Oh, Stanford

The actual point of this post was to lament the fact that Stanford men’s tennis won while Stanford men’s volleyball lost. I really wish those results were reversed. With the loss, Stanford’s at-large chance at the NCAA Championships decreases. I might not get to see Erik Shoji 😦

Anyway, I might as well make an actual post out of this, so here goes. I played hooky today and went to the following tennis match between UW and Stanford. It was a great, albeit cold, day to be outside playing tennis. The bonus of outside matches is having tons of space to chill out in (as a spectator). The downside = the fences.

(#1 doubles match. For Washington – Kyle McMorrow (L) and Jeevan Neduchezhiyan (R). For Stanford – Bradley Klahn (L) and Ryan Thacher (R). Klahn/Thacher won 8-4. Quick tip – Klahn is the shorter Stanford player.)

It was a fun to watch more live, top-quality men’s college tennis once again. I was well equipped with a fully-charged camera and took 40 photos that weren’t all fuzzy!  I would think the players are used to people taking photos of them and I was at least separated by a fence. It was kind of awkward when I went to the courts further down and I was pretty much only 10 feet or so from the fence because I couldn’t comfortably stand anywhere else. I felt too close at that point.

After the second sets were underway in the singles, I began my wanderings down towards the lower numbered courts where only a few park benches were located. As I walked along, there was this other guy who seemed to be following me. When I settled at a bench eventually to watch the end of the #4 singles (the match that Stanford won and clinched the win), he was sitting on the bench next to mine. Maybe he thought I had good taste in matches? He didn’t follow me to the standing-room only area of court #6 where I went afterwards, but soon the Stanford team gathered nearby. I felt awkward but I was also trying to overhear their gossip and not self-impose. You don’t eavesdrop well if they know you are there, after all 🙂 Way to sound creeper, self. But really, it’s like catching random gossip at a restaurant or something. I didn’t pester them because I couldn’t pester someone who wasn’t a professional athlete who is expected to give back to fans, even though I could have gotten some really clear, non-fence photos of the Stanford team right then. But if I really wanted nice photos, I could just go to their official website. It’s not like I actually have camera skills.

Anyway, gossip. It wasn’t like the boys were really saying things that people who are fans of college tennis didn’t know. Kyle McMorrow, a UW player who grew up in California, was talking to his buddy/friend/former and current rival? Denis Lin about previous matchups with UCLA and about Oregon with interspersed cheers for their respective teammates. I didn’t hear the other stuff too well. Besides, there was just a lot of texting going on, like most people do. Bradley Klahn gets props for showing extra competitiveness or leadership or whatever it is by trying to encourage his teammate still playing on court 6.

I thought about wishing the Stanford players before I left (had an eye exam to make) luck against Oregon, but I wouldn’t have really meant it. I would have meant it if I told them “great job today”, but alas I didn’t talk to them at all. I hope they don’t actually remember me as the creeper who stood by them as the matches finished up. I believe in my relative power of anonymity and invisibility, but I suppose you never know…

Tomorrow is another great home tennis match – UW vs. Cal-Berkeley. I might post about it, I might not.

Also related but not really to this post – Henrique Cunha lost in singles today at Georgia Tech. I stop crushing on him and he loses, haha. What a weird coincidence.

Sports and University Budget Crisises

So the school that I go to for graduate studies, the University of Washington, recently announced that they would reduce in-state freshman class spots over the next few years and admit out of state students, who pay 3x more in tuition costs, instead. This caused a lot of uproar, of course, and in one article/editorial that I just read calling out taxpayers for not paying the university enough (tax money is only about 40% of the money, which is crazy in my opinion), there were comments advocating the elimination of all NCAA sports and moving them to club level. One even claimed to be a “former athlete”. Before you make these statements, you might want to check your numbers. Just saying.

