RockyMTblue2
Don't Look Up!
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
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They will, including this year AND next year - it's coming soon.
From your lips etc etc...
They will, including this year AND next year - it's coming soon.
I live in Santa Cruz. In fact, I live just around the corner(well, actually around two corners) from Haley’s and her parents house. Her father, Patrick was in the same class as my younger son. My two sons played Soccer(four years varsity) Golf and ran track. Patrick concentrated on basketball. So we only knew them very casually, seeing them at school functions(fund raisers, etc.)
I had seen a comment or two about Haley’s accomplishments at Mitty High in the local paper, but had no idea she was that good until her name appeared in the Boneyard. She has a great basketball pedigree. Both parents were stars on their respective Santa Cruz High basketball teams. And both parents were head coaches of the girls and boys teams respectively for several years. So there is no doubt in my mind as to the altitude of her basketball IQ.
As for the picture above, I have stood there several times. There are many more scenic spots in town and, as most residents live within a mile or so of the water, we are often presented with a great view. The sky you see in the photo is the sky we see almost 300 days of the year. Yes, there is fog, but it does “burn off” by noon(often by 9 or 10AM). We have lived here for 44 years and during that time it has snowed twice for about an hour with the flakes melting as they touched the ground. All that being said, I can say from experience with my sons that young people out here are appreciative of their climate and scenic environment but are also well traveled and want to see more of other places. My sons went to the New England and New Jersey areas for college. They found the social and scenic aspects stimulating and rewarding and the Winters invigorating. I think Haley, like them, will see many more pluses than minuses to going back there to school.
I believe UConn’s big competition is Stanford. I’m sure Haley could do well academically at Stanford. Stanford is ranked #2 academically this year behind MIT. That’s a strong pull if you qualify. And I think Haley is smart enough to look forward to life after basketball(i.e. the last 2/3 of her adult life. A lot depends on what she wants as a “second career”. If she wants to be a physician, a professor or a politician then Stanford looks good. If she is interested in a career in athletics(coach, G.M.,etc.) then Geno and UConn look good.
As somebody must have said, “the ball’s in her court”.

I live in Santa Cruz
That looks like the inlet in the sate park with the butterfly preserve? Went there last spring before we went to sample Sante Adarious sour beers! Beautiful spot and the butterflies are amazing.I live in Santa Cruz.
As for the picture above, I have stood there several times. There are many more scenic spots in town and, as most residents live within a mile or so of the water, we are often presented with a great view.
Looks right to me.I did this in my head a while back so I could very well be wrong. But it looks to me that since the HS class of 1990 only two classes have gone through the program and not won a championship (HS classes of '95, '04).
Maybe one of the history people on the board can confirm or clarify.
Yes she does!!!Home visit....NICE.
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Muffet Bench report. Sorry if it is really old news. Haley Jones.
BTW the new Hall of Famer looks great!
competition has come to college WBB with great players spread throughout the top ten along with some improved coaching....unless UConn gets a recruiting haul in the next two years they will be just one of a few really good teams
This is what most days look like here in the coastal areas of California, especially Southern California once the morning fog burns off. 72 degrees and sunny with a cool sea breeze blowing in off the ocean.
One more thing.......it NEVER snows in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. We're in a basin, practically at sea level. We get a hail storm once every 5-7 years. The ice sticks on grass (not sidewalks/streets) for about 30 minutes, then melts. Two hours later, you can't tell it hailed. In over 65 years, I've never seen it snow in L.A. We have local mountains (less than an hour's drive) that get plenty of snow and are home to several ski resorts, if you're into that sort of thing. We also get snow in the Gorman/Castaic area about 50 miles to the north, just not in the L.A. basin.
I lived in Sunnyvale, near Montain View and Palo Alto--never saw snow except in the mountains.
You say a lot of nice words about Southern Cal but not one word about ----TRAFFIC!!

Don't feel bad I have the same reaction going over the Tappan Zee bridge and Danbury Ct. I avoid them and most of the Conn highways as ever I can.Er, thanks. I forgot about our never ending traffic jams.......Comment has been corrected.![]()
Where to hide from Mother Nature.
After much debate, then, we settled on Slate's "America's Best Place to Avoid Death Due to Natural Disaster": the area in and around Storrs, Conn., home to the University of Connecticut. It lies in Tolland County, which was not part of the 1999 federal disaster declaration for Tropical Storm Floyd.
It's a safe 50 miles from the sound and not close to any rivers. It also has relatively easy access to a major city (Hartford) in the event an evacuation or hospitalization becomes necessary.*