Main

June 14, 2010

Shuffle Up and Deal: 2010 World Series of Poker and Competitive Eating

wsopbracelent.jpg

I played in the 2010 World Series of Poker, Ladies No-Limit Hold'em Championship, this weekend, finishing somewhere between 525th and 550th place of 1,054 entrants. (When you finish as early as I did, they don't bother to write down your name). Compared to my WSOP debut in 2008, I have definitely improved my game, while managing to achieve some personal benchmarks:

1) I made it past the first break and waded further into the field. I survived about 4.5 hours, just shy of the third break of the afternoon and finished roughly mid-pack after finishing in the bottom 25% in 2008.

2) When the 2005 Ladies Champion, actress Jennifer Tilly, sat down to my left, I didn't throw up (though I did manage to do that later on in the evening). I outlasted her and got the best of her in one pot - so I know I can hold my own against really good players.

3) I learned that I can survive significant runs of bad cards and major hits to my chip stack and fight my way back into contention - rather than circle the toilet of despair (which happened later that evening).

4) I now know that if you're a guy and decide to enter the ladies-only event at the World Series because you think it'll be easy, you will be mocked and ridiculed so brutally, you might as well check your wedding tackle at the door since you won't be needing it when the girls are done with you.

5) I learned that if a blind squirrel plays poker for 16 hours over the course of 3 days, eventually she might stumble onto the nuts and take home a tidy $819 for fourth place in another tournament.

6) I discovered that if this whole poker thing doesn't work out for me, my husband has a future as a competitive eater.

Continue reading "Shuffle Up and Deal: 2010 World Series of Poker and Competitive Eating" »

June 08, 2010

Team Limoncello Competes in Epic Mud Run, Launches Scientific Inquiry

Limoncello Mud Pit.jpg

CAMP PENDLETON, Ca. -- Team Limoncello completed the World Famous Marine Corps Mud Run in 1 hour, 56 minutes, 9 seconds on Saturday.

Comprised of Team Captain Stacy "Toes" Bertinelli, Team Athletic Gear Aficionado Jason "I Lost 90 Pounds" Robert, Team Wine Connoisseur Lisa "Mud Bath" Dinsmore, Team Cheerleader Dave "DAVE!" Dinsmore, Team Celebrity Trainer Christopher "I Can't Believe I Made It!" Ross Lane and Team Last-Minute Substitute Juri "My Feet Don't Touch the Bottom in this River" Yamashita, our intrepid harriers finished the Mixed Team division in a hangover-free 176th place of 268 teams.

Or in the words of Team Sherpa / Photographer Patrick "Disabled List" Bertinelli: "Man, y'all suck."

Even though it was the fastest mixed-drink team in its age group, Team Limoncello's less-than-triumphant finish has posed some interesting questions for scientific inquiry into the limits of human endurance...

Continue reading "Team Limoncello Competes in Epic Mud Run, Launches Scientific Inquiry" »

January 03, 2010

Team Limoncello Rides Again: Bike-N-Hike 2010

BNHLookout.jpg

After spending 2009 overdosing on Vitamin B (for Bacon), Team Limoncello decided to kick the new year off right with some good, old-fashioned Vitamin D (sunshine) and Vitamin E (exercise): Bike-N-Hike 2010.

The plan: Depart from the Pat and Stacy World Headquarters (elev 593) at 11 AM - riding our bikes 5 miles straight uphill on Happy Valley to the Pinnacle Peak Trail Head (elev 779 feet). Dismount our bikes, lock them up, change shoes and hike to the summit of Pinnacle Peak (elev 2889 feet). After working up a sweat and a good appetite, we would roll down the road (0.4 miles) to Blu Burger Grill (elev 765) where we would enjoy tasty gourmet burgers and their full bar. Suitably sated, we'd roll back downhill to the Pat and Stacy World Headquarters. (Because we don't like to exert ourselves after we make pigs of ourselves).

