NBA Rookie Jeremy Lin’s Preseason Highlight Reel
July 26, 2010
The Saints’ Japanese-American X-Factor in Super Bowl XLIV
February 7, 2010
- [Update] Whodat? Saints 31, Colts 17. Read Scott Fujita’s Super Bowl diary on NOLA.com
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MIAMI—The New Orleans Saints will be packing a Japanese-American double whammy for the Indianapolis Colts Sunday when they face off in Super Bowl XLIV. The unlikely duopoly consists of the speedy, 6-5, 255 lb. strong-side linebacker Scott Fujita and front office marvel James Nagaoka, a guy who doesn’t even have to don a jock and pads to make his team a winner.
A UC Berkeley political science grad with a master’s in education, the inspirational Fujita has done much to rehabilitate the image of the professional athlete by taking some courageous stands on hotly debated social issues, such as abortion rights and gay marriage. While most ballers’ quotes are monosyllabic, Fujita’s are nuanced and articulate.
Given up for adoption by his 16-year-old birth mother when he was six weeks old, Fujita was adopted by third-generation Japanese American schoolteacher Rodney Fujita and his wife Helen, a Caucasian.
Though not Japanese American by blood, Fujita received a typical Japanese American upbringing (with all the trappings) in Oxnard, Calif., considers himself Japanese culturally and says the strongest person he knows is his tiny grandmother Lillie Fujita, who was imprisoned in a concentration camp by the U.S. government during World War II.
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But the Saints’ real secret weapon just may be the team’s incredibly resourceful director of operations James Kuniki Nagaoka, 60, who orchestrates where his players eat, sleep, travel, work out and practice with the exacting logistical skill of a four-star general. He runs the show that is Saints’ football.
An NFL veteran of 31 seasons, Nagaoka excels at giving the Saints the winning edge of preparation, especially on the road, where the season can be won or lost, through hurricanes Katrina and Gustav and the media conflagration that is the Super Bowl.
A graduate of the University of Washington with degrees in communications and Japanese literature, Nagaoka was lured away in 2000 from the Seattle Seahawks franchise for whom he handled a myriad of logistical duties for 22 seasons. The unflappable operations chief may prove to be the difference on Super Bowl Sunday.
- NFL Stats: Scott Fujita, NFL.com
- The Saints Linebacker Who Speaks His Mind, NYT
- A Linebacker With a Conscience, ESPN
- Scott Fujita: Family Valued, The Times-Picayune
- Fast Facts: Jaclyn Fujita (Scott’s Wife), playerswives.com
- Curriculum Vitae: James K. Nagaoka, Spoke
Godzilla Headed for Anaheim?
December 14, 2009
Filipino American Shane Victorino used his power and speed to crush the hopes of the L.A. Dodgers and propel the Philadelphia Phillies into their second consecutive MLB World Series Wednesday. The 28-year-old Maui, Hawaii native and son of Maui County Councilman Michael P. Victorino, always seems to play his best against the Dodgers, the team that originally drafted him out of high school in 1999.
With a World Series appearance last year, an All Star selection and a Gold Glove, Victorino was a track star at Maui’s St. Anthony High School and once held the state record in the 100-meter dash.
Victorino is the 27th native Hawaiian and second Maui-born player to take the field in a regular season MLB game. He is today arguably the finest Asian Pacific American player to ever play in the major leagues. He is half Portugese and half Filipino.
U.S. Open (Food) Winners
September 10, 2009
Lost in the media madness over his Team USA teammate Michael Phelps’ eight-gold triumph at the 2008 Beijing Olymoics and Jamaican Usain Bolt’s dominance in the sprints, Glendora, Calif.’s Bryan Ezra Tsumoru Clay, the reigning champion in the grueling decathlon, is virtually unknown in his own country.
Victory in what is considered track-and-field’s toughest event — 10 running, jumping and throwing competitions — once conferred larger-than-life status to guys like Bob Mathias, Rafer Johnson and Bruce Jenner. Not for Clay, son of Japanese American Michelle Ishimoto and African-American Greg Clay, who is competing at the U.S. Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Ore., this weekend. (Update: Clay was forced to scratch from the USATF championships due to a hamstring injury).
Clay was tested by SPARQ to establish his SPARQ Rating across a number of different sports. The test is meant to measure sport-specific athleticism and in the football test Clay recorded a score of 130.40, the highest ever recorded. By comparison, Reggie Bush scored a 93.38. NFL?
