Tuesday, March 10, 2015

KSU vs. Akron - Day in the Life!

Hi again everybody!

On Friday, March 10 2015 the Golden Flashes and Akron Zips played another in a long line of instant classics on the basketball court.  Throughout the day, I captured everything that goes into my preparation for these games. From the equipment walk-through to the  pre-game meal, it's all there!

Enjoy and Go Flashes!!

TL

Friday, January 2, 2015

Video Blog - Behind the Scenes!

Hi again everybody! Happy New Year! I'm just getting set to call Kent State's final men's basketball interleague game of the season tonight at the MAC Center. During the set-up tonight, we did a little video blog that will hopefully shed a little light on what goes on leading up to, during and following one of our game broadcasts.

Take a look and let us know what you think!

As always, Go Flashes!!

TL


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Meet the Golden Flash!

Hi again everybody!

This year I'm pleased to announce a fun new weekly feature on my Linder's Look blog. Last year we shot a weekly video recognising the student-athlete of the week for his or her accomplishments on the field, court, etc. However, it only really allowed the fans to get to know that person as an athlete.

Now, I'll be sharing some weekly interviews with KSU student-athletes in our Hometown Bank Meet the Golden Flash segment. These interviews feature a randomly selected, in-season student-athlete as he or she takes the always intimidating hot-seat in our KSU Radio Network studios! You'll now have the chance to get to know the young men and women whom you root for each and every week and what makes them tick!

Last week we debuted with soccer freshman Karli Paracca.


This week we sat down with volleyball senior Tinuke Aderemi-Ibitola.


I hope you'll continue to check back each week as we meet your Kent State Golden Flashes!

TL

Friday, August 15, 2014

Baseball Gods Smile on KSU... again

Hi again everybody!

There is no question the Kent State baseball program has been blessed over the last several years. From championship celebrations to high draft selections, from team grade point average records to a dramatic run to college baseball's promised land, the Golden Flashes program has seen its cup runneth over time and time again.

Wednesday night in Cleveland, it happened again.

KSU product Andrew Chafin throws a pitch in his MLB debut Wednesday night at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, OH

Andrew Chafin, who in 2009 set a new single-season earned run average record with a microscopic 1.23 as KSU's closer, was drafted in the first round by Arizona following an incredible performance in the 2011 NCAA Regionals in Texas. He outdueled a previously undefeated Taylor Jungmann in front of 7,000 Longhorn fans in what could arguably be viewed as Kent State's arrival on the national college baseball stage.

I have been working on a book project detailing Kent State baseball's dramatic month-long magic carpet ride in 2012 and wrote this excerpt a year or so ago. It seems fitting to share a preview here.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You see, at Kent State, everything is earned. Student-athletes aren’t afforded the types of frills and benefits – all perfectly legal – their counterparts in the Southeastern Conference, Big XII Conference or elsewhere are. This is a tough Northeast Ohio college town. A mill town, a town with rich history in the Underground Railroad and one in constant battle with Mother Nature.

The best athletes in the nation do not come to Portage County – unless they do so as members of a visiting team. The fastest sprinters from Florida, toughest linebackers from California and big-armed pitchers from Texas aren’t coming to Kent State. The Golden Flashes do not have a national recruiting base – they must try and contend with players in their own backyard or just across the street.

For northern so-called “mid-majors” like Kent State, good fortune must also play into the equation.

Much as it had on this steamy 100-degree night in the Southwest. Facing a Longhorn team with All-American talent on every corner of the roster, KSU sent six-foot, two-inch left-hander Andrew Chafin to the same pitcher’s mound once occupied by Roger Clemens, Greg Swindell and Huston Street.

Chafin – whose only scholarship offers came from Kent, Toledo and Cincinnati – dominated the star-studded Longhorns lineup and silenced the 6,268 in attendance at Disch-Falk Field. He watched in glee as catcher David Lyon smoked a grand slam into the right field bullpen off the heretofore-invincible Taylor Jungmann as part of a six-run sixth which gave the underdog Flashes a 7-2 lead.

