Palo Alto prep tennis ace

Sara Choy the Oak Creek tennis giant

Sara Choy the Oak Creek tennis giant

edit to add: Stephanie Savides, Gunn 1983 and Stanford 1987, who I met at Fremont Hill Elementary / PAUSD in 1974, broke it down for me the history of girls prep tennis on the Peninsula. Recently and apropos of my neighbor Sara Choy first upsetting the defending CCS girls champ in league play then winning the title herself, a rarity for a freshman. There are repeat winners but no 4-time champs. Stephanie also has a daughter at M-A, Sami Andrew, who is a fine player and excellent student but not a champ like mom. Or she’s a late bloomer. I was meaning to get back to Stephanie as I continue my research: coach and I strolled San Mateo County Sports Hall of Fame (and the former Redwood City courthouse dome), mostly looking at hoops legends, but I noticed Linda Gates, of Burlingame, a Stanford teammate of SS, and Ann Kiyomura, of Aragon, who also excelled at Team Tennis professionally, a decade or generation ahead of us.

I did also suggest to Palo Alto Mayor a recognition Karen Holman of Ms. Choy. (I watched the Li Na segment on 60 Minutes for insights into Sara; I think in one of my brief encounters with her, in our lobby or laundry room, she told me Li Na her fav.

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The Mullin Show w. Al Palo Alto

Four Paly seniors, by Maddy Atwater, The Viking

Four Paly seniors, by Maddy Atwater, The Viking


The mullin show w. al palo alto

The Mullin Show is Paly Vikings, 15-3, who have to win out against three tough teams and especially at Fremont Friday, Feb. 20 to take or tie for SCVAL De Anza League and advance to CCS. Mullin is Kevin Mullin, a gunner but who does use his four or five key teammates, such as Dees, Rojahn, Tention, Grandy. It is notable that Paly is not that deep, other than the four or five weapons.

“Al Palo Alto” is my new nickname for Gunn, led by Alex Gil-Fernandez. “Al Palo Alto” references El Palo Alto the City’s namesake — a large tree — but also subtle “All Palo Alto” (and “All America”) but also, subtly Lew Alcinder, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, “al-Palo Alto” — I’m just riffing off of the xenophobia I thought I saw Saturday at the pit, that I described below. But Gunn is pretty deep, I’ve seen 12 or more players (they carry 16) make contributions. (I was #13, on my shirt and on the team and only got in during scrub time, for a league champion Titan squad way back when).

Coach and I will check out Titans trying to avenge Saratoga Falcons, here Friday. Gunn should win out against Santa Clara and Cupertino. Meanwhile, I will mos def get to Fremont of Sunnyvale in 10 days to watch Kevin Mullin and I do hope the Vikes can put it together and win out.

As I happened to meet twice this week but for the first time Carol Smallwood Mullin*, not the son of a gun but the momma, I am feeling the Kevin Mullin show. I defended him in these two posts to PAW (and also, in my particular Plastic Alto manner, I am remembering here Frank Smallwood the former head of the Rockefeller Center where I was a fellow in 1980; I never took his course but interviewed him on Dartmouth College governance, he passed away recently as a ’51>86):

The anonymous post critical of the 17 or 18 year old kid deserves a “T” for technical foul, or a round of raspberries. And shame on PAW for breeding so many trolls. 

Mullin is a player no doubt, a gun in the sense of Lloyd Free or Peter Maravich, but not showy. And as one poster says, a bigger deal might be the sickness that kept a key guy out of the Los Gatos loss. Paly could run the remaining games and compete for CCS. On their best night they could top St. Francis. The Fremont rematch should also be key, 2/20 away. Certainly to beat Gunn, Paly spread it around. Alex “Al Palo Alto” Gil-Fernandez was high for Gunn with 21 to 17 for Mullin, as Rojann and others stepped it up, outside and Mikey Gandey they had no answer to inside.