As usual, things didn't always turn out as planned - but that didn't mean we didn't have a good time!

Continue reading "Team Limoncello Rides Again: Bike-N-Hike 2010" »

September 29, 2009

Spray-On Love

So you should know by now that I'm prone to do somewhat crazy things with little preparation: Trying out for the Navy Seals, taking chemistry as a 37-year-old undergraduate, entering the World Series of Poker.

Now you can add getting a spray-on tan to that list.

Continue reading "Spray-On Love" »

September 26, 2009

Where Did the Money Go?

Gratuity for dealers and casino staff - $300
Pot-sweetener for my ladies' home game - $100
New iPhone that is smarter, faster and stronger than my husband's - $199
Cool accessories for my iPhone that is smarter, faster and stronger than my husband's - $124
New battery for my MacBook - $129
5-piece patio furniture set with puffy cushions - $1,497
"Hey Pat, I'll give you $100 if you'll fix me a drink so I don't have to get up off the couch." - $100
Round of drinks and appetizers for friends and clients - $96
10% tithing to Local First Arizona* - $331
Spa day with my Mom - $256
Another round for my family and clients - $48
Two rebuys for Dirk's home game - $40
Contribution to Ponyboy's Africa Trip - $50
Taking my coworkers out for drinks to celebrate, TBA - $91

Burning through $3,361 of the house's money in just under two weeks: Priceless.

Guess I gotta get back to work now.

*When I joined the board of Local First, I told our executive director Kimber that I'd give her a 10% stake in all my winnings. Prior to the Ladies State Poker Championship, my contributions amounted to $6 here, $30 there and a whopping $1.20 on one memorable occasion. It was quite a treat to count out $331 at the last board meeting, and one of our new members actually made a motion to send me to Vegas for a fundraiser. The Nays carried.

September 13, 2009

I'm No. 7!

Being berated by professional poker player Annie Duke at the World Series of Poker Academy in June has its benefits:

snowangel.jpg

That would be me doing snow angels on my bed in the $3,361 that I won for finishing seventh at the Fourth Annual Arizona State Ladies Poker Championship on Saturday at Casino Arizona.

Continue reading "I'm No. 7!" »

April 07, 2009

Fly, Meet Wall

As the aunt-by-marriage of a rock star, I can truthfully say that I have partied with rock stars... but after last Saturday night, I can also say with some certainty: Rock stars got nothin' on Nobel Laureates.

In my day job as public radio salesperson, I helped Dr. Lawrence Krauss, the director of the Origins Initiative at Arizona State University, promote his recent Origins Symposium. Basically he invited about 100 of the world's leading scientists to Tempe, locked them in a room and asked two questions:

What is the origin of the universe? What is the origin of life? Discuss.

Apparently all that thinking really takes it out of you because the attendees - among them, seven Nobel Laureates, the discoverer of Lucy, the sequencer of the human genome, and Lawrence (the guy that did the show on How William Shatner Changed the World) - all needed to kick back with a few cocktails on Saturday night. Little old me (on behalf of my sister-in-law, the swimsuit model) managed to procure an invitation for two: Fly, meet wall.

Read on, get smarter...

Continue reading "Fly, Meet Wall" »

March 14, 2009

I Tried Out for the Navy SEALs - How I Spent My Spring Break, Part 3

teamwhite.jpg

Yes, you read that correctly: Kellee "Goat" Stooks and I, Stacy "Toes" Bertinelli (Team Limoncello), tried out for the Navy SEALs today. To say that we failed to make the team is something of an understatement. For starters, they don't allow girls to become SEALs, but even if they did, neither of us is 28 years old (maximum age to apply), and after our performance today, I can say with some degree of certainty that we would not be among their hallowed legions.

But at least we tried ... and we had fun ... and we were quite entertaining in the process.