But the devoutly Christian Clay is not bitter. “My family and I have everything that we could ever ask for. We’ve got a house, a roof over our head, we have food, we have our cars, my wife gets to stay at home and take care of the kids, our kids are happy. So really, I can’t be mad. I’ve got what I need.”
Listen to Diana Nyad’s NPR feature on Clay and America’s fickle adoration of athletes.
The Score: Track and Field Blues—06/18/09
Clay, whose grandparents, Tsumoru and Kay Ishimoto of Honolulu, cheered him on in Beijing, is proud of his Japanese American heritage.
“Japanese culture and food were a huge part of my life growing up. My mother made sure I knew who I was and where I came from. Our house was always full of grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins. We ate ozoni [a traditional Japanese rice soup] on New Year’s Eve. My life was very Japanese.”
Clay was understandably upset about his injury in Eugene, but there was also good news. He’s been nominated for and ESPY Award.
- Clay Resumes 2012 Medal Quest, Meri-Jo Borzilleri, Ultimate Sports
- Bryan Clay’s Official Web Site
- Clay is Gold, Epicanthus
- In An Age of Hybrids Decathlete Bryan Clay Is the Ultimate All-American Athlete, 08/20-08, Epicanthus

Only a win away from Super Bowl XLIII, the emergence of the baby-faced 6-4, 265-pound Philadelphia Eagle linebacker Chris Gocong has sent thousands of Asian/Pacific American fans to their computers to Google his name— Chris Gocong: Vietnamese? Filipino? Pacific Islander?
Well, no need to speculate any longer, crack Epicanthus researcher Rachel Roh contacted Gocong’s dad, Bruce Kennedy, to pin down Chris’ ethnic roots. Here’s what he had to say:
“After review with Chris and his mom (Julie), he is the following—100% American, 12.5% French, 12.5% German, 25% American Indian (and) 25% Hawaiian/Pacific Islander and 25% Filipino.”
So there you have it. Quite a mix. Gocong calls himself a “mutt” in this video. Seems like another mutt is having his big day January 20 in Washington, D.C. Ah, 2009: Year of the Mutt in Post-Racial America.
Gocong, 25, is part of the Eagles’ frenetic blitz-happy linebacking corps (along with Stewart Bradley and Akeem Jordan) that has wreaked havoc on opponents and humbled the vaunted Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants offenses in their last two contests.
Gocong and the Eagles continue their unlikely march toward the Super Bowl against another dark horse, the Arizona Cardinals, who will suit up Polynesians Deuce Lutui (USC) at guard, Pago Togafau (Idaho State) at LB and Filipinos Aaron Francisco from Hawaii via BYU at DB and Travis LaBoy(UH) at DE.
More on Chris Gocong:
- Chris Gocong Profile, philadelphiaeagles.com
- Ask the Eagles—Chris Gocong, video
- Who Exactly Is Chris Gocong? philadelphiaeagles.com
- Chrs Gocong NFL Draft Profile, Fox Sports
- Eagles: Glitz and Glue, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Fall 2008 UCLA Undie Run
December 12, 2008
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Hundreds of UCLA students marked the end of final exams Dec. 10 by dropping trou for the thrice-annual undie run across the Bruin campus in Westwood. The run has lost some of its ribald cache of years past. Local TV stations and even the staid and nearly dead L.A. Times covered the event. Less Asians than years past, but it’s the quality that counts.
Phiten Aqua-Titanium: The New Bling for Major Leaguers
October 24, 2008
As a lifelong fan, I’m enjoying Major League Baseball’s post-season and World Series play. Philly and Tampa may not be big market franchises, but the level of play has been high. Both teams make up for their lack of known superstars with power, speed and pitching.
As an Asian American, I can also root for the Phillies’ Pilipino American outfielder Shane Victorino and the Rays’ gritty second baseman Akinori Iwamura. Aside from the clutch-hitting Iwamura, there’s another Japanese import on the field. Are you noticing all the multicolored, braided neck wear on big leaguers the last few years? Used to be gold and platinum were de rigueur for the proper pivot man, but seems like “therapeutic” PhitenUSA aqua-titanium necklaces have replaced bling as the king of the diamond. I mean, they’re everywhere.