Obviously I am biased since I love sports at the NCAA level, but there is a reason why this university isn’t cutting sports despite all the outrage that athletes get equipment, coaches, training facilities, and they might even have subsidized living expenses! How dare a school give scholarships to students who excel at sports and represent the school in that manner instead of students who have extremely high GPAs and maybe in some future become famous enough that the this university can claim  it as a famous alum and use it as advertising. Because, you know, people only decide on schools due to their academics and cost. They spend hours pouring over numbers and statistics for every single university around in order to figure this out. I mean, some people do, but can you not say that a famous university, no matter how it is famous, is more likely to be on your mind than a school that is relatively unknown?

Since that tangent is rather complicated, I’m going to return to the original topic. Which is whether cutting athletic programs would really fix the budget issue. For a school like the University of Washington, I would say no. Sports here sell tickets, gear, get people to hang out around the university, cause future students to commit, and pay for expensive parking and eat at the nearby places, which is all money, money, money. While I can get into a lot of events for cheap or free, being a student here, these same events for other people, even for sports like soccer and volleyball, are $5 a person. That still adds up even for soccer. I’m not saying that soccer is a revenue-generating sport by itself, but it definitely offsets some of its costs. I’m not sure about the details at this particular university, but schools like the University of Michigan have a self-sufficient athletics department, meaning that the department receives no money from the government or from student tuition. I’m not sure if that’s the case for all schools, but with how rabid the football and basketball fans are here, as well as decent crowds for volleyball, soccer, and softball, I’m sure they are making money enough to pay for high coach’s salaries.

Yes, even the track team here is making money, in a way. There aren’t all those home indoor meets for no reason. They even hosted a high school studs meet. I’m sure they didn’t just charge for housekeeping.

And an added bonus for having NCAA sports that really isn’t a quantifiable number? Advertising. It’s even better, when TV pays you to advertise your school! Who earns that money for the school? The student athletes.

I could go on another rant about why the situation with student athletes is dicey and why there just needs to be much better consistency and enforcement of the rules, but that will be another day.

Getting over a Fan-crush

Ways to get over a fan-crush on someone (athlete, etc.)

  1. Time (heals all wounds? or something)
  2. Too much exposure/get sick of him or her. Maybe this happened with Rafael Nadal, though I never really fangirled him that hard.
  3. Start fangirling someone else. THIS happens all the time.
  4. Become too busy (aka have an actual life outside of following the sport/person)
  5. Have a dream where the person wonders why the hell you are fangirling him and you freeze up (in the dream)
  6. Actually meet the person and be disappointed. This has never happened to me so I can’t say anything

So my lovely crush on a certain Brazilian tennis player fell susceptible to reason #5 above. I still will probably check on his results as part of my overall fangirling of men’s college tennis, but now I am crush-less until the next phenom sneak-attacks me.

Who to Fangirl – Tyler Mizoguchi

Unlike last time, I’m going to actually link to some content in this edition of “Who to Fangirl”.

(via the Illinois website)

Who is Tyler? He is a USA gymnast who is currently a junior at the University of Illinois who competes hard and with a ton of passion. I believe it was John Roethlisberger who said that Tyler is a “beast” and seeing who he reacts after hitting a routine is rather beastly and rather awesome, in my opinion. He is also a good gymnast, of course. He’s pretty solid as an all-around competitor but definitely strong on parallel bars, floor and vault. It was rather unfortunate that he messed up on parallel bars at the Big 10 Championships which took him out of the all around title (got 3rd after a low score also on high bar).

A future Olympian? Sure. USA men’s gymnastics is getting pretty deep except at pommel horse, and Tyler isn’t particularly good at that event. 2012 might be too early for him since he just competed in his first international meet this winter, but 2016 why not?

Your best bets for seeing Tyler this year are any reshowing of men’s gymnastics on the Big 10 network and the NCAA championships, which should be April 15-16, though I’m not sure when TV coverage will happen. Of course, if you need to see him perform now, there should be quite a few videos of him doing routines on YouTube.

