Tuesday, March 2, 2010

“Recruiting: CMU coach Dan Enos' philosophy (Detroit Free Press)” plus 2 more

“Recruiting: CMU coach Dan Enos' philosophy (Detroit Free Press)” plus 2 more


Recruiting: CMU coach Dan Enos' philosophy (Detroit Free Press)

Posted: 02 Mar 2010 12:06 AM PST

Dan Enos was the Michigan State running backs coach before being named the head coach at Central Michigan, and he developed quite a reputation as a dynamic recruiter and an individual who went above and beyond to develop relationships with potential student-athletes and their families. At CMU, Enos will carry over some of those same principles in his recruiting philosophy.

"The first thing we want to do is qualify somebody physically," Enos said. "If they physically fit the mold of asking them what we want them to do at a certain position, whether its speed, strength, get off blocks, flexibility, whatever that is physically. Then, obviously, and these are not in any particular order, but we need to qualify them as a person with their character and next, we need to academically qualify them and make sure they can do the work and give the effort to graduate. So it's not just about finding good players, its about finding good players that are good people and that are good academically. We want the total package when we recruit a young man. We also look for toughness and whether they play hard."

Finding players who match those qualifications is a major priority and Enos will not limit where those players come from, although he has placed certain geographical priorities.

"Where are we going to go? We're going to go anywhere we have to," Enos said. "We know this, we need to do a great job within our local area, and, to me, that's the state of Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and the city of Chicago. We're going to recruit those areas very hard and do the best we can. Now that being said, we have coaches on our staff that have ties: Joe Tumpkin with South Florida, Kort Shankweiler from Tampa, Terry Samuel from Houston and Jay Johnson has done a great job of recruiting Atlanta over the years. Mike Cummings has done a great job of recruiting the East Coast with the areas of New York and New Jersey, and he's done an outstanding job.

"So we'll all have our local areas and we'll all have our secondary areas and we'll continue to attract players from all parts of the country. But we also know that we need to do an outstanding job in this state first and foremost, and the states that touch it."

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Etiquette and philosophy get a run for their money at Ross Creek (Otago Daily Times)

Posted: 01 Mar 2010 08:18 AM PST

Many of my friends lead shamelessly sedentary lives.

Little things, like what is on the telly, keep them perfectly happy and medically sound.

I also have friends who pound roads and cycle up mountains.

These friends are all crippled with Achilles tendon injuries and anterior cruciate ligament damage.

I have always leaned towards the former, although I do exercise regularly.

But I walk.

Quietly.

If I wanted to stride out on pavements in front of people while wearing outrageous clothing, I would model at the Dunedin Fashion Show.

Recently, I have been doing a lot of recuperative walking around the Ross Creek Reservoir, surely one of Dunedin's most breathtaking spots.

It is popular with runners, albeit usually the more recreational kind, the ones who have decided to try to get fit this year, or are merely running off the tawdry excesses of the night before.

Rarely do I see the supremely fit.

For every taut, upright body, there are five toppling over like dogs in a bag.

Interestingly, men often run in threes, women almost always only in twos.

Behavioural psychologists could explain this, so I won't try.

I strain to catch snatches of conversation, but this is not a restaurant, where you can cock an ear and pick up a full daytime soap opera episode - these are just stray sentences.

Men cover business, money and other men.

Women lower their voices when they approach and raise them when out of earshot, probably discussing Barbara Kingsolver's La Lacuna.

Most people run anti-clockwise, like the Olympics, but I go around clockwise, like the Auckland Trotting Cup, which means I am constantly directly meeting people.

I learned very early on there is a conversational protocol.

My cheery hail to single women was always met face-down in stony silence, so I went face-down as well.

Speak only when spoken to.

Some days my face was so far down it was poking through my legs looking backwards.

I remain incredulous that the penetrating newshounds at Close Up have yet to run a story on The Headless Man Of Ross Creek.

My reward near the end of a circuit is the bench overlooking the smaller stretch of reservoir where I gaze at the water and trees and think deep philosophical thoughts.

Often I fall asleep.

Sometimes when I am walking I think deep philosophical thoughts, too.

Once, on a dark section of the track, my failing eyesight determined I was approaching the tallest person I had ever seen.

And I once stood beside NBA center George Muresan, 7ft 6in, under the Chicago Stadium.

Applying deep philosophical thought, I could only conclude this person lived in the trees, surviving on power bars and Mizone stolen from runners' cars.

Boy, the Nuggets could use this one, I mused philosophically.

When the tallest person I had ever seen reached me and my fading eye, I saw it was a woman on a horse.

My wife runs like the wind while I walk.

Normally I would be affronted by this transparent show of superiority, but I take comfort in the fact that she takes nine minutes for a circuit and I take 14, which means my sedate thoughtful stroll takes place at 64% the speed of her lung-busting, eyes-bulging run.

I could probably lap her if push came to shove.

But running and walking around Ross Creek is not competitive.

Families, old people and doggy pooper scoopers do it.

A man pushing a baby in a stroller at high speed does it.

What deep and philosophical thoughts is that baby having as the wheels whirr over the loose gravel and his tiny teeth chatter like marbles in a glass jar? "Is this what life is? How long before I can get a car? And then what, the Demolition Derby at Waldronville, or, gasp, Formula One?"I tell you, Ross Creek really makes a man think.

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Sulaiman honored in Thailand (Fightnews.com)

Posted: 01 Mar 2010 09:50 PM PST

The Crown Prince of Thailand, Maha Vagiralongkorn, on behalf of Bansomdejchaophraya Rajabaht University, presented World Boxing Council President Jose Sulaiman with an Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy on Monday at the Palace of the Kingdom of Thailand. The Honorary Doctorate is the fifth one with which Sulaiman has been honored.


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Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

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