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April 2007 Archives

April 28, 2007

Closing up shop

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Wow, that was fun.

I know the Penn Relays was probably the third most important sports event going on in Philadelphia this weekend, but the action and the atmosphere proved once again why it really is one of the most fun weekends every year.

Am I tired? Yeah, I am. But every moment of it was worth doing. And I can't help thinking that as great as this year's Relays were, next year's version -- being in an Olympic year -- will just be off the charts.

So that's it from me. But before I go put the blog back in storage for a while, I'd like to thank all of you readers out there for actually paying attention to this thing.

One of the most gratifying things that can happen to a journalist is finding out that people are reading his or her work. Over these three days, the blog has averaged more than 1,500 pageviews per day. The only comparable day over this thing's entire history was Selection Sunday. So I feel truly honored to have this kind of attention.

With that, I sign off for now.

He's really good at running

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After trying for two days, I finally caught up with Texas sprinter Jamaal Charles. He ran in the 100-meter sprint Championship of America today after qualifying yesterday (despite an apparent, but uncalled, false start by the guy who won).

Some of you out there might know Charles for a different reason, though. He's a stud running back for the Longhorns' football team. I talked to him about what it's like to play two sports. Click on the photo above to watch.

UPDATE: Was told that Charles isn't actually dating Sanya Richards. His now-former teammate, cornerback Aaron Ross, is. Oops.

The race of the day

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Just before the high school boys' 4x400-meter Championship of America race, I wondered aloud why so many of the Jamaican fans were still around, the USA vs. the World races being long done.

Well, that question got answered rather quickly. There were three powerhouse Jamaican schools in the race: St. Jago, Kingston College and Calabar.

But they were all beaten by Long Beach Poly in what was by far the loudest high school race I've ever seen at Franklin Field. Despite the fact that Yohan Blake was running the anchor for St. Jago, Long Beach Poly's Bryshon Nellum never let him get by and held on for a truly thrilling win.

Nellum's 45.4-second anchor leg was the fifth-fastest split ever in Penn Relays history; the team's winning time of 3:09.89 was the second-fastest ever.

St. Jago came in secend in 3:10.42, a difference of 0.53 seconds.

I shot some video of the fans during the anchor leg. Watch it by clicking on the above photo.

College men's 110-meter hurdles Championship of America

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Hail to the victors

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A day after breaking the record in the 4x1500-meter relay, the Michigan women went out today and made history again. They set a new Penn Relays and overall collegiate record in the 4x800m race, winning in 8:18.78. Tennessee had set the previous record, 8:20.22, in 1984.

The Lady Vols finished second today, in 8:27.45.

Anna Willard, who ran the third leg today and yesterday, was named the Oustanding Women's College Athlete of the Meet.

Men's masters 75+ 100-meter dash

So you'll remember there were a bunch of Masters races yesterday. Well, they saved the best one for today: the 75-and-older 100-meter dash. Here are a few photos:

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Edward Cox is the guy in the middle.

Bell lap

So you've probably figured out by now that the Relays ended at around 6 p.m. Because of the rain and the swarms of people around Franklin Field, I decided to get out and write from home. I still have a bunch of stuff to post, so stick around.

From one home team to another

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For the fans at Franklin Field who come here more than once weekend each year, a few names in the USA vs. the World distance medley relay probably sounded familiar.

Two former Penn runners competed in the event: 2004 graduate Sam Burley (left) ran the third (800-meter) leg for USA Red, and 2006 graduate Courtney Jaworski (right) ran the third leg for the All Stars.

After the race, they both spoke about what it meant to come back to the Penn Relays wearing different jerseys. Click on the photos above to watch the videos.

The Zimbabwe 4x100-meter team

The Zimbabwe 4x100-meter relay team is the fist African team ever to compete in this event at the Penn Relays.

Click here to watch them talk about the experience.

I'm off to the infield for a while. Back later.

UPDATE: Fixed, with thanks to commenter KB for pointing out the mistake

The Championship of America Jamaica

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With seven of eight teams in the high school boys' 4x100-meter Championship of America hailing from Jamaica, the many Jamaican fans in the stands at Franklin Field had a great time watching their teams.

St. Jago won the race, with star Yohan Blake anchoring. The team was presented with its Championship of America plaque by another track star -- Carl Lewis. You might have heard of him.

Click on the photo above to watch them.

A local winner

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Hatboro-Horsham's Joe Berry won the high school boys' pole vault with a Penn Relays record of 4.96 meters (16 feet, 3 1/4 inches). He tried to clear five meters even on his final vault but couldn't quite.

4x400-meter USA vs. the World relays

On the women's side, USA Red -- with Allyson Felix running second and Monique Henderson running third -- won in a rout. They finished in 3:24.70, with Jamaica second in 3:29.84.

On the men's side, USA Red and USA Blue finished 1-2, pulling the track equivalent of a boxout against an attempted surge by Jamaica over the last half of the anchor leg.

Both US teams were stacked. USA Red (always the stronger of the two) had 2004 4x400-meter gold medalist Derrick Brew running second and LaShawn Merritt running third. USA Blue had former Penn Relays stars Wallace Spearman (Arkansas) second and Kerron Clement (Florida) third, with Bershawn Jackson anchoring.

USA Red's winning time was 2:59.18. USA Blue finished in 3:00.04. Jamaica was third in 3:00.44.

For the cameras

ESPN analyst Lewis Johnson does his best Dick Vitale impression and gets the Jamaican fans to make some noise.

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Today's crowd

It looks like this:

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Engineering & Science wins the Public League race

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Yep, I've used that headline before. They swept both genders.

Get out the brooms

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USA Red won the 4x100 women's relay, with Lauryn Williams (not surprisingly) blowing out the field to finish things off in 42.87 seconds. Jamaica finished second in 43.55, a hair ahead of USA Blue with 43.58.

On the men's side, USA Red won in 38.35, with Tyson Gay opening and 2004 gold medalist in the 200m Sean Crawford anchoring. Jamaica was second and USA Blue finished third.

Showtime

We interrupt the order I was going to do things in for the marquee races of the Penn Relays: the USA vs. the World 4x100-meter sprints.

Yeah, the 4x400 high school races are the meat and potatoes of the thing. But this is where the speed and the stars and the best athletes are. ESPN2 is on the air now so watch it live, then check back here for my view of things.

On call

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It's not always easy to find familiar people at the Penn Relays, with more than 19,000 runners competing this year. But you probably know -- or at least you've heard -- Ron Lopresti and Burt Ritchie. They're the public address announcers at Franklin Field.

I shot a video of Lopresti (left) and Ritchie (right) calling a 4x400-meter high school boys' relays race. To watch it, click on the photo above.

Taking off

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Jared Dixon of Fiorello H. LaGuardia Arts High School in Manhattan goes up for a high jump attempt.

Warming up

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I am definitely not a morning person. But when it's this nice out, with the sun shining and some of the runners out in the infield getting warmed up, I can't help being excited. It's the sports equivalent of the moment when an orchestra is tuning up onstage in front of the audience.

Joe Juliano leads the Inquirer's coverage with a recap of Texas' victory in the Distance Medley Relay. Juliano also previews today's USA vs. the World races with a profile of Tyson Gay, who wants to challenge 100-meter sprint world record-holder Asafa Powell on the big stage.

Jeff McLane recaps the college women's races, led by Michigan's great win in the 4x1500m relay. Nice to see how much it means to the Wolverines.

Sam Carchidi writes a great column about the Masters runners.

