LA TIMES PLAYER OF THE YEAR JUJU WATKINS ON SSDL APRIL 1st 5:00pm

No Fooling!  The Frosh Phenom to Appear on FBL5 Wednesday Show

March 30, 2020

90045 - Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL) is expanding its offering of programming with a Wednesday Facebook Live at Five (FBL5) show that will focus on personalities in the world of high school, college and Olympic sports.  The debut show at 5:00pm on Wednesday, April 1st, will be HUGE!  

Los Angeles Times Prep Sports Columnist Eric Sondheimer (@LATsondheimer) and Hall of Fame broadcaster Randy Rosenbloom (@RandyRosenbloom) of the So Cal Prep Report will join the Los Angeles Times High School Girls Basketball Player of the Year Juju Watkins (@Jujubballin) of Windward School (West Los Angeles).

The spectacular 14-year-old Watkins is a unique talent that averaged 21 points and nine rebounds over the past season.  Rarely has there been a high school player that has displayed the size, strength, speed and skill that the 6’0” standout has shown over the course of a season where Windward took on the top teams in California, finishing runner-up in the CIF Southern Section and the CIF Southern Regionals.

Let’s do this!

SSDL FBL5:  Wednesday, April 1st @ 5:00pm:

https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast

Guests:  Randy Rosenbloom, Eric Sondheimer and Juju Watkins

SSDL Website: https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/  

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

Marlee Rice, SSDL
WHO’S THE NATION’S TOP AMATEUR ATHLETE?

Cast Your Vote for the 90th AAU Sullivan Award

March 25, 2020

90045 - The iconic AAU Sullivan Award, which has been handed out annually since 1930 by the Amateur Athletic Union(AAU), will, for the first time in its history, be presented “virtually” this year.  This is, of course, the way 2020 is playing out in the face of the coronavirus.  The ceremony was originally scheduled for April 21st at the New York Athletic Club (NYAC), but “in light of the ongoing situation with COVID-19…the AAU has decided to cancel the onsite ceremony portion…” the president and CEO of the AAU, Roger Goudy and AAU Sullivan Award Chair Melissa Willis, announced this last week.  “Instead, the AAU will recognize the accomplishments of the finalists and announce the winner virtually”.  

More information from the AAU National Office in Orlando, FL will soon follow.  

While the ceremony has been held at different venues since 1930, this is the only time I am aware of that it will not be “physically” staged.  These are unprecedented times, but the coronavirus certainly does not diminish the accomplishments of this year's 10 semifinalists.  After public, media and committee voting concludes on Monday, March 30, the finalists for the award will be revealed.  

You can see the list of 2020 nominees and cast your vote at:  http://www.aausullivan.org/

You can take a walk through history and see the impressive list of past winners at:  http://www.aausullivan.org/History/Winners

I have been involved with the AAU since 1994, when I started conducting beach volleyball tournaments with Gino Grajeda.  I was named to a position on the Sullivan committee in 2015, the year running back Ezekiel Elliott of Ohio State won the award.  I think I was most impressed by the speech Navy's quarterback Keenan Reynolds gave after winning in 2016, articulating to the crowd at the NYAC what is takes to be a good teammate.  I know for sure I was most proud last year when Stanford volleyball great Kathryn Plummer won.  Kathryn had come up thorough AAU volleyball programs, winning the AAU Beach Player of the Year award in 2015.  

I made an argument for Plummer as the greatest collegiate volleyball player ever in my blog post from December 22, 2019, after watching her win a third NCAA title in Pittsburgh.

Blog post:  https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/new-blog/the-greatest-everstanfords-kathryn-plummer

I will continue to study the nominees and cast my vote by this weekend.  I’d encourage any sports fans to cast their vote (link listed above) and if you’d like to comment to this blog, I will be sure to take your input into consideration before I cast mine.

