march madness 2011

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Better Together

And so we wrap up this year’s madness with a two-way tie for first place, an unprecedented outcome for the Wine With Friends bracket.  Though Melanie and I have shared much over our near decade of friendship: a Geology class and a Pledge Class, cabs in NYC, countless meals, flights to DC, two addresses, an unrelenting love for cardigans, trashcan lid nachos, hours of laughter and a few tears as well, and, of course, that one infamous noise violation… I am happy to add one more thing to our list.

To the friend who brings over flowers when you get into an “incident” involving an 18 wheeler…

To the friend who annually offers to send out the Evite for your birthday so you don’t have to…

To the friend who knows pretty much everything about you and loves you anyway…

Congrats Mel! 

Tange and Smel - Klop's Nuptials - April 2009

Smel and Tange - After carving our names in the wall at The Chicken - Pi Phi Reunion 2007

Tange and Smel (and fly and crab) - Eating crab was not Mel's favorite part of our trip to DC - August 2008

Ray, Smel and Tange - Ready for a Mule ride - May 2009

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Ode to Professor Stein

Enduring Professor Stein’s statistics class was in many ways a rite of passage at A&M.  I thoroughly enjoyed the class because the man was clearly unstable and I found his instability somewhat entertaining and, if I'm being honest, a bit endearing.  Stein used an owl puppet, Spot, to teach the class.  I empathize with his fear of speaking in front of large (or any) groups.

In honor of Professor Stein, of all that I learned in INFO 303 and of Excel which calculated all of this information for me, I present you statistics on our 2011 bracket:





Count of teams selected by Wine With Friends participants to win:
Kansas
9
Ohio State
8
UNC
5
Pittsburgh
4
Duke
2
Florida
1
Notre Dame
1
Purdue
1
San Diego
1
Syracuse
1
  
Statistics:
Mean
136.8181818
Median135
Mode
123
Range91
Minimum84
Maximum175

Schools Represented in previous/current Wine with Friends Brackets:
Alabama
Arkansas
Baylor
Duke
Florida
Furman
Georgia
LSU
NYU
Oklahoma
Ole Miss
Richmond
SMU
Stetson
TCU
Texas
Texas A&M
Utah
Vanderbilt
Wake Forest

Careers Represented in previous/current Wine with Friends Brackets:
Accountants
Artists
Bible Study Leaders
Brain Surgeons (Ok, it’s a bit of a stretch, but shout out to Sarah Monning!)
Child Abduction Preventers
Consultants
Graphic Designers
IT Auditors
Journalists
Lawyers
Loan Repackagers (Right Amy?)
Nurse Practitioners
Physical Therapists
Students
Teachers
Tutors

Places of Origin Represented in previous/current Wine with Friends Brackets:
Alabama
Arkansas
Canada (Anna, thanks for taking us international.)
Florida
Georgia
Louisiana
Mississippi
Missouri
Oklahoma
Texas
Utah

Other miscellaneous facts about previous/current Wine with Friend Bracket participants:
-One contestant will only allow her alarm clock to be set to an odd number.
-One contestant has not had a carbonated beverage since 8th grade.
-One contestant has been in a body cast.
-One contestant’s parents keep the remains of her cremated dog on top of their refrigerator.
-One contestant is so scared of the dark that she refuses to close her eyes when she washes her face.
-One contestant secretly wishes her name was Svetlana.
-If one contestant could participate in ANY Olympic sport, she would pick rhythmic gymnastics.
-Another contestant would argue that rhythmic gymnastics is a competition, not a sport.


1 - WikiQuestions.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Sweet 16 Have Been Announced

NCAA Selection Committee Announces Sweet 16: 'It's The Teams That Won Last Weekend'

March 23, 2011

INDIANAPOLIS—The 10 members of the NCAA Selection Committee reconvened in Indianapolis late Sunday to select this year's Sweet 16 participants, announcing they had chosen the teams that, at the end of last weekend, had won their first- and second-round games. "There were many deserving programs out there, but we decided to go with the teams that won," said committee chairman Gene Smith, noting that because they had been victorious, Duke, UConn, Wisconsin, and the other thirteen selectees would continue playing in the NCAA Tournament, whereas the teams that lost would not. "We know there's going to be some controversy about including Richmond and Butler, but you can't deny that they won. And while we did consider some NIT participants and some other bubble teams, in the end we had to acknowledge that none of them had won any NCAA Tournament games this year." Smith added that committee members would meet again after Friday's games to pick who will play in the Elite Eight, saying they would probably weight their decisions in favor of teams that win in the Sweet 16. 

http://www.onionsportsnetwork.com/articles/ncaa-selection-committee-announces-sweet-16-its-th,19799/

Shout out to Angie Fleshman and Lauren Parma for picking Richmond... unbelievable.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Who should you root for?

LC, our resident basketball expert, informed me that ESPN released a pretty incredible flowchart to help determine which team you should root for this March Madness.  I'm still looking for the line that leads to Texas A&M...  Enjoy!

ESPN Bracket Flowchart

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Guest Blog: lcblogs

My dear friend, LC (Lauren Cowling), in that parenthetical order, is somewhat obsessed with POTUS... so I asked her to marry this obsession with the tournament.  Consider yourself more informed--about America and about the tournament:



Which POTUS has the best shot at his alma mater claiming victory this March?
James K. Polk. 

