November 29, 2007
First and Way, Way Long
Some academic football coaches can inspire their students to great things year after year, like Serra's Rich Bowen, McKeesport's George Smith, or Penn State's Joe Paterno (who, as Alert Reader Jonathan points out, apparently plans to coach until he's
just a floating head in a jar).
Other coaches are like Coach Chuck Flannery, our football analyst and a guest on my radio show a few weeks ago:
Listen: "Sports Parade" with Coach Chuck Flannery (3.2 MB, MP3)
. . .
Speaking of Football: Can you take one more comment on the Steelers-Dolphins game the other night? No? Well, too bad.
WKHB's Barry Banker said Tuesday morning that "all the field needed was a fence, and it would have made a nice pigsty." That's the most accurate description I've heard yet.
In retrospect, Josh Yohe's column in Monday night's
Daily News seems eerily prescient.
Yohe wrote about Gateway's heart-breaking 35-34 overtime loss to Central Catholic. Central's victory was clinched when Gateway's kicker missed a point-after-touchdown.
Wrote Yohe: "I found it peculiar that one of the best kickers in the WPIAL would have missed his target ... I suspected that the infamous Heinz Field grass had something to do with (Ryan) Lichtenstein's inability to do something that he can probably do with his eyes closed."
According to Yohe, who says he snuck out onto the field immediately after the game, the turf was so muddy, wet and uneven he had trouble walking on it, even in hiking boots.
Lichtenstein "was literally kicking on a sheet of mud and water. If the Rooneys ever grow out of this old-fashioned, traditionalist crap and install some Field Turf, it's conceivable to assume that Gateway might be the WPIAL champion today."
Of course, all that happened before the Steelers laid the sod, and God brought the deluge.
And anyway, I don't know if "woulda, coulda, shoulda" will make you Gateway Gators fans (like
Dr. Bob Kelso) feel any better.
. . .
On a Related Note: Some people are saying that the WPIAL games shouldn't have been played at Heinz Field in the first place, because they damaged the turf.
To quote that great philosopher, Sherman Potter, "Horse-hockey." That field was built with taxpayer money after taxpayers specifically said they didn't want to use tax money to build it. As far as I'm concerned, any public group that wants to use Heinz Field should be allowed, from the Allegheny Intermediate Unit to the Wilmerding YMCA.
Besides, other cities play their high school football championships at the local pro stadium, including in Boston. (The difference being that the Patriots' stadium has artificial turf.)
I'm not sure we should be playing high school games at a pro stadium because I don't know if I like the message it sends. We spend so much time telling student-athletes that they should get an education, then we rush to add the trappings of pro sports to their games.
The WPIAL championships used to be played at high school stadiums. If neutral sites are necessary, then maybe the WPIAL should use smaller college stadiums (like Robert Morris' and Carnegie Mellon's) or Pittsburgh city league stadiums.
Defenders will say that playing in a WPIAL championship is the only time most students will ever get to play in a pro stadium.
True. But playing high school football is the last time they'll ever get to be a kid. I know some of them --- like Jeannette's star
Terrelle Pryor --- look like adults, but they're not. We need to stop rushing them out of childhood.
And we need to stop commercializing high school football like college football was commercialized decades ago.
Oh, and the Rooneys seriously need to fix that field. "Pigsty" was generous.
November 27, 2007
Something New Blooming in White Oak
A longtime local business will be relocating to a new building come spring.
Breitinger's Flowers is constructing a new store at the intersection of Cool Springs Road and Route 48 in White Oak. Owner Russell Breitinger expects the building to be complete in March or April; the exact date of the move isn't yet known.
As Breitinger points out, it also may take several months for the landscaping --- an important tool for marketing a flower shop --- to be complete.
The current store on McKeesport's Versailles Avenue near Patterson Avenue is for sale.
. . .
In a field dominated by large chains, Breitinger's stands out as a locally-owned, family-run business. The shop was founded just after World War II by Herbert Breitinger, a 1938 graduate of McKeesport High School who was inducted into its hall of fame in 2004.
According to a 2004 interview, after leaving the Army in 1945, Breitinger borrowed $500 from his cousin Bill Craig, founder of Craig Funeral Home on Versailles Avenue, to start the flower shop as a one-man operation. He closed the shop each day so he could make deliveries himself.
