Sporting Clays Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Sporting Clays. Here they are! All 17 of them:

There are people like Senhor José everywhere, who fill their time, or what they believe to be their spare time, by collecting stamps, coins, medals, vases, postcards, matchboxes, books, clocks, sport shirts, autographs, stones, clay figurines, empty beverage cans, little angels, cacti, opera programmes, lighters, pens, owls, music boxes, bottles, bonsai trees, paintings, mugs, pipes, glass obelisks, ceramic ducks, old toys, carnival masks, and they probably do so out of something that we might call metaphysical angst, perhaps because they cannot bear the idea of chaos being the one ruler of the universe, which is why, using their limited powers and with no divine help, they attempt to impose some order on the world, and for a short while they manage it, but only as long as they are there to defend their collection, because when the day comes when it must be dispersed, and that day always comes, either with their death or when the collector grows weary, everything goes back to its beginnings, everything returns to chaos.
José Saramago (All the Names)
Smoke a bowl and you can do this for hours,” one of the guys says. “Just kidding. No drugs in the major leagues.” As we cut the clay, there are no bowls to smoke—though according to one sod farm worker, weed goes well with anything turf-related: “You can’t be a grass man and not be a grass man,” he says—but there is an easy intimacy among the crew, a kind of in-this-together camaraderie, and for a few minutes I feel like one of them, too.
Rafi Kohan (The Arena: Inside the Tailgating, Ticket-Scalping, Mascot-Racing, Dubiously Funded, and Possibly Haunted Monuments of American Sport)
There are people like Senhor José everywhere, who fill their time, or what they believe to be their spare time, by collecting stamps, coins, medals, vases, postcards, matchboxes, books, clocks, sport shirts, autographs, stones, clay figurines, empty beverage cans, little angels, cacti, opera programmes, lighters, pens, owls, music boxes, bottles, bonsai trees, paintings, mugs, pipes, glass obelisks, ceramic ducks, old toys, carnival masks, and they probably do so out of something that we might call metaphysical angst, perhaps because they cannot bear the idea of chaos being the one ruler of the universe, which is why, using their limited powers [...], they attempt to impose some order on the world, and for a short while they manage it, but only as long as they are there to defend their collection, because when the day comes when it must be dispersed, and that day always comes, either with their death or when the collector grows weary, everything goes back to its beginnings, everything returns to chaos.
José Saramago (All the Names)
for one measure of economic power was the ownership of sports teams—the Tigers had been owned by the Briggses, an old manufacturing family for whom the baseball park had been named, and the football team by William Clay Ford, Henry’s brother—and in the early eighties the two newest owners, of the Tigers and the hockey Redwings, were pizza franchisers.
David Halberstam (The Reckoning)
Sex is also a positive way of working on one's personal freedom project. After all, it is one of the few areas of real privacy that a person has in an existence that is almost wholly social, entirely shaped by the parents and society. In this sense, sex as a project represents a retreat from the standardizations and monopolizations of the social world. No wonder people dedicate themselves so all-consumingly to it, often from childhood on in the form of secret masturbations that represent a protest and a triumph of the personal self. As we will see in Part II of this book, Rang goes so far as to say that this use of sex explains all sexual conflicts in the individual-"from masturbation to the most varied perversions." The person attempts to use his sex in an entirely individual way in order to control it and relieve it of its determinism. It is as though one tried to transcend the body by depriving it entirely of its given character, to make sport and new invention in place of what nature "intended." The "perversions" of children certainly show this very clearly: they are the true artists of the body, using it as clay to assert their symbolic mastery. Freud saw this and recorded it as "polymorphous perversity"-which is one way of talking about it. But he seems not to have realized that this kind of play is already a very serious attempt to transcend determinism, not merely an animal search for a variety of body-zone pleasures.
Ernest Becker (The Denial of Death)
Tennis is not a game. It's a sport and a puzzle, an endurance test. You do whatever you can to win. it has been my enemy and my friend, my nightmare and the solace to that nightmare, my wound and the salve for my wound. Ask anyone who has made a life in this game, who has been out on the clay before they were old enough to understand the consequences of a strange early talent. I know you want us to love this game —us loving it makes it more fun to watch. But we don't love it. And we don't hate it. It just is, and always has been.