Juliano, McLane and Keith Pompey's notebook is led by Coatesville's win in the high school boys' DMR.

The Inquirer also has two good photo slideshows.

In the Daily News, Ted Silary recaps the day for Chestnut Hill Academy shot putter Wayne Crawford, who finished in second behind another football player. He'll have quite the decision to make when he gets to North Carolina in the fall. Steve King writes a preview of USA vs. the World and throws in a few other tidbids.

The same is true for Frank Litsky of the New York Times, whose USA vs. the World preview highlights the 10-year-long rise to prominence of Tyson Gay.

In the Washington Post, Camille Powell tells us something I didn't know: that the Championship of America plaque weighs 30 pounds. Carl Little writes that Matt Centrowitz's record-setting time in the high school boys' mile is nothing special.

Two non-Relays stories. First, six Penn State football players, including Anthony Scirotto and Justin King, were charged yesterday after a brawl they were involved in four weeks ago. Frank Fitzpatrick and Bernard Fernandez have the details. Second, Dick Jerardi's story on St. Joe's guard Jawan Carter's transfer to Delaware.

April 27, 2007

When (if, just to be safe) the sun comes out tomorrow...

I'll close the day's posts with one last photo, which I consider to be something of a personal accomplishment. If you've ever been to Franklin Field at night, you know it's pretty dark and thus very hard to get good pictures in. I managed to get this shot of a handoff during the high school girls' 4x400-meter Championship of America race, and I think it's pretty good.

Talk to you all again in the morning.

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Champions

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Eleanor Roosevelt's girls 4x400-meter relay team did two really impressive things tonight.

First, when their team was announced as the runners took to the track, they got the loudest ovation in a field that included four Jamaican teams.

Second, Roosevelt went out and won the race, capped off by a scintillating 53.4-second anchor leg from Tameka Jameson. The picture above is all I was able to get of Jameson crossing the finish line. The picture below is rather more obvious.

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I shot two videos after the race. First, I talked to Roosevelt coach Desmond Dunham about what the win means for his program. Then I talked to Doris Anyanwu, who ran the opening leg, about her emotions during the race.

Even though it's dark out...

... there are still records falling.

Matt Centrowitz of Broadneck (Maryland) High School just set the record in the boys' high school mile with a winning time of 4:08.38.

Today's attendance

Announced as 39,166.

On the wire part 2

Dan Gelston of the AP filed this preview of the USA vs. the World races.

He also filed this recap of Texas' win in the DMR, which includes a few elements of the above story at the end.

Jamaican fans

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Part of the deal with being able to shoot video here is that I can't shoot races themselves. I can shoot fans, though. So for the high school girls 4x100-meter Championship of America race, I put the camera on the Jamaican fans the whole time.

Check it out by clicking on the photo.

70 years or younger

Three shots from the Men's Masters 70+ race.

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Wayne Bennett of Dallas Masters (No. 2, in case you didn't figure it out) was the winner, posting a time of 13.98 seconds.

I have a couple of movies to process, so I'm going to go do that and I'll be back later.

(Meanwhile, we're only on college men's 4x400-meter heats. We really are two and a half hours behind.)

Jamaica wins at everything

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... inclduing the Special Olympics 4x100-meter relay, as Shane Hudson crosses the finish line first. The winning time was 49.04 seconds.

Amputee Men's 100-meter dash

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Nothing about their performance seemed disabled to me, that's for sure.

Shuttle hurdles transfer

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With Penn at the near side, a shot of how the transfer in the shuttle hurdles works. Once the first runner crosses the line, the other gets going. There's no actual transfer of an object.

Duel in the shuttle hurdles

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Rhode Island is on the near side; I forget what the other school is.

Liftoff

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Cornell's Ray Taylor gets airborne during the long jump.

Villanova 2nd in the men's DMR

Villanova ran Texas real close in the men's distance medley relay, but the Longhornns pulled away for the win, 9:29.60 to 9:32.00 for the Wildcats.

This will be one of the main stories in tomorrow's papers, so if you don't mind I'm going to skip the press conference (Joe Juliano is there) and work on some other things I'll be posting shortly.

USA vs. the World Press Conference

Hi to all who've come here through the front page of Philly.com. I've been down on the field for a while and I'm headed back there in a moment. But in the meantime, here's the audio of the USA vs. the World press conference from earlier this afternoon. It featured some of the top names who will race in tomorrow's USA vs. the World races at the Penn Relays, including:

-- Allyson Felix, USA
-- Lauryn Williams, USA
-- Sherone Simpson, Jamaica
-- Tyson Gay, USA
-- Wallace Spearmon, USA

First ladies

A couple big results of note while the blog server was going haywire:

-- Eleanor Roosevelt of Prince George's County, Md., came back to beat Jamaican power Holmwood Tech for the the girls' 4x800-meter relay Championship of America in a thrilling finish. Roosevelt's anchor chased down Holmwood Tech's anchor (I can't find their names at the moment) in the final homestretch and snatched the victory just by the length of her head at the finish line.

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-- Later, in the college women's 4x1500-meter relay, powerhouse (and I do mean powerhouse) Michigan broke Villanova's famed record of 17:18.10, winning the Championship of America in 17:15.62. The ovation they got at the end and the lap of honor they ran after the race was fully deserved.

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Okay, so that took than I expected

Sorry. I was out taking photos. Including these four from the Masters 60+ 4x100-meter relay.

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The woman in the bottom right picture was part of a team of runners all aged 70 or more.

Gremlins

So you probably noticed that the blog crashed for a while. Sorry. It happens sometimes.

Normal service will resume shortly.

Race video

Just found out that this website has streaming footage of races after they take place. So if you want to see a particular team and you know what heat it ran in, have at it.

(Just don't abandon my blog for it!)

Why the Jamaican fans just got loud

Yohan Blake just got on the track and his St. Jago team won its 4x100-meter heat in 40.94 seconds. I don't have the anchor leg time Blake ran yet but I'll try to get it.

Puerto Rico Baseball Academy

Yep, that's one of the teams running in the 4x100-meter relay at the moment. They came in 2nd to St. George's of Jamaica, 43.43 seconds to the winning 42.28 seconds.

I actually walked by them earlier, and the school's logo looks almost exactly like the World Baseball Classic logo.

Oh, wait, there's a good reason for that at the bottom of this page.

Is Pat Gillick in the house?

The crowd today

It looks something like this:

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The time machine

Just got an email from Joe Juliano that 1999 was the last year there was a lightning delay. He also sent along the Inquirer's recap of that day. Here's Ron Reid's story:


A LIGHT SHOW
STORMS AND STARS AT RELAYS

Apr 24, 1999

By Ron Reid, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Four women from Texas blazed around Franklin Field to a meet record yesterday in the 105th Penn Relays , where Georgetown made the men's distance medley a drama for about 90 seconds and TCU fell by the competitive wayside.

Bad weather also got into the act, dousing athletes, officials and those of the 31,109 spectators who couldn't find cover with a steady rain that got intense at times before lightning suspended competition twice for a total of 90 minutes and forced the rescheduling of some events for today.

Herman Mancini, 87, the clerk of course emeritus who has officiated the last 61 Penn Relays , said the suspensions were a Penn Relays first.

A nicer time was produced by the Longhorns' Kim McGruder, Nanceen Perry, LaKiesha White and LaKeisha Backus, who graced their victory in the 4x100-meter relay with superb baton passing and superior speed.

