Archive for the ‘Omaha World Herald’ Category

Omaha may be latest to warm to ice skating

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

By Steven Pivovar
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

U.S. Figure Skating Championships

• When: Jan. 19 through 27, 2013
• Where: Century Link Center
• TV: NBC

Bob Dunlop knows Omaha hardly is considered a hotbed of figure skating.

Neither was Spokane, Wash., nor Greensboro, N.C., before U.S. Figure Skating brought its championship event to those cities the past two years. Given the way those cities embraced the event, Dunlop figures he’ll see the same kind of reaction when the championships are held in Omaha in 2013.

“When we took the event to Greensboro, they were really excited about hosting it because it was something new and different,” said Dunlop, senior director of events for U.S. Figure Skating. “It was something outside of the norm that they see every day.

“They really got engaged by it, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the same thing happened here.”

Dunlop spent the past two days in Omaha, laying the groundwork for the event that will come to the city from Jan. 19 through 27, 2013. He met with officials from the Omaha Sports Commission, which helped land the championships.

He toured Century Link Center, where about 250 of the country’s elite skaters will compete for spots on the U.S. national championship team, and the adjacent Hilton Hotel, where many of them will stay.

That set-up — the hotel is connected to the arena by an enclosed skybridge — will be particularly appealing, Dunlop said.

“I would argue that it will be one of the best layouts in terms of what the starting point looks like,” Dunlop said. “There’s a lot of tweaking here and there to make the full plan of the event run but it really is one of the best layouts.

“The ability to have the hotel connected to both rinks makes weather a non-issue.”

Dunlop said the size of Omaha’s arena and convention center will allow U.S. Figure Skating to expand the championships to include its youngest competitors in the juvenile and intermediate groups. The older skaters will compete in the arena, with two additional sheets of ice in the convention center — one for practice and the other for the younger skaters’ competitions.

“We’ll have a bigger contingent coming in ’13 than we’ve ever had,” he said. “It’s good for us to bring them all to one city and it will add to the impact of the event, as the younger group will come with families.”

The economic impact of the event already is sizeable. Dunlop said Greensboro recently completed a study that gauged the 2011 championships had a direct economic impact of $27 million, with an additional $24 million of media impact. The championships will be broadcast by NBC.

The 2012 championships will be held in San Jose, Calif., another nontraditional site in terms of figure skating.

“Where we’ve had our most success in running championships have been in nontraditional communities for figure skating,” Dunlop said. “People are excited to see something new. We hit home runs in Spokane and Greensboro, and people were saying the same thing in those cities that they’re saying here.

“Why Spokane? Why Grensboro? Why Omaha? We could go to bigger cities but you get lost when you go to bigger markets. Not every city is right for this event. I think Omaha is right for this event.”

The city’s ability to stage major sporting events such as the College World Series annually and the U.S. Swim Trials in 2008 was also noted by Dunlop. The Swim Trials will return to Omaha in 2012.

“Omaha has amazing facilities that fit our needs especially well,” he said. “And what Omaha has done in recent years, with an event like the swimming trials, was noticed by us and others.”

Tickets for the championships won’t go on sale until early next year, but when they do, Dunlop anticipates interest in obtaining them will be high.

“Knowing what I know about Omaha now and particularly the success the city has had in the ability to draw fans, I think it will be,” he said. “Our athletes will be at their prime, and it will provide people with the opportunity to come out and see some fantastic skating.”

USA Baseball Raises Money for Japan Relief

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

USA Baseball announced Wednesday that over the course of five games in early July, it raised $2,500 for efforts to help rebuild baseball infrastructure in areas of Japan affected by the tsunami and earthquake damage.  Donations were accepted throughout the five-game collegiate all-star series between the U.S. and Japan, July 3-8.

During the first four games of the series in Durham, Cary and Kannapolis, N.C., July 3-6, USA Baseball set-up a donation table on the concourses of the Durham Bulls Athletic Park, USA Baseball National Training Complex and Fieldcrest Cannon Stadium, respectively, to raise awareness for the effort. Fans that donated two dollars or more received a USA Baseball ‘Our Pastime’s Future’ bracelet.

On July 8, when the series shifted to Omaha, Neb., for the fifth and final game, USA Baseball worked with the Omaha World Herald to print game programs which were offered in exchange for a donation. Donation buckets were also placed at the entrance to TD Ameritrade Park.

At both the North Carolina sites and Omaha, USA Baseball auctioned off authentic U.S. jerseys signed by both Team USA and Japan, with the profits going toward the relief effort.

“The United States and Japan have had a great baseball relationship since 1972, and we decided this international friendship series would be the perfect opportunity to help the Japanese baseball community,” said Paul Seiler, Executive Director/CEO of USA Baseball.  “We want to also thank our partners in Cary, Durham, Kannapolis, and Omaha for their support of this initiative as well.”

USA Baseball’s donations will be distributed to three baseball conferences in Japan that were affected by the tsunami and earthquake tragedies.  The federation will work with Japan’s baseball governing body to help rebuild the sport in damaged areas.

“I would like to express our heartfelt gratitude to USA Baseball for its support and encouragement concerning the tragic east Japan earthquake and tsunami,” said All-Japan University Baseball Federation president Hideitsu Ohashi.  “We have sent the contribution to the Sendai University Baseball Federation, which represents three university federations in the area that was affected, and they are committed to use the contribution for the reconstruction of their baseball activities.  Nothing is more heartening in a crisis than the encouragement and support of friends overseas.”

