RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Granny Smith Caramel Apple Crumb

By RON MALY

This cool, breezy Wednesday was an ideal time for me and a bunch of other guys to be enjoying coffee-and-free-pie at Village Inn.


The pie I chose was Granny Smith Caramel Apple Crumble, and it tasted  just as good as it looks in the photo at the left.

That said, let's get down to business.

A tableful of eight experts on everything  showed up to discuss subjects such as the Cubs-Indians World Series, Andrew Logue's forced departure from the paper after 20 years of hard work, the usual second-guessing of the Iowa and Iowa State football teams, Drake's talented women's basketball squad, the scary pre-Halloween scene in the yard next to a guy's house in West Des Moines, the shocking and controversial exit from Drake of longtime athletic trainer Scott Kerr,  the Iowa high school football playoffs that start this week, first-grade tackle football in Oklahoma and assorted other stuff.

I brought up the question about Scott Kerr because a couple of people have asked me in recent days  why he's no longer at Drake.

It wasn't exactly like Kerr didn't know his way around the university's athletic department, and got lost.

He joined the Drake staff as head athletic trainer in August, 1985. 

So that's more than 30 years he was there.

In other words, a lot of sprained ankles and sore knees.

It was explained over today's 2-hour 45-minute pie and coffee session that Kerr and Drake's administration evidently didn't see eye-to-eye on such subjects as support staff and salary.

So there was a parting of the ways.

Tough deal. 

Scott is a good guy and Drake has good people in the administration.

Too bad it happened.

One last thing before I sprawl out on the La-Z-Boy to watch the rest of tonight's World Series telecast.

Kyle Schwarber of the Cubs is an incredible story,  playing--and playing extraordinarily well--in the Series for the first time since undergoing major knee surgery in April.

He's hitting like crazy as the Cubs' designated hitter against the Indians, and I've got to think manager Joe Maddon needs to find a way to get Schwarber into the lineup--not just a pinch-hitter--when the Series moves to Chicago on Friday.