Sounders, Timbers rivalry coming to Tumwater
I am already calling it Olympia’s sporting event of the summer and maybe one of the biggest sporting events to ever come to the Olympia area.
The Sounders U-23 will take on the Portland Timbers U-23 on June 2nd at Tumwater Stadium. The two Cascadia rivals compete in the United Soccer Leagues’ Premier Development League. Tickets to the game are just $10 and can be purchased here. First kick is scheduled for 6:00 PM.
The Sounders U-23 are in their first year as an affiliate of Seattle Sounders FC. Pierce County businessmen Cliff McElroy and Lane Smith purchased the Tacoma Tide from Mike Jennings following the 2011 season, partnered with the Sounders and changed the team’s name. The team is coached by Darren Sawatzky, Seattle Sounders FC’s Director of Youth Development.
Besides the game in Tumwater against Portland, the Sounders U-23 will play five of their home games at Franklin Pierce High School in Tacoma – a very easily and quickly accessed stadium from the Olympia area – and two games at Cheney Stadium, home of the Tacoma Rainiers in what will be the first soccer games at Cheney Stadium. They also have one exhibition game scheduled for April 15th against Gonzaga University at Sunset Stadium in Sumner.
Portland was the 2010 PDL national champion but finished fourth in the Northwest Division in last year.
Today (4/4): Saints softball, Blazers and Cougars baseball

I’m currently at the RAC where it is 31 degrees and foggy but it looks like it might be a pretty nice day. Sadly, the weather report tells a less optimistic story, right in the middle of today’s scheduled games.
The red hot Saint Martin’s softball team and GNAC player of the week Morgan Klemm hosts Northwest Nazarene this afternoon. The Saints are 20-10 on the season and and are coming off a 6-2 California road trip. They are third in the GNAC at 10-5. Northwest Nazarene comes into the game at 6-21 overall and are fifth in the GNAC at 5-13. The doubleheader starts at 2:00 PM.
And in high school baseball action, Timberline travels to Capital to take on the Cougars in a 3A Narrows League contest. Game time is at 4:00 PM.
Conley, Champlin and Harvey assigned to Minor League teams, Brodin signs with new indie
Spring training came to an end this week and Major League Baseball teams assigned their prospects to their affiliates and four local athletes were among those that found a new baseball home for the 2012 season.
Adam Conley has been assigned by the Miami Marlins to the Greensboro Grasshoppers of the single-A South Atlantic League. A 2008 graduate of Olympia, Conley pitched for Washington State and was a second round draft choice by the Marlins in the 2011 draft. Conley pitched two games last season for the Gulf Coast League Marlins giving up just one hit in two innings of work. The left hander was named the #7 prospect in the Marlins system by MLB.com and the #10 prospect in their system by Baseball America.
Another 2008 Oly graduate, Kramer Champlin, has been assigned to the Lansing Lugnuts of the single-A Midwest League by the Toronto Blue Jays. Champlin was a 33rd round draft choice of the Blue Jays in the 2011 draft after two years at Western Nevada College and one season at Arizona State where he was named Pitcher of the Year by the Sun Devils. The 6-6 right hander pitched one game in the Gulf Coast League and seven games for the Vancouver Canadians last season. In Vancouver, Champlin went 0-2 with a 4.91 ERA and struck out 11 batters in 14.2 innings of work.
River Ridge’s Seth Harvey will take his talents to the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, the single-A Midwest League affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers. Harvey was a 37th round draft choice out of Washington State in 2010 and this will be his third year of professional baseball. After being drafted in 2010, Harvey appeared in sixteen games with the Arizona League Brewers where he went 0-2 with six saves and a 2.45 ERA. He struck out 32 batters in just 22 innings. In 2011, Harvey appeared in sixteen games for the Helena Brewers and went 2-1 with a 2.70 ERA and struck out 46 batters in just 33 1/3 innings.
North Thurston’s Joash Brodin is the only local product playing professional baseball that plays a position. The first baseman/outfielder/third baseman signed to play for the London Rippers this season and will be in his fourth year in the independent Frontier League after two years at Green River Community College and two at the College of Charleston. In 2009, Brodin hit .330 with 10 home runs and 37 RBI for the Midwest Sliders. In 2010, the Sliders became the Oakland County Cruisers and he hit .301 with nine homers, 62 RBI and 29 stolen bases despite playing the bulk of the season on the road due to Oakland County’s stadium deal falling through. Brodin moved on to the River City Rascals in 2011 and hit .300 with 14 home runs, 66 RBI and 19 stolen bases.
