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August 9, 2006

How?

Filed under: Big 11,Embarrassing,General Stupidity,Police Blotter — Chas @ 9:45 am

With Maurice Clarett, many ask how a kid with such potential to earn a fortune in football could piss it all away. I’m now wondering how he managed to hold it together as long as he did.

Maurice Clarett was arrested early Wednesday after a highway chase that ended with police using Mace on the former Ohio State running back and finding four loaded guns in his sport utility vehicle, a police spokesman said.

Officers used Mace to subdue Clarett after a stun gun was ineffective because the former Fiesta Bowl star was wearing a bullet-resistant vest, Sgt. Michael Woods said.

“It took several officers to get him handcuffed,” Woods said. “Even after he was placed in the paddy wagon, he was still kicking at the doors and being a problem for the officers.”

Safe to say that the entire Buckeye Nation is just hoping he goes to jail very soon and for a long time. Just so they don’t have to take more crap for having to acknowledge he was ever a part of their team. Right Lee?

August 5, 2006

NFL Alumni Update

Filed under: Alumni,Football,Good,NFL,Puff Pieces — Chas @ 10:53 am

A couple stories on a few Pitt players in the NFL.

Larry Fitzgerald wants to get better on and off the field.

What’s really important to him, Fitzgerald said, is to remain low key and humble. He said he doesn’t go out much, and instead, he devotes time to some eclectic interests.

Last year, for instance, he hired someone to come to his home and teach him how to cook. He’s dabbling in real estate, and he intends to take some Spanish classes this year.

“It’s important to be well-rounded,” he said. “Football players get this stereotype that we’re just dumb jocks and that all we can do is run and stuff like that. I just try to change the mold up. There are a lot of things that interest me besides football, but this is what I love to do, and, hopefully, I can do it for a long time.”

Fitzgerald’s parents, Carol and Larry Sr., emphasized the importance of education and developing varied interests, he said. Fitzgerald’s grandfather called him recently to remind Fitzgerald that his younger brother, Marcus, is due to graduate from Marshall this year, and that a cousin also is graduating from college.

“He (his grandfather) is like, ‘You know, you’re the only one in the family who hasn’t gotten a degree,’ ” said Fitzgerald, who plans to tackle that in the coming years.

Fitzgerald has grown up on the field, too. Coaches said his practice habits are improved. He constantly asks receivers coach Mike Wilson, a former San Francisco 49er, how future Hall of Famer Jerry Rice did certain things.

Hopefully Pitt will make sure to do what it can to maintain ties to Fitzgerald.

Another great Pitt receiver is taking it out on a former Pitt cornerback in training camp practices.

Bryant had the cart flying Friday morning. He took off down the right sideline and was well covered by left cornerback Shawntae Spencer. In a sucker move by the more experienced wideout, Bryant slowed to a jog to dupe Spencer into thinking the ball was coming, then sped up to catch it in a laid-out position.

“Coming off the field, me and Antonio were talking about the deep ball,” Spencer said of the first highlight pass. “I had him covered and he slowed down and started jogging. I looked for the ball. He took off and the quarterback threw it. He said ‘You had me covered. All I could do is make you think it was thrown.’ ”

Darned if Smith and Bryant didn’t do it again in the afternoon practice. This time, Smith found Bryant down the middle for what turned out to be an 85-yard touchdown romp in which the ball was in the air about 45 yards. Spencer was again the victim in coverage.

While developing chemistry with Smith is important — vital, even — Bryant said he is also trying to make his teammates in the secondary better, in this case by schooling one of them. Spencer should have known better, since both men were college teammates at Pitt for a time.

“He’s a scrappy guy,” Bryant said of Spencer. “I like going up against him. He gives it 100 percent. He never gives up on a play. Shawntae is going to face a lot of talented receivers this year. I’m doing my best to be there for Alex and help our DBs look good. It’s all about team.”

Spencer is being moved to left corner this year.

August 1, 2006

No Steroids

Filed under: Alumni,History — Chas @ 11:25 am

Track and Field or Cycling. Take your pick as to which has more doping going on in it. My bet is on Track and Field. They are much more advanced in what to use. Cyclists lacks sophistication and much creativity.

So, naturally if there is a non-steroid story regarding Track, it must be about the past. Great story about the 1936 Olympic Gold Medlist in the 800 meter — John Woodruff.

On Aug. 4, 1936, John Woodruff won one of the most memorable races in Olympic history. In the 800-meter final in Berlin, he was boxed in by other runners at 300 meters and forced to stop in his tracks. He let everyone else go by, then caught and passed them all.

It was another gold medal for the United States’ so-called Black Auxiliaries — the Nazis’ term for the black athletes — and another thorn in the side of Adolf Hitler, who greeted every white winner, but none of the blacks.

“It didn’t bother me,” Woodruff said in a telephone interview Friday. “After the race, Marty Glickman, who was a teammate, told me how good a job I did. Two other teammates told me that, too. The coaches said nothing.”

Woodruff was a 21-year-old college freshman, an unsophisticated and, at 6 feet 3 inches, an ungainly runner. But he was a fast thinker, and he made a quick decision.

“I didn’t panic,” he said. “I just figured if I had only one opportunity to win, this was it. I’ve heard people say that I slowed down or almost stopped. I didn’t almost stop. I stopped, and everyone else ran around me.”

Then, with his stride of almost 10 feet, Woodruff ran around everyone else. He took the lead, lost it on the backstretch, but regained it on the final turn and won the gold medal.

Did I mention he’s a Pitt grad? Woodruff served in both WWII and the Korean War. He became career Army and retired as a Lt. Colonel.

He has given some of his trophies and medals to Pitt. Unfortunately, his health doesn’t allow him to travel, so he won’t be able to come to Pittsburgh this fall. Pitt wanted to honor him and his accomplishments at halftime of a game this season.

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