March Madness is upon us and everyone who has filled out a pool anxiously awaits each round of the NCAA tournament to see how they are doing. NCAA college basketball is now a billion dollar business and the thought of me ever filling out a pool again just adds to this despicable empowering of betting on collegiate athletics.
I must admit; I used to play the “office” pool every year and then I started to wonder if it was adding to the pressures played upon student athletes during this tournament. When has a game or tournament for that matter become a national betting obsession?
I love sports, that has never been a question in my mind. I do, however; not bet on sports. Betting on sports for me ruins the fun of watching sports. Billions of dollars are bet each year on professional and college athletics. Is this why sports were invented? I tend to think not.
Gambling as ruined lives and families, yet we as a nation continue to allow this. Gambling is a national epidemic that needs to be stopped.
College athletes have always been a major part of their Universities. School pride to me is what college sports should be about and not the point spread on some game. I played sports to play for the love of the game and not to make some gambler rich. My bones creak and the pain in my knees are always there for me, but I did not make one red cent from playing sports.
I lost a lot of friends in school because of gambling and I hope they all have found their way. I miss those guys and I could never see what their addiction was.
Whether it is casino gambling or betting on sports this is not going to go away any time soon. I am not going to be a martyr and call for the end of gambling. I just want to end it on college sports.
Look at the gambling scandals that have plagued college sports, has anything been so damaging to the integrity of Universities?
So the next time that you go and fill out a college pool, think about how this affects the integrity and the school spirit of our colleges.
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Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Weekly Thought Bonanza March 17th
On Sunday/Monday, I produce a column called “The Weekly Thought Bonanza”. The column is based on all of the random thoughts that run through my head all week, and trust me there are a plethora of them. I will try to share as many of these thoughts as I can, so each one of my readers can think just a little bit extra over the coming week.
Nursing homes in this country are an absolute disgrace in this country. We let our parents and grandparents live the remaining years of their life in an underfunded and understaffed facility. This is a shame, a darn shame.
Anyone have a boat for us here in the Northeast?
This country has a bigger population of its people behind bars than any other country in the world. County Jails are full of people who are in jail for petty cases that should be civil cases. Where is PETA to cry for humans in cages? They protest when lions are in cages.
Law Abiding Citizen starring Jamie Foxx and Gerard Butler is a great movie.
No more health care talk please. Scott Brown said it best last week when he said, “Shouldn’t we be concentrating on jobs.”
Term limits for Congressmen should be addressed again. For too long we have let the same people run the show in the United States Congress. If it is good enough to limit the President it is good enough to limit Congress too.
The CIA chief has stated that Al-Qaeda is on the run. Does anyone in the world really truly believe that is true?
Texas Rangers manager Ron Washington admitted he made a "huge mistake" when he used cocaine and failed a Major League Baseball drug test last season.
In his first public acknowledgment, Washington apologized Wednesday for his behavior, eight months after he told Rangers president Nolan Ryan, who turned down the manager's offer to resign.
"I made a huge mistake and it almost caused me to lose everything I have worked for all of my life," Washington said at a news conference Wednesday. "I am not here to make excuses. There are none."
Washington said he used cocaine only once and called it "stupid" and "shameful."
Washington is a disgrace to the Rangers and to all of baseball in my opinion.
This season of 24 is the best one yet.
A California Highway Patrol report released Wednesday says an officer responding to a report of a runaway Toyota Prius arrived to find a Border Patrol agent near the driver with lights flashing.
The Border Patrol presence raises the prospect that there were other witnesses, but the report offers few new details and does nothing to clarify wildly divergent explanations from Toyota Motor Corp. and the driver, who says his gas pedal got stuck and sent him to speeds topping 90 mph March 8 on a California freeway.
Toyota has dismissed James Sikes' account, saying its tests show he pressed the gas and brakes rapidly 250 times, the maximum amount of data that the car's self-diagnostic system captures.
So glad I bought that Toyota.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Nursing homes in this country are an absolute disgrace in this country. We let our parents and grandparents live the remaining years of their life in an underfunded and understaffed facility. This is a shame, a darn shame.
Anyone have a boat for us here in the Northeast?
This country has a bigger population of its people behind bars than any other country in the world. County Jails are full of people who are in jail for petty cases that should be civil cases. Where is PETA to cry for humans in cages? They protest when lions are in cages.
Law Abiding Citizen starring Jamie Foxx and Gerard Butler is a great movie.
