Monday, March 7, 2016

Bracketology: Championship Week has the bubble in major flux

Our resident bracketologist salutes the three new teams that reached the 2016 NCAA Tournament on Sunday and examines the eight teams who should be the most anxious during the final week before Selection Sunday.
Three further teams will now have their names in ALL CAPS from here on out, thanks to the conference tournament titles they claimed on Sunday afternoon.
In the Missouri Valley final, Northern Iowa's Wes Washpun stunned the Evansville Purple Aces at the buzzer to send the Panthers to their second consecutive NCAA Tournament. Not long after action wrapped up in St. Louis, the UNC Asheville Bulldogsqualified by pulling away from the Winthrop Eagles late in the Big South final. Finally, the Florida Gulf Coast Eagles spared their conference, the Atlantic Sun, some blushes by defeating the tournament-ineligible Stetson Hatters in an overtime thriller in Fort Myers. Had the seventh-seeded Hatters defeated Dunk City, the regular season champion North Florida Ospreys would have represented the conference instead.
 
In non-elimination action, Sunday was a better day for the bubble teams in action than Saturday. All three American Athletic Conference bid contenders in action -- theConnecticut Huskies, Cincinnati Bearcats and Temple Owls -- won. Cincinnati picked up the biggest win of the trio, as it completed a season sweep of the SMU Mustangs. However, UConn awaits the Bearcats in the 4 vs. 5 game of the conference tournament on Friday afternoon.
In the Big Ten, the Indiana Hoosiers completed their Big Ten championship season with a resounding win over the Maryland Terrapins, a result that led to the teams swapping places on the three and four lines of the bracket below. The Purdue Boilermakers, another team with protected seed hopes, knocked off the Wisconsin Badgers to help their cause.
After today's full bracket and rundown, I'll look more closely at the eight teams surrounding this projected field's cut line.
(1) MIDWEST
Chicago (Fri/Sun)
(2) EAST
Philadelphia (Fri/Sun)
Des Moines (Thu/Sat)Brooklyn (Fri/Sun)
1Kansas (Big 12)1Villanova (Big East)
16FLORIDA GULF COAST/Texas Southern16AUSTIN PEAY/Hampton
8Providence8USC
9Vanderbilt9Connecticut
Denver (Thu/Sat)Spokane (Fri/Sun)
5Iowa5Purdue
12Saint Mary's (WCC)12San Diego State (MW)
4Duke4Kentucky
13Akron (MAC)13YALE (Ivy)
Des Moines (Thu/Sat)Brooklyn (Fri/Sun)
6Baylor6Arizona
11St. Bonaventure/Wichita State11Syracuse/VCU
3Indiana (Big Ten)3West Virginia
14Stephen F. Austin (Southland)14UAB (C-USA)
St. Louis (Fri/Sun)Raleigh (Thu/Sat)
77Notre Dame7Texas Tech
10Temple (American)10Oregon State
2Xavier2North Carolina (ACC)
15Weber State (Big Sky)*15UNC ASHEVILLE (Big South)
(4) WEST
Anaheim (Thu/Sat)
(3) SOUTH
Louisville (Thu/Sat)
St. Louis (Fri/Sun)Raleigh (Thu/Sat)
1Michigan State1Virginia
16Lehigh (Patriot)16Wagner (NEC)
8Colorado8South Carolina
9Butler9Saint Joseph's
Oklahoma City (Fri/Sun)Providence (Thu/Sat)
5Iowa State5Texas
12Hofstra (CAA)*12NORTHERN IOWA (MVC)
4Texas A&M (SEC)4Maryland
13Little Rock (Sun Belt)13Chattanooga (SoCon)
Providence (Thu/Sat)Denver (Thu/Sat)
6California6Wisconsin
11Monmouth (MAAC)11Valparaiso (Horizon)
3Miami3Utah
14Stony Brook (Am East)14IPFW (Summit)
Spokane (Fri/Sun)Oklahoma City (Fri/Sun)
7Dayton (A 10)7Seton Hall
10Cincinnati10Pittsburgh
2Oregon (Pac-12)2Oklahoma
15Hawai'i (Big West)15New Mexico State (WAC)
FIRST FOUR (Dayton)
Tuesday: To Des MoinesTuesday: To Des Moines
16FLORIDA GULF COAST (A-Sun)*11St. Bonaventure
16Texas Southern (SWAC)11Wichita State
Wednesday: To BrooklynWednesday: To Brooklyn
16AUSTIN PEAY (OVC)11Syracuse
16Hampton (MEAC)11VCU
BIDS BY CONFERENCEAVOIDING DAYTONARRIVALSDEPARTURES
ACC: 7Connecticut (36)Northern Iowa (MVC)Evansville (MVC)
Big 12: 7Oregon State (37)St. BonaventureTulsa
Pac-12: 7Pittsburgh (38)UNC Asheville (Big South)Winthrop (Big South)
Big Ten: 6Cincinnati (39)

Big East: 5LAST FOUR IN

Atlantic 10: 4Syracuse (40)

SEC: 4St. Bonaventure (41)

American: 3VCU (42)

MVC: 2Wichita State (43)

One-Bid Conferences: 23FIRST FOUR OUT


Tulsa

 Florida


Gonzaga


Michigan


NEXT FOUR OUT


Florida State


George Washington


Ohio State


Washington

 
Also considered (in order): Princeton, Virginia Tech, Georgia, Creighton, Georgia Tech, BYU, Alabama, LSU, Clemson
With less than a week remaining until Selection Sunday, it's time to take our first close look at the four teams that are just on the right side of the cut line, and the quartet that's the closest to breaking through with the right results this week.
Note: All Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) and strength of schedule (SOS) information is courtesy RPIForecast.com.

