Seeing the play is also prompting us to seek out and watch the 1966 film version that starred Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, George Segal, and Sandy Dennis, and that was directed by the great Mike Nichols. Taylor and Dennis won Oscars for their performances and Burton, Segal, Nichols, and the movie itself were also Oscar nominated. Yep, that's a movie that I want to see, but I think that I'll wait awhile after just seeing the play.
The Grandstander
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"
Seeing the play is also prompting us to seek out and watch the 1966 film version that starred Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, George Segal, and Sandy Dennis, and that was directed by the great Mike Nichols. Taylor and Dennis won Oscars for their performances and Burton, Segal, Nichols, and the movie itself were also Oscar nominated. Yep, that's a movie that I want to see, but I think that I'll wait awhile after just seeing the play.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
Taking a Break
For various and sundry reasons, I have decided to take a break from Facebook. We all know that social media can be a really good thing. It can reconnect you with friends and family, talk about your vacations, share wedding photos and baby pictures, relive fond memories.
It can also be a pain in the ass. Need I list all of the ways? I have also found that I am spending an inordinate amount of my leisure time here when I could be reading a book, watching television, or having cocktails and conversations with my wife. So I've just decided to take a break for a bit. If nothing else, I can already feel my tension levels lowering because I won't be seeing the latest atrocities emanating from the Executive Branch of the Federal Government.
I have not deleted my account, and I may still post my Grandstander Blog posts there so that they can find a wider audience. (You can also go the www.grandstander.blogspot.com and choose to "Follow" the blog.)
I am going to try a variation of the "one day at a time" school of thought on this. My initial goal is to just stay away from reading and posting (other that the aforementioned Grandstander posts) through the month of April, at which time I'll reevaluate the whole thing.
See you on the other side and please stay in touch in other ways. It is possible, you know.
Bob, aka, The Grandstander
To Absent Friends - George Foreman
George Foreman, two time Heavyweight Champion of the World and at a time when that title still meant something in the sporting world, died last week at the age of 76, and what an amazing life story he had. Born in the rough part of Houston, Texas, Foreman, like many such youths, took to amateur boxing, and this is where that led him.
- He was the Golf Medalist in the heavyweight class for the USA in the 1968 Olympics
- Turned professional after the Olympics and in 1973, he defeated Joe Frazier for the Heavyweight Championship
- Lost the championship in 1974 to Muhammed Ali in the famous "Rumble in the Jungle
- Retired from boxing and became a Born Again ordained non-denominational Christian minister serving, mainly, at-risk youths in his native Texas
- After ten years of retirement, he returned to the ring - he needed the money to support his ministry - and, improbably, won the Heavyweight title again at the age of 46, the oldest man to ever win the title.
- Soon after one of boxing's alphabet soup governing bodies stripped him of his title, he retired again and began endorsing a line of indoor electric grills, and here is where a whole new life began for Foreman
Monday, March 24, 2025
Sporting Thoughts on a Monday Morning
Like many of you, no doubt, I have just come off of a four day weekend spent in large part most part watching the first and second rounds of the NCAA Men's and Women's Basketball Tournaments. These four days every March offer a truly unique bacchanalia of sports viewing pleasure.
This applies to me, but the highlight of the weekend was the terrific showing that Robert Morris put up against second seeded Alabama in the opening round on Friday, losing 90-81, a score that didn't reflect the close nature of the game overall, as shown in this screenshot from late in the second half:
It was great showing by the team, and one in which everyone connected with the University can take pride, as reflected by this photo released by the school in its social platforms later that evening:
Under circumstances that used to exist in college athletics, the future would look very bright for the RMU hoopsters, but in this age of NIL and the transfer portal, who knows? Foremost question: the team's two best players, Alvaro Folguieras and Amarion Dickerson have eligibility remaining, but after seeing how they performed over the course of the season and post-season, they are prime candidates to be poached by bigger programs. Good for them, but tough on the fans, but that's life in a mid-major conference.
Otherwise, the tourney offered no real Cinderella Stories, other than a #10 seed Arkansas knocking out #2 seed St. John's, but can you really label any team coached by John Calipari a "Cinderella"? Of the sixteen teams remaining twelve of them were seeded 1 through 4 in their regions. All four #1's remain, along with three #2's, two #3's, three #4's, one #5, two #6's, and the aforementioned #10 Arkansas Calaparis.