No more health care talk please. Scott Brown said it best last week when he said, “Shouldn’t we be concentrating on jobs.”
Term limits for Congressmen should be addressed again. For too long we have let the same people run the show in the United States Congress. If it is good enough to limit the President it is good enough to limit Congress too.
The CIA chief has stated that Al-Qaeda is on the run. Does anyone in the world really truly believe that is true?
Texas Rangers manager Ron Washington admitted he made a "huge mistake" when he used cocaine and failed a Major League Baseball drug test last season.
In his first public acknowledgment, Washington apologized Wednesday for his behavior, eight months after he told Rangers president Nolan Ryan, who turned down the manager's offer to resign.
"I made a huge mistake and it almost caused me to lose everything I have worked for all of my life," Washington said at a news conference Wednesday. "I am not here to make excuses. There are none."
Washington said he used cocaine only once and called it "stupid" and "shameful."
Washington is a disgrace to the Rangers and to all of baseball in my opinion.
This season of 24 is the best one yet.
A California Highway Patrol report released Wednesday says an officer responding to a report of a runaway Toyota Prius arrived to find a Border Patrol agent near the driver with lights flashing.
The Border Patrol presence raises the prospect that there were other witnesses, but the report offers few new details and does nothing to clarify wildly divergent explanations from Toyota Motor Corp. and the driver, who says his gas pedal got stuck and sent him to speeds topping 90 mph March 8 on a California freeway.
Toyota has dismissed James Sikes' account, saying its tests show he pressed the gas and brakes rapidly 250 times, the maximum amount of data that the car's self-diagnostic system captures.
So glad I bought that Toyota.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Getting Back to a "Normalized" Life
My daily column will return on the 15th of March. I took a few weeks off to help with my mother's care for cancer. Please support all charities that help in this terrible disease.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Monday, February 22, 2010
Weekly Thought Bonanza February 22nd
On Monday I produce a column called “The Weekly Thought Bonanza”. The column is based on all of the random thoughts that run through my head all week, and trust me there are a plethora of them. I will try to share as many of these thoughts as I can, so each one of my readers can think just a little bit extra over the coming week.
Is it me or have we really lowered ourselves as a nation when we have to change hotdogs because children are choking on them? I gave my son a hotdog once when we ordered from the kiddies menu. I cut my son’s hotdog into a million pieces, took me twenty five minutes, but I did it. I cut the hotdog into pieces for my nine month old at the time. Let’s not redesign the bun because parents are too lazy or more to the point, don’t want to get their food cold.
The new Sirius/XM Blackberry App is fabulous.
If you are a sports, fan the hockey game between the United States of America and Canada is an instant classic. I have never been more excited for a game since the Miracle on Ice game in 1980.
Ham, Pineapple, and Garlic pizza is the best I have ever tasted.
Stuart Woods novels are excellent. I am really enjoying his new novel, Kisser. He is one author that needs to be checked out.
I love old ripped T-shirts. They are the best to wear to bed.
Whatever happened to Doan’s pills. Wasn’t it the miracle cure for back aches. My back and knees are killing me from years of football and rugby. Why can I not find it?
Mitt Romney is the next Ronald Reagan. Watch, listen, and learn, people Romney in 2012 is a Dr Cris Chasse lock.
The democrats are bringing healthcare back. What will it take for them to stop rushing through this bill and actually trying to make one that makes sense?
Bode Miller, it is about time, my man!!
I am watching ice dancing. Why? I have no idea except to say the Americans have a shot at two medals.
Jay Leno is back next Monday where he certainly belongs and never should have had the 11:30 time slot taken away. Conan O’brien I feel really bad for you. Keep your chin up my friend. No pun intended.
Does anyone remember records anymore?
The Weekly Thought Bonanza Thought of the Week; Why are all of our politicians in the hospital with heart problems? Is it because their jobs are so stressful that they cannot handle it?
There is nothing wrong with being the cowboy every once an awhile
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Is it me or have we really lowered ourselves as a nation when we have to change hotdogs because children are choking on them? I gave my son a hotdog once when we ordered from the kiddies menu. I cut my son’s hotdog into a million pieces, took me twenty five minutes, but I did it. I cut the hotdog into pieces for my nine month old at the time. Let’s not redesign the bun because parents are too lazy or more to the point, don’t want to get their food cold.
The new Sirius/XM Blackberry App is fabulous.