For reference, Kent Lockhart, Gunn 1981, two-time league champion (two-time CCS player of the year), part of the Three L’s with Lin and Loscutoff, all time All-City, averaged under 20 in high school, ended up top 20 all time CCS after three varsity seasons (including sophomore year at Cubberley, before it merged with Gunn), his high game was 41 in a Christmas tournament, and a sign of Gunn still putting it all together, struggling. He figured out that raising his teammates would take them (us) to CCS finals, 25-3. Lockhart incidentally after 4 seasons at UTEP under Don Haskins is arguably the smallest person ever drafted by the NBA — the the Knicks — for his defense. He averaged under ten points per game for the Miners. 

It would be great to see Gunn and Paly rematch in CCS. Good luck, Vikes and Mullin et al. 

(and Peter Jordan in four seasons thru 2006 bested Lockhart’s career totals, which reminds, apropos of the pickle the Weekly and its trolls put #21 in here, rumor is that even Gunn coach B. Williams reached out to Mullin and says “haters gonna hate hate”: allegedly Peter Diepenbrock called Peter Jordan and said “I spent four years designing defenses to stop you, so you have to keep playing, college ball, at UCSB.” Mullin is like Randy Arrillaga of his generation.)

I mean: Paly has won four straight and based on how they pulled away from Gunn Saturday could probably win out their remaining three by avenging on the road even to Los Gatos and Homestead and picking up the Fremont game as well. 

In addition to the three’s versus Gunn, they had quite a few back door plays. It seems their big is getting better over the course of the season, could be key in CCS. 

To repeat, if Mullin is like a Lockhart he will know how to bring out the best in the other six or seven. (And he is supposed to be pretty smart, Ivy League material; his parents are).

* former 3-sport star at Paly and 2-sport block at Williams, met her Cornell hubby at Stanford grad systems, but claims to have never heard of Nathan Ford. What about Ken Dryden? I’m sure the hubby would ace the test. The Times noted their stars in alignment. Mazel tov and good luck to Kevin at the next levels (CCS and then maybe Ancient Eight or D III)

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Deso Dogg dissed by Yank, Kraut G-men

Denis Cuspert, pka Deso Dogg, 39, "specially designated global terrorist" which for international criminal sect is like signing with a major label. I wish for my death and can hardly wait for it/Armed with bombs and grenades

Denis Cuspert, pka Deso Dogg, 39, “specially designated global terrorist” which for international criminal sect is like signing with a major label. I wish for my death and can hardly wait for it/Armed with bombs and grenades

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Kayla Mueller inducted into The Pueblo Girls hypothetical rock band

Former NAU student, beluved dead near Aleppo Syria worked with Save The Peaks to honor sacred Hopi lands

Former NAU student, beluved dead near Aleppo Syria worked with Save The Peaks to honor sacred Hopi lands

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Myself when I am foam

Sent this photo as a meme to Paul Asel, in line ahead of me at Coupa; I met Paul in 1982, at Richardson Hall, he picked for its intramural sports rep, I for its location.

Sent this photo as a meme to Paul Asel, in line ahead of me at Coupa; I met Paul in 1982, at Richardson Hall, he picked for its intramural sports rep, I for its location.

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Ledisi deserves her own tv show

When I was Stew's manager a reviewer said "sings better than Richard Pryor, is funnier than Jimmy Webb"

When I was Stew’s manager a reviewer said “sings better than Richard Pryor, is funnier than Jimmy Webb”


Ledisi singing a gospel song to the MLK character in “Selma” was a highpoint for me — I’ve written and talked about some of my disappointments with the film and that I look forward to the rumored MLK-biopic that will include cooperation from the estate and actual speeches and footage.

But I stand with Ledisi in protesting that the Grammy show used Beyonce and a chorus of dudes to sing “My Precious Lord”, the Mahalia Jackson song she covered digetically (in camera) in the film.

Sure, Beyonce is a star and I guess can pull rank, but Ledisi deserves some love beyond just a nom and decent seats at the telecast (and I admit I have no idea how the party scene plays out, never having been to the show).

A couple years before Ledisi was nominated for Best New Artist, I spoke to her booking agent about wanting to manage the singer, who had played with her Anibade project at my jazz series at Cubberley Center in Palo Alto, years before, in 1997.