Watching all of the various conference tournaments prior to the main event, I thought Florida was the best team that I saw, but watching Duke dismantle Baylor yesterday, I think that I am changing my mind. They are scarey good, and it's not just because of Cooper Flagg. At this point, I will call for a Duke win over Florida for the championship come April 7.
Speaking of Florida, I took great delight in seeing them beat Connecticut in a terrific second round game yesterday, if only because it has knocked Danny Hurley out of the tournament. His profane sore loser comments afterward only cemented my great dislike for him.
And the last game that I saw before heading to bed last night was the Colorado State-Maryland game. In case you missed, Colorado State snatched victory away from Maryland when Jalen Lake hit a three pointer to take a 71-70 lead with :06.1 remaining, only to see Maryland snatch said victory away from them when Derik Queen hit a floater with time expiring to win it for the terms 72-71. In the space of six seconds of game time, BOTH teams experienced the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. If you missed it, HERE is how it played out.
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
To Absent Friends - John Feinstein
Saturday, March 15, 2025
Book Review: "The Accidental Critic" by Arch Campbell
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
Hail to The RMU Colonials
The Robert Morris Colonials are Champions of the Horizon League!
If you have talked with me lately, or have been seeing my Facebook posts, you know that I have been caught up this winter following the fortunes of the men's basketball team of my Alma Mater, Robert Morris University. At some point in mid-January, after starting with an 8-4 non-conference record and a blah 2-4 record in Horizon League play, the Colonials clicked as a team and caught fire. They then proceeded to win 13 of their final 14 games, win the regular season Horizon League championship with a 15-1 record. They concluded the regular season with an overall record of 23-8 and on a streak where they won seven straight games and thirteen of their final fourteen games.
We were able to see their HL Quarter-final game over Wright State 83-62 as part of a sellout crowd at the RMU Events Center last week. The atmosphere on campus that night was electric, and the game was as an exciting a sporting event as I have ever attended. Through the magic of ESPN, we then saw them defeat Oakland 79-76 in overtime in their semi-final game, and last night they put the cherry atop the sundae with an 89-78 win over Youngstown State.
It was the culmination of a season that saw Coach Andy Toole, and players Alvaro Folgueiras and Amarion Dickerson be named, respectively, Horizon League Coach, Player, and Defensive Player of the Year.
Before going any further, let me take you back five years, to March 10, 2020. This was the night that RMU defeated St. Francis to win the Northeast conference Championship and secure a trip to the NCAA tournament. In THIS POST I said that that game that night was one of the reasons why you follow sports. Later that same week, sports, the nation, and the world shut down due to the COVID pandemic, and the NCAA tournament was canceled. Andy Toole has since said that this team being denied the chance to see their name on Selection Sunday and not being able to compete in the big Tournament, was the hardest thing he has had to experience as a coach.
That 2019-20 season was also RMU's last year in the NEC. They began competing in the Horizon League the following year, and it has been hard sledding for the Colonials the first four years, but it all came together, unexpectedly so (they were picked to finish ninth at the beginning of the season), for the Colonials this year. And it all culminated last night with the team cutting down the nets in Indianapolis.
Winning the championship tournament in a mid-major conference is what schools like Robert Morris play for. They will probably draw a seed in the area of 12th to 14th, and will probably play a power five school in Round One and will no doubt be a double digit underdog, but no matter. They will have achieved the goal that every team sets for themselves at the beginning of the season: Win their conference and go to the Big Dance. Whomever they play in that first round, will not be getting a cupcake.
In the universe that is college basketball in Pittsburgh, Robert Morris will always be the ignored little brother to Pitt and Duquesne, we all get that, but in a year where Pitt finished below .500 and got knocked out in the first round of the ACC Tourney, and where the Dukes haven't been able to follow up on the A-10 successes of last year, it was the Colonials who were the story, even if it did take the local sports media awhile to figure that out. Also, as the Steelers suffered a flameout in round one of the NFL playoffs and currently don't know who their quarterback will be this coming season, where the Penguins are in the beginning stages of a rebuild and are in last place in their division, and where the Pirates are, well, the Pirates, you can definitively state, I believe, that the RMU Colonials Men's Basketball team has been the best Pittsburgh sports story so far in calendar year 2025.
#proudtobeaColonial #letsgoBobbyMo