Maria Sharapova (Unstoppable: My Life So Far)
Woody Allen made a PBS television special called Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story in 1971, a half-hour satire of Henry Kissinger. The mockumentary was a natural follow-up to Allen’s directorial debut, Take the Money and Run. It opened with a Kissinger-esque character played by Allen, complaining on the phone: “I want you to get an injunction against The Times. Yes, it’s a New York, Jewish, Communist, left-wing, homosexual newspaper. And that’s just the sports section.” President Nixon already believed PBS was against him and had sent word through Clay Whitehead of the White House Office of Telecommunications Policy that criticism of the administration would result in funding cuts. PBS screened the Woody Allen special for its legal department, which found nothing objectionable. Still, station president Ethan Hitchcock wrote a memo: “Under no account must it be shown.
Kliph Nesteroff (The Comedians: Drunks, Thieves, Scoundrels, and the History of American Comedy)
We all have someone in our lives that has disappointed us a time or two, someone that no matter what they do you still try to love them through it" I just stare down at our joint hands. "The boys' dad, our son Benjamin he…" she squeezes my hand "he loves the boys in his own way" I look up into her face, but she's looking past me at Ry and Jase. "It was hard to watch those two grow up without either of their parents around for them and we tried to make up for it. To be what they needed, but every time we taught them new things or helped them with their homework or even attended their sporting events; every single time I saw the boys faces fall in disappointment. I felt that I felt disappointed towards my Benjamin." I tighten my grip on her hand, knowing it must not be easy to admit out loud. "We all have a weak spot; their dad was ours. Until he wasn't until he couldn't be anymore.
Sarah Clay
The story of Cassius Clay’s lost bicycle would later be told as an indication of the boxer’s determination and the wonders of accidental encounters, but it carries broader meaning, too. If Cassius Clay had been a white boy, the theft of his bicycle and an introduction to Joe Martin might have led as easily to an interest in a career in law enforcement as boxing. But Cassius, who had already developed a keen understanding of America’s racial striation, knew that law enforcement wasn’t a promising option. This subject—what white America allowed and expected of black people—would intrigue him all his life. “At twelve years old I wanted to be a big celebrity,” he said years later. “I wanted to be world famous.” The interviewer pushed him: Why did he want to be famous? Upon reflection he answered from a more adult perspective: “So that I could rebel and be different from all the rest of them and show everyone behind me that you don’t have to Uncle Tom, you don’t have to kiss you-know-what to make it . . . I wanted to be free. I wanted to say what I wanna say . . . Go where I wanna go. Do what I wanna do.” For young Cassius, what mattered was that boxing was permitted, even encouraged, and that it gave him more or less equal status to the white boys who trained with him. Every day, on his way to the gym, Cassius passed a Cadillac dealership. Boxing wasn’t the only way for him to acquire one of those big, beautiful cars in the showroom window, but it might have seemed that way at the time. Boxing suggested a path to prosperity that did not require reading and writing. It came with the authorization of a white man in Joe Martin. It offered respect, visibility, power, and money. Boxing transcended race in ways that were highly unusual in the 1950s, when black Americans had limited control of their economic and political lives. Boxing more than most other sports allowed black athletes to compete on level ground with white athletes, to openly display their strength and even superiority, and to earn money on a relatively equal scale. As James Baldwin wrote in The Fire Next Time, many black people of Clay’s generation believed that getting an education and saving money would never be enough to earn respect. “One needed a handle, a lever, a means of inspiring fear,” Baldwin wrote. “It was absolutely clear the police would whip you and take you in as long as they could get away with it, and that everyone else—housewives, taxi
Jonathan Eig (Ali: A Life)
Tension stretches across my back like a wire hanger. “What does that mean?” “It’s just an awkward time to be talking black and sleeping white.” He shrugs the linebacker shoulders rebelling against his tweed sports jacket with patches on the elbows. “To be dating someone outside your community when you’re emerging as such a voice for it.” The smartest man I know just said some dumb shit. “You see those two things as somehow incongruous?” My question is laced with dread as I brace myself for the man I saw as a hero to show his feet of clay.