Torrance, Calif.-based PhitenUSA claims that their titanium-infused necklaces, wristbands and tape all stimulate the body’s ETS (Energy Transport System). According to PhitenUSA’s website, their products “may help to alleviate discomfort, enhance circulation, promote relaxation, stimulate energy flow, reduce stress, sooth tension.”
Tampa’s Iwamura and fireballer Matt Garza wear them; I’ve seen them on Boston pitchers Daisuke Matsuzaka, Josh Beckett and Hideki Okajima and reports say 6-10 hurler Randy “The Big Unit” Johnson of the D-Backs started wearing the Phiten necklaces back in 2005.
I’ve done a little research. Phiten’s stuff isn’t really that expensive, and MLB trainers say at least 200 big leaguers are wearing the titanium chokers, with many endorsing their wondrous powers.
Well, I guess they’re better than steroids, and perhaps more of these ballers should finish college with special emphasis on Snake Oil 101.
- “Is Your Bat Speed Off? Try a Titanium Necklace,” by Lee Jenkins, NY Times, 06.22.05
- “Product Has Red Sox Collared,” by Rob Bradford, Boston Herald, 06.20.08
- “So What’s With All These Necklaces in Baseball These Days?” by Chris Chase, Yahoo! Sports, 10.13.08
- PhitenUSA Website
“Peace Pot Microdot”
October 10, 2008
UPDATE: Murder Suspect Miura Bids World Cryptic Farewell, Hangs Self in Jail Cell
Japanese businessman Kazuyoshi Miura, 61, accused of conspiring to have his wife murdered 27 years ago in Los Angeles, hanged himself in his jail cell Oct. 10 (Jailers said they found his body at about 9:40 p.m. PST), a few hours after he arrived in the United States to face charges.
Miura, also suspected of killing a second Japanese woman in L.A., was taken from a Continental Airlines flight from Saipan wearing a blazer, jeans, knit shirt and a black baseball cap bearing the words “Peace Pot Micrdot” in two-inch white lettering. According to urbandictionary.com, “Peace Pot Microdot (PPMD)” is “a time-honored farewell, wishing other stoners and hippies a happy and high good-bye.”
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Tight $pirals
October 9, 2008
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UNFORTUNATE TIMING—Citibank equities trader John Chiang, 28, made the cover of the September issue of Trader Monthly as one of the top 30 Wall St. traders under 30. Read why he’ll keep his cool as the economy tanks. RUMOR has it that KoreAm, the fine Korean American monthly is in financial trouble. It’s tough out there for all print journalists. The October issue features brainy Northwestern University Wildcat QB C.J. Bachér, whose favorite meal is his Korean American mom’s galbi. It’s at the newsstands now. Buy it or subscribe. We won’t be “scan-stealing” from KoreAm for now. LASTLY, happy birthday John!
Money
‘The Freak’ Cy Young Contender; Berkeley Grocer Pissed @LATimes; TV Drama Hooks U.S. Koreans
September 24, 2008
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- BECAUSE OF TIM LINCECUM’S high leg-kick and Olive Oyl long-stride delivery, hitters started calling the S.F. Giants starter “The Freak.” But what’s really freaky about the 24-year-old Seattle native is that the diminuitive (5-10, 170) Filipino American can crank his two-seam fastball up to the plate at 100 mph. He a guy a lot of hitters would rather not face, and he’s got a good chance to be awarded the 2008 NL Cy Young Award.
- GLENN YASUDA has risen before sun-up for the past 30 years in order to bring customers at his Berkeley Bowl market the finest fruit and veggies available in the entire Bay Area, but he can be a little cranky and could ban you from his store if you don’t toe the line. L.A. Times’s featurist John Glionna profiled Yasuda and his store in a whimsical Sept. 22 Column One piece, but evidently, the 74-year-old Japanese American wasn’t too happy with the story and has reportedly banned Glionna from his store… for life. Read the offending piece here. Visit Berkeley Bowl’s web site here.
- KOREAN TV DRAMA MANIA has reached our shores. Korean Americans from Fort Lee, NJ to L.A.’s Koreatown will be glued to their wide-screen TV’s Sept. 25 for the final episode of the insanely popular KBS TV drama Women in the Sun, the tale of two sisters who share a dark childhood secret. The 20-episode program, which garnered monster ratings in So. Korea, is targeted at the young adult audience and boasts an all-star cast of the Korean entertainment industry’s hottest male and female idols. So, break out the dried squid jerky, OB Beer and hankies. It’s gonna be a roller-coaster ride, baby!
