The Hlog, by Cedar Rapids Gazette Sports Columnist Mike Hlas

Entries from June 2008

Hlog Honors the Red, White and Blue

June 30, 2008 · 1 Comment

expos

The Hlog is on vacation from now until the last firecracker is shot off Friday night. Happy Birthday, USA.

So without further adieu – er, ado – we give you the Montreal Expos’ logo in all its red, white and blue glory. The Expos relied primarily on American players, you know. Like Vladimir Guerrero. OK, bad example.

By the way, despite the fact the Hlog will be on hiatus for five days, it still will have more updates this week than some Gazette sports blogs. This may not technically qualify as an update, since it offers no information or anything that could possibly regarded as useful. But, like I said, the Hlog is on vacation.

The Hlog: Working for you, the Expos fan.

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Fresno State’s baseball coach could have been Iowa’s

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

bulldog

In 1997, the University of Iowa needed a baseball coach to replace the retiring Duane Banks. The finalists were Hawkeyes assistant coach Scott Broghamer, Arizona State assistant coach Doug Scheiber, and Cal State Northridge head coach Mike Batesole.

“In the final evaluation I selected a person who exemplifies the values, professional qualities and personal characteristics we were seeking,” then-U of I athletic director Bob Bowlsby said in a prepared statement.

Batesole, 33 at the time, had a two-year record of 94-38 at Northridge when the school disbanded its baseball program because of budget cuts and gender-equity issues. The Matadors had been one win from a College World Series berth in 1996.

Broghamer resigned in 2003 after a six-year record of 123-183. Jack Dahm was hired from Creighton to replace him and is the coach today. Iowa hasn’t had anything resembling a sniff of a CWS appearance under Dahm or his predecessor.

And Batesole? Well, he stayed at Northridge and won more than he lost even though the team was forced to compete as an independent from 1997 to 2000 after the program was axed. The program was reinstated in 2001. In 2002, Batesole was the Big West Conference’s Coach of the Year, then left to take the head coaching job at Fresno State, where he just finished his sixth season.

Wednesday, the Fresno State Bulldogs capped a highly unlikely and totally extraordinary run to the NCAA championship.

Could Batesole have done likewise at Iowa, or even come close? Who knows? But watching his gutsy team play on TV over the last week, you knew it had a coach with the right stuff.

Hawkeye baseball, meanwhile, has been a non-story for a long, long time.

Bowlsby is now Stanford’s athletic director. Stanford reached this year’s CWS. But Bowlsby didn’t have to hire the coach there. Mark Marquess has over 1,300 wins in 32 years as the Cardinal’s coach.

Sometimes you inherit a great coach. Sometimes you have to hire one yourself. The latter is quite a bit harder.

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ESPN Doomsday Purveyor: Iowa in the Motor City Bowl

June 25, 2008 · 1 Comment

MCB

 

People who write about college football have occasional summer doldrums. So it is with ESPN.com’s Mark Schlabach, who has his bowl projections for the coming season at the site right now, in June.

When everyone is 0-0. When the first of many upsets to come has yet to occur.

Well, why not? It’s all just entertainment. But how entertaining is it for Iowa Hawkeyes fans to see their team projected to go to the (shudder) Motor City Bowl to play the Fighting Cardinals of Ball State?

Schlabach has Ohio State making its annual trip to the BCS championship game, Wisconsin representing the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl, Illinois in the Capitol One Bowl, Penn State in the Outback, Michigan State in the Alamo, Michigan in the Champs Sports, Purdue in the Insight, and … Iowa in the lowly Motor City.

Oh, how the mighty have fallen.

Tickets for the Motor City Bowl are next to nothing. Correction: Ford Field in Detroit, the site of the game, is next to nothing.

But look at it this way. Ball State will be a clear step up in competition from the two teams Iowa opens the season against, Maine and Florida International.

Ball St

(the Ball State Cardinal – the fact this is a waste basket is not an editorial comment)

The ESPN.com prophet of doom’s work is at http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/columns/story?columnist=schlabach_mark&id=3458435

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George Carlin: A Great American

June 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

Carlin

The American media mourned Tim Russert long and loudly, and understandably.

But I’ll maintain George Carlin was just as important an American. He told unfiltered, harsh, needed-to-be-said-out-loud truths about us, truths that few others with public platforms would ever dream of saying.

And he was unbelievably funny.

