Archive for October, 2009

Another Pete Carroll story

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

I have a lot of regard for Pete Carroll and not just because he wins. He seems to have a sense for people who are not appreciated by others. I have previously told the story of Ken Norton Jr, who is now the linebacker coach.

Seto

Today’s story is another one, even more unlikely if possible. Rocky Seto is the new SC defensive coordinator. He has quite a story.

The book says Rocky Seto was a walk-on at USC in the late ’90s, meaning he didn’t come with a scholarship.
The book is too nice to say he was actually a beg-on.

The difference is that walk-ons, these days, are usually players whom the coaches know. They’re encouraged to join the team with the tacit assurance they’ll get scholarship help later to keep them from attending Cal Poly or Utah State, etc. They are not strangers.

When Seto finished his second year at Mt. San Antonio College, he drove to USC and sat in the Heritage Hall lobby. He was a cold call.

He had gone to Mt. SAC because Bill Fisk, an ex-Trojan, was the coach. He thought that might help him. He didn’t have an NFL bloodline. His dad was a Japanese immigrant who ran a gardening business in Boyle Heights and then Arcadia, and Rocky spent a lot of time raking and mowing. Football was more appealing.
But this was more a delusion than a dream. This wasn’t even like David Eckstein showing up at U. of Florida workouts, looking for a couple of swings. At least Eckstein was on a field. Seto had nothing going, except that he was coming to USC anyway.
Seto looked up and saw Coach John Robinson walking around on the second floor. This was it.
“I went up the stairs and sort of hung around where I saw him going,” he said the other day. “I wanted to make it look like a chance meeting.”
Robinson brought Seto into his office for a 10-minute chat.
In August, Seto wore a USC practice jersey.

I am a big fan of John Robinson and still believe he was screwed by SC. Had he been treated properly, he would probably have been the coach until he retired. Instead, an administration that did not value sports pushed him out and the university paid for this error with years of mediocre teams and loss of revenue. Football supports the rest of the varsity programs. In 1979, the university decided that coaches could not be trusted to monitor players academic performance. They took this role away from the coaches, and Robinson, and gave it to some junior faculty members who promptly lost their objectivity and let players get away with taking a sham “writing course” by correspondence. When the scandal broke, instead of acknowledging its own failure of judgement, the administration blamed the coaches and forced Marv Goux, the long time coach, to leave the university. Robinson left soon after to coach the Rams. He eventually returned but it was never the same.

I think the Robinson experience has made the present administration appreciate what they have in Pete Carroll. Like Robinson, Carroll will continue to lose assistant coaches because, in addition to teaching players how to make it in the NFL, he is teaching coaches. Look at Rocky Seto.

Hackett was fired after 2000. Seto feared he was losing his grip on football. He was also second-guessing his decision not to pursue a doctorate in physical therapy, even though the program had accepted him.
“Sharla wanted us to go to a women’s volleyball game and support the team,” he said. “I said, nah, I wasn’t in the mood. But I finally did.
“And talk about being in the right place at the right time again.”

One of the players was Jaime Carroll. Her father is named Pete.
“He was sitting right behind me,” Seto said. “I knew he was the darkhorse candidate for the job. I just introduced myself and told him who I was and what he did. And then he got the job and kept me around.”
Seto wasn’t on the official staff in 2001-02, but he worked with the safeties. “It helps,” he said, “when one of them is Troy Polamalu.”
It also helped that Carroll, in his own mind, never quit playing safety. Carroll and Seto discussed the position day and night. When a full-time spot opened in 2003, Seto took it, and when Nick Holt left for Washington last year, Carroll took about five seconds to make Seto the coordinator.

Prestigious title. Risky job. The Trojans lost three linebackers to the first round of the NFL draft, plus five other starters.
That defense held opponents to nine points a game and 3.6 yards per play.

The four USC opponents in 2009 have averaged 10 points and 3.5 yards per play.

Asked about it, Seto launched into a checklist of deflected credit. Defensive line coach Jethro Franklin, linebackers coach Ken Norton, graduate assistant secondary coach Kris Richard …
“Sure, Pete always puts his stamp on the defense,” said Petros Papadakis, the broadcaster who played with Seto at USC. “But the guys up front have learned to play together in a short period of time. Sometimes that takes all year. Players like Rocky so much, they don’t want to let him down.”
There was a limit to the nice.
“During practice, Rocky was a pest,” Papadakis said, laughing. “He would cut-block you. This did not go over very well in November with some of the guys. But everybody knew what walk-ons went through.
“To be honest there are some walk-ons that you never remember. Everybody remembers Rocky. He was a great teammate.”
He was not a walk-on for long. In a team meeting, Hackett announced Seto had earned a scholarship.

