Thursday, June 26, 2014

WORLD CUP REPORT 


Will Ferrell Supports Team USA With Hilarious World Cup Pep Rally Speech in Brazil, Threatens to Bite German Players

Celebrity News Jun. 26, 2014 AT 9:10AM
Put him in, coach! Team USA has found a ringer for Thursday's World Cup game against Germany, and it is none other than actor and comedian Will Ferrell.

The Anchorman star, 46, hit a pep rally in support of the USMNT on Wednesday evening, June 25, in Recife, Brazil. After being introduced by soccer-themed Teddy Roosevelt impersonator Teddy Goalsevelt and United States Soccer Federation President Sunil Gulati, Ferrell took the stage in a USA jersey.

Branded as the "secret weapon" of the American soccer team, Ferrell gave a hilarious speech, joking that he would be on the field to compete with the players and chanting "USA!"

"I am so honored to be playing tomorrow," Ferrell said. "I'm not gonna lie to you, I'm not in the best shape. I'm not in soccer shape right now, but I'm gonna try my best and I'm going to live up to the spirit of this American team."

"If the game gets close, I will bite!" Ferrell jokingly added, referencing the incident that took place during the Uruguay game against Italy. "I will bite the opponent! I will bite them! I will bite every German player if I have to
 

THE STATE OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL:

PART ONE

Schools aiming to improve fan amenities

June, 24, 2014
Jun 24
9:00
AM ET

Coming soon to a college football stadium near you: interactive phone apps, live pregame locker room footage, concession stands filled with food from local eateries.

And plenty of Wi-Fi.

With college football fans choosing the HDTV home experience more and more over going to games, schools everywhere are stepping up the fan experience to lure them back to the stadiums.

“We want to make sure that the fan experience in the stadium is better than the experience at home on your couch,” Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said
. “That is a significant challenge. Obviously television does a great job. So you’re competing against that a little bit, and competing against a lot of other things as well.”

The national epidemic of declining attendance, most troublingly among students, has spurred athletic departments across the country to get creative in improving their football stadium fan amenities, while also investing heavily in the most obvious of solutions.

“If you take a photo of fans in any stands, a high percentage of them will have their heads down on their phones or iPads or whatever,” Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez said. “To keep fans in the stands, you have to keep up with the technology, so they can continue to use those things in the stadium.”

Concerned by the decline in national college football attendance, the Big Ten last year formed a game-day experience subcommittee, which found that boosted cellular service and Wi-Fi availability throughout a stadium was paramount.

Previously, Penn State was the only Big Ten program with stadium Wi-Fi. But this summer, Wisconsin announced it would be spending $6.2 million to install a Wi-Fi network at Camp Randall Stadium for the upcoming season. Earlier this year, Nebraska's regents approved $12.3 million for a Wi-Fi and sound system project for its stadium. Ohio State and Illinois could soon have Wi-Fi capability in their stadiums, as well.

“We’re looking at technology overall,” said Smith, who chairs the subcommittee. “We’re encouraging schools to get Wi-Fi if they don’t have it, so their fans can have access to that second screen.”

Because of the cost, only a handful of schools have committed to putting Wi-Fi in their stadiums, but many more have moved forward with enhancing the cellular service.

“We live in this social media world in which people want to be connected and want to converse during games,” said Kirby Hocutt, athletic director at Texas Tech, which recently installed a digital antenna system at Jones AT&T Stadium. “It’s important to be able to send and receive messages inside the stadium.”

But while offering Wi-Fi and better cell service might be the two biggest components to getting fans back to games, schools are hardly stopping there.

Smith said that this season leading up to kickoff, Ohio State will begin showing live shots on its video board of the Buckeyes prepping for the game in the locker room. It also will be airing behind-the-scenes footage of the players, such as team meetings at the hotel on Friday nights.

“Things you won’t be able to see at home,” Smith said.

Others are attempting to create stadium-exclusive experiences.

Baylor will be introducing a phone app for its new McLane Stadium, which is coming equipped with Wi-Fi, that will allow fans to rank game highlights that would then be shown in order accordingly on the video board.

“We wanted to be very interactive, as far as capturing the interest of younger fans,” Baylor athletic director Ian McCaw said.

McLane will also have unique tailgating experiences by land and water. As with the stadiums at Tennessee and Washington, McLane will have a boardwalk connected to the Brazos River, where fans can “sailgate” before games. Elsewhere, fans will be able to tailgate on top of the turf from the old Floyd Casey Stadium.

“Our priority when we set out on this new stadium was to try and create the best fan experience in college football,” McCaw said.

In the past, new stadiums and renovated stadiums usually also would have meant bigger stadiums. But many schools are prioritizing their money toward making their stadiums better, not just bigger, for their fans.