Last Four IN

Avoiding Dayton: Connecticut Huskies, Oregon State Beavers, Pittsburgh Panthers, Cincinnati Bearcats
Syracuse Orange
19-12 (9-9 ACC); RPI: 60; SOS: 39; Non-conf. SOS: 110 ; KenPom: 41
The Orange looked to be in great position in mid-February, until they dropped four of their final five regular season games. Saturday's loss at Florida State is particularly ugly and costly, especially since the Orange handled the Seminoles at the Carrier Dome. Syracuse's profile features an 8-9 record against the RPI Top 100 with five particularly good wins, three of which came away from home (over Connecticut and Texas A&M en route to the Battle 4 Atlantis title and at Duke). However, Jim Boeheim's team has three bad losses—at former Big East rivals Georgetown and St. John's, and to Clemson at the Carrier Dome.
However, that trio of defeats came during Boeheim's NCAA-mandated suspension. If the Selection Committee considers his absence in its deliberations as promised in media and broadcast reports, Syracuse might get a boost. However, after a rough finish, the Orange would be well advised to win a game or two in Washington, D.C., especially Wednesday's third meeting of the season with Pitt, a possible elimination game. Claim victory then and a third shot at a North Carolina squad the Orange lost to by five in Chapel Hill a week ago would await in the quarterfinals on Thursday.
Next game: Pittsburgh in the ACC second round (Wednesday)
St. Bonaventure Bonnies
22-7 (14-4 A 10); RPI: 27; SOS: 85; Non-conf. SOS: 163; KenPom: 77
What's now one of Syracuse's five best wins came over the Bonnies at the Carrier Dome back in the season's earliest stages—on Nov. 17. The Orange were the only "name brand" team Mark Schmidt's squad played in November and December, which is part of the reason why they're near the cut line, despite their high RPI position. Note that Hofstra, whom the Bonnies fell to in Olean, actually ranks as the Bonnies' best non-conference opponent in the metric.
But St. Bonaventure, left for dead after dropping three straight to Duquesne, Dayton and VCU in January, rallied to win 10 of its last 11. Unfortunately, the only loss in that span came at a La Salle squad that finished last. That result also hurts their hopes. However, a road win at Dayton and a sweep of Saint Joseph's helped push Bona into a three-way tie for the conference title, while pushing their RPI into the Top 30.
A win or two in Brooklyn would push the Bonnies even nearer to safety.
Next game: TBD in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals (Friday)
VCU Rams
22-9 (14-4 A 10); RPI: 41; SOS: 70; Non-conf. SOS: 61; KenPom: 37
Like St. Bonaventure, the Rams started slowly, Shaka Smart left new head coach Will Wade a tough November and December slate, and VCU failed to record victories against teams like Duke, Wisconsin (both in New York), Florida State, Georgia Tech (both in Atlanta) and Cincinnati (also away from Richmond). As a result, the Rams' best non-league win came against a Middle Tennessee team that's barely within the RPI Top 100.
Since falling to 5-5 after the loss to the Bearcats, VCU has gone 17-4, but the Atlantic 10 schedule didn't do them many favors. While the Rams defeated both St. Bonaventure and Saint Joe's in league play, they only played each once. The same goes for the Dayton team they lost to after overtime on Saturday night. That result might be one they regret on Sunday evening.
Of course, VCU and St. Bonaventure are each a win away from meeting in the Atlantic 10 semifinals on Saturday. If you're a fan of a bubble team, you might want to keep an eye on happenings in Brooklyn on Friday evening.
Next game: TBD in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals (Friday)
Wichita State Shockers
24-8 (16-2 MVC); RPI: 48; SOS: 105; Non-conf. SOS: 11; KenPom: 11
On Sunday, I wrote about the Shockers' situation and little has changed, except for the fact their 1-2 record against Missouri Valley Tournament champions Northern Iowalooks far better now than it did on Saturday evening.
Similar to Syracuse's case, if the Selection Committee accounts for the absences of Fred VanVleet and Anton Grady (which most seem to forget about), Wichita State should be in good shape. If not, they'll be a top seed in the NIT.
Next game: none

First Four OUT

Next Four Out: Florida State Seminoles, George Washington Colonials, Ohio State Buckeyes, Washington Huskies
Tulsa Golden Hurricane
20-10 (12-6 American); RPI: 51; SOS: 57; Non-conf. SOS: 104; KenPom: 46
While Sunday was a good day for the American's bubble teams as a whole, the Golden Hurricane dropped out of this projection, for the moment at least. That's despite a win over Wichita State and a 4-4 mark against the three other American contenders and ineligible SMU. A lack of non-conference results beyond the victory over the Shockers (a loss to South Carolina in the Paradise Jam final hurts) and a late loss at strugglingMemphis damage Tulsa's case.
Wins in Orlando, starting with a rematch against those same Tigers, would do wonders for Frank Haith's team, especially with the competition that will be sharing the stage there.
Next game: Memphis in the American quarterfinals (Friday)
Florida Gators
18-13 (9-9 SEC); RPI: 54; SOS: 18; Non-conf. SOS:4 ; KenPom: 44
Just two weeks ago, the Gators were 17-10 and in relatively decent shape, even after an overtime loss at South Carolina. Since Feb. 20, Florida lost three further games, not looking particularly interested in defending in any of them, before finally winning at woeful Missouri on Saturday.
Far and away, Mike White's team has the best non-conference schedule of the eight teams profiled here, a gift from the NBA-bound Billy Donovan. However, other than a home win over West Virginia and a win over Saint Joseph's in Connecticut, Florida didn't take advantage of its opportunities. A 2-8 record against the Top 50 and 7-12 mark against the Top 100 is the result. Lost opportunities against Miami, Michigan State, Purdue and Florida State might end up sending UF to the NIT (where it can't even host games).
Winnable games against Arkansas and possibly Texas A&M (who only defeated Florida by three in College Station) in the SEC Tournament might give the Gators some fresh hope.
Next game: Arkansas in the SEC second round (Thursday)
Gonzaga Bulldogs
24-7 (15-3 WCC); RPI: 66; SOS: 127; Non-conf. SOS: 57; KenPom: 30
If the Bulldogs fail to win the WCC Tournament, their run of consecutive NCAA appearances that began in 1999 will likely be over. Gonzaga played a typically difficult non-conference schedule, even hosting Arizona and UCLA at the Kennel, but they claimed just one Top-100 win in November and December, a 73-70 decision over UConn in the Battle 4 Atlantis third-place game. The Zags also failed to win at SMU in their typical mid-February, non-WCC test.
Making matters worse, Gonzaga only went 1-3 against the other two possible bid teams in the WCC, as they were swept by co-champ Saint Mary's and split with BYU. That combination of results leaves Mark Few's team needing to defeat both over the next two nights to get back to the dance.
Next game: BYU in the WCC semifinals (tonight)
Michigan Wolverines
20-11 (10-8 Big Ten); RPI: 68; SOS: 59; Non-conf. SOS: 190; KenPom: 54
The best thing about the Wolverines' profile is that they went a perfect 16-0 in games against teams from outside of the Top 100. However, Michigan went just 3-11 in its games against the teams in that group. Home wins over Maryland, Purdue and a Battle 4 Atlantis victory over Texas likely won't be enough.
John Beilein's team, which finished by winning just three of its last nine games, will have to pick up some wins in Indianapolis to reach the field. They'll start by putting that perfect record against non-contenders on the line.
Next game: Northwestern in the Big Ten second round (Thursday)
Three bids are on the line tonight, with the Monmouth Hawks a possible at-large team should they fall in the Metro Atlantic final. Plus, the WCC semifinals are also on the night's slate. I'll be back tomorrow with a new bracket accounting for tonight's games.

