3 Ways YOU Can Help Get A Thousands of Kids Fencing in Harlem! (via Fencing in the Schools!)

Dear Friends,

Help us start NEW Fencing programs in Harlem!     Fencing in the Schools is a 501c3 foundation I started to help bring the great sport of fencing to kids around the country to fight childhood obesity and instill Olympic ideals.  It begins its mission to get 1 million students fencing in schools by 2023 with 1600+ students fencing in 6 Harlem schools starting in late march!  We also have the goal to get 10,000 kids by 2013-14 school!   I needs YOUR help to get our country fencing!

On March 13, Fencing in the Schools is hosting its kick-off event in NYC at the Baryshnikov Arts Center (450 W 37th St  New York, NY between 9th and 10th Ave) at 7pm featuring talks by 2012 US Olympic team members and two special Fencing Masters matches featuring top ranked men’s saber fencers Daryl Homer Vs. Tim Morehouse and top-ranked women’s foil fencers Nicole Ross Versus Nzhingha Prescod!

These matches will also be aired on national TV in April on Universal Sports!

FOR TICKETS (OR TO DONATE):  www.crowdrise.com/fencingintheschools2013

3 WAYS YOU CAN HELP START 6 SCHOOL PROGRAMS!

#1 BUY TICKETS to the FENCING IN THE SCHOOLS March 13 Kick-Off event!  Go to www.crowdrise.com/fencingintheschools2013 and purchase a ticket!

You can earmark your ticket proceeds specifically to one of the schools in Harlem and earmark proceeds for your ticket(s) to one of the schools!  (Hint: If you earmark for “Democracy Prep Middle School – Olympian Tim Morehouse”  or go to my http://www.crowdrise.com/team-morehouse/fundraiser/timmorehouse1 the top fundraiser for me will get a special prize!)

  •  My top fundraiser on my personal page will get a fencing lesson from me!

#2 DONATE!! Go to http://www.crowdrise.com/team-morehouse/fundraiser/timmorehouse1 and donate!   Every donation helps!

#3 JOIN A FUNDRAISING TEAM AND SPREAD THE WORD! Each school has a specific fundraising page with a team made up of an Olympian, a fundraising captain and ANYONE CAN JOIN to help the cause!

* Step 1: Go to www.crowdrise.com/fencingintheschools2013

* Step 2: Scroll down the page and click on one of the Olympian School Teams

* Step 3: on the page, Login via Facebook or create a Crowdrise account (costs you nothing!)

* Step 4: On the specific school page, click on “THE TEAM” and click on “JOIN THE TEAM!”

* Step 5: you are now a member of the team and you can post to facebook, twitter or send your friends an email requesting their support for Fencing in the Schools!

To help bring fencing to your school you can email info@fencingintheschools.com to learn more or go to our website: www.fencingintheschools.org

Olympic Ambassador for Team For Tomorrow Tim Morehouse to speak with Young Athletes at New York City’s Vanderbilt YMCA

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

2008 Olympic silver medalist, Tim Morehouse, will visit the Vanderbilt YMCA in New York City on Tuesday, October 16. Morehouse will be appearing as an Athlete Ambassador for the United States Olympic Committee’s Team for Tomorrow program.Morehouse is a New York native who won a silver medal in the team saber fencing event at the 2008 Olympic Games. Now, Morehouse is part of a group of Olympic athletes that are captains of the Team for Tomorrow program developed as a means to continue spreading the Olympic values of excellence, friendship and respect. These U.S. athletes offer their assistance and support to those in need around the world through donations, volunteerism, disaster recovery support, advocacy and other contirbutions to communities.

“Team for Tomorrow provides me with a platform to contribute to making the world a better place,” said Morehouse. “It’s humbling to see my fellow athletes share the excitement I have in giving back to others. As Olympians, we have a responsibility to give back, and I would not be where I am today if it were not for the wonderful role models and mentors in my own life.”

At 4pm on Tuesday, Morehouse will speak with young athletes at the YMCA about the importance of living an active and healthy lifestyle as well as his personal story of determination and commitment. He will also encourage young people to reach for their dreams.

After his presentation, Morehouse will give a demonstration and allow the participants to try their hand at fencing.

To attend Morehouse’s visit to the Vanderbilt YMCA, please contact Ellen Murphy at emurphy@ymcanyc.org. If you need images or have additional requests for Morehouse, please contact Brant Feldman at agmsports@aol.com or Nicole Jomantas at n.jomantas@usfencing.org

Pictures from the USOC Media Summit in Dallas #mediasummit #raisetheflag @usolympic

pic.twitter.com/Q7NtWvmr

Spent a quick day in Dallas, Texas today at the US Olympic Committee media summit.    It is a great opportunity to get the word out about fencing to hundreds of different media outlets in a one-day marathon of interviews, photo shoots and video shoots.