When Backus shot across the finish line, 10 meters in front of Pete-Gaye Dowdie of Louisiana State, the timers caught Texas in 43.33 seconds. LSU was second in 44.27.

The Longhorns' time wiped out the former Penn Relays standard of 43.42, set by LSU in 1998, and obviously added another chapter to the ongoing rivalry between the two teams, each of whom will contend for the NCAA outdoor championship in June.

``We came here hoping to do that,'' McGruder said of the record run. ``We knew if we came in ready to compete, we knew we were capable of breaking a record. ''

The LSU women won't go home empty-handed. Loren Leverton, Selena Lewis, April Sams and Philadelphia's Joyce Bates saw to that with a 54.01-second victory in the women's shuttle hurdles.

Bates, the NCAA indoor hurdles champion who prepped at Simon Gratz High School, nailed the victory with a strong closing leg.

``I knew we weren't first when I was coming out,'' Bates said, ``but I just said to myself: `I'm stronger than them. ' I focused on my rhythm. I couldn't tell where I was . . . because there was so much water in my eyes. I was just pounding forward and hoping I would get through the line first. ''

High drama of a longer duration came in the men's distance medley relay during the brief stint in which Georgetown anchorman John Jordan seemed headed toward a colossal upset of Arkansas' Seneca Lassiter.

Jordan had taken the baton 15 meters behind Lassiter, one of the nation's best middle-distance stars, at the final exchange and trailed by as much as 25 meters through the early stages of the 1,600-meter leg.

But Jordan closed the distance with a courageous pace helped enormously by Lassiter. For reasons known only to his psyche, the Razorbacks senior eased off in the final 400 meters to save himself, as he explained later, for today's 4x800 and 4xmile relays .

The result was Jordan pulling to within one long stride of his Razorbacks rival before Lassiter knew what was up.

Once he realized the situation, coming out of the first turn in the final 400 meters, Lassiter hit the throttle and ran away from Jordan like a startled pickpocket. He boosted his lead to 20 meters before he came out of the final turn and won the race by 15 meters.

Lassiter ran a 4:02.5 split to give Arkansas a victory in 9:32.81, the slowest time in 17 years but a happy one for the Hogs, who wanted to make amends for losing the DMR to Michigan last year.

Arkansas got good early work ahead of Lassiter. Mike Power, an Australian, covered the opening 1,200 lead leg in 2:54.7. Ryan Stanley blasted through the 400-meter second leg in 46.2, and James Karanu, a Kenyan, had a 1:49.4 split for the 800-meter leg that preceded Lassiter's lope.

``He had it all set up for himself,'' said Jordan, reflecting on the apparent guile of his Arkansas rival. ``I knew once he took it out it would be tough to catch him because I used up so much [energy] trying to gain ground on him. ''

Jordan was timed in 4:03.8, but the Hoyas were beaten for second place by Southern Methodist, who got a spectacular 3:57.2 anchor leg from Clyde Colenso.

``I guess I relaxed too much on that second 800,'' said Lassiter. ``I didn't realize how much I'd slowed down but I didn't nothing of it. I knew I had all the energy in the world. ''

So did the sprinters of TCU, but their control was a big problem. The pre-meet favorite in the men's 4x100-meter relay , the Flying Frogs suffered a highly uncharacteristic bad handoff in their qualifying heat. Jarmiene Holloway, running second, barely got the baton to Lindel Frater within the passing zone. The error cost dearly as the Frogs finished 15th with a time of 41.11 seconds. Three weeks ago, their victory in the Texas Relays was timed in 38.64.

TCU's pratfall left Clemson the favorite in today's final off a 39.98 qualifying mark. No other team broke 40 seconds. Clemson also ran the fastest time in the 4x200 qualifying heats at 1:22.66. Auburn was second in 1:22.76, the only other team to break 1:23.

The women's 4x1,500-meter relay went to Wisconsin's Stephanie Pesch, Bethany Brewster, Janet Westphal and Jenelle Deatherage.

The Badgers put it out of reach on the third leg, shortly after Westphal took the lead away from Kelly Brady of Wake Forest and moved 15 meters ahead of the pack. Deatherage gave a little ground on the final leg but held a 10-meter margin of victory at the finish line.

Wisconsin's winning time of 17:37.15 was the second slowest in the 11-year history of the event, but the race was decidedly more painful for Villanova.

Krissy Jost, in what was only her second race of the outdoor season, showed she has yet to recover from the foot injury that cost her all of last season and indoor competition in 1999.

Jost, the 1997 NCAA 3,000-meter champion, simply wasn't ready to race. Nova fell 15 seconds behind after the first leg, and Carmen Douma, Kristen Nicollini and Carrie Goddard couldn't overcome the deficit.

The Wildcats finished sixth in 17:51.24 and left first-year coach Marcus O'Sullivan wondering whom to run today in the women's distance medley.

Brad Snyder of South Carolina won the shot for the second straight year when he muscled the 16-pound iron ball 64 feet, 5 1/4 inches. Snyder won at 65-9 3/4 last year.

Yet another Kimberly Williams post

So you might recall that I wrote yesterday about Kimberly Williams, the triple-jumper from Vere Tech of Jamaica.

After I did that, word got out that her jump wouldn't stand as the record because it was wind-assisted.

Well, it turns out that the supposed winning jump wasn't even her longest effort. Her actual longest was 43 feet, 10 inches (13.36 meters), and it wasn't wind assisted. So the record is indeed hers.

And for that good reason, Kimberly Williams is the High School Girls Athlete of the Meet this year.

A shoutout

To Daily News Penn Relays beat writer Drew McQuade. I was tipped off that his CYO team, St. Martha, ran in the Philadelphia Archdiocese Junior Boys 4x100-meter relay.

Unfortunately, the team finished seventh out of nine teams with a time of 59.55 seconds. St. William won the race in 56.51 seconds.

"They drew a bad lane," a fan told me.

Here we go again

And we're back in action, with the PIAA Middle School Girls 4x100-meter relay just done and the Camden Diocese Boys' 4x100m relay about to start.

Still we wait

No word about what time races will resume.

The debate in the press room is over whether the combination of this delay and the last one (which went almost an hour and a half) is the longest in Penn Relays history.

Joe Juliano of the Inquirer says it's "the only delay" he's ever seen, and he's been here a while. I overheard Frank Litsky of the New York Times involved in a discussion going back a couple decades... I'll be nice and not say which ones.

Track cleared again

More lightning in the area, even though it isn't raining at the moment.

Racing resumes in half an hour.

The Geordie track spike boys

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The Royal Grammar School of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, England, is currently running in the 4x800-meter relay. It's the first time ever a British school is competing in this event.

They're wearing white uniforms with red and blue trim (the guy at the far left in the picture). Somehow, that doesn't make sense to me...

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Photo by Flickr user Akuppa.

Let's get it on

Two and a half minutes ahead of the scheduled 11:10 a.m. restart, we're back underway with Event 84: High School Boys 4x800-Meter Large Schools. And there are 18 schools in this race, including three from Jamaica and five from the Pennsylvania suburbs of Philly.

The crowd is pretty big, probably as many people here already as there were all of yesterday, but they're all under the overhang. Which is one of the really great things about Franklin Field, both because of the protection from the rain (in theory, though often not in practice) and because of the way it bounces the noise around.

When it's raining, watch a movie

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If, like me, you've got nothing else to do, check out the movie I shot of the rain here by clicking on the picture above.

