Team United: through the lens of a 4K camera

2012-04-21 13

A few months ago my friend was super excited to show me his latest project. He told me giddily how they had rented a RED camera and used it to film a music video. I looked at him funny and said, “It’s not that uncommon, I’ve seen them at my football practices.”

He replied, “No, no. You don’t understand, that couldn’t have been a RED camera. There are only a few in the entire States. No one just owns one of these.”

Well apparently, one of the few in the entire states was at the football tournament on saturday. That, my friends is a 4K RED camera. It is so advanced Youtube does not have a quality setting for it…you can simply watch it as “original” and it will only show you 2K quality. Check out the size comparison below:

George Tsai of GTsai.com had been at a few Team United practices and I always marveled how unfazed he seem to be holding a $30K+ camera with footballs shooting by. The guy is an amazing cameraman. His latest work includes David Choi’s Missing Piece video which was shot on his camera. Check out the screenshots from the tournament below and marvel at the video itself at the bottom of the post. Thanks George for the awesome video!


Beware, if you don’t have great internet connection you may want to just chose 1080p or 720p. For higher bandwidths, enjoy the video in all it’s glory on the “original” setting!

*all screenshots and video credit to George Tsai of GTsai.com

Team United: “This is our time” retold

Over the past months, I had the opportunity to coach Team United, a women’s football team comprised of ladies from various local churches to compete in a single day flag football tournament. Team United was crowned champions in 2011, and this would be their quest to defend the title in 2012. This is my recount of the last 5 minutes of the tournament.

*screenshot from GTsai.com

“This is our time!”

The game clock said 5 minutes left in the ball game. Offense line up X steps on the field. This is not our ordinary line up but it is the line up that gives us the best chance in a must-score situation. Of the 25 players on this team, 14 of them play offense and the team truly needed every single player to get to this point. Coach Lin and Bao would manage playing time and rotations throughout the day and their efforts resulted in a line up that is still fresh and ready for this crucial drive.

Team United had not played from behind the entire tournament. Through the 3 round robin games, United scored first and scored often. But in the semi-final, and here in the finals the team was struggling to score. As the pressure increased with each game, teams were elevating their intensity and focus. Things that worked for us in the initial rounds were not there in the playoff rounds.

Here with 5 minutes left in the finals, Berean is up 7-0. Nearly 25 game time minutes had passed since Berean scored on their first drive of the game. United had had a few solid chances to score earlier in the game but missed on a few plays at Berean’s 1 yard line and 5 yard line. Frustration and nerves were setting in as the team realized this could be the deciding drive of the game.

After a few plays we suddenly found ourselves 2nd and 18 on our own 22 yard line (the field is 60 yards, with first downs at our own 20 and their 20). We call an isolation play for Crystal on the left side. Crystal and Sylvai (QB) had been working on a bounce route all season. Practices normally ended ~5:30pm but Syl and Crystal would still be on the field running routes and getting the timing down for 30-40 min each week.

The play doesn’t work. 3rd and 18, with 3.5 minutes remaining.

When you see a pair put so much time and effort into forging something, you don’t leave it up chance. We call time out and draw another isolation play, this time with Crystal running a fly route. With the corner that Berean has on her, Crystal will win a jump ball situation 9 out of 10 times. We call mass protect in the huddle, giving the QB 5 players on the line to give her the time to get a good look and a solid pass. I tell our line “give Syl 4 seconds. She needs 4 seconds.”

Asking for 3 seconds is a lot to ask of any line. 4 seconds is an eternity to hold off an opposing rush. This play makes or breaks the drive, with a championship on the line. a 4th and 15+ yard situation would be the end of the season.

The pass is beautiful but Crystal is just slightly too far infield. She contorts her body to reach over her back shoulder to make the grab. She does. It’s one of the most exhilarating catches of the day.

But football is a game of drives. Plays need to be strung together to sustain a drive down the field. One play doesn’t make or break a game. As beautiful a catch as it was, the drive ends on an interception on the very next play. United’s title hopes diminish greatly as the seconds continute to tick away.

“If you stop them here, they will punt”

The game clock says 3 minutes left in the ball game. The ball is in team Berean’s hands on the 19 yard line. 3rd and 1.