The southpaw Chafin – whose hometown of Wakeman, Ohio boasts all of one stoplight – tired in the heat and pressure and gave way to the bullpen in the ninth inning. UT eventually closed the gap to 7-5 and had runners on the corners with two outs when KSU called upon an All-American of its own to collect the elusive 27th out. And even though many of the fans had long departed, they collectively groaned as Kyle McMillen induced Shepherd to shoot the pop-up straight up into the humid Austin night.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

After soaring through the minor league ranks, Chafin rose to AAA Reno and was recently summoned to the big league club after a series of injuries decimated the Diamondbacks' roster. His call-up coincided with a brief two-game interleague series with the Indians this past week at 2401 Ontario Street in Cleveland, Ohio.

I've been fortunate to know the Chafin family since Andrew arrived as a hyper nine-year old in the Bellevue Little League many years ago. His father Darryl helped coach the team he was on and the two instantly became favorites of mine. At the time I was earning money in the summer serving as an umpire.
Darryl Chafin watches his son warm up

I was overjoyed when then-head coach Scott Stricklin re-introduced me to the Chafin family in 2008 on a recruiting trip, and even more thrilled when he signed the dotted line to become a Golden Flash. And as he worked his way through a brilliant KSU career, I became even more proud when he made North Texas stand still that night with a breathtaking performance.

But nothing compared to Wednesday night.

Those of us who follow the game know of the "Baseball Gods." And boy have they been wearing blue and gold lately. When the Arizona-Cleveland series started Tuesday night, torrential rains forced the game into a four-hour delay. Word trickled down that when the game resumed, Chafin would be on the mound for the D-backs in the fourth inning.

But it never resumed.

And MLB approved a traditional doubleheader the following day. This was key as it didn't allow either team to expand their roster to bring up additional pitching. Originally the Arizona folks announced Chafin would start game one of the DH but I got word that he would instead start the nightcap. And so it was off to the corner of Carnegie and Ontario to see a former Golden Flash start a Major League Baseball game.
Chafin loosens up in right field

It was great to see Andrew's dad before the game and we watched his son warm up in right field under the towering scoreboard which bore his surname as that night's starting pitcher. And in front of dozens of family members and friends, the southpaw did not disappoint, tossing five shutout innings and recording his first major league strikeout.

It was a great night for a great family. Not just the Chafin family but the Kent State baseball family as well. Players from all eras chimed in with their support from afar and it was truly a blessing to share in one young man's success.

I just wonder if Wakeman turned off its stoplight in his honor.

TL

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Summer Update

Hi again everybody!

I hope this Linder's Look finds everyone in the throes of a great summer. Here at KSU, football training camp just began this week and the countdown is on toward that August 30 opening night battle with Ohio! I'll have more on that a little later.

As the "Voice of the Golden Flashes," I am pretty much booked from Labour Day through Memorial Day. (Sometimes beyond, see KSU Baseball 2012!) So it's important for me to be able to take some time during the summer months to catch up with family and friends I missed during that time span. Part of the tradeoff of this great job is working weekends and holidays and sometimes missing out on some pretty special occasions like weddings and birthday celebrations.

Each year since 2008 the Linder family makes the trek to Las Vegas for one week. It's a great family vacation destination because there are just as many things to do on your own as their are as a group. This year we went to a very special room at the top of one of the southernmost hotels called the Foundation Room at Mandalay Bay. It offers unrivaled vantage points of the most famous stretch of road in the world. Films such as Oceans 11 have been shot there and the view is breathtaking. Just don't look down!


The world-famous Siegfried and Roy Show was the most visited show in Las Vegas from 1990-2003 and featured the German duo's iconic white tigers. While I was never personally able to see the show, the effect the show had on the entertainment industry is still being felt. And who knew they were such big KSU fans! Check out that sylish hat Montecore is sporting!

Not far from Vegas is the Mohave Desert and a plot of land known as "Death Valley." This is a stretch of geography you drive through on your way to Los Angeles and back. Located in LA - among other things - is Six Flags Magic Mountain, which bills itself as the "Thrill Ride Capital of the World." Having grown up in Sandusky, Ohio, the home of Cedar Point, those are fighting words! Even so, I like making the four-hour trip on I-15 every once in a while to check out what CP's biggest rival has to offer.