Prior to playing Team USA, the Japanese College All-Stars played in Forest City, N.C., against the Forest City Owls of the Coastal Plains League. Forest City also participated in fundraising efforts and collected $1,200 toward Japan relief.

The 2011 USA vs. Japan series was won by Team USA, with the U.S. sweeping three games in the Triangle-area of North Carolina before moving to Omaha for a double-header. The teams finished the first game tied, and Japan won the series finale.

Championships make Omaha focal point

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

By Chad Purcell
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

UNO coach Mike Denney manned the tape measure, making sure there was the perfect amount of space between the mats and the stands.

Wrestlers from both UNO and Nebraska worked the floor at Qwest Center Omaha, pushing and pulling together that massive puzzle of padding.

The 2010 NCAA Division I wrestling championships were still 48 hours away, and already on Tuesday morning the atmosphere inside the city’s downtown arena felt intense.

A small army of workers buzzed about, making sure that the Qwest Center was ready to host yet another high-profile celebration of sport. Event organizers chattered back and forth, all of them happy to have the Mavericks and Huskers making sure that center stage was up to snuff.

“Having both of those wrestling teams here was a huge help,” said Stan Benis, the Qwest Center’s director of event operations. “Our guys probably could’ve figured those mats out, but they know all the little details and know how to get everything just right.”

And rest assured, officials said, all of the necessary pieces will be in place come Thursday, when Omaha becomes the center of the college wrestling universe.

When it comes to collegiate athletics, the NCAA’s Randy L. Buhr — who has overseen the wrestling championships for the past decade — calls this three-day event “the beast of all beasts.”

It’s easy to see why.

There will be 330 wrestlers here representing 77 schools. There will be somewhere in the neighborhood of 450 workers — be they full-time, part-time or volunteer — making sure everything that needs to get done gets done. The NCAA issued 270 media credentials for the event, and that doesn’t include the additional 110 men and women who will help ESPN televise the championships.

Then there are all of those fans, who will show up 16,000 strong for each of this weekend’s six sold-out sessions.

“Of our 88 NCAA championships, it’s one of the most — if not the most — difficult events we put on,” said Buhr, the NCAA’s associate director of championships. “Just the volume of people who are involved, and all the moving parts, and eight mats going simultaneously — it’s kind of like organized chaos. It really takes a lot to pull this off.”

Fortunately, by no means is this the first rodeo for the University of Nebraska and the Omaha Sports Commission. Both entities have an extensive history of hosting NCAA championships. That’s made everything this week go smoothly, Benis and Butch Hug agreed, as this event debuts at the Qwest Center.

“This is a big one, and there are a lot of challenges,” said Hug, Nebraska’s associate athletic director for facilities and events. “But I think that past experience definitely helps a lot, and I’m comfortable with where we are at this point.”

When the event opens on Thursday, wrestlers will compete on eight brand-new mats, ones colored blue, black or green. They were provided for the NCAA through its partnership with Resilite, a leading manufacturer of athletic mats and padding.

Come Saturday night, all the action will take place on a single mat placed atop an elevated stage at the center of the arena. Following the event, the NCAA and Resilite will donate that championship mat, valued at $10,000, to Omaha’s King Science Magnet Middle School for use by its wrestling team.

“We’re really excited to have this event in Omaha, and I think it’s going to be a great atmosphere here this weekend,” Buhr said. “There’s obviously a lot of interest in wrestling in the greater Omaha area, and I think it’s great that there are so many schools located near Omaha that have a rich history of success in the sport.”

Swim Trials CEO named president of the Omaha Sports Commission

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

By Rich Kaipust
World-Herald Staff Writer

Harold Cliff came to Omaha for 18 months but now will be staying for at least 36 more.

The chief operating officer for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Swim Trials has been named president of the Omaha Sports Commission. Cliff recently returned from the Summer Olympics in Beijing and officially takes over Monday.

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Olympic Swim Trials: Will this be beginning of more?

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

By Rich Kaipust
World-Herald Staff Writer

State Sen. Brad Ashford of Omaha was behind getting $250,000 for the U.S. Olympic Trials, so few on Wednesday might have taken as much satisfaction on seeing one pool completed and another started inside Qwest Center Omaha.

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Mutual of Omaha Swimvitational Tickets Now on Sale!

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Top Stars to Use Swimvitational as Warm-Up for Olympic Trials

Tickets are now on sale for the Mutual of Omaha Swimvitational, scheduled for June 5-8 at the Qwest Center. The Swimvitational is the final swim meet in the country where Olympic hopefuls can qualify to compete at the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials.

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2008 will be big year for sports in Omaha

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

By Rich Kaipust
World-Herald Staff Writer

Maybe it will take until the Qwest Center Omaha pool fills, because nothing says different like a million gallons of water.

The last time Qwest Center Omaha hosted the NCAA volleyball tournament, 17,209 spectators saw Nebraska win the national championship. The final four returns to Omaha on Dec. 20.The U.S. Olympic Trials-Swimming sit right in the middle of a something-for-everybody sports year in Omaha. They promise world-class talent, major crowds and network television.

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