Sunday, November 30, 2008

Matt on GAMEDAY!!!


Matt getting some airtime on ESPN -- #7 in the red jersey!

The Italian Football League has reached a new level of recognition as Catania Wide Receiver Matt Epperson appeared this Saturday on ESPN College Gameday! Well, maybe not actually appeared... let me explain:

ESPN College GameDay is the most popular college football preview show on television. Each week it is filmed on location at the campus hosting the biggest game of the week. The set is built so that fans can be seen behind the three hosts of the show, Chris Fowler, Lee Corso, and Kirk Herbstreit. Fans go absolutely crazy to be on GameDay, and make elaborate posters and flags to show their school colors. (In a semi-related story, the Washington State Cougar flag has appeared in all 76 GameDay episodes.)

This week, who should appear on screen other than Matt Epperson in his Mount Etna Lava Red home jersey for your Catania Elephants! Matt's brother Monte, who visited Catania this past season, is a student at Oklahoma State University and may or may not be involved in the sighting of Matt's poster. RPP plans on investigating the Epperson sighting, although at face value it is a clear sign of the Italian Football League's growing popularity in the United States.


But the big question remains -- will Lee Corso don the ELEPHANT HEAD next year when GameDay is filmed on location in Catania, Sicily?! Stay Tuned!
~ J. Twice

Thursday, November 27, 2008

AUSTRIA IN 2009!!!

THIS JUST IN:

I will be playing in AUSTRIA in 2009!!!

 This week I signed a contract to play for the Swarco Tirol Raiders in Innsbruck, Austria.  They are currently the #1 ranked team in all of Europe, having won the 2008 Eurobowl (Champions League) and playing in the 2008 Austrian Final.  I will be reunited with my teammate from last season in Catania, wide receiver Matthew Epperson, who signed with the team earlier this month.  Hopefully we can continue the aerial magic of the 2008 season!

The story of this decision is an interesting tale.  For the longest time, Christie and I hadn’t even considered returning to Europe a possibility.  After we had come home from Italy, we spent a month in Hawaii with family before heading to Los Angeles to pursue other business careers.

However, one day in early October I received a call from Raiders Head Coach Santos Carrillo, who offered to bring me out to Innsbruck for a weeklong recruiting trip.  Matt, unsure of whether or not I was returning to Innsbruck, was seriously considering playing in Austria and it was a great opportunity for me to at least check things out with a good friend.

The Home Stadium of the Raiders.

What I found in Austria was impressive to say the least.  The Raiders organization is one of the most professional in all of Europe, with three full-time American coaches, a junior program with over 300 youth players, and a commitment to excellence that would make Al Davis proud.  They have strong support within the community and excellent owners/sponsors.  The Raiders play in a state of the art soccer stadium (one of the sites for the Euro 2008 soccer championship) and all games are televised in Austria and streamed on the Internet.  I practiced three times with the team and was very impressed by their speed, ability, and knowledge of the game.  The level of football in Austria is considered to be the most competitive in all of Europe.  The country currently boasts the top three rated teams on the continent and an Austrian team has won the EuroBowl each of the last five years.  (Team Site: www.raiders.at)

 The 2008 EuroBowl Champion Raiders.

Innsbruck is located high in the Alps...

Off the field, the intriguing thing about Innsbruck was that it’s a completely different experience from what we did last year.  While Catania was all about the beach, this would be an Alpine experience – Innsbruck hosted the 1964 and 1976 Winter Olympics and sits in the middle of the Austrian Alps.  It is surrounded by some of the best skiing and winter sports available.  It is also centrally located in Europe, providing easy access to many of the places we did not get to explore last season, such as Eastern Europe and Scandinavia.  Everyone I came across in Innsbruck spoke excellent English, making communication (hopefully) much easier, and the food is an assortment of the best German, Italian, American, and Mediterranean styles.  Even more, I formed an instant bond with the other new imports, coaches, and national players – providing me an instance sense of comfort.

 

Colorful buildings line Innsbruck's river.

The Old Town of Innsbruck is filled with patios and history.

After much deliberation and prayer, Christie and I decided that the best opportunity for us at this point in our life was to play the 2009 season for the Raiders.  We are extremely excited about this upcoming season, and the opportunity to chase both an Austrian and EuroBowl championship.

