Saturday, March 10, 2007

Kiowa - Air Cavalry


What my Brother (and yours) flew in the 1st Cavalry before he transitioned to airplanes (and yes he wore the Cavalry Hat).
Great video of the Kiowa OH-58 scout helicopter.

Note: Duane sent me this in response to the Kiowa video,
"Hey that's one of my old units at Ft Hood, Delta
Troop 1st squadron, 7th cavalry."










This is what he switched to, the RC-12. He flew this as a
member of the 1st Military Intelligence Battalion in Germany
supporting U.S. and Allied Forces in the Balkans.






































He then moved on to the passenger version of the C-12 plane,
which is what he flew for the Army in Korea, Germany, Iraq, the Army National Guard in Virginia and continues to fly now
with the Army National Guard in Idaho.


















In between getting out of the Army (he joined the Guard soon after) and going full time with the National Guard, Duane flew this plane for United Express (if you ever flew United Express between Washington. DC and Chicago he may have been your pilot).

Swiss Airforce and The Alps



Awesome

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Video Fix

Beastie Boys

Sabotage


3 Mc's & 1 DJ


Run DMC

Mary Mary


King of Rock


Run's House


The Gap Band

You Dropped a Bomb On Me



Afrika Bambaataa


Planet Rock

Monday, March 05, 2007

Other Mentions of Austin Peays Shining Moment

The Illini Might Be Responsible For The Dick Vitale We Now Know.
In 1987, an Illini team led by Ken Norman and Doug Altenberger received the No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament and were predicted to reach the Final Four by an up-and-coming broadcaster named Dick Vitale. In the first round, Illinois faced little-known Austin Peay, the champions of the Ohio Valley Conference and most famous for their fans' chant for 1970s player James "Fly" Williams: "The Fly Is Open ... Let s Go Peay!" Back then, early rounds of the NCAA tournament were shown on ESPN, and in the second half, with Peay down to the Illini by only three points, Vitale appeared in ESPN's studio and bellowed, "THERE S NO WAY ILLINOIS LOSES THIS GAME! IF ILLINOIS LOSES, I'LL STAND ON MY HEAD!" Sure enough, Austin Peay pulled off the 68-67 upset, and, months later, Vitale visited the school's Tennessee campus and successfully stood on his head for 10 seconds. The headstand caused an extreme rush of blood to Vitale's brain and reduced his mental acuity to that of a retarded dolphin. -- Will Leitch

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From the OVC history books:

Football wasn’t the only sport in which the OVC was quickly gaining respect. In 1955, the OVC became only the second six-member league nationally to earn an automatic bid to the prestigious NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, which, at that time, was limited to only 24 participants. The conference quickly proved worthy of that bid, as Morehead State defeated Marshall (107-92) and Wayne State (95-84) in the 1956 tournament.

Fifteen years later, former OVC member Western Kentucky became the first and only conference team to reach the Final Four. The Hilltoppers defeated Jacksonville, Kentucky and Ohio State before losing to Villanova in double overtime. WKU went on to finish in third place after beating Kansas 77-75 in the consolation game.

Since that time, the OVC has recorded some of the biggest upsets in the history of the NCAA Tournament. Perhaps the most famous moment came in 1987, when Austin Peay came from fourth place in the regular season to win the OVC Tournament and earn the league's automatic bid. The Governors drew powerful Illinois, and were such big underdogs, that ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale promised to stand on his head if APSU won the game. After a 68-67 victory over the Illini, and a narrow 90-87 overtime loss to eventual Final Four participant Providence in the second round, Vitale made good on his promise in a visit to Clarksville two months later.

Murray State added to the OVC's string of upsets in 1988 when it knocked off 14th-ranked North Carolina State, 78-75. The Racers' M&M Boys - Jeff Martin and Don Mann - combined for 39 points in the win. MSU nearly went on to the Sweet 16 that year, losing to eventual national champion Kansas, 61-58. A bank shot by Mann that would've given the Racers a one-point lead rolled off the rim with three seconds left. In recent years, Murray State has dominated the OVC Tournament, reaching the championship game every year in the 1990's and winning the title seven times.

(note: This article forgets to mention the Trifecta completed in 1989 by #13 seed MTSU which took out #4 seed Florida State in the first round of the NCAA's. 1987-1989 were the Glory Years in OVC basketball and we were there to see it.)