The police were called because Kam Chancellor looked in the window of a gym he wanted to buy

When Seattle safety Kam Chancellor isn't decimating running backs and wide receivers on the field, he spends some of his time helping run a women's fitness boot camp.
 
The boot camp has traveled from city to city. Apparently, Chancellor is interested in buying a gym to host the boot camp, so he went to go check on a facility that was closed. When he arrived the place was closed, so like any person would do, he looked in the window. There were two employees inside and he tried to ask them for help. They responded by calling the police.
No really.
Police released the audio of the 911 call one of the employees made. In it, she called Chancellor and the four people he was with "bad news" and said they were pounding on the door and trying to break in.
"Yeah, they were trying to get us to open the door, asking us for information," the employee said via Komo News. "I don't know if they're, like, homeless kids, I know there used to be a lot of heroin addicts around here - that used to hang around here, so I don't know."
The Redmond Athletic Club lost its lease at the end of February and closed. Chancellor was interested in buying it. Maybe he still is. But we wouldn't blame him if he's not.

More from SBNation.com

  • It's officially time to consider Peyton Manning's legacy
  • Mock draft: How free agency could change things
  • Here's a list of every major NFL record Peyton Manning holds
  • The Colts may have been better off keeping Peyton Manning
  • Bill Belichick & his girlfriend had dinner with good friend Donald Trump

NBA scores 2016: Warriors live by the 3, die by the 3 to the lowly Lakers

It was likely an anomaly, but Steph Curry and the Warriors were no match for the lowly Lakers because of poor shooting from deep. Plus, Russell Westbrook taking over as usual and everything else from a wild Sunday in the NBA.
With the Golden State Warriors trailing the Los Angeles Lakers 97-81 with 6:41 left to play on Sunday, Stephen Curry brought the ball up the court. For what seemed like the first time all day, no one on the Lakers picked him up at half court. He was supposed to waltz up to the three-point line and sink a high-arcing three like he's done so many times this season and lead the Warriors on a comeback for their 56th win of the season. But Curry missed — he was only 1 of 10 from deep — and the Warriors never made their patented run. The Lakers coasted to a 112-95 blowout win.
It was one of the biggest upsets in regular season history. The Warriors were 55-5 and the Lakers were 12-51. It was the first time a team with a win percentage better than .900 met a team with a win percentage below .200 at least 50 games into a season, according to Elias Sports Bureau. And it was never really close — the Lakers had a 23-point lead in the fourth quarter.
 
Curry had 18 points in the loss as Jordan Clarkson and D'Angelo Russell led the Lakers in Kobe Bryant's final game against the Warriors. Clarkson had 25 points and Russell added 21 points and five assists in a game in which the Lakers were consistently a step ahead.
It was an ugly, ugly day for the Warriors, who were a mere 4 of 30 from three — Clarkson, for reference, was 4 of 6 from deep. Curry was bad, but Klay Thompson's 0 for 8 was even worse. Only benchwarmer Ian Clark, who was 2 for 2, could get the ball through the hoop. The Warriors shoot 41.7 percent from deep this season, but made only 13 percent in the loss to the Lakers.
It was disastrous on all counts. They were 2 of 12 on wide open threes (defenders were more than six feet away) and 1 of 10 when a defender was within two to four feet. Curry and Thompson were 0 for 17 from the field when their shot wasn't preceded by a pass, per ESPN's Tom Haberstroh.
Plus, they couldn't take care of the ball. The Warriors turned it over a season-high 20 times — many times on lazy passes around the perimeter that led to fast-break points for the Lakers.
Sure, it was a sloppy, lazy game for the Warriors and almost assuredly a blip on the radar in a historic season, but the Lakers did show a few ways to slow down Golden State. They double-teamed Curry every opportunity they got and, unlike every other team this season, were able to slow the rest of the Warriors, too. The Warriors can often get by even if they fall apart for stretches, but the Lakers never let up. Sensing that a lull would let the Warriors back into the game, the Lakers looked like the team chasing the 1995-96Chicago Bulls' 72-10 record.
 
The Warriors will rebound from this. They're still 55-6 and on pace to pass the Bulls — who, incidentally, made four three-pointers or less 23 times, and in a loss to the Sunsshot 8.3 percent (1 of 12). It was, however, a gut check that Curry or Draymond Greencan't play hero ball every night. And the race for 73 wins just got a lot more interesting.