And here's some more reading material. If you speak French, check out a nice story on the history and culture of the Penn Relays that ran today in Le Monde, one of the biggest newspapers (by circulation and influence, though not at all by size of the page) in France.

If you don't, here's a story in English from the Jamaica Observer (hat tip to The Buzz) on Jamaican high school star Yohan Blake. He is quite possibly the next Asafa Powell.

Just heard that races will resume at 11:10.

Thunder

Just had some thunder and lightning. I know my mother's reading this, and I can assure her that I'm fine.

Though some of the floodlights just went out.

The bigger problem is that if I make a run for the press room, I have to go from my covered seat out into the rain to get there.

Hmmm. Never mind, the call's been made. Everyone off the track.

I'm gonna make a run for it.

UPDATE: Having successfully made the run, word is we break for half an hour. I shot some rain footage and I'm going to work on that for a bit.

It's not just me

Screen capture from the results website:

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I was going to shoot some video of the rain but it's not coming down as hard anymore.

The Penn Relays and the Postal Service

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... two things that keep going no matter the weather. My seat is under cover by only a few inches, so I'm able to write with a plastic bag over the top of my laptop screen.

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Let's have a look at this morning's headlines:

Joe Juliano recaps the women's distance medley relay, in which Villanova had a late lead but got caught by Tennessee right at the end. Mike Kern does too. I would have blogged about this but I was working on the Public and Catholic League videos at the time.

I told you Sam Carchidi would have a piece about the Virginia Tech track team, and here it is.

Keith Pompey recaps a big day for Methacton's Ryann Krais, highlighted by victory in the 400-meter hurdles.

Jeff McLane was out at the field, where Texas' Michelle Carter made her father proud by winning the shot put.

And all three of the above writers compiled the notebook, featuring Abilene Christian's Nicodemus Naimadu's record-tying third straight win in the steeplechase.

Daily News Penn State beat writer Bernard Fernandez checks in on the team's NFL draft prospects, especially Tony Hunt, and notes that Joe Paterno won't be paying attention. Good for him. (I have to, as it's part of my job.)

Temple will rename its baseball field in honor of longtime former coach James "Skip" Wilson this weekend.

And finally, if I may take a bit of a tangent (the rain does this to one's mind): Major League Soccer commissioner Don Garber dropped a hint that Philadelphia is very much in the mix for an expansion team and soon. Take that as a clue about where this blog might go if it comes...

Anyone got an ark?

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I could sure use one if you do. It is pouring out and it looks like it's going to keep raining for a while.

But everyone here thinks the first race is going off on time. We'll see.

April 26, 2007

Closing up shop

I think that's it for the night. There are a few more long-distance races to be run, but there isn't really much news- (or humor-) worthy.

Talk to you all again in the morning.

Breaking news: Jawan Carter to transfer to Delaware

We interrupt the Penn Relays coverage for a college basketball story...

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Thanks to another one of my apparently growing network of expert tipsters, this story from the Wilmington News Journal:

NEWARK – Former Delaware high school boys basketball Player of the Year Jawan Carter is transferring to the University of Delaware from St. Joseph’s, he said today.

Apparently the rumors have been swirling on this for some time. It's worth remembering that the Blue Hens' coach is former St. Joe's assistant Monte Ross, who recruited Carter to Hawk Hill.

The Hawks' backcourt this past season was certainly pretty deep with Carter, D.J. Rivera, Garrett Williamson and Darrin Govens. Some might say too deep, and Carter certainly seems to be among those some. Still, I find it a bit surprising, if only because I thought that amount of depth would end up being an asset.

Discuss.

The photo of Jawan Carter getting beat to a loose ball by Curtis Sumpter was taken at this past season's Holy War by the Inquirer's Ron Cortes. It's the only one in the system I could find on short notice.

Where all the cool people are

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At the water pit corner of the steeplechase track, of course.

Attendance

23,996. Just announced.

Distance stuff to come -- and the Jamaican media are already complaining that it's getting cold.

More pictures

The Inquirer has posted a slideshow of the day's action that you can see by clicking here.

Engineering & Science wins the Public League race

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Engineering & Science won the girls' 4x400-meter Public League relay with a time of 4:00.77. After the race, I talked to three member of the team (the fourth wasn't interested; so be it) about what it meant to them. Click on the photo above to watch the video.

St. Hubert's wins the Catholic League

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St. Hubert's won the Catholic League girls' 4x400-meter relay with a time of 4:08.81. After the race, I talked to the team about what it means to win at the Penn Relays. Click on the photo above to watch the video.

Bang

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The starter fires his gun to get the Prep School Girls 4x400-meter relay (in which my high school competed) underway.

I'm off to do some video stuff for the Catholic and Public League races. Back later.

Say hello to Long Beach Poly

Famed Long Beach Poly (of the same named town in California) just beat the stuffing out of perennial Jamaican favorite St. Jago in the girls' 4x400-meter relay, 3:44.17 to 3:47.15.

If you've heard of Long Beach Poly before, it's probably because of the team's trademark high socks. Well, the socks aren't here this year. I think it's the second straight year that's been the case.

But a strong team is certainly present.

Good reason

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A fan celebrates the announcement that Vere Tech's Kimberly Williams won the high school girls' triple jump with a mark of 12.91 meters (42 feet, 14 inches). It's a new Penn Relays record and the third straight year Williams has won the event. She jumped 12.47m (40 feet, 11 inches) each of the last two years.

Speaking of Jamaica, Edwin Allen just blew everyone else away with a 4x400m time of 3:41.67. Amoy Blake ran the anchor leg in a blistering 54.10.

The second- and third-place teams were no slouch either. Easton (Pa.) finished in 3:51.77 and Uniondale (N.Y.) finished in 3:51.80.

On the wire

Dan Gelston of the Associated Press has filed a nice story on the Virginia Tech track team.

Results

If you're interested in specific race results, there's finally a working up-to-date system (there have been computer glitches with the interface people are supposed to use). Click here to check it out. I've also been told that the system includes photo-finish pictures from the finish line camera.

And if there's a specific school you want to know about, let me know by posting a comment or emailing me.

The Thursday crowd

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This is just the side of the stadium with the finish line on it, but it gives you a decent idea to start from of how many people are here. It's probably about the same as it was for Thursday last year.

A few odds and ends I forgot to mention earlier...

-- I left out a story in the Inquirer's business section by Bob Fernandez about a small company in Royersford, Montgomery County, that made a device which automatically returns shot puts to the throwing area.

-- I heard from a reasonably good source that the closed-down food stalls I mentioned earlier have opened.

Handoff

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Penn's Laurie McDaniel takes the baton heading into the anchor leg of the 4x100-meter relay this morning.

Elevation

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A pole vaulter clears the bar. I have no idea who it is, but I got the timing right on the picture.

Back at you

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A few fans in the stands take pictures of a runner they know.

As rollouts are to the Big 5...

... I think this banner is to the Penn Relays.

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... or maybe not.

The crowd wakes up

The fans here today have been pretty quiet so far, but two things have gotten them to pay attention and make some noise. First was when the Virginia Tech 4x100-meter relay team was announced earlier in the day, and the Inquirer's Sam Carchidi is working on a story about them.

The other was just now, when the Mergenthaler High School (from Baltimore) girls' 4x400m team ran the first sub-four-minute relay of the day.

As for why I haven't been posting much lately, my computer's running real slow. I'm working on some photos that I'll have up shortly.

Lunch

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So I went out to Walnut Street for lunch, as I usually do on the first day of the Relays. I took the video camera with me and shot some footage of the food stalls and craft stands.