Now, he is defensive coordinator. Another Carroll success story in seeing the potential in people who might not impress a less intuitive superior.

Health reform back in familiar territory

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Health reform moved back (was it ever anywhere else?) into familiar territory, behind closed doors.

With the Senate Finance Committee finally poised to complete its work, the volatile health-care debate shifts into closed-door negotiations taking place around the conference room of Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.).

Has it ever been anywhere else ? Attempts to require that legislation be posted on the internet (Remember that promise?) for 72 hours have been turned back by Democrats.

“All of the queasiness about this bill is on the Democratic side, not the Republican side. . . . They ought to be able to do anything they want to. The question is: Will they?” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Friday morning, hours after the Finance Committee completed its two-week consideration of more than 500 amendments to its proposal.

The Democrats have a 60 vote majority in the Senate and a similar majority in the House.

Reid’s first days as Democratic leader came when his party held just 45 seats in 2005, and the goal was just blocking George W. Bush’s White House agenda. He unified his small caucus and scored early successes, stalling Bush’s initiative to practically privatize Social Security. Reid also fired from the hip, calling Bush a “loser” and then-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan “a hack.” Those shoot-first-aim-later comments drew him wide praise among liberal activists, then clamoring for a fighter to stand up to the powerful Bush White House.

Now, with a 60-seat majority and Barack Obama in the White House, Reid seeks consensus. This has provoked a revolt among liberal activists who long for the days when Lyndon B. Johnson ruled the chamber in the 1950s with an iron fist, believing such a leader could herd Democrats into a unified bloc of 60 to pass Obama’s most critical priorities.

See, it is all about politics. The Senators, won’t read the bill they are voting on because they don’t understand it. Yes, that gives us confidence.

Then there are the lies:

In one corner of Reid’s office will be Baucus, whose legislation was deficit-neutral, in part, by lowering subsidies for lower-income workers who are to buy insurance on a new exchange. That bill has won accolades from the roughly 15 centrist Senate Democrats who represent conservative-leaning states, many of whom Reid and Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) helped elect in 2006 and 2008.

The deficit neutral claim requires a lot of explanation. There is still support for single payer in the House. I fully expect it to come back in the conference report. What none of these people are willing to say is that the Baucus bill will require huge cuts in Medicare, $500 billion, or the costs will explode. Single payer will bankrupt the country. If you are a leftist, that doesn’t matter. I refer you to the previous post.

There is a corollary of this largely unspoken assumption: that no matter what you do to one part of a machine, the rest of the machine will continue to function normally.

A variant of this is the frequently expressed denial of the law of unintended consequences: the belief that, if the effect you intend is good, the actual effect must be similarly happy.

There is a lot of this in the Democrat health reform effort.

At least somebody is standing up for Honduras

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Senator Jim Demint has traveled to Honduras to meet with the government there and let them know that not all Americans are supporting Zelaya and the Chavez thug brigade. Senator DeMint has previously declared himself in support of the Honduran constitutional government.

DeMint, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, criticized Zelaya as a “Chavez-style dictator” referring to leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a frequent thorn in the side of the U.S.

“The Honduran Congress, the Honduran Supreme Court, and the Honduran military have acted in accordance to the Honduran constitution and the rule of law,” DeMint said in a statement today. “Zelaya’s open defiance of democratic norms has set Honduras on a path toward violence, instability, and tyranny.”

DeMint further sought to tie Obama’s condemnation of the coup as an indication of the president’s willingness to open dialogue with hostile foreign leaders.

“I am hopeful that as President Obama grows in office, he will eventually turn away from despots like Ahmadinejad, Chavez, Castro, and Zelaya, and give the United States’ full-throated support to the people of any country who are fighting for the same values we cherish and defend in America,” the South Carolina lawmaker said. “President Obama’s call for the reinstatement of Zelaya is a slap in the face to the people of Honduras…The rule of law is working in Honduras. President Obama should not undermine the democratic institutions that guarantee freedom by forcing an illegitimate President back into power.”