Which is to say: Each of us swam 500 yards - breaststroke or sidestroke only, because you can't do the fly, backstroke or freestyle without coming out of the water, creating some splashy noise and making yourself into a nice target for a sniper. Then, after we managed to avoid drowning, we got to do as many push-ups as we could in 2 minutes, as many sit-ups as we could in 2 minutes and as many pull-ups as we could... period... and then we got to run 1.5 miles. Oh, and we were competing against aspiring Navy SEALs and Olympians who actually medaled in swimming in Beijing.

olympians.jpg

And we lived to tell about it - with photos!

Continue reading "I Tried Out for the Navy SEALs - How I Spent My Spring Break, Part 3" »

March 12, 2009

We Frame, We Saw, We Hammer - How We Spent Pat's Fur-cation, Part 2

We framed... we sawed... we hammered... We doubled the size of our backyard deck by ourselves and managed to stay married in the process. Behold, the Patrick and Stacy World Headquarters Backyard Deck:

Small, Petite, Decent but Workable Before:
deckbefore.jpg

Amazing, Awesome, Incredible and Humongous After:
afterdeck.jpg

Go ahead and admit it, you can't wait for Mardi Gras 2010 to trip the light fantastic on that dance floor - and no, we do not contract ourselves out. Mom already asked. And yes, I realize we said we weren't going to spend a lot of money on our fur-cation, so you'll be happy to know that we paid for half our materials with the coins I rolled from our change jar ($450) - though we had to take it to four different banks to get it converted to paper. Now that's what I call recessionary economics.

You can read more about this adventure, see pictures of Stacy using an actual saw and not amputating any of her own limbs, plus learn how to persuade your wife to help you build a deck... all after the jump.

Continue reading "We Frame, We Saw, We Hammer - How We Spent Pat's Fur-cation, Part 2" »

June 15, 2008

World Series of Poker: The Recap

Dazed and confused don’t begin to describe how I feel about my experience at the World Series of Poker. But here goes: It's like taking the SAT naked in front of a live studio audience.

Things you need to know before you think about entering, courtesy of my friend Mike Sochacki and my own surreal experience: EVERYONE is a good player. They play fast and aggressive and they know exactly what they’re doing, and they will eat you alive if given half the opportunity. Truly, I’m still not so sure what happened, but I think I am missing a few limbs. Here's me when I still had chips...

IMG_1719.JPG

Continue reading "World Series of Poker: The Recap" »

June 14, 2008

World Series of Poker: I'm not that good.

Don't know what to say except everyone here is smarter than me.

It's scary. Phil Helmuth was 2 tables over from me. I lost when my straight got beaten by a flush. Fortunately I finished in the top 2,000... Not that it's very good... but that millions of other players weren't here, and a total of 2,700 REALLY good players were. ... Mike & Phil finished shortly after me so I feel bad for them. And I console myself with "But at least I played." Now I'm going to eat a big steak...


Welcome to the World Series of Poker

IMG_1710.JPG

Lucky boots... CHECK.
Clean underpants... CHECK.
Skanktacular sportswear... CHECK.
WSOP Registration... CHECK.
Table Assignment. Amazon Blue, No. 38, Seat 3... CHECK.

Holy SHIT this place is huge! Not only does it take 15 minutes to walk from the front desk to the convention center, the room is literally the size of a football field and lined with poker tables. No flash photography - learned that little tidbit a little too late, but they were nice enough about it. Lining the halls of the convention center are chair-massage stations, souvenir stations, food kiosks and information stands for "THE OFFICIAL VITAMIN SUPPLEMENT OF THE WORLD SERIES OF POKER." From the air quality surrounding many of the players, I thought that was Vitamin 2-C (Caffeine and Cigarettes). They have mini tournaments going on throughout the day, for those who haven't dropped enough coin already.

What have I gotten myself into? T-minus 2 hours, 11 minutes and counting.

June 06, 2008

I Got Your Pair Right Here: The World Series of Poker

It’s not the smartest thing I’ve done with $1,500, but it’s certainly the most interesting.