Link to Tyler’s profile at Illinois gymnastics http://www.fightingillini.com/sports/m-gym/mtt/mizoguchi_tyler00.html

An interview with Tyler off Illinois’ website http://www.illinihq.com/news/2011/03/31/gymnast_mizoguchi_gains_more_confidence/

This is no April Fools’

According to this link http://www.pepperdinesports.com/genrel/033111aaa.html, Pepperdine is going to withdraw from postseason play in men’s tennis, volleyball, and baseball. I found this out via the forums at Volleytalk and while Pepperdine isn’t ripping it up in the MPSF for volleyball, it is certainly a very, very good tennis team.

I really suck at understanding all these rules but it appears that Pepperdine has not quite withdrawn from NCAA Championships, just the WCC championships. Either way, I’m rather sad for these guys since it’s obviously not the athletes’ fault that their school screwed up their accounting. But I can understand why the program is punished despite how it affects the kids. If you were working at a large company and the CEO of the company decided to mess around, you get screwed over by losing your job and/or money in company stock. I just wish there was some way those people who majorly screw up at the top could really pay back the people they hurt besides just going to jail or paying some measly fine…

Anyway tomorrow is not only April Fool’s Day (in the U.S. at least) but also a Friday, which means college tennis and college volleyball galore! I am hoping for the best for my current favorite college tennis player Henrique Cunha as he and his teammates take on Virginia. (I have to admit that I watched Reid Carleton’s senior profile because I knew Cunha would be in it for a bit…) Also on Big 10 network there is men’s college gymnastics and on ESPN2 there is men’s professional tennis live from the Sony Ericsson Open. So this Friday will have a lot of TV and knitting.

I swear I fangirl over other things but…

Henrique Cunha has moved up the ITA Rankings to #6 in singles! Woohoo!

I went to the Pepperdine/Washington match this Saturday and, as expected, Pepperdine won. UW managed the doubles’ point but then were quickly down 2-1 because Pepperdine beat UW in all but one of the singles’ matches. Yet there was good drama since UW came back to even the sets at 1-1 in the #1, #3, and #5 singles. Tobi was the only one to win. It was a nice win for a guy who sometimes has a rough time at #5 singles. Pepperdine is a really strong team and it was really fun to watch the ball being whipped around. Court#1 singles was tight the entire time except for the match tiebreak where Jeevan just lost his concentration or something. Before that he was pulling some amazing down-the-line shots, so I suppose that couldn’t continue forever.

Watching college tennis makes me realize how awesome the pros must be. It’s reinforcing my love of professional tennis and I’ve been following the Sony Ericsson open and Novak (my favorite professional tennis player), though I haven’t scheduled my life around it. I still find live tennis > TV tennis since I rarely get to see good live tennis in this area. Besides, I have gotten to see a lot of Novak because he keeps winning 🙂 There’s never too much Novak in my life, and so I hope he keeps winning and winning…

Though I have to admit, I don’t really enjoy one person just dominating the tour, but I really want him to achieve his dream of becoming the #1 player in the world, so he has to dominate in order for that to happen. Poor Troicki who has been stuck in Novak’s path too many times recently and has to suffer through the bulldozing. I can’t really say poor Roger Federer because Roger still gets to the later stages and you expect that top seeds have to meet then, but a #16 ranked player meeting the same #2 or #3 (depending on the week) player in pretty much all the tournaments they’ve played together this year? That really sucks.

Who to Fangirl – Brad Stevens

If you have been following March Madness at all this year, you must know about Butler and their return trip to the Final Four. They have had some crazy games, and before that they were having a crazy season, but supervising this operation was one collected man – Brad Stevens. I should look up links but just go to ESPN.com or search Google and you’ll find plenty of recent articles on him and the Butler team.