Actually I wanted to reposition her as the black Lucille Ball; Or a Whoopi with pipes. I was impressed with how funny she was, in between songs, at Yoshi’s, mimicking some of her audience members, like a stand-up comic. I never saw her in “Beach Blanket Babylon” but I’m sure people who knew her then would agree she has an untapped comic touch.

So, let’s atone for last night’s snub by giving her a network, primetime variety show, or pilot at the least.

Also, when Ledisi played my venue I was asked to pay her in cash not check and I had her sign an autograph on the little money-garter-belt that the bills came wrapped in. As in: Ledisi = money.

She laughed. (But never really heard me out, years later, on the management thing. No worries. You, go!)

Link to today’s brouhaha.

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No waffling on Brown Sugar Kitchen

Mark, Terry, Maggie & Phil 2:51 on a Saturday

Mark, Terry, Maggie & Phil 2:51 on a Saturday


Terry, Maggie and I did not mind waiting 90 minutes to be seated Saturday at West Oakland’s famous Brown Sugar Kitchen especially since a, owner and hubby of the chef Tanya Holland Phil Surkis schmoozed us a bit during the delay and b, the chicken and waffles were as good as ever and the staff stayed on it until 90 minutes past their advertised 3 p.m. close to fit us in.

Phil also signed our copy of Tanya’s Chronicle Books opus, a cookbook, as if we could try this at home. We compared notes on our respective monologues; whether he was just being nice, he said he wanted to hear more about my comedic antipathy towards my former hoops adversary Jim Harbaugh, the star of my “Harbaugina Monologue”. And it is true, but hardly relevant, that a recent Palo Alto High principal named Phil Winston was reassigned after pestering co-eds, at an Eve Ensler event — a slippery slope for the high school crowd, with apple cider or maple syrup — “don’t you want to hear about your vagina?”

I sent Phil a cryptic text about Tabasco; then proceeded to answer my own query by trying to create savory beignets, and have the pictures to prove it. We also texted our friend the fellow former Palo Alto arts commissioner Ally Richter the rocket scientist about helping to plan a Delta fundraiser there, on Mandela Parkway “and we’ll get Ledisi to sing”.

At Tanya Hollands’ Brown Sugar Kitchen, the friend chicken doesn’t just sizzle, it sings.

Terry kicked me when I went into the part about meeting Bobbito Garcia there, and calling him a one-man, Latino Harlem Globetrotters act.

It took me a minute, like like in The Smashing Pumpkins, The Counting Crows and for a minute my client The Orange Peels, that the sugar kitchen is brown, not the sugar. The sugar, ironically enough is powder white.

Tabasco on beignets is bangin'

Tabasco on beignets is bangin’

I nearly rang the nearby Don Farnsworth, who I believe to be, before West Oakland, a famous Palo Alto artist. I may still. We also noted — and this is as much a book review as the food per se — Mildred Howard in the house. Or a mediated version of such. Can I mention here that I own a basketball signed by she and Walt Frazier?

The book features a preview by Michael Chabon and photos by Austin-based Jody Horton.

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These colors don’t run and gun

Paly beats Gunn by 20, behind the jingoistic rooters who arguably disgraced and dishonored our country, flag and national anthem

Paly beats Gunn by 20, behind the jingoistic rooters who arguably disgraced and dishonored our country, flag and national anthem

(I wrote the bulk of this Sunday morning but let it breath for a day before posting. I thought of the relative value of working behind the scenes to get traction on this, or just letting it go completely. Beyond my reaction, let’s keep in mind that there are about 2,000 people who either saw what I saw or saw it otherwise; I would prefer the kids to self-edit over being forced by an arbitrary authority, censorship. Consistent with my copious writings about Sean Berry — and the Gunn graffiti hate crime hoax — its probably better to do too little than too much).

