Crossing the finish line: Bikus motivates everyday athletes to achieve goals

November 17th, 2009 by Matt Smolsky No comments »

IMG_2730Just talking on the phone with Sandy Bikus is motivating. One can only imagine what a training session with her would be like.

Bikus is the Endurance Coach at Life Time Fitness in Omaha, Nebraska. She sets up training programs for people looking to do triathlons. That’s the “by the book” description of what she does. However, it’s a little like saying “the President of the United States signs bills into law.” A vast understatement as far as what she really does for people.

Probably a more accurate assessment would be this: Sandy’s a tremendously focused and energetic person who keeps ordinary people motivated to perform a truly extraordinary feat – complete a triathlon.

Now, at first blush, that might seem like a simple matter of setting up workouts, monitoring progress, etc. But Bikus puts her own unique and enthusiastic spin on it:

“I believe in what I do and what you can accomplish,” Bikus said. She puts a lot of stock in monitoring and acknowledging successes along the way.

“At the end of every year we’ll go back through the training logs and tabulate the results,” Bikus said. “It’s important for us to look back at where we came from and what we accomplished.”

After all, it’s her job to pull you along, cajole you, and encourage you to become something better than what you currently are. “I spend a lot of time keeping people motivated,” Bikus said. “I spend a lot of time on the phone, coaching people, helping people.”

As part of her coaching strategy, Bikus organizes the indoor triathlons held at Life Time Fitness.

“We’re planning four smaller ones in the coming months to get people ready for the Omaha Triathlon (August 1, 2010)” Bikus said. This approach can be rewarding for athletes, but it’s actually more work for Bikus.

“It’s not all that efficient for me to do four smaller races – setting up the bikes takes a long time,” she said. “But having the smaller groups helps the athletes. I can engage with people more.”

Bikus said triathlon is one of the fastest growing sports in the nation. “A lot of my running club members are hooked on triathlon,” she said. “I’ve tried to involve more people because of all the injuries related to just running.” She said the cross-training aspect of triathlon helps reduce the number of overuse injuries.

In addition to shorter triathlons, Sandy competed in a half-ironman race in Austin, Texas, and plans on competing in Ironman Louisville and the Miami Marathon in 2010.

With four kids under the age of 10, you might wonder how she does it. “Once 24 hours is past — it’s gone,” she said. “I don’t hardly ever watch TV – I’m either working out, listening to music, praying or reading a book.”

What’s her advice for someone training for a triathlon?

“Go your hardest. If you’re not exhausted at the end of a workout, you need to go harder.”

Some good economic news: Foreclosure rates decline for 3rd consecutive month

November 12th, 2009 by Matt Smolsky No comments »

Some positive news on the US housing market — foreclosure rates declined for the third month in a row, according to the RealtyTrac US Foreclosure Market Report released today.

October foreclosure activity was down 3 percent from the previous month.

“Three consecutive monthly declines is unprecedented for our report, and on first blush an indication that the foreclosure tide may be turning,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. Rates are still higher than they were a year ago, but Florida and Nevada, two states that have been among the toughest hit during the real estate crisis, showed improvements when compared to last year.

It’s a glimmer, but we’re getting more and more of those lately.

Read more here …

The value of hustle – Onatolu keeps pushing, keeps succeeding, despite detours

November 9th, 2009 by Matt Smolsky No comments »

Lots of times, when dreams run into roadblocks, detours cause the end of the dream.

Onatolu

Onatolu

Unless you’re Kenny Onatolu. Kenny’s a linebacker who plays on special teams for the National Football League’s Minnesota Vikings. Special teams handle kickoffs and punt returns. One word describes how he plays – hustle. I’ve watched his games, and he’s always around the ball, even if that means blocking 80 yards downfield.

Playing in the NFL was a dream for Onatolu.

“I always wanted to play in the NFL,” Onatolu said. “I always knew I was good enough.”

Maybe it’s that belief in himself that gives him the hustle he needs to succeed. Coming out of high school, Kenny had to delay his college career to make up a few classes.

That was detour #1 to NFL career.

Then, he joined a Division II football program in college. Detour #2, since the NFL doesn’t draft many players out of Division II.

When he finished his college career, no NFL teams offered him a contract. So Kenny went to play in the Canadian Football League.

Detour #3.

Onatolu said that while he learned something from every path he took, the last one to the CFL might have been the one that put him over the top.

Kenny2It’s actually harder to stick in the CFL than it is in the NFL, Kenny said, since so many ex or future NFL players end up in the CFL. The Canadian teams will cut players mid season, with no warning, which forces you to work harder, according to Kenny. Also, playing alongside high-quality former NFL players, hearing about their experiences, and learning from them gave Onatolu the edge he needed to make the Vikings’ 53-man roster last summer.

The detours appear to be over for Kenny. He’s happy to be playing special teams for now, knowing that’s the place he can have the most impact immediately.

“I always just try to stand out,” Kenny said. “I want to make sure I’m finishing plays. My goal is to be a special teams Pro Bowler.” (The Pro Bowl is the NFL’s All-Star game, played in Hawaii.)

