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Ahira's Hangar • View topic - Amusing and Offbeat Sports Stories

Ahira's Hangar

David Zindell's Neverness, A Requiem for Homo Sapiens and all things Science Fiction and Fantasy
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 Post subject: Amusing and Offbeat Sports Stories
PostPosted: Sun Jun 26, 2005 8:50 pm 
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Zoo changes animal names after complaints
June 15, 2005
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports

ROYAL OAK, Mich. -- Some University of Michigan backers weren't amused to learn the Detroit Zoo's baby wolverines had been given nicknames of rival Big Ten teams.

After receiving several dozen complaints, including threats to cancel memberships or reduce donations, the zoo renamed the 3½-month-old kits last week.

A zookeeper who graduated from Michigan State University had named the kits Sparty -- for the MSU mascot -- and Bucky, either for the Wisconsin Badger mascot or a variation on the Ohio State Buckeyes.

"We got some e-mail and phone calls from zoo visitors and the general public who were deeply offended by the names," zoo spokeswoman Rana Kozouz told the Detroit Free Press on Tuesday. "So we changed the names to Tamarack and Tilia, the names of Michigan trees."

AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

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Our lives are the songs that sing the universe into existence.~David Zindell
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 Post subject: Re: Amusing and Offbeat Sports Stories
PostPosted: Sun Jun 26, 2005 8:52 pm 
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Need a World Series keepsake? Check out 'Bobble Ankle'
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON -- Handing out bloody socks seemed like a bad idea for a ballpark promotion, so the brain trust of the Brockton Rox minor league baseball club devised a much more sanitary way to pay tribute to the World Series heroics of Red Sox ace Curt Schilling.
The first 1,000 fans at Saturday night's Rox game will get a free "Bobble Ankle," a Schilling-shaped doll with a flimsy ankle instead of a bobbing head.
The figurine, which the team also is selling for $25 over the Internet, celebrates Schilling's grit for pitching through an ankle injury that left blood seeping through his sock.
"It's a great way to say thank you to Curt and commemorate his determination and sheer guts," said Rox team president Jim Lucas.
The giveaway isn't the first creative promotion for the Rox, who count comedian Bill Murray as a part-owner.
After the Red Sox were knocked off by the New York Yankees in the 2003 playoffs, the team handed out a Grady Little "Bobble Arm" doll, which invoked the former manager's ill-fated decision not to pull Pedro Martinez in Game 7 of the series.
After the Red Sox won the World Series last year, Lucas said people kept asking him what the team would do for an encore.
"The problem was, there's nothing fun about a bloody sock," he said.
Schilling, through his publicist, signed off on the Bobble Ankle, provided that half of the proceeds would benefit his Pitch for ALS foundation and his wife Shonda's SHADE Foundation for skin cancer awareness.
The team already has sold 3,700 dolls in the past two months and raised more than $45,000 for the Schillings' foundations.
The Bobble Ankle features a broken "A" on its base, which was a serendipitous mistake by a factory worker in China. The team decided not to fix the mishap, which Lucas called a "mistake from the bobble gods."
"People feel the figurine has an aura about it," he added.
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Our lives are the songs that sing the universe into existence.~David Zindell
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 Post subject: offbeat and interesting sports stories
PostPosted: Mon Aug 29, 2005 2:18 am 
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Thrill ride
Tom "Pohaku" Stone works to revive
the ancient Hawaiian tradition of
he‘e holua, or lava sledding
By Alexandre Da Silva
Associated Press
As a boy growing up in a poor family on the Big Island, Tom "Pohaku" Stone found entertainment barreling down grassy slopes aboard ti leafs and banana stumps.

But for Stone, what began as childhood fun on a natural roller coaster ride has evolved into an academic and cultural journey aimed at reviving the 2,000-year Hawaiian tradition of he'e holua, or Hawaiian lava sledding.

He has the scars to show for it.

Wearing just a tank top and shorts and reaching speeds of up to 70 mph on a sled standing only four inches above ground, Stone once ran into a steel post sticking up from the grass during a demonstration in a slope on Maui, tearing an 18-inch gash in his left thigh.

In another crash, Stone broke his neck. It hasn't stopped him.