i.
Jerry from Terry’s Aquinas Sunday crowd asked me about my cap: OBEY. I said that Shepherd Fairey is the Warhol of his generation, made a poster for Obama that was cartoon like with a pithy maxim, that none of us could recall just then, and that if he had ever heard of Andre the Giant, that there was also a set of stickers or posters or wheat-pasted messages that said first “obey the giant” and then simply “obey” and that “obey” in the context of my wardrobe probably translates to “dissent” more than “obey” in the way that “cool” can mean “hot’. And this was after trying to explain to the group that I was about to write an essay colorscomplaining about how the Palo Alto rooters sang “The Star Spangled Banner” that it did so in an exclusive and not inclusive way, that it was a taunt, and that in arguably was a dishonor and disgrace and not an act of Americanism or Patriotism. Words be tricky. The last thing I want is for the VWF crowd to attack me for attacking the flag. I was also going to go into a riff about how Huck Finn loves Jim even though he calls him “nigger”. Huck thinks he is going to hell for breaking the law, because the law of the land, at the time said Jim was not actually a person, but like I said, Huck thought Jim not just a person but a friend. okeh?*

ii.
One good thing about music, when it hits you feel no pain. (repeat; okeh I and I will: One good thing about music, when it hits you feel no pain) Bob Marley, “Trenchtown Rock”, circa 1970

Run and gun Bo Kimble led the nation with 35.3 ppg in 1988

Run and gun Bo Kimble led the nation with 35.3 ppg in 1988


iii.
Paly, #5 in CCS, beat Gunn, #23 in CCS, 70-51 behind Kevin Mullin’s 21, but that’s almost beside the points.

iv. Woody Guthrie has a lyric about when you get to the sign that says “no trespassing” there is often a verso that does not say that at all. We use that side.

v. These colors don’t run, a bumper sticker slogan about Old Glory, by Betsy Ross.
Run and Gun I think was invented or at least perfected by Bo Kimble and Hank Gathers, at Loyola Marymount circa 1990. In this context, and I will probably delete this from finished version, “these colors don’t run and gun” means that if you are 18 or 17 and want to use our national anthem and our flag as a taunt, against your neighbor, you better at least have read about periods of our history where power used race and class to repress the people, and why that is considered by most of us, today “un-american” (or “neo-Nazi”). I want to make sure the civics teachers at Paly know what they are or aren’t teaching. I am not asking for an intervention, I just want to make sure, for my share of the tax dollar, that these kids realize what they are saying, or how some of us hear it.

This is definitely the whitest slash winningest Paly team in years, that’s firsure. St. Francis is equally white, and probably even stronger! And J. Anthony Lukas, not necessarily writing about Danny Ainge, Larry Bird, John Havlicek and Kevin McHale, described race and class in Boston ingeniously, then 12 years later took his own life. Matt Bowling meanwhile, in 2012 said that in 1924, Palo Alto said “no” to the Ku Klux Klan here, although in 1951, Chief Howard A. Zink “struck out against” — meaning counter-attacked persons responsible for painting in red letters “KKK” at 398 Sheridan Avenue here, the Jerusalem Baptist Church. Chief Dennis Burns meanwhile, or in October, 2014, asked me whether it was the known White Supremacist J_ W_ of nearby Woodside who I call “the drunken German guy” who baited me along anti-Semitic lines at a candidates forum, W_ who Greg Betts, of Community Services Divison, said was disrupting cultural events at Lucie Stern center in recent years. Did J_ W_ suggest that Paly kids use the flag and anthem to taunt Brandynn Williams and dem?

Got a color TV, so I can see...Alex Gil play basketball; that's me in the fourth row, hand on chin

Got a color TV, so I can see…Alex Gil play basketball; that’s me in the fourth row, hand on chin

*”hope” — that is the message of the Shepherd Fairey Obama poster.

these colors were wheat-pasted

these colors were wheat-pasted


adendum: in my head at least I re-wrote an article about the three Gunn students, Keplinger Kincheloe and Kramer who put their initials in 50-foot white paint on the side of Spangenberg Auditorium in fall, 1978 and then tried to convince the Blacks Students Union and members thereof – their schoolmates — that they were just making a joke and were forming a different “KKK”. Hundreds of us gathered at brunch in the Bat Cave just out of earshot, watching the body language get increasingly intense; soon enough, chaos and violence. Nobody intervened for a while. Teachers and staff eventually separated the ten or so fights, each pitting black versus white. I can almost recall the name of the guy whose jaw was broken. And of course the three boys live on in infamy. I doubt the Paly kids realize that they are the heirs to this.