And finally, Jared Sandberg returns as manager of the Hudson Valley Renegades. The Capital graduate and former Major League Baseball player is in his third season as the manager of the Tampa Bay Rays short season single-A affiliate in the New York-Penn League. The Renegades season starts on June 18th.
Monday scoreboard: Saints swept, Bears remain undefeated, Blazers win thriller
College baseball
Western Oregon 13, Saint Martin’s 0
Western Oregon 5, Saint Martin’s 2 – More from WOUWolves.com
Saint Martin’s Nate O’Bryan, the GNAC pitcher of the week last week, gave up seven runs in the first inning without getting an out and Western Oregon continued to pile on en route to a 13-0 game one win. In game two, four Western Oregon runs in the third inning was all the first place Wolves ultimately needed to drop the Saints to 9-23 overall and 5-9 in the GNAC.
High school baseball
Olympia 5, Stadium 1
Timberline 6, Capital 5
Olympic 8, River Ridge 1
Gabe Padukiewicz went 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBI for Olympia to keep the Bears undefeated this season.
Capital scored three runs in the top of the seventh inning to tie Timberline before Charlie Hinson drove in the game winning run for the Blazers in the bottom half of the inning. Ryan Tydingco had a triple and three RBI and picked up the win on the mound for the Blazers.
Olympic exploded for seven runs in the sixth and seventh innings and held River Ridge to just four hits in an 8-1 non-league win. Brad Wallace accounted for two of the Hawks’ four hits including their lone run on a homer in the sixth inning.
Today (4/2): Spring break baseball
It’s going to be a slow high school sports week around here with Spring break upon us, but there are still some games to be played, mostly on the diamond. Three baseball games on the schedule today and it looks like the weather will cooperate:
Capital @ Timberline – 4:00 PM
Olympic @ River Ridge – 4:00 PM
Stadium @ Olympia – 4:00 PM
Sunday scoreboard: Saints lose in semifinals; Donnas dropkicked
College softball
CSU Monterey Bay 5, Saint Martin’s 1
After finishing the round robin portion of the CSU Stanislaus Tournament of Champions in Turlock, California 4-1 on Saturday, Saint Martin’s lost 5-1 to CSU Monterey Bay in the Gold Bracket semifinal. Rick Noren’s Saints went 6-2 on the California road trip and are now 20-10 on the season and are assured of their first ever winning season. The Saints return home and to conference play on Tuesday when they host Northwest Nazarene. The doubleheader starts at 2:00 PM.
Roller Derby
Terminal City Rollergirls 153, Oly Rollers Dropkick Donnas 74
Vancouver’s Terminal City Rollergirls laid a Canadian whooping on the Dropkick Donnas in the second half of the bout on Sunday night. Oly led 32-31 with seven minutes left in the first half before Terminal City went on a 24-3 run to close the half. They then out scored the Donnas 97-39 in the second half.
Tonight (4/1): Dropkick Donnas vs. Terminal City
The Dropkick Donnas take on Vancouver’s Terminal City Rollergirls in Oly Rollers derby action tonight at Skateland. Doors open at 6:00 PM and tickets will be available at the door.
Photo credit: Joe Schwartz – JoeRollerfan.com
Cranes, Claws and Controversy in Olympia
“I am the greatest arcade claw player in the world!” An exhausted yet triumphant Joe Nguyen yelled after capturing the World Arcade Claw Organization’s championship on Friday night in downtown Olympia.
The nearly 24-hour long competition held at the Olympia Center capped off a year of scandal and change in the competitive arcade claw circuit. A year that started with the revelation of years of fraud, led to the dissolution of the world organizing body, the disappearance of its leader and finally ended with the first clean crane machine world championship in nearly ten years.
Endurance: “I Didn’t Think I Was THAT Good”
The WACO Championships kicked off Thursday night with the endurance test, 12 solid hours of arcade claw play, six hours longer than any other previous championship endurance test. Other than the 10 minute breaks that are given every three hours, the 65 competitors from around the world stand in one spot, hunched over, picking candy and stuffed animals out of a machine.