"You can't even imagine what it's like to be head first, four inches off the ground, doing 30, 40, 50 miles an hour on rock," Stone said. "It looks like you are riding just fluid lava. It's death-defying ... but it's a lot of fun."

It wasn't quite as dangerous when Stone was a kid.

"You would break off a bunch of ti leaves, sit down on it and skid down the mountain all covered in mud," said Stone, now a 54-year-old community college professor who teaches the ancient Hawaiian sport and gives classes on sled building and riding. "That just became my cultural passion because of the similarities with surfing, but it also became my academic passion."

Traditionally, he'e holua served both as a sport and as a vehicle for native Hawaiians to honor their gods, especially Pele, the goddess of fire. After reaching the top of a slope, Hawaiians would stand up, lie down, or kneel atop hardwood sleds -- often carved from Kauila or Ohia and measuring 12 feet long by 6 inches wide -- and speed down the man-made courses of hardened lava rocks sprinkled with grass.
But missionaries who brought Christianity to Hawaii saw the sport as "a frivolous waste of time," Stone said, and its practice ended in 1825, when the last he'e holua racing event was documented.

"They wanted us to work, stop being happy," Stone said.

Stone first heard about the practice, which also took place in other islands in the Pacific such as Tahiti and New Zealand, through stories told by his grandfather. His interest in reviving the sport came in 1993, when he wrote a term paper on the tradition for a college class. A year later he had built his first sled and soon he began teaching people how to ride and craft the sleds, which are hand lashed with coconut fiber and weigh between 40 and 60 pounds.

It takes Stone about two weeks, or 24 hours of nonstop work, to finish a sled, and his prices start at $3,000. He is currently carving a sled for an exposition and another for a restaurant in Kona.

Stone said his solid wood sleds "last forever," unlike today's snowboards and surfboards built on more high-tech, yet less durable materials like fiberglass and foam. For example, the Bishop Museum, the state's largest museum, has an 800-year-old sled on display, he said.

A retired lifeguard and champion surfer, Stone has discovered some 57 rock slides of various lengths across the state, and spent three days with a crew of seven to make a 200-foot repair on a 700-foot course. The only remaining course on Oahu is at Kaena Point, he said, and only two courses are in rideable conditions, both on the Big Island.

Stone said there are only about a couple dozen regular riders, and he is unaware of any deaths or serious injuries among those trying the sport.

Clifford "Pake" Ah Mow got hooked on the sport three years ago as he sped down a trail on the Big Island.

"It's great, unbelievable," said Ah Mow, a lifeguard who patrols Oahu's east and south shores and has sustained "little bumps and bruises" while sledding. "You get the chills."

The upkeep of centuries-old courses and hand carving the sleds from scratch are only some of the sport's challenges.

By the end of 2005, Stone wants to complete a mile-long rock slide on the Big Island and hold the first he'e holua event there in more than 100 years.

He said the biggest challenge is to find a sponsor who would be willing to back the dangerous event, whose judging criteria will include "style, length of ride, and survival ability."

Stone said safety measures like nearby medical care centers are being considered for the tournament the same way Jet Skis assist surfers who run into danger while competing in big waves.

"There's people across the world that want to ride," he said. "Once you do it, you never look back. You want to do it all the time."


Hawaiian Boarding Co.

www.hawaiibc.com/shaper.htm


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 Post subject: offbeat sports stories
PostPosted: Tue Sep 20, 2005 10:31 pm 
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www.clickondetroit.com/irresistible/4995220/detail.html

Quote:
High School Wrestler Practices With 450-Pound Bear

POSTED: 8:10 am EDT September 20, 2005

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio -- High school athlete Josh Herbert is not easily intimidated by opponents. After all, he has a 6 -foot, 5 -inch, 450-pound bear for a playmate.

Josh's family raised Buddy, the 8-year-old American black bear, since it was a cub. Now, Buddy is a lot bigger than Josh – but still likes to wrestle with him.

But Josh, the Middletown, Ohio, area senior, said the de-clawed bear never gets too rough and will back off if he shouts "No!" Herbert said, "He knows when to stop."

Josh, who plays football and wrestles, never faces an opponent that comes close to Buddy's size.

Josh's father Daniel Herbert is a veteran outdoorsman who has helped track and relocate bears.

Josh is used to challenges. He battled back from life-threatening leukemia as a child. He now is interested in a career in veterinary medicine.
Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

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