One thing it has to offer - albeit for not much longer - is Colossus, a twin wooden roller coaster which has appeared in many film and television shows. You may best remember it from the 1983 movie "Vacation" where a disgruntled Clark Griswold forces a security guard played by John Candy into the ride with a BB gun. To commemorate the closing of the ride this fall, the park brought the legendary "family truckster" out of retirement and it's on display near the ride's que! KSU women's basketball assistant coach Geoff Lanier and myself have been known to communicate in National Lampoon's "Vacation" movie dialogue so I know he appreciates this gesture!

It has certainly been a great summer of vacation memories. But the one thing Ive noticed is how much money one can spend on vacation! For example, tickets to a decent Las Vegas show were $110 a person! And a day at Magic Mountain can wreak havoc on the pocketbook when you add up tickets, parking and food!

Which is why I'm so proud that we offer our football season tickets at such a bargain price. Get this folks, for six exciting NCAA DI football games featuring the Golden Flashes and members of one of the most entertaining and rising conferences in college football, you only have to pay $96. Say WHAT? Yes, just $96! And we are gonna throw in a parking pass as well, another $30 value! And that price is for chairback seats, you can sit elsewhere for as low as $60! And we'll still toss in a parking pass!

Now, if you have somehow missed Ametek's unbelievable fireworks display on opening night the last two years, don't let it happen again! They are again planning a huge pyrotechnic display choreographed to music after the Flashes beat the Ohio Bobcats on Saturday, August 30. And you can even come down on the field to watch!

Get to the ticket office ASAP and treat you and your family to one last summer treat - tickets to KSU football! Our office is open Monday-Friday from 8:30a to 4:30p. Or give Eric a call at 330.672.2244.

Until next time!

TL

Monday, May 19, 2014

MAC Tournament Memories

Hi again everybody! Well it's tournament time once again for the baseball teams of the Mid-American Conference. All eight qualifiers are hoping to skip the Memorial Day barbecues in favour of a another holiday weekend tradition.

The dogpile.

KSU's Golden Flashes were fortunate enough to celebrate four straight times from 2009-2012 on the first unofficial weekend of summer - with a celebration also coming in 2007. This year the Flashes will play from the four seed, taking on Bowling Green - last year's tourney winner - on Wednesday afternoon at 1.

I was lucky enough to witness many memorable moments during KSU's great run from 2007-2012, and along with former baseball SID Matthew Lofton have compiled a list of some great moments. Here they are, in no particular order!

The Dogpiles

Nothing in sports quite compares with watching eight fully uniformed players converge with a handful of dugout players into a mess of tangled excitement and joy when the final out of a title game is recorded. KSU found itself in such a position in 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012. And each year was unique in its celebration. I remember pitcher Justin Gill and catcher Cory Hindel embracing for a moment before being enveloped by their teammates in 2010 and Evan Campbell soaring into the top of the pile in 2012 like he was making a landing at Hopkins International Airport.

Bouncing the RedHawks

In baseball, KSU's biggest rival through the last decade has been the Miami RedHawks. Always a spirited regular season series, the two squads often met in post-season play as well. And regardless of how that regular season set went, the Golden Flashes got the last laugh in 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2013 - dealing Miami a loss which ended its season. Even more damaging in 2011 was the fact it was the title game; when a well-rested RedHawks team was blitzed by KSU, 11-0.

Kyle Hallock
Hal'lock' ing it Down

In 2010, second-seeded Kent State was shocked in the opener 12-4 by Eastern Michigan. It had to rally back to win four consecutive elimination games (two in their final at-bat) just to reach the finals. In the semi-final rematch with the Eagles, Kyle Hallock came in to work the 10th inning of a game KSU once trailed 8-3. He breezed through the inning and when the Flashes won in the bottom half, head coach Scott Stricklin quickly announced him as the starter for the title game just 40 minutes later. Against the top-seeded Chippewas, the lefty dazzled, tossing seven superb innings, striking out six in making 121 pitches. The bullpen held the lead and KSU pulled off the biggest comeback in MAC Tournament history.
 
No Fear

2008 MAC Pitcher of the Year Chris Carpenter was cruising into the sixth when he lost command of his fastball. He walked three straight CMU hitters and was pulled from the game. With ice in his veins, pitching coach Mike Birkbeck made the move to rookie Jon Pokorny. The southpaw came in and delivered one of the most clutch pitching performances in KSU history. He notched a strikeout against the first hitter, using four pitches and then recorded a 6-4-3 double play on an 0-2 pitch to keep the game tied. Seven pitches. Six of them strikes. Clutch.