Update: Nishikori Run Ends at Open
September 2, 2008
- Nishikori Advances at U.S. Open, Associated Press
- Project 45: Nishikori Game and Development, ESPN
Tennis Phenom Kei Nishikori, 18, Into 3rd Round at U.S. Open
August 29, 2008
NEW YORK—As recently as 18 months ago Kristie Haerim Ahn was struggling desperately with her tennis, trying somehow to find joy in it before she was faced with the ultimate decision about whether to give it up for good. Yesterday (Friday, Aug. 22), as she flung her racket in the air, screamed and fell on the court with both hands atop her head in shock, there was plenty of joy overflowing to all her friends and family who had crossed two rivers to watch her stunning victory.
Ahn, a feisty kid from Upper Saddle River, NJ, had just beaten No. 4 seed Anna Lapushchenkova, 6-4, 6-4, in the third round of the qualifying tournament to earn an unlikely spot in the U.S. Open main draw. That’s main draw, as in the one Serena Williams and Ana Ivanovic play. Not too shabby for a 16-year-old young woman ranked 758th in the world.
UPDATE—Unseeded qualifier Kristie Ahn lost in straight sets (6-3, 6-4) to Russian Dinara Safina this morning in 1st round action at the U.S. Open in Flushing, New York. Ahn, just 16 from Upper Saddle River, NJ, nonetheless showed flashes of a solid game that made her one of the hottest players on the pro circuit prior to the Open. Ahn is arguably Asian America’s No. 1 women’s singles player.
The Olympic Decathlon, the two-day, ten-event test of all-around athletic skill and human endurance, has produced some of the greatest icons of the American sports pantheon. Decathlon gold medalists Jim Thorpe, Bob Mathias, Rafer Johnson and Bruce Jenner were easily the biggest names to emerge from their respective Olympics. But comes along 28-year-old, Kaneohe, Hawaii-born Bryan Clay and the mainstream media seems a bit skeptical.
Beijing is Clay’s second Olympics. He won a silver in Athens as the event’s rising star. Following Athens, Bryan captured a World Track Championship gold in 2005 and was ranked as the No. 1 decathlete in the world by 2006. Last year, he forced out of the World Championships in Osaka with a foot injury. Earlier this year, 12 pounds lighter and injury-free, he stunned the track and field world with a remarkable 8,832-point performance in winning the U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, Ore.
Ten years ago, Clay was a troubled kid. The product of a broken home, Bryan is the son of Japanese American mother Michelle Ishimoto and an African American father, Greg Clay, who divorced when their son was in the fifth grade.
At the Athens Olympics, Bryan’s mother, stepfather and wife, Sarah, stayed away not wanting to be distractions. In Beijing, however, the Ishimoto clan will be in full force. Sharing the two-day event with Bryan at the “Bird’s Nest” will be his maternal grandparents—84-year-old Tsumoru and 82-year-old Kay Ishimoto—along with “a bunch more family and many friends” to root Bryan over the top.
About his Japanese heritage, Clay reveals, “Japanese culture and food were a huge part of my life growing up. My mother made sure I knew who I was and where I came from. Our house was always full of grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins. We ate ozoni [a traditional Japanese rice soup] on New Year’s Eve. My life was very Japanese.”
Earlier this month, Clay told NBC, “I think that if I am healthy, and if I am competing well and in shape, I don’t think there’s anybody out there that can beat me. I really don’t think so.
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UPDATE—As I key this in real time, it’s already Thursday, Aug. 21, 2:45 p.m. in Beijing, and Bryan Clay has won the 100 meters and long jump and placed second in the shot put. He leads Oleksiy Kasyanov of the Ukraine and American teammate Trey Hardee of Birmingham, Ala. Roman Sebrle of the Czech Republic, who edged out Clay for the gold in Athens is in 10th place in the early going. I plan to update here as results become available.
UPDATE 2—(Thursday, Aug. 21, 7:20 a.m. PST) With the first five events of the men’s decathlon completed, Hawaii-born Japanese American Bryan Clay held an 88-point lead over his closest rival, Andrei Krauchanka of Belarus. Clay, who attends Azusa-Pacific Univ. in Southern California, won a rain-drenched 100 meters in 10.44 seconds and followed with the top mark in the long jump with a leap of 25-6¼. Clay then recorded a lifetime best heave of 53-4½ in the shot put. He high jumped 6-6¼ (11th best), and finished day one of the grueling event after 10 p.m. Beijing time with a 48.92 in the 400 meters. Trey Hardee (USA) is holding on to third place 93 points behind Clay who is favored to the the gold. Day 2 of the decathlon begins at 9 a.m. Beijing time (today at 6:00 p.m. PST) and will include 110 meter hurdles. discus, pole vault, javelin and 1500 meters.