He attempted to use government transportation to met with the Honduran officials this week but Senator Kerry, who met with the North Vietnamese in 1972 when he was still a naval officer, blocked the trip. DeMint has found other transportation and is representing those of us who are not in love with leftist dictators.

Frederick Jones, communications director for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a Kerry spokesman, explained the distinction to us: Kerry was not blocking DeMint from going to Honduras — any American can legally travel there — but the issue was over government funding and plane travel for an official fact-finding mission. “Clearly, as an American citizen, Sen. DeMint is free to travel to Honduras commercially.”

I guess Kerry used private transportation to Paris in 1972 when he met with the North Vietnamese who were killing US troops. Or maybe the NVA paid for his trip.

Thanks to Washington Monthly for the heads up.

UPDATE: More at Big Lizards. He has linked Miguel Estrada’s piece on the Zelaya removal. Since I no longer read the Times, I missed it.

UPDATE #2: Zelaya certainly has some interesting advisors.

The latest on that front comes from his chief propagandist, David Romero Ellner, who came out with these pearls of wisdom:

There are times when I ask myself if Hitler was or not correct in finishing with that race with the famous Holocaust. If there are people that do damage in this country, they are Jewish, the Israelis. I want to name, this afternoon here in Radio Globo, by name and last name, who are the two officers of the Jewish army who are working with the Armed Forces of our country and who are in charge of carrying out all these conspiracy activities and undercover actions and everything else that is happening to the President of the Republic.

After what I have learned, I ask myself why, why didn’t we let Hitler carry out his historic mission. Forgive me for the grotesque expression. But I ask myself after I have realized this and many other things. I believe it should have been fair and valid to let Hitler finish his historic vision…

Yes, that our president’s side in this controversy. Maybe we should look harder at his side.

Not long after ousted wannabe Marxist dictator Manuel Zelaya issued a bizarre rant about Israelis attacking him with high frequency radiation and toxic gases, his chief propagandist, David Romero Ellner, who heads up Honduras’ Radio Globo went on the air to suggest that Hitler had been right and that it was unfortunate that he had not gotten the chance to finish off the Holocaust.

David Romero Ellner and Radio Globo are significant because the media aims to make them into the newest martyrs of the Honduran government’s “crackdown” on civil rights. Reuters and other media outlets are already carrying touching narratives of the police raid on Radio Globo and David Romero Ellner continuing to carry on broadcasting over the web.

This is what the leftists at Washington Monthly are talking about when they accuse Honduras of “closing down radio stations.”

The line looked a little foolish when the de facto government shut down Honduran media outlets and suspended constitutional civil liberties in the country.

And this was what the tragic martyr, David Romero Ellner said on Radio Globo;

“There are times when I ask myself if Hitler was or not correct in finishing with that race with the famous Holocaust. If there are people that do damage in this country, they are Jewish, the Israelis. I want to name, this afternoon here in Radio Globo, by name and last name, who are the two officers of the Jewish army who are working with the Armed Forces of our country and who are in charge of carrying out all these conspiracy activities and undercover actions and everything else that is happening to the President of the Republic.

“After what I have learned, I ask myself why, why didn’t we let Hitler carry out his historic mission. Forgive me for the grotesque expression. But I ask myself after I have realized this and many other things. I believe it should have been fair and valid to let Hitler finish his historic vision…”

David Romero Ellner, currently being praised as a hero of the free press by the liberal media, began his career as an activist with the Communist party. He co-founded the People’s Revolutionary Union, better known for its Cinchoneros armed wing which carried out numerous terrorist attacks. In 1981 they hijacked Flight 414 to New Orleans and took its crew and passengers hostage, demanding the release of other Honduran leftists.

In 1988 they carried out an attack on US servicemen in Honduras wounding four outside a disco. Their overall attacks on US troops claimed 28 casualties. They also kidnapped the Vice President of Texaco and seized an OAS office and took hostages. And ironically, considering David Romero-Ellner’s outrage over the raid on Radio Globo, seized radio stations to broadcast leftist propaganda.

Yes, this is their side in the controversy.

My new favorite song

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Peggy Noonan doesn’t like this sort of thing but she is living in her New York City bubble. The people who live outside the east coast alternative universe know better. If someone doesn’t stop this runaway train, our children and grandchildren will blame us and rightly so.