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From Time.com By TOM CALLAHAN

excerpt:
Last week, when the Austin Peay Governors came home to Clarksville, Tenn., overtime losers to Providence after conquering Illinois, the whole town met them at the interstate in a caravan complete with fire engine and mayor. Senior Forward Bob Thomas missed the foul shot that would have won the Providence game in regulation, and the anguished picture of him leaving the court is one of the tableaus of the tournament. Thomas was the last player to get up to speak to the caravan, but he never got anything out for all the cheering.

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Nice article on Lake Kelly

Ever wonder where Lake Kelly went, here is an article from 02/25/2007 with a few Austin Peay references.

One for the history books
Lake Kelly has big role in state's hoops highlights

By Mark Story
HERALD-LEADER SPORTS COLUMNIST

FLEMINGSBURG - Lake Kelly lives on a hill in the house where he was born 73 years ago.

His mother was born in the same home. "We still have the bed she was born in," says Kelly.

It is fitting that Kelly -- the longtime college basketball coach who returned to his hometown in the 1990s and coached the local high school, Fleming County, to its greatest hoops success -- lives a life in touch with history.

Across a long basketball career, few have been in the picture more often than Lake Kelly when significant events in Kentucky's basketball history have occurred.

Let's retrace an eventful journey:

• Stop one. The 129-game Kentucky Wildcats winning streak stopped.

There was not much anticipation in the University of Kentucky's Memorial Coliseum on Jan. 8, 1955. On this evening, Adolph Rupp's Kentucky Wildcats will face a lightly regarded team from Georgia Tech.

The mighty Wildcats had not lost in Lexington since falling to Ohio State 45-40 on Jan. 2, 1943. No one expects anything different tonight.

Kentucky native Lake Kelly is a reserve guard for the Yellowjackets. Yet when he called his father, Ed, and asked if he wanted tickets, "My dad said 'No, I don't relish the fact of seeing you guys get slaughtered and embarrassed. We're going to Louisiana to visit your sister,'" Kelly recalls.

Yet, on this night, the lightly regarded visitors hang tough. "The longer we stayed with them, the more confidence we got," Kelly said.

The final two of Joe Helms' 23 points gave Tech a 59-58 lead. They were the game's final points.

When the horn sounded, 8,500 people fell stone silent.

"Nobody got up, in the whole gym, nobody moved," Kelly says. "We were jumping around and banging each other, and those people sat there. They were totally shocked. I don't think one got up and left the gym."

The best part for young Lake Kelly was yet to come. Out to celebrate with a couple of teammates, he found a phone in a Lexington eatery and called his family in Louisiana.

"I said, 'Hey, you all aren't going to believe this, but we just beat Kentucky,'" Kelly said. "My dad said, 'Oh, c'mon.'"

His father didn't believe the news, Kelly says, until he returned to Kentucky and saw the newspaper accounts of the game.• Stop two. A UK NCAA Tournament game without Adolph on the bench -- and a magical Fly.

On March 15, 1973, at Vanderbilt's Memorial Gymnasium, something that has never happened before in all history -- Kentucky playing an NCAA Tournament game with someone other than Adolph Rupp as head coach -- will this day occur.

Joe B. Hall's first edition of Wildcats closed the season with a rush to wrest the SEC crown from Tennessee. Their first NCAA opponent is Ohio Valley Conference champion Austin Peay.

Coached by Lake Kelly.

Austin Peay is led by the charismatic freshman star and New York playground legend, James "Fly" Williams.

"Fly was a completely undisciplined maniac," Kelly says. "When he got upset, he was ready to fight. He didn't like authority. He loved to trash talk.

"I don't know how I survived it. I was ready to get him out of there 15, 20 times and send him back to New York. But my wife, our coaches, they'd always say, 'Don't send him back.'"

With good reason. What Pete Maravich was to SEC basketball, Fly Williams was on the smaller OVC stage.

He averaged 29.4 points as a freshman. With his high-rise Afro hair style, Fly did things with panache.

People turn out to see stars.

One night, when the fire marshals declared the Austin Peay gym filled beyond capacity, a husband got in but his wife was left outside when they locked the doors, Kelly says.

So she punched the glass door out.

"She said, 'I'm getting in to see Fly Williams.'" Kelly says. "Those kind of things were just commonplace. Fly packed arenas."

