Remembering Chocolate Thunder

Darryl%20Dawkins.jpgGiven the Rockets mediocrity over the last decade or so, it’s hard to get too enthusiastic about professional basketball in Houston. This season’s Rockets team is not bad, but it hasn’t had all of its working parts playing at the same time yet and, even with all those components working, probably isn’t as good as the NBA Western Conference powers Dallas, Phoenix and San Antonio. By the way, the best way to keep up with the Rockets is through Jonathan Feigen’s blog, which is excellent.
About 30 years ago, the Rockets also had a pretty good team, but they were beaten in the Eastern Conference playoffs by the Philadelphia 76ers, who were led by Julius Erving and. one of the true characters of NBA history, 20 year-old center Darryl Dawkins, he of the “Chocolate Thunder-flying, Robinzine-crying, teeth-shaking, glass-breaking, rump-roasting, bun-toasting, wham-bam I am jam.” The NY Times checks in with the always entertaining Chocolate Thunder, who, among other things, used to claim to be an alien from planet Lovetron where he spent off-season practicing “interplanetary funkmanship” with his girlfriend Juicy Lucy.

A quick note about Barbaro’s death

BARBARO1_lg%20013007.jpgThe sad but not unexpected end for Barbaro came earlier this week (prior posts here). Alas, thoroughbreds are born to race, not to convalesce. So, Barbaro was simply not able to fend off the multiple infections that increasingly afflicted his legs and hoof areas.
Although those in horse racing circles knew that the Kentucky Derby champ’s recovery was always a longshot, Barbaro’s death has generated a surprising amount of over-the-top public emotion. Thankfully, the Washington Post’s Sally Jenkins does a good job of placing Barbaro’s death in the perspective of the high-risk nature of thoroughbred racing, as does NY Times Joe Drape in analyzing the advancement in treatment of thoroughbreds that resulted from Barbaro’s attempted recovery.
But the same thing cannot be said for NY Times Select ($) columnist Harvey Araton, who is utterly overwrought in attempting to interpret the public displays of emotion over Barbaro’s death:

Maybe Barbaro, as the fallen champion, was reminiscent of a country that was seriously wounded on 9/11 and has been wobbly ever since. Maybe the horseís medical roller coaster struck a chord at a time when a great American city, ravaged by nature and neglect, still canít stand up. Maybe only in such context can we rationalize such widespread passion for the health of a horse that has exceeded that for any single American soldier killed or wounded in Iraq.

Harvey, get a grip. Sheesh!

What’s the big deal about a snowstorm?

bobby_knight_intrvw1.jpgLegendary basketball coach Bobby Knight (prior posts here) is not everyone’s cup of tea, but he sure keeps things entertaining.
After coaching for most of his career at Indiana University where basketball is king, Coach Knight has never been all that comfortable playing out his coaching string at Texas Tech, where basketball is just a distraction between football and spring football.
On Saturday, Coach Knight was not impressed that only about 11,000 fans showed up to see Tech beat perennial Big 12 basketball powerhouse Kansas despite a snowstorm that dumped several inches of snow in the Lubbock area. Coach Knight is amazed that Texans make such a big deal about winter weather (just imagine if he had been in Houston last week!):

“People in Texas gotta understand that goddamn snow, you drive through it. Jesus!” Knight observed in his post-game remarks. “I mean, they’re selling out grocery stores.”

Not missing a beat, Coach Knight then turned entreprenurial:

“I think I’m going to buy a store and start rumors about snowfall.”

HT DMN College Sports blog.

The Admiral of San Antonio

David%20Robinson_vi.jpgOne of my sisters, Mary, is a pediatrician who lives in Boerne and works in San Antonio.
Although sister Mary couldn’t care less about professional sports in general and professional basketball in particular, she knows who former San Antonio Spurs center David Robinson is and admires him a great deal. This NY Times article explains why.
Robinson made a lot of money in San Antone while playing for the Spurs, embraced the community during his playing days and decided to stick around and give back to the community after his playing career was over. Bully for him.

The myth of healthy marathoners

chevronmarathon.jpgThe Chevron Houston Marathon takes place Sunday morning, and this Dale Robertson/Chronicle article tells the story of Dolph Tillotson, the Galveston Daily News publisher who almost died of a heart attack while training at Memorial Park in preparation for the 2004 marathon. Tillotson has now recovered to the extent that he is going to try and complete the marathon on Sunday, which is certainly a remarkable comeback.
But is Tillotson’s long-distance running making him healthier? Art DeVany argues that it does not and, in this recent post, notes a study from the Annals of New York Academy of Sciences that indicates that long-distance running is more dangerous to one’s health than conventional wisdom suggests:

Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1977;301:593-619.
Related Articles, Links
Coronary heart disease in marathon runners.
Noakes T, Opie L, Beck W, McKechnie J, Benchimol A, Desser K.
Six highly trained marathon runners developed myocardial infarction. One of the two cases of clinically diagnosed myocardial infarction was fatal, and there were four cases of angiographically-proven infarction. Two athletes had significant arterial disease of two major coronary arteries, a third had stenosis of the anterior descending and the fourth of the right coronary artery. All these athletes had warning symptoms. Three of them completed marathon races despite symptoms, one athlete running more than 20 miles after the onset of exertional discomfort to complete the 56 mile Comrades Marathon. In spite of developing chest pain, another athlete who died had continued training for three weeks, including a 40 mile run. Two other athletes also continued to train with chest pain. We conclude that the marathon runners studied were not immune to coronary heart disease, nor to coronary atherosclerosis and that high levels of physical fitness did not guarantee the absence of significant cardiovascular disease. In addition, the relationship of exercise and myocardial infarction was complex because two athletes developed myocardial infarction during marathon running in the absence of complete coronary artery occlusion. We stress that marathon runners, like other sportsmen, should be warned of the serious significance of the development of exertional symptoms. Our conclusions do not reflect on the possible value of exercise in the prevention of coronary heart disease. Rather we refute exaggerated claims that marathon running provides complete immunity from coronary heart disease.

DeVany — who has been studying physiology and exercise protocols for years — has accumulated a series of posts regarding the unhealthy nature and outright dangers of endurance training. The reality is that many endurance runners are not particularly healthy people, suffering from lack of muscle mass, overuse injuries, dangerous inflammation and dubious nutrition.
Tillotson obviously has great desire and discipline to be able to return to marathon running after almost dying of a heart attack. But his judgment in doing so is open to serious question.

And you thought big-time college football was competitive?

chess-game-480.jpgAlums of several Ivy League powerhouses might be calling for the head of their coaches soon.
Their chess coaches, that is.
As noted in this Washington Post article, former Ivy League chess powerhouses such as Harvard and Princeton are now routinely waxed by emerging powers such as burgeoning powers as University of Maryland, the University of Texas at Dallas and Miami Dade College. Even more interesting is the way that these new top teams are doing it. They hire Russian and East European coaches and offer full-ride scholarships for recruits, many of whom are from abroad, one of whom was a 40 year old grandmaster. Ringers such as that led to the usual regulatory initiatives, such as prohibiting grandmasters over the age of 25. Now, there is even a six-year eligibility limit and a requirement that players maintain a 2.0 GPA and at least a half-time course schedule. Sounds almost like football . . .
But the market for chess coaches remains robust. Might things have turned out differently for Bobby Fischer had this market been around a generation ago?

Those darn “four-legged fire ants”

feral hog.JPGThis earlier post reported on the emerging market for the meat of feral hogs, which are a fixture of rural (and, increasingly, suburban) Texas.
The Chronicle’s Shannon Tompkins takes the discussion of earlier post several steps further and provides this excellent overview of the feral hog phenomenom in Texas. The battle between humans and hogs is a fascinating story involving a myriad of subjects — including biology, ecology, farming, hunting and game policy — and it appears that the hogs are winning that battle!

Are you ready to rumble?

bilde2.jpgWhat’s the old saying about hockey fans went to see a fight and a hockey match broke out?
Well, as Gary Gaffney reports, when the University of Iowa and Iowa State University wrestling squads got it on over the past weekend, 13,700 screaming Iowans showed up and the respective coaches — including Iowa’s legendary former head coach, Dan Gable — almost got it on, too.
Even though the other coaches involved are quite a bit younger than Gable and — like Gable — former Olympic wrestlers, don’t bet against Gable in a fracas.

The Delta Center becomes the Melta Center

HMMPCover.gifNaming rights deals on stadiums and arenas are notoriously speculative ventures, and sometimes the naming itself becomes rather odd. Inasmuch as debtors in bankruptcy such as Delta Airlines don’t normally renew naming rights deals, a nuclear waste company has bought the naming rights for what was formerly known as the Utah Jazz’s Delta Center, prompting local wags to propose nicknames such as Glow Bowl, the Isotope, the ChernoBowl, the Tox Box, and the Melta Center.
Of course, the Times story can’t report on this development without reminding us of Houston’s naming rights fiasco:

Radioactivity is quite new to naming rights, unless you count the brief time before Minute Maid replaced Enron as the name of the Houston Astrosí ballpark.

By the way, this Forbes slideshow (related article here) reviews the ten largest naming rights deals, which is led by another Houston deal.

A Sonic boom fizzles in Seattle

SeattleSonics2.jpgI read this NY Times article over the weekend and found it rather refreshing:

Empowered by a wave of venture capital, a hiring boom and pride in its homegrown billionaires, this city has decided it no longer needs a mediocre professional basketball team to feel good about itself.
On Election Day, residents rebuffed their once-beloved Seattle SuperSonics, voting overwhelmingly for a ballot measure ending public subsidies for professional sports teams. [. . .]
The vote last week guarantees that the Sonics will leave their current home, KeyArena, in 2010, he said. The team may move to the Seattle suburbs and plans to talk to the State Legislature about that in coming weeks, but most people here think [the Sonics’ owners] will move the team to Oklahoma City.

In short, the cost of subsidizing an NBA team has finally exceeded the benefits that most Seattle residents believe they derive from having an NBA team. The same thing has already occurred in Los Angeles with regard to the NFL. As professional sports franchises test the upper limit of what consumers are willing to pay for their product, several other cities will likely follow LA and Seattle’s lead. That’s not a bad development. Warren Meyer agrees.