A blog by Bill Hess

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Entries in sports (14)

Friday
Nov152013

Lunch break: Who do you think these folks want to see go to the Super Bowl?

Who do you think these folks want to see go to the Super Bowl? I feel a certain temptation to drop everything, conduct a journalistic investigation and find out the answer to this question – the who, why, what and all that? But I have other things I must do now. I have a feeling the answer may soon reveal itself to me, anyway.

 

Text added at 5:54 PM. The Squarespace nightmare continues.

Wednesday
Oct302013

Portrait of a young hockey player, young artist

This is he, Branson Starheim, eight-year-old son of Carmen and her late husband Scot, who I promised to shoot a portrait of tonight. I didn't arrive until near the end of the game, so I did not see Branson score the first goal of a contest that ended in a tie, 2–2. He gets out there to rough it up with 10-year-olds who are much larger than him. He is also the artist who created the the brightly colored, lively, cross held in the hands of his mother in the photo I posted earlier today from Metro Cafe. I am told that at a recent game, Branson made the sign of the cross, looked up, gestured upward with his hand and then skated onto the ice to play this game for his dad, to whom he had just sent his love.

 

Text added at 8:57 PM. The Squarespace nightmare continues.

Sunday
Oct272013

Today's game turned out just as she wanted

Lisa was pretty pleased with the outcome of today's World Series game, which the Red Sox won even as Lisa folded her laundry.

 

Text added at 8:49 PM. The Squarespace nightmare continues.

Sunday
Oct272013

Daughters, baseball and art recognition

Lisa showed up, too, eager to catch what she could of the World Series, game 4. She's a die-hard Cubs fan, but, of course, the Cubs aren't in the series so she's rooting for the Red Sox. The drawing is the work of Charlie, produced during the big art session with the boys. Melanie was pretty sure it was of a character from "Our Gang." She asked me which one it was but I didn't know.

 

Text added at 8:46 PM. The Squarespace nightmare continues.

Wednesday
Sep252013

Carmen remembers the burglary - and the tears that flowed at the last hockey game her husband ever got to watch their son play

I back up to this morning, just after Shoshana served my coffee to me. Carmen came in. I had hoped we might have a nice chat, but all sorts of people kept coming in – Amanda the hockey mom; Jay, my fellow pilot and lover of airplanes, Ollie Kent, Carmen's four-year-old neighbor who came with his mom; others whose names I do not know. Some of the talk was about the burglary, and how violated Carmen and Shoshana felt to have had someone smash his way into their space, and then snoop about doing whatever he wanted in there.

Here, Carmen describes a much more joyful moment, yet a moment ringed in a halo of deep sadness. It was Branson's final hockey game of the past season – for state championship - and the last his father would ever see him play. His father knew it, too.

Branson's team was one goal behind and the game was drawing to a close. With just seconds to go, little Branson knocked in the tying score. Tears flowed from his father's eyes – tears of joy, of pride, of gratitude; tears of sorrow and of longing for all those future games death would force him to miss. Tears flowed from the eyes of all of Branson's teammates and their parents. Only Branson did not cry. His father had taught him to be strong and he was going to be.

They lost the state championship in overtime, but this could not diminish that special moment Branson had given to his team, his mother and his dying father.