in front of third or the short stop. On Tuesday, when my bat connected with the ball, there was an audible solid smack that sent it just beyond the baseline. (I did have a great weight workout an hour or so before.)

If I remember correctly, I got 2 RBIs. This time, no face plants at home plate--the shoes worked!

Then Royce slammed that bad boy way out there, and we both booked it. I got to third base. And when the next batter connected, I took off. That run brought the score to 10-9.

That streak continued until we were ahead 13-9. Our dugout went nuts! There were people climbing the fence, hooping, hollering, cats and dogs living in harmony--utter pandamonium.

We were totally ready for the game to be over. Unfortunately, the clock wasn't on our side. The game went on, and those little devils did catch us.

Truly, though, the ultimate score didn't really matter. We had a victory over our morale. We now know we are a decent group of players.


Next week, we have a 7:30 p.m. game, thank goodness.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Toe Jam

I thought I should separate my thought from my actions, so to speak. This blog will cover my active life, including my running and softball efforts. The Spiral will still be home to my cerebral life.