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College volleyball
Evergreen @ Northwest – Postponed
Women’s soccer
Northwest 4, Evergreen 0 – Recap
High school football
Tumwater 41, Inglemoor 24
Olympia 34, Timberline 7
North Thurston 22, Foss 20
Rochester 49, Rainier 21
Black Hills 55, Bainbridge 27
Wilson 41, Shelton 7
Yelm 47, Stadium 21
Elma 36, Tenino 35
River Ridge 39, Ridgefield 3
What you see above is the Twitter timeline of an 18 year old local athlete that is off to play community college sports this season. This is just a sampling of how his Saturday night went.
I follow a lot of young athletes on Twitter, a couple of high school students and quite a few college students, and though most of them are actually pretty savvy when it comes to social media, sometimes I find some pretty stupid things.
This was probably the dumbest set of tweets I’ve ever seen from an athlete that I follow and it is a good opportunity to remind people that nothing you do online is private. He has his account set to protected but I followed him when I heard he was going to play sports in college before he protected his account. Even if you protect your account, anybody that followed you before you set it to protected can still see all your tweets. So I can see all of his drunk tweets, all of his tweets about smoking weed and all of his tweets about his coach. You know, the stuff he probably doesn’t want me, his parents, his coach or his future coaches/employers to see.
So please, tweet smart. Have fun, but take it easy.
In week one, my five year old daughter went 6-4 in picking local high school football games using her super secret, proprietary prognosticating system that you can’t even hope to understand. And she is back once again this week to give you the most well reasoned picks you will find anywhere on the internet.
Here is the entire week two high school football schedule, complete with radio information and Addie’s expert picks…
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Tumwater T-Birds @ Timberline Blazers
South Sound Stadium – 7:00 PM – Radio: Eli Sports Network
Addie’s pick: Blazers
Rory’s pick: Blazers
“They will win! They will poke them in the face!” – Rory, 2 1/2
North Thurston Rams @ Black Hills Wolves
Tumwater Stadium – 7:00 PM
Addie’s pick: Rams
Rory’s pick: Wolves
“They are going to come bucking into the other team, buck buck ba-duck buck buck.” – Addie
“They are going to eat them.” – Rory
Capital Cougars @ Olympia Bears
Ingersoll Stadium – 7:30 PM – Radio: 1240 AM KGY
Addie’s pick: Cougars
“They’re going to pounce on the Bear and kill it. Cougars are kind of fast.”
Rochester Warriors @ RA Long Lumberjacks
Longview Memorial Stadium – 7:00 PM
Addie’s pick: Lumberjacks
“They are going to cut down a tree right on top of one of the Warriors heads.”
Yelm Tornadoes @ Olympic Trojans
Silverdale Stadium – 5:00 PM
Addie’s pick: Tornadoes
“They are going to pick up the other guys and they are going to throw them out and spin them around.”
Rainier Mountaineers vs. Mossyrock Vikings
Rainier HS – 7:00 PM
Addie’s pick: Vikings
“They are going to come and stab the Mountaineers right in the back as they are trying to climb a mountain. Also, they have dragons. Dragon fire, I bet.”
Tenino Beavers @ Washougal Panthers
Fishback Stadium, Washougal – 7:00 PM
Addie’s pick: Panthers
“Are Panthers carnivores?”
“Yes they are.” – Me
“Since Panthers are carnivores, I think that they will eat the Beavers.”
River Ridge Hawks @ Sequim Wolves
Sequim HS – 7:00 PM – Radio: KONP
Addie’s pick: Wolves
Rory’s pick: “Wolves, Wolves Wolves….Wolves, Wolves, Wolves!”
“When the Hawks are on the ground looking for worms, the Wolves are going to bite off their tails. Or their foot.” – Addie
“Like, bite bite bite bite bite.” – Rory
Shelton Highclimbers vs. North Mason Bulldogs
Highclimber Stadium – 7:00 PM – Radio: 1030 AM KMAS
Addie’s pick: Bulldogs
Rory’s pick: Bulldogs
“I think they will run and scratch the Highclimbers. They will chase them into a tree an not let them down.” – Addie
“I think they will poke them in the face. Or the stomach!” – Rory
After five outstanding seasons in the independent leagues, North Thurston grad Joash Brodin finally got the call from a Major League organization on Tuesday night and has signed with the Arizona Diamondbacks this morning. He will head from Sugar Land, Texas where he was on the road with the Long Island Ducks, to Visalia of the advanced-A California League.
Brodin was hitting .307 with 11 home runs, 79 runs scored, 49 RBIs and 14 stolen bases. He represented the Ducks in the Atlantic League All-Star, his third all-star game since hitting the independent circuit out of the College of Charleston.
He was in his second season with the Ducks having signed with them at midseason last year after his team, the London Rippers of the Frontier League, abruptly folded. He was tearing up the Frontier League for the Rippers hitting .370 with 11 homers and 54 RBIs in 59 games and then had to adjust to a higher level of competition in the Atlantic League and still hit .282 with 24 RBIs and 31 runs in 49 games for the Ducks and tore up the playoffs hitting .359 with seven RBIs and eight runs in Long Islands’ championship run.