Hindel's Wild Ride

In the same 2008 tournament game against the Chips, the Flashes used the momentum from Pokorny's sixth inning Houdini act to take the lead in the bottom half. With the bases empty and two outs, Brett Weibley singles and Cory Hindel steps to the plate. With the clock nearing midnight, Hindel hits a slow roller to second. The Chips' infielder appears as if he is going to eat it but spins at the last moment and throws wildly to first, shooting it off the dugout rail. Weibley flies into and around third as Hindel takes off for second. The CMU centre fielder comes into second for backup purposes as Hindel gets into a pickle. Just as they are about to tag him to end the inning, they opt to instead throw home against a charging Weibley. That throw hits halfway up the backstop allowing the Flashes to take the lead. Seeing this, Hindel resumes on his path to second. The throw there is air mailed into centre field, where - you guessed it - no one is because of the backup. As the ball gets smaller and smaller as it rolls to the wall, the KSU catcher sets sail for home plate and scores with ease, giving Kent a 4-2 lead and game one win.

Evan Campbell
Soup's Slam is Mmm Mmm, Good

In a win-or-go-home semi-final clash with the Eastern Michigan Eagles in 2011, Andrew Chafin and Rob Wendzicki were locked in a mesmerizing 0-0 game in the eighth inning. In the bottom half with two outs and two strikes against pinch hitter Nick Hamilton, he drew a free base on a hit by pitch and later broke the ice on a seeing-eye single by Joe Koch. With KSU clinging to a 1-0 lead and runners at second and third, the Eagles elect to walk the bases loaded. As the walk is issued, Mike Birkbeck leans into the on-deck circle and tells Evan Campbell to "be better in this moment than he is in this moment." The junior launched a missile into the treeline in right field for a dramatic grand slam, finishing off the Eagles and sending the Golden Flashes dugout into delirious celebration as the Miami RedHawks - scheduled to play the winner in the title game - looked on and collectively gulped.

The Comeback

The 2010 title was as hard-earned as any in history for KSU
Heavily favoured KSU opened the 2010 tournament against seventh-seeded EMU and was shocked by a 12-4 laugher. Now with an impossible trail in front of them, they send Robert Sabo to the mound in a 9 a.m. elimination game against Miami. He saves the season with a 143-pitch masterpiece as the Flashes rout the RedHawks, 9-2. The next day against Toledo, David Starn is magnificent. But a rare bullpen snafu allows the Rockets to tie the game at 3-3. In the bottom of the 11th, Jared Humphreys corks a liner to the gap to give KSU a dramatic win. Later that night, Ben Klafczynski's grand slam is all the offense Ryan Mace needs as the righty shuts EMU down over seven innings. KSU's 15-1 revenge forced a second semi-final the following day. There, the Eagles rip open an 8-3 mid-game lead and the outlook is bleak. But as they had all year, the Flashes battle back and down to their final out, David Lyon rips the first of what would become many clutch hits in his KSU
career to tie it at 8-8 in the bottom of the ninth. Travis Shaw was hit by a pitch in the bottom of the 10th with the bases loaded to send the Flashes to the 9-8 win. In the finale against CMU, Hallock provided the pitching and the good guys went up 5-0 and held on for a thrilling 5-3 win.

Rocky the Rally Raccoon 

In the late game to open the 2009 tournaments, top-seed Bowling Green and eighth-seeded Central Michigan are at the end of three innings with CMU holding a surprising 4-1 lead. The entire complex then goes dark before the fourth begins. Here, a raccoon had worked its way into a nearby transformer and caused the entire device to rupture. Power crews were not able to restore juice to the facility until the next night, forcing a suspension until the following morning. The discombobulated Falcons never got on track, falling to the Chips, 6-2 in the only 8-beats-1 upset in the tournament's history. The extra day and pitching takes its toll on both clubs, as the Flashes club CMU later that Thursday, 17-2.