What I didn't capture, though, was the fact that all but one of the food stalls had been closed by the city health inspectors.

(Yes, I got lunch from the one that was open.)

I was tempted to go find Milton Street or Jannie Blackwell's phone numbers -- just kidding. But the stall owners definitely thought they were being treated harshly.

As with last time, click on the picture above to watch the video.

Breathing room

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LSU won the first college women's 4x100-meter heat in 44.93 seconds, almost a second and a half faster than second-place Pittsburgh.

The busiest intersection in the city

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Forget about the Vine Street Expressway, or the Conshohocken Curve. The biggest traffic jam in the region this weekend is in the Penn Relays paddock. The administrators who move the runners through have a harder job than any traffic cop I've ever seen.

I shot some video of all the commotion a few minutes ago. Check it out by clicking on the photo above.

Another Penn Relays tradition

Let it be said that a few seconds after 10:30 a.m., it started raining.

That's how you really know the Penn Relays are underway.

That didn't take long

In the first high school girls' 400-meter hurdles race of the day, Methacton High School's Ryann Krais just knocked off a bunch of highly-touted Jamaicans to win in 58.93 seconds. That's the fast time in the United States this year.

On your marks

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Three weeks ago today, Steve Hardings posted this comment:

How does one Blog about the Penn Relays?

The guy in lane 1 is ahead... no wait, its the guy in lane 2... etc. Curious how this will play out on line. Unlike a "game" a race is just that. I dont know what you plan on doing besides reporting on results.

I suppose it would be the same if you blogged about a stock car race. Maybe not. At least there are crashes!!!

Maybe I am just so down on the PennRelays...i have had some bad experiences over the years with that event. Its always a good weekend to get out of town

Well, we're about to find out. We're just a few minutes seconds away from the first 400-meter hurdles heat of this 113th Penn Relays Carnival, and I must admit that of all the things I cover, this is my favorite event on the Philadelphia sports calendar.

This region's sports fans are second to none, as we all know. The electricity of an Eagles game or a Flyers playoff game is unrivaled. But there's something really special about being in Franklin Field with a big crowd that has come here from all over the country to watch a few athletes they know and a few thousand they've never heard of.

Over the course of the next three days, I'll bring you all kinds of features and race updates. Not just text, but also photos, video and audio. Above all, I want it to be fun, and I want you all to enjoy it as much as I do. So let me know what you want to hear about, either by posting a comment or sending me an email.

Oh, and that first race I mentioned just ended. South Carolina's Krystal Cantey, a native of Winslow Township, N.J., finished second in the heat to UTech (of Jamaica)'s Kaliese Spencer.

Now for this morning's headlines.

Start in the Inquirer, with Joe Juliano's fans' guide. The biggest tidbid in there is that stud Texas running back Jamaal Charles will be running for the Longhorns.

Jeff McLane recaps the heptathlon and decathlon, both won by Penn State athletes. All the expected puns are included in the story. Joe Juliano profiles the highly touted Florida State team, which is the reigning NCAA champion but has never won a Championship of America.

Juliano also notes the stars -- and they are stars -- who will be in the USA vs. the World competition, while Rick O'Brien explains why Penn's Shani Boston didn't compete in the Heptathlon.

In the Daily News, Mike Kern has a great story on Kortney Clemons, an Iraq war veteran who will run in the open 100-meter sprint on a prosthetic leg. Ted Silary profiles Simon Gratz's Khaliff Featherstone, who is apparently quite good at running the track and running his mouth.

And a few hoops and football stories to close things out. Dana Pennett O'Neil takes a shot at the NCAA for its soon-to-be-adopted ban on text messaging. Joe Santoloquito hails the prowess of high school phenom Tyreke Evans, whose family says he "will go to college." The Inquirer's Frank Fitzpatrick sizes up the draft chances for Penn State offensive tackle Levi Brown, and Coaches vs. Cancer will host a big high school hoops tournament this weekend at Temple.

April 25, 2007

Newsstand: Runners and throwers

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The runners, of course, are the football players waiting for this weekend's NFL draft. Specifically, Penn State's Tony Hunt and Rutgers' Brian Leonard.

Speaking of Rutgers and football, women's hoops coach C. Vivian Stringer got herself a pay raise to the same base salary as football coach Greg Schiano.

Elsewhere on the women's hoops front, the Big Two Five gave out its awards last night, and La Salle and Temple cleaned them up.

Drew McQuade, whose son knows a thing or two about competing (and writing) at Franklin Field, leads the Daily News Penn Relays preview with a feature on the field events. There's also a sidebar on Penn throwing coach (and bodybuilding expert) Tony Tenisci, a list of the big names to watch, and a really neat audio slideshow of yesterday's events by David Maialetti.

In the Inquirer, Jeff McLane recaps day one of the decathlon and heptathlon. Rick O'Brien profiles Villanova's Drew Eckman, whose father also ran in the Penn Relays.

And the Daily Pennsylvanian examines one of the more interesting Penn Relays mysteries: exactly what is Team Jamaica Bickle?

See you all tomorrow morning at Franklin Field.

Photo of a runner taking a nap on the track by the Inquirer's Michael S. Wirtz.

April 24, 2007

Newsstand: 6/8 time

Dana Pennett O'Neil writes an insightful column in this morning's Daily News about the fact that six of the Ivy League's eight head men's basketball coaches are African-Americans, now that Princeton has hired Sydney Johnson.

Between this hire and Harvard hiring Tommy Amaker, It's been a topic of quite some discussion in the league this year. I've talked to a few coaches about it, and Joe Jones' quote in the Daily News pretty well sums it all up. And while I don't want to get political about the issue on here, I will say that most of the people I've talked to haven't really much cared what the coach's skin color is because both the hires this year have been quality people well-suited for the jobs.

But here's a bombshell: Comcast SportsNet reports "multiple sources" said Larry Brown was in the running for the job. Oh my. I'd love to know your opinion of what that would have been like.

Mike Jensen was at Colleen's last night to watch the Herb Good Basketball Club give out its annual awards.

Ibrahim Jaaber is the Big 5's Player of the year, as previously reported. Scottie Reynolds is the top freshman. Bruiser Flint is the top coach, even if his players aren't eligible for the all-Big 5 teams, though Bashir Mason won the Guy Rodgers award for top playmaker. Read the rest of the awards for yourself, though I think it's pretty cool that the award for the top area small-college player is named for John McAdams.

A football story: Penn State's Paul Posluszny is playing the waiting game ahead of this weekend's NFL draft.

On the Penn Relays front, the Inquirer's Joe Juliano looks at the democratization of the winner's podium, while Rick O'Brien profiles Chestnut Hill Academy shot putter and sprinter (yes, you read that right) Wayne Crawford. And Mike Kern gets us ready for those "L-U" chants with a profile of Lincoln University's track teahm.

Finally, a pause to mourn the death of David Halberstam. I didn't know him, and I haven't read nearly enough of his writing, but I know enough history to know that this country lost one of its truly great writers yesterday, and that is something worth taking time to remember this afternoon. Peter Gammons, the Inquirer's Dick Polman and Newsweek's Jon Meacham pay tribute, while the New York Times and Harvard Crimson have compiled a range of his journalistic works over the years, including some of his sportswriting.

April 23, 2007

Brandan Wright declares for the draft

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UNC stud freshman Brandan Wright has declared for the NBA Draft, according to the AP, but hasn't hired an agent yet. Still, it's a good bet that he'll go real early.

