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Sports

TWO GAMES – Baseball & Financial Education

by Jayne Johnson on February 5, 2009

This post is about two games – the sport of baseball and another game, one you could call the “financial education game.”

FIRST, BASEBALL

I am a baseball fan. Have been all my life. I used to watch the games with my Dad on a tiny RCA television way back in the day. That was the day when both the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants were both still located in New York!

Both teams soon moved out West, as did our family. Pure coincidence, I assure you!

In the summer of 1962 I had the fantastic opportunity to go to a baseball game with my friend Betty Jo. Her Dad drove us up to L.A., to Chavez Ravine, aka Dodger Stadium.

We watched the Los Angeles Dodgers play the San Francisco Giants and what luck! Sandy Koufax, my hero, was pitching that day. The Dodgers won 11-2. How do I remember the score? Have no idea! All I can say is that it was an historic experience for me.

I loved the Dodgers and listened to the games on my little transistor radio every night. I was supposed to be sleeping… school the next day and all… but I listened to every game. I did that for 2 or 3 years, in the early sixties.

I knew all the players’ names and their jersey numbers. They were all my heroes but Sandy Koufax was my favorite.

I loved Vin Scully too. He was the announcer for the Dodgers, and he was the best. He holds the record for the longest consecutive service of any current major league broadcaster for one team. Vin Scully is now 81 years old and still announcing for the Dodgers!

Fast forward to the late sixties and there I am watching a brand new Major League Baseball team, the San Diego Padres. It was May 1969, and I’ll always remember it. It was my first date with Ted, a fellow baseball fan and oh, as it turned out, my soon-to-be husband! I was so happy to be able to share the joy of baseball with someone who loved it as much as I did. It was the first of many games we attended, and we had great seats too – right behind home plate. That’s because Ted’s Dad had season tickets, so you see, my “baseball family tree,” which includes both my kids too, is a pretty big tree.

When I saw the movie “Bull Durham” (1988) with Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins, I loved it. At the beginning of the movie when Susan’s character Annie describes why she loves the game, I could relate.

A BASEBALL MOVIE ABOUT HARD FINANCIAL TIMES AND FORECLOSURE

Though “Bull Durham” was entertaining, Kevin Costner’s next movie was right up my alley: “Field of Dreams” (1989), a movie that can legitimately be described as one of the most perfect combinations of spirituality and sports ever made.

Ironically, it’s also a movie about facing hard financial times and foreclosure!

In this one video clip we have both sides of the story. Costner’s character Ray is being told by his brother-in-law:

“Ray, when the bank opens in the morning, they will foreclose. You’re broke, Ray. You sell now or you lose everything.”

In the same clip we have James Earl Jones’ character’s incredible oration on baseball and how following your dreams will lead to prosperity.

Fast forward again, this time to Fall 2001. Best-selling author Robert Kiyosaki had just finished presenting a 3-day seminar up at the Carefree Resort, just north of Phoenix, Arizona. A group of us, including Robert & his wife Kim, were celebrating at a Mexican Restaurant after the seminar.

The TV was on and blasting full force. No one in the whole restaurant was eating. No one was doing anything except watching the most miraculous series of events unfold. The Arizona Diamondbacks were playing the New York Yankees, THE dynasty in Major League Baseball, in the seventh and final game of the World Series. The two teams were tied at 3 games each so whichever team won this game won the 2001 World Series. Amazing game, won in the 9th inning by the D’backs in spectacular fashion. Read about it.

Well, that’s the short version of the part of my life called baseball. If you asked me WHY I love it so much, I swear to you, I could not tell you. I don’t know why. I just do.

SANDY KOUFAX AND OTHERS SWINDLED BY MADOFF

So all that said, it was sad to see the headline this morning on espn.com – an article about Sandy Koufax and other baseball folks being among those swindled by Bernard Madoff. The damage this man has done reaches far and wide. It’s astounding.

But this post is no comment on Sandy Koufax or anyone else. My compassion goes out to ALL who’ve lost their money. There are people who have lost their entire fortunes. They went from being wealthy to scrambling for a dime, some trying to get a job as a greeter at Wal•Mart.

An enormous amount of trust was placed in this man Madoff, by a multitude of people, many of whom were business-savvy. Perhaps there’s only so much you can do but I still feel that raising one’s financial IQ is one of the best forms of insurance.

THE FINANCIAL EDUCATION GAME AND HOW TO WIN IT!

Coincidentally, the same morning I see the headline about Sandy Koufax, I received an email from the Rich Dad Company about Robert Kiyosaki’s FREE online book, Conspiracy of the Rich – The 8 New Rules of Money. Read Chapter 1

I understand that there are no guarantees in this world. But the best insurance in the financial arena is financial education, in my opinion. Doesn’t mean everything is going to be perfect all the time, but to put the odds squarely in your favor, financial education is the way to go.

Check out Chapter 1 of Conspiracy of the Rich -The 8 New Rules of Money. Robert Kiyosaki is the best-selling author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, a book that has been on the NY Times Business Best Seller List for over 6 years. Robert has written many other books, all of which have valuable information to offer.