This week, Oklahoma will put a proposal before its regents that would pour millions into completing the bowl on the south side of Memorial Stadium. The Sooners have a school record 92-game sellout streak, but sources have told ESPN.com that the project will aim to create better and more comfortable seating throughout the stadium, as opposed to substantially increasing its seating capacity of 82,000.

At Iowa State, regents have already approved plans to complete the bowl in the south end zone of Jack Trice Stadium. But even though the Cyclones have set single-season average attendance records the past two years, the capacity hike figures to be a modest 6,000, so the stadium will hold roughly 61,000.

“We really think it’s going to make the stadium more intimate and really capture the atmosphere for the fans,” Iowa State athletic director Jamie Pollard said.

Pollard said school officials have also discussed constructing a walkway before the 2016 season that would go over the main road east of Jack Trice, and connect the stadium entrance to a primary tailgating area.

“We would dress it up where it would be a fun place to tailgate,” Pollard said. “It would also get fans off the road and to their cars a lot quicker and safer.”

Through a $450 million renovation, Texas A&M is in fact significantly expanding the capacity of Kyle Field from about 82,500 to more than 100,000. But as part of the renovation, the Aggies are also doubling the number of women’s bathrooms. And they’re developing a phone app that is supposed help fans deal with traffic around the stadium.

Even schools that aren’t building or renovating stadiums are developing ways to augment the fan experience.

Associate athletic director Jesse Martin said Oklahoma State is adding video boards to its concession areas so fans can watch the game while they’re still in line.

Wisconsin will have 700 TVs around its stadium this year, and beginning this season, its concessions operation will offer food from local restaurants.

“You come to Madison, you want to have a brat,” Alvarez said. “Well, we’re going to take one of the best brat shops in town, and put them with our concession stands.”
West Virginia began selling beer inside Milan Puskar Stadium three years ago, and this year, athletic director Oliver Luck said, the stadium would begin selling wine.

Hocutt noted Texas Tech recently offered a payment plan to its season-ticket holders. And according to Rutgers athletic director Julie Hermann, the school, in its first year in the Big Ten, will begin opening their RV lots a day earlier so people can go in the night before the game if they want.

“When people come to High Point Solutions Stadium, we want to give them as great an experience as we possibly can,” said Hermann, who added that she already is talking with local transit authorities about the best ways to funnel people out of the stadium parking lots so they don’t have to wait as long in New Jersey traffic.

New fan amenity ideas are still being hatched.

We’ve got people brainstorming all the time,” said Alvarez, who added Wisconsin officials have discussed the possibility of creating a phone app where fans could order gear from the team shop and have it delivered to their suite during a game.
Smith has been intrigued by the possibility of implementing a college version of NFL Red Zone, giving Ohio State fans the ability to watch key plays from around the Big Ten or even the country while waiting for the Buckeyes' game to start.

“The NFL shows Red Zone on its video boards,” Smith said, “and we’ve been thinking about how we could do something of that nature.

“We have to think differently and try some things. If we do six things, and only two stick, then great. We won’t do the other four. That’s kind of where we are. There’s no science to this. But it’s about thinking outside the box and finding ways to make the experience in the stadium better than staying at home.”

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

 

WISCONSIN

Where Bars Outnumber Grocery Stores

May 29, 2014  |  Data Underload
 
Back in 2008, the Floatingsheep group collected data about the number of bars across the United States, and they compared those counts against the number of grocery stores. Their map showed what they called the "beer belly of America", which is a much higher than average number of bars in the Wisconsin area.

I came back to the  map recently, and three questions came to mind:
  1. The original map only showed a binary comparison. That is, areas were either colored as more bars or more grocery stores. What if we mapped the magnitude of the difference?
  2. The data from 2008 comes from the now defunct Google Maps Directory and only represented references to bars and grocery stores (which maybe made the previous bullet point not worth doing then). Would using the newer Google Places API provide more detail?
  3. What about other countries?
I started with the first two questions and went from there.

Pulling data from the Places API, I reproduced the two-category map as a quick check. They look similar. Again, you see the "beer belly" in the Wisconsin area.
US bars vs grocery stores
So the data appears to check out (more on this at the end). The nice thing about the Google Places API is that businesses are categorized and searchable, which makes it a lot easier to count given an area of the country. I chugged along every 20 miles and then searched within a 10-mile radius for bars and grocery stores. Then it was simple math to get the ratios. 