In addition, our time in Austria gives Christie a chance to become involved in two of her favorite passions: television and cheerleading.  Christie will be hosting weekly TV segments that will air both in Austria and in the US.  These reports will give viewers a first-hand look at what it is like to play American Football in Europe and all the fascinating characters that play this game.  She will also assist the Raiders Cheerleading program, as they complete in the European Cheerleading Championships in Vienna in March.      

Playing in Catania gave me a whole new set of brothers...

... and was incredibly fun for my wife and I!

As for my friends in Catania, I wish them all the best in the 2009 season.  Leaving Catania last year was unbelievably hard for Christie and I.  It is embarrassing to admit but we cried like babies.  We have so many incredible friends there, and could not have been treated better.  I still keep in touch with many of my friends there, as well as corresponding frequently with George, who is headed back as Head Coach in 2009.  The good news is that we will be close, and plan on making a number of trips down to Sicily to visit! 

Some of my best friends in Catania - we'll be there to visit for sure!

On the field, Catania has signed three solid imports for the new season – Defensive Back Larry Atkinson (Nebraska-Omaha), Wide Receiver Taber LeMarr (Wyoming), and Quarterback Steve Panella (St. Mary’s, Canada.)  The trio played together last year in Finland, leading the PORVOO BUTCHERS (greatest mascot in the history of football?) to the championship.  If they are anything like the last player Catania signed from Finland (Matt Epperson), than the Elephants should be well equipped for a playoff run in 2009!

 

Finally, a number of family and friends have already asked the biggest question – WHAT ABOUT THE BLOG?  

 

Well, the blog is not going anywhere!  I consider this season a continuation of my European experience, and some (who will remain nameless) have already gone as far as to say that this decision was driven solely by the opportunity for new blog material.  In fact, I will not be changing the name or format of the blog – and will be expanding the blog even further this season as I chronicle my next football journey.

 

So stay tuned to REALLY PLAYING FOR PIZZA for another incredible adventure!

 

Arrivederci,

 

J. Twice

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Rick Steves on Iran

Iran doesn't sit in the best neighborhood, sandwiched between Iraq and Afghanistan.

When you begin brainstorming possible locations for your next holiday, I'm sure such standards as Maui, Mexico, and the Caribbean top the list.  If you are looking for something a little more exotic, maybe Australia, Thailand, or a few weeks in Europe.  Rarely would anyone even consider going to an often overlooked tourist hotspot called IRAN.  Then again, very few people are like European Travel Guru Rick Steves.

Rick Steves is European Travel.  His best-selling guidebooks (Europe Through the Back Door) and public television shows teach American travelers how to become 'temporary locals' and find hidden gems across the continent.  This past season, Rick was an invaluable guide to us, as George, Christie, and myself used his "2008 Best of Europe" guide to find such places as Cinque Terra, Prague, and Neushwanstein.  He makes a personal connection with readers through his sincerity, which is often tough to find with more commercial publishers.  Along the way we would encounter hundreds of fellow travelers, all clinging to his blue and yellow covered guidebooks as if they were the Bible.     Rick, like myself, comes from the Seattle area, having grown up in the small suburb of Edmonds.  His official bio reads like this:

Rick Steves grew up in Edmonds, Washington and studied at the University of Washington where he received degrees in Business Administration and European History. But his real education came in Europe — since 1973 he's spent 120 days a year in Europe. Spending one third of his adult life living out of a suitcase in Europe has shaped his thinking. Today he employs 80 people at his Europe Through the Back Door headquarters in Edmonds where he produces 30 guidebooks on European travel, the most popular travel series in America on public television, a weekly hour-long national public radio show, and a weekly column syndicated by the Chicago Tribune. Rick and his wife Anne have traveled each of the last 18 years with their two kids, Andy and Jackie.

A capacity crowd of around 300 people listened intently to Rick's hour long presentation on Iran, which included video clips and a photo slideshow from his recent trip.  The hour long special will air on public television in January 2009.

I randomly heard Rick was speaking this past Monday near Seattle so Christie and I decided to check it out.  When we arrived, the Sammamish High School Performing Arts center was packed with excited people ready to hear about his recent trip to Iran.  The event was sponsored by the World Affairs Council, a non-profit organization that provides a forum for speakers representing a diverse point of view.

At first I was a little curious, both to why Rick - the European Travel Specialist - would visit Iran, and secondly, how it is applicable to me.  Like most Americans, I knew next to nothing about Iran, other than they are somewhere in the Middle East and want to blow America up with nuclear weapons.  However, we learned that Rick had gone to Iran on a specific mission to film a television special and to 'humanize' the country that many of us fear.  What we heard left a lasting impression!    

