I have run in 115 degree weather, and I have run in -23 degree weather. This is the story about the -23 degree episode in LaCrosse, Wisconsin. I bring you this tale after being reminded of it by of our great Throws Coach Patrick Ebel, who spent quite a bit more time there than I did.
The year was 1985 and I was getting in my clinical experience in podiatric medicine prior to graduation that year. I had signed up for a month at a top-notch facility, the Gundersen Clinic. Think of it like the Mayo Clinic without all the fat, hassles and calories. I had learned how good a program it was for aspiring Residents of Podiatry. But I hadn't figured about the time of year I would be there, and I ended up with January. In Wisconsin! Oh well, I'm sure I could handle that...
Unlike nowadays, booking tickets to get there was an over-the-phone affair, unless you went to a travel agent. I got a great deal on a 2-flight combo from Philadelphia to LaCrosse on a major airline and thought nothing more of it.
December 31, 1984 came and I grabbed my things and took off on my 1 month-long adventure of learning. The first flight took me to Minneapolis in big plane luxury. Well, what I thought of as luxury anyway. I had an hour to spare and went to sit at the gate for the connecting flight to LaCrosse. I was plenty early and no one else was there, so I casually took a nap.
I was awakened by a gentleman in a pilot uniform who asked if I was headed to LaCrosse. I answered in the affirmative and he helped me grab my stuff and we headed for the door. It opened to the tarmac where we trudged across the macadam to a very little commercial plane. We stuffed my bags into the open hatch and hopped onto the plane. There was still no one else around. I thought I was being treated special and figured others would be along any minute. It was a nineteen-seater. I was further startled when the gentleman closed the door, fired the beast up and we began taxiing toward the runway!
Turns out he was the pilot and I was the only passenger for the flight. I then figured that there had to be a stewardess hiding somewhere I couldn't see, but none ever came.
Once the surprise almost left me, I napped a little bit more. Why waste any time to rest prior to a month as an unpaid intern? I was again awakened by a gentleman in a pilot's uniform. MY PILOT was sitting next to me starting a conversation with me! And I was in the back of the plane. I sneaked a glance up front and must have looked panicked as the pilot exclaimed "Don't worry, it's on autopilot." as if I had ever been on a plane without a pilot and should relax like everyone else on the planet would!
We talked briefly and he resumed the controls, telling me "This will be bumpy, but it always is because of the terrain of Southwestern Wisconsin". True to his word, the flight became quite like a little roller coaster you rode as a kid at a church carnival. Still, it was really scary to someone like me, who hadn't flown much at all prior to that.
Once we landed, I was thinking about kissing the ground, but was dissuaded from it because it was REALLY COLD! The thermometer prominently displayed at the airport read -23 degrees. I suppose the locals have some sort of pride about it. And I was the only person I ran into wearing a hat. This was before the when every damn hipster in the world wears a knit-cap 24/7. I figured my bizarre start to the month was over, but I was wrong!
I hailed a cab for the short trip to the rather large complex of the Gundersen Clinic and my temporary apartment among the medical students. I was looking forward to a little down time prior to checking in with my mentors.
But the cab stopped dead on the two-lane road with a line of stopped cars ahead of it stretching into the distance. Up ahead were several cop cars with lights flashing. More cops sped by us in the opposite lane, all converging at the same spot ahead. It was just an open field covered by the snow, like everywhere else I looked? It was over an hour until the flashing lights ceased, and the cars started to leave. And then.... Nothing. We just completed our journey with nothing at all to see, and that was that?
It was only the next morning when I read the paper that I learned what had held us up. It happened to be "just a burning body without a head or hands left burning beside the road". Welcome to Wisconsin!
And since I always try to link the blog to running, golf, or physics, I will tell you that I don't think it ever got above 0 degrees during the whole month. And I took a run across the Mississippi River, and I never saw any moving water. Ever.
The highlight of my runs there were the beer crystals hanging in the frozen air from the Heileman Brewery along the river (brewing that great Old Style lager as seen in the Blues Brothers movies). You could actually taste the beer instead of merely smelling it! At -23 degrees, every run was a beer tasting.
Showing posts with label Patrick Ebel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick Ebel. Show all posts
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Ebel Is Able And His Throwers Are Too!
Coach Ebel has every right to be strutting and crowing, but he has just nonchalantly directed all congratulations to his throwers. And his throwers won or excelled in just about every event they could at Penn Relays, both College Division and Championship Division!
Women's Discus: Obeng Marfo 2nd 161' 2"
Men's Shot Put: Jon Yohman 1st 60' 10.5"
Men's Discus: David Lucas 1st 180' 6"
Women's Javelin: Sarah Stanley 1st 147' 3"
Men's Javelin: Ryan Kerr 1st 228' 8"
Women's Shot Put: Alyssa Robinson 3rd 52' 5.5"
Women's Hammer Throw: Rachel Fatherly 6th 178' 10"
Women's Javelin: Lauren Kenney 6th 144' 5"
Men's Hammer Throw: Morgan Shigo 1st 206' 0"
Women's Discus: Obeng Marfo 2nd 161' 2"
Men's Shot Put: Jon Yohman 1st 60' 10.5"
Men's Discus: David Lucas 1st 180' 6"
Women's Javelin: Sarah Stanley 1st 147' 3"
Men's Javelin: Ryan Kerr 1st 228' 8"
Women's Shot Put: Alyssa Robinson 3rd 52' 5.5"
Women's Hammer Throw: Rachel Fatherly 6th 178' 10"
Women's Javelin: Lauren Kenney 6th 144' 5"
Men's Hammer Throw: Morgan Shigo 1st 206' 0"
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Coach Ebel and John Lucas. |
Sunday, March 13, 2016
Two More All-Americans
The final day of the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships saw two more Nitany Lions added to the ranks of All-Americans.
