BLEACHERS BREW EST. MAY 2006

Someone asked me how my blog and newspaper column came to be titled "Bleachers Brew". It's like this, it's an amalgam of sorts of two things: The bleachers area in the stadium/arena where I used to sit when I would watch baseball, football, and basketball games and Miles Davis' great jazz album Bitches Brew. That's how it got culled together. I originally planned on calling it "The View from the Big Chair" that is a nod to Tears For Fear's second album, Songs from the Big Chair. So there.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

A whirlwind year for One FC Ring Girl Christine Hallauer


This appears on philstar.com

A whirlwind year for Christine Hallauer
by rick olivares

Mixed Martial Arts has been getting more popular in the Philippines. Not only are Filipinos of foreign descent making a good account of themselves in major fight circuits but also domestic fighters are stepping up.

When Fil-Australian Christine Hallauer stepped into a One Fighting Championship cage early this 2013 during One FC: Kings and Champions in Singapore, you can add “ring girl” to our country’s contributions to the world’s fastest growing sport.

She became an instant crowd favorite not only with Filipinos but Asian audiences. Since then, she has graced the cover of many a magazine on top of giving countless interviews.

Hallauer, whose mother hails from Davao while her father is Swiss, is from Perth, Australia where she works for a multinational. Being a One FC Ring Girl has given her a chance to reconnect with her Filipino roots.

Rick: How would you describe this year for you as you got out of your desk job and into the One FC cage?

Christine: It started off pretty ordinary, for 2013 my goal was to finish studying and gain full time employment (in Human Resource Management or Industrial relations) and that was about it.... Pretty average when I compare it to where I am today. My life has completely changed since making my appearance as a One FC ring girl.

Rick: Since you’ve been with the One FC for almost a year now has that changed the way you look at MMA? Are you a fan now?

Christine: Definitely! I didn’t really know much to begin with. I always thought of it as a sport that men watch. Now I love MMA and the One FC and really get into it.

Rick: Do you distinctly recall the first time you stepped into a One FC cage? What were your thoughts and emotions? Were you nervous?

Christine: Yes I remember at the first event while I was waiting behind the curtains to make my entrance and I was SO nervous! I didn't really know what to expect or what the crowd would be like. I had never been on stage in front of that many people before and on live television.

Rick: Are you bothered by the catcalls?

Christine: I can't say I've heard any yet, the crowd has always been so respectful.

Rick:  How has your life changed since becoming a One FC ring girl? How so? Can you cite some examples?

Christine: Since joining One FC I have been travelling overseas at least once a month to attend press conferences, events and photo shoots. I've been fortunate enough to appear in many major magazines across Asia like Men's Health Singapore, FHM Singapore, FHM Philippines and on the cover of FHM Malaysia. I never saw this coming, it's definitely something I have always wanted to do but never thought it would happen.

Rick: Do people now recognize you as a One FC ring girl if you go to say the grocery or a mall?

Christine: In Australia I continue working my office job so nothing has really changed there. But in the Philippines... occasionally people have come up and ask for a photo and it's still such a surprise and compliment that someone would want a photo with me! For example, (during my recent visit in December) I joined the end of the queue at McDonalds and the lady at the front of the line called me over to her, she insisted I take her place as long as I promised to have a pic with her three sons! Haha!

Rick: What is the most unusual request you've received from a fan this year?

Christine: A fan sign! We don't really have these in Australia so it was pretty unusual! I was like a sign? Why does this person want me to give them a sign for? I was so flattered when I actually realized what this was.

Rick: All of a sudden you've got lots of interviews, appearances, etc. How are you taking in all of this?
Christine: I guess it's better than homework and assignments right? I really love it! I've been quite surprised at the amount of interviews and requests I have had.

Rick: Since you work at a multinational has anything changed for you there at work? Now that you are "known" as a One FC ring Girl?

Christine: Things haven't really changed at my day job as I like to keep this separate from the work I do for One FC.

Rick: What's next for you? I mean will you continue with One FC?