3 other things

Russell Westbrook doesn't have to shoot to dominate

The Oklahoma City Thunder coasted to a 104-96 win on the tails of another Russell Westbrook triple-double. He had 15 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds to lead the way, and he did so only taking seven shots. Westbrook was 3 of 7 from the field, but made his presence known in other ways — just like he always does.
The man is everywhere on the basketball court. The Thunder have struggled to close out elite teams this season, but they were able to hold on despite a poor second half against the Bucks on Sunday. They have the talent to make a run this postseason, especially if Westbrook continues to do it all.

It's impossible to understand the Houston Rockets

The Rockets trailed the Toronto Raptors by 10 at the half and by eight heading into the fourth quarter. At 3-7 in their last 10 games, the Rockets looked doomed to lose yet another game. But then James Harden took over, scoring 29 points in the second half to lead the Rockets to a 113-107 win on the road to keep the Rockets in the thick of the playoff hunt. Harden had 40 points and 14 assists with only one turnover as the Rockets continued their roller coaster season. When they're at their best, Harden is slicing apart defenses with drives to the lane and they look like the team that was in the Western Conference Finals last season. That was the Rockets team that showed up in the second half on Sunday, unfortunately for Rockets fans, that team shows up sparingly. If the season ended today the Rockets would be in the playoffs. At 31-32, they're a half-game up on the Utah Jazz for the eighth spot.

The Detroit Pistons' ceiling is high

Like the Rockets, the Pistons can beat anyone — they're one of six teams to beat the Warriors — but often end up laying an egg. On Saturday they lost to the strugglingKnicks, on Sunday they handed the streaking Portland Trail Blazers a 123-103 defeat. They beat the Blazers with the blue print that's leading the Pistons to success: Reggie Jackson led the offense with 30 points and nine assists, and Andre Drummond was a monster down low with 14 points and 18 rebounds. Plus, the defense held Damian Lillard at bay — Lillard was only 8 of 22 from the field and 2 of 9 from deep. It wasn't just the stars for Detroit, the supporting cast was on point, too. Marcus Morris had 19 points, Tobias Harris added 16 points, five rebounds and five assists and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 16 points. The Pistons would be out of the playoffs if the season ended today. Like the Rockets, they're going to need to find some consistency if they're going to make the postseason for the first time since 2009.

Play of the night

Sunday, March 6, 2016

MOTHER'S DAY 2016: INSIDE HOLLYWOOD'S MOTHER/DAUGHTER FEUDS



Ariel Winter at Vanity Fair party
Mother’s Day is here once again and on Sunday daughters and sons around Britain will honor the women who gave them life, whether it be with a hug or a bouquet of flowers.
But what about the mothers who won’t be hearing from their offspring? The Modern Family actor Ariel Winter recently revealed she hasn’t spoken to her mother, Chrisoula Workman, in three years. The young star bid to be removed from her parent’s custody in 2012 and was legally emancipated in 2015 at the age of 17.
It’s a common trend in Hollywood, it seems, to distance yourself from your mother and Winter is by no means the first star to do so. Jennifer Aniston, Drew Barrymore and Meg Ryan are just some of the big names who at one time or another were estranged from their mothers.
The mother/daughter relationship is one of the most special bonds in life, but it can also be one that is fraught, emotionally challenging and perhaps even unhealthy—particularly as those daughters enter their own adult life and become more secure in their own skin and personalities. 
London-based psychotherapist Wendy Bristow explains to Newsweek: “For a daughter, your mother is your role model, your template of how to be a woman and the person who tells you about what being a woman is. You define yourself by trying to be like her, or perhaps her opposite. For a mother, the temptation to want your daughter to be just like you—or be the perfect daughter you imagined you’d have—is also very strong.
“There’s a two-way identification going on which you don’t get in exactly the same way between mother and son, or father and daughter. This puts enormous pressure on the relationship and is what makes it so intense.”
Adding fame to the mix, then, can be incendiary to what is already a potentially combustible relationship. Says Bristow, “Fame can change people and perhaps for some the adulation of the masses gives them more of a buzz than the warts-and-all relationships they have with the real people in their life.”
In the case of Winter, now 18, and her breakdown in relationship with her mother, the root cause appears to be what Bristow describes as “stage mother syndrome.” The sitcom star contends thather mother pushed her into acting at a young age.
“The child can come to feel they have no value of their own but only as a performing puppet whose job is to shine and reflect well on the parent,” Bristow analyzes. “Sometimes when that child does achieve fame they can want to cast off the parent who drives them mad by trying to take the credit.”
Here are just some of Hollywood’s contentious mother/daughter feuds:
Joan and Christine Crawford
Joan Crawford was a revered actor with an Oscar for Best Actress to her name. However, her adopted daughter Christina painted a very different picture of the star—that of an abusive, alcoholic mother.
The allegations provided bestseller material for Christina’s tell-all memoir, Mommie Dearest. It was later turned into a movie, with Faye Dunaway as Crawford, that spawned the classic line: “No wire hangers!”
Decades after Crawford’s death in 1977, it seems Christina hasn’t forgiven her adopted mother. In 2008, she said: “I think she took absolutely no responsibility for changing her behavior. Forgiveness is a two-person process.”
Jennifer Aniston and Nancy Dow
The Friends star admits she had a fractured relationship with her mother growing up. In 2015, Aniston said, "She was critical. She was very critical of me. Because she was a model, she was gorgeous, stunning. I wasn't. I never was... She was also very unforgiving. She would hold grudges that I just found so petty."
The pair became estranged in the late-1990s after Dow apparently gave a rather public interview about her daughter at the height of her fame as sitcom favourite Rachel Green. Dow went on to pen a tell-all memoir, From Mother and Daughter to Friends: A Memoir, in 1999. The pair did beginrebuilding their relationship after Aniston’s split from Brad Pitt in 2005 but Dow says she wasn’t invited to her daughter’s wedding to Justin Theroux in August 2015.
Drew and Jaid Barrymore
Finding fame as a child actress in E.T., Barrymore has spoken at length about her unconventional childhood with mother Jaid, resulting in her seeking treatment for drug and alcohol addiction by the age of 13. Barrymore legally emancipated herself from her fun-loving mother, who “lost credibility” by taking her to parties instead of sending her to school as a child, at the age of 14.
They haven’t spoken much since but Barrymore, now 41, revealed in her 2015 memoir Wildflowerthat she still supports Jaid financially. “I must know that she is taken care of or I simply cannot function. I am grateful to this woman for bringing me into this world, and it would crush me to know she was in need anywhere,” she wrote.
Meg Ryan and Susan Jordan
The Sleepless in Seattle actress and her mother are said to have clashed over the man in her life, actor Dennis Quaid, in 1990. As Jordan explains it, she confronted her daughter with worries about Quaid’s “jittery” behaviour and questioned whether he might have been taking cocaine—something that was denied. Jordan stopped hearing from her daughter and wasn’t invited to the couple’s 1991 wedding, which took place only after he agreed to go to rehab.
A decade later, Jordan wrote in her 2001 autobiography The Immune Spirit: “The image [Meg] has of the innocent, dizzy girl-next-door could not be further from the truth. In real life, she's a cold-hearted, cruel manipulator.”
Ariel Winter and Chrisoula Workman
The Modern Family star’s well-documented efforts to be removed from her mother’s custody date back to 2012. She filed a restraining order against her mother, alleging physical and emotional abuse, including slapping and mocking her weight. The actress’s guardianship was permanently awarded to her sister, Shanelle Gray, in 2014 following a long court battle. Workman, meanwhile, has maintained her denial of any abuse.
Now 18, Winter said this week that she hasn’t spoken to her mother in three years. She added of the public custody battle, "It's already hard enough for abuse victims, but it's harder in the public eye when everybody has an opinion."