This one defensive stand encapsulated everything that the defense had worked on all season. A defense built to stop the run with 4 potential rushers on the line to pressure the QB to go to the air. The air was our specialty, we thrived when QB’s were forced to throw deep with our safeties picking off more than 4 passes today, returning 2 all the way for touchdowns. Time and time again throughout the tournament the defense had given the offensive confidence to go for it on 4th down situations, even if we were deep in our own territory. They were just that good throughout the day.

I yell, “3rd down! If you stop them here, they will punt!” Coach Clarence and I looked at each other immediately afterwards and knew there is a chance that wouldn’t be true. Our defense had been solid all day, we had only given up 2 offensive touchdowns the entire tournament. But here if Berean got a first down they could very well kill the rest of the game clock if they managed things right.

If ever there was time we would need a defensive stand this was it. One stop.

Whistle blows, Berean is stopped at the line of scrimmage. It’s 4th and 1.

We look over to the Berean sideline and see their coaches motion to punt. Our defense had given us one last chance.

“6950”

The following sequence has to be explain in context from the beginning of the season. Emily T had asked me to help out coaching Team United this year and since the guys would not have a tournament this year, it meant our practice schedules would finally not conflict. When I joined the coaching staff, I was asked to work with Sylvia on her pocket presence and awareness. Immediately we began working on a wide range of things from footwork, throwing mechanics and timing, but the request we made early on was to have Syl design her own plays. That way she can make adjustments on the line and make calls as she sees them.

This was the flexibility and freedom given to me when I was playing with the guys and this was the next step for Syl in her evolution as a QB. Coach Lin and Bao would institue a passing tree that became the foundation for our spread offense and allowed us to go no-huddle if needed. One of the plays Syl loved to call early on was 6950. I personally didn’t like the play much but it seemed to work from time to time. I kept thinking against a good defense this play would have issues getting anyone open.

**update: Syl wants to make sure credit is given to the true mastermind of 6950. The play originated from last year’s offensive coordinator Steven C. Thanks Steve!

Here we were with 30 yards to go and needed to score a touchdown. 2:30 left in the game.

Syl looks over to the sidelines for a play but I don’t call one. I’ve been calling plays throughout the game and it hadn’t resulted in a touchdown, so I want to see if Syl can see something I can’t at the line of scrimmage.

Bao calls me over and says, “Hey, we need to get the ball to Jess. She can punch it in.” I agree but I want to see what Syl calls, I think she’s going to call a run play. Run plays had been good for us all day but we can’t afford to nickel and dime our way down the field with only 150 seconds left in the tournament. We need to pass and get to the line quickly.

Bao and Syl must be of one mind right now. She hikes the ball and hits Jess L our right wide receiver on a slant, who catches and rumbles off for 10 yards after the catch for a total of 20 yards. I love the play call so I rush into the huddle and ask Syl, “what play was that?!”

“6950”, she says.

“run it again”

I don’t tell her to look for Jess, when I return to the sideline Bao says again “did you tell her to hit Jess again?”. I shake my head no. Let’s see what she does. As if on cue, Syl hits Jess again on the same slant route. Touchdown.

United 6 – Berean 7.

1 or 2?!

Coach Clarence looks over to Lin and says, “I don’t know, you guys are going to have to call it.”

Lin motions to the ref with 2 fingers in the air, but I tell him to wait. As I head towards the huddle, I hear myself shout, “How do you feel?”

Syl stares back in disbelief, a bit flabbergasted that we’d leave the decision to her. We need her to believe in the decision. Confidence is key and here we’d stand together in victory or defeat no matter the decision.

A 1 point conversion starts at the 5 yard line and you get 1 chance to score from there. A 2 point conversion starts at the 7 yard line and you only get one chance to score from there as well. If we convert on a 1pt, we tie the game. 2pt conversion means we could win it. In a game of inches, 2 more yards is a long way to go.

It feels like forever. The refs have asked us a few times already, we hadn’t taken a time out to decide. Syl’s not too sure but Kelly grabs her and Kelly’s eyes open wide. Kelly’s ready to go for 2 and Syl looks ready as well. We signal to the refs “2”.

I run back to the sidelines and I realize I didn’t make a play call. It’d be up to Syl to call it once more.