I’ve entered the World Series of Poker, Event 27 – No Limit Hold’em. No Rebuys. No Add-ons. Yes, this is the same World Series you see on ESPN at all hours of the morning – but it’s not necessarily the same tournament. It’s not the $10,000 buy-in Main Event – if I had a spare $10,000 lying around, I could think of a lot more creative things to do with it than play cards… Then again, you could say the same thing about a spare $1,500, but at least I have a chance to win a coveted World Series bracelet, and I get to test my skills against the big boys.

Continue reading "I Got Your Pair Right Here: The World Series of Poker" »

March 24, 2008

Stacy B Goes to Washington (Street, that is)

1700 West Washington Street: The Arizona State Capitol Complex.

It's where I spent my springtime... there, and hunched over my computer furiously emailing members of the Arizona state legislature, the editorial board of the Arizona Republic, other unsuspecting members of the press, and innocent bystanders like yourselves, who (used to) call themselves my friends.

I am (unofficially) a lobbyist... which means I have now worked in three of the most reviled jobs in the universe: Journalist, salesperson, lobbyist. If only I were to enroll in law school, then I could hit for the cycle!

SO DON'T SAY YOU WEREN'T WARNED: YOU ARE ABOUT TO WITNESS THE CURTAIN BEING PULLED BACK ON THE SAUSAGE-MAKING EXERCISE OF LAWMAKING. (And it's a long, blow-by-blow process) Make a drink, take a seat and continue... we're gonna change government for the better, and we're gonna do it TOGETHER!

Continue reading "Stacy B Goes to Washington (Street, that is)" »

February 13, 2008

I went to New Orleans... and all I got was this TATTOO!

tatpic

Yes, it's real.
Yes, my Mom and Dad know.
No, they have not disowned me.
No, I'm not the first in my family to get a tattoo - that would be my Dad, and he did it when he turned 60.
Yes, it hurt.

Wanna hear the whole story? And see photos of what real pain looks like? We'll see you after the jump...

Continue reading "I went to New Orleans... and all I got was this TATTOO!" »

December 19, 2007

Scott Simon is my BITCH! The true story of the most depraved NPR junket ever

Back in the golden age of radio - well, the golden age of radio SALES - when ad reps had four-martini-lunch expense accounts and eight-martini-Happy-Hour slush funds, and payola wasn't considered a premium form of whole-grain cereal...

Back in the good ol' days, I'm told, there were legendary junkets whereupon a radio salesperson (like me) would take a client or two (like, say... representatives of a gigantic, world-dominating, Internet search-engine and a cool web start-up) to an out-of-town location... perhaps a concert? Then said sales rep would ply them with hookers and crackpipes... or at least concert tickets and copious schwag that would resemble a Texas-high-school football recruit's haul of Camaros and underage cheerleaders back in the glory days of the Southwest Conference.

... And then, and only then, would they proceed to make some memories.

Business may or may not have been discussed... but much fun would have been had by all, and bonds would have been posted by shady organizations, and perpetrators would have been released from the county lockup under the cover of unmarked taxicabs, and vaccination records would have been doctored to protect the innocent, and then (and only then) would the "OUT OF TOWN RULE" have come into play - the "OUT OF TOWN RULE" being the precursor to "What Happens in Vegas stays in Vegas."

This was, after all, the 1970s... when I was about 6 (years old).

Fast forward 30 years... to the following true story (or not) of the most debauched and depraved National Public Radio junket ever undertaken (actually, probably the ONLY NPR junket ever undertaken that did not involve Diane Rehm reciting Shakespeare at a poetry slam or Robert Siegel singing Kum-Ba-Yah at a vegan protest).

You thought you'd heard the stories about Carl Kassell doing the Macarena atop the bar at Coyote Ugly... You'd caught whispers of Susan Stamberg filling a bathtub with her family's cranberry relish and Tanqueray gin... You claimed you saw a grainy photo that purported to be Corey Flintoff doing bong-hits in Fred Flintstone pajamas... And yes, on YouTube, you'd searched, however fleetingly, for records of Scott Simon singing the theme song to Shaft at a karaoke drag bar in Sao Paolo.

