You’re Going to Run to the Lake?

17 Feb

With a solid 5 inches still on the ground, Chicagoland was delivered another dusting of snow this afternoon. It was light stuff, but came down in a flurried hurry, reducing visibility to no more than 3 blocks for most of the afternoon. So I thought, what a perfect day to go for a run by Lake Michigan?

You might think I’m crazy. In fact, most folks thought I was. I stopped by the Ray Meyer Fitness and Recreation Center to set up a base camp, and then begin my journey about 1.5 miles to the Lake. A few friends there asked where the heck I was going, so I told them, and received nothing but astonished reactions. Who  goes out for a jovial jog in blinding snow, 20º temperatures, and 15° wind chill? What loon thinks it a thrill to brave conditions that would force most of us to barricade ourselves indoors with blankets, warm beverages and TV marathons, just to see more piles of snow and a frozen over lake?

I do.Snow Covered

So in the locker rooms I began to prepare myself for the trek. My feet would be protected by socks, plastic bags, another pair of socks, and shoes. Compression shorts, gym shorts, and track pants on my lower half, with a dry-fit, t-shirt, heavy longsleeve, and raincoat over my torso. Headgear was crucial if I was going to survive. A bandanna, a toboggan, a beanie, a face warmer and two scarves bundled my face tighter than Ralphie’s little brother in A Christmas Story. I cued up some classics on my iPod classic, and was ready to run.

The only footprints I saw were my own.

The only footprints I saw were my own.

The cold was not an issue. I had layered successfully. The real struggle was the terrian. Short, choppy steps were necessary to keep my foot moving at a brisk pace. It was a relief when strolling along a freshly shoveled sidewalk, but those were few and far between. The snow was coming down too quickly. I found footing in the tracks of others through the rough stretches of unattended sidewalks, but even then my ankles plunged into tracks that were lumpy and slippery.

As I approached the Lake from the entrance at Fullerton avenue, there were no signs anyone had been down this path in a while. The only footprints I saw were my own. A trailblazing sense of triumph went through my veins. Was I the only nut out here? Am I the singular reason they put up signs during weather like this saying, “Lakefront Trail CLOSED?”Lake Shore Path Closed

I’ve been running to the Lake many a times, and never saw it like this. Never saw it so desolate and undisturbed but at the same time so lively and picturesque. Lake Michigan was frozen, the snow piling up on top of the sheet of ice. Snowdrifts building on the banks where ice met sand. The furiously falling snowflakes veiled the colossal buildings of Chicago’s downtown. From Fullerton and the Lake, what’s usually a vibrant view was now vividly void of color. The sight was panoramic white.  And nobody was around to take in this breathtaking sight but me.

I got as far as that trail closed sign, then turned back and made my trip back. I was feeling high, and more importantly dry. The old Polish trick of lining your gym shoes with plastic bags had worked perfectly, and my layering was holding up to the stiff winter breeze. I trudged my way back through Lincoln Park, stopping only once at a statue of William Shakespeare, just to see how he’s dealing with this weather, and finally made it back. I survived. No hypothermia, not frozen toes, not even a cherry nose.

Was it stupid? Maybe. Dangerous? I didn’t think so. What I saw it as, was an hourlong adventure to Lake Michigan in a daunting snowstorm to take in an awe-inspiring glimpse of chaos, remoteness and serenity.

Lake Michigan

Umm…Why Do You Have a Thesaurus?

27 Jan

Webster's Thesaurus

The other day I picked up my thesaurus, and started reading out of curiosity. I’ve tried reading sections of the dictionary, but the thesaurus was uncharted territory. I figured it’d be a basic line up of synonyms, but I was wrong. I opened the thesaurus to a random page, somewhere in the M’s. Move, moving, mow, moxie, mozo, Mr., Mrs., Mrs. Grundy … Wait what? Mrs. Grundy? What in the world does that mean?

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The Baseball Hall of Fame, Nellie Fox, and my Old Man

14 Jan
Me and my Old Man, in front of Nellie Fox's plaque at the Baseball Hall of Fame (July 1997)

Me and my Old Man, in front of Nellie Fox’s plaque at the Baseball Hall of Fame (July 1997)

The Baseball Hall of Fame has always been the biggest amongst corridors of notoriety. Pro Football Hall of Fame? Hockey Hall of Fame?  It’s where those who excelled in and around America’s pastime are honored eternally. It beats out Hollywood’s Walk of Fame because, well, I’d like not to hurt anyone’s feelings, but you’d be surprised at the list of people and Tokyo-terrorizing monsters who have a star on the boulevard. It defeats all other sports hall’s of fame. Not only because it was established first, but it hasn’t changed its enshrinement style since it’s doors first opened in 1936.

I’m talking more about the plaques, and what it means to be on one of those plaques.  Your now immortal baseball likeness in bronze; and right below it your career record, and a 12-lines or less bio that captures your stats, status and spirit. It’s a 100 word summary of why you deserve a permanent place in the history of the game.

