Saturday, August 16, 2008
A work-filled weekend and nearing the end
On the plus side, the weather today is nice. The English Premier League kicked off this weekend, with the first game of the season at 1pm. It was pretty cool to be able to watch it on a fairly basic television channel without having to either pay a ton for cable or go to a pub, as I do in the States. It was also nice that it was on at a fairly normal time for a sporting event.
In any case, this weekend will be one for report writing and taking care of a few things that i need to do before I head back to America a week from Monday.
Read more
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Lawyers, Guns , Money?
I've been watching a good deal of Wimbledon, which isn't difficult because its on when I get home from work. On Monday night we got to see Andy Murray come back from down 2 sets and a break to beat Gasquet in five sets, and earlier today we saw Nadal completely destroy him in less than two hours (I think). Evidently John McEnroe's commentary is also played in Ireland. His tennis commentary empire extends beyond the United States and to the BBC. I had no idea. I also didn't realize the extent of the pro-Murray hysteria among Wimbledon fans. Quite entertaining, in any case.
Speaking of Wimbledon, I discovered yesterday that the Brookfield complex (where I am staying) has two grass tennis courts. This is, of course, AWESOME. It's been raining ever since I discovered the courts themselves, but once it stops I'm heading down to play on the surface that inspired serving and volleying.
Read more
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Euro 08 Final: Spain v Germany
Let's be honest with ourselves; everyone enjoys listening to a pair of old Irish guys describing 16 balloon sculptures emblazoned with flag patterns of various countries dancing with each other. Everyone.
Read more
Gaelic Football
Today
Evidently when
Everyone seems to expect
Westmeath have a goofy prematch ritual in which everyone gets into a big crowd and throws themselves around trying to bounce off one another for about 30 seconds. Reminds me of the Hawaiian football team dance, except its less organized and decidedly less intimidating.
1st minute
2nd minute That was fast. Number 4 for Westmeath fouls a
4th minute Two more shots from
5th minute Point! Maybe I was wrong, this could turn into a pointfest after all. This time its Dennis Glennon for Westmeath, and we’re tied.
6th minute First blood (literally).
7th minute GOAL! Westmeath guy plays a long ball through the defense and a teammate gets there a fraction before the
9th minute Another point. Westmeath are in danger of running away with this, they’re up 5 points to 1.
10th minute
13th minute
14th minute Basically the same play and foul leads to a free kick for Westmeath, which leads to a point. 7 to 3. The bleeding
15th minute That looked painful. A
17th minute
18th minute Times two. These points seem to come in flurries.
20th minute And a bad Westmeath pass is intercepted and leads to yet another
22nd minute That was odd. Westmeath got a free kick and immediately kicked it directly out of bounds. I’m not sure if that was incredibly stupid or somehow strategically significant. I’ll go with the former unless this is some subtle mind ploy that I do not understand (which is I suppose possible, considering that I understand very, very little about Gaelic Football)
24th minute FOUL! And first second yellow card of the match. I have no idea when the first happened.
26th minute Another yellow card for Dublin now, and I’m very curious about that first yellow card that the announcers keep referring to but do not show a replay of.
27th minute A pretty sequence of play from Westmeath following the yellow card leads to a point. The 3 or 4 passes leading up to it seemed to be the Gaelic Football equivalent of approximately what
32nd minute A yellow card for someone from Westmeath (the first one not to go to a
33rd minute
34th minute
1 minute of stoppage time
35 + 1 minute Halftime. Whew, that was an exciting first half. These GAA people like their sports high scoring.
Aaaaand they’re back.
36th minute
37th minute A shot at goal! Those don’t seem to happen too often, no goalkeeper to block points. The Westmeath keeper saved this shot though. I’m not exactly sure what the goalkeeper’s special privileges are (if he has any) because everybody is allowed to use their hands.
39th minute Wow, that was a bad shot. Westmeath player tries for a point, comes closer to the corner flag than the upright.
44th minute Long span of possession followed by missed shots ends with a Westmeath free kick that they convert for a point, tying the game at 9. The action has seemed to slow down, after this amount of time in the first half we had seen 7 or 8 points.
45th minute And of course just as I say that, Westmeath score another point to pull ahead, 10 to 9. This is back to looking like it did in the first half, we’ll see if they keep up with they points in flurries theme.
48th minute Evidently not. A
51st minute Yellow card for
52nd minute Two quick points put
56th minute That was very strange. A Westmeath player fouled a
A few subs happened in the past few minutes, is seems like each team is allowed a lot of them.
60th minute TRICKERY! CHEATING SCUM! Or at least this is what they tell me. One of the
64th minute After a few more assorted misses on either end,
66th minute Man down! Man down! Westmeath number 5 is lying on the field in pain.
He’s ok now.
67th minute Point! We have more scoreboard changing to do! That took long enough, and puts
69th minute Westmeath are reduced to playing long balls and praying for a goal. It does not look good for the underdog at the moment.
70th minute And that is probably the final nail in the coffin. An impressive buildup of passes by
70 + 1 minute A free kick for Westmeath is turned into a point, but it is not enough. The match is over,
Westmeath 1-8 (11)
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Sports, Shops, and Rain
There always seems to be some sort of sporting event on TV. If no Euro 08 match is on at the time there is always something on, either cricket or rugby or non-European soccer or hurling or Gaelic football. I even saw a bit of of USA v Canada in rugby yesterday. All of this on standard television, with about 10 channels. I'm pretty sure you'd need uber-cable to watch that rugby match in the United States, and here its on their equivalent of NBC. They like their sports here, obviously.
Earlier today I saw the end of a hurling match. Its fascinating to watch. Everyone here claims that its the "fastest game in the world". I'm not quite sure what that means, but the game is very high tempo, although I'm pretty sure its impossible to quantify speed of play and compare across different sports.
Unfortunately, the Irish love of all things sports-related does not seem to extend to tennis. Yesterday I went into town and looked in at least 3 sporting goods stores for tennis balls and returned empty-handed. This could have something to do with the weather. It rains quite often here, making regular tennis training a rather difficult goal.
Speaking of rain, on the way back from town after looking for said tennis balls I got caught in a rather heavy downpour. It rained nearly 2 inches yesterday, and as luck would have it most of that came all at once in the afternoon during my 20 minute walk from the City
Read more
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Irish Euro Commentators and Cork City Centre Center
I also went into the Cork City
Sadly, I saw a Dominoes Pizza on the walk to the City
Food aside though, I did run into very surprising American items in a sporting goods store that I poked around in for a few minutes while one of my housemates was buying running shoes. Right next to all the Cork GAA and assorted professional soccer team apparel I found a bin of sports balls which held soccer balls, rugby balls, bigger rugby balls, and (to my shock) an American football. Next to it was a rack of 3 or 4 basketballs. They seemed very out of place and I'm sure those same 3 basketballs and 1 football have been in stock for the past 2 months because I can't imagine that there are many basketball courts or football fields in Cork. It seemed like just a run of the mill sporting goods store too, not a specialty store or an extra-thorough enormous one. It was very strange.
Oddly enough, I was almost killed crossing the street today and it was not my fault and not because I looked the wrong way. The guy in the car decided not to slow down coming around a blind corner when turning left on a red light. Fortunately he stopped in time, but rather frightening nonetheless, especially because when I first heard him honk I assumed that I had done something stupid, which didn't turn out to be the case.
Read more