If you are a sports, fan the hockey game between the United States of America and Canada is an instant classic. I have never been more excited for a game since the Miracle on Ice game in 1980.
Ham, Pineapple, and Garlic pizza is the best I have ever tasted.
Stuart Woods novels are excellent. I am really enjoying his new novel, Kisser. He is one author that needs to be checked out.
I love old ripped T-shirts. They are the best to wear to bed.
Whatever happened to Doan’s pills. Wasn’t it the miracle cure for back aches. My back and knees are killing me from years of football and rugby. Why can I not find it?
Mitt Romney is the next Ronald Reagan. Watch, listen, and learn, people Romney in 2012 is a Dr Cris Chasse lock.
The democrats are bringing healthcare back. What will it take for them to stop rushing through this bill and actually trying to make one that makes sense?
Bode Miller, it is about time, my man!!
I am watching ice dancing. Why? I have no idea except to say the Americans have a shot at two medals.
Jay Leno is back next Monday where he certainly belongs and never should have had the 11:30 time slot taken away. Conan O’brien I feel really bad for you. Keep your chin up my friend. No pun intended.
Does anyone remember records anymore?
The Weekly Thought Bonanza Thought of the Week; Why are all of our politicians in the hospital with heart problems? Is it because their jobs are so stressful that they cannot handle it?
There is nothing wrong with being the cowboy every once an awhile
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Weekly Thought Bonanza February 16th
Finally this week we have the “The Weekly Thought Bonanza”. The column is based on all of the random thoughts that run through my head all week, and trust me there are a plethora of them. I will try to share as many of these thoughts as I can, so each one of my readers can think just a little bit extra over the coming week.
I knew when I bought my Toyota truck Toyota was having a few problems, but when my Toyota was recalled because it has a tendency to just not stop it kind of made me a bit nervous. When I watched it drive away by itself and pick up my dry cleaning, I did not know if this is going to be a problem or a welcome addition. In all seriousness, I believe Toyota is getting the raw end of the stick a bit. I do however, feel that it will be deserved if it is found that they lied to Congress about the problems they had with their vehicles early on.
When did restaurants start bringing soda with lemons in it automatically? I want a diet coke not with a lemon.
I cannot sing that is a given. Even in the shower my voice has some major issues. I certainly do not get that extra acoustic bounce in the shower. I at least know I cannot sing. I wish others would follow my lead. On a side note, if you get kicked out of a singing competition stop crying and stop telling people how much you had to endure. Please people, man up.
I must thank all of my readers for the e-mails of support I receive due to my mom’s battle with Cancer, (yes, I capitalize it). It was a tough week for mom, as see is in the ICU at the hospital. She does not quit though and I wish you could just bottle that toughness.
Lost has just gotten weird. I do not get it anymore, not that I ever did.
Steven King’s new book, The Dome, was a great right up until page seven hundred and fifty out of eight hundred and twenty three. Then it just got weird. Notice the theme going on here?
The body of a veteran climber who fell 1,500 feet into the crater atop Mount St. Helens was recovered Tuesday after he spent more than a day in the snow, authorities said.
God do I love my Blackberry.
Clouds and wind had hampered efforts to reach Joseph Bohlig, 52, who was posing for a picture Monday on the rim of the dormant crater when a snow overhang gave way and he fell into the volcano. If you pose for a picture on the edge of a crater you are just asking for trouble.
I started to write a novel and I hope people will actually read it and enjoy it as much as I am enjoying writing it.
Consumer alert. Do not buy a Walmart vacuum cleaner. I have bought three of them and each one has broken after a few uses. I am going to Sears and getting a Kenmore.
If all of the anti-aging cream really worked, we would be beautiful forever.
The Weekly Thought Bonanza Thought of the week; The Olympics are way too commercial. We build up our countries athletes only to tear them down when they do not win. They are athletes people and people lose.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
I knew when I bought my Toyota truck Toyota was having a few problems, but when my Toyota was recalled because it has a tendency to just not stop it kind of made me a bit nervous. When I watched it drive away by itself and pick up my dry cleaning, I did not know if this is going to be a problem or a welcome addition. In all seriousness, I believe Toyota is getting the raw end of the stick a bit. I do however, feel that it will be deserved if it is found that they lied to Congress about the problems they had with their vehicles early on.
When did restaurants start bringing soda with lemons in it automatically? I want a diet coke not with a lemon.