The ball is hiked. It’s 6950 again. It’s Jess L again. She catches it at the 1 yard line…the defender is right on her hip and grabs at the flag. The defender misses momentarily and dives sideways and grabs the flag just as Jess reaches the line. The ref in the middle of the endzone raises his hands…a 2 PT conversion!!

whistle

The left sideline ref runs on to the field and points to the Berean player on the ground. She’s holding a reg flag at the 1/2 yard line. Berean players are sure she made the flag grab, United players are sure Jess made it in. There’s pandemonium on both sidelines as we try to make our cases. The ball was over the line! She held the ball out!

The referees huddle for minutes. I see the head referee motion to the 1 yard line. I see another referee hold a ball out with one hand at arms length as if to indicate she held it over the line. We have at least 2 refs on our side and at least 1 against. The coaches walk over to the offensive huddle and offer our congratulations. Regardless of the ruling, it was a crazy gutsy call and a beautiful drive.

The whistle blows and the refs emerge from their huddle. We see the head ref raise his arms…we scored the 2pt conversion.

United 8 – Berean 7

The final drive ends in a desperation heave as Berean has less than a minute left to launch down the field. It ends with an interception by a United safety. Game over. United repeats as defending champions.

Pursuing HK: Round 1: Phone Interview with the Hiring Manager

My phone’s been on the fritz for the past few months it shuts off when it’s charging and every few days it restarts. Last week the hiring manager and I confirmed a time that’d work out for both of us. Since we’re on different time zones ~6-7pm here correlates to 9-10am over there. I told him 6pm (9am his time) works best but he won’t get that email until he goes into work the next day so I’ll just keep 6-7pm open.

5:57pm

Maybe the slight bit nervous but everything should be okay. Phone restarts.

Ohhh man. this better not happen during the interview

6:05 pm

Phone restarts again

6:25 pm

Phone restarts AGAIN! My phone’s never done this before, restarting that frequently in a short time. If I were a bit superstitious…this would be a bad omen for the interview. I’m beginning to wonder if international calls cause my phone to restart.

6:45pm

Looks like the hiring manager had a few issues in the morning and final got to calling ~9:45am his time. The general gist of the job:

A production sequencing plant in the boonies (Tai Po) of Hong Kong. The main HQ of the company is in Shenzhen but they have a secondary plant in HK. The position would service the machines at the secondary plant in HK. Every once in a while we might the call to cross the border to fix a few machines in Shenzhen.

Unlike other typical field service positions that travel a whole lot to different areas, this one just serves a single company. They’re a pretty big customer so we have a dedicated team for their facility. It’s kind of a production style maintenance team. At any given time a percentage of their machines are down for various issues and we service them. When we finish a case, we take the next case. A team of 1 account manager, 2 field service engineers and 2 field application scientists work together. that’d be my team…they’re all in their 30’s.

9-6 job…manager’s from the states so these are typical hours for US workers. Totally abnormal for HK so that’s a pretty nice plus.

Growth wise, this position definitely has less growth compared to a systems engineer or analyst. Field service engineers don’t really progress too rapidly, so the hiring manager cautioned that I’d probably need to look elsewhere to continue my career, given where I want to go and do.

All in all the interview went fairly well. I put my best foot forward and I probably hear back this week whether the team over there wants to hear from me. We’ll see how far this goes!

Pursuing HK: Your application has been submitted

“My name is Kreptonic. You might want to pay attention to because I choose my words carefully and this could be of use to you. I’ve told you my name: that’s the Who. The Where can most readily be described as a fragrant harbor. Almost all know it by another name…Hong Kong. The What is easy: recently I planned and set in motion events to execute a job search within my own company. That’s also the When. As for the Why: beyond the obvious career motivation, it’s exceedingly simple…because I can. Which leaves us only with the How; and therein, as the Bard would tell us, lies the rub.”

Application has been submitted!

I consulted my manager to get his thoughts on the whole thing. It’s always a bit of a gamble to tell your manager you might be interested in something else, but he’s a stand up guy and I chose my current position under him because I trust him. He gave me a few solid points to consider and ultimately told me to try for it. “If nothing happens, you won’t keep wondering what if. If you get it, you can decide then.” I’ll take that.