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

Marlee Rice, SSDLComment
COVID-19 and SPORTS

March 19, 2020

- Olympics, FIFA Medical Advisor Bert Mandelbaum on Sports Stories 

- Loyola High School Coach Mike Boehle will guest on “SSDL Facebook Live Friday”

90045 -  World renown surgeon, medial advisor and author Bert R. Mandelbaum, MD, is the guest of episode 24, published today on Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL).  Dr. Mandelbaum, an advisor to the United Sates Olympic Committee, FIFA and the USA Soccer National Team physician, provided expert and unique insight into the crisis we now face and what’s to expect in the sports world.

Episode 24 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon with Dr. Bert Mandelbaum is now available to watch or listen.

YouTube:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHOOW-EE6lE&t=12s

SSDL will continue to look into the coronavirus and the impact on sports, as Los Angeles Loyola High School volleyball coach Mike Boehle joins Denny Lennon on “SSDL Facebook Live Friday”.  The four-time State and six-time Section winner will share the challenges he and his team face, as well as how they remain hopeful and prepared should spring sports be reinstated.  

Mike Boehle on SSDL Facebook Live Friday, March 20th at 5:00pm.

Facebook Site: https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast/

SSDL Website: https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/  

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

USA NTL TM's Dr. Bert Mandelbaum on FB Live Today re COVID-19

March 18, 2020

THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC AND THE SPORTS WORLD

Dr. Bert Mandelbaum is on Facebook Live Today, SSDL Video Podcast Tomorrow

Los Angeles -  World renown surgeon, medial advisor and author Bert R. Mandelbaum, MD, will be on Facebook Live today with Denny Lennon, the host of the video podcast Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL).  Dr. Mandelbaum, medical advisor to the United Sates Olympic Committee and the USA Soccer National Team physician, will address the adversity posed by COVID-19 that is facing all of us and the sports world.  

The Facebook Live interview with Denny Lennon will begin today at 4:00pm, March 18th

Watch here: https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast/

Episode 24 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon with Dr. Bert Mandelbaum will be available to watch or listen on Thursday, March 19th.

Website:  https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/

YouTube:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAptlwY1ahhH9LG9DyHGMDw

Dr. Bert Mandelbaum, author of the 2014 book “The Win Within, Capturing Your Victorious Spirit”, is among the foremost experts in prevention, diagnosis and treatment of orthopedic conditions.  He served and continues to serve as the medical director of the Federation of International Football Association Medical Center of Excellence, a team physician for Major League Soccer Teams, the United States Soccer National Team, he is the director of research for Major League Baseball and serves on the United States Olympic Committee Advisory Group.

Facebook Site: https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast/

SSDL Website: https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/  

Associated link:  https://www.amazon.com/Win-Within-Capturing-Victorious-Spirit/dp/1626341311

2014 Sports Injury Prevention Seminar Video Report:  https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

Marlee Rice, SSDL
THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC AND SPORTS STORIES

March 15, 2020

World Renown Surgeon Bert Mandelbaum is the Guest this Week on SSDL

90045 -  Prior to launching Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL), I was the Athletic Director at The Archer School for Girls in Brentwood, a private all girls school on the Westside of Los Angeles.  While we definitely had our share of “high profile” parents, it didn’t really affect our sports program. An athlete didn’t get extra points in a game for having a famous parent.  However, there was one parent, a superstar in his area of expertise, who gave Archer, and by extension, any other schools looking to protect their athletes, a huge assist.

Dr. Bert Mandelbaum, who sent three daughters through Archer, was that parent who came to the rescue of the athletic program.  Bert Mandelbaum, author of the 2014 book “The Win Within, Capturing Your Victorious Spirit”, has the kind of resume you marvel at, and then cherry pick when you’re writing about him.  He is among the foremost experts in prevention, diagnosis and treatment of orthopedic conditions.  He served and continues to serve as the medical director of the Federation of International Football Association Medical Center of Excellence, team physician for Major League Soccer Teams and the United States Soccer National Team; he is the director of research for Major League Baseball and serves on the United States Olympic Committee Advisory Group.  I really did only throw in a few of his posts, the man is a virtual database of successful sports medicine innovation and practices.

