Gartner |
RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Friday, December 25, 2015
I Hope It's Not a Polaroid One-Picture Rose Bowl
By RON MALY
I know Iowa's football team will be playing in the Rose Bowl next week, and I'll get to that in a minute.
First, I want to write a few things about the years in Hawkeye football history when there were no Rose Bowls, no bowls of any kind and no championships.
Just a lot of losing seasons and coach firings.
I'm referring to the dark days of 1962 through 1980 when the university never had a winning season in football.
That's right, 19 consecutive years of non-winning football.
They were years that gobbled up Jerry Burns,
Ray Nagel, Frank Lauterbur and Bob Commings.
Decent guys and decent coaches, most of them.
Some better than others.
I covered a lot of Hawkeye football in those years.
I suffered too.
Not as much as Burns, Nagel, Lauterbur and Commings.
But it wasn't much fun showing up in press boxes all over the country [Iowa played games at such places as Southern California and UCLA in those years], wondering if the Hawkeyes would lose by 30 or 40 points, or would even score.
Commings came from a high school coaching job to Iowa, and went back to a high school job after he was fired at Iowa.
After one miserable season, the joke [at least I think it was a joke] was going around that, when Commings wanted to show a recruit the highlight film of the season, he reached into the bottom drawer in his desk and pulled out one Polaroid picture.
There was also a season when T-shirts were being worn on the Iowa campus that showed a picture of a Hawkeye player sitting on a toilet.
The Toilet Bowl was where some fans thought Iowa belonged in those days.
I'm sure glad things have changed now.
I'm glad coach Kirk Ferentz has his Hawkeyes in the Rose Bowl against Stanford, and I have every reason to believe Iowa will play well, and might even win.
Oh, I know Hayden Fry took three Iowa teams
to the Rose Bowl, and the highlight film of those three games could easily have been one Polaroid picture.
I mean, if you're looking for happy thoughts about a Hawkeye Rose Bowl game you've got to find guys like Kenny Ploen and Randy Duncan, who played on Forest Evashevski's brilliant teams in 1956 and 1958.
Fry's 1981 Hawkeyes didn't fire a shot and lost to Washington, 28-0; his 1985 squad lost to UCLA, 45-28, and his 1990 team lost to Washington, 46-34.
But this is Christmas, and my thoughts are of candy canes and sugar plums, not a one-picture Polaroid highlight reel.
I hope the 2015 Hawkeyes have a good week of practice.
My guess is they'll need it.
I know Iowa's football team will be playing in the Rose Bowl next week, and I'll get to that in a minute.
First, I want to write a few things about the years in Hawkeye football history when there were no Rose Bowls, no bowls of any kind and no championships.
Just a lot of losing seasons and coach firings.
I'm referring to the dark days of 1962 through 1980 when the university never had a winning season in football.
That's right, 19 consecutive years of non-winning football.
They were years that gobbled up Jerry Burns,
Bob Commings |
Decent guys and decent coaches, most of them.
Some better than others.
I covered a lot of Hawkeye football in those years.
I suffered too.
Not as much as Burns, Nagel, Lauterbur and Commings.
But it wasn't much fun showing up in press boxes all over the country [Iowa played games at such places as Southern California and UCLA in those years], wondering if the Hawkeyes would lose by 30 or 40 points, or would even score.
Commings came from a high school coaching job to Iowa, and went back to a high school job after he was fired at Iowa.
After one miserable season, the joke [at least I think it was a joke] was going around that, when Commings wanted to show a recruit the highlight film of the season, he reached into the bottom drawer in his desk and pulled out one Polaroid picture.
There was also a season when T-shirts were being worn on the Iowa campus that showed a picture of a Hawkeye player sitting on a toilet.
The Toilet Bowl was where some fans thought Iowa belonged in those days.
I'm sure glad things have changed now.
I'm glad coach Kirk Ferentz has his Hawkeyes in the Rose Bowl against Stanford, and I have every reason to believe Iowa will play well, and might even win.
Oh, I know Hayden Fry took three Iowa teams
Polaroid Camera |
I mean, if you're looking for happy thoughts about a Hawkeye Rose Bowl game you've got to find guys like Kenny Ploen and Randy Duncan, who played on Forest Evashevski's brilliant teams in 1956 and 1958.
Fry's 1981 Hawkeyes didn't fire a shot and lost to Washington, 28-0; his 1985 squad lost to UCLA, 45-28, and his 1990 team lost to Washington, 46-34.
But this is Christmas, and my thoughts are of candy canes and sugar plums, not a one-picture Polaroid highlight reel.
I hope the 2015 Hawkeyes have a good week of practice.
My guess is they'll need it.
Monday, December 21, 2015
I'm glad I got the shot a few years ago that's supposed to keep me from getting shingles. My Neighbor Al, the Health Nut called me a few minutes ago to say he hears that getting shingles is bad enough, but medical people now think there's a greater risk of having a heart attack or a stroke after having the disease.
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Indeed, It Was a True Classic
By RON MALY
The first nutcase who hollers out of a maximum security cell or on a sports talk show that the Big Four Classic should be taken off
this state's collegiate basketball schedule should be hung by the balls [his balls, not the game balls] from the scoreboard at Wells Fargo Arena.
This afternoon's and tonight's extravaganza at the big building downtown was a true classic, in results as well as name.
The announcers on ESPNU were talking during the Northern Iowa-Iowa State game about the atmosphere in the place.
It felt like an NCAA tournament, they said.
Four state universities represented.
Lots of fans.
Two outstanding games.
I fully agree.
It was a wonderful basketball show for Des Moines and the state of Iowa.
UNI handed fifth-ranked Iowa State its first loss of the season, 81-79, and Iowa held off Drake, 70-64,
Not everyone went home happy.
But what an exciting day and night it was.
The first nutcase who hollers out of a maximum security cell or on a sports talk show that the Big Four Classic should be taken off
this state's collegiate basketball schedule should be hung by the balls [his balls, not the game balls] from the scoreboard at Wells Fargo Arena.