“This is the most demanding competition in the history of our sport,” said Commissioner Gregory Kporku, the underground arcade claw legend that founded WACO after the International Crane Machine Association was taken over and dissolved in April of 2011. “This will really separate the real champion competitors from the pretenders. It has already scared away most of them.”
The son of the Ghanan ambassador to China, Kporku is highly regarded in the arcade claw world. The markets of Beijing, where he spent his teenage years, are filled with claw machines. You can insert a coin and fish out anything from iPods to stuffed Hello Kitties to live animals. Though most claw machines are programmed to payout in advantage to the owners of the machine, Kporku would routinely pull winners nine times out of ten.
“I’d go in, spend a few dollars, pull out a couple high ticket electronics, sell them and make 200% profit. Then I’d use a few more dollars, pull out a few live lobsters or crabs and give them to a couple of the poorer vendors at the market. I did it quietly and secretly and only a couple people knew.”
But after about a year of losing more than they ever did before, the owners of the cranes discovered the source of their losses and put the clamp down.
“I couldn’t even enter the markets anymore; the security guards harassed me anytime I came near.”
As word of his prowess leaked out, Kporku was approached by a couple businessmen about entering the 2004 International Crane Machine Association’s Championship, coincidentally being held in Beijing. He easily won the championship dominating the three disciplines – endurance, speed and skill – but never felt right about the win.
“It was too easy, I knew I was good, but I didn’t think I was THAT good.”
Disillusioned, Kporku never returned to international competition, but his legend in the competitive arcade crane universe grew as YouTube videos would pop up of him emptying machines all around the world.
“Anywhere I went, I’d find a machine, we’d tape me cleaning it out and usually donating the prizes to the kids that inevitably would surround me while I was doing it. But I never knew that my star was rising because of the videos.”
When the endurance test ends at 8:00 AM, Friday morning, 42 of the 65 competitors remain standing. With one third of the players already knocked out, most with sore backs – crane machines are notoriously short – a three hour break is called to give the competitors a rest and to prepare the Olympia Center for the skills competition.
“It was a successful night,” boasts the commissioner. “Now the fun begins. Now we’ll find out who is really skilled.”
Skills: “Young Kids, Beautiful Women and Underdogs from Impoverished Lives”
The skills competition begins at 11:00 AM. Two competitors don’t show back up to the center, their weary backs getting the best of them in their hotel rooms. The remaining 40 players will go one-by-one in front of a panel of three judges.
Ten machines are setup with various sized and shaped prizes, randomly programmed with different claw grip strengths, all with different rules of play. Each competitor must pass each test to continue on in the competition. The pressure is enormous. One mistake and your championship run immediately comes to an end.
In the previous 10 years, the skills competition closed out the championship while the speed round usually came second, after the endurance test. Now the competition is more like a tournament. Survivors of the endurance test move onto the skills test and survivors of the skills test move onto the speed round and the winner of the speed round is the champion.
In the 2011 ICMA Championships held in Puerto Vallarta, Melissa Kenworthy, a comely 20 year-old from Richmond, Indiana, who has since filmed two VH1 reality shows, was the only competitor left standing after the skills competition despite barely escaping the endurance test and coming in second to last in the speed round.
Kenworthy’s resounding victory was the boldest and most transparent fraud carried out in the history of the ICMA championships. Suspicions of foul play were already high after the 2010 competition in Bucharest when offshore gambling parlors reported a record amount of bets were placed on the eventual champion, Scott Hufnagel, a 12 year-old boy from Adelaide, Australia.
“Every champion this sport has had since 2003 have been completely unknown prior to winning,” said WACO commissioner Kporku. “And after the first few years, looking back at it, they all fit a marketable mold: young kids, beautiful women, underdogs from impoverished lives. With each year, it became obvious to the serious players that somebody, maybe even ICMA, was choosing the most marketable competitors and rigging the machines to give them the win.”
Most of the champions never knew they were chosen to be victors and walked away from the championship with only a small cash reward, a trophy and the requirement to represent ICMA on goodwill and marketing appearances.
