Showing posts with label College sports. Morons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College sports. Morons. Show all posts

Monday, January 24, 2011

Drinking ban at North Dakota college sporting events defeated in state legislature

Thank God this moronic rule was defeated in the legislature, cooler heads have prevailed. This bill was flawed and ill conceived. Seriously, we don’t need anymore rules. This bill stunk of nannystateism, we don’t need the government telling us how to raise our children and how to live our lives, back off already. This is North Dakota, not some blue state.

Another reason this bill was ill conceived and poorly thought out was it was counter productive, is I don’t think these people that proposed this bill realized or had a clue what the economic impact would've been on the Alerus, REA and possibly the Fargo Dome. Rep. Chuck Damschen, the man that proposed this moronic bill also said that he didn't drink so he was trying to push his values on the rest of us.
BISMARCK — A proposed ban on drinking at North Dakota college sporting events has been beaten in the state House.

Valley City Rep. Phillip Mueller says the issue should be left to the colleges themselves. He says some college arenas serve alcohol to adults, and the bill would prevent them from doing it.

Representatives voted 78-13 today to defeat the proposal. It sought to ban drinking at college games, and on nearby property, if anyone younger than 18 was there.

Hampden Rep. Chuck Damschen sponsored the measure. He says it was intended to fight underage drinking in North Dakota.

Damschen says opponents of the bill claimed it was an attempt to ban tailgating at college games. He says it would have only prohibited drinking at tailgate parties.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Josh Birkholz, gets a chance to rejuvenate his career in Everett

This is a text book definition of a "prima donna." This is the problem with today's hockey players, some of them think they are entitled to play on the first line and when they don't play as well as they think they should they just change teams instead of working harder in practice.
HeraldNet.COM --- But Birkholz wasn't given his chance to shine. Instead he found himself buried on the depth chart, seeing just a handful of shifts per game while playing on the fourth line. In 36 games he managed just five goals and one assist.

Everett had added Birkholz to its 50-player protected list a year earlier, and as he rode the pine Birkholz's thoughts turned toward Everett. His mind was all but made up to leave Minnesota for Everett when he was slapped with a suspension by Minnesota for violating team rules. That erased any final lingering doubts about his decision.

“Growing up in Minnesota it's always a goal for the young hockey players to play for the University of Minnesota,” Birkholz said. “It's tough leaving that and tough leaving home. But it's part of the sacrifice you have to make to reach your goals.”

Now in Everett, Birkholz sees opportunity. He sees the chance to show the Panthers the full range of his abilities, something he says he was never able to do at Minnesota. And he sees a chance to move into the professional ranks as quickly as possible.
This was a perfect opportunity for a life lesson for the young Josh Birkholz, instead of facing the music, he just quit and went somewhere to escape his punishment.