This afternoon's and tonight's extravaganza at the big building downtown was a true classic, in results as well as name.
The announcers on ESPNU were talking during the Northern Iowa-Iowa State game about the atmosphere in the place.
It felt like an NCAA tournament, they said.
Four state universities represented.
Lots of fans.
Two outstanding games.
I fully agree.
It was a wonderful basketball show for Des Moines and the state of Iowa.
UNI handed fifth-ranked Iowa State its first loss of the season, 81-79, and Iowa held off Drake, 70-64,
Not everyone went home happy.
But what an exciting day and night it was.
34 Years Ago
By RON MALY
It was 34 years ago today--Dec. 19, 1981--that I flew to California to cover Iowa's Jan. 1, 1982 Rose Bowl football game against Washington.
It doesn't seem like yesterday, but it doesn't seem like it was 34 years ago that coach Hayden Fry and his Hawkeyes were preparing for Iowa's first Rose Bowl game since Forest Evashevski's fantastic 1958 squad thrashed California, 38-12, at Pasadena.
How time flies, especially when a guy is having fun.
I was the first of three Des Moines Register sportswriters to make the trip to Pasadena for the 1982 Rose Bowl.
Buck Turnbull and Maury White followed me to California after Christmas.
I went to Pasadena on Dec. 19 because that's when Fry and his Hawkeyes made the trip.
I flew from Des Moines to the Los Angeles International Airport and met them at the John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana/Orange County. That's where the Hawkeye charter plane landed.
Fry held a press conference at the airport, and it was one of many sessions ol' Hayden had with reporters.
He didn't meet a microphone or a tape recorder he didn't like on that trip.
He was proud to take the Hawkeyes to the Rose Bowl, and the Rose Bowl was happy to have him.
Fry's 1981 team had an 8-3 regular-season record and won the Big Ten championship, climaxing a season that ended a horrible run of 19 consecutive non-winning years of Hawkeye football.
Fry and his players enjoyed themselves in the days leading up to the Rose Bowl.
They did it all--going to all of the places the Big Ten's representative in the Rose Bowl were supposed to go, such as Disneyland, the beaches, the movie studios in Hollywood, the Beef Bowl at Lawry's Restaurant.
I followed right along, covering the coaches and the players at most of the places they went.
We all had a great time.
Until game day.
As Fry says, Iowa didn't fire a shot.
In other words, the Hawkeyes didn't score a point.
Sadly, they were outplayed and outcoached.
It was Washington 28, Iowa 0.
The next day, it was back to the cold and snow of our state.
Back to reality.
Embarrassing
Streaming the game on something called ESPN3 doesn't cut it with me.
The four-team event is trying to show some class, but the TV coverage of today's opening game was entirely classless.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
I told you Randy Peterson wouldn't be out of the lineup long, even though he suffered a compound fracture of his left leg less than a week ago. It was good to see Peterson back in the paper today. Three times he was back. And just one of three stories was about the two bones he broke in the leg following Iowa State's 83-82 basketball victory over Iowa at Hilton Coliseum in Ames.
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Thanks, Rick
BY RON MALY
Thanks to Rick Brown for the kind words he wrote about me in his farewell sports column in the Des Moines Register.
I enjoyed working with Rick for many years at the paper.
He is a first-class guy and an outstanding writer.
The same was true of Bob Brown, Rick's late father.
I sat in many press boxes with Bob throughout my working years.
Bob then was a standout sports editor at the Fort Dodge Messenger.
Even though Rick has accepted a buyout at the Register, I'm betting he's not finished writing about sports and the people who play them.
He's got a tremendous amount of excellent writing left in him.
I hope to continue reading whatever he writes, and I also hope our paths cross again soon.
Thanks to Rick Brown for the kind words he wrote about me in his farewell sports column in the Des Moines Register.
Rick Brown |
I enjoyed working with Rick for many years at the paper.
He is a first-class guy and an outstanding writer.
The same was true of Bob Brown, Rick's late father.
I sat in many press boxes with Bob throughout my working years.
Bob then was a standout sports editor at the Fort Dodge Messenger.
Even though Rick has accepted a buyout at the Register, I'm betting he's not finished writing about sports and the people who play them.
He's got a tremendous amount of excellent writing left in him.
I hope to continue reading whatever he writes, and I also hope our paths cross again soon.
Count On It That Talented and Hard-Working Randy Peterson Will Be Back In the Register's Sportswriting Lineup Sooner Than You Think
By RON MALY
I had a nice conversation on the phone this morning with Randy Peterson, the talented and
hard-working Des Moines Register sportswriter who suffered a compound fracture of his left leg last Thursday night in Ames.
Peterson, a veteran writer who is as tenacious as any reporter in America when working on a column or a story for his newspaper, was injured while performing his postgame responsibilities at Hilton Coliseum on the Iowa State campus.
His leg was fractured while Cyclone basketball fans stormed the court following Iowa State's 83-82 victory over Iowa.
Both the tibia and fibula in his left leg were broken in the mishap.
Randy was still at Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines when I talked with him today, but he expects to be released from the hospital very soon.
"The physical therapists are doing a great job with me," he said.
Physicians obviously did a wonderful job, too.
I had a few broken bones and other medical problems myself many years ago while covering sports at the paper, and doctors always told me it would take six weeks to heal the fractures.
I always tried to beat the odds so I could get back sooner.
I know Peterson will, too.
Randy, of course, has two broken bones, so I don't know if that means he'll take longer to heal or not.
Whatever, I know he'll be back on the job sooner than people think.
He's always been a gamer, and he'll return to the writing lineup as quickly as possible.
I wish him the very best.
I had a nice conversation on the phone this morning with Randy Peterson, the talented and
Randy Peterson |
Peterson, a veteran writer who is as tenacious as any reporter in America when working on a column or a story for his newspaper, was injured while performing his postgame responsibilities at Hilton Coliseum on the Iowa State campus.
His leg was fractured while Cyclone basketball fans stormed the court following Iowa State's 83-82 victory over Iowa.
Both the tibia and fibula in his left leg were broken in the mishap.