However, starting with Hufnagel in 2010 and perhaps even the 2009 winner, Bobby Sanchez of Reynosa, Mexico, it appears that champions started to profit greatly from their wins. Shortly after his win, Hufnagel’s family moved from their 700 square foot, two bedroom apartment in a lower-middle class Adelaide neighborhood to a six bedroom, 4,500 square foot McMansion in a tony suburb. And Sanchez is an international playboy, a far cry from his previous life working in a tortilleria.
Kenworthy confirmed suspicions when in June of 2011 she sued ICMA president John Koflanovich to retrieve what she claimed was promised to her: 25% of his offshore gambling wins on the competition, a modeling contract with the Ford Modeling Agency and a starring role in a Pussycat Dolls knockoff that he claimed he was producing for a Las Vegas casino. But Kenworthy claims that when Koflanovich’s romantic advances were rebuked, he became withdrawn, started sending her to humiliating marketing appearances and never paid her a cent.
Koflanovich hasn’t been seen since two days after Kenworthy filed her lawsuit. And though a few clues have emerged that he is still alive, his family fears the worst.
Back in Olympia, it is 4:30 PM and the skills competition has finally wrapped up. There were a few bumps along the way including some technical difficulties with the random grip strength machine that threaten to mar the results of the championship, but most of the competitors agree that this was a very fair test of their skills.
25 competitors remain. Knocked out in this round: 14 year-old Scott Hufnagel, a surprise last minute entry to the competition. He was unable to finish even the most basic of skills and left the center without comment.
Speed: “We Didn’t Care, It Was Exhilarating”
25 arcade claw machines line the room, all set with the exact same grip strength settings, all filled with identical stuffed animals, all set to allow two moves before dropping the claw. When the bell rings, all 25 competitors run to their machines with one simple goal: pick out the most stuffed animals in 60 minutes.
Amongst the crowd of hopefuls still in the running for the WACO championship are Kevin Mattingly – the first ICMA champion in 2001 and cofounder of the organization in 1999 with Koflanovich – and 2008 champion Joe Nguyen.
Kevin Mattingly met John Koflanovich in 1998 as a freshman at Bowling Green State University.
“We were fraternity brothers and roommates,” recalls Mattingly during a break from the competition. “I don’t know where it came from, but a crane machine turned up, tipped over in the middle of our room. Rather than get mad about this strange hazing, we picked it up, plugged it in and started playing.”
After a huge success with a 1999 Greek system tournament, Mattingly and Koflanovich jokingly founded the ICMA, produced a website in a computer science class and organized their first international tournament. Expecting a handful of friends from Ohio to come, it came as a huge surprise when 50 people from as far away as Norway came to play in the first ICMA championship held at the BGSU Student Union.
“We had no idea it would be a hit,” says Mattingly. “Our website ended up in an arcade claw message board that we didn’t even know existed and people got really excited. It was the first tournament of its kind. We had to totally rewrite the rules and get more machines. But we didn’t care, it was exhilarating.”
But the unexpected success put a strain on their relationship. After winning the first championship, Mattingly settled back into college life while Koflanovich left school to promote the ICMA internationally, convinced that he had hit upon an idea that would make him rich.
“He got rich alright, and I made a fair share of money,” said Mattingly. “But with each passing year, the people that he brought in got shadier and shadier until I had enough and became the most silent of silent partners. I kept my ownership share, but didn’t collect any money or have anything to do with the ICMA until after the 2011 tournament.”
When Koflanovich disappeared following Melissa Kenworthy’s lawsuit, Mattingly went straight to work researching the business and discovered that every championship since 2001 had been tainted, rigged by either international gamblers or by Koflanovich himself.
Immediately he distributed the ICMA’s assets over to the players that he felt had been cheated and then dissolved the organization. A month later he formed the WACO as a member owned co-op and hired Gregory Kporku, the passionate former champion, internet sensation and arcade claw hero who was eager to change the culture of a sport that he helped tarnish.
“I could tell when I met him that he was embarrassed and pretty pissed off that he had been taken advantage of,” said Mattingly, “and he wanted to do something about it. He wanted to have clean, pure competitions. He was a perfect fit for commissioner.”
Joe Nguyen also had an ax to grind with Koflanovich. Nguyen shocked everybody when he won the championship in 2008. Most shocked were the international gamblers that Koflanovich conspired with to rig the games in favor of Adela Diaz, the holy trinity of ICMA champions – 14 years-old, supermodel beauty, from an impossibly impoverished upbringing in Guatemala.