The map below shows these ratios. The more bars, the darker the brown and the more grocery stores, the darker the green. It's kind of what you'd expect, but now you can really see that high bar concentration in Wisconsin, whereas a lot of the country has at least three times more grocery stores.
United States
From a per capita perspective, Wisconsin has the third highest rate with about 8 bars per 10,000 people. North Dakota and Montana take the one and two spots at 9.9 and 8.6 bars per 10,000 people, respectively. Delaware, Maryland, and Mississippi have the lowest rates, all with under 1.5 bars per 10,000 people.

I've actually been to none of these six states, so I'm not sure how to interpret these rates. The gut reaction is to assume that states with a lot of bars must drink a lot, relative to the others, but it might just mean that people like to hang out at bars in these areas. Maybe they don't even drink. Maybe people in other states drink more at home. 

So I'll leave interpretation to the residents. I'm a Californian. My state has the fifth lowest rate, but I wouldn't say people don't drink by any stretch of the word.
On to the ratio in other countries. Click to see big.

Worth noting

Again, higher rates don't necessarily point to higher volumes of drinking. You can look to drinking estimates from the World Health Organization or OECD for those comparisons. I think the bar versus grocery store comparison says more about culture than anything else. This is just a guess though.

It's also worth noting again that this data comes from the Google Places API. These numbers aren't from official government records, so we're placing a lot of stock in that the data from Google is accurate. I suspect mileage varies across countries, but the results did seem to make sense for the countries that I've been to. 
 

Tuesday, June 24, 2014


AN ELECTION DAY MESSAGE
FROM BRETT FAVRE 

Is Brett Favre's Cochran Endorsement Political Payback to Haley Barbour for Brother's Pardon?



JACKSON, Mississippi — NFL legend Brett Favre has endorsed the re-election of Sen. Thad Cochran (R-MS), cutting a television ad for the six-term incumbent days ahead of a runoff election against Tea Party-backed state senator Chris McDaniel.

I’ve learned through football that strong leadership makes the difference between winning and losing. And when it comes to our state’s future, trust me: Mississippi can win — and win big with Thad Cochran as our strong voice in Washington,” Favre says in the ad. “Thad Cochran always delivers, just like he did during Katrina.”

But a drunk-driving accident involving Favre's brother and the death of one of their friends raises questions about whether the unusual endorsement is political payback to former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who is strongly backing Cochran.


In 1996, Favre’s brother Scott Favre was driving drunk on his way home and stopped on railroad tracks. A 49-car freight train crashed into the vehicle, and Brett’s close friend Mark Haverty, a passenger in the car, was killed. Police determined Scott Favre had a .23 blood alcohol content level—more than twice the legal limit. Shortly thereafter, Scott Favre was convicted of vehicular manslaughter and sentenced to 15 years in prison. Fourteen years were suspended, with one year of house arrest.

This was a mistake between two buddies. I mean, there's nothing good about drinking and driving, but who hasn't done it?" Brett Favre said of the incident in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 1997. “They were unlucky. It could just as easily have been Scott who was killed. If I had been home that night it could have been me.”


In May 1997, Scott Favre was arrested again for driving without a license while he was on his way to help his dad fix a fishing boat. He was sentenced to 13 years in prison for that episode—and ended up only serving 67 days in prison after courts determined later he was wrongfully jailed.


Favre, who had won the Super Bowl against the New England Patriots earlier that year, told Playboy he would literally give up his Super Bowl ring to trade places with his brother in that jail cell.


“Here I am in my fairy-tale world playing football while Scott sits in prison, and I have done more bad things than he's ever dreamed of,” he told Playboy. “I would give up my ring in a heartbeat to trade places with my brother.”


In 2012, on his last day in office, former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour pardoned Scott Favre—clearing his record entirely.

Now Brett Favre is endorsing Cochran at the last minute in the runoff campaign while Barbour's political machine works overtime to help Cochran win.

After publication of this article, Barbour emailed Breitbart News saying he had nothing to do with the Favre endorsement and argued there is someone "pushing" this story.

"I have had no contact with Brett Favre in years, and I had nothing to do with his endorsement of Senator Cochran," Barbour said in an email. "I recognize someone is pushing this story as you are not the first reporter to ask me the same or similar questions this morning."

Monday, June 23, 2014

HERE'S YOUR SIGN

Guess they dropped, "The Other White Meat."

Sunday, June 22, 2014

 

Noll touched many with his “Life’s Work”

June 15, 2014
By CHUCK GREENWOOD , Salem News
When I heard the news early Saturday morning that the former Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Chuck Noll had passed away in Sewickley Friday evening, it brought back a flood of memories. He was 82. Noll had been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1993.

Noll was the Steelers coach from 1969 to 1991. He directed the team to four Super Bowl titles within a six-year span. In a touch of irony, the Steelers sent out a release last week detailing some of the events they are planning for this season, celebrating the 40th anniversary of their first Vince Lombardi trophy.

