Nightshift Sports: Friday Afternoon Pairings for Ryder Cup

Sports
Game on: Pairings for the Friday morning Foursomes competition at the 2016 Ryder Cup. The pairings for the afternoon Four-Ball competition will be announced on Friday. All times ET, adjust for your own time zone.
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Tracking It.

 
Editor’s Note: This article was originally posted on the site on 18 June 2016 during the 2016 U.S. Open. It’s reprised because of the use of the technology in this year’s coverage of the Ryder Cup.
Paying attention (2016 U.S.Open Edition): As we move into a world in which virtual reality becomes one of the driving visual/computer forces in how we perceive and interact with the world around us, a look around at some of the technology that’s enhancing our world today–right his minute, now!– shows that visual enhancement technology has been closing in on us for quite some time. Especially in sports.
In tennis,  for example, a system named HAWKEYE is used to handle the very difficult task of determining if a ball is in or is out. There’s an upcoming post about HAWKEYE and it’s technology, which is quite interesting. That post will go up when Wimbledon starts.
In golf, one of the  systems du jour for enhanced visual presentation on televised events is a “launch monitor”  named PROTRACER.

 
It was invented by Daniel Fosgren, who started working on the technology in 2003. Protracer enables the TV audience to see the flight of a ball after it is hit in real time; the technology is used most often in tracking tee shots, but it could track everything from a bunker shot to a shot out of boonies.  It does not use radar (Trackman, a different system that generates a different set of data, uses radar). Protracer works by using a camera with a custom sensor that is keyed to following a white dot (the golf ball) through a continuous stream of frames (you know, of course, that motion pictures/television consists of a series of individual frames captured/played back at a pre-determined speed, 24 or 36 FPS; your mind combines these individual frames into a seamless mental representation of movement). The path and position of the ball from one frame to another are combined in real time to create the visual “tracer” effect that you see on television. GolfWRX did a very nice piece on Fosgren and his ProTracer technology. You can see Fosgren’s amazing technology at work all weekend on the telecasts of the U.S. Open golf tournament. What a wonderful enhancement to the sport, and special thanks to Daniel Fosgren who created it and went all-in to make it a commercial reality. Well done–TV golf wouldn’t the same without him.
 
The Fine Print: Image courtesy of Getty Images, the non-commercial bloggers best friend. Thanks, guys, for sharing (and for always having just the right image. If you’re a blogger and you’re not using Getty Images–check them out. 
 
 
 
 
 

Nightshift Sports: The Ryder Cup

Paying Attention

It’s Back: The Ryder Cup. The Biennial golf competition that pits 12 of the best U.S. Golfers against 12 of the best European Golfers. It’s a three day competition, with competition taking place in three different formats: four ball, foursomes, and singles. The enthusiasm for this competition is amazing–in America, it’s more like a big time college football game than a traditional PGA tournament. Control of emotions and nerves is paramount for a good showing. Here’s a short, handy guide to the golf competition that will take over the sports world this weekend (even better: it’s being played in the U.S. at Hazeltine, in Minnesota). The major story line? The U.S. has lost 8 out of the last 10 competitions. Maybe this year’s team will bring the Cup back to America again. Read all about it,  by clicking this this link: Deep background: The Ryder Cup. 
 
The Fine Print: image courtesy of our friends at Getty Images (thanks guys). Doing a blog? You need them. Check them out. 

Nightshift Sports: Pairings for Friday's first round of Ryder Cup Competition

Sports
Game on: Pairings for the Friday morning Foursomes competition at the 2016 Ryder Cup. The pairings for the afternoon Four-Ball competition will be announced on Friday. All times ET, adjust for your own time zone.
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The NightShift: The News While You Slept

Press Clippings:
It’s Friday, 30 September 2016…… Here’s the Very Early Morning evening edition of The Nightshift. The Ryder Cup competition starts today, pitting a team of 12 top U.S. golf pros against a team of 12 top European golf pros. The competition continues all weekend and, combined with another terrific weekend of college football, this weekend is shaping up to be one of the best of the year.
The Times (London)
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt  (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Le Figaro (Paris)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
 
 

