Saturday, April 30, 2011

Beat the Lakers

      It's the only way to call the current NBA season
a success...The Dallas Mavericks now face a major 
obstacle in their road to the championship...and it 

is called the Los Angeles Lakers. The two teams entered the playoffs with almost the same record, but Laker superstar Kobe Bryant hit a three point shot at the buzzer to give the Lakers the number one seed in the  Western Conference, while Dallas is number two. The Mavericks have a history of NOT doing well in the playoffs despite having steller performances in the regular season. They have added a couple of big men since last year, but still the burden will be on the backs of Jason Kidd and Dirk Nowitzki. Kidd has played for other teams in the NBA, but Nowitzki has been a Mav since day one. The seven foot German was suppose to elevate Dallas to championship caliber, but so far it has not happened. Two years ago Dallas folded in the finals against Miami, despite winning the first two games of the Championship series. Dallas is coming off a first-round win over Portland and the Trail Blazers tried to make it a blue-collar series. They roughed up the Mavs to try and make them lose their composure, but Dallas took the series in six games. Now it is a different and stronger opponent as they enter the Western Conference Semi-Finals. All eyes will be on Nowitzki to see if he can finally attain the superstar status he has been promising all these years.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Doolittle's Raid on Tokyo



    It was 69 years ago today... April 18, 1942 and America finally fought back after the disaster of Pearl Harbor. The Japanese had a lot of successes after the surprise attack on December 7, 1941. Buoyed by the great victory of the Pearl Harbor mission, the Japanese followed up with conquests of Malaysia, the Phillipine Islands, and Indonesia, to go along with the large section of China (Manchuria) the Japanese had invaded in the late 1930's. The constant stream of bad news for America forced President Franklin D. Roosevelt to order his military forces to come up with some way to fight back. Japan was too far from any U.S. base to attack from the air, so a joint-service effort was devised. The Navy would ferry U.S. Army B-25 bombers close to Japan and the bombers would strike five different Japanese cities before heading for China. On April 18, 1942 sixteen B-25's took off from the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Hornet. Never before in history had a bomber taken off from a ship. The mission was under the leadership of Lt. Colonel James Doolittle and he not only trained the men, but was the pilot of the first bomber to leave the Hornet. The mission was a super success for the U.S. and extremely embarrassing for the Japanese, who thought they were safe from the U.S. military. One of the bombers landed in Russia, five others ditched in the South China Sea, and the ten others crashed in China. Of the eighty men involved in the mission only five are still alive as of this day. Each year since the mission the remaining fliers all get together for a reunion and there is a bottle of vintage champagne waiting for the last of these American heroes.  

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Titanic's 99th Birthday

    April 14th,....It is a date that most people
gloss over without much thought. I happen to remember it because of the significance of the moment..
    Construction of HMS Titanic actually began in April of 1907 in the ship-building port city of Belfast, Ireland. Five years and 7,000 workers finished the Titanic on April 2, 1912. The ship was the most luxurious vessel afloat at this point in history. Gold chandeliers, sterling silver flatware, and porcelain dishes with only the finest of foods gracing the tables. Over 20 boilers gave the Titanic a speed of almost thirty knots and was designed for passengers of all levels of society. American millionaires Benjamin Guggenheim, Isodor Strauss, and John Astor had to be on the maiden voyage of the Titanic. The ship was almost four football fields long, and had three propellers, each forty feet wide. She was the showpiece of the White Star Line, which owned the Titanic. The first passengers boarded the Titanic at Southampton, England on April 10, 1912. After brief stops at Cherbourge, France and Queensland, Ireland, the Titanic headed for open water and a destination of New York City. It was 11:40 at night on the 14th when she struck the iceberg, and water poured in at the rate of seven tons per second. Distress calls went out immediately, but 58 miles away the 'USS California' had turned off the radio shack at 11pm. It took just two and a half hours for the 'unsinkable' to slip below the frigid waters of the Atlantic. Of the 2,206 passengers and crew, only 703 were saved due to the shortage of lifeboats on the big ship. Since it was one of the deepest parts of the Atlantic, the Titanic would rest in peace until 1985 when technology made it possible for divers to finally find her. James Cameron's great movie of 1997 has been hailed as being extremely true to the historical facts of this disaster...and remember it happened 99 years ago tonight.     

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Harvick Wins.......Again!!!

This posting is almost a repeat of the one
before it....with the same result.
At the NASCAR Sprint Cup race in Martinsville,
Virginia today, Kevin Harvick passed Dale
Earnhardt, Jr with three laps to go to claim
the win and the Grandfather clock trophy. Harvick
becomes the first two-time winner at the Cup 
level in 2011. He started the race in the 24th spot 

and remained about mid-pack until the 200 lap mark
of the 500 lap event. Earnhardt, Jr has not won a
Cup race since June of 2008 and was the sentimental
choice, but it was not to be. He did edge out Kyle 
Busch for second place, with Juan Pablo Montoya
fourth and Jeff Gordon rounded out the top five.
Harvick, who finished 42nd in the Daytona 500 has slowly worked his way back into the points chase and now is fifth after todays victory. The NASCAR drivers will be in Dallas-Fort Worth next week when they come to Texas Motor Speeday, north of the metroplex. It
is one of the fastest venues on the NASCAR circuit.