Randy was still at Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines when I talked with him today, but he expects to be released from the hospital very soon.
"The physical therapists are doing a great job with me," he said.
Physicians obviously did a wonderful job, too.
I had a few broken bones and other medical problems myself many years ago while covering sports at the paper, and doctors always told me it would take six weeks to heal the fractures.
I always tried to beat the odds so I could get back sooner.
I know Peterson will, too.
Randy, of course, has two broken bones, so I don't know if that means he'll take longer to heal or not.
Whatever, I know he'll be back on the job sooner than people think.
He's always been a gamer, and he'll return to the writing lineup as quickly as possible.
I wish him the very best.
Friday, December 11, 2015
The Chicago Cubs have been breaking the bank while trying to buy themselves into a World Series. They haven't won one--a World Series, I mean--for more than 100 years. So a lot of Cub fans have died without ever seeing their ballplayers participate in what is supposed to be baseball's biggest two-team tournament. The Cubs today agreed to pay an outfielder named Jason Heyward $184 million over the next 8 seasons to see if he can help get the team into a World Series. This comes a few days after the Cubs spent other millions of dollars signing pitcher John Lackey and second baseman Ben Zobrist. By the way, Heyward's contract says he can opt out of his new deal after 3 seasons or 4 seasons if he isn't happy about something. Frankly, I hope the man stays happy so he can be paid all of that $184 million. And if Heyward, Lackey, Zobrist and all of the other multi-millionaires on the Cubs' roster can't get the team into a World Series, I think Wrigley Field should be turned into a picnic grounds in the summer and an ice skating rink in the winter. Another by the way: National baseball reporters such as Ken Rosenthal are saying the St. Louis Cardinals, Heyward's former team, and the Washington Nationals each offered Heyward $200 million. But Jason, good guy that he is, turned down those larger contracts because he wanted to be a Cub. I'm sure the Cardinals and Nationals understand the young man's rationale. I sure do.
Big 12 Review Of Happenings At Hilton
Memo from the Big 12 Conference:
The conference has reviewed the Iowa - Iowa State men's basketball game and determined the host school handled its postgame celebration protocol consistent with Big 12 Conference Rules related to sportsmanship and ethical conduct. Game management staff appropriately handled their primary responsibility of ensuring the safety of the teams, coaches, officials and administrative staffs. We were sorry tao hear about the unfortunate accident with Des Moines Register reporter Randy Peterson and wish him a speedy recovery.
The conference considers this matter resolved and will have no further comment.
[RON MALY'S COMMENTS--I, too, wish Randy Peterson a speedy recovery after suffering a compound leg fracture during the time when Iowa State fans stormed the court after the Cyclones' 83-82 victory last night over Iowa at Hilton Coliseum. I learned a long time ago to stay away from excited fans running onto basketball courts and football fields. The next time I see Peterson, I'll stress to him that nothing good happens when a man my age or his age collides with college students who are running fast. Hopefully, no one else will get hurt if and when there are court-stormings the rest of the 2015-2016 basketball season. However, as far as I'm concerned, the fewer court-stormings there are, the better off everyone will be].
The conference has reviewed the Iowa - Iowa State men's basketball game and determined the host school handled its postgame celebration protocol consistent with Big 12 Conference Rules related to sportsmanship and ethical conduct. Game management staff appropriately handled their primary responsibility of ensuring the safety of the teams, coaches, officials and administrative staffs. We were sorry tao hear about the unfortunate accident with Des Moines Register reporter Randy Peterson and wish him a speedy recovery.
The conference considers this matter resolved and will have no further comment.
[RON MALY'S COMMENTS--I, too, wish Randy Peterson a speedy recovery after suffering a compound leg fracture during the time when Iowa State fans stormed the court after the Cyclones' 83-82 victory last night over Iowa at Hilton Coliseum. I learned a long time ago to stay away from excited fans running onto basketball courts and football fields. The next time I see Peterson, I'll stress to him that nothing good happens when a man my age or his age collides with college students who are running fast. Hopefully, no one else will get hurt if and when there are court-stormings the rest of the 2015-2016 basketball season. However, as far as I'm concerned, the fewer court-stormings there are, the better off everyone will be].
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Forget that phone call I was planning to make to Fred Hoiberg in Chicago. Fourth-ranked Iowa State [8-0] doesn't need any advice from The Mayor after rallying from a 20-point deficit to get past Iowa, 83-82, on Monte Morris' basket with 9 seconds remaining
Cyclone fans storm Hilton Coliseum court. Photo courtesy of Deadspin. |
By RON MALY
I'm canceling my plan to make that phone call to Fred Hoiberg.
He was busy anyway.
The man they called The Mayor when he lived in Ames and played and coached basketball at Iowa State was calling the shots tonight for the Chicago Bulls in their 83-80 NBA victory over the Los Angeles Clippers at the United Center in Chicago.
Oh, well, I don't need to talk to Hoiberg, the former Iowa State basketball player and coach after all.
I planned to ask Fred if he thought the Cyclones had forgotten how to play defense and how to play both ends of the floor with tenacity since he coached his final game in Ames.
Well, it's a good thing there was a last half to tonight's game against Iowa at Hilton Coliseum.
Although lethargic in the opening half, Iowa State played much better defense and offense in the final 20 minutes--holding Iowa without a point in the final 2 minutes 35 seconds--and won, 83-82, for its eighth victory without a loss in Steve Prohm's first season as Hoiberg's successor.
Monte Morris' basket with 9 seconds remaining decided the drama-filled game.
The Cyclones had games like that when Hoiberg coached 'em, too.
So he would have understood.
Iowa State scored the last 9 points, and many of the giddy students who were in the crowd stormed the court when the game ended [photo at the top of this column].
Yes, Hilton Magic is still alive.
However, it turned out that the magic didn't reach far enough to protect Randy Peterson, a longtime sportswriter who was covering the game for the Des Moines Register.
I learned on Twitter that Peterson suffered a compound fracture of a leg during the court-storming.
I guess that's called being part of the story, not just covering the story.