Nightshift Sports: Olympic Wrapup

The Olympics

 
The 2016 Rio Olympics are now history. New highs. New lows. New Scandals. New miracles. It’s the Olympics, and everything is supersized. Here’s a look back at some of the best reporting and great stories on the Rio Olympics that you might have missed. Olympic Games coverage resumes on this channel in two years, with the Winter Olympics.
The Best Shoes at the Olympics (Source: Newsday)
Back in the Saddle Again:Hermes at the Olympics (Source: Bloomberg)
Athletes Hit The ROI Hurdle in Rio (Source: Bloomberg)
Scandal Drowns Swimmer Lochte’s Endorsements (Source: Bloomberg)
Every Olympian is a Cyborg (Source: Wired)
Sports Illustrated Olympic Wrap Up (Source: si.com)
NPR’s Sunday Night Olympic Review (Source: NPR.org)
Olympic Technology ( Source: InsideScience.org)
Silicon Valley Technology at the Rio Olympics (Source: bizjournals.com)

PK

Pete Sat am
Peter “PK” Kaczmar, on a pre-race Saturday morning, in uniform, headset on, ready to race, with the ever present quicktie ready for use. (photo by Regis Lefebure).
Transitions: Peter Kaczmar (1955-2015) On Sunday, August 22nd, 2015,  former Risi Competizione Chief Mechanic (more on that later) Peter “PK” Kaczmar died.  PK was living in Danville, Virginia—also the home of  Virginia International Raceway. Ironically, that same weekend, Risi Comp was racing at VIR (a track at which the team has had notable success). Dave “Beaky” Sims, the Risi Comp Team Manager found out that PK was sick when he called him on the Wednesday preceding the race to invite him out to the track (as we always did when we raced there) and to visit the team. The news Dave got about PK was not good and on Thursday night—late—Dave called to tell me  that PK was in critical condition and would probably not survive the weekend. This was news to me and to Dave.  The cause of PK’s illness was immaterial—it doesn’t really matter unless it is something that can be cured and, in PK’s case, there was zero to little hope.  By the time the TUDOR United Sports Car Championship race was finished at VIR on Sunday, PK had exited this life. When Beaky called to give me the race results (3rd), the second thing he told me was that PK had died. It was a sobering moment. Pete was sixty.
For over a decade, Pete Kaczmar was Chief Mechanic for Risi Competizione. He had the role of Chief Mechanic, but he, typically, did not want the title or the paperwork responsibility or the human management. He just wanted to be “Number 1” on the car. And he was. Before he came to Risi Comp, he had an impressive body of work in Motorsports. He  worked for John Macdonald in the early Eighties in Formula One. Then he moved to Electromotive in the Mid 80s, prepping the Nissan GTP Car. In the late Eighties and into the early 1990s, he was with Tony Dowe on the Jaguar XJR12. For Risi Competizione, he ran the 333SP that won it’s class at Le Mans, won the first Petit Le Mans, and also the World Sportscar Racing championship. Risi Comp’s success with the 333SP was considered one of the reasons that particular model enjoyed a late-model-run resurgence. When Risi Comp retired the 333SP after running one last race at the 24 Hours of Daytona in 2002, PK became our chief mechanic on the Ferrari 360 (the predecessor to the 430 and 458) that finally broke Porsche’s stranglehold on the ALMS series. In 2005, PK was assigned to work on the Maserati MC12 project, working with Risi Comp as support for Maserati’s North American ALMS efforts. One year later, PK was prepping the Ferrari 430, the factory’s new GT entry. With Jaime Melo and Mika Salo driving, the Risi Comp F430 dominated the ALMS GT racing class in 2006 and 2007, winning Sebring, Le Mans, and the Petit Le Mans. In 2007 the team won the ALMS GT Class Championship, Driver’s Championship, Team Championship, and Manufacturer’s Championship, winning 9 out of 11 races. PK was awarded the “Mechanic of the Year” prize for ALMS that season, receiving a $10,000 gift. He shared it with the other techs on the team.  PK left the team in 2008, spent some time with Tafel Racing (who also ran a Ferrari 430 before edging into bankruptcy) and then was selected to join the Edison 2 Project, an enterprise created to win the $1.0 million dollar prize for designing, building and developing a car capable of obtaining 100 MPG performance. With Edison, PK was stretched—he had to build and prep the whole car. Not surprising to those who knew him, the Edison 2 team won the competition. Edison 2 was located in Danville and that was how PK came to that small city—once a major textile town—located in the foothills of Virginia. He had two brothers, one who predeceased him and one still alive, and a daughter. Peter was English by birth (Ukrainian parents), Italian by temperament, American in aspiration.