“I was just better than her,” says Oxnard, California native Nguyen. “Even handicapped, even with rigged machines, I beat her.”
But Nguyen paid a price for his victory. Koflanovich spread rumors among ICMA members that Nguyen himself had cheated. He then let loose his co-conspirators and they shook Nguyen down for cash, periodically roughed him up and generally made his life a living nightmare for the next year after winning the championship.
“Winning in 2008 turned out to be the worst thing that could happen.”
Nguyen’s victory drove Koflanovich to take total control of who won and how they won. The next three year’s competitions weren’t even close and participation in the event by serious players dwindled. When Kenworthy won in 2011, nobody was surprised.
“As soon as she walked in the room, I said ‘there’s our winner’,” recalls Mike Cannon, a five time ICMA championship participant and WACO championship finalist.
“This year is totally different. Everybody has a chance, anybody could win. It’s exciting to finally feel that way.”
With five minutes remaining in the speed round, the competition is close. Kevin Mattingly – competing in his first competition since 2002 – leads with 95 animals picked. Joe Nguyen is in second with 93 and Marianne Beaman is third with 90. Mattingly glances up at the scoreboard and you can literally see him tense up. He misses his next four attempts while Nguyen gets three out of four.
With a 96-95 lead, Nguyen settles into a rhythm and doesn’t miss another attempt finishing with 104 animals picked in 60 minutes. Mattingly only manages to pick three in the final five minutes and finishes in second with 98.
Minutes later, watching commissioner Kporku on stage, awash with confetti, hand over the WACO championship trophy and an oversized check in the amount of $500 – all the prize money that could be afforded this year – to Nguyen, Mattingly beams with pride.
“Sure I came in second. I kind of choked down the stretch. But it doesn’t matter. We have our rightful champion. We have our clean championships. We have our sport back in order. This is all I could ask for.”
Saturday scoreboard: Saints softball splits in California
College softball
Chico State 2, Saint Martin’s 1 – More from ChicoWildcats.com
Saint Martin’s 8, CSU Stanislaus 0
Saint Martin’s snapped their nine game winning streak in game one at the Cal State Stanislaus Tournament of Champions in Turlock, California on Saturday morning. But in game two the Saints started a new streak with an 8-0 win over the host Warriors.
Friday scoreboard: Saints softball extends streak; Blazers, Cougars, Bears win
College softball
Saint Martin’s 7, Dominican 2
Saint Martin’s 4, Chaminade 3
Saint Martin’s 7, CSU Dominguez Hills 0 – More from SMUSaints.com
Saint Martin’s picked up three wins today in the CSU Stanislaus Tournament of Champions to run their winning streak to nine straight games. Sam Munger went 4-for-4 in the first game to drop Dominican to 2-26 on the season. In game two, Sara Bakos drove in the game winning run and Chaminade dropped to 9-17. And in game three, Munger pitched a complete game one hit shutout against the previously 33-6 CSU Dominguez Hills. The Saints ran their record to 18-8-1 and have an 8:45 AM date with CSU East Bay on Saturday before taking on CSU Stanislaus at 1:15 PM.
High school soccer
Timberline 4, Lincoln 1
Capital 2, Yelm 0
Olympia 1, Tumwater 1 (Oly wins 5-4 in a shootout)
Alec Davies scored two goals for Timberline and Ryan Erickson and Kasey French each scored in Timberline’s 4-1 win at Tacoma’s Lincoln Bowl.
Bryce Joling scored Capital’s two goals in their 2-0 win over Yelm. Jakob Racimo posted the shutout for the Cougars.
In a battle of father versus son, the son (Bryce Winkler) got the better of the father (Bryan Winkler) as Olympia beat Tumwater in a shootout. Regulation ended tied 1-1 and Duncan Urban scored the deciding goal to give the Bears a 5-4 shootout victory. Devon Parman opened the scoring for the Beats with a goal in the 38th minute and Bradley Saner got the equalizer with just 2:48 left in regulation. Oly managed to keep the T-Birds’ Kevin Weyand off the board before he opened the shootout with a goal.
High school baseball
W.F. West 11, Black Hills 1
Black Hills braved the weather but perhaps wished they hadn’t. The Bearcats jumped out to a 9-0 lead before the Wolves got on the board with a run in the bottom of the sixth.