If he does, it'll be too bad for the fans around here, as he won't be playing at the Palestra with Carolina next season. Of course, he'll come to town with whatever NBA team drafts him.

Anyone out there?

If so, I want to hear from you, and here's why.

Kristen Graham and I are going to be liveblogging the Penn Relays, including photos and video interviews, starting Thursday morning. I want to know what teams you want to read about, and we'll go out and try to feature them.

Post comments or email me. High schools, college, and of course the pros, you name it.

Newsstand: A chance to mention Phil Martelli

Yep, he was in the paper this morning. Why? Because he gave a speech to the Philadelphia Kixx late last week, and they promptly went out and won the MISL championship over the weekend.

Penn State's women's basketball team apparently has a new coach, Notre Dame assistant Coquese Washington. She would be the first ever African-American to head the program. She also has no connections at all to the Nittany Lions' former coach, Rene Portland, which is understood to be a good thing.

The Daily News runs its spring football reports today: Penn State has some tall wide receivers, which is something new (or at least different from the last two years), while Temple's game had no kickoffs or punt returns. Nothing wrong with avoiding the heavy hits in practice.

And one Penn Relays story, since I know I have a few readers here from Cherry Hill: Theresa Catuna, runner up in the state indoor 3,200-meter championship, will run Thursday night at Franklin Field.

April 22, 2007

Go outside

Because it's going to be in the 50's and rainy at the end of the week, which is of course when I'll be outside all day at Franklin Field.

But before you stop reading, print these stories out (or buy the paper)...

Shannon Ryan's recap of the Penn State Blue-White game, which attracted 71,000 people and included some classy remembrances of the Virginia Tech massacre.

Kevin Tatum's recap of Temple's Cherry-White game, with the unresolved question of who picked up the loose ball at the end.

And Keith Pompey's profile of the Pleasantville High boys' 4x800-meter relay team, which is the odds-on favorite to take home the Championship of America this year. Don't miss the Tidbits sidebar, either.

Now stop reading and get out.

April 19, 2007

Penn Relays odds and ends

A few leftover from Wednesday's Penn Relays press conference that didn't make it into yesterday's Daily News or today's Inquirer...

For recreational purposes only, watch out for Florida State's 4x100m team. Walter Dix, who won the 100m and 200m NCAA championships for the Seminoles two years ago as a freshman, was originally scheduled to run the 100m sprint with some teammates, but now they'll run the relay instead. The full Seminoles squad took home the NCAA title last year.


Steve King's story in yesterday's Daily News highlighted something that I wanted to write about, so credit to him for getting to it first: the power of the Southeastern Conference.

The SEC has a consistent track record of putting its top runners into the U.S. Olympic team, including former Tennessee star Justin Gatlin, Louisiana State's Xavier Carter and Florida's Kerron Clement. Both have run at the Penn Relays a number of times, especially Gatlin. It will be quite something to not have Gatlin in attendance this time after his doping suspension last year.

"I think tradition -- it goes much farther than just recent," South Carolina coach Curtis Frye said. "You've got to go back to Willie Gault at Tennessee, Tyrone Kemp and Mark Everett at Florida, Anita Howard. They were all great athletes and all Olympians that attracted that atmosphere... In turn, that attracts kids from around the country who want to go where there are Olympians."

Gault is one of this year's inductees into the Penn Relays Wall of Fame, as Keith Pompey reports in this morning's Inquirer.

Frye also gets credit for the quote of the day, a response to a question about one of his star freshmen: Willingboro Township, N.J. native Crystal Canty.

"Eastern kids get to the Penn Relays and the animal comes out," Frye said. "Our team is full of kids from the east, and they always have great days at Penn Relays."

(And as an aside, yes, that's the same hometown as NBC track analyst Carol Lewis, who also competed at the Penn Relays for Willingboro High School. Which is a pretty good pedigree.)


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In the USA vs. the World races, there will be some big stars. Penn Relays director Dave Johnson (whose job is endowed by the late former Inquirer columnist Frank Dolson) said he "presumes" the Dominican Republic's 4x400 team will likely feature 2004 400m gold medalist Félix Sánchez. Great Britain, which won the 4x100m gold in Athens, will be in that race this year at the Relays.

Johnson also said he has "seen reports" have stated that Jamaican superstar Asafa Powell (the guy in the picture), who is the current world record holder in the 100m sprint, will come to Franklin Field once again, but that he won't run the 100m sprint. He ran that race last year and the Jamaican fans just about blew the upper deck off the place. If he runs this year, you will want to be there because whatever he does will get the most attention of any race Saturday.

April 18, 2007

Some say

I'm a comics junkie, no question about it. One of the strips I read regularly is Non Sequitur, which has been playing on the idea of what it means in society when a person says "Some say..." about a subject.

Well, according to yesterday's Daily News, some say that Temple's latest recruit, 6-8 forward Craig Williams is the best player to come out of the Virgin Islands since Tim Duncan.

What does that mean? I don't entirely know. But I generally like what I'm hearing about Temple's recruiting class. If there are any readers out there among the tumbleweeds, I'd like to know what you think.

An evening in the spotlight

At Penn, they know a few things about second-half collapses in games against Princeton. So as the Quakers women's lacrosse team watched a 13-7 lead get cut to 13-10 with 3:28 left tonight, I couldn't help wondering if a few of the Palestra's old ghosts had made their way over to Franklin Field for a few minutes. But a few things made this night different.

For one, it was a Wednesday, not a Tuesday as that famous February night in 1999 was. For another, whereas Matt Langel missed the shot that would have rendered meaningless the Tigers' comeback from 33-9 down at halftime to 50-49 up at the buzzer, Rachel Manson scored the insurance goal with 1:33 to play that helped Penn to a 14-10 win tonight.

That gave the Quakers at least a share of the Ivy League title and an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament whose Final Four they'll host at Franklin Field next month.

Not that Penn's Becca Edwards and Chrissy Muller, who were the key players in the win, were aware of the history in Penn-Princeton games outside of their sport. And not that Quakers coach Karin Brower necessarily was either, even though she used to be a Princeton assistant.

But when the players were asked what was going through their minds when Princeton cut the lead to three goals, they both said they were still totally confident they'd win. Brower took what you might call a nervous deep breath before laughing.

"I knew that if we kept composed, we'd be fine," she said.

If, of course. But they did.

This game was a battle between two Top 15 teams, which is something you don't see all that often in Philadelphia no matter the sport. Penn is No. 3 and Princeton is No. 15 in the latest women's lacrosse coaches' poll, with only defending champion Northwestern and perennial power Maryland above the Quakers.

Penn has beaten three ranked teams this season -- No. 18 Yale, No. 12 Johns Hopkins and No. 10 Penn State -- and its only loss all year is to the Wildcats in Evanston. And Princeton has always been a powerhouse team in lacrosse in both genders, which has made the series against Penn a lot more lopsided than the basketball rivalry has been over time.

"To beat a program such as Princeton that is so steeped in tradition is a reward in itself," Brower said. "This is a game that I've wanted to win for eight years, and you feel like if you beat Princeton, you can compete with anybody."

While I don't expect women's lacrosse to generate much interest, having the Final Four in town at least makes all this worth sticking in the back of your minds if you're a college sports fan in the region.

It's certainly understandable that the players have making it back to their home field right up there at the top of their list of goals for the season.

"That's been our motivation since the day we stepped on the field in the fall," said Muller, a native of Rydal, Pa. "This is where we want to be."