Bert and I struck up a relationship when his third daughter, Ava, played on the same Archer volleyball team as my daughter, Ciena.  In one school year alone, 2013-14, five girls at Archer tore their Anterior Cruciate Ligaments.  We were not the only schools witnessing a rise in female athletes tearing their ACL.  Bert called me to say we needed to do something, and so we did.  We started by having Archer coaches redesign their pre-practice and pre-game warm ups, using specific exercises that Bert and his team developed, ones particularly helped female athletes protect themselves.

The results were spectacular. We went to zero ACL tears that next year for Archer teams.  Our next step was to co-host an open seminar at Santa Monica College for any schools or sports programmers that wanted to attend. We rallied different medical groups to provide information, as well as pro athletes to provide testimony to the process.  With Bert’s guidance, we were able to make a difference in the lives of multiple Westside athletes. That is how Bert handles things.  He is indeed a superstar.

Now, with the coronavirus shutting down virtually all athletic events, including threatening the 2020 Olympic Games scheduled for this summer in Tokyo, I reached out to Bert for an interview, and he quickly agreed. That is how Bert handles things.  He is that kind of a person.  The Sports Stories crew will head to the Santa Monica Orthopedic & Sports Medicine Group building this coming Wednesday where Bert will provide his unique insight into this new challenge facing all of us.  

Episode 24 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon with Dr. Bert Mandelbaum will be available to watch or listen on Thursday, March 19th.

2014 Sports Injury Prevention Seminar Video Report:  https://www.facebook.com/sportsstoriespodcast

SSDL Website: https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/  

Associated link:  https://www.amazon.com/Win-Within-Capturing-Victorious-Spirit/dp/1626341311

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

Marlee Rice, SSDL
SPORTS STORIES PLAYING BALL

SSDL Making a Media Move with Coverage of Windward and Sierra Canyon  Schools

90045 - Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL) was on hand at Windward School (West Los Angeles) last night to see Frosh phenom Juju Watkins power in the go ahead basket as Windward won 44-41, to move onto the CIF State Open Division Southern Regional Finals.  Watkins is the rare 9th grade athlete who has not only athletic ability and skills, but plays the game with the kind of intellect that will continue to move her forward in the sport.  SSDL would like to recognize a venerable publication, The Los Angeles Sentinel, and Sports Writer Amanda Scurlock, who were on the story a year ago (link below). 

Windward Athletic Director, Tyrone Powell, will be the guest for episode 23 on SSDL, which publishes Thursday.  We discuss the school’s great line of girl basketball players, one that includes WNBA star and champion Jordin Canada, and current UCLA star Charisma Osborne, who is also a projected high pick in the draft.  Windward, 27-5, will take the coast route south to San Diego on Tuesday (March 10) where they will play the #1 ranked girls team in the country, La Jolla Country Day.  At 31-1, the Torres will present a huge challenge for the Windward girls.  The winner advances to the State Championship game.

SSDL episode 22, available now, is with Sierra Canyon School (Chatsworth) Athletic Director Rock Pillsbury.  Sierra Canyon is not only the overall top high school program in the country, it also leads the nation in Social Media.  LeBron James and company were on hand last night at Pepperdine College in Malibu to watch another advanced 9th grade athlete, his son Bronny, and the Sierra Canyon Trailblazers.  The SC boys team also won to advance to within a game of the CIF State Open Division Championship.  The Trailblazers, now 29-4 and the #2 ranked team in the nation, will play the 30-3 Etiwanda High School Eagles on Tuesday (March 10), the game will again be hosted at Pepperdine College. 

SSDL announced in a blog on February 28th that we, like our friend, Laker broadcaster Chris McGee, were “Here to Play Ball”.  We have put focus on two schools, and their leaders, and find them both within a win of the State Championship game.

Video Podcast Link, Rock Pillsbury:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BinlJjuZ_eg&t=3s

Website: https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/

Associated link:  https://lasentinel.net/student-athlete-of-the-week-judea-watkins.html

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

March 5, 2020

TRAILBLAZERS!  SIERRA CANYON SCHOOL

Basketball “Super Team” Leads the Nation’s Best HS Sports Program

90045 - Rock Pillsbury, the Athletic Director at Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, is the guest for episode 22 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL).  Rock dropped by the 7428 Studio for an interview on January 30th.  Through his hard work and careful planning, Rock has built an athletic program that is unrivaled in the country.  Boys and girls teams in multiple sports win section and state titles each year in the highest divisions in the ultra-competitive California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section (CIF-SS).  