One of the many fascinating Anti-American murals in Tehran, the country's capital.  

Rick's talk on Iran was both eye-opening and perspective changing.  He went to the country without an agenda - merely to travel it like he does any other European country, and to engage with the people.  He found them to be extremely friendly, and actually very fond/curious of Americans.  It seems that the Iranian people are not anti-American, it is more their Theocratic governments position and resentment for American involvement in the region.  Interesting facts I learned included:

1) Iranians are not Arab - they are PERSIAN.  They trace their ancestry back thousands of years before Christ to the Persian Empires.

2) The are not a 'free' people - their government is a Theocracy - meaning that it is driven by religious ideology.  The ironic thing that Rick found is that the methods of their government (strict rules on the dress of women) are done so to ensure morality.  They find Western culture's depiction of women (Bikini-driven advertising, Britney Spears videos) as offensive as Westerners find offense to making women cover up.  (Interesting side note - the fact that Iranian women can only reveal their faces leads to the most nose-jobs per capita in the world!)

3) Iran's traffic = Catania.  (One cab driver would shout out of his window, "Death to Traffic!")

4) At the end of the day, the Iranians are just people like us.  It would do a lot of good for all of us to try to understand each other, and see our similarities rather than our differences!

The man, the myth, the guidebook: posing with our European travel guru Rick Steves!  
(Like George, he's a University of Washington Grad - further proof that Huskies are good people!)

The one-hour special RICK STEVES' IRAN will air this January in every city in America on public television.  For more information on Rick's Iran Special, go to: www.ricksteves.com/iran.

I also recommend looking at his website (www.ricksteves.com) or consulting his guidebooks before planning any of your European travel!

~ J. Twice

Saturday, November 15, 2008

California Adventures (Continued)

The 18th at the Ritz Carlton Ocean Course in Half Moon Bay.

The last few weeks have marked many fun times along our continuing "GREAT CALIFORNIA ADVENTURE."  Our latest journey took us to the Monterey Peninsula for good times with our family and for an amazing 35-34 shootout victory by the PLU Lutes over Menlo College.

The white sand beach at carmel was stunning!  (As was my wife :-)

The 17-mile drive between Monterey and Carmel takes you to Pebble Beach, America's top golf course.  It is filled with million dollar views (and homes) along rocky cliffs and sparkling blue water.

Pebble Beach was built in 1919 and has taken its place as one of the most famous courses in the world.  The AT&T Pro-Am takes place here every year and has also hosted numerous US Opens and other major tournaments.  It will host the 2010 US Open.

Lunch overlooking the 18th green is spectacular.  (Side Salad = $22)

Christie, Mom, Dad, and myself in front of the 18th green - the best finishing hole in golf.

SAN FRANCISCO - PART TWO

Mom and Dad above the Golden Gate.

With PLU playing in the Bay Area, we made our way to San Francisco a few days early to hang out with my recently retired parents.  We did the usual tourist things, such as clam chowder on Fisherman's Wharf, coffee in Sausalito, and going to the Golden Gate lookout.  We also traveled down the coast on Highway 1, weaving through some incredible beach side towns (Pacifica, Half Moon Bay) that I never even knew existed!  It was, dare I say, GOOD TIMES! 

Just another deserted beach fifteen miles south of San Fran.

The Golden Gate bridge.

We joined the PLU football team for a tour of Stanford's remodeled football stadium.  When I played there in 2002, it was an ancient, spacious 80,000 stadium that rarely filled over half way.  It has since been remodeled to reduce capacity to an intimate and intense 55,000.  Awesome!

FRESNO

Rees holding up his first trophy - proving to me without a shadow of a doubt that you don't have to teach kids to love winning... it is genetically built into us!

My brother Chad and his wife were going out of town for 3 days, so they asked "Aunt Christie and Uncle Jason" to come watch the kids.  We had an incredible time hanging out with our two nephews - Rees, 3.2, and Cole, 1.5.  I also am in favor of everyone stating their ages rounded to the nearest decimal point.

Rees and Cole hanging out after Rees' last soccer game.  Cole's first word was "ball."


On Halloween, we took the kids to a carnival at a local church.  Cole was stunning as a horse and Rees, keeping with family tradition, went as a quarterback!

All in all, it has been a fabulous time with family and friends.  We are now headed to Seattle for Thanksgiving and for other business opportunities.  Cheers!

~ J. Twice