Posts

Showing posts from November, 2021

Because Thanksgiving: brown and orange

Image
  11/24 Brown is back Because Thanksgiving: Brown and Orange This week’s “Hat’s off” is to Thanksgiving.   I’v got no Thanksgiving hats or jerseys…except for a few old Turkey Trot shirts from my road race days.   So I’m going for color…the brown and orange we associate with Thanksgiving.   Brown for turkeys and orange for pumpkins   I guess.   Although this year there is added meaning to orange as it has become the color for memorializing the senseless hidden deaths of First Nation peoples in Canada. (To learn more see  https://www.techlifetoday.ca/articles/2020/why-we-wear-orange-on-orange-shirt-day-nait.) As for brown and orange in sports, pretty rare. In the US, no hockey (except for the AHL Hershey Bears.) None in basketball I can think of. As for football, there is of course the Cleveland Browns. And in baseball, only one since the St. Louis   Browns left in 1954 to become the Baltimore Orioles.   That would be the SanDiego Padres, who s...

Harvard -Yale game...

Image
 11/18 Boola, boola...bow wow wow This week’s “hats off” goes to the 137th edition of THE GAME, between Yale and Harvard. The game will be played this coming Saturday at the iconic Yale Bowl.   Built in 1914 to house a team then at the top of collegiate football, the Bowl became the template for the Rose Bowl and all thus  the inspiration for all the “bowl” games that would follow.   In addition to Yale games, the site was home to what was called the “Suburban Super Bowl,”   an annual preseason game between the Giants and Jets in the years just prior to AFL- NFL merger. For two very strange seasons 1973-75, the NFL Giants played their home games at the Yale Bowl while Yankee Stadium was being renovated and the Meadowlands under construction. I actually caught some of those games including a December including a miserable 31-7 loss to the Vikings in freezing rain in late December.   And the next year, a gimpy Joe Namath scrambling into the end zone. During m...

Honoring Veterans

Image
 11/11 PACKOS and MASH Today’s hats off is to our veterans.   I’m not usually one for military style wear and especially the wearing of camo by shorts teams. But I’m making exception in a unique way. We’ve got a military style hat and olive green sweat shirt from Tony Packo’s, the famous hot dog emporium in Toledo, Ohio.  Packo’s was made famous by Toledo native Jamie Farr in his role of Klinger in the long-running Korean War era series M*A*S*H.   While Klinger usually dressed as a woman in an effort to get out of the service, his parents regularly sent him care packages from Packo’s and Klinger would occasionally opt for a Toledo Mud Hens jersey and hat thus creating an ongoing connection between MASH, Mud Hens and Packos.  Klinger and Hawkeye in MASH Though set in the Korean War era, MASH was clearly reflecting on the then active Vietnam conflict. The Korean War was the first of what would become an ongoing pattern of US involvement in post colonial struggles ...

All Souls and el trueno de Trenton (Trenton Thunder)

Image
11/3 el Trueno de Trenton   Yesterday was All Souls Day , or El Dia De Los Muertos (the Day of the Dead ) as it’s known in Mexico. So what better way to commemorate the day than with this “sugar skull” logo from “ El Trueno de Trenton ” or Trenton Thunder . Sugar skulls are both used as treats for roaming bands of children and decorations for one’s own ofrenda , or altar.   This particular logo was developed as part of Trenton’s contribution to La Copa de Diversion, or Fun Cup, a program developed by minor league baseball to attempt to build closer ties with the Hispanic community. This year, El Trueno de Trenton was the Friday edition of the team playing as the Trenton Thunder which in fact was the Buffalo Bisons displaced when the Toronto Blue Jays left Dunedin. Trenton being available when the Yankees abandoned the city for Somerset, New Jersey. When the Bisons returned to Buffalo, the Trenton Thunder finished the year as a “Draft League” team so the team that began ...