Got to re-connect with some Olympic friends from other sports including our women’s soccer team player Alex Morgan (pictured above), Tony Acevado (captain of our water Polo team) and a number of athletes from different sports.  Also always great to re-connect with our USOC family.

Back home now and back to practice!

Rolling tape for Sports Illustrated at #mediasummit
Getting a lesson in proper Cockney slang…this was hard!
Answering questions at a print press round table. I remember in 2004 when barely anyone was interested in fencing…man times have changed!

NBC Sports head Dick Ebersol resigns

By DAVID BAUDER and RACHEL COHEN

NEW YORK (AP) — Dick Ebersol, who made NBC the TV home of the Olympics for more than two decades, will watch someone else run the network’s coverage of next year’s Summer Games.

The powerful TV executive behind shows from “Saturday Night Live” to “Sunday Night Football” resigned Thursday as head of NBC Sports in a contract dispute with his new bosses at Comcast.

The break was sudden and unexpected: Ebersol had been given a promotion when Comcast took over NBCUniversal earlier this year and appeared Monday at a presentation NBC gave to advertisers in New York, tossing footballs from the stage and talking about coverage of the 2012 London Olympics.

Now, he said he’ll be an uninvolved spectator.

“I think it’ll be fun once I get past thinking, ‘I would’ve done that differently,”‘ he said in a phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday.

Ebersol, who is married to actress Susan Saint James, survived a plane crash that killed their teenage son in 2004.

He has had a profound effect on what the nation has watched on television since the 1970s — and his exit could portend big changes in the TV landscape in the next decade.

Ebersol said he wanted “to make a really cool deal” with Comcast executives. “We just couldn’t get to the same place.” His nine-year contract with NBC was due to expire at the end of next year.

He said his resignation was partly timed so it would be clear with both Comcast and the International Olympic Committee that he would no longer be involved with the Olympics.

Mark Lazarus, the former Turner Entertainment Group president who joined the company in February to run its cable sports operation, will replace Ebersol.

It’s another major signal that the Philadelphia-based cable giant was breaking from NBC’s recent past. During the same presentation to advertisers this week, new Comcast appointee Ted Harbert made it a point to say NBC had to do “a little less reinventing the wheel” and get back to broadcasting basics.

“I had a long run and loved every bit of it,” Ebersol said.

The 63-year-old Ebersol’s dedication to the Olympics dates to 1967, when he temporarily left Yale to work at ABC as an Olympics researcher at the side of renowned TV producer Roone Arledge.

Ebersol, who began running NBC Sports in 1989, has made it the Olympics network: NBC has broadcast every Summer Olympics since 1988 and every Winter Games since 2002.

“I’ve worn the five (Olympics) rings on the inside of my heart as much as anybody,” Ebersol said.

Under Ebersol, NBC’s telecasts from the 1996 Atlanta Olympics were billed as “plausibly live” — a term coined to describe the showing of taped material as if it were live, withholding results from viewers to heighten the suspense.

When NBC showed some events in Atlanta a few hours after they took place, it got roasted by the critics.

Even in more recent years, his Olympics coverage — some live, some taped — has been called anachronistic in the fast-moving information world. But Ebersol said the strong ratings the Olympics achieve are a sign that his style, which dates back to Arledge, is the right one.

Next month, the IOC holds its auction for broadcast rights to the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, and 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Networks can also bid on a four-games package including the 2018 and 2020 Olympics, whose host cities have not yet been chosen. The IOC is hoping to surpass the previous $2.2 billion deal.

His resignation could be a sign from Ebersol’s new bosses at Comcast that they’re not willing to pay any price to keep the Olympics, though he said he believed the company was serious about holding onto the games. Despite strong ratings, NBC lost more than $200 million covering the Vancouver Olympics in 2010 because its bid did not anticipate the economic downturn. There’s real concern among some in sports that an Olympics in Russia, well out of U.S. time zones, could be a tough sell for the American audience.

There were published reports in recent months that despite the united public front, Ebersol and Comcast executives had clashed in preparation for the Olympics bid.

IOC President Jacques Rogge says Ebersol’s resignation came as a shock and that he was told it had “absolutely nothing to do” with the upcoming bids. He said he has been assured that NBC will bid on the U.S. Olympic broadcast rights for those games despite Ebersol’s resignation.

Rogge said he spoke by phone with Comcast CEO Brian Roberts and two other executives who “reiterated the full support of NBC/Comcast for the Olympic movement and the Olympic Games.”

Earlier this year, Comcast had chosen Ebersol to oversee the NBC Sports Group, which included NBC Sports, Versus, the Golf Channel and a string of regional sports networks the company owns.

After working with ABC and Arledge at three Olympics, Ebersol moved to NBC as one of the network’s youngest executives, in charge of weekend late-night programming. He teamed with Lorne Michaels to develop “Saturday Night Live,” a comedy institution that endures today.