Close to 600 schools compete in the CIF-SS alone, and close to a million student-athletes compete in the states ten sections.  Sierra Canyon School, in a community north of Los Angeles in the San Fernando Valley, has won 12 state championships and 15 section titles in the last 13 years.  That is an astounding statistic in the talent rich region in which they compete.  In basketball, both the boys and girls team won the 2019 state Open division, a first in CIF history.  

This season, both teams secured #1 seeds heading into the CIF-SS playoffs.  The girls team lost in the region quarterfinals to Windward School (Mar Vista) and their frosh phenom, Juju Watkins, who dropped 22 points.  Incidentally, Watkins will be featured on episode 23 of SSSDL, when the Athletic Director of Windward, Tyrone Powell, is our guest. 

The Sierra Canyon boys team won the section championship last weekend and has advanced to the region semifinals this weekend, where they will play another elite private school, Harvard-Westlake (Studio City).  That game, to be held Saturday at Pepperdine University in Malibu, will feature, as Eric Sondheimer from the Los Angeles Times notes, a “parking lot filled with Teslas, Corvettes and Porsches”.  It is Rock, as the Athletic Director, who has overseen the rise of the Sierra Canyon program.  Rock expends his energy equally among boys' and girls' teams, lower and upper school.   Rock shares his experiences on SSDL from his start in Texas to his landing in Chatsworth.  

A recent article in New York Magazine by Reeves Wiedeman called Sierra Canyon “the most Instagrammed high school in America”, mostly due to its high profile boys' basketball team.  The “super team” has played in eight different states this season to record crowds, and has appeared on national TV more often than some NBA franchises.  Besides 7’3” junior Harold Yu from China, the team includes top recruits Brandon Boston and Zaire Williams. These two 6’7” all-Americans combine for close to 35 points and 30 rebounds per game.  Bronny James and Zaire Wade, you may know their fathers, LeBron and Dwayne, combine for 6.5 million followers on Instagram.

It is Rock who keeps all of the teams, celebrity parents and high expectations in check.  Watch and listen to how he builds relationships and maintains the priorities for the Sierra Canyon student-athletes.  SSDL episode 22 is available now as a video podcast on YouTube, and an audio podcast wherever you listen.  

Video Podcast Link:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BinlJjuZ_eg&t=3s

Website - Audio/Social Media Links : https://www.sportsstoriespodcast.com/

Associated link:  https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/02/sierra-canyon-basketball-team.html

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

THE COMETS GOT SHOT DOWN!

CIF BB Committee Leaves itself Open to Criticism

90045 - The 90045 zip code is not only home to the 7428 Studio where Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL) is recorded, it is home to the Westchester High School Comets.  The Comets won the Los Angeles City Section championship last Saturday, then were left out of the CIF Southern California Regional Open Division playoffs, thus denied an opportunity to win the State Open Division Championship.  This is the first time the LA City Open champion was left out of the Southern California Regional Open Division.

Since 2010, Westchester has gone by Westchester Enriched Sciences Magnets. However, we at SSDL are not, as of now, doing stories on science or magnets, so we will call the school by its given name.  With respect to the title of this blog, and the new name the school was given, we will make note that a comet would be intercepted, not shot down, scientifically speaking, of course. 

The school, founded in 1948 and given the appropriate nickname “Comets” (representing the booming aerospace business in the area) has been a power in basketball, especially under the school’s legendary coach, Ed Azzam.   The CIF, which governs the state’s 10 sections, uses a “competitive equity” formula (think of the BCS ranking system) to pick the teams for each division of the state playoffs.  The Open Division is reserved for the strongest teams, and, considering the Comets have won 15 city section and six state championships, you’d think they would get proper consideration.  