When Austin Peay went on the road, fly swatters would dot the opposing stands.

At home in Clarksville, Tenn., arguably the single greatest cheer in college sports history would fill the air: "The Fly is open, let's go Peay!"

Against Kentucky, Williams scores 26 points on 13-of-31 shooting. With the game tied at 92 and the clock ticking down in regulation, Austin Peay has a shot in the air to win.

It misses.

Getting an unexpected offensive lift in overtime from Larry Stamper, UK proves it can win an NCAA tourney game without Rupp, 106-100.

• Stop three. 3-for-33.

On the date of March 31, 1984, Seattle's Kingdome is playing host to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament.

It will also turn out to be the site of the worst half of basketball ever turned in by a Kentucky team.

Lake Kelly is in his first year as an assistant on the staff of the same Joe Hall against whom he coached in the 1973 NCAAs.

On this day, Hall, Kelly and Kentucky take a 29-22 lead over John Thompson's Georgetown Hoyas at halftime.

What happens next still causes heads to shake from Paducah to Pikeville. In the second half, UK made only three of 33 shots. That horrid performance ended in a 53-40 loss to Patrick Ewing and Co.

How could such a good UK team play so poorly with the stakes so high?

"Oh, Lord, I still don't know," Kelly says.

Then he tries.

"First of all, Kenny Walker got hurt in the Illinois game (in the finals of the Mideast Region) and it was his Achilles' tendon. About 55 percent of our points came from him in games we won in the second half. We didn't have that from him out there.

"Georgetown came at us like buzz saws and got us on our heels. And we just shot so poorly and it snowballed."

• Stop four: A King assumes his throne.

(note: Greg Moore, Scott Erby and I went to this game and cheered the Peay on. We had a great time in the middle of the UK fans. The Peay and Darryl "Bedrock" Bedford had them worried that night, they couldn't believe it when "Bedrock" stepped out to drain a three.)

In Rupp Arena on Nov. 29, 1986, Kelly is in his second stint as head coach at Austin Peay and about to play UK for the second time. But what has people excited is that this will be the first game in a Kentucky uniform for the ballyhooed freshman, Rex Chapman.

The night before, Austin Peay opened its season with a home loss to Centre College.

King Rex scores 18 in his college debut.

But, amazingly, the team that lost to Centre the night before is down one and has a Vincent Brooks 17-footer in the air in the final seconds that would beat Kentucky.

It misses.

Says Kelly: "I guess I just wasn't meant to beat Kentucky. We never got that last shot to go. But we almost spoiled Rex's first game."

• Stop Five: Back Home.

After taking Austin Peay to the second round of the 1987 NCAA Tournament -- including a wrenching overtime loss to Providence College and a young up-and-coming coach named Rick Pitino -- Kelly eventually makes his way back home.

(note: They kind of shorted us on this mention, but this is a KY article after all, G.Moore, Erb, myself and I think Pat Day also made the trip up to U. of Illinois for the rematch the next year which ended 100-62 in the Illini's favor. I might need my memory refreshed on who went on the road trip.)


In 1993, he became an assistant principal at Flemingsburg Elementary. Two years later, he became head basketball coach at Fleming County High.

Working at a school that had never won a boys' Sweet Sixteen game, he led the Panthers to back-to-back state tournament appearances in 1998 and '99, including a trip to the state semifinals in 1998.

"What we did here at Fleming County ranks right up there with anything I've experienced," Kelly says. "This is home. And the people here were so excited. It was very meaningful."

Out of coaching but still working as an elementary assistant principal at 73, Kelly talks like a man who even now feels the tug of X's and O's.

"It's still in my blood," he says of coaching.

Few have a richer history from which to draw.

#14 seed Austin Peay 68, #3 seed Illinois 67

Kel brought this up in the group, a huge win and great memory for all that were there. We watched it on the front porch of the KSig house and jumped in the back of pick-up trucks to drive around Clarksville in celebration. We were ready to do the same next game, but that punk Billy "The Kid" Donovan pushed off to get the game winning three, "we was robbed", lol.