Oddly enough, if Penn got one of the top four seeds in the 16-team tournament, it would have to leave Franklin Field even though it would be the home team for all of its games. Because of Penn's graduation, the first-round game would be at Rhodes Field, the bandbox-sized soccer facility sandwiched between the South Street bridge, the Schuylkill Expressway and the Amtrak tracks. But the second-round game would be at Franklin Field, as would all the others Penn plays.

Believe me, I'm still well aware of perceptions that this blog is weighted towards Penn in how it covers the area's teams. But there was a reporter from the Daily News at the game tonight, and there were probably a couple thousand people in the stands, which is way more than usually turn up for spring sports around here no matter who's playing.

And what happened tonight could actually end up being a pretty big deal next month if Penn actually makes it to the Final Four.

April 17, 2007

The rest of the All-Big 5 teams

The All-Big 5 first and second teams were just announced:

First team

-- Ibrahim Jaaber (Penn / Player of the Year)
-- Mark Zoller (Penn)
-- Curtis Sumpter (Villanova)
-- Scottie Reynolds (Villanova)
-- Ahmad Nivins (Saint Joseph's)
-- Dionte Christmas (Temple)

Second team

-- Darnell Harris (La Salle)
-- Mark Tyndale (Temple)
-- Dustin Salisbery (Temple)
-- Mike Nardi (Villanova)
-- Pat Calathes (Saint Joseph's)

Who would you have on your first team, and as Player of the Year? Leave a comment or email me and let me know.

On Ibrahim Jaaber

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A couple weeks ago, Mike Jensen told me that Ibrahim Jaaber was the one guy on the floor for Penn who could really go toe-to-toe with the future NBA stars on the BCS teams the Quakers played.

At first, I must admit, I didn't see it. But over the last two or three weeks of the season, and into the NCAA Tournament, it became clear. And now, that status has been cemented.

It might seem improbable that Jaaber is the first Penn player to win Big 5 Player of the Year since Tony Price did it with the 1979 Quakers team that went to the Final Four. In fact, when I first saw that, I didn't really believe it. But I got out the Daily News Big 5-0 book, which had the list of all the Big 5 Players of the Year in the City Series' first 50 seasons, and there it was.

Jerome Allen was beaten twice, in 1994 by Temple's Eddie Jones and in 1995 by Villanova's Kerry Kittles. It's hard to argue with that Ugonna Onyekwe was also beaten twice, in 2002 by Lynn Greer and in 2003 by Jameer Nelson. It's probably harder to argue with that, as good as Onyekwe was and even though Penn won the Big 5 outright in 2002.

But in 2007, Jaaber's competition was really only teammate Mark Zoller and Villanova's Curtis Sumpter. So the voters of the Herb Good Basketball Club decided that the Geasey Trophy should move from the Big 5's 33rd Street office into the building next door, instead of to one of the other gyms in the region.

As an aside, I'm not one of the voters, if you're wondering, but that isn't the point.

If I had a vote -- and I don't mean this as disrespect to Ibby, who had a great Penn career -- I admit, at the time when the voting was conducted, I would have gone for one of the other two.

Sumpter was the star of the Big 5 champions, the player that the other teams respected the most... and yet, in the last month of the season, Scottie Reynolds was the star and the go-to guy, and the player who delivered the clutch shots.

I probably would have voted for Zoller, because he just did so much for Penn in terms of putting up numbers. 18.2 points and 7.5 rebounds per game, 87 assists, 55 steals and 12 blocks over the season. Plus the countless dives for loose balls, those big free throws against Temple, and being a guy who grew up watching Big 5 games and wanting to be a part of them.

But then I thought -- and talked to Mike just now -- and I thought about how much I watched Jaaber over the last few weeks of the season and saw that he really does have the kind of presence and ability to take over a game. Not always against Big 12-sized opponents, but against a lot of other ones. And against North Carolina, to borrow from Mike again, he was the guy for Penn that could play even with the other team.

So I thought about it this way: what happened when the players weren't on the floor, or at least weren't being effective? With Sumpter -- and it happened against Kentucky -- Scottie Reynolds stepped up more often than not. Yes, Sumpter made a difference when he scored a lot, but he had a lot of quiet games down the stretch, even if his scoring didn't drop too much.

Zoller got in foul trouble a lot, and Penn was definitely a different team without him on the floor. But the Quakers still went 13-1 in the Ivy League, and won that game against Brown on the last weekend after he had fouled out.

So it comes down to Jaaber, and this is where he has a very strong case. He averaged 36.9 minutes per game. That's 92.3 percent of the possible minutes he could have played, which is the 12th-highest percentage in the country according to Pomeroy.

Which means that we don't have a full idea of what Penn would have been like without its starting point guard on the floor. It also means, combined with his average of 2.2 fouls committed per game, that Jaaber was able to stay out of foul trouble, and thus be on the floor when his team needed him to direct traffic.

Add that to 15.9 points and 4.5 rebounds per game, plus 90 steals, 162 assists and 17 blocks (second-best on the team), and the picture becomes even more clear.

Ibrahim Jaaber didn't just win this year's Big 5 MVP award, he earned it. In a city which prizes its hard workers, that is high praise in and of itself.

Breaking news: Ibrahim Jaaber named Big 5 Most Outstanding Player

The Penn student newspaper broke the news this morning that Ibrahim Jaaber has been named this year's Big 5 Player of the Year.

Jaaber is the first Penn player to win the Geasey Trophy since 1979.

I will have quite a bit more to say about this later today.

April 9, 2007

Portsmouth Invitational

A note to Will Bunch, Dan McQuade, Kris Gochenour, and others. When I watch the Phillies, they lose. When I don't, they... well, they don't always win, but they don't play as badly.

So with that in mind, I'm going to not pay attention to the fact that the Mets just took a 2-1 lead, even though the TV at the office is right in my natural line of sight, and write about the Portsmouth Invitational instead.

The tournament, which is comprised of the top senior players from across the country, featured a number of players either from Philadelphia-area schools or with Philadelphia area-roots.

Among the 64 players invited were:

-- Dustin Salisbery, Temple / Cherry, Bekaert & Holland (who played on what I think was the best roster in the tournament)
-- Ibrahim Jaaber, Penn / Tidewater Sealants
-- Christian Burns, Philadelphia U. / Portsmouth Sports Club
-- Jahsha Bluntt, Delaware State / Portsmouth Sports Club
-- Jason Cain, Virginia / Bartram High (Philadelphia) / Norfolk Sports Club
-- Russell Carter, Notre Dame / Paulsboro High (N.J.) / Holiday Inn-Portsmouth
-- Gary Neal, Towson / ex-La Salle / Beach Barton Ford
After the jump, the players' lines from the tournament.

Continue reading "Portsmouth Invitational" »

April 5, 2007

We interrupt your regularly scheduled programming

It just came across that Bob Huggins has made it official: he's leaving Kansas State to take the West Virginia job.

I'd love to know what you all think of this. Huggins was in Manhattan for all of one year, and his best recruit, Bill Walker, tore his ACL and barely played last year. It'll be fascinating to see how Walker reacts to this, as well as the other players Huggins has been recruiting lately.

Oh, and you can bet the most important reaction of all will come from Cincinnati president Nancy Zimpher, who fired Huggins and will now have to see him on the other side of the floor.

Transition game

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I always find it amusing that the college basketball season, or at least the men's season, ends on Opening Day of the baseball season. It makes a seamless transition from one of the great indoor sports to one of the great outdoor sports.