He's a bad mother- Shut your mouth! ... But that was before Stacy B found her way to San Jose.

Draw the acid bath, fire up the rubbing alcohol eyewash, prepare to scour your ears, and read on if you dare:

Continue reading "Scott Simon is my BITCH! The true story of the most depraved NPR junket ever" »

November 13, 2007

Team Limoncello Scales Seven Summits... Sort of

It sounded like a good idea at the time: Entering the Phoenix Summit Challenge.

In a smaller scale version of the epic "Seven Summits" - the highest peaks on each of the seven continents - we would scale seven smaller summits in the Phoenix Mountain Preserve... in one day.

"We could do the two-day event, you know - three summits one day, four the next," I said to Team Limoncello member Kristi Olson, who was tasked with entering said team in said event.

"Seven summits. One day. We can do this. Don't be a wimp," she insisted. "One day."

Yet that one day would be days after I succumbed to the antibiotic-resistant mega-bug known as consumption or maybe it was typhoid... or dysentery... or cholera... I consulted The Big Book of Things That Can Kill You: Self-Diagnosis for the Hypochondriac and determined that it must have been SARS... or maybe even MRSA.

And so, the month of October disappeared in a fog of Tylenol Cold and Sinus, NyQuil, DayQuil, Airbourne, pseudoephedrine, sneezing, hacking and coughing - and I awoke at 4 AM on Sunday, November 11 with throbbing feet, wishing I could roll right over and go back to sleep. Instead, I drove to Kellee's house, and together we drove to meet Kristi at Papago Park to begin our one-day adventure.

If your name is Jeffro, now is when you can click on the link below to read the "jump" so you can finish the story (rather than wait for the never-arriving cliffhanger). If you're a normal reader, you know that if you want to continue reading, you can just click on the link below...

Continue reading "Team Limoncello Scales Seven Summits... Sort of" »

June 14, 2007

The Drrty Dozen: Team Limoncello Tips for Future Mud Runners

1) It cannot be repeated enough: Just because you mix Gatorade with vodka doesn't mean you're hydrated.
2) Mexican food recommended by a 52-year-old man with braids in his beard does not a good training table make.
3) Don't run behind Jeffro or Pat if they ate Mexican food last night.
4) Cover or hover - there is no alternative when using a public toilet, especially if you're Jeffro.
5) Don't forget to take a towel! Or duct tape... or dry clothes... or sunscreen... or FLIP FLOPS since you're going to throw away your shoes anyway.
6) Expect to find rocks in your jog bra when you're done... and know this is why men are staring at your chest: It looks like you have triple-nipples.
7) If Stacy pushes all-in with three Oreos, she's on a draw and Pat will get lucky tonight.
8) Beer snob or not, that cold Coors Light will be the best beer you've ever had when you're done.
9) If you are wading chest-high through the lake and hit a warm pocket, don't go underwater.
10) Kiss and/or thank the Marine before you use his thigh as a step-stool - it's a courtesy.
11) Trim your finger- and toenails before starting the race because "The best manicurist in Scottsdale won't want to touch those when you're done," says Roger, Our Hero.
12) Don't leave your wet, muddy clothes tied up in a plastic bag in the back of your BMW... in the sun... for two days.

June 13, 2007

Team Limoncello Gets Down and Drrty at Mud Run

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. – Before we begin, we offer this important training tip for Mud Run aspirants: Just because you mix Gatorade with vodka, doesn’t mean you’re hydrated.

Hungover, out of shape and unprepared, Team Limoncello completed the World Famous Marine Corps Mud Run in 1 hour, 34 minutes and 59 seconds Sunday at Camp Pendleton. In their maiden Mud Run, team captain Kellee "Goat" Stooks, team sherpa Patrick "Mud" Bertinelli, team orthopedic surgeon Jeff “Jeffro / The Ringer" Martin, team personal injury attorney Roger "Our Hero" Martin and I, team bartender and official scribe Stacy "Toes" Bertinelli, finished in 202nd place overall – 94th in the Mixed Team division.