I tweeted this late-night message to Peterson: "Sorry to hear about your mishap. But knowing what a gamer you are, you won't be MIA very long."
Earlier in the night, Iowa's basketball players seemed capable of making sure there would be no Hilton Magic and no court-storming by Iowa State students.
But the Hawkeyes couldn't continue their first-half domination.
Frankly, the Hawkeyes [7-3] are a veteran team and had no business losing.
They got a phenomenal 30 points from Jarrod Uthoff in the first half and built their lead at one stage to 20 points.
Uthoff connected on 11 of his 13 field goal attempts in the opening 20 minutes.
But the defensive tenaciousness that Iowa State lacked in the first half forced Iowa into mistake after mistake when the game was on the line.
For some reason, Uthoff quit shooting in the last half, finishing with just one basket in those last 20 minutes.
Go figure.
If Iowa is going to be a factor in the Big Ten Conference this season, stuff like that just cannot happen.
And So Forth
By RON MALY
In recent seasons, the Iowa-Iowa State basketball game has been played on Friday nights.
This year's game isn't on Friday night, and I'm happy.
I'm glad it's being played tonight at Hilton Coliseum in Ames.
It starts at 6:30 and it'll be televised by ESPN2.
Leave Friday night to high school basketball.
Many high schools have a difficult enough time attracting fans, including students, to their games without an Iowa-Iowa State game getting in the way.
*
A few days ago, I wrote that I was getting sick of reading the word takeaways in the paper.
Evidently, one or two people at the paper have suddenly decided it's cool term.
Unfortunately, takeaways showed up again in the paper's coverage of the Iowa-Michigan State football game that decided the Big Ten football championship.
Beneath the takeaways headline, was something just as curious.
The paper had a story about the game written by Andy Hamilton that had no Indianapolis dateline.
Which indicated to me that Hamilton wrote the story in Des Moines while watching the game on TV and listening to it on the radio.
Indeed, he included a quote from Ed Podolak, the former standout Hawkeye player who has been a longtime commentator on radio broadcasts of Iowa games.
I doubt people covering the game in the press box at Indianapolis were listening to Podolak's commentary on the Iowa radio network.
I don't know where the quote from Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio came from.
I guess Hamilton will be the successor to Rick Brown [who has taken a buyout] on the Hawkeye sports beat.
Hamilton is no stranger to writing about Iowa athletics.
He covered the Hawkeyes when he worked at the Iowa City Press Citizen, and did it so well that George Wine [now deceased] told me a number of years ago that, at the time, he thought Andy wrote sports stories as well as anyone.
Wine, who was Iowa's sports information director for a quarter-century, was like a lot of us.
He didn't think much of 21st century sportswriting. After he retired, compliments to sportswriters by ol' George were few and far between.
But in his eyes, Hamilton's writing was better than most at the time.
Another curious thing was that Hamilton later left the Press Citizen and moved to the paper here. Both newspapers are owned by the Gannett--a company that has worked hard to earn its horrible reputation.
The fact that Hamilton came to Des Moines cost the hard-working Dan Johnson [also now deceased] his job at the Register.
That's the cut-throat type of business Gannett did, and still does.
Anyway, I am now wondering if bosses at the paper are frothing at the mouth after finding out that Hamilton was able to write a decent story on the Iowa-Michigan State football game by watching it on TV and listening to it on the radio.
For all I know, they may decide to cover all Iowa [and Iowa State] games by watching 'em on TV.
Look at all the money they'd be saving.
No need to fill the gas tank in the company car, no expensive airplane tickets, no meal money, no Motel 6 costs.
*
Still on the subject of the paper, there was this headline in the business section:
Clive store to become Cash Saver outlet
The first two paragraphs of the story said:
"For the second time in less than a year, the Price Chopper grocery store in Clive will be re-branded.
"Starting Dec. 17, the store will become a Cash Saver Food Outlet discount supermarket."
My question is this:
Where the hell in Clive, a city of 16,590 residents, is the Price Chopper store that is turning into a Cash Saver store?
There was no address of the store included in the entire story, which was spread out over two pages.
By the way, I think Price Chopper and Cash Saver are both dumb names for grocery stores.
*
That's it from me. I hope it's a good game tonight.
.
In recent seasons, the Iowa-Iowa State basketball game has been played on Friday nights.
This year's game isn't on Friday night, and I'm happy.
I'm glad it's being played tonight at Hilton Coliseum in Ames.
It starts at 6:30 and it'll be televised by ESPN2.
Leave Friday night to high school basketball.
Many high schools have a difficult enough time attracting fans, including students, to their games without an Iowa-Iowa State game getting in the way.
*
A few days ago, I wrote that I was getting sick of reading the word takeaways in the paper.
Evidently, one or two people at the paper have suddenly decided it's cool term.
Unfortunately, takeaways showed up again in the paper's coverage of the Iowa-Michigan State football game that decided the Big Ten football championship.
Beneath the takeaways headline, was something just as curious.
The paper had a story about the game written by Andy Hamilton that had no Indianapolis dateline.
Which indicated to me that Hamilton wrote the story in Des Moines while watching the game on TV and listening to it on the radio.
Indeed, he included a quote from Ed Podolak, the former standout Hawkeye player who has been a longtime commentator on radio broadcasts of Iowa games.
I doubt people covering the game in the press box at Indianapolis were listening to Podolak's commentary on the Iowa radio network.
I don't know where the quote from Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio came from.
I guess Hamilton will be the successor to Rick Brown [who has taken a buyout] on the Hawkeye sports beat.
Hamilton is no stranger to writing about Iowa athletics.
He covered the Hawkeyes when he worked at the Iowa City Press Citizen, and did it so well that George Wine [now deceased] told me a number of years ago that, at the time, he thought Andy wrote sports stories as well as anyone.
Wine, who was Iowa's sports information director for a quarter-century, was like a lot of us.
He didn't think much of 21st century sportswriting. After he retired, compliments to sportswriters by ol' George were few and far between.
But in his eyes, Hamilton's writing was better than most at the time.
