~terry
Tue, Oct 1, 1996 (15:28)
seed
Join a Spring pickup game according to the season. Do you have an idea
for a time and place for a pickup game?
~max
Wed, Oct 2, 1996 (12:23)
#1
Saturday or Sunday afternoon, Zilker Park for a little two-hand touch below tha waist... (sounds like it should be at Oilcan Harry's)... whaddya say?
~terry
Wed, Oct 2, 1996 (21:30)
#2
Let's shoot for weekend after next. Zilker Park. At the area above
Barton Springs where the picnic tables are. Near the hillside theater.
Any preferences as to Saturday or Sunday?
~ginger
Sun, Jun 15, 1997 (00:54)
#3
Frisbee golf at the Bastrop Spring bash. July 5th, all day.
Email terry@spring.com or call 512 303 4000 for details.
~MarciaH
Tue, May 30, 2000 (23:37)
#4
Not sure where this goes but here is where it is going now:
http://starbulletin.com/2000/05/30/sports/
W O M E N 'S _ F O O T B A L L
She says that her favorite quarterback is Drew Bledsoe of the New England Patriots.
With the No. 7 emblazoned on her Hawaiian Storm jersey, her sturdy build, her rifle arm
and running ability, she looks and plays more like John Elway.
Her name is Heather Stone, and she is the woman under center for the Storm, one of the
teams in a new and loosely formed women's tackle football league in Hawaii.
While women's tackle football leagues have sprung up and been successful on the
mainland, the sport is struggling to get a foothold in the islands.
There have been only two official games in the past six months -- both blowout victories by
the Storm -- and the league and its teams are struggling for funding and sponsorship.
Despite the fact that these women play not for money, but for the adrenaline rush of the
contact and pride, there is absolutely no denying that many have sound and sometimes
impressive football skills.
The hitting gets vicious, even compared with the men's game, and spectacular running and
pass plays are not uncommon.
Stone, a former professional softball catcher from Newport, N.H., is one of the standouts in
the sport locally.
She has the familiar hitch step before the ball is snapped, she can throw a tight post pass
or the touch-fade, and she is fearless running the option or keeping the ball herself on draw
plays. Though she doesn't typically do so in games, she can throw the ball 50 yards
downfield without much difficulty.
"Heather is just a pure athlete," said Storm head coach Ben Morn.
"Physically she is strong and can take a lot of pain, and she is improving mentally. She has
gone from a quarterback who used to get frustrated, to one who now controls the offense."
Dictating the offensive flow is exactly what Stone did in the Storm's last game earlier this
month, a 44-0 shellacking of the Hawaii Thunder. Stone showed her versatility and
toughness throughout, throwing for two scores and rushing for two more touchdowns. She
was successful on two 2-point conversions, and she got right back to her feet after every hit
she absorbed.
"I like to pass, but I also like to run the option and include everybody in the offense," Stone
said.
Though Stone and her teammates will likely take a six-month break before suiting up for
another game, they routinely practice three times a week. She is a working professional,
just like most of the other women in the league. Stone is employed as a counselor with
Hale Kipa Youth Services and is also assistant softball coach at Brigham Young
University-Hawaii.
"I finally know why guys get so excited to play football," Stone said of her enthusiasm for the
game. "I have a whole new respect for them. It's so much more intense than the other
sports I played -- getting hit and not knowing when you're going to get hit -- I give the guys a
lot of credit."
Though the league is struggling for viability, Morn and Stone see a future for women's
tackle football in Hawaii. The decent-sized crowd at Kaiser Field for the last game attested
to public interest, and with the sometimes loud and raucous cheering that went on, it
appeared that many of these fans would come back for more.
"I think that if we get the sponsorship so that we can go and compete with the mainland
teams, the league will continue to develop," Stone said. "Money will always be a concern;
it's the reason we don't have a professional men's team here."
~terry
Sun, Apr 29, 2001 (19:22)
#5
Hawaiian Storm, still blowin'?