UPDATE 3—(Thursday, Aug. 21, 5:00 p.m. PST) Bryan Clay left the following comments on his blog a little after midnight after completing Day 1 of the decathlon in Beijing: “I had three very, very good events. Then I had one not so good event, a poor event, which was high jump. Then just an OK event in the 400, nothing special in the 400, but it was OK. I don’t know about scores. I really don’t pay attention to scores until we get to about the javelin, then I look to see what I need to do to stay in the position that I’m in. I’m coming out tomorrow just trying to compete against the conditions and the competitors. Hopefully, I’ll be the best one there and be at the top of the podium at the end of the day. I think every event in the decathlon is important. You can’t win the decathlon without having all ten events. Anytime you have a poor event, that’s going to set you back a bit, and every time you have a good event, that’s pull you ahead. I don’t think it was the rain. I think that I was a little fatigued. We started in the rain and mentally and physically, it takes a lot to get through that and I think I did it very well. That made me a little fatigued going into the high jum and the 400.”
UPDATE 4—(Thursday, Aug. 21, 7:00 p.m. PST) We’re live blogging the Olympic decathlon results as they come out of Beijing. U.S. decathlete Bryan Clay recorded the second fastest time of all four heats of the 110 meter hurdles Friday morning in Beijing to start day two of the decathlon. Yordani Garcia of Cuba had the fastest time with a 13.90 to Clay’s 13.93. Andres Raja of Estonia had the third lowest time at 14.06. Clay netted 984 points in the event and now has a leading total of 5505 points. We’re awaiting the start of the decathlon discus throw.
UPDATE 5—(Thursday, Aug. 21, 8:00 p.m. PST) Japanese American gold medal hopeful Bryan Clay has won the decathlon discus competition with a season’s best heave of 176 feet 10 inches and added 950 points for a leading total of 6455 with the pole vault, javelin and 1500 meters to follow in Beijing, where it is Friday morning.
UPDATE 6—(Friday, Aug. 22, 2:10 p.m., Beijing, China CST) The decathlon pole vault is underway in the “Bird’s Nest,” and American Bryan Clay has cleared a qualifying height of 4.80 meters on his first attempt and shares the lead with four other decathletes—Andrei Krauchanka, Belarus; Andre Niklaus, Germany; Alexander Pogorelov, Russia; Andres Raja, Estonia.
(Aug. 22, 2:24 p.m., Beijing) Belarus’ Krauchanka has cleared 4.90 meters. We’re blogging real time from Silver Lake 90026!
(Aug. 22, 2:27 p.m., Beijing) Bryan Clay regains the pole vault lead clearing 4.90 meters on his first attempt. Roman Barras is also over 4.90, a season’s best for the Frenchman.
(Aug. 22, 2:50 p.m., Beijing) Glendora, Calif.’s Bryan Clay has cleared a season’s best 5.0 meters in the decathlon pole vault and leads the event on the basis of fewer misses. Krauchanka, Pogorelov, Niklaus and Barras are also over the height.
(Aug. 22, 3:15 p.m., Beijing) Andre Niklaus of Germany has cleared 5.20 meters, a season’s best for him, to take the lead in the decathlon pole vault. Bryan Clay, US; Krauchanka, Estonia Belarus; Pogorelov tied for second in the event. Clay leads overall with 6455 points after seven events.
(Aug. 22, 3:35 p.m., Beijing) After missing 3x @ 5.10 meters Clay is out of the vault in 2nd place. He leads the decathlon with 7365 points and leads Krauchanka by 316. The final two events—javelin and 1500 meters—are scheduled for 7:00 and 10:20 p.m. Beijing time.
Asian Americans Medal at Beijing Olympics
August 19, 2008
Berkeley Grad Natalie Coughlin First Woman to Defend 100m Backstroke Gold Also Takes 2 Silver, 3 Bronze; Emily Cross Wins Fencing Silver; Team USA Captain Kevin Tan, Raj Bhavsar Help Gymnasts to Team Bronze
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