My main question: can you get thru two or three years at Paly and not realize that using “Star-Spangled Banner” and Old Glory as taunts gets you compared to: Lester Maddox, David Duke and Daniel Burros?

The leading scorer of the game was not Kevin Mullin of Paly but Alex Gil-Fernandez, with 21: our neighbor, and nephew of Javier and Jessie Gil. He is USA, fellas. He is All-Palo Alto. Maybe that’s his new nickname: Al Palo Alto. I’d even flash to Al-Palo Alto. Here is the scoring line as printed in the Merc although there is some wisdom in not fixating on the names per se:
Gill, 21; Agustin, 2; Davis, 4; Russell, 10; Lee, 2; D.Lee, 14; Dorhard, 1;
Dorward, 6; Rojahn, 19; Grandy, 8; Bicknell, 6; Mullin, 17; Dees, 6; Hull, 4; Svirsky, 5. BTW, same paper reports that Bellarmine beat St. Francis, I spotlight above, 37-36.

My riff about Wendell McKines is that in Jeremy Lin’s last home game, the Paly rooters were in a frenzy as the team routed Richmond, and I thought it remarkable that the visitors’ best player was disqualified for swearing while the home team used at least two arguably ineligible players. I thought: these kids are going to have a strange sense of entitlement.

and1: I don’t get to it here, not by a mile, but this is in consideration of my interest in “Adventures of Huck Finn” which is subject of a new promising book by Andrew Levy, on my list.

Here is PAW version of this:
Palo Alto celebrated its Senior Night with seniors Johnny Rojahn, Kevin Mullin, Alex Dees and Corey Bicknell combining for 48 points in a 71-54 nonleague win over visiting Gunn on Saturday night.

The Vikings improved to 17-4 while the Titans dropped to 14-3.

Rojahn had a solid all-around game with 19 points, six rebounds and five assists while Mullin added 17 points and seven assists after tying his career high with 35 points on Friday night in a win over Los Altos. Bicknell and Dees combined for 12 points while the Vikings made 52 percent of their field goals (26 of 50). Paly drained 11 three-pointers with Rojahn sizzling with a 5-for-7 effort from long range.

Gunn junior Alex Gil-Fernandez tallied a game-high 21 points.

More:
Allegedly fans in Lodi, California used “U.S.A.!” to taunt an opposing player based on his apparent ethnicity, as he stood at the free throw line. Which reminds me that a Pinewood girls player, maybe even their famous star, made chicken cackle noise as Gunn shot charity stripers Tuesday. And more to the point, Lynbrook rooters made monkey-noises briefly when a black Gunn player was subbed in, a few weeks back. His friends quickly cautioned him. It actually seemed like Gunn, at home Tuesday retaliated with similar bad-sportsmanship for a moment. But I think the idea of using a flag or a national anthem to divide not unite is a new development, as far as I’ve seen. We think we’ve come a long way since Dick Allen of the Phils in the Little Rock in 1963, the Jim Crow era.

vi: The Sixth Man part: Tom Dubois, a City Council member, I sat with, who says he coached AAU level kids on both side Saturday, said I should drop it and I replied in kind that maybe a remedy would be to raise a fund and fly out the Mingus Band to teach kids at both schools “Fables of Faubus” a 1957 song about the racist governor of Alabama who would not follow the Supreme Court and integrate University of Alabama. As perhaps a step in that direction, I posted (something about Mullin, elsewhere and) at the Paly press website:
What’s the deal with the “U.S.A! U.S.A!” cheer? You kids sound like Orval Faubus.
The flag and anthem are there to unite us, not divide us. Nice work!
In 1981, when a Gunn team I played on, okay I sat the bench, played St. Ignatius of San Francisco, for the CCS championship, at Maples Pavillion, Paly actually sent its band to join our band and fight, musically, the invaders from the North. It’s really hard to imagine Gunn and Paly kids working together on anything these days. Why is the rivalry now so bitter?
But the jingoism is pretty tacky. Don’t they teach history? (And Mr. Bloom is actually my Terman and Gunn schoolmate, Eric Bloom).
-Mark Weiss
Gunn class of 1982
Plastic Alto blog
– See more at: http://vikingsportsmag.com/featured-athlete/2015/02/07/boys-basketball-defeats-gunn-on-senior-night/#comment-52585