When Michaels left the show for several years, Ebersol was executive producer of “SNL” from 1981 to 1985. He briefly left NBC for his own production company, developing “Later with Bob Costas” and working with Vince McMahon to televise professional wrestling.

Even as a sports executive, he kept his hand in other parts of the company. Ebersol took on a public attack role during NBC’s contentious divorce with former “Tonight” show host Conan O’Brien, publicly criticizing the comedian’s stewardship of the late-night series.

During 1995-96, NBC became the only network to televise the World Series, Super Bowl, NBA finals and Summer Olympics in one year. The Sporting News in 1996 named Ebersol the most powerful person in sports.

Costas, the longtime NBC announcer, lauded Ebersol’s gift for producing major events and “capturing the atmosphere and sense of occasion.”

“Over the years he has been by far the most important person in my professional life and one of my closest friends,” Costas said.

“Sunday Night Football,” which Ebersol largely put together, has been a huge ratings success for the network in the past five years, increasingly helping NBC keep afloat in the fall as its prime-time schedule continues to slump.

“Dick Ebersol is an incredible talent whose contributions to the company over the last four decades in sports, news and entertainment are unsurpassed,” said Steve Burke, CEO of NBCUniversal and executive vice president of Comcast.

Burke said that “we will miss his intellect, experience and passion for the television business.”

Ebersol said he will leave NBC in June. He said one reason he was leaving was because of fatigue; on top of his executive responsibilities, he travels many weeks of the year to produce events.

“He’s the most engaged sports executive I’ve ever known,” said NBA Commissioner David Stern, who credited Ebersol’s aggressive promotion of the sport for boosting ratings in the 1990s.

Ebersol was in the headlines for the 2004 tragedy in which a small plane with ice on its wings crashed in Colorado and killed three people, including his 14-year-old son, Teddy. Dick and another son, Charlie, were seriously injured in the crash.

Ebersol said one of his career’s most memorable moments was the reaction to Muhammad Ali lighting the Olympic flame in Atlanta. “It was a long process to convince the organizers to let it be him,” he said.

——

AP Sports Writer Stephen Wilson in Lausanne, Switzerland, contributed to this report.

Cool Fencing Video of the Day: Dairy Queen’s Fencing Commercial!

I can’t remember the last time I actually eat at Dairy Queen, but kudos to them for a funny fencing commercial!

Another brand jumps on the fencing train!

Special thanks to Ryan Arieta for alerting me to this! You should follow him on twitter and thank him! @LeftyFencerRyan

The Sport of Fencing is (Officially!) Coming Back to TV in the USA!

Not since the 1980s  has a fencing tournament in the USA (outside of the Olympics) been televised!    That drought is over and this is only the beginning ! (Especially if we have your support!)

The official press release is below. Now, LET’S SELL OUT HAMMERSTEIN BALLROOM (2000 seats!) AND SHOW THE WORLD OUR GREAT SPORT!

Tickets and info: www.fencingmastersnyc.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

FENCING MASTERS NYC BRINGS WORLD CHAMPION FENCERS TOGETHER FOR THE LARGEST SPECTATOR-FENCING COMPETITION EVER TO BE HELD IN THE UNITED STATES

PRODUCED BY WCMG EVENTS, FENCING MASTERS NYC WILL TAKE PLACE NOVEMBER 17, 2010 AT HAMMERSTEIN BALLROOM IN SUPPORT OF TEAM USA FENCING

NEW YORK, NY – OCTOBER 6, 2010 – The first ever Fencing Masters NYC brings world champion fencers to New York City to compete in the largest spectator-fencing tournament in modern USA history, outside of the Olympics.  Produced by WCMG Events, the Fencing Masters NYC will be hosted by Tim Morehouse, US champion and Olympic Silver medalist, on November 17, 2010 at the Hammerstein Ballroom. The tournament will be televised on SportsNet NY (SNY), reaching 14.5 million homes in the tri-state area, and is the first non-Olympic US fencing competition to hit the airwaves since the 1980’s. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Olympic fencing hopefuls as they train to compete in the 2012 Summer Olympics.

The tournament will feature Olympic fencing champions, Aldo Montano (Italy), Nicolas Lopez (France), Olga Kharlan, (Ukraine), and Mariel Zagunis (USA), along with international Olympians, Jaime Marti (Spain), Alex O’ Connell (Britain), and USA Olympic medalists and champions, Tim Morehouse, Ben Igoe, and Daryl Homer.  Team USA will fence the International Champions during a dramatic and unprecedented evening of fencing entertainment, exhibition, and inspiration.

“We are very excited to bring this event to New York City to introduce our sport to new fans,“ says Tim Morehouse event organizer.  “The tournament provides a great opportunity to showcase and educate New Yorkers and Americans about the athleticism and prestige surrounding the sport.”