I cannot sing that is a given. Even in the shower my voice has some major issues. I certainly do not get that extra acoustic bounce in the shower. I at least know I cannot sing. I wish others would follow my lead. On a side note, if you get kicked out of a singing competition stop crying and stop telling people how much you had to endure. Please people, man up.
I must thank all of my readers for the e-mails of support I receive due to my mom’s battle with Cancer, (yes, I capitalize it). It was a tough week for mom, as see is in the ICU at the hospital. She does not quit though and I wish you could just bottle that toughness.
Lost has just gotten weird. I do not get it anymore, not that I ever did.
Steven King’s new book, The Dome, was a great right up until page seven hundred and fifty out of eight hundred and twenty three. Then it just got weird. Notice the theme going on here?
The body of a veteran climber who fell 1,500 feet into the crater atop Mount St. Helens was recovered Tuesday after he spent more than a day in the snow, authorities said.
God do I love my Blackberry.
Clouds and wind had hampered efforts to reach Joseph Bohlig, 52, who was posing for a picture Monday on the rim of the dormant crater when a snow overhang gave way and he fell into the volcano. If you pose for a picture on the edge of a crater you are just asking for trouble.
I started to write a novel and I hope people will actually read it and enjoy it as much as I am enjoying writing it.
Consumer alert. Do not buy a Walmart vacuum cleaner. I have bought three of them and each one has broken after a few uses. I am going to Sears and getting a Kenmore.
If all of the anti-aging cream really worked, we would be beautiful forever.
The Weekly Thought Bonanza Thought of the week; The Olympics are way too commercial. We build up our countries athletes only to tear them down when they do not win. They are athletes people and people lose.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Let the Winter Olympics begin!
The Winter Olympics begin tomorrow and I for one cannot wait. Growing up in New England and practically living on a ski slope, has me geared up for the next two weeks. These games have all the makings of the best Olympic game’s ever.
The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially the XXI Olympic Winter Games or the 21st Winter Olympics, will be a major international multi-sport event held on February 12–28, 2010, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with some events held in the resort town of Whistler, British Columbia and in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond. Both the Olympic and Paralympic Games are being organized by the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC). The 2010 Winter Olympics will be the third Olympics hosted by Canada, and the first by the province of British Columbia. Previously, Canada was home to the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec and the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta.
The Olympics have returned. Athletes who ply their trade on snow and ice in relative obscurity until it's decided their most incredible feats merit incredible attention are back. Commence the scramble to discern a double-cork from a double-Salchow, a hog line from a high-line. Here are ten topics that look to dominate watercooler chatter when the calendar hits Feb. 12.
1. Vonn, Vonn who?
All eyes are on the athletes competing in Vancouver. Here is a glimpse of what you'll see on NBC starting Feb. 12.
You may know Lawrence and Street and Mahre and Ligety, Moe and Johnson and Miller and McKinney. But do you recall, the most successful U.S. skier of all? That would be Lindsey Vonn . And if you don't know her name, you soon will. Since the 2006 Games, where she competed as Lindsey Kildow, Vonn has become a mega-celebrity in Europe. That might have something to do with her back-to-back overall World Cup titles. Or the two world championships she won in 2009. Or maybe it's her charming disposition, her winsome smile or her rejection of prize money in favor a cow (she now has 5). Either way, the U.S. is finally going to understand what Europe already knows - Vonn is a medal threat in each event she enters. And if she does compete to her level, well, she'll go down in history. But her ability to ski at her best may be significantly hindered by a painful shin injury she suffered in training Feb. 3 in Austria. In a pre-Games press conference Wednesday, Vonn said she was in excruciating pain and wasn't even positive she'd be able to ski at all in Vancouver.
2. Border battle
Most will be surprised to know that America's neighbors to the north could beat the United States at anything, but Canada could top the U.S. in the medal standings in 2010. At the 2006 Torino Games, an emergent Canadian team won a national record 24 Olympic medals - one less than the U.S., which finished in second place overall. That finish, coupled with a home Olympics, has emboldened Canada to spend resources with the intent of yet another record haul. One small problem: Canada has never won a gold medal at home. At the 1976 Montreal Games and the 1988 Calgary Games, Canada failed to win a single Olympic title. Those results will weigh heavy on the national consciousness, not to mention the athletes themselves, in the opening days. If a gold doesn't come early, things could get ugly
3. Drama kings
With the return of reigning Olympic champion Yevgeny Plushenko of Russia and Torino silver medalist Stephane Lambiel of Switzerland, the men's figure skating field is suddenly as crowded as Moscow's Red Square during a Paul McCartney concert. Not since the 1994 Lillehammer Games, when Olympic champions Brian Boitano (1988) and Ukraine's Viktor Petrenko (1992) returned to challenge Russian Aleksei Urmanov and Canadians Elvis Stojko and Kurt Browning, has a men's competition featured such a compelling lineup. Representing the U.S. are Jeremy Abbott, Johnny Weir and 2009 world champion Evan Lysacek. The trio is excited to challenge for medals. No matter the outcome, there promises to be an extra helping of drama.