But we can say we were the fastest hungover team in our age group - and we did beat 99 other teams, and even whipped 386 individuals who started the run 15 minutes ahead of the teams... though we cannot vouch for their blood-alcohol content.

Here is our triumphant Team Limoncello victory photo...
MudRunVictory.jpg

Now, before you start complaining that "Hey, these's guys don't look too muddy," please note that both Patrick (left) and Roger (far right) were wearing white T-shirts when we started the race… and this was after we'd been blasted by fire hoses. Click here to read more and find out whether you’d like to be one of us, the few, the proud, the Team Limoncello Mud Runners…

Continue reading "Team Limoncello Gets Down and Drrty at Mud Run" »

September 18, 2006

Team Limoncello Survives Triathlon, Wins Trophy!

We ran... We biked... We swam... and we lived to tell the tale!

With two new members, Team Limoncello finished the Anthem Sprint Triathlon on Sunday, September 10 in rousing fashion, claiming one second-place trophy (Kristi "Duct Tape" Olson), avoiding humiliation at the hands of a girl (Mike "Crone Dog" Cronin), achieving a personal-best time (Terri "Carrot Eater" Karl) and managing not to finish last (me). Sadly two of our Team Limoncello training buddies, Kellee (knee) and Pat (calf), were on the disabled list and did not make the event.

Though your adulation is deserved (and Pat and Kellee are wimps), you might temper your praise when you learn the actual distances involved: A 5K run (3.1 miles) followed by a 14-mile bike (two 7-mile loops) capped with a 400-meter swim (16 laps in an Olympic-sized pool). For you purists (who probably have single-percentage body fat), the vast majority of triathlons start with the swim, followed by the bike, finishing with the run. Being held in the desert during the summer, the kind folks at the Anthem Sprint Triathlon decided to reward us with a cool 400-meter dip in the pool at the end of the race - overlooking the fact that they were finishing said event with the part that would be MOST LIKELY TO KILL US.

So, with our bikes and gear loaded in the transition area and our ages marked on our shoulders, calves and hands (so as to identify the bodies) and Terri returning from her 12th trip to the loo, we took our marks on the starting line. Actually Mike, Terri and Kristi took their marks, I just stood there complaining about how much I hate to run and how all these nice hard-bodies had to feel real proud about kicking my lame 34-year-old butt. (In truth, I think the 64-year-old felt really good about kicking my 34-year-old butt, as did the 11-year-old, the 13-year-old and 46 other people ages 40 and up that gave me a real drubbing). But I wasn't competing against them: I competed not in a measly age group but in a meaty weight class.

I, along with Kristi, entered the Athena Division, which is for girls who weigh more than 150 pounds... no, I'm not telling you how more than that I weigh, and no, they didn't write it on my leg... My rationale was that all my beer-drinking and bacon-eating should count for something. I finished fourth in my group... out of five. Kristi finished second - but before you discount her effort, consider that her finishing time of 1 hour, 27 minutes, 54 seconds put her at 35th overall among the women and within 90 seconds of Crone Dog (1:26:25) who put his body on the line in a valiant effort not to get beaten by that girl.

Please check out this fabulous photo of Kristi closing on Mike during the grueling run -
http://myracepics.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=220485

In this moment, our brave Team Limoncello members are about to turn for the transition area, and as Mike is thinking he is home free, Kristi says, "Hi Mike!"

With the sound effects from the Bionic Woman cha-cha-cha-cha-ing in the background, Kristi proceeds to pass him, leap on her bike and take off. At which point, Mike utters a string of profanities that would make me proud and proceeds to sacrifice his left lung in a vain attempt to catch her. He trails her heading into the swimming pool, when he screams "Nooooooooo!" in a really deep, slo-mo voice that has clearly been disguised to protect his identity (just like in the movies). He churns through the water, passing her at the very last minute, and staggers from the pool triumphant (you must be so proud, Mike, you beat a girl - but were beaten by 32 others!) at which point a race volunteer offers him "Gatorade?" His heartbeat pounding in his ears, Mike replies, panicked, "First aid? You think I need first aid?"