“Some common sense in the meeting might have gone a long way,” Westchester coach Ed Azzam told the Los Angeles Times Eric Sondheimer, the guru of prep sports in Southern California. “We’ll play the hand we’re dealt. We’re much better now than we were in December. I would argue that point if I was in that meeting.  It’s completely disrespecting L.A. City.”  

SSDL has been covering the Westchester team this season for an upcoming story, and yes, it is disrespectful to the LA City Section, and to the hallowed boys’ basketball program at Westchester.  Let’s hope the committee, and the formula, that shot down the Comets is intercepted before another mistake happens.

  • Denny Lennon is the Host of the Video Podcast, “Sports Stories with Denny Lennon”

Marlee Rice, SSDL
SSDL is "Here to Play Ball"

“My name is Christopher Joseph McGee and I just came to play ball Phil”. That’s what Los Angeles Laker broadcaster Chris McGee, aka Geeter, told “Phil” in 1994 outside CBS Studios as Phil was choosing contestants for TV game show The Price is Right. It was enough to make the cut, and Geeter went on to win a car…and a lamp set. The story of Geeter’s hilarious appearance on the show is broken down on episode 20 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL). That episode, and episode 21, which includes original SSDL footage from the Kobe and Gianna Bryant Memorial at Staples Center, are both available on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAptlwY1ahhH9LG9DyHGMDw

As we conclude our three part series with Geeter, we remain inspired, and we will continue to “Play Ball”. Tonight, February 28th, SSDL will make good use of our media passes to cover the best High School basketball action in the nation. We will be at The Pyramid in Long Beach for the CIF-SS Open Division Championship games, where we keep up with the Windward School (Mar Vista) girls team, including frosh phenom Juju Watkins, as they take on Mater Dei High School (Santa Ana) in the 5:00pm game. The Mater Dei fans will stay in their seats for the 8:30pm boys title game, as MDHS plays the well traveled Sierra Canyon High School (Santa Clarita), a “super” team that has payed in eight states this season and on national TV more than some NBA teams. Sierra Canyon has an up and coming freshman of their own, Bronny James, who hit a big three down the stretch of their last game to help the team advance to tonights title game. SSDL has upcoming episodes with Sierra Canyon Athletic Director Rock Pillsbury and Windward Athletic Director Tyrone Powell.

Saturday, SSDL will be at Loyola Marymount University for the unveiling of the Hank Gathers Statue and reunion of the 1990 LMU basketball team that made a magical run to the NCAA Tournament “elite eight” . SSDL will be on hand for the event, and will have an inside look at the 1990 on a future episode which will include an interview with Wayne Boehle, the lead attorney for LMU in the Hank Gathers case.

Time to Play Ball.

Image attached: Jonas Never (@never1959) mural at Tower Pizza, 8351 Lincoln Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90045

Marlee Rice, SSDLComment
Chris "Geteer" McGee Visits 7428 Studio

Westchester, CA - On his way to the Lakers El Segundo studio today, Laker studio show host Chris “Geeter” McGee stopped by the “7428 Studio” this afternoon to record a video podcast for Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL). The former pro beach volleyball MC discussed everything from announcing his imaginary games as a youth to his years playing volleyball at Cal State Northridge, then his road to hosting the Emmy award winning “Access Sportsnet: Lakers” show. Per tradition at the home studio for SSDL, the former “All-CIF” basketball player from Crespi High School (Encino) took the pre-interview basketball shot…and drained it. Geteer then professed his love for the board game “Strat-O-Matic” in the rapid fire question round and showed off his knowledge of “The White Shadow” during the pop culture quiz.

Keep an eye out for “Life is Sweeter with Geeter” on SSDL this Valentines season.

