USC Football… New Quarterback… New Backs… same ol’ SC!

USC over Arkansas ... againOne of the fun things about watching football happens when YOUR team WINS! AAAh, scientific evidence has clearly demonstrated that when a male watches HIS team win… then HIS testosterone goes up!

Of course, the opposite happens if you are cheering for a team that loses… so it’s good to pick the right team in the very beginning!

Watching this years Trojans was a leap of ‘faith’… sooo many changes and sooo many new folks that one wondered… can ‘SC REALLY do it again? Add to this all the cheap talk from the folks in Arkansas… and our team having to travel to the wild hog pit of Arkansas. Well, those who weren’t believers… are NOW!

A lot of smack from Arkansas… here’s some of it:

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jack says:

posted on June 21, 2006 11:48 PM —

The razorbacks will kill usc. We have mithc who willthre for around 500 and darren and felic both getting a buck 50. USC lost all their players and we got some. Have fun lossing usc

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Well… that didn’t happen! One of the assistant coaches last year thought that USC took away their ‘manhood’ and ‘pride’… how would you phrase what happened this year? The Hogs had 30% more ‘manhood’ than last year?Here are a few more fun links:
USC FOOTBALL

CSTV.com

Whole Hog Sports

10 Reasons Hogs Have a Chance… heh heh

Someone just asked me IF I had season tickets…. I said ‘NO’ ( heh heh, I lied)… it is amazing how many NEW friends you have when folks find out you have ‘SC season Tickets! Nebraska, Notre Dame and UCLA… it’s all good!

FIGHT ON!!!…

Roger Freberg

 

Hey, brother, whatcha taking to get so…. bullish?

Somehow I like this guy

 Athletes are clamoring to discover what they can do to look like this handsome fellow… the guy on the right.(Looking like the guy on the left is a lot easier…. eat heavily at a place with arches and you’ll get there. Sorry, guy, you need to live on a ‘stepper’ for a while)

In fact, go to almost any weightroom and ask around — and after a time — people will generally let you in on their ‘secrets.’ Some of what the ‘professionals’ will tell you is fact, some will be superstition and some will just be bunk. However, it is always fun to hear the latest craze.

Sometimes, someone will walk into the weightroom looking a little ‘super’ natural like my buddy above and this will cause other lifters and athletes to freak out… it’s really not too unusual… it happens to me all the time.. heh heh. Actually, at 54 years old, I am still fairly strong … but it’s a family genetic thing.

Some families have a non-fatal version of muscular dystrophy that gives you roughly the same effect….. in fact, it has been hypothesized that many top athletes have some naturally occuring myostatin inhibitors ( allows for muscle growth )… but there are less genetically endowed athletes working hard on getting at these secrets… they’re throwing away their EPO, Steroids, Hormone Precursors, HGH and the like and looking at something that will propel them into the ‘big time’…. it’s called gene doping. Look for it in the next Olympics, I am sure we’ll see some real surprises!

As I mentioned before, there is a strong feeling on the part of many scientists that a number of top athletes carry a gene for increased muscle development … naturally. However, we’re bound to read more and more about IGF-1.

The interest in understanding the actions of myostatin inhibitors and myostatin inhibition has less to do with finding the ‘new secret’ for the world’s top athletes, as it does for finding a treatment for muscular dystophy. Increasing the potential lifespan and quality of life for someone with MD is a worthy goal.

One young boy being observed today is from from Germany. He has unusually large muscles since birth… and… the hope is that by studying him, possible treatments for MD can be developed. Wyeth Labs is looking at such treatments for humans after successful experiements in animals.

Well… the tests ( referred to as ‘human trials’) by Wyeh have been going for a year or two now and I can only wonder if some of the ‘samples’ have been deengineered by some of the mad scientists of the athletic community… hmmmm. The problem as I see it for the athlete — besides all the ethical considerations — is that most of these types of drugs are fairly general… and — I would have to ask – what would prevent the drug from causing potentially life threatening side effects , such as enlarging the heart in the man or woman not stricken with muscular dystrophy?

News is already out that this drug exits the human system after 28 days ( becoming nondetectable from the athlete’s perspective)…
Cybex Stepper... very cool

As for me…. I’ll keep lifting weights the old fashioned way and… I’ve started using this thing that my daughters and my wife call a ‘stepper’… I think it has something to do with eating green vegetables!

Somehow I feel better if I imagine that I am stomping grapes to make wine… but I feel drenched when it’s finally over…. yep, I am losing weight and it makes a great warm down from my weight lifting regimine.