Saturday, March 5, 2016

https://www.wowfeed.org/75iiX

Author Pat Conroy dies after short battle with pancreatic cancer

Pat Conroy, who arrived in Beaufort as a teenage Marine brat and found both a home and palette for his best-selling novels, died Friday at his home on Battery Creek.
“The water is wide but he has now crossed over,” said his wife, Cassandra King, through a family friend.
Conroy, 70, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer only four weeks ago. When he announced it Feb. 15 on Facebook, he said, “I intend to fight it hard.”
He died at 7:43 p.m., surrounded by loved ones and family.

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/entertainment/books/article64211442.html#storylink=cpyStomach pain was at first thought to be pancreatitis. But further testing confirmed shortly before the public announcement that it was pancreatic cancer, which spread rapidly.
His lyrical novels painted harsh pictures of inadequate schools, an abusive father and South Carolina’s military college, The Citadel. He tackled threats to the Lowcountry environment with equal vigor. But he loved each of his subjects, and the town he adopted after 23 moves in 16 years loved him back.
Beaufort historian Lawrence S. Rowland said Conroy put Beaufort on a national stage through books like “Prince of Tides” and “The Great Santini.” And those novels brought Hollywood to town, and the stars would return for other blockbusters like “Forrest Gump” and “The Big Chill.”

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/entertainment/books/article64211442.html#storylink=cpy“I can’t imagine anything other than World War II that promoted Beaufort any more than what Pat did,” Rowland said. “The value of Pat’s publicity — to put Beaufort on the silver screen and advertise it, and the millions of fans who read his every word — is hard to measure.
“I know there’s controversy, and I think he’s entitled to any opinion he chooses, but the amount of good he’s done is exceptional. It’s a huge economic boon to this town and he’s the kind of guy we ought to raise a statue for.”
Beaufort Mayor and close friend Billy Keyserling said, “His impact has really been to the region and opening up eyes, concurrently with the growth of the greater Lowcountry. He was a part of turning the eyes to this part of the world.”
Conroy appeared to feel fine when the University of South Carolina Beaufort hosted the “Pat Conroy at 70 Festival” in late October, with numerous writers, friends and family members celebrating a life that was on an uptick.
He had never been busier, more productive, or more public. In addition to his own writing, he was promoting a stable of other writers in the Story River Books imprint he edited for the University of South Carolina Press.
 

Sallie Ann Robinson recalls press tour with Pat Conroy

Sallie Ann Robinson, the inspiration for "Ethel" in Pat Conroy's famous memoir, "The Water Is Wide," shares a story of her close friend. The duo were on a press tour to Oklahoma with the release of the movie version of the book. Robinson, of Savannah, Ga., was a sixth-grade student of Conroy's on Daufuskie Island, S.C. in the late 1960s. Robinson is the author of two story cookbooks, with a third set to be published soon.
Josh Mitelman The Beaufort Gazette
 Conroy had been on a health kick for four years. He said that’s when he nearly died of his own bad habits, so he quit drinking, hired a nutritionist, joined the YMCA, lost weight, andlast year opened the Mina & Conroy Fitness Studio in Port Royal with his personal trainer.
“There is nothing on my resume that indicates I’ll be successful in this unusual endeavor,” he wrote on his web page. “But I’m doing it because there are four or five books I’d like to write before I meet with Jesus of Nazareth — as my mother promised me — on the day of my untimely death, or reconcile myself to a long stretch of nothingness as my non-believing friends insist.”