In support of this extraordinary and historic evening, fencing clubs across the country are hosting men’s saber qualifier tournaments, the winner earning a chance to compete against Olympic Gold medalist, Aldo Montano, in front of the 2000-plus spectators expected to attend.

The Fencing Masters NYC kicks off at 3:00 p.m. at the Hammerstein Ballroom with a Fencing Expo for kids, adults, fencers, and non-fencers alike.  At 6:30 p.m., VIP’s will be treated to a meet and greet with additional celebrity athletes from the world’s of figure skating, speed skating, synchronized swimming, rowing, and women’s basketball, along with cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. Doors open for the main event at 7:00 p.m. to general admission ticket holders.

For more information on sponsorship opportunities, donations, or to purchase tickets, go to www.fencingmastersnyc.com or email info@fencingmastersnyc.com.

About Fencing Masters NYC

The Fencing Masters NYC (www.fencingmastersnyc.com), in partnership with WCMG events (www.wcmgevents.com), features Olympic champions from around the world in the largest non-Olympic spectator-fencing tournament to be held in the US in the modern era. This event offers an extraordinary and unique behind-the-scenes experience dedicated to the sport of fencing, with a portion of the proceeds donated to Team USA Olympic hopefuls training to compete in the 2012 Summer Olympics

CONTACT:

M&C Saatchi Sport & Entertainment

Jody Sowa

o:646-274-1428, c:917- 691-0952

jody.sowa@mcsaatchi.com

Apolo Ohno and other Olympians in NYC to celebrate 2 Years Until the London Olympics!

New York City will be in the Olympic spirit on Monday with multiple Olympic countdown events taking place.   In the morning, Olympic Champion speed skater Apolo Ohno will speak at a press conference to announce a new Olympic sponsorship with a major brand who will be sponsoring the US Olympic Committee directly along with 4 Olympic sports. (Sadly, fencing is not one of them)

I’ll be on-hand for the announcement along with a host of other folks.   In the evening, the British Consulate is hosting Olympic athletes, dignitaries and Olympic sponsors for an event celebrating 2-years until the start of the London Games! Crazy!  I have the honor of speaking at that event to convey our country’s excitement for the Games in London 2012.

Should be a fun day tomorrow with practiced sandwiched in between!

Cool Sports News of the Day: Doing Athletics Makes You Smarter!

Cool article in Discovery Magazine about how sports can make you smarter called, “Why Athletes Are Geniuses.”

The qualities that set a great athlete apart from the rest of us lie not just in the muscles and the lungs but also between the ears. That’s because athletes need to make complicated decisions in a flash…In recent years neuroscientists have begun to catalog some fascinating differences between average brains and the brains of great athletes. By understanding what goes on in athletic heads, researchers hope to understand more about the workings of all brains—those of sports legends and couch potatoes alike.

Full Article:
http://discovermagazine.com/2010/apr/16-the-brain-athletes-are-geniuses/article_view?b_start:int=0&-C=

And, since athletics makes you smarter and fencing is known as the “Braniest Sport” according to Sports Illustrated that means that fencing is the best sport for you to get SMAHTA.  😉

When I’m Tired I Want to (fill in the useless activity) when I should be (fill-in the productive activity). In Need of Advice!

 

sleepy-dog.jpg image by ilikecat1

I’ve been thinking a lot about ways to make myself more efficient and productive.   While I’m a pretty busy guy who generally gets a lot done, I still feel like there is more or at least a better way for me to get things done in my life.

Now, when I’m a) motivated and well-rested or b) under the gun of a deadline I can get a remarkable amount accomplished in a short period of time as I think it true with most even semi-functioning people.

But what to do when things are not so urgent, but still very important (See 7 Habits of Highly Effective People) to achieving your goals?

I’ve been thinking a lot about this over the past weekend because I had a few days of free time (which I rarely have) and I had some big non-urgent, but very powerful (i think) plans to get things done that would have helped me achieve my big goals and I wasn’t able to get it done because of procrastination. 

And these times happen throughout a month.  You know those times when you’re tired, but there is still time left in the day and you’re “unsupervised”, so to speak.   

Over this past weekend and generally during these times, I want to a) watch TV b) waste time on useless emailing c) eat junk food or just generally procrastinate.(and then I generally feel bad that I’ve done these things later!)

I’ve been trying to figure out better strategies for using these hours in my day.  Right now, I feel like these moments are even counter-productive to me especially if, for example, I eat junk food or watch TV and end up staying up later because I’m zoned out in TV land.(Curse you VH1!)

What are your thoughts? how do you deal with these times?  What should I be doing with this time?

Should I just power-nap and then try to re-focus? Although I think that really isn’t specific enough to turn these times around for me. 

Yours Truly,

Wasting Time in NYC (My ode to Dear Abby here!)