4. Old kids on the block
Torino marked the arrival of a relatively new cast of U.S. Olympians. Of the nine American athletes who won gold in 2006, seven were Olympic rookies. But even with the veterans the average age of the golden nine was a tender 23. More important, all but one of the gold medal winners will return to compete in Vancouver (speed skater Joey Cheek has since retired). With four more years of seasoning, the U.S. team will enter the Games as one of the more accomplished in Vancouver.
5. Apolo and protégé
After introducing the U.S. to short track as a one-man machine in Salt Lake and Torino, the Apolo Ohno show will finally have a supporting character. Ohno's understudy is 19-year-old J.R. Celski, who had a breakthrough performance at the 2009 World Championships winning four medals and finishing second overall. (Celski has recovered from a serious crash at the Olympic Trials in September, but his first competition since then will be at the Games.) Celski, who happens to be from Ohno's hometown of Federal Way, Wash., first began short track after watching Ohno on television during the 2002 Games. But don't think that Ohno is ready to pass the torch just yet. As a five-time Olympic medalist, Ohno needs two more to become the most decorated winter Olympian in American history. Only 27-years-old, the fleet footed Dancing With the Stars champion has every intention of staying centerstage.
6. Halfpipe hegemony
Apolo Anton Ohno and J.R. Celski
The U.S. snowboarders ooze cool, like a rat pack redux in polarized wayfarers. And in such an individual sport, the pack of women halfpipers is as close to a team as it comes. When 2006 silver medalist and snowboard's darling Gretchen Bleiler wedded last summer - to the cringe of adolescent boys everywhere - multiple female riders were in attendance, with 2002 gold medalist Kelly Clark serving as bridesmaid. "It's a privilege to be friends with your competitors in a sport that's so creative and artistic rather than competitive," says 2006 halfpipe gold medalist Hannah Teter, who was unable to attend the ceremony. "Last winter I was telling the girls we need to be called ‘The Dream Team.'" Leading the way on the men's side is 2006 gold medalist Shaun White, the man, the myth, and the emerging legend. Right now no other country can match the skill level of American boarders. Expect Clark to take the women's title and White to unleash his latest brain-melting move, known as both the McTwist and Whitesnake, all over the Cypress halfpipe on his way to gold.
7. El Niño returns
El Niño, Spanish for.... "The Niño," has made an uninvited, though not unexpected, landing ahead of the 2010 Olympic Games. And like Chris Farley in the now infamous SNL skit, the irregularly occurring phenomenon has been a troublesome sight. The weather pattern has brought warmer weather to Vancouver. The record warmth and dearth of snow has proven particularly problematic at low-lying Cypress Mountain, site of the snowboarding and freestyle skiing events. The mountain has been shuttered for the past sveral weeks as hundreds of workers have been working round the clock to create a winter wonderland in time for the Games. Cypress is expected to be ready for competition.
8. Canadian pastimes
For most Canadians, the whole of the Olympics could be canceled so long as the curling and ice hockey competitions stay the course. Both are considered national pastimes and no medals mean more to the 2010 hosts. While Canada should be considered a strong candidate for gold in the men's and women's competitions of both, victory is far from assured. In curling, Scottish skip and 2009 world champion David Murdoch is as tough an opponent as they come; in hockey, the maple leafs will face dominant squads from the Russian men and American women. If one of the Canadian teams falter, expect a country in mourning.
9. Partying on an Olympic level
Ski cross
Noted Alpine bad boy Bode Miller will be at the Vancouver Games. While the skiing, international goodwill and chance to represent your country might have all played a part in his decision, he most surely is enticed by the famed Whistler nightlife. It's a "I-woke-up-with-a-bald eagle-tattoo-and-a-new-bride-named-Destiny" type of place. One Alpine skier called it "a mini ski Vegas." And things are only looking up. "The energy of the place without the Olympics is crazy," adds 2006 giant slalom gold medalist Julia Mancuso. "I can imagine when the Olympics roll into town, it's going to take it up a notch to where it has probably never seen."