Brannon Kidder placed seventh in the 800M (1:50.29) in the midst of one of the finest fields ever assembled for the event. Rachel Fatherly topped off her steady progress as a thrower by placing eighth in the Shot Put (56' 6"). Dannielle Gibson finished 10th in the Triple Jump with a leap (or is it 3?) of 42' 3.25".
In other action, Casimir Loxsom placed 3rd in the USATF Indoor Championships 800M in 1:47.89.
Brannon Kidder placed seventh in the 800M (1:50.29) in the midst of one of the finest fields ever assembled for the event. Rachel Fatherly topped off her steady progress as a thrower by placing eighth in the Shot Put (56' 6"). Dannielle Gibson finished 10th in the Triple Jump with a leap (or is it 3?) of 42' 3.25".
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Rachel Fatherly and Mid-Atlantic Assistant Coach of the Year Patrick Ebel. |
In other action, Casimir Loxsom placed 3rd in the USATF Indoor Championships 800M in 1:47.89.
Saturday, March 5, 2016
End of Season Accolades and Rankings
It was a great Indoor Season for the Nittany Lions, and eight athletes are moving on to the very exclusive NCAA Indoor Championships in 5 events (only top 16 make it nationwide)!
And two athletes and one coach earned Regional honors!
MID-ATLANTIC - Track Athlete of the Year – Brannon Kidder, Penn State
Kidder, a senior from Lancaster, Ohio, broke the collegiate 1000 meters record in 2:18.26, ranks No. 8 at 800 meters in 1:47.01 and anchored the No. 3 DMR with a 3:55 1600-meter split. He won the mile at the Big Ten Championships and anchored the winning DMR. He’ll put his individual undefeated record on the line over 800 meters at the NCAA Championships, and will also run the DMR.
MID-ATLANTIC - Field Athlete of the Year – Rachel Fatherly, Penn State
Fatherly, a senior from Williamsport, Pennsylvania, broke the Penn State record in the shot put at 17.27m (56-8) for the No. 8 rank in the country. She finished runner-up in the event at the Big Ten Championships to go along with a fourth-place weight throw finish. She will contest the shot put at the NCAA Championships.
MID-ATLANTIC – Womens Assistant Coach of the Year – Patrick Ebel, Penn State
Ebel, in his fourth season guiding the Penn State throwers, coached his shot putters to three of the top four individual finishes at the Big Ten Championships. National No. 8 Rachel Fatherly finished runner-up as one of three Nittany Lions to surpass 50 feet, and he also had two finalists in the Big Ten weight throw. Fatherly, the school record holder in the shot put, will compete at the NCAA Championships.
And Penn State is ranked 2nd overall in the 800M as a team, just 0.3 seconds behind Texas A&M and Freshman sensation Donavan Brazier. The top 4 runners from each team count in the standings.
9 Tessa Barrett FR 5000M 15:46.08D
14 Tori Gerlach SR 5000M 15:50.49D
15 Dannielle Gibson JR Triple Jump 13.14mD
8 Rachel Fatherly SR Shot Put 17.27mD
4 Isaiah Harris FR 800M 1:46.24D
8 Brannon Kidder SR 800M 1:47.01D
3 Distance Medley Relay 9:27.20D
1200M) Jordan Makins SR 400M) 426 Alex Shisler SR
800M) Isaiah Harris FR 1600M) 424 Brannon Kidder SR
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Isaiah Harris to Brannon Kidder! |
And two athletes and one coach earned Regional honors!
MID-ATLANTIC - Track Athlete of the Year – Brannon Kidder, Penn State
Kidder, a senior from Lancaster, Ohio, broke the collegiate 1000 meters record in 2:18.26, ranks No. 8 at 800 meters in 1:47.01 and anchored the No. 3 DMR with a 3:55 1600-meter split. He won the mile at the Big Ten Championships and anchored the winning DMR. He’ll put his individual undefeated record on the line over 800 meters at the NCAA Championships, and will also run the DMR.
MID-ATLANTIC - Field Athlete of the Year – Rachel Fatherly, Penn State
Fatherly, a senior from Williamsport, Pennsylvania, broke the Penn State record in the shot put at 17.27m (56-8) for the No. 8 rank in the country. She finished runner-up in the event at the Big Ten Championships to go along with a fourth-place weight throw finish. She will contest the shot put at the NCAA Championships.
MID-ATLANTIC – Womens Assistant Coach of the Year – Patrick Ebel, Penn State
Ebel, in his fourth season guiding the Penn State throwers, coached his shot putters to three of the top four individual finishes at the Big Ten Championships. National No. 8 Rachel Fatherly finished runner-up as one of three Nittany Lions to surpass 50 feet, and he also had two finalists in the Big Ten weight throw. Fatherly, the school record holder in the shot put, will compete at the NCAA Championships.
And Penn State is ranked 2nd overall in the 800M as a team, just 0.3 seconds behind Texas A&M and Freshman sensation Donavan Brazier. The top 4 runners from each team count in the standings.
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