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Because It’s the Cup

12 Jun
Blackhawk on a horse at Diversey and the Lake Shore Path

Blackhawk on a horse at Diversey and the Lake Shore Path

In 1892, Lord Frederick Arthur Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby and then Governor General of Canada gave a gift of a championship trophy to annually be awarded to the top amateur team in Canada. The generously sized bowl shaped trophy would eventually become known as the Stanley Cup, and the rest is history.

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Elevate Chicago Will Elevate DePaul Hoops

3 Jun


By Jake Berent

On May 16th, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel announced plans for a brand new 10,000 seat events center to be built at McCormick Place, with DePaul University being the facility’s primary tenant. Continue reading

Red Line Alternatives Launch

21 May

The CTA began their 6-month construction project on the south branch of the Red Line on Sunday May 19th. For the alternatives to the L Stops ranging from 22/Cermak Chinatown to 95th, Sunday was kind of a soft opening. There were few problems for riders.

The real test was on Monday, when the transportation lines would take on the full ridership of a work-week commute.

Check it out on Storify.

[View the story “Red Line Closure: Day 1” on Storify]

Big East, Fear the D

10 May
A Reason to Fear DePaul Next Year? I've got Five. And a few leftover from last year, like this T-shirt slogan devised by the DePaul faithful.

A reason to fear DePaul next year? How about five? And a few leftover from last year, like this T-shirt slogan devised by the DePaul faithful.

Oliver Purnell heads into his fourth season as DePaul head coach with two reasons to be optimistic.

The first is a presumption that Purnell will find success in year four based on his previous two coaching stops. Purnell took over an abysmal Dayton squad in 1994 that went 7-20 in his first season. In his fourth season, he lead his team to twenty wins and an NCAA Tournament bid two years later.

When Purnell arrived at Clemson in 2003, he went 10-18 in his first year. After three years in the ACC cellar, his Tigers strung together four straight years of 20+ win seasons, including three NCAA tournament births. Continue reading

Red Line Headache

6 May
Carmella White of Andersonville

Carmella White of Andersonville

By Jacob Berent

CTA commuters on Chicago’s South Side have been dreading May 19 for months.

The Red Line South Branch will close all stations south of the Roosevelt stop for at least five months in order to perform necessary repairs on the aging railway.  This leaves everyday Red Line passengers to find other means to get around the city.

Carmella White of Andersonville says she takes the Red Line daily all over the South Side to look for employment, visit friends, and go to church.  White has reviewed the commuter options the CTA is offering, but is unsure if they will be enough to ease the burden.

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DePaul Blue Steel

17 Apr

Steel

The A. Finkl & Sons Co.’s moving of operations from their steel mill located at 2011 N. Southport Ave. to 1355 E. 93rd St. is about 60 percent complete officials told the Chicago Tribune.  That land is exactly one-half mile east and one-half mile west of the heard of DePaul’s campus at the corner of Sheffield and Fullerton.  Continue reading

What’s in a Bullpen Name?

8 Apr

Image

What’s in a name? If you’re a relief pitcher, it’s everything.

Because relief pitchers face far less hitters and appear more sporadically than starting pitchers, they’re just a name on the roster until they take their late game trot to the mound, emerging from a place who’s name itself is intimidating, the bullpen. It makes us conjure up images of the words historical meaning. Certain prison camps in the American Civil War and WWII were referred to as the bullpen. Or, we think of it’s literal meaning. A place where giant, ornary beasts are waiting to be brought to the chopping block, but suddenly one of them breaks through the fence wild and freed. The straight line sprint of John Rocker or the caffeine infused feet of Todd Coffey.

While charging like a bull from the pen can do a lot to intimidate a hitter, hearing a sterling name blaring through the PA can buckle a hitter’s knees in the on-deck circle.

Yes, beer guts, mustaches and not speaking any English contribute to a reliever’s reputation, but a name can eloquently paint the picture of a man you do NOT want to see on the mound.

It can be something as simple as alliteration, like the Tiger’s Al Alburquerque or former Minnesota big man Boof Bonser. Their names stick in your brain like nursery rhymes.

Animalistic nicknames stick to relievers, no matter what particular species. Does anyone really know Goose Gossage‘s real name. It’s Richard, but after playing for nine different teams in his hall of fame career, it made it easier on everyone to just call him Goose.

Some guys are blessed by birth with naturally tough sounding names. Tug McGraw and Paul Assenmacher. Yes, there’s jokes to be made with both of those names, but each of them spent over 13 years in Major League bullpens.


All you need sometimes is just two syllables. First, last. Rod Beck. Lee Smith. Short, sweet.

Other relievers are benefit from exotic mystique. When a name sounds so foreign your tongue tingles pronouncing it correctly, you know you don’t want to see them warming up for the ninth. PA announcers across the league relished introducing Shingo Takatsu or Mariano Rivera.

And then, there’s guys you can tell that they’re not only Major Leaguers, but crafty late inning hurlers. Rollie Fingers. Bobby Thigpen. Enough said.

Bullpen heroes are something to be treasured by baseball fans everywhere. The pitcher may get yanked, but the names will live on beyond the fences.