The Greatest Ever…Stanford’s Kathryn Plummer

Pittsburgh - Sports Stories made the cross-country trip to Pittsburgh, PA this week for the AVCA National Convention and the NCAA Womens Volleyball Final Four.  We set up in the AAU volleyball booth at the Pittsburgh Convention Center for interviews, including ones with BYU head coach Heather Olmstead and JVA executive director Jenny Hahn.  But it was in witnessing the greatest collegiate player ever, Kathryn Plummer of Stanford, collect her third national championship to go with her three NCAA most outstanding player awards and two NCAA player of the year trophies that made the trip memorable.  With Plummer leading the way from the outside position, Stanford swept both Minnesota in the semifinals and Wisconsin in the finals.  In the two matches, KP recorded  a combined 48 kills at a .406 clip, 19 digs and 8 blocks.  The 6’6” Plummer, who won her first major national award as the 2015 AAU Beach Player of the Year, last year won the prestigious AAU Sullivan Award, given out to the nations top amateur athlete since 1930 when golfer Bobby Jones won the award.  Kathryn Plummer proved, yet again, that she is, without a doubt, the greatest Women’s collegiate volleyball ever.  I welcome any opposing opinions.

Marlee Rice, SSDL
The Lakers and the Yellow A-frame

7428 Studio - I read today in Houston Mitchell’s LA Times article that this years Lakers had now won 11 straight road games, one short of what the 1973 Lakers had done and third in line behind my favorite Laker team of all time the NBA Champion 1972 team.  Before I talk about the ’72 team, I’d like to make note of a couple items.


First, I want to state how much I enjoy reading Houston Mitchell, he is on point and very funny.  Second, I want to express how exciting it is to have the glory of the Lakers return, this years team, with their commitment to defense, is exhilarating to watch.  The choice of the new coach, Frank Vogel, must be acknowledged.  The last time Vogel had this much success he was performing a stupid human trick on the David Letterman Show.  The roster is as good as it could be considering the situation at hand, so it is time, as Laker fans, to forgive Rob Lowe, er..uh, General Manager Rob Pelinka, for whatever he did to hurt Magic Johnson’s feelings.  Look, I named my dog “Buck Magic Lennon”, so I am a Magic guy, but apparently he needed to walk off once he brought over LeBron.


Now, back to the ’72 squad.  I was seven years old and loved basketball.  I practiced as much as possible in my own backyard, was “all in” with Coach Wooden and UCLA’s run of titles, and wanted nothing more than for the Lakers to finally get a championship in LA after so many years of coming up short against the Celtics.  


As it turned out, my godfather, Dick Gass, was friends with the then Laker Coach, Bill Sharman.  Sharman, the nicest man ever, let us come and watch the Lakers practices when they used the gym at Loyola Marymount University.  You might want to read that last sentence again, given it remains among the greatest things I have ever done.  When Jerry West, Gail Goodrich and Wilt Chamberlain would get a water break, I would run out and shoot on the court, hoping that one of them would pass me the ball.  Those future Hall of Fame inductees just looked at a dorky seven that was in the way, but Flynn Robinson came through for me!  He threw me a few passes and gave me a couple tips. Later in life, I got to play one on one with Flynn at the Westchester YMCA and told him how cool he was to a little kid decades previous.


That 1971-72 team, now officially my Lakers, between November 5th and January 9th won 33 straight games.  That is craziness!  The record of course still stands, it set the Lakers on a path to a 69-13 regular season mark, then an NBA record, and an NBA championship with a 4-1 series triumph over the New York Nickerbockers.  Yes, I referred to the New York team by their given name, they should not have named theirselves after questionable mens clothing if they didn’t want to be made fun of.  


Anyhow, almost as important as the NBA title was that 33 consecutive game win streak.  In fact, it was so important, that the preeminent eating establishment in my world commemorated the achievement with a team photo.  Big time props to Der Wienerschnitzel for doing what needed to be done!  Founded in 1961 by John Galardi, a guy who worked for Taco Bell, Galardi was savvy enough to realize that Americans had forgot about their anti-German feelings, especially if you could get one of those tasty dogs from a building with an A-framed yellow roof.  


I grew up in Venice, CA, near Lincoln and Venice Blvd’s and it was a big deal that a McDonald’s was nearby.  But, I also very much liked Der Wee Wee, as we affectionally called it.  And that Yellow A-frame roof with those mustard dogs I loved so much was right across the street from the Golden Arches.  The Lakers commemorative team photo sealed the deal for me.  I now officially preferred Der Wee Wee to McD’s.  My Lakers had won 33 straight and an NBA championship, I now had clear vision on where I preferred to eat, and today I have a picture that brings it all back to me.