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From ESPN
Classic NCAA Cinderellas
A big upset happens every year. You come to expect it, yet still can't believe it. Once the NCAA brackets are announced, NCAA Tournament fans start looking for the unknown or overlooked team that will surprise a heavily favored school from one of the power conferences. Waiting for the Cinderella to appear is one of the great joys of the tournament. What makes a Cinderella? For ESPN Classic's Cinderella ranking, we used the following criteria: a Cinderella can't come from a traditional power conference, must beat a highly regarded traditional power and must be seeded No. 12 or higher. Also, only games since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 have been considered.

10. Let's Go Peay

#14 Austin Peay 68 #3 Illinois 67
March 12, 1987
Birmingham, Alabama
The high-flying Illini, led by Kendall Gill, Nick Anderson and Ken Norman, were grounded by Austin Peay. Tony Raye hit a pair of free throws with two seconds left to lift overwhelming underdog Austin Peay to a 68-67 win over Illinois. Austin Peay coach Lake Kelly said their strategy was to "Sic 'em. If we had to play the Lakers and Celtics combined Saturday night, it wouldn't have made any difference." Darryl Bedford led Austin Peay with 24 points, 15 on 3-pointers. Norman paced the Illini with 17.

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From collegehoopsnet.com / Adam Glatczak

March 18th, 2004 - 16 Biggest First Round Upsets in NCAA Tournament History

When the NCAA expanded its Division I basketball tournament to 64 teams in 1985, it certainly couldn’t have had any idea what fun it was creating.

Since the first 64-team field began play that March, the tourney has taken off in ways few could have imagined. Its emergence led to the NCAA signing a mind-boggling $11 billion contract just for its top division basketball tournament. It also practically made a struggling cable network. Before its college basketball coverage exploded in the mid-80s, ESPN was still a struggling network searching for its niche nationally.

The tourney has also quickly turned the term ‘office pool’ into a part of the national lexicon. Ten years ago, the only time you may hear that term was if there was a leak in a roof somewhere. Now, everyone hears office pool and immediately remembers the cardinal rule about always pick a 12 seed to upset a 5 seed.

The NCAA Tournament has grown from a mostly regional, hard-core fan event into a national mania. History would have been greatly altered, though, if the tourney had never proven to be so unpredictable when it expanded to 64 teams.

If Navy, Arkansas-Little Rock or Austin Peay had never marked those first few years of the larger field with stunning performances, ESPN might be showing Australian Rules Football reruns at all hours of the day. How many of the Quinnipiacs, Sacramento States and Hamptons of Division I would have moved up to that level if not for the financial incentive the D-I tourney now carries? And what would the purpose be of an office pool if everyone knew who would win?

The Final Four was starting to become a national event in the 1980s, but the entire NCAA Tournament as a whole was still strictly regional, much like the college baseball postseason now. When smaller schools began doing the unthinkable and started bouncing top 10 teams from the tourney, the NCAA Tournament acquired its reputation for being the event with Cinderellas and true underdogs, and it became a three-week national happening.

Because they have had such an impact on history (and because it’s just fun to relive the past) this is a list of 16 of the biggest upsets that have occurred in the first round in NCAA Tournament history. For our purposes, games considered were from 1979 and after, the first year seeds were used to rank teams. It was also the first year the tourney ever included a sixth round. Before that, what is now the first round didn’t exist; the tourney started with what is now the second round.

Besides the fact that most of the results of these games were shocking, what’s also interesting is so many of the teams that pulled upsets almost never had the chance to. Many didn’t necessarily have monster seasons preceding their big wins. Some dominated their leagues, but many were just good teams in lightly regarded conferences. Fun facts and assorted tidbits like this are called ‘Oddballs.’

The order of the games on this list is purely subjective, the opinion of one person who has followed the NCAA Tournament for 17 years, enjoys researching it and has seen or watched tapes of almost all of the games. Or, in a few cases maybe just remembers where he was when he heard the score of the game. In general, games are placed in an order of historical significance, with the quality of the game or memorable moments also playing a factor. Surely there are games some people might remember as more or less important to them than others, but hopefully it’s a fun history lesson, if nothing else.

And now, the revealing of the 32-team field…

3) 1987 #14 Austin Peay 68, #3 Illinois 67

It's very tempting to make it a three-way tie at the top, but the edge goes to the other two games only because they were the trendsetters. This was another of those defining TV moments for the NCAA Tournament. Years ago, before the tiring overuse of the term "mid-major" had developed, Dick Vitale worked in the ESPN NCAA Tournament studio and told the audience that the tourney was for the "best" 64 teams. Hard as it may be to believe now, at that time he frankly had no use for the Idaho States, Austin Peays, or any of the other "little guys." Vitale was so certain Austin Peay couldn't beat Illinois that he announced he would stand on his head if the Governors somehow beat the Fighting Illini. Well, they did, and Vitale did. It was statements like Vitale's followed by upsets like this (as well as ESPN's superb coverage of the tourney at this time) that displayed the charm of this event to an entire nation.