Brodin will likely join Visalia on Friday when they open a homestand with the Stockton Ports. The Rawhide have 18 games remaining in the regular season and are fighting for a playoff spot sitting just a half game behind the Modesto Nuts.
All middle school and high school students that need sports physicals for the upcoming seasons are invited to the Providence St. Peter Family Medicine Sports Physicals Clinic tonight at 5:30 PM.
Physicals cost $20 but all money is put back into the child’s school and students with financial hardships can have the fee waived. There will also be free TDAP, Menactra and HPV vaccinations available to those that need them.
The Sports Physicals Clinic is located at St. Peter Family Medicine at 525 Lilly RD.
Puget Sound Collegiate League baseball
Tumwater Brewers vs. Hawks Prairie Cardinals – The RAC – 5:00 PM
West Olympia Linx vs. Nisqually Silvers – The RAC – 7:30 PM
The MLS and Seattle Sounders FC are currently working with United Soccer Leagues to transform their MLS Reserves squad to a second tier USL Pro team with it’s own city and identity. Tacoma appears to be the front runner after a Mother’s Day game between the Sounders Reserves and Orlando City at Cheney Stadium served as a market and stadium test and drew a respectable 2,174 fans.
Buried in this report from KING 5 News is that Everett and Olympia are also being considered as the home for the team. It seems far-fetched, I know, but could Olympia land the Sounders top minor league team in the next two or three years? I don’t think it is as impossible as it seems.
Sounders owner and general manager Adrian Hanauer admitted in KING 5’s report that Cheney Stadium is not the ideal place for soccer and the Sounders are interested in a soccer specific stadium, something that does not currently exist. So if the Sounders want a soccer specific stadium, they will probably have to build it or work to have it built themselves. The Olympia area has a lot of cheap land currently available with excellent infrastructure, the failed Lacey Gateway Town Center being the most obvious spot with the Nisqually Tribe looking to develop more than 250 acres in the area.
Olympia has no professional sports for a USL Pro team to compete with and if a team based in Olympia were given the right marketing and sales resources by the Sounders, it could easily build that into a big advantage for the club. But even with less competition for sponsorship dollars, the corporate base in Thurston County is extremely weak. A team in a Lacey stadium could be a more regional club drawing interest from companies in south Pierce County, but that is no guarantee.
Obviously, the biggest problem is population. Is Thurston County large enough people to draw between 2,000-3,000 fans a contest even as the only game in town? The USL Pro is based in much larger cities like Orange County (Los Angeles Blues), Rochester, Orlando and Pittsburgh. These are cities more similar to Seattle, maybe Tacoma, but definitely not Olympia. Even I, an ardent cheerleader for sports in Olympia, have my doubts. But again, if the Sounders would allocate the right marketing and sales resources, it’s not out of the question.
The Sounders organization has seen what the Olympia area can do with games at Tumwater Stadium between the Sounders U-23s and Portland Timbers U-23s drawing more than 1,200 fans twice in the past two years despite little to no general marketing efforts outside of partnering with Blackhills FC. That has to be at least a little intriguing.
Whatever the result, and most likely the team will go to Tacoma, at least Olympia is getting some consideration. I don’t think we are too far off until the area gets a professional, semi-professional or developmental team.
GoalWA.net has been championing the expansion of the National Professional Soccer League, a national semi-professional league that has seen some success lately with teams in Detroit, Tulsa and Chattanooga. The NPSL wants to expand to the Northwest with multiple teams making up a Northwest conference and Olympia is one of the obvious choices along with Yakima, Tri-Cities, Port Angeles, Wenatchee and Spokane. The league fee and operating costs are reasonable, however the revenue possibilities are a bit limited considering they would have to play at a high school stadium and would not be able to sell quality facility advertising and decent concessions, including alcohol.
The Premier Development League is another option, especially given the success the Sounders U-23s have had at Tumwater Stadium and the established nature of the PDL Northwest Division. But the league fees are much higher than the NPSL and the revenue possibilities are probably equal. Also, the rights to Thurston County might already be owned by the Sounders U-23s, and they might not be willing to give them up.
Another option is the Pacific Coast Soccer League, a British Columbia based league that has one Washington club, Bellingham United. Bellingham United has been a success story creating the second most popular men’s team in Washington State in just two years of existence despite playing in a substandard league. League costs are low and they have created a thriving supporters/pub culture that could be replicated in Olympia. However, the drive for every team in the league would be very long, overnight affairs that probably would lead the league to not expand to Olympia without financial assurances or league expansion into other Western Washington cities.
One last option, the Women’s Premier Soccer League, the second or third tier of women’s soccer, would make a lot of sense in Olympia and would bridge the travel gap between the Seattle based teams and Oregon based teams. But again, revenue opportunities are low. They play just 10 games, would play in a high school stadium and might have limited appeal.
One thing is for sure: any startup soccer team, or any sports team for that matter, needs to have proper resources to make it a go here. For a USL Pro team, they need the backing of the Sounders, a new soccer specific stadium and a full-time, professional marketing and sales staff. Other lower level leagues would need to have the resources to have at least one full-time person devoted to sales and someone skilled at marketing and communications. It will take money and effort, but it certainly can be done.