I scouted out the position a little bit and began a quick back and forth email with the hiring manager. A good start. Unfortunately, he’s on vacation this week because HK gets Ching Ming Festival, Good Friday, and Easter off, so I’ll have to wait another week to receive any word on the next step.

Kids…This is the Story of How I Pursued Her

As soon as I wrote the title I got goosebumps.

This isn’t how you’re supposed to tell the story. This story always is told in hindsight, sometimes at a long dinner table with friends or family and with a toast to top it off. That’s how people tell this story.

This is the story of how I pursued her.

It’s a risk. Revealing my intentions in such a public manner is tricky gambit but the process of going through it might be priceless. It should be okay, I’m pretty certain she doesn’t read blogs…let alone mine. It seems that the only times we hear these stories are when it works out and we gravitate toward these stories because it warms our hearts and plucks our emotional heart-strings. Rarely do we hear about the failed overtures and pursuits. Perhaps we can learn just as much from them as well.

This story doesn’t have an ending yet…it doesn’t even have a chapter two yet, it’s just the beginning. It could end tomorrow, it could end next week. But maybe, just maybe, there might have a happily ever.

Some might take this the wrong way and think this is lame bravado on full display, that I’m so certain I’ll succeed in my pursuit that I’m flaunting it each step of the way. It’s not that at all. There’s a real thrill about not knowing where this goes from here on out. It could fail spectacularly!

History

I’ve known her for a while now, and to be honest, her first impression was not the best. I think the only reason she stuck out in my mind was because she was one of the first I really had a chance to connect with. I was young, I didn’t really think much of it at the time.

Over the years, she became quite a looker and I’ll admit seeing her pop up on my facebook mini-feed from time to time caused me to scroll back up and double click. I admired her from afar, knowing that it couldn’t amount to anything…they said long distance rarely works. I’m fairly certain my parents thought this one was a phase, one that I’d grow out of somewhere down the line.

I thought so too.

I’ve visited her a few times and each time I got to see and learn about another side of her I hadn’t before. Sometimes I’d see a side I wish hadn’t seen. She’s not without her blemishes and flaws, but she covers them up well. Each time I see her I feel like she’s put on a slightly different look…and if I had photos of when I first met her and now, I’m pretty sure the differences would be blatantly obvious to see.

Over the last year or so I really couldn’t get her out of my mind. When I mention her name or bring her up in conversations with friends who’ve met her before they instantly smile and start raving about her as well. I’m not a dunce. She’s had her share of suitors of the years…I’m not entirely sure I’m ready for anything long term myself, but in this season and at this time, it just feels right.

A friend of mine who recently got married (t.hong) encouraged me to push forward with this. And after reading a post from a friend that once again tried to point out the passive asian male syndrome (here)…this is my rebuttal.

So my friends, do me a favor and let’s keep this between you and me? If you see any blatant missteps I might be taking…please feel free to leave a comment!

And just so you don’t think this is a lame april fool’s joke…here’s her picture: link

Wo Hing Preserved Meats Behind The Scenes

Chinese preserved meat is something I cannot get enough of and so it got me super excited to find out that a relative of mine owns a store in HK. We stopped by for a bit and toured the store and the factory. It was really fascinating.

Some say, there are two things people don’t want to know how you make ’em: laws and sausages. I’m not sure about the sausages, cause this was pretty cool. We didn’t get to see how they made “lap cheong” but we got to see the drying stages.

Had some fun with editing and style in the beginning of the video. Hope you guys enjoy it.

Daughter Project 5K run: Mission Bay

5k_daughter_project_A

Mission Beach 5K run

Distance: 3.1 miles

Organization: Daughter Project

A sample of the things I learned from V.Hui, studying performance physiology, this morning…

  1. Jam serves the same purpose as GU. Sugar energy…fast.
  2. It’s better to warm up by running a mile than stretching before a workout. Something about compliance and non-compliance.
  3. water + baking powder (in trace amounts of some quantity i forgot) transports lactic acid to type 1 muscles which break down lactic acid better than type 2 muscles.
  4. type 2 muscles = fast twitch muscles
  5. spoonful of pickle juice > bottle of powerade

There was much more. I forgot.

5K_daughter_project_4a

許’s: K.Hsu, N.Hui, V.Hui, L.Hui