“THE NEW WEALTH IS KNOWLEDGE — IT ALWAYS HAS BEEN KNOWLEDGE”

Two insightful quotes from Robert:

• “Learning is actively seeking new information”
• “The new wealth is knowledge — it always has been knowledge.”

Whether you study Robert Kiyosaki and Kim Kiyosaki, or Donald Trump, or Warren Buffet, someone else, or ALL of them, the point is, protect your family and your future by continuing to increase your financial education.

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Jennifer Hudson – God Bless Her

by Jayne Johnson on February 2, 2009

Interesting development.

I posted this morning about what a fantastic job Jennifer Hudson did in singing the National Anthem at the Super Bowl yesterday.

Just read some news that she was lip-synching.

I’m positive that she didn’t want to lip-synch but according to the report, the show’s producer insisted.

Jennifer’s mother, brother and 7-year old nephew were murdered in October. Can you imagine dealing with such a magnitude of tragedy? The show’s producer was looking out for her, to make sure her first public performance since October was perfect, and to make her feel safe and secure.

And it was perfect. Her voice was stunningly beautiful, and I’m not retracting one word of my earlier post.

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Watch Jennifer Hudson, former American Idol contestant and Oscar Winner for “Dream Girls” as she sings the U.S. National Anthem at the Super Bowl yesterday.

She did a beautiful rendition – one of the best ever. The elegance and grace she displays is inspiring also. She seemed to have a tinge of fear – who wouldn’t, singing for gazillions of viewers? But she was wonderful, and I say Bravo! After the last notes, which were stunning, she appeared relieved, as the look on her face seemed to say with utmost humility and reverence, “Thank You, God.” It was very sweet, and so is she. This is worth watching. The inspiration of music at its best.

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PGA Professional Golfer J.P. Hayes has been getting national attention for his act of honesty.

Last week Hayes realized that, while playing in a PGA tournament, he had inadvertently used a golf ball that was not on the list of officially-approved balls.

From a story on ESPN.com where Hayes turns himself in:

“Hayes had a choice: He could have said nothing and kept playing, with no one aware of his mistake. Or he could turn himself in and let his mistake cost him a 2009 PGA Tour card.

He chose the latter.”

His act of honesty means that Hayes is disqualified from playing in PGA Tournaments in 2009.

I first heard about this as I was driving and listening to two local sports radio guys discuss/argue about it.

One guy was OK with what Hayes did. “OK” means, you know, OK if he did turn himself in and OK if he didn’t.

The other argued passionately that Hayes should not have turned himself in, his reasoning being that:

A) no harm was done
B) Hayes would not ever have gotten caught

A radio caller acknowledged Hayes for demonstrating such a high level of integrity. The caller also said it was rather sad that an act of honesty would cause such amazement.

In the video below you can see that J.P. Hayes is pretty amazed, himself!

Interestingly, the radio guy against Hayes turning himself in could not hear what the caller was saying. So entrenched in his own rightness, there was no room in his paradigm to grasp the caller’s viewpoint.

What amazed me was the sports radio guy arguing against Hayes’ act of turning himself in, all the while completely oblivious to how dishonest he sounded as he made his points. Listening to him, you could think, “Uh, wouldn’t want to be your wife!

Well, no sense being righteous about it. The remedy is to ask, “When have I done that or something like that?” Acknowledging that allows for taking responsibility instead of getting in an uproar about how someone else is wrong about something. It’s a good lesson.

As for the issue at hand, kudos to J.P. Hayes! Your act of integrity is a gift to all of us!

From espn.com – “J.P. Hayes Disqualifies Himself From PGA Tour Event

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The World Series, Major League Baseball’s own Octoberfest, started Wednesday, and the Cinderella Team, aka, the Tampa Bay Rays, lost to the Philadelphia Phillies.

The Phillies are a powerful team, loaded with talented athletes so it was no surprise. Just a little disappointing if you’re a Fairy Tale-ending kinda person.

Fortunately, any disappointment was short-lived, as Game 2 rolled around the very next evening, and the Rays beat the Phillies in stunning fashion – by making outs instead of by getting hits or hitting home runs.

Completely unorthodox, and how refreshing is that?!

Rays Game 2

By the way, the manager of the Rays, 54-year old Joe Maddon, sports a mohawk under his baseball cap, my only point being that unorthodox tactics in playing the game itself would not be all that surprising. Are you with me?

I never claimed to be an impartial sports reporter. I’m rooting for the Rays all the way.

But I will say this. Growing up on the East Coast in the 1950′s, I used to watch baseball games on TV with my Dad. His team was the New York Giants (moved to San Francisco in 1958), and the Giants were (and still are) in the National League.

The Tampa Bay Rays are in the American League, clearly demonstrating that I’ll root for the Cinderella Team all day long, no matter National or American League.

This is a great story unfolding. Lots of fun – for all ages!

Picture 6

Read the whole story at espn.com – this is an excellent article for baseball fans and non-fans alike!

How do you feel about a Cinderella Team? How do you feel about being unorthodox in your game play? Leave us a comment!

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