I’ve covered a lot of basketball games and remember few. But I remember being at an NCAA tournament once in Seattle, and dropping by the hospitality room in the media hotel on the Saturday night between Friday/Sunday games. There, a dozen sportswriters from around the country were laughing their heads off at a George Carlin HBO special. Dinner plans had to wait, because the experience of enjoying that man’s work with others was impossible to walk away from.

I saw Carlin perform live twice. It was worth every dime. Once I cut out of the state basketball tournament early one night (I wasn’t derelict in any duties – no Gazette area team was playing that evening) to catch him at the Des Moines Civic Center. With no disrespect to the tournament, it was easily the highlight of that week in Des Moines.

He was brilliant, he was hilarious. His face, voice and mannerisms on stage could make you laugh hard enough by themselves , but it was his words that relentlessly attacked our funny bones.

George Carlin didn’t suffer fools gladly, and we were the better for it.

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Hlas’ Flood Story in the Wall Street Journal

June 21, 2008 · 1 Comment

WSJ

Relying more than a little on some of the work done in the last two weeks by The Gazette’s fine news staff, I wrote a guest piece for Saturday’s Wall Street Journal on the flood that has torn my Cedar Rapids hometown asunder.

Without further ado, here’s the link:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121400377319393441.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

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Gimme Shelter

June 19, 2008 · Leave a Comment

limo

(Gazette photo by Jonathan D. Woods)

The Hlog was at the Cedar Rapids Kernels’ game tonight (Thursday) to do a flood-related column, and wasn’t optimistic about the prospects. As nice as people bringing non-perishable food items to donate is – and it’s very nice – it doesn’t make compelling copy.

Then a couple of stretch limos rolled up to the front gate of Veterans Memorial Stadium, with about half of 40 people who were the Kernels’ guests at the game in luxury suites. They got fed at the ballpark, too.

Now that’s nice. Here’s the link to the column:

http://goimg.sv.publicus.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=GO&Date=20080619&Category=SPORTS&ArtNo=773414407&Ref=AR&Profile=1008&MaxW=350

Bravo to the Kernels, Diamond Limousine, the American Red Cross, and anyone else who made this happen. Three hours at a ballgame won’t end the frustration of temporarily living in a Red Cross shelter at Viola Gibson School instead of their own homes and apartments, but the flood victims seemed to be enjoying themselves at the game.

Similar acts of kindness are being shown all over Cedar Rapids and other flooded Iowa river towns. I wonder what the number of volunteers and donors might be. I bet it crests way over the projected levels.

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My City of Ruins

June 15, 2008 · 1 Comment

flood(Gazette photo by Cliff Jette)

I have never seen or heard a more moving musical performance than when Bruce Springsteen and a cadre of backup singers including his wife, Patti Scialfa, sang a song I’d never heard. It opened the live national telecast of “America: A Tribute to Heroes” in September, 2001 to raise money for Sept. 11 victims’ families.

It was stripped down and stark. The only music was provided by Springsteen’s guitar and harmonica. How he got from start to finish without breaking down, I’ll never know. Especially since he grew up and still lives so close to New York City in his beloved New Jersey. :

That song was loud in my head tonight, June 14, as I drove across the Cedar River on Interstate 380 and saw a bigger picture of the flooding and the ruins in daylight for the first time.

There’s a blood red circle
On the cold dark ground
And the rain is falling down
The church door’s blown open
I can hear the organ’s song
But the congregation’s gone

My city of ruins

So many landmarks underwater, so many businesses and homes wrecked or in need of so much renovation. A Dairy Queen that I’ve patronized a few times too often. A Maid-Rite owned by someone who I once worked for one summer at Ellis Park. So many places downtown that I’ve stepped foot in so many times for so many reasons.

Everyone here has either been hurt badly by this flood or has a relative or good friend who has. My next-door neighbor owns a business on First Avenue Northwest (www.affordableplumbingservice.com) that he built himself. It got blasted by the flood waters. A good friend of mine for many years owns a deli in the basement of the U.S. Bank building downtown that I hit about once a week. His food is high-quality. He’s a proud and good guy.

Now the sweet veils of mercy
Drift through the evening trees
Young men on the corner
Like scattered leaves
The boarded up windows
The hustlers and thieves
While my brother’s down on his knees

My city of ruins

I work downtown. For a while, it looked like the Gazette might move its newsroom to its Bowling Street plant that is the site of our printing press. I didn’t want that one bit. I think a newspaper should be in the heart of its city. It should be easy for people to find their newspaper.