Steve Partington takes the lineups in 2008
Party's Last Party

Veteran umpire Steve Partington - with nearly 50 years of baseball service - worked his final MAC Tournament in 2008. Selected to work the plate in the title game for the final time, he accepted Scott Stricklin's lineup with tears in his eyes. The Flashes fall to EMU in the title tilt, but "Party" is virtually flawless on the balls and strikes, taking only one direct foul ball to the mask. As the final out is recorded, he tips his cap, leaves it at home plate and walks off the field. The support for Steve from both the players and his brethren was a fitting conclusion to a great career.



Here's hoping for a handful of new memories this week in Avon!

See you there!

TL

Thursday, May 1, 2014

We're Going Streaking!!


Jump for Joy! Flashes win 16th MAC title in a row.
Hi again everybody!

Last weekend, our Golden Flashes women’s golf team secured its 16th consecutive Mid-American Conference championship.

The ladies of KSU did again did it in familiar fashion.

Thoroughly dominating.

Knocking off second place Toledo by 21 strokes and besting rival Akron by 58 to earn a PNC Wagon Wheel Challenge point, the Flashes simply keep adding to their legacy.

Ever since the MAC added women’s golf as a sponsored sport in 1999, KSU has established a string of dominance that is, in a word – unprecedented. It has almost reached the point of expectation around Kent and the Mid-American Conference landscape that the Golden Flashes will win the conference golf title. That kind of pressure and expectation can cause some teams and individuals to wilt – these ladies have thrived.

Even with the rest of the conference dying to be the team which finally ends Kent’s sensational streak, the blue and gold have found a way to outdistance themselves from their competitors. Last weekend in Indiana, Jennifer Ha won the event for the second year in a row and was flanked on the podium by two of her teammates. It was another proud weekend for head coach Greg Robertson and the entire KSU Golf program.

The Kent Streak of 16 straight got my mind racing. What are some of my favourite sports streaks? I have listed just a few of them that came immediately to mind – in no particular order.


Johnny Vander Meer – 1938 Cincinnati Reds
Vander Meer threw back-to-back no-hitters for the Redlegs against Boston and Brooklyn and was rewarded with a start in the All-Star Game in his home ballpark. While this streak was only two, it simply will never be outdone

Joe DiMaggio – 1941 New York Yankees
For 55 straight games – that’s a third of the major league season in those days – DiMaggio reached safely on a hit. Only Pete Rose has been in the same area code as the Clipper with a 44-game streak in 1978.

UCLA – Men’s Basketball 1967-73, 1971-74
Seven consecutive NCAA titles for the Bruins and legendary coach John Wooden. They added more for a 10-title run in a 12-year span. With 68-team format and upsets galore, along with the NBA draft decimating teams’ rosters, this won’t happen again, either. The Sons of Westwood then won 88 straight games (two 30-0 seasons) between ’71-74 before coughing up an 11-point lead to Notre Dame to end the impressive run.

Cael Sanderson – 1999-2002 Iowa State Cyclones
At a time when collegiate wrestling started to flourish, Sanderson competed in 159 matches during his time in Ames. He won them all, sweeping four straight NCAA titles. Let that marinate. In the toughest sport in the world, he didn’t lose ONCE. The Penn State wrestling program now reaps the benefits from this icon – he’s led the Nittany Lions to four-straight NCAA DI team titles as their head coach.

Cleveland Indians Fans – 1995-2001
The renaissance of Cleveland’s downtown, the opening of a beautiful new stadium, the departure of the hapless football team and one of the most exciting baseball teams in club history all came together perfectly in the mid-90s. On June 12, 1995 Jacobs Field sold out and there wasn’t an empty seat in the house until April 4, 2001. The sellout streak of 455 for a city with a dwindling population due to economic and infrastructure issues is even more impressive and appreciated today.
 
Mount Union – Football 2000-2003
Just down the road from Kent State, veteran Larry Kehres guided his Purple Raiders to 55 straight wins between 2000-2003 (they also won 54 straight from ’96-’99). The Raiders have 11 national titles and continue to be a threat every year.

Also of note: Cal Ripken and Brett Favre’s consecutive games streaks, Oklahoma football’s 47 straight wins, Byron Nelson’s 11 straight PGA wins and Wayne Gretzky’s 51 consecutive games with a point.

Congrats to the KSU women’s golfers once again! Let’s hope #16 is just another rung in the ladder! They’ll head for Stillwater in a couple weeks for the NCAA Regionals!

TL