Kennedy Ryan (Grip Trilogy Box Set (Grip, #0.5-2))
William Lee Lyons Brown, chairman of the Brown-Forman distillery, where Faversham worked, and a great southern charmer (“Ah wonder if you realize,” he once told Sports Illustrated, “that Cassius Clay’s aunt cooks for my double-first cousin?
Jonathan Eig (Ali: A Life)
I thought about the times we'd had in his small garret above Greville's darkroom. And I didn't feel anything. It's strange how strong emotions can be so easily diminished as your life continues; how deepest intimacies become commonplace half-recalled memories-- such as an exotic holiday you once went on, or a cocktail party where you drank far too much, or winning a race at the school sports day. Nothing stirs anymore.
William Boyd (Sweet Caress: The Many Lives of Amory Clay)
Monastery Nights I like to think about the monastery as I’m falling asleep, so that it comes and goes in my mind like a screen saver. I conjure the lake of the zendo, rows of dark boats still unless someone coughs or otherwise ripples the calm. I can hear the four AM slipperiness of sleeping bags as people turn over in their bunks. The ancient bells. When I was first falling in love with Zen, I burned incense called Kyonishiki, “Kyoto Autumn Leaves,” made by the Shoyeido Incense Company, Kyoto, Japan. To me it smelled like earnestness and ether, and I tried to imagine a consciousness ignorant of me. I just now lit a stick of it. I had to run downstairs for some rice to hold it upright in its bowl, which had been empty for a while, a raku bowl with two fingerprints in the clay. It calls up the monastery gate, the massive door demanding I recommit myself in the moments of both its opening and its closing, its weight now mine, I wanted to know what I was, and thought I could find the truth where the floor hurts the knee. I understand no one I consider to be religious. I have no idea what’s meant when someone says they’ve been intimate with a higher power. I seem to have been born without a god receptor. I have fervor but seem to lack even the basic instincts of the many seekers, mostly men, I knew in the monastery, sitting zazen all night, wearing their robes to near-rags boy-stitched back together with unmatched thread, smoothed over their laps and tucked under, unmoving in the long silence, the field of grain ripening, heavy tasseled, field of sentient beings turned toward candles, flowers, the Buddha gleaming like a vivid little sports car from his niche. What is the mind that precedes any sense we could possibly have of ourselves, the mind of self-ignorance? I thought that the divestiture of self could be likened to the divestiture of words, but I was wrong. It’s not the same work. One’s a transparency and one’s an emptiness. Kyonishiki.... Today I’m painting what Mom calls no-colors, grays and browns, evergreens: what’s left of the woods when autumn’s come and gone. And though he died, Dad’s here, still forgetting he’s no longer married to Annie, that his own mother is dead, that he no longer owns a car. I told them not to make any trouble or I’d send them both home. Surprise half inch of snow. What good are words? And what about birches in moonlight, Russell handing me the year’s first chanterelle— Shouldn’t God feel like that? I aspire to “a self-forgetful, perfectly useless concentration,” as Elizabeth Bishop put it. So who shall I say I am? I’m a prism, an expressive temporary sentience, a pinecone falling. I can hear my teacher saying, No. That misses it. Buddha goes on sitting through the century, leaving me alone in the front hall, which has just been cleaned and smells of pine.
Chase Twichell
The helmsman who so attracted Bertie's eyes sported a ten penny nail, stuck skewerwise through his nose. About his neck was a string of pants buttons. Thrust through holes in his ears were a can opener, the broken handle of a toothbrush, a clay pipe, the brass wheel of an alarm clock, and several Winchester rifle cartridges. On his chest, suspended from around his neck hung the half of a china plate.