And selfishly, I like to eat lunch, and like to be able to walk to a variety of eating options. I like to be able to walk to my bank, to another good friend’s office in an investment firm, to a newsstand when it’s time to buy my annual fantasy football magazine.

But our Gazette brass kept us downtown. I’m glad they did, even when I was downtown Thursday night at 11 p.m. and the flood water was crawling up Second Avenue East with sinister intent. We need to be exactly where we are, putting out that paper right there.

The water is receding and the Gazette was so lucky to escape damage to its building, especially compared to its downtown neighbors. But what will be left downtown for all of us once the flood recedes all the way back inside the river’s banks?

What will be left on all those ravaged city blocks on the other side of the river, the West side. That side of town often gets short-shrift in Cedar Rapids, but has just as many merits as its East side brothers and sisters? What can possibly be left of Czech Village? What will happen to Time Check? The Boys and Girls Club?

What will happen to Cedar Rapids?

Someday, I hope today’s children can look back and say this is a city that not only recovered from a disaster, but got better after the recovery. Tonight, though, in the weariness of a numbing four days with many more to come? It’s not all that easy to fathom.

Now there’s tears on the pillow
Darling where we slept
And you took my heart when you left
Without your sweet kiss
My soul is lost, my friend
Now tell me how do I begin again?

My city’s in ruins

But these are the commanding, almost-defiant final lines of the song:

Come on rise up!
Come on rise up!

Come on, ri-i-i-ise up

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Where’s the Water Conservation?

June 14, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Water

I don’t think many Cedar Rapidians are hearing or receiving the message. They’ve got to stop using city water for anything except the absolutely essential for as long as we’re told to during this flood and its aftermath.

I had lunch at a Cedar Rapids pizzeria Friday and the server asked if I wanted Mountain Dew, Pepsi, water …

No. Serving water should be taboo given the dire water situation in C.R. So should washing dishes, running washing machines, maybe even making coffee and tea. Local media have made note of the water situation, but I wonder if most people are listening. Are they holding off on taking showers?

Of course, what kind of dope am I? As a reader noted to me, the pizzeria probably is using more than a little water in food preparation.

I went to a supermarket after that lunch expecting to see bottled water sold out. It was a pleasant surprise to see water still in stock, and just as pleasant to see a lot of customers hauling 24-packs of it in their carts. But my gut says enough people are showering and using water in other ways to their hearts’ content, and it will come at a cost. Hope I’m wrong.

I’m going to wash my hair with bottled water tomorrow. Better to feel filthy-rich than just plain filthy.

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Sandbags, Levees, and Good People

June 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Little Bohemia flood

(Gazette photo by Liz Martin)

This is a sports-related blog, but sports take a distinct back seat today, tomorrow and for quite a while in Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, Vinton, Elkader, and all throughout the Gazette circulation area and Eastern Iowa.

What the flood of the Cedar, Iowa and Wapsipinicon rivers has brought and is about to bring are destruction and loss. If you’re in another part of the world … you probably should be glad. For a while, anyhow.

I’ve been down to Ellis Blvd. in Cedar Rapids and saw goodness and hard work in every direction. City employees have worked on short sleep for several days now, and will continue to do so for several more. County people helped bring in dirt for makeshift levees. I don’t know what the compensation is, if any. And diesel isn’t cheap.

Volunteers were all over the place shoveling sand, bagging it, tying the bags, lifting the bags onto forklifts, and lifting bags off forklifts to put up barriers from the river as best they could. Many spent several hours under the sun doing serious physical labor for nothing but the knowledge they were helping their city and its people.

Friends came in from all around to help people move possessions from their homes. Moving is hard enough work, but try doing it on nature’s schedule instead of your own.

These are going to be hard times in Eastern Iowa’s river towns, from the flooding through the clean-up of the devastation. It takes good, strong people to get through it. Luckily, Iowa has never lacked for those.

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FIU to You

June 10, 2008 · 1 Comment

This is FIU

 

Florida International University, which is sending its football team to play at Iowa on Sept. 6, says its teams will now be known as the FIU Golden Panthers instead of Florida International University Golden Panthers.

FIU was 1-11 last season. It probably needs to change more than its name.

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