Christine: I would like to get into more modeling in the Philippines for 2014, so I'll be working on that as well as continue with One FC.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Reflections on the Year of FIVE and 11 DAYS IN AUGUST and what's next



As a kid, I spent a lot of my time drawing. In fact, during summers, I’d split time between going to piano lessons and art school. I wanted to draw the X-Men that was my favorite comic book as a kid.

Things changed for me when I began to play a lot of football and baseball in school. More so when I discovered music. I wanted to be in a band and began to write songs. In fact, I used to have a notebook filled with lyrics to songs that were finished and half-finished. Some of them I collaborated with classmates of mine.

During class plays, I’d help write the scripts and on occasion co-direct them. It was around this time that a classmate of mine, Allan Roño, asked me if it was all right to add my name as co-author of an article he was writing for The Eaglet, the Ateneo Grade School newspaper. I objected and I remember very well what I said, “I can’t write well.”

“It’s okay,” assured Allan. “Since we’re best friends, you’ll get co-credit for an article.”

So that was my first foray into the world of journalism and it wasn’t even something I wrote. And by the way, I still have a copy of that article in my portfolio.

After graduation from grade school, I was given some money as reward for a job well done (or so I think). I promptly bought the Lord of the Rings Trilogy from National Bookstore (75th Anniversary edition). I had seen the animated film prior to the reading the book so you can say that Ralph Bakshi’s film literally opened new doors for me.

In fourth year high school, there was a time when I got back an essay marked with a “F” with a note to see the Prefect of Discipline. I asked my teacher, Mrs. Esperanza Chee Kee, the mom of Parokya ni Edgar’s Gab Chee Kee why and she said that I had plagiarized my essay. I was aghast. What I wrote was 100% bullshit. I crammed by writing about Babe Ruth, that late and great New York Yankee. This time being the before the digital age, there wasn’t much access to info on the Babe so I completely made up everything I wrote except for some basic stuff I had seen on a sports almanac that I had.

The prefect of discipline investigated and said that everything was 100% original (he declined to use my description of ‘100% bullshit’). It there I first had an inkling I could write.

In college, I got stuck in the English honors section where I fared rather badly in the writing of essays and papers. I was in a class of my peers many who I knew back in high school as terrific writers. For the most part, I was getting ‘Ds’ and ‘Cs.’ I never got an ‘A’ at all. Our bible that freshman year was Strunk and White that began the deconstruction of my writing that was heavily influenced by Robert Frost, Tolkien, and Stan Lee.

After school, I also began to contribute to the features section of the Philippine Daily Inquirer where I wrote about comic book artists (While Portacio and Gerry Alanguilan), musicians and bands (Rizal Underground, Parokya ni Edgar, Peter White etc), and diplomats. Then I moved to writing about the Philippine Amateur Basketball League (the forerunner of the PBL and the D-League).

But that all changed when I got into advertising that further changed the way I wrote. The basic tenet of advertising copy is to say things in the fewest possible words while saying a lot. Kind of difficult at first but when you get it down pat it’s easier but no less challenging. With my life 24/7 in advertising, I couldn’t write for the Inquirer anymore.

It was while working in an ad agency where I first began to do public relations and that entailed a different style of writing and thinking. I wrote or ghostwrote columns, reports, Senate reports, and papers for a variety of people from businessmen to politicians. I also did some jingles and campaign materials for some of them. Sorry, I won’t mention whom because these are trade secrets. But I think I got good at it because in two agencies I worked with I did a lot of in with the PR teams (in addition to my regular copywriting jobs). But after several years, I called it quits as I wanted control with my life and not surrender it to ad agencies and clients who thought they were the target market and not the actual target market.

But the changes in my writing were sweeping. I had graduated from trying to be a clone of so and so to ultimately finding my own style that was a mix of David Halberstam, Frank Deford, Jack McCallum, and Rick Reilly. It was a mixture of a historical perspective with behind-the-scenes reporting while trying to find that human touch to go with a dose of humor.