Go Lakers!

Marlee Rice, SSDLComment
Cleveland Browns Memories

For the second time on Sports Stories, my guest this week will be one with Cleveland, Ohio ties, this time it is the AAU’s Joe Gura...Every city has its own sports history, and Cleveland is no exception...The Indians and the Cavaliers have fans, but it is the Browns that have the heart of the City...I’ve attended five or so games at FirstEnergy Stadium with my friend Roger Goudy and his family, and am always amazed at the passion and loyalty of the Browns fan base… I wished I could’ve gone to at least one game at old Municipal Stadium, would’ve loved to sit in the old “dawg pound” with the locals, despite the heartbreaks they suffered…The most famous heartbreak, or infamous depending on your perspective, was John Elway leading the Broncos to the Super Bowl with “the drive” in 1986...I did get to attend one game that is put in “quotation marks”, the 2007 “snow bowl” game against the Buffalo Bills, which had a QB on its roster, JP Losman, that I taught how throw a ball when has a 2nd grader at St. Mark School in Venice...That “snow bowl” game had 13 inches of snow in one half, which was as much snow as an LA guy like me had seen in several years...With my Rams having left Los Angeles on some kind of spiritual journey from 1995 to 2015, it was those games watching the Brown Dawgs that filled the void of my NFL heart...Now the beloved Browns franchise just needs to get that guy out of the Kitchen...


Marlee Rice, SSDL
Clippers vs. Lakers

How great it is to be in LA this basketball season, with both teams a threat to win the NBA title…I had a chance to see each team play on November 11 and 15 last week…I attended the Clippers vs. Toronto Raptors on Veterans Day, thanks to my friend and AAU associate Gino Grajeda…As we watched from the Delta Lounge, it seemed like the Raptors were missing something, which of course was Kawhi Leonard…Now a Clipper and despite facing a double team everywhere he went, Kawhi almost recorded a triple double as the Clippers won…The Clippers are going with a slogan of “Street Lights over Spotlights”, and while I do not agree with making a reference to anyone else while advertising yourself (the Lakers use a spotlight for great dramatic purpose during introductions), I do recognize the Clippers making a reference to their work within the city…Besides building a great roster and coaching staff, the Clippers made a donation that will build/refurbish some 350 LA Park and Rec courts throughout LA.  Steve Ballmer and staff are wise to brand with the upcoming generations and make a real difference…Now the Clippers need to build their own place, playing “third fiddle” to the Lakers and the hockey Kings at the Staples Center must hurt…Besides civic improvement efforts, another area the Clippers clearly dominate is “in-game promotions”…The Chick-fil-A 4th quarter promotion, whereupon if an opposing player misses both free throws while at the line the whole crowd gets a chicken sandwich, is brilliant.  The Chick-fil-A “cows” walking out of the tunnel to get the crowd going after the first miss is hilarious…On Friday (Nov. 15) my son Vaun treated me to some great seats to watch the Lakers play the Sacramento Kings at Staples…After the drama that is the “spotlight introductions” for the 15 time NBA champions, perhaps the greatest franchise in all of sports, LeBron James turned back the clock and played like the LeBron of old (young?) as the Lakers ruined ex-coach Luke Walton’s return to town…Sharing the game with my boy, close to 20 years after we shared the 2000 title team and Kobe Bryant in his prime was memorable, and a moment like that serve’s as an example that the Clippers have a lot of work left to take over LA with their streetlights…It’s a big city though, and two teams going for a title sure is fun…Making plans for their Christmas showdown and the Western Conference Finals…GO LA!

