I told a certain Canadian a few days ago her women's team was going down. While I didn't see it happen during the Vancouver Games, I'm enjoying the fact the Team USA women are now the three time IIHF tournament champions after their 3-2 victory in Switzerland Monday
USA 3-Canada 2
Ahem, to quote the late James Brown...I feels good!
And as your men's team advised the USA men's hockey team before they got beat down by the USA 5-3 during the Vancouver Olympics, it's time to learn how to sing 'O Canada'.
Catchy tune, but I'll have to tweak it with some extra special lyrics.
O Canada-USA Gold Medal Hockey Version
(sung to the tune of the Canadian national anthem)
Oh Canada,
Your fans just got to see
Your women lose
The gold in IIHF hockey
Your glowing hearts
Got to see rise
The US flag on your TV
From far and wide
O Canada
The world saw the USA beat thee
We won the game
Gloriously
O Canada the gold is ours
In women's hockey
O Canada the gold is ours
In women's hockey
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Sunday, February 27, 2011
UH Lady Cougars Ballers Keep Winning
In what is turning out to be the best season ever for the University of Houston women's basketball program, they rode the sizzling shooting of Brittney Scott to beat Marshall 72-54 for their school record 14th straight win.
Scott scorched the Thundering Herd for 24 points with 6 for 10 shooting from behind the three point arc as the now 25th ranked Cougars improved their record to 23-4 on the season and are now only two wins away from an unbeaten romp through Conference USA.
They clinched the conference championship with a 77-61 win over UTEP last week and have two games left on their schedule standing between them and becoming the second C-USA women's team to go unbeaten.
The Cougar lady ballers battle our crosstown rivals at Rice and have a Tuesday night regular season finale at Hofheinz with Tulane before they head to El Paso to play in the C-USA tournament.
Looks like I'll have a reason to watch the Selection Monday coverage on ESPN when they announce the teams that will be going to the NCAA womens tournament.
Scott scorched the Thundering Herd for 24 points with 6 for 10 shooting from behind the three point arc as the now 25th ranked Cougars improved their record to 23-4 on the season and are now only two wins away from an unbeaten romp through Conference USA.
They clinched the conference championship with a 77-61 win over UTEP last week and have two games left on their schedule standing between them and becoming the second C-USA women's team to go unbeaten.
The Cougar lady ballers battle our crosstown rivals at Rice and have a Tuesday night regular season finale at Hofheinz with Tulane before they head to El Paso to play in the C-USA tournament.
Looks like I'll have a reason to watch the Selection Monday coverage on ESPN when they announce the teams that will be going to the NCAA womens tournament.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Black And Latina
We all know Black women are beautiful in all their shades from vanilla creme to darkest ebony.
That also applies to Latinas as well. Contrary to the conventional beauty stereotype, Latinas also come in a wide variety of skin tones, shades and body builds as well.
There are sistahs in our midst who we are increasingly becoming aware of who proudly claim both their African and Latina heritages.
Former MTV VJ Alani 'La La' Vazquez and CNN reporter Soledad O'Brien have been vocal about claiming both. Vazquez even kicked it up another level by writing an essay for Latina magazine that pointed out that being Black and Latina are not exclusive identities.
“A lot of people don’t realize that I’m Latina, which is fine. One thing about being Latina is that there isn’t one look that comes with the territory. I don’t expect people to know my cultural background just by glancing at me. I do, however, expect that when I tell people my family is from Puerto Rico, that I will be believed and not accused of trying to be something that I’m not. It usually goes something like this: a person having a conversation with me discovers one way or another that I’m Puerto Rican and fluent in Spanish. That person then expresses their shock over these realizations for any number of reasons–common responses are, “You don’t look Latina” and “I thought you were black!” I never said I wasn’t black. And since when does being black and being Latina have to be mutually exclusive?
Choreographer and actress Rosie Perez didn't surprise me either. She's been associated with African American culture ever since her initial stint as the choreographer for the Fly Girls dance troupe on In Living Color and her role in Spike Lee's movie Do The Right Thing.
Actress Zoe Saldana, Gina Torres, Lauren Velez from the 90's TV series New York Undercover, Tatyana M. Ali, singer Christina Milian and the late Cuban born Queen of Salsa Celia Cruz are some of the names that also appeared on the Latina magazine list as well.
But some of the ladies who are on this Latina magazine list who have Afro Latina heritage did surprise me like journalist Gwendolyn Ifill, who is from Panama, Oprah Winfrey Network president Christina Norman, and the singer Kelis.
But it's past time for us to acknowledge that some of our beautiful sistahs are just as proud of their Latina heritage as they are of their African roots and not trip about it..
And I'm just as proud to claim them as well.
That also applies to Latinas as well. Contrary to the conventional beauty stereotype, Latinas also come in a wide variety of skin tones, shades and body builds as well.
There are sistahs in our midst who we are increasingly becoming aware of who proudly claim both their African and Latina heritages.
Former MTV VJ Alani 'La La' Vazquez and CNN reporter Soledad O'Brien have been vocal about claiming both. Vazquez even kicked it up another level by writing an essay for Latina magazine that pointed out that being Black and Latina are not exclusive identities.
“A lot of people don’t realize that I’m Latina, which is fine. One thing about being Latina is that there isn’t one look that comes with the territory. I don’t expect people to know my cultural background just by glancing at me. I do, however, expect that when I tell people my family is from Puerto Rico, that I will be believed and not accused of trying to be something that I’m not. It usually goes something like this: a person having a conversation with me discovers one way or another that I’m Puerto Rican and fluent in Spanish. That person then expresses their shock over these realizations for any number of reasons–common responses are, “You don’t look Latina” and “I thought you were black!” I never said I wasn’t black. And since when does being black and being Latina have to be mutually exclusive?
Choreographer and actress Rosie Perez didn't surprise me either. She's been associated with African American culture ever since her initial stint as the choreographer for the Fly Girls dance troupe on In Living Color and her role in Spike Lee's movie Do The Right Thing.
Actress Zoe Saldana, Gina Torres, Lauren Velez from the 90's TV series New York Undercover, Tatyana M. Ali, singer Christina Milian and the late Cuban born Queen of Salsa Celia Cruz are some of the names that also appeared on the Latina magazine list as well.
But some of the ladies who are on this Latina magazine list who have Afro Latina heritage did surprise me like journalist Gwendolyn Ifill, who is from Panama, Oprah Winfrey Network president Christina Norman, and the singer Kelis.
But it's past time for us to acknowledge that some of our beautiful sistahs are just as proud of their Latina heritage as they are of their African roots and not trip about it..
And I'm just as proud to claim them as well.
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