By: Lauren Cowling [www.lcblogs.com]

Who else could make a run? Gerald R. Ford and Bill Clinton.

Polk, the small mulleted man who served as the Governor of Tennessee and as Speaker of the House before becoming POTUS, is an 1818 graduate of the University of North Carolina.  Clinton is a graduate of Georgetown and Ford, a former football player for the University of Michigan.

UNC is a two-seed in the East and  is coming off a pretty bad loss to Duke in the finals of the ACC Tournament Championship. So, what do these Tar Heels have in common with Polk?

Not Terrible:  Polk, before even garnering the Whig nomination for President in 1844 Polk vowed to only serve one term and set up four clear goals to accomplish. And that he did. Thus, making him not terrible.

UNC is considered one of the most successful college basketball programs of all-time. They’ve won five national championships and are number three on the all-times win list for Division I men’s basketball. Thus, making the program not terrible.

Storied rivalry: Polk, though efficient and effective during his term, was not without a thorn in his side. Enter: Henry Clay, the “Great Compromiser” and one of the greatest men to ever serve in the United States Senate (and House).  If you wanted something accomplished or passed, you needed Clay on your side. Or, you had to go through Clay to get it done.  Polk barely edged out Clay for the Whig Party’s nomination in 1844. Polk even lost his home state of Tennessee to Clay.

UNC is no stranger to hatred. Enter Duke.  Eight miles apart from each other and no love lost. For either team to win a championship of any kind they have to beat each other—usually three times in a season, if not more.  UNC leads the rivalry 131-101.

UNC gets the nod for “more” in every major success category, but ACC Tournament Championships.  However, to a lot of people Duke has more prestige and is hated more. Much like Henry Clay is considered to be more successful and prestigious, but numbers don’t lie. UNC has five NCAA Championships, to Duke’s four. And Polk? Well, he was President and Clay wasn’t. (The Missouri Compromise didn’t even last that long anyway.)


That one thing: Polk’s hair, which was a mullet, is his one thing most people actually know about.

And UNC? Well, they’ve got that Michael Jordan guy as their one thing.

Ford and Clinton’s teams have a few things in common with their most notable alumni as well.  Ford, an extremely well liked Congressman was never supposed to be President. He just kept getting bumped up the ladder. And Michigan? Well, they aren’t supposed to be fully recovered from their NCAA sanctions yet. Will Ford’s happen chance at the Presidency parlay this young Michigan team into the Final 4 only a few years after being banned from tournament play all-together?

Clinton tasted success young and never backed down from a challenge. Plus, his political successes ultimately led to the political successes of his wife, Hillary Clinton, current Secretary of the State. Georgetown, always the fighter and always a tough opponent to Big East foes gained notability in the 1980s through their legendary coach, John Thompson. Their current coach? Well, his name is John Thompson III and he’s Thompson’s son. My guess is he got the job the job thanks to Daddy-O. Kind of like Hillary. But, hey—a win’s a win.

So, there you have it.
It’s James K. Polk for the win.

Survey Says...

We will have 5 winners this year!  The breakdown:

1st Place:
1650%
2nd Place:
825%
3rd Place:
514%
4th Place:
38%
Last Place:
13%




Sunday, March 13, 2011

A New Year

Much has happened since the culmination of the 2010 NCAA March Madness festivities so before the 2011 games commence, I want to take a few minutes to reflect back on the past year.  As Bonhoeffer in his wisdom would say, “just as the capacity to forget is a gift of grace, so memory, the recalling of lessons we have learnt, is also a part of responsible living.”  Here we go:

…BP inadvertently did a stand up PR job for the auditing profession.  We [collectively] warned them:  you built too fast without proper procedures… you can’t ignore the fire alarms… you need to have a contingency plan for when things go wrong.  But they disregarded our audit findings.  They laughed at our action plans.  I hate to use the words “epic fail” but… Lesson Learned:  The chance that my line of work actually matters is one in a million billion but there is that one.

http://www.thedailygreen.com

…In an effort to cut back on travel expenses due to the now global economic crisis, only nominations for incarcerated individuals were considered for this year's Noble Peace laureate.  Lesson Learned:  If the economy is not doing well and you want to be a contender for the Noble Peace Prize, move to a communist country and promote democracy.



…After years of pent-up jealousy over the Kardashian's incessant press, North Korea decided they wanted in on the attention so they launched a few artillery shells south.  Unfortunately, the Kardashian/Jenner family Christmas card was released the next day.  Lesson Learned:  Americans are more impressed by Kardashians than by weapons of mass destruction.
www.anythinghollywood.com

…First Facebook inadvertently legalized stalking.  Then Facebook made it possible for you to farm online, inside, at any given hour of the day.  This year Facebook took it to a new level by instigating multiple revolutions.  Lesson Learned: Oprah is not the most powerful person in the world, Mark Zuckerburg is.
www.gwaker.com

…Charlie Sheen.  There is not anything even remotely redeemable about this train wreck currently unfolding.  Maybe next year.

And so, March Madness 2011 begins.