Herb Breitinger died in March 2006, aged 85. His son Russ Breitinger joined the firm in 1979; it currently has eight to 10 employees. Though privately owned and not required to release sales figures, Dun & Bradstreet estimates the store's annual business is in the half-million dollar range.
Now, Breitinger's joins a decade-long trend of retail and professional businesses in the city relocating to neighboring White Oak, many of them to spots along Lincoln Way.
Breitinger's purchased the Cool Springs property in 2004, and Russ Breitinger said he debated the move for "three or four years."
. . .
A number of factors led to Breitinger's decision. The current shop is located in an old single-family home and a garage across an alley; workspaces and storage areas are on six different floors in two different buildings.
"I'm going to be 50 years old," Breitinger said, "and I'm tired of walking up and down stairs." Building a new store on one level will increase the business' efficiency, Breitinger said.
A lack of easy parking at the present location --- the store shares a lot with the Viking Lounge --- and a relatively small amount of walk-in trade hurts the business, Breitinger said.
The corner lot on Route 48 is a heavily trafficked, highly visible location that will allow Breitinger's to build its "cash-and-carry" business, he said.
One not unimportant factor was a conscious decision to move away from Versailles Avenue, Breitinger said. Once a prosperous mix of private homes, professional offices and neighborhood shops, many storefronts are now empty and foot traffic is light. Female employees and wedding planners sometimes feel threatened coming to the neighborhood alone at night, he said.
"The area is not the best right now," Breitinger said, "and we don't feel like we can do nighttime hours."
He's quick to note, however, that the Viking Lounge has been a good neighbor; the store abuts the local landmark and popular nightspot.
. . .
Russ Breitinger is excited about the new building, and especially the chance to increase the store's walk-in trade. The new store is set at an angle to the highway --- all the better to increase its frontage --- and will provide Breitinger's with the chance to jump on special promotional offers from suppliers "at the drop of a hat," he said.
Breitinger's Flowers currently delivers to most of the Mon-Yough area, from West Homestead north of the city to Buena Vista in the south, and then from Swissvale west of McKeesport to North Huntingdon in the east.
Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Saturday. The store's website is at BreitingersFlowers.com
November 26, 2007
Excelsior, You Fathead!
(Above: Jean Shepherd photo taken in 1966 at WOR radio, New York, courtesy flicklives.com)
I see the neon Christmas decorations are back in the press room windows of the Daily News Building on Lysle Boulevard. Huzzah! If we have nothing else for which to thank Richard Mellon Scaife after his purchase of the great, gray lady of Walnut Street, we can thank him for that.
You'll remember that last Christmas, for the first time in memory, the decorations weren't put up, possibly as an austerity move.
The same week that the Tribune-Review Publishing Co. took control of the
News, I noticed that the American flag was once again flying from the roof of the building (along with a Commonwealth of Pennsylvania flag!), and that the sign was lit again at night.
Thank you,
Daily News, and thank you,
Tribune-Review. We noticed. The efforts to pretty up the corner of Walnut and Lysle are much appreciated, because Downtown needs all the cheer it can get.
Some other Downtown property owners could take a lesson from their stewardship (and I'm looking at you,
Don Farr Moving ... the old
G.C. Murphy Home Office on Lysle Boulevard across from the bus terminal is a disgraceful mess).
. . .
P.S.: The clock on the "Daily News" sign used to be tied to a set of electrically-controlled bells on the roof that struck the hours with the "
Westminster chimes." I think the workings are still on the third floor, or possibly in the equipment room on the roof.
I don't suppose we could get that fixed, too? OK, I'm pushing my luck.
. . .
Shepherd's Pie: Since the "holidays" have now been firmly crammed down our throats, I decided to take a look at Jean Shepherd, the man behind the movie "A Christmas Story."
He's the topic of
today's installment of the "Monday Morning Nostalgia Fix" over at
Pittsburgh Radio & TV Online.
. . .
Correction, Not Perfection: Alert Reader Deane points out I goofed up the date of the
McKeesport Model Railroad Club's holiday train show. It starts this Friday, not last Friday.
As a dues-paying member, what a stupid mistake for me to make!
Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.
I also thought that the Downtown "Salute to Santa" parade was this past Saturday, but I was off by a week. (It was Nov. 16.) That's why I didn't post anything in advance. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
Please don't get me anything for Christmas, but if you wanted to get me something, a calendar would be helpful. It's easier to wrap than a
pimp slap, which is what I really need sometimes.