Home at last

Alexia Jones Helsley says she was Conroy’s first editor.
The daughter of the Baptist preacher in town was editor of the Tidal Wave newspaper at Beaufort High School, where Conroy first latched onto the Lowcountry in the remarkable class of 1963.
“He took a track meet and turned it into a race between good and the Devil,” Helsley said. “It was hilarious.”
Another time, principal Bill Dufford asked Conroy, as president of the senior class, to address the girls before a powder puff football game.
“He took a napkin from the cafeteria and wrote this little poem on it and got up and read it,” Helsley said. “We thought he was so talented, but we had no idea how talented he was.”
Conroy was a basketball star and Best All Around in a class that had six National Merit Finalists, and included Daisy Youngblood, a sculptor who won a MacArthur Foundation “genius grant”; Daun van Ee, editor of the papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower at the Library of Congress; and Julie Zachowski, retired director of the Beaufort County library system. Helsley is an archivist who has written a history of Beaufort. Conroy is among three members of the class inducted into the school’s hall of fame.
Conroy wrote often of inspiring teachers there, like Millen Ellis and novelist Ann Head, but especially Eugene Norris.
“He taught me to value the old, to sharpen my eye for the most intricate detail, and to strengthen all the appetites upon which beauty itself fed,” Conroy would later write. “In the end, Gene Norris handed me the key to my first hometown and made it feel like the most sublime gift.”

A new life

Conroy returned to Beaufort High as a teacher after graduating from The Citadel, but a much different school on Daufuskie Island cast the die for his life.
“The Water is Wide” — and the movie version, “Conrack” — described Conroy’s year battling authorities to stretch the stunningly limited opportunities and achievement of students on a remote island.
 

Teacher: Decades after Daufuskie, Pat Conroy 'knew every (student's) name'

Esther Shaver, founder of E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Ga., recalls with amazement a Pat Conroy book signing at her store -- for Sallie Ann Robinson -- in which the famous author was reunited with his former students from Daufuskie Island, S.C. Mr. Conroy, Shaver says, was remarkable in his recall of each of his former pupils.
Josh Mitelman The (Hilton Head) Island Packet
 A number of Beaufort women, including Harriet Keyserling, typed portions of the manuscript written in longhand on a legal pad in a breathless dash to get it to his publisher on time. It was published in 1972, launching a new career.
When Conroy was inducted into Penn Center’s 1862 Circle in 2011, he was cited for helping show the world the South’s unequal public education for blacks and whites. He told the crowd that despite the abuse he took for saying it, he thought he got it right.
It set in motion a career of writing what others would not dare say, and in the process he created enemies at his alma mater and in his family.
In 1976, he published the look inside his family of seven children, a beautiful mother and a boorish fighter pilot. In “The Great Santini” he told of his father, a heroic Marine who beat his wife and children. It was a smash hit. The movie was filmed in Beaufort.
 

Great Santini tells principal 'my son will not be a secretary'

William "Bill" Dufford of Columbia was Pat Conroy's principal at Beaufort (S.C.) High School in the early 1960s. Dufford spoke about Conroy Feb. 18, 2016, while in Bluffton for an art show opening for another former student, Doug Corkern. Conroy died Friday, March 4, 2016, after a short battle with pancreatic cancer.
David Lauderdale The Beaufort Gazette
 Conroy was banned from campus after the 1980 book about The Citadel, “Lords of Discipline.”
As other books chronicled the rough edges of a life like his own, with two divorces, suicidal impulses and psychiatric problems, Conroy’s smooth writing and brutal honesty made him a regular on the New York Times best-seller list. Other titles include “South of Broad” set in Charleston, “The Pat Conroy Cookbook: Recipes of My Life” and “My Reading Life.”
He later found peace with The Citadel, and wrote another book about his experience there, “My Losing Season.”
And he found a happy marriage to novelist Cassandra King. They have lived on the banks of Battery Creek in Beaufort, which they both could see from their writing rooms, and where he could smell the pluff mud late in the day while enjoying a cigar and a Lowcountry sunset only he could put in words.
He had lived in Atlanta, Italy and San Francisco. But in 1993, he came home for good.
Conroy also found peace with his father, Col. Don Conroy. That was chronicled in the 2013 book drenched with the people and places of Beaufort, “The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son.”
“If my father knew how many tears his children had shed since his death,” Conroy wrote in his father’s eulogy, “he would be mortally ashamed of us all and begin yelling that he should’ve been tougher on us all, knocked us into better shape — that he certainly didn’t mean to raise a passel of kids so weak and tacky they would cry at his death.”
IF MY FATHER KNEW HOW MANY TEARS HIS CHILDREN HAD SHED SINCE HIS DEATH, HE WOULD BE MORTALLY ASHAMED OF US ALL AND BEGIN YELLING THAT HE SHOULD’VE BEEN TOUGHER ON US ALL, KNOCKED US INTO BETTER SHAPE.
Pat Conroy, eulogizing his father Col. Don Conroy

‘OK to be in therapy’

As Conroy’s former therapist, no one may know him quite like Marion O’Neill, a psychiatrist and the inspiration for the psychiatrist in Conroy’s 1986 book, “Prince of Tides.”
The best-selling novel was later turned in a 1991 movie with Barbra Streisand playing the lead role.
O’Neill treated Conroy during two periods of his life — first in Georgia in the 1970s and then in the 1980s at her Hilton Head Island practice while Conroy was working on another best-selling novel, “Beach Music.”
“He’s always made the statement that I saved his life twice,” said O’Neill, 86, who retired in 2010 when she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. “It means that I kept him from going off the rails.”
O’Neill, who now lives in her hometown of Norwell, Mass., won’t dish on her therapy sessions with Conroy.
Rather, her focus is on the acceptance that he brought to psychological treatment.
“He made it OK to be in therapy and to say you had some mental problems,” O’Neill said. “That was his biggest contribution because people always thought they had to hide it and it was a secret … It was particularly true for men.”
HE MADE IT OK TO BE IN THERAPY AND TO SAY YOU HAD SOME MENTAL PROBLEMS.
Marion O’Neill, Pat Conroy’s psychiatrist and the inspiration for the Barbra Streisand character in film adaptation of “Prince of Tides”
While the two friends haven’t talked in a few years, O’Neill still chuckles when she remembers Conroy’s wicked sense of humor.
Following the release of “Prince of Tides,” many wondered if Conroy and O’Neill had had a romantic relationship like the two characters in the book.
“He was often asked if he had slept with his psychiatrist. And he would say, ‘No, only because she wouldn’t let me,’ ” O’Neill said. “He always had a great sense of humor.”