Jack London (Stories of the South Stories of the Sea)
!NFHS-LIVE! Clay-Battelle vs Wheeling Central Catholic Live Free High School Football Playoffs Game December 05, 2025 Watch high school sports and events nationwide, live and on demand, via the NFHS Network. Stream regular season and playoffs online from anywhere. Where to watch high school football championships. You can watch all of the games streaming live in the embedded video on CBS News Boston. ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ The crisp autumn air, roaring crowds, and the undeniable thrill of Friday night lights—it can only mean one thing: the High School Football Playoffs are back! As we dive into the 2025 postseason, the stakes are higher, the competition fiercer, and the dreams of young athletes and their communities burn brighter than ever. The Journey to the Playoffs For many teams, the road to the playoffs has been months—even years—in the making. From grueling summer workouts to hard-fought regular-season battles, every snap, tackle, and touchdown has led to this moment. The 2025 playoffs promise to showcase some of the most talented and determined high school athletes in the nation, each with their eyes set on a state championship title. Teams to Watch This year’s playoff bracket is packed with powerhouse programs and Cinderella stories alike. Defending champions are looking to repeat their glory, while underdogs are poised to shock the world. Whether it’s a high-octane offense that averages 40 points per game or a lockdown defense that hasn’t allowed a touchdown in weeks, every team brings something unique to the field. Keep an eye on: Eastside Eagles: A dominant force with a nearly perfect season, led by a quarterback with a cannon for an arm. Northview Knights: A defensive juggernaut that thrives under pressure. Westgate Wildcats: The dark horse with a knack for pulling off upsets when it matters most. Key Matchups and Storylines Rivalries will be renewed, legends will be born, and heartbreak is inevitable—such is the nature of playoff football. Some of the most anticipated matchups include classic cross-town showdowns and clashes between teams with contrasting styles. Will the run-heavy offense overpower the pass-first strategy? Can a team with a young roster hold its nerve against seasoned veterans? One thing is certain: every game will be a battle until the final whistle. The Impact Beyond the Field High school football is more than just a game—it’s a unifying force for communities. From pep rallies and packed stands to local businesses decked out in school colors, the playoffs bring people together in a shared celebration of pride and passion. For the seniors on the field, these games represent the culmination of years of dedication and could be their last time wearing their school’s jersey. For underclassmen, it’s a glimpse of what’s possible with hard work and heart. How to Follow the Action Can’t make it to the stadium? No problem! Many games will be streamed online, and local sports networks will provide coverage and highlights. Follow your favorite teams on social media for real-time updates, stats, and behind-the-scenes content. Final Thoughts The High School Football Playoffs are a testament to perseverance, teamwork, and the pure love of the game. As the brackets unfold and the competition intensifies, we’re reminded why this sport holds such a special place in the hearts of so many. So grab your spirit wear, warm up your vocal cords, and get ready for a postseason filled with unforgettable moments. Here’s to the players, coaches, families, and fans—may the best team win!
FGB
# !NFHS-LIVE! Clay-Chalkville vs Saraland Live Free High School Football Playoffs Game December 05, 2025 Watch high school sports and events nationwide, live and on demand, via the NFHS Network. Stream regular season and playoffs online from anywhere. Where to watch high school football championships. You can watch all of the games streaming live in the embedded video on CBS News Boston. ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ The crisp autumn air, roaring crowds, and the undeniable thrill of Friday night lights—it can only mean one thing: the High School Football Playoffs are back! As we dive into the 2025 postseason, the stakes are higher, the competition fiercer, and the dreams of young athletes and their communities burn brighter than ever. The Journey to the Playoffs For many teams, the road to the playoffs has been months—even years—in the making. From grueling summer workouts to hard-fought regular-season battles, every snap, tackle, and touchdown has led to this moment. The 2025 playoffs promise to showcase some of the most talented and determined high school athletes in the nation, each with their eyes set on a state championship title. Teams to Watch This year’s playoff bracket is packed with powerhouse programs and Cinderella stories alike. Defending champions are looking to repeat their glory, while underdogs are poised to shock the world. Whether it’s a high-octane offense that averages 40 points per game or a lockdown defense that hasn’t allowed a touchdown in weeks, every team brings something unique to the field. Keep an eye on: Eastside Eagles: A dominant force with a nearly perfect season, led by a quarterback with a cannon for an arm. Northview Knights: A defensive juggernaut that thrives under pressure. Westgate Wildcats: The dark horse with a knack for pulling off upsets when it matters most. Key Matchups and Storylines Rivalries will be renewed, legends will be born, and heartbreak is inevitable—such is the nature of playoff football. Some of the most anticipated matchups include classic cross-town showdowns and clashes between teams with contrasting styles. Will the run-heavy offense overpower the pass-first strategy? Can a team with a young roster hold its nerve against seasoned veterans? One thing is certain: every game will be a battle until the final whistle. The Impact Beyond the Field High school football is more than just a game—it’s a unifying force for communities. From pep rallies and packed stands to local businesses decked out in school colors, the playoffs bring people together in a shared celebration of pride and passion. For the seniors on the field, these games represent the culmination of years of dedication and could be their last time wearing their school’s jersey. For underclassmen, it’s a glimpse of what’s possible with hard work and heart. How to Follow the Action Can’t make it to the stadium? No problem! Many games will be streamed online, and local sports networks will provide coverage and highlights. Follow your favorite teams on social media for real-time updates, stats, and behind-the-scenes content. Final Thoughts The High School Football Playoffs are a testament to perseverance, teamwork, and the pure love of the game. As the brackets unfold and the competition intensifies, we’re reminded why this sport holds such a special place in the hearts of so many. So grab your spirit wear, warm up your vocal cords, and get ready for a postseason filled with unforgettable moments. Here’s to the players, coaches, families, and fans—may the best team win!