While living in New York, I stalked then Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada outside their Park Avenue offices. I had some scripts and plots about the X-Men and Daredevil who were my favorite characters. Only I wasn’t the only one with the idea as there were hundreds of others so my chances were even slimmer. I did meet Mr. Quesada eventually at Midtown Comics in Manhattan where I turned in a sheaf of notes but never heard from him. I thought back to my artist friend Gerry Alanguilan who went through dozens of rejections before he finally got a break.

I also had some short stories complete with artwork by some friends that I tried to shop around to no avail.

It was around this time where I began to write letters to my parents, relatives, friends, and classmates from New York. I wrote them in straight up prose detailing my adventures, heartaches, experiences, and thoughts; sometimes even in poetry.

Many of them were circulated about by my mom, aunts, and some friends. One newspaper asked if they could publish them as a series of essays and letters about the life of immigrants abroad. My first real chance to get ‘published’ and I said no. Imagine that!

Coming back home to the Philippines, I was asked by then VP for Planning Fr. Tito Caluag to write about the Ateneo Blue Eagles for the school’s website. I leapt at the chance. With the basketball season over, I first wrote about the Ateneo Men’s Football Team that detailed their championship year of 2006. The following year, I finally wrote about the basketball team. A year after that, I had taken over from Paolo Trillo writing the Blue Eagle Bulletins.

I was also working as Marketing Manager for Solar Sports at this time and Jun Lomibao and Ricky Alegre of Business Mirror met up with me for an ex-deal. They also asked me to write for them. Now I had tried to come back to the Inquirer before this but was told they had a full house of writers. Business Mirror gave that opportunity to get back in the game.

I also put up my blog, Bleachers Brew, with the massive help of a former girlfriend. I’d say that the blog was a huge blessing and boon. Thanks, Mai. Forever.

From there on the floodgates opened – Philippine Free Press, FHM, Men’s Health, Homestyle, Football Philippines, Blueblood, and Rebound to name a few. Then came the Philippine sub-site of nba.com, philstar.com, livegigasia.com, abs-cbnnews.com. and the PBA website. 

I’ve also done a few documentaries on television (including a boxing special that I am very proud of plus a couple of sports specials for Solar Sports) and one for Ateneo.

There have been so many ups and down through these years. You get to do something then get pushed out by all the politicking and the sipsipan (neither of which I am good at) that has left me unhappy and discouraged. However, in spite of all of that, I’ve managed to stay head above water.

Over the years, I tried my best to write lengthy pieces about the Blue Eagles, the NU Bulldogs, the Letran Knights, Perpetual Help Altas, UE Red Warriors, Smart Gilas, Azkals, and Loyola Meralco Sparks to name a few, but there never seemed a format to tell the entire stories until Five (I also previously wrote The 18th Banner on Ateneo's Season 71 championship season) and now there’s 11 Days in August.

I am so happy to be given the opportunity to write Five (about the Ateneo Blue Eagles’ five-peat) and 11 Days in August (the FIBA journey of our national team). It didn’t contain everything I wanted to put in there because of the format (coffeetable form) but I am not complaining. That will serve as the jump off platform for something more detailed and comprehensive.

And both have made 2013 all the more surreal and memorable for me. Who would have thought this, right? I certainly never did. Not where I came from with all the hardships, challenges, and heartaches. But I am grateful. Eternally grateful.

A few years ago, Coach Joe Lipa got wind of some of my stories from the United States and he encouraged me to release them in book form. I finally did but it has taken a while because a lawyer friend of mine advised me to change the names of people and some circumstances because they also tell of sensitive incidents (read: the lives of TNT Pinoys I had met in the US). I could never find the impetus to finish it although everything is done except the layouts.

Writing Five, the book that chronicled the five-peat of the Blue Eagles and 11 Days in August, has given me the impetus and experience and will to get it done.