Civic involvement

Conroy used his pen occasionally as a local activist.
In 2006, when the city sought to annex rural land along U.S. 21 north of town that could open development to 16,000 residences and 40,000 people, Conroy fired back.
“For the life of me, I cannot understand why Mayor Bill Rauch and most of the members of the City Council seem to loathe the exquisite and endangered town of Beaufort,” he wrote in The Beaufort Gazette.
“I’ve made a career out of praising this town’s irreplaceable beauty and the incomparable sea islands that form the archipelago that makes Beaufort County the loveliest spot on Earth to me. A man once told me while we watched a full tide coming up on Fripp Island accompanied by a full moon, ‘The only thing I worry about heaven is that it won’t be as pretty as this.’ That was 10 years ago. Now, my greatest worry is that developers are going to figure out a way to pave the ocean.”
In the same piece, Conroy was open about Beaufort’s influence on his life:
“Am I anti-business and anti-progress? I think somewhat. But I believe I have brought more tourists and outsiders to visit these islands than anyone I can think of and have praised their beauty all over the world in books you can open up and smell the great salt marshes of our rivers and creeks. I have written more about Beaufort County than anyone who has ever lived here, and I believe with all my heart that I love this place as much as anyone who has ever crossed the Combahee River.”
In another op-ed on the same issue, Conroy used his passion to stir others to action:
“I owe my writing life to this spot of earth. This extraordinary geography has provided the joy of my youth and the comfort of my old age. In my last breath, I believe Beaufort is worth fighting for. I urge all of you to come to the last meetings. This is our homeland — the place that makes our hearts sing. It needs us to rise up in its defense. It needs us now — right now.”
More recently, he lent his name to a fundraising drive for athletic facilities at the new John Paul II Catholic School in Okatie.
He has aided fundraisers for USCB and the Beaufort County Open Land Trust.
In 2014, the Beaufort Regional Chamber of Commerce created an award in his name.
In 2014, Chamber of Commerce created award in his name:
I CAN NOW ANSWER THAT. I AM FROM BEAUFORT. AND THIS IS WHERE I’M GOING TO BE BURIED.
Pat Conroy, in Palmetto Achievement Award acceptance speech
When he received the first Pat Conroy Palmetto Achievement Award, he joked that he must have outlived his enemies.
And he told the audience:
“Two questions a military brat can never answer is ‘where are you from’ and ‘where are you going to be buried,’ I can now answer that. I am from Beaufort. And this is where I’m going to be buried.”

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/entertainment/books/article64211442.html#storylink=cpy
Round Two of Donald Trump vs. Megyn Kelly turned out to be not much of a fight. During the prime-time debate Thursday night, Kelly landed a series of blows that seemed to leave the GOP’s front-runner reeling.
The candidate and the cable news host he seems to love to hate mixed it up for a second time since August at the Republican debate in Detroit. This time, Kelly put the party’s front-runner on the defensive with tough questioning about his failed for-profit school, Trump University, and by airing a series of video clips in which Trump made contradictory statements about accepting Syrian refugees, the war in Afghanistan and President George W. Bush’s record on the Iraq War.
“How is this telling like it is?” asked Kelly, the co-moderator at the event, after showing Trump on both sides of the issues — in one instance, as Kelly noted, in the course of a single day.
It was, in some respects, almost a payback performance by Kelly, whom Trump has savaged since the first Republican debate during the summer. In that encounter, Trump objected to Kelly’s opening question about his history of making disparaging comments about women. He later suggested that Kelly was biased and angry: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes. Blood coming out of her — wherever,” he said, in a comment many interpreted as vulgar and sexist.
Trump then began a long campaign of taunting Kelly on Twitter, calling her “a lightweight reporter,” “so average in every way,” and suggesting she was “a bimbo.”
Kelly has remained professional throughout Trump’s attacks on her, generally refusing to respond at all. The pair haven’t spoken since the first debate; he has appeared on several Fox News programs since then but not her prime-time program.
On Thursday, Kelly, who is an attorney, came prepared to challenge Trump with a series of nearly prosecutorial questions and factual statements that countered Trump’s assertions.
At one point it appeared that the debate was between Kelly and Trump, not among Trump and rivals Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and John Kasich.
When Trump argued that the Better Business Bureau had given Trump University an “A” rating for its business practices, the Fox host pointed out that its last rating — in 2010 — was “a D-minus” as a result of numerous complaints from former students.
“Let’s bring the viewers up to speed,” said Kelly over Trump’s objections. “Let me set the record, then you guys can have at it. Trump University, a business that you started, was marketed to many people, and now there is a class-action [lawsuit] of over 5,000 plaintiffs against you, Mr. Trump.”
When Trump countered that the lead plaintiff was abandoning the suit, Kelly fought back.
“Okay, stand by,” she said. “What happened in that case was you countersued her. The court threw out your countersuit, made you pay her legal fees.”
Once more, Trump attempted to object, but Kelly kept at it. “Stand by,” she ordered again. “This is what the court of appeals found. They said the plaintiffs against you are like the Madoff victims,” a reference to convicted financial felon Bernard Madoff.
Fox News then cut to a screen shot of the U.S. appeals court ruling, with a quote reading, “victims of con artists sing the praises of their victimizers until they realize they have been fleeced.”
The Detroit debate was supposed to be the third encounter between Kelly and Trump, but the second meeting never happened. The billionaire businessman boycotted the last Fox News-sponsored Republican debate a few days before the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1. Trump objected to having Kelly as a moderator and walked away after Fox issued what he deemed to be disrespectful comments defending her participation.
Trump’s absence from that event seemed to hurt Fox. The Iowa forum, sans Trump, attracted just 12.5 million viewers, or only about half the 24 million who tuned in to see Trump and Kelly in the August debate. The August event was the highest-rated primary debate ever.
[GOP debate’s clear loser: the GOP]
Trump greeted Kelly pleasantly when Thursday’s debate began, saying, “You’re looking well tonight” when she addressed him for the first time. There was no mention of the earlier unpleasantness between the candidate and the journalist, or Trump’s on-again, off-again feud with Fox News.
But Kelly seemed to succeed in rattling the hyper-confident Trump later in the evening when she rolled out the video clips of Trump’s contradictory comments — the kind of package that Fox News deployed against Rubio and Cruz in the January debate that Trump skipped.
In response, Trump said he likes to be “flexible” and is willing to change his mind in the face of new facts.
Kelly offered a withering retort: “You change your tune on so many things. People are saying, what is his true core?”
“I have never seen a successful person who didn’t have a certain degree of flexibility,” Trump responded. “You have to be flexible because you learn.”
On the issue of accepting Syrian refugees, for example, he said he changed his position because “the number had increased significantly.” Trump has advocated a complete ban on immigration to the United States by Muslims.
But Trump’s response opened him up to an attack from Rubio. “There’s a difference between flexibility and saying whatever you want to get [people] to do what you want,” Rubio said.