Another curious thing was that Hamilton later left the Press Citizen and moved to the paper here. Both newspapers are owned by the Gannett--a company that has worked hard to earn its horrible reputation.
The fact that Hamilton came to Des Moines cost the hard-working Dan Johnson [also now deceased] his job at the Register.
That's the cut-throat type of business Gannett did, and still does.
Anyway, I am now wondering if bosses at the paper are frothing at the mouth after finding out that Hamilton was able to write a decent story on the Iowa-Michigan State football game by watching it on TV and listening to it on the radio.
For all I know, they may decide to cover all Iowa [and Iowa State] games by watching 'em on TV.
Look at all the money they'd be saving.
No need to fill the gas tank in the company car, no expensive airplane tickets, no meal money, no Motel 6 costs.
*
Still on the subject of the paper, there was this headline in the business section:
Clive store to become Cash Saver outlet
The first two paragraphs of the story said:
"For the second time in less than a year, the Price Chopper grocery store in Clive will be re-branded.
"Starting Dec. 17, the store will become a Cash Saver Food Outlet discount supermarket."
My question is this:
Where the hell in Clive, a city of 16,590 residents, is the Price Chopper store that is turning into a Cash Saver store?
There was no address of the store included in the entire story, which was spread out over two pages.
By the way, I think Price Chopper and Cash Saver are both dumb names for grocery stores.
*
That's it from me. I hope it's a good game tonight.
.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Best-Kept Sports Secret In Central Iowa
A copy of the tweets Mike Mahon and I exchanged today:
mike mahon
@mahonsports
Ronald Wesley Maly @WesleyVaclav
Best kept secret sports event in central Iowa this Fri & Sat: #NCAAVB Regional @WellsFargoCtr —#4Minnesota #7Hawaii #8PennState #21Illinois
Ronald Wesley Maly @WesleyVaclav
Ronald Wesley Maly Retweeted mike mahon
Does the paper know about this yet?
What an embarrassment it is to collegiate football that three teams with 5-7 records--Nebraska, Minnesota and San Jose State--will play in bowl games. I wonder how many players from those losing teams actually want to play another game. Even more embarrassing is the fact that Minnesota will play in something called the Quick Lane Bowl on Dec. 28 in Detroit. I know that if I were invited to Detroit for anything, I'd say thanks, but no thanks.
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Everything Is Coming Up Roses for the Hawkeyes. They'll Play Stanford In the Rose Bowl On New Year's Day. Iowa Hasn't Been To the Rose Bowl Since 1991 and Hasn't Won At Pasadena Since Forest Evashevski's Outstanding 1958 Team Walloped California, 38-12
By RON MALY
Hey, so what if the Hawkeyes lost their first game of the 2015 football season last night and didn't make it to the collegiate playoffs?
They're headed to the Rose Bowl for a Jan. 1 game against Stanford.
Not a bad consolation prize for an Iowa team that has a 12-1 record.
Iowa will take a No. 5 national ranking into the game at Pasadena, Calif., against a Stanford team that's No. 6.
Stanford [11-2] rode a sensational performance by Christian McCaffrey to a 41-22 victory Saturday over Southern California in the Pac-12 title game.
Afterward, David Shaw, his coach, called him the best player in the nation. Indeed, by the time Iowa and Stanford tee it up in the Rose Bowl game on New Year's Day, McCaffrey could be the Heisman Trophy winner.
McCaffrey ran for 207 yards and a touchdown, threw a touchdown pass, caught a a touchdown pass and broke Barry Sanders' one-season all-purpose yards record in the victory over USC.
Iowa lost to Michigan State, 16-13, in the final half-minute of the Big Ten championship game at Indianapolis.
The Hawkeyes haven't been to the Rose Bowl since 1991 and haven't won a Rose Bowl game since the 1958 team coached by Forest Evashevski walloped California, 38-12.
Iowa set Rose Bowl records for total offense and rushing offense in that game, and I regard that team as the best in university football history.
Evashevski's 1956 Hawkeyes defeated Oregon State, 35-19, in the Rose Bowl.
Three of coach Hayden Fry's Iowa teams lost in Pasadena. His 1981 squad was beaten by Washington, 28-0; his 1985 team lost to UCLA, 45-28, and his 1990 team lost to Washington, 46-34.
I'd say it's about time Iowa won one out there.
Hey, so what if the Hawkeyes lost their first game of the 2015 football season last night and didn't make it to the collegiate playoffs?
They're headed to the Rose Bowl for a Jan. 1 game against Stanford.
Not a bad consolation prize for an Iowa team that has a 12-1 record.
Iowa will take a No. 5 national ranking into the game at Pasadena, Calif., against a Stanford team that's No. 6.
Stanford [11-2] rode a sensational performance by Christian McCaffrey to a 41-22 victory Saturday over Southern California in the Pac-12 title game.
Afterward, David Shaw, his coach, called him the best player in the nation. Indeed, by the time Iowa and Stanford tee it up in the Rose Bowl game on New Year's Day, McCaffrey could be the Heisman Trophy winner.
McCaffrey ran for 207 yards and a touchdown, threw a touchdown pass, caught a a touchdown pass and broke Barry Sanders' one-season all-purpose yards record in the victory over USC.
Iowa lost to Michigan State, 16-13, in the final half-minute of the Big Ten championship game at Indianapolis.
The Hawkeyes haven't been to the Rose Bowl since 1991 and haven't won a Rose Bowl game since the 1958 team coached by Forest Evashevski walloped California, 38-12.
Iowa set Rose Bowl records for total offense and rushing offense in that game, and I regard that team as the best in university football history.
Evashevski's 1956 Hawkeyes defeated Oregon State, 35-19, in the Rose Bowl.
Three of coach Hayden Fry's Iowa teams lost in Pasadena. His 1981 squad was beaten by Washington, 28-0; his 1985 team lost to UCLA, 45-28, and his 1990 team lost to Washington, 46-34.
I'd say it's about time Iowa won one out there.