A trip to Hawaii with the best players in the NFL? You get the feeling that’s one “detour” Kenny is going make – and enjoy.

Yano Jones: Closing the cracks & helping teens excel

November 5th, 2009 by Matt Smolsky No comments »

Too many times, we hear about a teen that “fell through the cracks.” So everybody shakes their heads and says, “how sad.”

Yano Jones

Yano Jones

Thankfully, there’s someone doing something to close the cracks. Yano Jones, an educator and athletic trainer in Omaha, Nebraska, works during the day at Northwest High School teaching juniors and seniors about how to prepare for college. Then, during the winter and spring months, he trains them on the field to help them maximize their athletic skills at the Red Zone Academy, which he founded. Again, the idea is to help them get to college, perhaps on an athletic scholarship.

Jones said most of the youth in his program at Northwest – funded by Omaha’s Bright Futures Foundation — are the ones who would normally have fallen through the cracks. Their grades are too low to really get into college, so they would just give up or never consider higher education as an option.

The athletes he works with at Red Zone Academy are much the same. They are, for the most part, pretty good athletes – not the stars – who perhaps never thought they had the talent to get a college scholarship.

And since Jones works with many kids who come from “at risk” backgrounds, it makes the work he does all the more important.
Redzoneryout02
In addition to the athletic training at Red Zone Academy, Jones builds an hour of study time into each session. Plus, he shows the student-athletes some of the details they’ll have to take care of to get a college scholarship (transcripts, clearinghouses, what position suits them best in their sport, etc.).

Jones is a former standout athlete who played football at the University of Nebraska-Omaha and Wayne State College in Wayne, Nebraska, where he received his degree.

“It’s rewarding helping students who may not ever have gotten into college, the kids with 2.5 GPAs and below,” Jones said of his work at Northwest. As far as Jones knows, “no one else in the country is doing it as a class in high school, that’s what takes it to a whole different level. We’ll be with the kids consistently, every day.”

With regard to athletics, Jones says “there are kids who athletically can do it but academically don’t. They don’t take care of the little things.”
thumb_1176412158study6
He said he hated to see potential academic or athletic talent go to waste, so he decided to do something positive.

His list of successes is long – 17 teens from his Red Zone Academy class of 2008 alone have gone on to play sports at either a 4-year university or community college.

That’s a lot of lives helped by one person being motivated enough to take time to simply patch some cracks.

Turn on a light, thank a cow …

November 2nd, 2009 by Matt Smolsky No comments »

Ever see a cattle feedlot? You’d remember if you had. It’s one of the few sights along the highway that comes with a smell. Feedlots go on for acres, filled with cattle and the stuff cattle leave for people to clean up. When driving by, your first thought usually is, “Wow, look at all those cows.” Your second thought, shortly after a unique odor hits your nose, is, “Wow, look at all that cow [blank].” Actually, depending on the wind, that might be your first thought.

It seems like such a waste to waste all that waste. Especially when you consider that a lot of non-renewable natural gas is used to power electrical power plants, rather than coal, since natural gas is a much cleaner fuel energy. And especially when cow manure can be turned into renewable methane, the equivalent of natural gas.

Cow - Penn States Department of Dairy and Animal Science

Cows - Penn State's Department of Dairy and Animal Science

The good news is that in the not so distant future, cow manure may help fuel an electric power plant or heat a building near you – that is, if Chris Gaul, Energy Engineer at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, has his say in the matter.

“You can generate electricity using uranium, coal, natural gas, oil, rivers, wind, sunshine, oceans, and biomass,” Gaul said. “How are you going to heat 100 million homes and businesses without natural gas?”

Good question. Known reserves of non-renewable natural gas in the United States could last another 40 years, according to Gaul. And looming on the horizon is an executive order, signed by President George W. Bush, mandating that Federal facilities eliminate fossil fuel use by 2030. Many of these office buildings have no other practical heat source other than natural gas. Retrofitting to some other fuel source may not be feasible.  With renewable natural gas no equipment changes would be needed to convert a building from fossil fuel to renewable energy.

“Biomethane” fits easily into existing distribution system

The process of turning manure into energy involves building “digesters” near the source of the waste, and then getting the methane (natural gas) produced by the digesters into the gas pipeline system. The digesters can convert not just cow manure, but also other organic wastes (such as from food processing) into methane, which can then be used just like non-renewable natural gas.

Renewable natural gas can be transmitted a long distance with little loss, unlike solar, wind, and biomass, where the end user typically has to be near the renewable resource.

The beauty of cow manure is that it’s an abundant renewable resource. Plus, we could take a smelly eyesore that has its own environmental problems and make it useful. Turning cow manure into methane to heat homes, offices, and run power plants makes perfect sense, especially when it can fit so neatly into the existing marketing and distribution systems.

So let’s wish Chris and the other engineers at the NREL luck. Let’s hope they can find a way to turn all that cow [blank] into renewable natural gas.