Finally, I have to admit, it doesn’t take a huge amount of time to get a great workout on this thing… and with my stereo blasting… well… it’s kinda like vegetables… after a while, they aren’t too bad.

 

Roger Freberg

Southern California Trojans — it’s a ‘lifestyle!’

Two Tough Trojans? Laura and Me at the USC-UCLA Game!
Me and my Sweetheart!

The other day I was walking down our town — San Luis Obispo, California — wearing a t-shirt from my Alma Mater and a cyclist ( probably someone training for a local triathalon) passed me by and yelled, “Fight On!”. For those of you not connected to sport, this is a salutory greeting from one Trojan to another! I looked up to see him riding by all decked out in Trojan cycling attire and for one brief moment — I was transported back home to Troy, the Business School and to those I helped learn the art of ‘burn outs’ in weightlifting…. fun times. Oh yes, then, there were the football games! Continue reading “Southern California Trojans — it’s a ‘lifestyle!’”

Soccer: Give them 1 point for effort… but it’s not enough to keep me awake!

 Soccer only requires a ball

Americans have just never caught soccer fever or ‘World Cup” mania. This has lead some advocates to believe that this failure is due to some shortcoming in the American psyche rather than soccer’s lower sex appeal. Many cried over the failure of women’s professional soccer, but it’s demise wasn’t totally unexpected. Even today, there is a certain amount of drum beating to try to develop support for reintroducing U.S. professional women’s soccer, but unless they compete in the nude, it’s not likely to fare much better.

Soccer has a tough road to hoe in a country that invented or popularized many of the great sports in the world. My impression is that baseball addressed the shortcomings of cricket and American football and rugby evolved from socccer by reshaping the sport to better engage the spectators and participants.

Soccer marketeers are working hard to capture American’s imaginations. Articles about the world’s greatest athletes are soccer players or the fittest athletes are soccer players just don’t ring true to fans who watch Reggie Bush and Justin Gatlin. It doesn’t seem likely unless the criteria include running around for 90 minutes or so and not do anything interesting. The world’s best athletes are in sports that captivate the fans and pay their players like gods.

What do average Americans know about the last World Cup? They know some French guy head butted some Italian guy. It seems rather ironic that two countries that can’t win any wars would be competing for any kind of World Championship.

Soccer is not the ‘safe’ sport for kids that it is marketed. Statistics reveal that head injuries are one of the most common forms of injuries and they occur in about the same frequency in soccer as in American Football. In case you were dozing off… the quote was “In soccer, concussions make up 2-3% of all injuries. This is the same rate as for American football!” All that contact, and soccer still can’t keep me awake.

It is also not hard to understand why in many less economically developed parts of the world, locals have embraced a contest that requires only a ball. Ask any Division I AD about which sports cost the most and the least.
Continue reading “Soccer: Give them 1 point for effort… but it’s not enough to keep me awake!”

at $300 an hour or so…. being a Professor Ain’t too bad!

The Challenge of today's universities -- getting Professors to Teach their subject and stay on topic 

San Luis Obispo is a small college town with a modest university. 

However, as is true in so many colleges and universities around the country, some professors don’t realize how good they have it. Recently, a couple of local professors complained about the Cal Poly football coach’s raise. They felt that they had to settle for crumbs from the table and were justifiably (in their minds) unhappy.

The head coach’s raise certainly reflected the very recent success Cal Poly was having in football. Making the playoffs was a striking improvement over decades of mediocrity. The coach’s salary — as head coach’s salaries go — won’t roll anyone’s eyes; Cal Poly is division I double A after all. To put it in perspective, if Oklahoma was nice, they’d roll over Cal Poly 77-0 in a bad year.

So why all the fuss?

Well, the professors who wrote to the Tribune obviously felt that they are ‘underpaid’. However, let’s take a closer look at what they really get. First, many of them have the biggest perk of all — a job for life. In contrast, coaches go to work every day with a guillotine blade hanging over their necks. 

Professors here teach a whopping 12 hours a week for 30 weeks a year. As for health benefits, a state job is hard to beat. This works out to something like $300 an hour.

Football Coaches — especially head football coaches — seldom have a life. They work constantly throughout the year and seemingly 24 hours a day. The hourly rate of a Cal Poly football coach would be something around $30 an hour. In addition, coaches can be fired for any reason.

Oddly enough, I suspect both underpaid professors report more to the IRS than the much maligned football coach.

Roger Freberg