I'm in shock. Drake's women's basktball team isn't supposed to lose games like this. Not by this type of score anyway. Green Bay walloped the Bulldogs, 86-61, today at the Knapp Center. Not the Green Bay Packers. The Green Bay women's basketball team. "We just weren't all there," said Lizzy Wendell of her team's second consecutive loss. "I think our mindset is to get better, but we have to take it possession by possession." Drake coach Jennie Baranczyk said, "We had too many breakdowns...some uncharacteristic turnovers."
I'm Distancing Myself From Last Night
By RON MALY
Getting back to whether last night's Iowa-Michigan State football game was big.
Big enough, that is, to lead off--or even be on--Iowa's all-time highlight reel.
Big enough to be classified alongside the Rose Bowl victories by the Hawkeyes' 1956 and 1958 teams that were coached by Forest Evashevski.
Big enough to be mentioned in the same breath as the 45-21 shellacking Kirk Ferentz's 2002 Iowa squad put on Minnesota to clinch a tie for the Big Ten championship.
Big enough to equal or surpass the nail-biters Nile Kinnick and his 1939 Ironmen had with Notre Dame [a 7-6 victory] and Minnesota [a 13-9 victory].
Big enough to match two or three Iowa-Iowa State games from past seasons.
You can think about the Hawkeyes' 16-13 loss to Michigan State all you want.
Me? I'm planning to forget the game as quickly as I can.
If it's going to wind up on somebody's highlight reel, it will be Michigan State's, not Iowa's.
As far as I'm concerned, Iowa can burn the game film or the videotape, whatever it is they use these days to chronicle football happenings.
I want to think about pleasant things.
Like how Iowa won its first 12 games this season.
Like how Kirk Ferentz, in 2015, proved that he hasn't forgotten how to coach.
Like the Hawkeyes' upcoming Jan. 1 Rose Bowl game against Stanford.
In retrospect, last night was pure misery.
Someone once said moral victories are for losers.
I agree.
I'm pretending last night did not happen.
It was not a game for the ages.
Don't believe anyone who tries to tell you differently.
Getting back to whether last night's Iowa-Michigan State football game was big.
Big enough, that is, to lead off--or even be on--Iowa's all-time highlight reel.
Big enough to be classified alongside the Rose Bowl victories by the Hawkeyes' 1956 and 1958 teams that were coached by Forest Evashevski.
Big enough to be mentioned in the same breath as the 45-21 shellacking Kirk Ferentz's 2002 Iowa squad put on Minnesota to clinch a tie for the Big Ten championship.
Big enough to equal or surpass the nail-biters Nile Kinnick and his 1939 Ironmen had with Notre Dame [a 7-6 victory] and Minnesota [a 13-9 victory].
Big enough to match two or three Iowa-Iowa State games from past seasons.
You can think about the Hawkeyes' 16-13 loss to Michigan State all you want.
Me? I'm planning to forget the game as quickly as I can.
If it's going to wind up on somebody's highlight reel, it will be Michigan State's, not Iowa's.
As far as I'm concerned, Iowa can burn the game film or the videotape, whatever it is they use these days to chronicle football happenings.
I want to think about pleasant things.
Like how Iowa won its first 12 games this season.
Like how Kirk Ferentz, in 2015, proved that he hasn't forgotten how to coach.
Like the Hawkeyes' upcoming Jan. 1 Rose Bowl game against Stanford.
In retrospect, last night was pure misery.
Someone once said moral victories are for losers.
I agree.
I'm pretending last night did not happen.
It was not a game for the ages.
Don't believe anyone who tries to tell you differently.
Saturday, December 5, 2015
Being Naive In 2015
Webster's definition of the word naive:
adjective na·ive \nä-ˈēv, nÄ«-\
By RON MALY
I guess there was something in the paper today that labeled tonight's Iowa-Michigan State football game the biggest in Hawkeye history.
To borrow one of the favorite words of Sec Taylor, who knew a few things about being the sports editor at a newspaper:
Horseshit.
Tonight's game in Indianapolis that will decide the Big Ten championship is the biggest game of Iowa's 2015 season so far, and that's the extent of it.
I've lived through more than a few of the biggest games in Hawkeye history.
Yes, sir, and yes, mam, dozens of 'em.
When you're on the scene, you always think the game you'll be attending or reviewing for the paper is the biggest.
The 1958 Hawkeye team that is still regarded by many as the best in university history had a pretty big game on Jan. 1, 1959.
Talented guys like Randy Duncan, Willie Fleming and Bob Jeter were on that team, and all the Hawkeyes did was cruise past California, 38-12, with an offensive explosion in the Rose Bowl.
Forest Evashevski, one of the best coaches in the history of collegiate football, coached that team.
Evashevski also was the coach in 1956 when Iowa's Big Ten champions steamrolled Oregon State, 35-19, in the Rose Bowl.
Big game.
Another big game in that same season came on Nov. 17 when Iowa seized the Big Ten championship with a massive defensive effort that produced a 6-0 victory over Woody Hayes' Ohio State squad.
I was there.
The emotions filling the stadium on that crisp afternoon in Iowa City that day will rival those in any stadium anywhere.
Yes, what a big game that was.
Kirk Ferentz is Iowa's outstanding coach now,
and he's been involved in more than a few big Hawkeye games.
One that stands out was certainly the Nov. 16, 2002 game at Minnesota in which his Hawkeyes buttoned up an 8-0 Big Ten record and a share of the conference title with a resounding 45-21 victory at Minnesota.
Hayden Fry [his 1981 team went 8-4 and played in the Rose Bowl to end a streak of 19 straight losing seasons at Iowa] had big games.
Howard Jones [he had 7-0 records in 1921 and 1922] had big games.
Eddie Anderson had big games [every one of those games played by The Ironmen in 1939 were big ones, and their star attraction was eventual Heisman Trophy winner Nile Kinnick].
Hell, even Bob Commings had a big game on Sept. 17, 1977.
That was the day his son, Bobby, quarterbacked the Hawkeyes to a 12-10 upset victory over Iowa State in the renewal of the series between the two universities.
My point in all of this is to stress that there have been many big games played by Hawkeye football teams.
Tonight's game is certainly one of them.