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# !NFHS-LIVE! Wheeling Central Catholic vs Clay-Battelle Live Free High School Football Playoffs Game December 05, 2025 # !NFHS-LIVE! Blountstown vs Hawthorne Live Free High School Football Playoffs Game December 05, 2025 Watch high school sports and events nationwide, live and on demand, via the NFHS Network. Stream regular season and playoffs online from anywhere. Where to watch high school football championships. You can watch all of the games streaming live in the embedded video on CBS News Boston. ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ ✅ CLICK HERE TO Watch Online Free ✅ The crisp autumn air, roaring crowds, and the undeniable thrill of Friday night lights—it can only mean one thing: the High School Football Playoffs are back! As we dive into the 2025 postseason, the stakes are higher, the competition fiercer, and the dreams of young athletes and their communities burn brighter than ever. The Journey to the Playoffs For many teams, the road to the playoffs has been months—even years—in the making. From grueling summer workouts to hard-fought regular-season battles, every snap, tackle, and touchdown has led to this moment. The 2025 playoffs promise to showcase some of the most talented and determined high school athletes in the nation, each with their eyes set on a state championship title. Teams to Watch This year’s playoff bracket is packed with powerhouse programs and Cinderella stories alike. Defending champions are looking to repeat their glory, while underdogs are poised to shock the world. Whether it’s a high-octane offense that averages 40 points per game or a lockdown defense that hasn’t allowed a touchdown in weeks, every team brings something unique to the field. Keep an eye on: Eastside Eagles: A dominant force with a nearly perfect season, led by a quarterback with a cannon for an arm. Northview Knights: A defensive juggernaut that thrives under pressure. Westgate Wildcats: The dark horse with a knack for pulling off upsets when it matters most. Key Matchups and Storylines Rivalries will be renewed, legends will be born, and heartbreak is inevitable—such is the nature of playoff football. Some of the most anticipated matchups include classic cross-town showdowns and clashes between teams with contrasting styles. Will the run-heavy offense overpower the pass-first strategy? Can a team with a young roster hold its nerve against seasoned veterans? One thing is certain: every game will be a battle until the final whistle. The Impact Beyond the Field High school football is more than just a game—it’s a unifying force for communities. From pep rallies and packed stands to local businesses decked out in school colors, the playoffs bring people together in a shared celebration of pride and passion. For the seniors on the field, these games represent the culmination of years of dedication and could be their last time wearing their school’s jersey. For underclassmen, it’s a glimpse of what’s possible with hard work and heart. How to Follow the Action Can’t make it to the stadium? No problem! Many games will be streamed online, and local sports networks will provide coverage and highlights. Follow your favorite teams on social media for real-time updates, stats, and behind-the-scenes content. Final Thoughts The High School Football Playoffs are a testament to perseverance, teamwork, and the pure love of the game. As the brackets unfold and the competition intensifies, we’re reminded why this sport holds such a special place in the hearts of so many. So grab your spirit wear, warm up your vocal cords, and get ready for a postseason filled with unforgettable moments. Here’s to the players, coaches, families, and fans—may the best team win!
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