I’ll be finishing Turn On the Bright Lights – that book about a short period of my life in the United States. I’ve been given the impetus and inspiration to get it done. Looking at getting it out in limited numbers by the end of the first quarter of next year. And there’s a surprise book that came out of nowhere and am honored to have been asked to write it. I can’t say whom it is about. There’ll be a time for that. Hopefully, soon. And there's another one as well. I can only shake my head and say a prayer of thanks. Almost everyday too.

I have said on occasion that I intend to move beyond sports and it is something I have started about a year ago already. The full shift won’t happen until a few years from now. All I can say you’ll see more varied material from me in 2014.

Recently, I have tried going back to sketching and drawing but my skills have clearly atrophied. But that’s not going to stop me. Am still giving it that old college try.

As for that dream of one day writing for Marvel Comics? Who knows.

I never thought I’d be doing all of this so…





Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Merry Christmas as Liverpool is atop the EPL. But that is not the gift I want.



Merry Christmas as Liverpool is atop the EPL. 
But that is not the gift I want.
by rick olivares

I will borrow a quote from the Associated Press: The last four Premier League champions have all been top on Christmas Day. It may still be wishful thinking for Brendan Rodgers, who claims he will only consider their chances with 10 games to go, but with Luis Suarez in current form he may have to reassess that sooner rather than later.

The last time I felt that Liverpool was finally going to nail that elusive Premier League championship was the 2008-09 season where the Reds finished four points adrift of the Red Devils, 90-86. They were atop the league during Christmas that year and remained there for two more weeks after (they were number one for seven consecutive weeks) until a string of draws and a surprising 2-nil loss to Middlesbrough saw them tumble to third. They came clawing back but the damage was done as the Red Devils won. Again.

So you can say that being atop during Christmas is good but not great. The Savior may have been born on the 25th of December but it remains to be seen if Luis Suarez will be Liverpool’s savior. Besides, the season is hardly at its halfway point.

Unfortunately, Liverpool’s best has not been good enough. Not since the old days. Aye, there’s the rub. There has been some to cheer about but one cannot keep rehashing history or even that one night in Istanbul. It gets old real fast especially in the light how United has rubbed our noses in the dirt as they have eclipsed us as the preeminent football club in England and the world.

While I watch Liverpool’s matches as much as I can, I have been mostly silent. After all, there really hasn’t been much to crow about. They don’t look great or even as overpowering as the 08-09 squad. There are holes in their game and defense; lots of them in fact.

And for all of Suarez’ prodigious scoring ways, he has been a polarizing figure. He is talented without a doubt but we do not need those histrionics and antics.

I feel bad that Steven Gerrard is not the fearsome player he once was. Robbed of his strength, pace, and wicked boot by the injuries that have plagued him as a youngster, I am not sure if he is still the inspirational leader he once was. He is sometimes reduced to taking the spot kicks won by others. That’s how he scores goals now and not with his thunderous right boot from distance that used to make the newsreel.

I am glad though that Daniel Sturridge is in red. Ditto with Raheem Sterling. But my immediate concern is the defense. Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel are lacking in clearly lacking in confidence as they have mostly fallen out favor with Rodgers.

Mamadou Sakho, former captain for Paris St-. Germain, isn’t that player that he once was. But he still isn’t so bad on defense.

They are only the fifth best defensive team in the Premier League. But fifth best doesn’t cut it.

As I mentioned that they aren’t the most overpowering squad as that belongs to Manchester City who they face at the Etihad soon.

The league will be won by being the best at both. You cannot take one or the other. It has to be both.

Leading the way are the two creative forces on Liverpool from South America in Brazilian Philippe Coutinho and the Uruguayan, Suarez, who made a name for himself worldwide in the 2010 World Cup. He is a household name in Ghana as well.

I am not even sure what to make of Suarez signing an extension with Liverpool after all, he has tried to bolt before. But I can understand. Why not? One wants to play for a top-flight club that challenges and wins but to also play in the Champions League and not Europa, the consolation prize for the pretenders.

We’ve been spurned by Fernando Torres and other players and that confirms that the club isn’t a winner in the eyes of many. The team has been unable to build on 2004-05 and 2008-09.