When I'm asked to name the biggest, I always say it was that Jan. 1, 1959 game in Pasadena, Calif., when Evashevski's wonderful offensive juggernaut thrashed Oregon State, 38-12, in the Rose Bowl.
Iowa hasn't won a Rose Bowl game since, so that'll do until something better comes along.
[Photos courtesy of Google]
having or showing a lack of experience or knowledge : innocent or simple
By RON MALY
I guess there was something in the paper today that labeled tonight's Iowa-Michigan State football game the biggest in Hawkeye history.
Sec Taylor |
To borrow one of the favorite words of Sec Taylor, who knew a few things about being the sports editor at a newspaper:
Horseshit.
Tonight's game in Indianapolis that will decide the Big Ten championship is the biggest game of Iowa's 2015 season so far, and that's the extent of it.
I've lived through more than a few of the biggest games in Hawkeye history.
Yes, sir, and yes, mam, dozens of 'em.
When you're on the scene, you always think the game you'll be attending or reviewing for the paper is the biggest.
The 1958 Hawkeye team that is still regarded by many as the best in university history had a pretty big game on Jan. 1, 1959.
Talented guys like Randy Duncan, Willie Fleming and Bob Jeter were on that team, and all the Hawkeyes did was cruise past California, 38-12, with an offensive explosion in the Rose Bowl.
Forest Evashevski and His Hawkeyes |
Forest Evashevski, one of the best coaches in the history of collegiate football, coached that team.
Evashevski also was the coach in 1956 when Iowa's Big Ten champions steamrolled Oregon State, 35-19, in the Rose Bowl.
Big game.
Another big game in that same season came on Nov. 17 when Iowa seized the Big Ten championship with a massive defensive effort that produced a 6-0 victory over Woody Hayes' Ohio State squad.
I was there.
The emotions filling the stadium on that crisp afternoon in Iowa City that day will rival those in any stadium anywhere.
Yes, what a big game that was.
Kirk Ferentz is Iowa's outstanding coach now,
Kirk Ferentz and His Hawkeyes In 2002 |
One that stands out was certainly the Nov. 16, 2002 game at Minnesota in which his Hawkeyes buttoned up an 8-0 Big Ten record and a share of the conference title with a resounding 45-21 victory at Minnesota.
Hayden Fry [his 1981 team went 8-4 and played in the Rose Bowl to end a streak of 19 straight losing seasons at Iowa] had big games.
Howard Jones [he had 7-0 records in 1921 and 1922] had big games.
Eddie Anderson had big games [every one of those games played by The Ironmen in 1939 were big ones, and their star attraction was eventual Heisman Trophy winner Nile Kinnick].
Hell, even Bob Commings had a big game on Sept. 17, 1977.
Bob Commings |
That was the day his son, Bobby, quarterbacked the Hawkeyes to a 12-10 upset victory over Iowa State in the renewal of the series between the two universities.
My point in all of this is to stress that there have been many big games played by Hawkeye football teams.
Tonight's game is certainly one of them.
When I'm asked to name the biggest, I always say it was that Jan. 1, 1959 game in Pasadena, Calif., when Evashevski's wonderful offensive juggernaut thrashed Oregon State, 38-12, in the Rose Bowl.
Iowa hasn't won a Rose Bowl game since, so that'll do until something better comes along.
[Photos courtesy of Google]
Friday, December 4, 2015
Valley Freshman Standout Zoe Young Treats Fans [Including Collegiate Coaches] At Bill Coldiron Fieldhouse In West Des Moines To a 16-Point Show As the Tigers Roll To a 74-44 Victory Over Roosevelt
By RON MALY
A sizable crowd showed up tonight at the Bill Coldiron Fieldhouse on the Valley High School campus in West Des Moines to watch Zoe
Young and her Tiger girls' basketball team hang a 74-44 thumping on Roosevelt of Des Moines.
Zoe, who scored 16 points in the victory, is Young in more than her name.
She's a 5-foot 9-inch freshman [that's right, a freshman!] guard for Valley who has already attracted the attention of numerous Division I coaches and scouts around the nation.
Joe Sigrist has built his Valley's girls' basketball program into one of the strongest in the state.
His team finished second in the class 5-A state tournament last season, and the addition of Zoe Young is a huge addition to his program.
Being a freshman, Zoe doesn't even attend Valley yet.
She shows up for her ninth-grade classes at Valley Southwoods Freshman High School in West Des Moines.
Among the collegiate coaches on hand for tonight's game, Sigrist told me, were Iowa State's Bill Fennelly, as well as an assistant on Iowa's staff.
Iowa State and Iowa are among the growing number of universities around the nation that want to recruit Young.
Fennelly obviously needs to start attracting such talented players as Young. His team has been on an early-season skid, losing noteworthy non-conference games to Drake, 74-70; Duke, 86-48, and Idaho, 97-65.
"Michigan State is sending its top assistant coach in a week or two," Sigrist said.
Before she's much older, there will be many more coaches and scouts watching Zoe.
It's going to be an interesting [and eventful] season for Sigrist and his Valley girls.
The Tiger boys aren't bad either. They defeated Roosevelt in the second half of tonight's doubleheader, 61-42.
A sizable crowd showed up tonight at the Bill Coldiron Fieldhouse on the Valley High School campus in West Des Moines to watch Zoe
Zoe Young courtesy of ESPN |
Zoe, who scored 16 points in the victory, is Young in more than her name.
She's a 5-foot 9-inch freshman [that's right, a freshman!] guard for Valley who has already attracted the attention of numerous Division I coaches and scouts around the nation.
Joe Sigrist |
His team finished second in the class 5-A state tournament last season, and the addition of Zoe Young is a huge addition to his program.
Being a freshman, Zoe doesn't even attend Valley yet.
She shows up for her ninth-grade classes at Valley Southwoods Freshman High School in West Des Moines.
Among the collegiate coaches on hand for tonight's game, Sigrist told me, were Iowa State's Bill Fennelly, as well as an assistant on Iowa's staff.