Marlee Rice, SSDLComment
John Featherstone
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Back in the mid 90’s, when the AAU Junior Beach volleyball program was just beginning, the head football coach from El Camino College in Torrance, CA, would ride his bike to one of the beaches in the South Bay where we were running a tournament, enjoy some of the action, talk up some of the parents, then grab his whistle and volunteer to officiate the finals of each division. John Featherstone was not only the legendary football coach of one of the most successful junior college programs in the country, he was a legend on the beach as well. “Feather” played more than his share of beach volleyball tournaments and became one of the top referees on the beach for the professional tournaments. His generous offer to share his knowledge with the young players on the sand, on what very well could be his only day off during the week, was an important part of the growth of the AAU junior beach volleyball program, now the elite junior beach volleyball program in the country.

On November 16th, El Camino College dedicated their football field to the great coach, who not only won a national championship, two state titles and complied a 214-119-1 record as a head coach, Feather mentored and helped move several young men forward in their lives. His dedication to helping young people makes the dedication of “Featherstone Field” the best play El Camino College ever came up with.

Story from Daily Breeze:

https://www.dailybreeze.com/?returnUrl=https://www.dailybreeze.com/2019/11/16/el-camino-renames-field-at-murdock-stadium-after-legendary-coach-john-featherstone/?clearUserState=true


Marlee Rice, SSDL
Upcoming on SSDL

As we approach the Holiday season, Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL) closes in on the first ten episodes…Charles Oliver (Track) has a uplifting story to tell in episode 7, Bobby Stone (Taekwando) and Joe Gura (gymnastics) will follow and then keep an eye out for a “special” episode 10 recap…Football might have some “issues”, but much like your favorite Uncle, you have to love it…Last week, along with two SSDL staff members, I was in Madison, Ohio, in Lake County outside of Cleveland. We were out there to cover a special story, one of a community that has bonded over their high school football team, and a story about a special coach that retired on a crisp autumn night with past players, friends and family on hand…The way Coach Tim Willis motivated his players, the history of the area and the challenges inherent in a small town in northeast Ohio will make the multi episode SSDL feature one to look forward to, with an anticipated release in February 2020…

Marlee Rice, SSDL
T's Take...

Nice to hear the youngun’ (Mike McKay) and the legend (Mike Martini) give us their Veterans Day stories. ‘Lil” Mike is carrying the torch on the legacy of service that ‘Big’ Mike started back in the day. Both guys were inspirational. Big kudos to the Lennon Brothers and Sisters for their musical truibute at the end…come on Venice - where’s your military tune to add?

Marlee Rice, SSDL
Veteran's Day

The next two episodes are Veterans Day focused and the introductions give me a chance to geek out on history. When I was in my young 20’s and had shown just a little aptitude coaching and teaching PE at a K-8 catholic school in Venice called St. Mark, they did what most catholic schools do, tried to get you to do more. Next thing you know, I was teaching History, 8th and 7th grade. I got into it big time. I didn’t care, and apparently the school didn’t care, that I didn’t have a degree. Good times. I would start each class with current affairs, where the students could bring up stuff and we would break that down, then a quiz on the previous nights reading (super easy) then a lecture on whatever they read, but with my spin…which always included some of Howard Zinn’s “A Peoples History of the United States”. I subscribe to the idea that history is written by the winners, and Zinn’s book tells it from the other side, so I felt that was necessary. Who cares if they are in 7th and 8th grade? I needed to stay engaged. I’d wrap up the class with allowing whomever had made the most improvement in class choosing a quote from a famous person out of Jonh Bartlett’s “Famous Quotations”, that made them think a little. Good times…

Marlee Rice, SSDL
Welcome

I guess this is the place I blog. I’ve alway wanted to do this, just never pulled the trigger. I wonder if one should stop saying “pulled the trigger” in light of today’s crazy mass shootings. There are so many terms and sayings you cannot use anymore. I thought of that when I was referencing the Bad News Bears movie, the one from 1976, in episode 3 of Sports Stories with Denny Lennon (SSDL), the things that they do and say were HILARIOUS, but terms for immediate dismissal nowadays. Anyhow, is referring to the French as “frogs” and the Germans as “huns” a problem? Even if one is putting it in the context of WW1? I think I will try it and see if anyone from our massive audience protests.

-Denny Lennon