10. Old men and the ski (cross)
In an attempt to youthanize the skiing events, the International Olympic Committee has added ski cross to the Olympic program for 2010. Think BMX with skis and snow. The addition comes on the heels of the wildly successful snowboard cross competition in Torino. The U.S. features two strong participants in the mass start event: four-time Olympian Casey Puckett and three-time Olympian Daron Rahlves. Both were successful Alpine skiers and either of the friendly pair could win the Olympic medal that eluded them in their previous careers.
Follow me on twitter at https://twitter.com/drcchasse
Or send a friend request on facebook http://www.facebook.com/cris.chasse
E-mail me at drcrischasse@me.com to get on our mailing list.
Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
To receive a copy of the Hardcover or softcopy of the Well Thought out Thoughts and Opinions with a Bunch of Useless Information book, please send an e-mail to drcrischasse@me.com
voice 206-350-4670
The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially the XXI Olympic Winter Games or the 21st Winter Olympics, will be a major international multi-sport event held on February 12–28, 2010, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with some events held in the resort town of Whistler, British Columbia and in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond. Both the Olympic and Paralympic Games are being organized by the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC). The 2010 Winter Olympics will be the third Olympics hosted by Canada, and the first by the province of British Columbia. Previously, Canada was home to the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec and the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta.
The Olympics have returned. Athletes who ply their trade on snow and ice in relative obscurity until it's decided their most incredible feats merit incredible attention are back. Commence the scramble to discern a double-cork from a double-Salchow, a hog line from a high-line. Here are ten topics that look to dominate watercooler chatter when the calendar hits Feb. 12.
1. Vonn, Vonn who?
All eyes are on the athletes competing in Vancouver. Here is a glimpse of what you'll see on NBC starting Feb. 12.
You may know Lawrence and Street and Mahre and Ligety, Moe and Johnson and Miller and McKinney. But do you recall, the most successful U.S. skier of all? That would be Lindsey Vonn . And if you don't know her name, you soon will. Since the 2006 Games, where she competed as Lindsey Kildow, Vonn has become a mega-celebrity in Europe. That might have something to do with her back-to-back overall World Cup titles. Or the two world championships she won in 2009. Or maybe it's her charming disposition, her winsome smile or her rejection of prize money in favor a cow (she now has 5). Either way, the U.S. is finally going to understand what Europe already knows - Vonn is a medal threat in each event she enters. And if she does compete to her level, well, she'll go down in history. But her ability to ski at her best may be significantly hindered by a painful shin injury she suffered in training Feb. 3 in Austria. In a pre-Games press conference Wednesday, Vonn said she was in excruciating pain and wasn't even positive she'd be able to ski at all in Vancouver.
2. Border battle
Most will be surprised to know that America's neighbors to the north could beat the United States at anything, but Canada could top the U.S. in the medal standings in 2010. At the 2006 Torino Games, an emergent Canadian team won a national record 24 Olympic medals - one less than the U.S., which finished in second place overall. That finish, coupled with a home Olympics, has emboldened Canada to spend resources with the intent of yet another record haul. One small problem: Canada has never won a gold medal at home. At the 1976 Montreal Games and the 1988 Calgary Games, Canada failed to win a single Olympic title. Those results will weigh heavy on the national consciousness, not to mention the athletes themselves, in the opening days. If a gold doesn't come early, things could get ugly
3. Drama kings
With the return of reigning Olympic champion Yevgeny Plushenko of Russia and Torino silver medalist Stephane Lambiel of Switzerland, the men's figure skating field is suddenly as crowded as Moscow's Red Square during a Paul McCartney concert. Not since the 1994 Lillehammer Games, when Olympic champions Brian Boitano (1988) and Ukraine's Viktor Petrenko (1992) returned to challenge Russian Aleksei Urmanov and Canadians Elvis Stojko and Kurt Browning, has a men's competition featured such a compelling lineup. Representing the U.S. are Jeremy Abbott, Johnny Weir and 2009 world champion Evan Lysacek. The trio is excited to challenge for medals. No matter the outcome, there promises to be an extra helping of drama.
