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Talbot Davis

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Top Five Tuesday — Rackets That Have Dominated The Last Five Decades At The US Open
August 27, 2013 at 1:00 am 1
It's U.S. Open time of year, which, if you like tennis, is probably the best time of them all.

And having played/watched/followed tennis as long as I have, few things have altered the development of the game as much as changes in technology.  Rackets in particular.

So for today's Top Five Tuesday I thought I'd walk down Racket Memory Lane as we see together which rackets have dominated the last five decades at the U.S. Open:

1970s
When I think of the 1970s at the US Open, I think of John McEnroe's Wilson Jack Kramer Pro Staff:


He won two Opens playing with this, one with a wooden Dunlop racket (1981) and then his final Open with a Dunlop graphite (1984). 

Some of his most dominating, artistic tennis, however, happened with this frame known best for the two brown diamonds painted on the shaft.  Never as popular as its cousin, the Jack Kramer Autograph, the Pro Staff nevertheless connects the most with my Open memories.

1980s
Ivan Lendl made the finals at Flushing Meadows eight straight times (winning three), all while playing with an Adidas racket to go along with his Adidas clothes and shoes.


We all knew that the Adidas was really just a painted-over Kneissl, but no one in the world was going to buy a racket with a silent first letter.  Either way, in anyone's hands other than Lendl, the frame played like a heavy fiberglass plank.


The real racket of the eighties, in terms of sheer numbers of "players playing" if not titles won, was the Prince Graphite.  It made most players' games much better; it made mine much worse.

1990s
The 90s are a tie between Pete Sampras' Wilson Pro Staff (not the Jack Kramer Pro Staff, mind you)


and Steffi Graf's Dunlop Max 200G:


2000s
Only two titles -- Andy Roddick in 2003 and Rafa Nadal in 2010 -- but the decade belonged to Babolat.  The company used to make racket string only -- an exotic product we called VS Gut -- but when it moved into the racket business, it got it right.

2010s
When Novak Djokovic first switched from Wilson to Head in 2010, the move was widely criticized by experts who said that both the timing and the purpose of the change were wrong.  After an all-time year in 2011, Djokovic proved them wrong.  I have a hunch that he'll do so again in 2013, still using his Head frame.  Plus . . . I still like Head's logo better than any other in the game.

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Devin Tharp, Student & Family Pastor At Good Shepherd
August 26, 2013 at 1:00 am 0
As we announced during the August 4 worship gatherings and then again in our e-newsletter, John Pavlovitz is getting a new job without leaving our church.

After eight highly impactful years as our Student Ministries Pastor, John will become our Pastor of Ministry Development effective September 1, 2013.  In this new role, John will use his unique gifts of motivation and exhortation to help us create and maintain a culture of high impact volunteers at Good Shepherd.




We figured that if John could mobilize over 100 middle and high schoolers to give up their spring break trips to Myrtle Beach and instead remain in Charlotte to spend that week serving among the most vulnerable people in our area, imagine what he could do with adults!

We also knew that given his recent affinity for NineRound Fitness (see above) that we had to do something dramatic.

Truthfully, it's a case of the church's needs being well met by someone already connected to the church's Body.

Which left us in search of a youth pastor.

And so I am glad to announce that Devin Tharp of Racine, Wisconsin will assume that role starting on October 1.

Devin separated himself from among a highly qualified pool of applicants with his leadership savvy, spiritual entrepreneurship, and communication gifts.

For the last eight years, Devin has himself been Youth & Family Pastor at Evangelical United Methodist Church in Racine, the largest UM congregation in the state of Wisconsin.  He has grown an adult leadership team from one to thirty-two during that span and has seen student involvement in the ministry increase from 15 to over 200.

Devin is a graduate of both Asbury University and Asbury Seminary (well, yes, that helps) and is married to Tia. They are the parents of Leyton (7) and Brynley (4).  


You can find Devin on Facebook here.

And on Twitter here.

And his blog here.








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Home Based Week 3 — Room Temperature
August 23, 2013 at 7:24 am 0

Your home as a spiritual room temperature.

So does mine.

How does it get there and stay there?

We'll discover together this Sunday.

Sunday.

8:30. 10.  11:30.

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Yearning To Live Galatians 2:20
August 22, 2013 at 1:00 am 1
Before bed each night, I try to speak out a verse of Scripture . . . all so that, as the Navigators say, His Word is the Last Word.

And recently I've been speaking out Galatians 2:20:

I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.

I first learned this one as a song while in my campus group in college.  The song sounded something like this, though a bit peppier:


But song aside, that verse is easier to say and sing than it is to live.

I like living, so why should "I no longer live"?  I like my opinions, I like my patterns, I like my life.

And yet Paul declares -- in the indicative voice -- that it is no longer his life, but Christ's in him.

And guess what?  This blog post does not give three ways quick ways to embody this verse.  I don't know them.  I doubt the depth and power of the words could be so simplified.

Instead, all I can promise is that I'll keep saying it and singing it (to myself in that case) so that its depth, power, and beauty seeps in and takes over.
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Why Having A Facebook Page Is Like Being Sally Field
August 21, 2013 at 6:34 am 2
When she won an Oscar for her role in Places In The Heart, Sally Field gave what is for my money the best known acceptance speech of all time.


And I have been thinking about that speech ever since I entered the world of Facebook a mere three weeks ago.

But instead of establishing a profile, in which one of your goals is to get a lot of friends, I created a page where one of the goals is to get a lot of . . . likes.

I wonder how many "Likes" Sally Field's page has?

Click here to link to mine.


 
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