Megyn Kelly schools Trump on Trump U., and his flip-flops

Round Two of Donald Trump vs. Megyn Kelly turned out to be not much of a fight. During the prime-time debate Thursday night, Kelly landed a series of blows that seemed to leave the GOP’s front-runner reeling.
The candidate and the cable news host he seems to love to hate mixed it up for a second time since August at the Republican debate in Detroit. This time, Kelly put the party’s front-runner on the defensive with tough questioning about his failed for-profit school, Trump University, and by airing a series of video clips in which Trump made contradictory statements about accepting Syrian refugees, the war in Afghanistan and President George W. Bush’s record on the Iraq War.
“How is this telling like it is?” asked Kelly, the co-moderator at the event, after showing Trump on both sides of the issues — in one instance, as Kelly noted, in the course of a single day.
It was, in some respects, almost a payback performance by Kelly, whom Trump has savaged since the first Republican debate during the summer. In that encounter, Trump objected to Kelly’s opening question about his history of making disparaging comments about women. He later suggested that Kelly was biased and angry: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes. Blood coming out of her — wherever,” he said, in a comment many interpreted as vulgar and sexist.
Trump then began a long campaign of taunting Kelly on Twitter, calling her “a lightweight reporter,” “so average in every way,” and suggesting she was “a bimbo.”
Kelly has remained professional throughout Trump’s attacks on her, generally refusing to respond at all. The pair haven’t spoken since the first debate; he has appeared on several Fox News programs since then but not her prime-time program.
On Thursday, Kelly, who is an attorney, came prepared to challenge Trump with a series of nearly prosecutorial questions and factual statements that countered Trump’s assertions.
At one point it appeared that the debate was between Kelly and Trump, not among Trump and rivals Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and John Kasich.
When Trump argued that the Better Business Bureau had given Trump University an “A” rating for its business practices, the Fox host pointed out that its last rating — in 2010 — was “a D-minus” as a result of numerous complaints from former students.
“Let’s bring the viewers up to speed,” said Kelly over Trump’s objections. “Let me set the record, then you guys can have at it. Trump University, a business that you started, was marketed to many people, and now there is a class-action [lawsuit] of over 5,000 plaintiffs against you, Mr. Trump.”
When Trump countered that the lead plaintiff was abandoning the suit, Kelly fought back.
“Okay, stand by,” she said. “What happened in that case was you countersued her. The court threw out your countersuit, made you pay her legal fees.”
Once more, Trump attempted to object, but Kelly kept at it. “Stand by,” she ordered again. “This is what the court of appeals found. They said the plaintiffs against you are like the Madoff victims,” a reference to convicted financial felon Bernard Madoff.
Fox News then cut to a screen shot of the U.S. appeals court ruling, with a quote reading, “victims of con artists sing the praises of their victimizers until they realize they have been fleeced.”
The Detroit debate was supposed to be the third encounter between Kelly and Trump, but the second meeting never happened. The billionaire businessman boycotted the last Fox News-sponsored Republican debate a few days before the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1. Trump objected to having Kelly as a moderator and walked away after Fox issued what he deemed to be disrespectful comments defending her participation.
Trump’s absence from that event seemed to hurt Fox. The Iowa forum, sans Trump, attracted just 12.5 million viewers, or only about half the 24 million who tuned in to see Trump and Kelly in the August debate. The August event was the highest-rated primary debate ever.
[GOP debate’s clear loser: the GOP]
Trump greeted Kelly pleasantly when Thursday’s debate began, saying, “You’re looking well tonight” when she addressed him for the first time. There was no mention of the earlier unpleasantness between the candidate and the journalist, or Trump’s on-again, off-again feud with Fox News.
But Kelly seemed to succeed in rattling the hyper-confident Trump later in the evening when she rolled out the video clips of Trump’s contradictory comments — the kind of package that Fox News deployed against Rubio and Cruz in the January debate that Trump skipped.
In response, Trump said he likes to be “flexible” and is willing to change his mind in the face of new facts.
Kelly offered a withering retort: “You change your tune on so many things. People are saying, what is his true core?”
“I have never seen a successful person who didn’t have a certain degree of flexibility,” Trump responded. “You have to be flexible because you learn.”
On the issue of accepting Syrian refugees, for example, he said he changed his position because “the number had increased significantly.” Trump has advocated a complete ban on immigration to the United States by Muslims.
But Trump’s response opened him up to an attack from Rubio. “There’s a difference between flexibility and saying whatever you want to get [people] to do what you want,” Rubio said.