Sports writer - Grant writer

Author: Kat (Page 20 of 89)

Take A Sick Day? Not On Super Bowl Sunday.

Super Bowl Sunday is not a time to get sick – especially if you’re playing in the big game.

We’ve seen tons of stories throughout the years of athletes persevering through injury or illness to play in the most important game, meet or match of their lives, and many of them have been in the Super Bowl. In a well-done marketing move, the marketing team behind Vicks created the following info-graphic about not letting anything derail you from playing in, attending or watching the game, as well as the best NFL stories that have the healing quality of a good bowl of chicken soup.

It even gives a shout-out for one of the only New England Patriots I can root for, fellow Western New Yorker Rob Gronkowski. A recent fan survey pointed to him as the best example of the Vicks slogan, “In the NFL, there are no sick days.”

(I’m a sucker for info-graphics, what can I say?

 

On Brady and Buffalo Bashing

Tom BradyFor a few years in during my childhood, I thought the most incredible hotel in the world was some generic chain hotel by the Walden Galleria, just outside of Buffalo, NY. My main reasoning for this? It was the first hotel I had ever been to, and despite my mother’s pre-trip warnings, it looked clean and didn’t smell. It also had Canadian television channels, which led 14 year old me to a wonderful dilemma: do I watch the Canadian Pro Figure Skating Championships or Hockey Night in Canada?

I eventually grew up, traveled much more, even lived in a hotel for a year and a half (overflow housing at Binghamton), and realized that beloved Walden Galleria hotel was just a chain. A clean chain, a safe chain, a very nice hotel for a 14 year old on a Girl Scout trip to a large regional mall, but still…a chain.

So part of me was taken aback when Tom Brady may have taken a swipe at Buffalo hotels in a Super Bowl press conference on Wednesday. You don’t like Buffalo hotels? You specifically felt the need to call out Buffalo hotels? I’m sorry that the Rust Belt-but-still-surviving city of Buffalo doesn’t suit the taste of you, your Brazilian supermodel wife and your two small children who honestly just get excited to go swim in a hotel pool regardless of its Triple A star status.

Then the more rational, less defensive, and Boston conditioned side of me took over. He may have a point. Brady only sees Buffalo and the surrounding area during its coldest and grayest months. He’s not spending long periods of time there (unless he gets snowbound in the Hyatt in Rochester after the World Junior Hockey Championships prevent him and his teammates from lodging in Buffalo.) And the hotels around Orchard Park, much like the hotels around Brady’s home stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts, are like the ones near the Walden Galleria: generic chains or sketchy motor inns best suited for home hair dyed hookers. (Nothing against home hair dye.)

Maybe it was not the best statement to make in public. Maybe he should have picked on Green Bay. (They’re small market too. They just…market their quaintness and sausages better?) But in the grand scheme of awful remarks to make, Brady’s jab ranks pretty low.

(I wrote this post Wednesday evening, before Tim Graham of the Buffalo News summed up Brady’s remarks and Buffalo’s knee jerk reaction perfectly Thursday morning. Read his column here. Brady isn’t the first athlete to bash Buffalo’s tourism, and most likely will not be the last.)

Another note: if any Western New Yorker uses this as an excuse to root for the Giants, I will…shake my head disappointingly (I’m not good with threats.) The Giants are not New York’s horse in this race; they are New Jersey’s. They are just as inherently unlikable as the Patriots. Remember the poorly officiated and entirely devastating Super Bowl XXV? Why would you even consider rooting for the team that caused Bills fans so much heartache twenty-one years ago?

The Sister Project

When we were younger, my sister Megan and I had a plan. We would buy the old Bells supermarket on Empire Boulevard in the Irondequoit/Rochester gray area, next to Dan’s Crafts and Things. We would gut it, partition it in half, and operate a gymnastics center and dance studio. My side, the dance studio, would be called “Dance By The Light of The Moon,” after a song reference in our mother’s favorite movie, It’s a Wonderful Life. My sister’s side, the gymnastics center, went unnamed save for a few times where she said she would just call it, “Megan’s Gymnastics.”