Iowa State and Iowa are among the growing number of universities around the nation that want to recruit Young.
Fennelly obviously needs to start attracting such talented players as Young. His team has been on an early-season skid, losing noteworthy non-conference games to Drake, 74-70; Duke, 86-48, and Idaho, 97-65.
"Michigan State is sending its top assistant coach in a week or two," Sigrist said.
Before she's much older, there will be many more coaches and scouts watching Zoe.
It's going to be an interesting [and eventful] season for Sigrist and his Valley girls.
The Tiger boys aren't bad either. They defeated Roosevelt in the second half of tonight's doubleheader, 61-42.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
I have decided that, when I grow up, I am going to become a major league baseball pitcher. I made that decision tonight after learning that 30-year-old David Price has agreed to sign a 7-year contract with the Boston Red Sox that will pay him $217 million. Many of you may consider that an obscene amount of money to be paid to a man for simply throwing a ball. Not me. I'm calling my travel agent right now, looking for the first flight available to Arizona so I can work on my curveball.
When Coach Maury John and His Drake Basketball Teams Were Enjoying Their Glory Years At Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Talented Organist Bill Henderson Pepped Up the Place With 'Three Blind Mice' and Other Famous Music
By RON MALY
My condolences to the family of Bill Henderson, whose funeral will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Grace Lutheran Church, 3010 52nd Street in Des Moines.
Bill died on Thanksgiving Day at the age of 85.
He was a talented musician who entertained fans as an organist at Veterans Memorial Auditorium when Drake basketball games were played there.
Maury John was the best basketball coach the university ever had.
He was in charge of the Bulldogs' program from the 1958-59 season through the 1970-71 season, coaching his 1968-69 team to the Final Four and taking his squads to three straight NCAA tournaments.
It was Maury John who arranged for organist Bill Henderson to perform at games in the Auditorium.
The organ music was in addition to music provided by the Drake pep band, giving atmosphere at the arena a big-city feel when Drake basketball was in its heyday during the Maury John coaching era.
Henderson always had fun with the fans, the coaches and the players.
John loved it.
The savvy coach, of course, was looking for any home-court advantage he could get in the 14,000-seat arena.
Henderson had fun with the fans and the teams.
The officials? Well, Bill had fun, the zebras probably not.
When Henderson thought the officials gave Drake a bad call, he'd play "Three Blind Mice" on the organ.
Henderson's obituary, provided by Hamilton’s Funeral Home, 605 Lyon Street in Des Moines, said he played the organ for 25 years at the Auditorium., meaning he continued performing after Maury John left Drake following the 1970-71 season.
John took the Iowa State job prior to the 1971-72 season, and persuaded Henderson to be the organist at Hilton Coliseum, which had just opened.
John was able to coach at Iowa State for only two full seasons and part of a third. He developed inoperable cancer in his third year, and died shortly thereafter.
With John's passing came the end of the organ music at Hilton Coliseum.
Henderson's obituary said he skillfully played a number of musical instruments including piano, trombone and tuba in addition to the organ for the Des Moines Symphony, Maple Street Jazz Band, and Veterans Band. Bill was a lifetime member of the Des Moines Musician’s Union.
My condolences to the family of Bill Henderson, whose funeral will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Grace Lutheran Church, 3010 52nd Street in Des Moines.
Bill Henderson. Courtesy of Hamilton's | . |
Bill died on Thanksgiving Day at the age of 85.
He was a talented musician who entertained fans as an organist at Veterans Memorial Auditorium when Drake basketball games were played there.
Maury John was the best basketball coach the university ever had.
He was in charge of the Bulldogs' program from the 1958-59 season through the 1970-71 season, coaching his 1968-69 team to the Final Four and taking his squads to three straight NCAA tournaments.
It was Maury John who arranged for organist Bill Henderson to perform at games in the Auditorium.
The organ music was in addition to music provided by the Drake pep band, giving atmosphere at the arena a big-city feel when Drake basketball was in its heyday during the Maury John coaching era.
Henderson always had fun with the fans, the coaches and the players.
John loved it.
The savvy coach, of course, was looking for any home-court advantage he could get in the 14,000-seat arena.
Henderson had fun with the fans and the teams.
The officials? Well, Bill had fun, the zebras probably not.
When Henderson thought the officials gave Drake a bad call, he'd play "Three Blind Mice" on the organ.
Henderson's obituary, provided by Hamilton’s Funeral Home, 605 Lyon Street in Des Moines, said he played the organ for 25 years at the Auditorium., meaning he continued performing after Maury John left Drake following the 1970-71 season.
John took the Iowa State job prior to the 1971-72 season, and persuaded Henderson to be the organist at Hilton Coliseum, which had just opened.
John was able to coach at Iowa State for only two full seasons and part of a third. He developed inoperable cancer in his third year, and died shortly thereafter.
With John's passing came the end of the organ music at Hilton Coliseum.
Henderson's obituary said he skillfully played a number of musical instruments including piano, trombone and tuba in addition to the organ for the Des Moines Symphony, Maple Street Jazz Band, and Veterans Band. Bill was a lifetime member of the Des Moines Musician’s Union.
Bill Dwyre, who got his start in the newspaper business as a sports copy editor at the Des Moines Register, has retired from his job as a sports columnist at the Los Angeles Times. Dwyre was a longtime sports editor at the Times before writing columns. I worked with Bill in his years at the Register. He's a good guy, and did wonderful work wherever he was employed.
Iowa, Memphis, Providence and Virginia headline the eight-team field for the 2016 Emerald Coast Classic basketball tournament. The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Savannah State and St. Francis Brooklyn also are playing in the tournament with one more team to be announced within the next month. Iowa, Providence and Virginia competed in the 2015 NCAA tournament, with Iowa and Virginia advancing to the third round. First and second-round games will be played at on-campus sites Nov. 12 through Nov. 23, with the third round and championship round scheduled Thanksgiving weekend Nov. 25-26 at Northwest Florida State College in Niceville, Fla. Iowa State captured the 2015 Emerald Coast Classic title by beating Illinois, 84-73, in the championship last Saturday.
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