What he needed was an ass-kicking, which Kristi provided, handily. So as Kristi and Mike continued their bickering, our Terri - in her FIRST EVER triathlon - clobbered the run in a cool thirty minutes, spanked the bike and glided through the pool for a most respectable 1:39:23 - good enough for 45th overall. Her sweet husband (and official team photographer) Ted captured her triumph for posterity... and then promptly put his camera in the microwave, wiping all records of our victory, including our post-race team photo where we all posed with Kristi's cigarettes. Still, the race organizers were kind enough to supply photographers (who managed to capture all of us at our grueling, grunting worst) Here's Terri!

http://myracepics.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=221118

Meanwhile, out on the course, the Moronic Woman (me) continued my slog, er, jog through the so-called run. Having watched the waves of fit bodies surge past me as though I were a pear-shaped rock in an on-rushing stream, I knew of at least one girl behind me - and I knew she was in my weight class. So I quickened my pace (as you can see in this graphic photo)...

http://myracepics.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=221156

... and she still caught me, passing me on the last turn, where I entered the transition area, triumphant in the knowledge that I was in LAST PLACE. Ted claims there was another person out on the course, but I saw only one bike in the transition area... mine. And it was BROKEN!

Yeah, that's a fun surprise: I couldn't shift out of the hardest gear, which made the long, sweeping hill on the 7-mile loop QUITE A CHALLENGE. So after a few choice words (if you read this blog, you know my vocabulary is limited), I started mashing the pedals - so well in fact that I re-passed that girl, along with six or eight others, until I got to the hill where I tried to fix my chain and watched them re-re-pass me. And the chain still wasn't fixed... so I remounted my bike, stood up and re-re-re-passed them, returning to the transition area triumphant in overcoming my adversity... only to find my teammates soaking wet and FINISHED and earnestly encouraging me. Bastards.

After trying four times to put my damn bike back on the stand, I stumbled in slow motion to the swimming pool - remembering to take off my socks when I was halfway there. Terri, Kristi and Mike cheered and cheered, reminding me of how cool the pool was going to feel after my long bike ride. All I could think about was Dave Munsey on Fox News at Nine, reminding you to watch your kids around water, and deciding he probably had me in mind.

With my legs dragging like rocks, I crawled through the water. Apparently, if a fellow competitor touches you on the foot, you're supposed to move over and let them pass. I did... twice. At each lap, I could hear Mike, Kristi and Terri encouraging me onward - "Just a few more laps! You're almost there! You're doing great!" - until I came upon an old man doing the breast stroke - THE BREAST STROKE!?! - though I wanted to curse, I figured I'd swallow too much water in the effort and drown, so I just put my head down and passed his slow ass.

I'd like to say it was heroic, but watching from the side of the pool, I'm sure I looked like a turtle dragging a parachute through oatmeal while overtaking a salted slug on a hot sidewalk. Nonetheless, I made it to the end of the pool without becoming a statistic, finishing the race in 1:45:54... and all I can say is, I wasn't last.

Now, where's that bacon?

October 21, 2005

Team Limoncello Traverses Grand Canyon

STOOKS, OLSON, BERTINELLI TRIUMPH IN RIM-TO-RIM ADVENTURE

By Stacy "Toes" Feducia Bertinelli
Team Limoncello Sporting News

GRAND CANYON, Ariz. – We came. We saw. We walked back to the car.
We walked back – from the North Rim to the South Rim, over 24 miles with a combined 10,230 feet of elevation-change, through 10 layers of rock, spanning 545 million years of geology.
In one day.

Continue reading "Team Limoncello Traverses Grand Canyon" »