Austin Peay needed a 30-foot shot by Richie Armstrong at the buzzer of the OVC final against Eastern Kentucky just to get to the NCAAs. Their flair for the dramatic continued in the tourney. The first half ended with five points scored in the final second. Illinois made a pair of free throws with one second left, and after the second make the Governors’ Tony Raye took the ball out from the basket, stepped across the end line with one foot and in one motion threw a one-handed 70-foot pass to Lawrence Mitchell, who caught it, squared up and banked in a three to tie the game at the half. AP continued to hang around in the second half, refusing to go away, and Raye hit the go-ahead free throws with two seconds left in the game. Austin Peay’s Darryl Bedford had an outstanding overall game, as the 6-foot-8 post player hit for 24 points, including five three-pointers while shooting a set shot that bewildered the Illini for its form and for the fact it was coming from a player so big. In the first year of the three-point line, post players didn’t usually shoot from the half-moon line unless their name was Brad Lohaus.

Oddball: Austin Peay wasn't even an example of a team being great all year and just being ripped by the NCAA Selection Committee with a bad seed. The Govs were an average team for most of 1986-87, finishing tied for fourth in the Ohio Valley Conference with an 8-6 record. They went into the OVC Tournament at 16-11, and likely wouldn't have made any kind of postseason if Armstrong hadn't hit his buzzer-beater in the OVC championship.

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One shot is all you get

From The Leaf Chronicle:

Life in OVC means one shot at NCAA Tournament

It hasn't been your typical season for the Duke Blue Devils.

So what.

When the NCAA selection committee announces its 65-team tournament field next Sunday, the Blue Devils will be there.

With an injured Chris Lofton on the sideline, Tennessee went through a January slump where it lost six of eight games. Now heading into the SEC tournament, the Vols are the conference's hottest team, winning seven of eight. The Vols don't have a great track record in the SEC Tournament, but again, so what — they will be a six or seven seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Kansas won the Big 12 regular-season title on Saturday, and will receive a high seed for the tournament, even if it doesn't win the Big 12 tourney.

Austin Peay won the regular season OVC title, and was 2.9 seconds away from an automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.

Now the Govs must settle for the NIT. Not a bad consolation prize, although that was of little consolation after Saturday's 63-62 loss to Eastern Kentucky in the OVC tournament title game.

Such is life when you don't call one of the super conferences your home.

Life in the OVC means winning the conference tournament title game.

The Govs know how to get there, only Murray State has reached more tournament title games (22), than Austin Peay, which has been there 14 times. But when it comes to walking off the floor with the trophy, Austin Peay has experienced that euphoria only three times.

For Austin Peay, watching another team cut down the net has become an all too familiar scene. Since 1995, the Govs have played in eight tournament title games, only to win twice.

And there have been some tough losses along the way.

The Govs lost in overtime to Murray State in the '97 title game, Eastern Illinois came from 18 down with less than nine minutes remaining to beat the Govs in the '01 title game, and three years later, Austin Peay was perfect in the OVC during the '03-04 season only to lose to Murray State in the title game.

The cruel reality of the OVC is you won't go dancing if you don't cut down the net.

Govs coach Dave Loos knows this all too well.

"It's down to one game, and it's not like the SEC or some of those other leagues that you can say, 'If we don't win, we're still going,'" said Loos, during his postgame interview Saturday. "We're not going. One team goes. That's the way it is... it is what it is."

The frustration of Saturday's loss will linger for a while, but the Govs were picked sixth in the preseason poll, and will return their entire roster next season.

"We're probably way ahead from a developmental standpoint than people thought we would be," Loos said. "These guys are going to play good again next year, I'm certain of it."

Another consolation for the Govs, and another reason to believe they will have another shot at cutting down the net.

Jimmy Trodglen is sports editor of The Leaf-Chronicle and can be reached by e-mail at jimmytrodglen@theleafchronicle.com or by phone at 245-0261.