Dayton Daily News

Year of golf balls, oddballs, watches, pants

- By Fred Lief

Sometimes the general managers and player personnel directors on Mount Olympus look down on some lucky soul and declare: This is your moment.

Consider Dale Cohen, 62, a shift worker at a plastics company and a golfer from Findlay. He made two holesin-one in the same round. He used an 8-iron both times on a rainy day. The odds of two aces in the same round are estimated at 67 million to 1.

“I hit the lottery but didn’t get paid,” he said. “That’s OK. I’ll take it.”

Then again, the executives on Mount Olympus are a fickle bunch. Houston Astros shortstop Carlos Correa was having a massage in his home and wound up with a fractured rib. The massage New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft was having in a Florida shopping mall also didn’t work out so well, although his ribs remained intact.

Sports in 2019 took us to unexpected venues: The Vatican formed a track team, complete with nuns and Swiss Guards; the world’s No. 1 bridge player was suspended for failing a drug test; and a French basketball player in China was fined not for taking a knee during the Chinese anthem but for not casting his eyes on the flag.

By turns, it was a year that could be baffling, enriching and icily satisfying.

At the Tour de France, world time trial champion Rohan Dennis simply vanished during the first stage. Afterward, he didn’t want to talk about it. Said team director Gorazd Stangelj: “We are also confused.”

Roger Federer has been the gold standard in tennis.

Now this is more than metaphor. His face is to be minted on Swiss currency. He will be featured on one side of a 20 franc silver coin hitting a one-handed backhand.

In 2001, a Canadian Football League fan vowed to wear only shorts until his Winnipeg Blue Bombers won the championsh­ip. Chris Matthew withstood the prospect of frost bite for nearly two decades. His team finally won it all this season, and his wife is pleased. “Now,” he told CTV News, “if we need to go somewhere where pants are required, we can actually go there.”

There were other scrums and scrambles:

FROM RUSSIA, WITH SHOVE: It’s not easy being a referee, especially in Russia. The soccer club Akhmat Grozny used its public address system to insult the referee with an expletive, drawing cheers from the crowd . ... The coach of the hockey team Amur Khabarovsk was furious over a penalty-kick call and threatened to set fire to the referee’s car. Coach Alexander Gulyavtsev was puzzled by the response to his comment. “I just said car. It’s not as if I said apartment.”

RICH MAN, POOR MAN: The scoreboard clock was not enough for Odell Beckham Jr. In the Cleveland Browns’ opener against Tennessee, he played while wearing a watch that retails for a cool $250,000. A day later, the league took issue with his accessoriz­ing, citing a policy “prohibitin­g hard objects.” Beckham’s watch would more than pay the rent for Chicago Cubs minor leaguer Trevor Clifton. He lived this season in a 104-square-foot home he and his father built from a $200 camper bought online. But it’s got a couch, a fridge and a mattress, and it’s quiet. “I just like to be on my own,” he told The Des Moines Register.

FRENCH PROJECTION: Clearly, the Seine wouldn’t do. Organizers of the 2024 Paris Olympics hope to hold the surfing competitio­n more than 9,000 miles away in Tahiti. The French also want breakdanci­ng on the Olympic roster, looking to entice a younger audience. Is breakdanci­ng a “sport”? It sure is, says top breakdance­r Mounir Biba. “I defy Cristiano Ronaldo to do just one of my movements,” he said.

WORD(IM)PERFECT: Words were a most dangerous game in 2019. Baseball traded its “disabled list” for the “injured list,” saying it doesn’t want to support the “misconcept­ion that people with disabiliti­es are injured and therefore are not able to participat­e or compete.” ... Canadian hockey authoritie­s, intent on being an “inclusive brand,” dropped its longtime “midget” division in favor of age designatio­ns . ... New York Jets’ Janoris Jenkins called a fan a “retard” on Twitter, insisting the expression was part of his “culture.” Two days later, he was part of another culture: unemployed.

WAITER, HATER: An English Premier League goalkeeper was cleared of wrongdoing but cited for “lamentable” ignorance by supposedly giving a Nazi salute during a team dinner. Wayne Hennessey contended he does not even know what a Nazi salute is, and he was merely extending his arm to get the attention of a waiter. ... Australian rugby star Israel Folau certainly knew what he was doing. His contract was terminated after his Instagram post in which he consigned to hell “homosexual­s, adulterers, liars, fornicator­s, thieves, atheists, idolaters.” Australian rugby condemned Folau for his anti-gay remarks.

Maybe the most eye-opening news came out of Virginia. Tony Bennett, coach of the NCAA basketball champions, declined a pay raise, saying give it to his staff and other department­s. He said he has more than enough money. It was as if he were speaking in tongues. Athletic director Carla Williams said this “just does not happen in our industry.”

 ?? RON SCHWANE / AP ?? The Cleveland Browns’ Odell Beckham Jr. sported a Richard Mille watch, worth over $250,000, during his debut against the Tennessee Titans on Sept. 8.
RON SCHWANE / AP The Cleveland Browns’ Odell Beckham Jr. sported a Richard Mille watch, worth over $250,000, during his debut against the Tennessee Titans on Sept. 8.
 ?? BRYN LENNON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Australian Rohan Dennis, competing at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, briefly vanished at the Tour de France in July.
BRYN LENNON / GETTY IMAGES Australian Rohan Dennis, competing at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, briefly vanished at the Tour de France in July.
 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES ?? Roger Federer will become the first living person in Switzerlan­d to have a coin — a 20-franc silver coin — minted in his honor.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES Roger Federer will become the first living person in Switzerlan­d to have a coin — a 20-franc silver coin — minted in his honor.

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