4. Old kids on the block
Torino marked the arrival of a relatively new cast of U.S. Olympians. Of the nine American athletes who won gold in 2006, seven were Olympic rookies. But even with the veterans the average age of the golden nine was a tender 23. More important, all but one of the gold medal winners will return to compete in Vancouver (speed skater Joey Cheek has since retired). With four more years of seasoning, the U.S. team will enter the Games as one of the more accomplished in Vancouver.
5. Apolo and protégé
After introducing the U.S. to short track as a one-man machine in Salt Lake and Torino, the Apolo Ohno show will finally have a supporting character. Ohno's understudy is 19-year-old J.R. Celski, who had a breakthrough performance at the 2009 World Championships winning four medals and finishing second overall. (Celski has recovered from a serious crash at the Olympic Trials in September, but his first competition since then will be at the Games.) Celski, who happens to be from Ohno's hometown of Federal Way, Wash., first began short track after watching Ohno on television during the 2002 Games. But don't think that Ohno is ready to pass the torch just yet. As a five-time Olympic medalist, Ohno needs two more to become the most decorated winter Olympian in American history. Only 27-years-old, the fleet footed Dancing With the Stars champion has every intention of staying centerstage.
6. Halfpipe hegemony
Apolo Anton Ohno and J.R. Celski
The U.S. snowboarders ooze cool, like a rat pack redux in polarized wayfarers. And in such an individual sport, the pack of women halfpipers is as close to a team as it comes. When 2006 silver medalist and snowboard's darling Gretchen Bleiler wedded last summer - to the cringe of adolescent boys everywhere - multiple female riders were in attendance, with 2002 gold medalist Kelly Clark serving as bridesmaid. "It's a privilege to be friends with your competitors in a sport that's so creative and artistic rather than competitive," says 2006 halfpipe gold medalist Hannah Teter, who was unable to attend the ceremony. "Last winter I was telling the girls we need to be called ‘The Dream Team.'" Leading the way on the men's side is 2006 gold medalist Shaun White, the man, the myth, and the emerging legend. Right now no other country can match the skill level of American boarders. Expect Clark to take the women's title and White to unleash his latest brain-melting move, known as both the McTwist and Whitesnake, all over the Cypress halfpipe on his way to gold.
7. El Niño returns
El Niño, Spanish for.... "The Niño," has made an uninvited, though not unexpected, landing ahead of the 2010 Olympic Games. And like Chris Farley in the now infamous SNL skit, the irregularly occurring phenomenon has been a troublesome sight. The weather pattern has brought warmer weather to Vancouver. The record warmth and dearth of snow has proven particularly problematic at low-lying Cypress Mountain, site of the snowboarding and freestyle skiing events. The mountain has been shuttered for the past sveral weeks as hundreds of workers have been working round the clock to create a winter wonderland in time for the Games. Cypress is expected to be ready for competition.
8. Canadian pastimes
For most Canadians, the whole of the Olympics could be canceled so long as the curling and ice hockey competitions stay the course. Both are considered national pastimes and no medals mean more to the 2010 hosts. While Canada should be considered a strong candidate for gold in the men's and women's competitions of both, victory is far from assured. In curling, Scottish skip and 2009 world champion David Murdoch is as tough an opponent as they come; in hockey, the maple leafs will face dominant squads from the Russian men and American women. If one of the Canadian teams falter, expect a country in mourning.
9. Partying on an Olympic level
Ski cross
Noted Alpine bad boy Bode Miller will be at the Vancouver Games. While the skiing, international goodwill and chance to represent your country might have all played a part in his decision, he most surely is enticed by the famed Whistler nightlife. It's a "I-woke-up-with-a-bald eagle-tattoo-and-a-new-bride-named-Destiny" type of place. One Alpine skier called it "a mini ski Vegas." And things are only looking up. "The energy of the place without the Olympics is crazy," adds 2006 giant slalom gold medalist Julia Mancuso. "I can imagine when the Olympics roll into town, it's going to take it up a notch to where it has probably never seen."
10. Old men and the ski (cross)
In an attempt to youthanize the skiing events, the International Olympic Committee has added ski cross to the Olympic program for 2010. Think BMX with skis and snow. The addition comes on the heels of the wildly successful snowboard cross competition in Torino. The U.S. features two strong participants in the mass start event: four-time Olympian Casey Puckett and three-time Olympian Daron Rahlves. Both were successful Alpine skiers and either of the friendly pair could win the Olympic medal that eluded them in their previous careers.
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