I had the pleasure of interviewing Noll twice at the Pro Football Hall of Fame. This was after he had retired from coaching and was enjoying the "good life" with his wife and constant companion Marianne.

Noll was a delightful interview, willing to talk about football, but also wiling to talk about wines, flying and boating. The only problem with this was that what I know about wine, flying and boating couldn't fill the proverbial thimble. His wife told me that he loved to know how things worked and enjoyed taking home appliances apart and putting them back together again.

Noll truly loved being on a boat. For many years, he kept a boat in Virginia, before eventually moving on to Florida. As the former coach aged and was less mobile, the Nolls spent more and more time in Florida. Noll told me how proud he was to have been a graduate of Cleveland Benedictine and then returned to be a "messenger guard" under the tutelage of the legendary Paul Brown. While he may not have particularly liked being a messenger guard, he noted that he had learned a great deal from Brown. After his playing career ended, he worked as an assistant under Sid Gillman (San Diego Chargers) and Don Shula (Baltimore Colts).

 Noll felt that he was ready to be a head coach when he was hired by the Steelers in 1969. Even though his first Steelers' team went a dismal 1-13, five years later, the Black & Gold were Super Bowl champions, and became "The Team of the 70s."

As his health declined in recent years, he was forced to walk with two canes. The dreaded Alzheimer's disease limited his contact with former players, many of whom realized after their playing careers had ended, how Noll had shaped them and enabled them to be successful in their "Life's Work".

I remember former Youngstown State University and Steelers quarterback Cliff Stoudt telling me a few years ago at a golf outing what an effect Noll had on him. Stoudt said that if he only had a day or two to live, he would want to spend part of that time with Noll.

While he was inundated with requests to be the spokeman for various companies, he generally declined those opportunties to make extra money. He just didn't feel comfortable in that atmosphere. He was a teacher and his subjects were football and life; especially life after football.

Many times Noll told players that their tenure as a player, or at least as a Steeler, was over, by telling them it was time to get on with "Their Life's Work." It appears that Noll's "Life's Work" is done down here on earth and Steeler fans are so lucky that the Rooneys hired "Chuck Who?" in 1969.
He may have been born and raised and played in Cleveland, but Noll was definitely a "Pittsburgh Guy."





 
 

News, Blogs & Events


I am looking for:
in:
News, Blogs & Events Web

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

 
AND NOW . . .



The Dahlke's oldest, Marissa, graduated from high school and is heading to Whitewater.
 
Andy's son, AJ, a two-time state champ in football,
 graduated, too.
 
 
It was also Andy's birthday yesterday. 


OBITUARIES FOR THE DEARLY DEPARTED 

Detroit's own Casey Kasem. AT40 & the voice of Shaggy!





Chuck Noll, he won four (4) Super Bowls and probably had the best draft of all time in the early 1970s.   
 
Chuck went to Disney in a cut-off shirt.  



That's the news for now from . . .
 

Friday, June 13, 2014


HAPPY FRIDAY:

 
WORLD CUP EDITION
 
 

Thursday, June 12, 2014

#TBT
MASH-UP EDITION

Coke, soda, and POP!!

Three words that divide a nation

The map below comes from North Carolina State University's Joshua Katz, who has mapped all kinds of dialectical differences between different areas of the country.

One of the most polarizing questions he asks: What do you call a sweetened carbonated beverage?


Nearly half of the country — 47 percent — refers to it as "soda," while 23 percent say "pop" and another 19 percent go the proper noun route and say "Coke."

The real maniacs, though, are the 7 percent of people who call it a "soft drink." Who talks like that!?
SoftDrink

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

WELCOME TO THE PACKER FAMILY. . . .

LOOKS LIKE YOU'LL FIT RIGHT IN!

June icebergs still roaming 

Lake Superior

Here’s one you don’t see every year on Superior in June.
The last remnants of the iciest winter in 35 years are still afloat on Lake Superior. Check out this June iceberg captured near Madeline Island Friday by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
Wisconsin DNR Marine Warden Amie Egstad said  the reluctantly melting iceberg was one of several floating aimlessly around the backside of Madeline Island.
“We were on today’s commercial net check,” Warden Amie says. “And there was this big iceberg – along with other ice packs and bergs floating around backside of Madeline Island area east towards Saxon Harbor.”
You can see why the ice is in no hurry to melt given water temps still lingering in the frigid 30s on the big lake.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Local seagulls seemed to appreciate the resting place.
Wisconsin DNR In case you were wondering, our polar vortex-driven winter and cold spring mean absolutely nothing in the context of climate change. As I’ve posted may times before, Minnesota has been the coldest place on the planet so far this year. This is the sixth warmest year on record globally so far.