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Titan hoops bring momentum into Viking tilt

Gunn defeated Pinewood Thursday by 9 to create some momentum before their matchup Saturday versus the cross-town rival Paly. Gunn stands at 14-2, with a four-game winning streak. 69-60, I have it as.

Jonathan Davis drained a few key threes to keep the Titans ahead of the Panthers, nipping at their ankles. Chris Russell, who missed a squeaker victory Tuesday hosting Lynbrook, finally found his range and contributed a key bucket down the stretch.

Mostly the game was dominated, as typical, by the passing: Lee-Heidenreich to Gil-Fernandez to Lee-Heidenreich, et cetera. Andre Augustin along with Jonathan Davis did a decent job beating the press with the dribble.

Gunn also controlled the boards. At halftime, Gunn was up 22-9 on the boards, and had several offensive putbacks for goals.

Pinewood tried to foul their way back into the lead, but the strategy back-fired as the Titans hit their free throws. It is understandable if scouting reports confuse Gunn with the Butch Cassidy character in the movies who can only hit the target if he can move.

Alex Gil-Fernandez and Chris Russell both had lay-ins that thwarted the Panthers do or die defense. A few minutes earlier, one of the Lee-H brothers suffered a deep scratch on his face from an overzealous and under-groomed Panther. Hopefully he had a recent tetanus booster, our man in red.

Gunn can go 12 deep in its rotation. Although the dribbling is sometimes sketchy, at other times the passing game is jaw-dropping and poetic.

There’s a weird real estate sub-plot this week in that the Panthers play on a campus that is actually PAUSD property with a long ground lease — the former Fremont Hills elementary (my home turf for 5th and 6th, although we played outdoors and there was no gym). Meanwhile, a former Panther player and coach, Jason Peery has offered to build a new Paly gym.

If I reported previously that the Gunn-Paly matchup was at “The Titensity Taj Mahal” i.e. a home game, I think the schedule did list it as on Arastradero. Mel Froli, who has watched or called as many Gunn games as anyone, claims that Brandynn Williams, a former Paly player now coaching the SoPA Supers, wanted the switch so that he can ruin the Vikings farewell to their famous Pit.

I would say Gunn is a slight underdog going in, but can pull off a “W” with team play and a little patience and poise.

Another small subplot is that Gunn reserve Lukas Dorward has a younger brother who plays for the Vikes.

check back to see if I can link to the photos taken by a MaxPreps stringer named Doug Stringer.

also: city councilman Tom Dubois is likely to attend the game as he has a boy at Gunn in the band and coached several of the Titans and Vikings at AAU youth basketball, including Noah Steinbrenner, who I misidentified in a previous post.

and1: I caught about half of a radio broadcast 89.1 FM (M-A high) of Sequoia over Burlingame, 74-68. I was listening for news of Chris Bene who is the nephew of the former Menlo three-sport athlete Tony Fenwick. I first met Tony at Stanford basketball camp when we were 12 or 13. His kin seems like a D-1 prospect and went for 29 as his team is now 18-3.

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‘The Protest Singer’ a book about Pete Seeger

Alec Wilkinson’s excellent job handling the story of math genius Yitang Zhang in The New Yorker earned this plug from Plastic Alto, which is after all a culture journal more than math or policy.

With Bruce, at the Obama event:

edit to add: in for seventy million, in for 246, here is Alec Wilkinson making, for 246 seconds math look easy:

a month or so later: i recommend the Pete Seeger protest singer book in tandem with photo book by Christopher Felver, features Pete Seeger on cover.

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