But there is hope now in the form of an in-form Suarez and the brilliant Coutinho while Jordan Henderson is playing with a lot more confidence. The holiday season is supposed to provide just that – good cheer and hope.

Thanks for making this Christmas merry, Liverpool. But all I want (like I am sure for many other long suffering Reds fans) for Christmas is to see the club lift that elusive trophy by season’s end.

That would be the best gift ever. Even if it’s a few months and a two decades two late.





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I like a lot of football teams but my absolute favorite and the one I followed all these years is Liverpool. I don't feel bad or cry when others lose but LFC.... man, I cannot begin to write down how I feel.

Monday, December 23, 2013

LeBron James is our Athlete of the Year



This appears on nba.com

LeBron James is our Athlete of the Year
by rick olivares

The picture above says a lot.

LeBron James is skying in for a massive tomahawk jam; the violence of the moment yet to be consummated. That happens about only a hundred times in a season (maybe more).

If you look more closely, it is James, leaving not only the Los Angeles Lakers but also Kobe Bryant in his wake.

With Bryant out once again due to his second most serious basketball injury in his career, the torch has been clearly passed to LeBron James.

Peyton Manning has been named Sports Illustrated’s Sportsman of the Year. Verily, he is deserving for what he is accomplishing on the gridiron at the age of 37 but the Super Bowl has yet to be won.

Manny Pacquiao should have been in the running for any athlete of the year award but even with his brutalizing Brandon Rios, the image of his snoozing on the canvas at the hands of Juan Manuel Marquez sticks in my craw and most of everyone’s noggin.

Cristiano Ronaldo is doing well individually but his Real Madrid team is five points adrift of Barcelona sans an injured Lionel Messi that is still on track to win a second consecutive La Liga title. At the moment, the Portuguese sensation isn’t even leading the Spanish league in goal-scoring as that honor belongs to city rivals Atletico Madrid where forward Diego Costa has 19 to Ronaldo’s 18.

LeBron James on the other hand was and is still atop professional basketball’s firmament where he is now mentioned in the same breath as the all-time all-universe greatest players.

Clearly, he is at the peak of his powers. He is the master of all he surveys.

He is a two-time NBA champion and with two Olympic Gold Medals to cement his greatness the world over. He is running away with a possible fifth MVP Award where he will join some dudes named Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, Michael Jordan, and Bill Russell. Barring disaster, his Miami Heat look like they will win a third straight Larry O’Brien Trophy.

In this season that isn’t at its halfway mark, he has also eclipsed Bryant in one more aspect – tops in NBA jersey sales worldwide.

When he left the Cleveland Cavaliers (rather controversially) for the Miami Heat, it was theorized and chastised by many, including myself, that he had given up being the man to play back up to Dwyane Wade. That was tantamount to like being second guitarist Don Felder to lead guitarist Joe Walsh in the Eagles. Like being Robin to Batman.

However, James has been anything but a back up for anyone in Miami. With Wade mostly injured and Chris Bosh putting on his guise as the Invisible Man (now you see him, now you don’t), James has been nothing short of spectacular.

He is the Man. And at only 28 years of age. So you know there’s more to come.

Like Jordan in his later years, he has improved his jumper. The transformation from a dunker to a complete basketball player is nearly done. He has added a devastating post-up game to his already wicked arsenal. He’s got the point forward position down pat. What can he not do on the basketball court?

Like the other great athletes of our time, he has transcended his sport. He graces magazine covers including one with supermodel Giselle Bundchen. He has even co-hosted the ESPYS! He did some of the best adverts until Cleveland guard Kyrie Irving’s Uncle Drew commercials came along.he has even hosted the


What athlete has gone from being the most disliked to the most liked? And to think that even before he got drafted, he had already put up a foundation that helps poor kids get an education.

I liked James then I disliked him. But I have to admit that he has turned things around and how! And for that and everything he is done in the past and this year, I’d say he is my Athlete of the Year.