Though there are a few weeks between the end of the World Series and the beginning of the college basketball season, it is clear that these two sports are each accorded their own parts of the calendar, and are to be kept separate from each other. This isn't the case with baseball and football, or football and pro basketball, or pretty much any other sport except for Major League Soccer, which doesn't have a team here anyway.

But here we are just a few days after the national championship games, and the whole thing is already well behind us. Which is probably how it should be, but this being a blog about college sports it also means the content on this page gets scaled down for a while.

Having said that, I'm not going away entirely, and I hope you don't either. I'm planning to liveblog the Penn Relays, hopefully along with another member of the Philly.com staff and hopefully with some multimedia elements as well. And I'm sure that over the course of the summer, newsworthy things will happen. They always do, somehow or other.

Of course, I'll continue to answer the emails and comments I get. If you have a question you want answered on here, it's probably a better idea to email me, which you can do by name in the Author box at the top of the page.

My sincere thanks to all of you for actually reading this thing, and helping to create at least a small community of people who have come together here to talk about college hoops. That really was one of the main goals of this blog, and I'm very proud that it's been accomplished.

Until later...

April 3, 2007

John Beilein to Michigan

Someone asked me if I was going to write about last night's game. I don't know what to say about it that isn't said elsewhere except that I was really impressed by Al Horford and I've finally been convinced that Greg Oden is for real.

But the news that actually matters is that it just crossed the wire that Michigan has hired West Virginia coach John Beilein. And Iowa just hired Butler coach Todd Lickliter. Which means that the Big Ten now has the following coaches:

-- Tubby Smith, Minnesota

-- John Beilein, Michigan

-- Tom Izzo, Michigan State (for now)

-- Bo Ryan, Wisconsin

-- Bruce Weber, Illinois

-- Todd Lickliter, Iowa

-- Thad Matta, Ohio State (for the purpose of this exercise... and I concede that he did at least try to do some coaching in the late rounds of the tournament)

-- Kelvin Sampson, Indiana (even I have to concede that he's a big name, as slimy as much of his work as been)

-- Matt Painter, Purdue (regardless of whether the Boilermakers should have been in the tournament, he's generally done a very good job succeeding Gene Keady)

-- and... because I got convinced to throw his name in... Bill Carmody, Northwestern.

That's quite an elite group -- 10 of the conference's 11 coaches (sorry, Penn State fans). I dare say that on a per-capita basis, it's the best of the BCS conferences, with the Big East second because it has 16 teams.

April 2, 2007

Play it in Glendale, not Atlanta

So for the second straight revenue-sport-season, we are left with Florida and Ohio State to determine the national championship. This time, it's in men's basketball. Mike Jensen and I got into this a little bit on the College HoopsCast last week, but now that I have a bit more time and space here's what I really think about tonight's national championship game.

Even though I've said it already, I might as well say it again: I don't like it. I don't find it healthy that two schools are dominating the college sports landscape the way these two are. Of course, they raise and spend enough money each year to qualify as minor countries, and they have good coaches (there, I said it) who can recruit the top players in the country and win games because of it.

Still... it just feels weird. Yes, it has something to do with the fact that these are football-first schools who've put money into basketball and overtaken schools that embrace college basketball first and sometimes way above everything else. But any school can spend a lot of money. Syracuse, Kentucky and Connecticut surely do, and it's not like they're football powerhouses even though they're in BCS conferences.

For me, the real problem is the way in which the football powerhouses have risen to prominence seemingly without batting an eye. Florida, Ohio State and Texas come to mind, and you bet it's no coincidence that those three schools clean the rest of the country's collective clock in football every year.

Nor is it a coincidence that their stadiums are larger than a significant proportion of the towns and cities in their respective states. And it's not coincidental either that the next team to make it big with rented NBA players is Southern California.

(If you haven't read it yet, read this piece by the Inquirer's Frank Fitzpatrick, in which he compares the profits of the four No. 1 seeds in this year's tournament to the rest of the Sweet 16 combined.)

I'm sure some of you readers out there have longer memories than I do and are more cognizant of how things were in the 1970s and 1980s, when there was a clearer separation between basketball and football schools. But now we have a situation where even though Big East and ACC schools have more than enough money to play with each year, they get trumped by the Big 12, SEC and Big Ten on a pretty regular basis.

Yes, Georgetown made the Final Four, and yes, Villanova almost did last year. But I fear that even though those two schools are among the heavyweights of Big East basketball, at some point, the presence of any non-BCS heavyweight school not called Duke, Kansas or North Carolina will be surprising to us no matter the conference.

Before you ask, no, I'm not advocating any kind of change in the way money should be distributed among teams and conferences. It's a free market. The only way you do anything about it is by getting players and coaches who can come and knock the other guy off when he's feeling just cocky and self-absorbed enough to not play good defense and hustle for loose balls.

(Except when you get stars not being whistled for flagrant fouls, or converting a few seconds' worth of grit into a game-tying three that forces an overtime in which the little guy runs out of gas.)

It is of some help if you have Big East or ACC basketball money. That's just enough to get the Villanovas and Georgetowns of the world a few players each year who keep the lesser football lights, especially the Big East's I-AA football schools, in the national conversation. It certainly gives them them a better shot at knocking off the BCS football schools than teams from the CAA or A-10 have.

But don't forget for a moment that a big reason why those two schools are in it is their coaches and the assistants who surely work ten times as hard at recruiting as the assistants at Ohio State, Florida and Texas.

That's enough of a rant for the night. I hope I'm way off about all this, but I fear I'm not. Better to get ourselves ready for it now, so that we won't be all that surprised by it in the years to come.

April 1, 2007

Big numbers

My old friend Bryan Graham of CSTV.com is down in Atlanta (lucky him), and compiled THE stat of last night's Georgetown-Ohio State game.

Put simply: when Greg Oden was in and Roy Hibbert was out, the Buckeyes outscored the Hoyas 15-2.

For the rest of the Oden-Hibbert matrix, click here.

Copyright © 2006-2008 Philadelphia Newspapers L.L.C. All Rights Reserved.

Author

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Jonathan Tannenwald is a producer with Philly.com.

I fell in love with the Big 5 at first sight upon moving to Philadelphia in 2002. At various points in my journalistic career, I've covered all six of the region's Division I teams. During that time, I've eaten many soft pretzels from the Palestra's concession stands, which is how this blog got its name.

In addition to the blog, I host and produce the Inquirer's College HoopsCast. It's a weekly podcast that features all the latest news and analysis from around local and national college basketball. Regular guests include Inquirer writers Mike Jensen, Joe Juliano and Mel Greenberg.

I also occasionally contribute to the Inquirer's women's basketball weblog, Women's Hoops Guru. If you've come here from there, this blog deals mostly with the men's side of things, though I do write about women's basketball and other sports when they fit in.

When not focusing on college hoops, I host and produce the Inquirer's PhilliesCast with Phillies beat writer Todd Zolecki, and can occasionally be found behind the camera shooting videos of the Eagles, other professional sports teams and the tiger cubs at the zoo.

One of the great things about City Series basketball, and college basketball as a whole, is its sense of community. So I want to hear from you. Post a comment or send me an email by clicking on my name above. But don't be profane, and don't post hate speech. I'm sure you'd like to take a shot at that commenter on the opposite side of a rivalry from you, or say something nasty about a team you don't like. But this blog isn't the place for it. Thanks.

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    About April 2007

    This page contains all entries posted to Soft Pretzel Logic in April 2007. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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