I was 11 and Megan was 6 when we hatched this plan, so there’s a good reason why Megan never named her side of the business.

I even created a brochure in Print Shop for the business during one of the few times I had free computer time in school, but that was as far as we got. But 11 and 6 year old us were convinced that when we were 30 and 25, this would surely be what we were doing with our lives: teaching dance and coaching gymnastics.

Flash forward to 2012. I just turned 30, and Megan will turn 25 in two months. I haven’t worn my tap shoes in eight years, and she gave up gymnastics in 2000 to play soccer (which she ended up briefly playing in college.) I am an educational administrator and part-time sports writer, and she’s in college majoring in mass communications, with a focus in television production.

Earlier this week, I was scrolling through Twitter while zombie-fied, since my weekend was a blur of taking care of my food poisoning stricken husband. I came across a Tweet regarding the American Cup, a gymnastics competition at New York City’s Madison Square Garden at the beginning of March. And in my sleep deprived and stress filled state, I hatched an idea.

I remembered that my sister was in the process of building her portfolio with a variety of print and video work in order to apply for internships. In my writing career, I have never really covered a gymnastics meet. What if we channeled our little kid selves and joined forces to cover the American Cup and the concurrent Nastia Lukin Cup? Megan would create some great pieces for her portfolio, I would get to cover a gymnastics competition and we would get to go watch live gymnastics together, something we haven’t done since the 1999 US Classic (where we both tabbed then child elite Chellsie Memmel as a future world champion. Call Miss Cleo, because we’re psychic!)

So I proposed the idea to my sister, who, since we shared a bunk bed for a decade, grew up having to hear and eventually learning to tune out all of my crazy ideas. But kudos to her – she listened, and immediately jumped on board.

Hopefully, if all goes as planned on March 2nd and 3rd, we’ll be doing some sort of coverage on two of the biggest gymnastics events on American soil this year. What we’ll be doing is still up in the air – will we just buy tickets, tweet from the stands and write recaps? Will we get press passes and do more multimedia coverage? Like our business dreams of nearly twenty years ago, we have some details to work out. But both Megan and I think our 11 year old and 6 year old selves would think that our plans were, in appropriate 1990s slang, “totally radical.”

 

To All The 9 – 12 Year Old Girls In Baltimore This Monday (From A Buffalo Fan Who Has Been There)

From the Kansas City Star.

Maybe that was the first whole football game you watched. Maybe it was the thirtieth. Maybe your father has gotten you into the great sport of football because he doesn’t have any sons…yet. Maybe you desperately wanted to hang out with your older siblings or uncles and were watching football in order to do so. Maybe you were at your friend’s giant game watch party in her giant house and her seven brothers and sisters and all of their friends.

Maybe it was your turn in the awesome wicker hanging chair in the den (quite the hot commodity in a party fill of 40 kids from the ages of 5-18) when Billy Cundiff’s kick went wide left Sunday afternoon, sealing a win for the New England Patriots and costing the Baltimore Ravens a chance at the Super Bowl.

You’ll probably remember that exact moment for the rest of your life. It’s either the moment where you gave up on football forever, or discovered how intriguing and mysterious football – and sports in general – can be. Continue reading

Speed and Shifts: Two Random Thoughts From a Boston Bruins Game

I can never quite take the writer hat off. I attended last Tuesday night’s Boston Bruins – Winnipeg Jets game at the TD Garden, my first NHL game of the season. I average one NHL game a year. (Depressing, I know, but I lack time and funds.)

I told myself to just watch the game. I left my notepad in the car, and didn’t even carry a pen with me. I told myself I wouldn’t tweet either, since the service at the Garden when filled is seriously lacking.

Despite my attempts to just enjoy the game, I still had two quick notes I had to write up post-game. You can take the tools away from the writer, but you can never make them stop thinking like one. Here they are: Continue reading

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