As for his style, I have to say I like the glasses. Ahem, I mean, I don’t understand basketball too well but I think he does a great job getting his players to believe in each other and the system, and I think he connects with them very well. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that he’s a young coach and just very, very cool 🙂

Stanford volleyball will kill me…

…but I will die happy if so. I don’t know what it is about the Stanford teams. It usually starts with me fangirling certain players. Therefore I have to see them on TV, so they also have to be on a team that gets far enough to be on TV, which biases me towards the first team I see on TV when I get into a sport. Therefore it makes sense sort of for the Stanford women, since my first women’s college volleyball match was the NCAA semifinal between UCLA and Stanford. I pretty much fell for Foluke and Cynthia at first site, and then there was the awesomeness the next year of Alix, Gaby and Cassidy joining. But for the men… I’ve watched USC, Penn State, UC Irvine, etc., and then last year I saw Stanford men and wow. Maybe it was their story, but I think I was a little bit obsessed with Erik Shoji for a bit… 🙂

Anyway, tough loss to my boys tonight. It’s pretty hard to replace Kawika Shoji and Evan Romero so I shouldn’t expect a ton (besides USC is dominating this year so far) but I want to see them on TV again so go go go!

This Friday for the Anonymous Sports Fangirl

Let’s see what I’m doing right now…

  1. Following 3 different men’s volleyball matches via GameTracker (Go Stanford!)
  2. Have the TV on with March Madness playing.
  3. Checking up on college tennis results and pro tennis results.

What I also did today was watch some women’s college gymnastics in the morning and some live college tennis after work (UW vs Arizona). After the basketball finishes I will watch some soccer (Spain vs. Czech Republic EURO  2012 qualifiers) off my DVR. I think I covered most of the sports I follow except for track and field.

I’m pretty good at marathoning certain sports, especially if it’s during a tournament, but I prefer just doing a little bit at a time. It keeps me fresh and I feel like I’m somewhat in the loop for multiple sports and not completely lost on most of them.

Also, I pretty much rely on my DVR to watch most of my sports, since so many events happen while I’m at school or working or sleeping. I could be a super fangirl and find a way to watch everything live, but being an anonymous fangirl doesn’t require me to be super or crazy, so I’ll just stick to what let’s me watch the most I can comfortably.

Current Crush – Henrique Cunha

I figured, since I’m being the anonymous fangirl here, I might as well try to spread anonymous love for some of my favorite people. Recently I have been into Henrique Cunha, a Brazilian tennis player who is currently a sophomore tennis player at Duke University.

I know, Duke University… I hate their athletics program, specifically their basketball program, so this is a rather unfortunate situation… What I end up doing is just hoping that Cunha wins and secretly gleeful when Duke still loses the match.

So the basics on Henrique Cunha. From the little info I could find on him via the Internet, he was a rather highly-ranked junior tennis player who got to hit with Roger Federer during the 2007 French Open. He is a lefty whose forehand, in my opinion at least, is the shot he uses to do the damage. His backhand seems pretty standard two-handed but not spectacular, his serve is okay, and he will come up to net but not that often. Last year he was the #1 ranked college tennis player for a while and he lost in the semis of the NCAA singles tournament to eventual champion Bradley Klahn. He teams up with Reid Carleton for a pretty solid doubles team. This year he has some losses to top guys like Steve Johnson and Alexandre Lacroix and a doubles loss to the Tennessee pair of Boris Conkic and JP Smith.

Of course, how I heard of Henrique Cunha was via the ITF National Team Indoor Championships that were played at the University of Washington back in February. The funny thing was I first saw him playing in the Duke vs. USC matchup and I was like, there is some dude out there playing left-handed. I skipped watching him against Lacroix because I wasn’t obsessed then. It was only when I saw Duke play for a third time when I was like, wait a second, I might like this guy…

Too little too late, with most things of course. Anyway I hope he does well once he returns to the pro circuit or maybe hope he is still around in 2013 when the National Team Indoors returns to Seattle and also hope Duke comes again…

Anyway, this blog is going to be a bit all over the place as I figure out what I actually want to put here, so the next update might be on anything, provided that I fangirl it.

Edit: OMG, so I just decided to visit the Duke men’s tennis website and they just put up a short video with Henrique Cunha. The timing of this is…wow. Anyway, click here to go to the Duke men’s tennis page.