Peter Kaczmar was intense. He was irascible. He could be irritable, intimidating, prickly, difficult. He had a volcanic temper. He was intelligent and skeptical and did not suffer fools gladly.  He was perfectionist (a very good trait to have in endurance racing where the smallest thing could cause the biggest problems) and was legendary for shooing other techs away from the car when he was intensely involved in fixing, prepping, or repairing something. He had his opinions and he would defend them. His disagreements with Team Engineers were combustible.  The PK “interface” could be difficult, but when one looked deep into the man and his psyche, it was very obvious that PK only demanded of others what he demanded of himself. He pushed himself very, very hard and he expected—always—the right outcome. Regis Lefebure, our Risi Comp team photographer, told me that he once saw PK repair one of the Risi Comp cars by himself after an accident on the track; he kept everyone else away from working on the car because he thought he could do it quicker and with more certainty. He got in the “zone” when he worked and he didn’t want any interference. The other techs let him be. The car was repaired in time to race. It was how he worked.
PK was not an easy person to know. He was intensely private (hence the very abbreviated history of his time in racing noted above) and if you wanted to build a friendship with him, it was something that was done over time, not over a weekend or a couple of days. Over the years that he and I were both at Risi Comp, I became friends with PK. It took time.  He was sincere in his friendships and he was entertaining and good company. PK loved cars, BMW motorcycles, music (he had a professional grade stereo system) and mechanical things. Nothing was too small for extra attention. When he bought a new toolbox to hold all of his tools, he immediately set about to customize it so that it was configured precisely for the way he worked. That was PK. If he was doing it, it was going to be done right. One of the Risi Comp techs I talked to after PK’s death said that his “cars always finished..when he put them together, they stayed together.”
I talked with him a few times a year after he left Risi Comp. In one of those conversations, after he had joined the Edison 2 team, I asked him if he missed racing. The drama, tension, intensity of racing seemed to suit him so well and he said that “No, I don’t. For almost 20 years, I have devoted my time and life and weekends to racing. It’s a nice break. I did it. It was good. But I like this project a lot.”
It is hard to lose any team member in any sport. Even though PK had been gone from Risi Competizione for 7 years when he died, he was a team member. He will always be considered a team member. He made major contributions to Risi Comp’s racing history, winning World Championships and Sebring and Le Mans and Petit Le Mans. He was here, he did very good work, he won and then he was gone.  Because he was so intensely private, I wondered if anyone would give him the sendoff that he deserved and when I asked Team Managing Partner Giuseppe Risi if I could do it, he immediately said yes, because PK was one of us. We want to recognize him, one more time, for his contributions and work.
It’s been good to remember PK, to highlight his life’s achievements, his highs and lows, and to be, again, thankful, for the gift of his friendship. His exit makes another point, however, and this is one that everyone should remember: it is important to let the people who are in your life know the impact they have on you and to do it while they (or you) are still here. Don’t let the thanks go unsaid, the apologies never delivered, the appreciation unnoticed. Do it and do  it now. Time will run out. Let the people who are important to you, know they are important to you, before they (or you) run out of time.

Nightshift Sports: Sunday Olympic Essentials

The Olympics
What to watch, the schedule, results, and the Rio Firehose. Last day necessities.

The Olympic Results: Who Won What  (Source: The Guardian)
The Rio Firehose (Courtesy New York Times and others)
Google Olympics Schedule (Courtesy Google)
What To Watch Today (Courtesy Bloomberg)
The Fine Print: Image courtesy of Getty Images, who is graciously sharing images from the Olympics as well as contributing to the absolutely incredible Rio Firehose photography live stream. Good guys–support them.