Photo of the Now, vol. 226: Happy Winter Festive Times!

Chelsea holds its Christmas festivities three weeks before Christmas itself; oddly enough, since Christmas seems to begin the week before Thanksgiving, that seems to be the right timing.

All weekend: Luminaries

Friday night: Christmas tree lighting

Friday night: Santa’s Workshop

Friday night: Common Chords bell choir concert

Saturday: Light parade

Sunday afternoon: Chelsea Area Players Youth Theatre presents Celebrate the Season

Photo of the Sports Now, vol. 3

Chelsea hockey lost to Wyandotte.


Here, seniors Charlie and Luke (11) celebrate a second-period goal.  Celebrating on the other side of the glass is Luke’s older brother Matt, once a Chelsea hockey player and now a member of the military.  Matt’s distant post hadn’t allowed him to be home for a while, but well-timed leave brought him home during hockey season, giving him the chance to take in a Chelsea game.

Photo of the Sports Now, vol. 2: Hail to the soccer victors!

Last week the Dearborn Press & Guide asked me to photograph the Michigan men’s soccer team’s NCAA tournament game against Central Florida.  Specifically, the P&G asked me to photograph two of the players, Dearborn natives Hamoody and Soony Saad.

This was my first-ever Michigan soccer game, so unsurprisingly, this was also my first-ever visit to Michigan’s gorgeous new soccer stadium and my first experience with the highly entertaining student section, the Michigan Ultras.

Yes, they’re as crazy as they look: like any good self-respecting soccer crowd, they made noise the entire game.  It made for a great game atmosphere.

The pregame:

The game:

A few minutes into the game, Soony crumpled to the ground in pain after contact with an opponent:

But a few minutes later he recovered and was able to play the rest of the game.

The game went into overtime with the teams tied at 1; halfway through the first overtime, Hamoody took a free kick that was deflected into the goal to win the game.  Obviously, both he and the student section were excited.

Soony was pretty thrilled, too.

The brothers (and the rest of the team) gave out autographs to some excited young fans.

Tastiness is what I long for, vol 2: Salads, Sandwiches & a Soup

Week 2 of the Arctic Breakaway project featured the salads of Breakaway, along with a bowl of soup and a few sandwiches.  (As you’ll see, an appetizer made its way into the shoot, too.)

First the salads…

Then one of the soups…

And a few of the sandwiches…

And finally, the (delicious) bruschetta…

If any of those dishes make you hungry, head on over to Arctic Breakaway.

Tastiness is what I long for, vol 1: Pizza

A few weeks ago I began the most delicious job of my short career: photographing every item on the menu of one of my favorite restaurants, Arctic Breakaway.  We’re going through one section of the menu each week, and we began with pizza.

Let me warn you: these pictures may make you hungry.

And, of course, what goes with pizza?  Cheesy bread!

If these pictures did indeed make you hungry, I suggest you make your way to Arctic Breakaway.

T.A.D.: Week 2 vs. Monroe

Freshmen: d. by Monroe, 6-54
JV: d. by Monroe, 7-27

Varsity 2010 record: 2-0 (0-0 SEC White)

Location: Chelsea, MI
Opponent: Monroe
Mascot: The Trojans
Real Mascot: The Fighting Scrub Brushes.  Wouldn’t this make a great mascot?
Last Decade vs. Chelsea: 0-1.  Monroe never faced Chelsea until joining the SEC in 2009.
Last Game vs. Chelsea: Chelsea defeated Monroe 41-7 in 2009

The story so far:
The victory over Huron provided a highly positive start to the post-Nick Hill era, with the security blanket of a stout defense complementing a considerably more diverse offense.  Week 2 brought all those positives back to Jerry Niehaus Field to start the home schedule against Monroe, a team that suffered a number of lopsided losses in 2009 but demonstrated ample improvement in 2010 with a close week 1 loss to perennial SEC contender Adrian.

First Quarter:
As they did last week, the Bulldogs started the game faster than Lightning McQueen on a caffeine buzz.  After a Monroe three and out and a short punt, Chelsea marched down the field and finished its opening drive with a two-yard Truman Hadley touchdown run; another Monroe three and out yet again provided good field position, and that good field position turned into a nine-yard Berkley Edwards touchdown run.  The resulting 13-point deficit finally irked the Scrub Brushes enough to prompt some life out of them, and a 48-yard kick return into Chelsea territory gave the Monroe offense the spark it needed to find the end zone near the end of the first quarter.

Second Quarter:
The second play of the quarter was a Chelsea punt, and it started to go steeply downhill from there; the punt left Monroe on its own 12, but before long the Scrub Brushes had a first and goal on Chelsea’s nine, threatening at least to tie the game with a touchdown and even — gasp! — to take the lead with an extra point.  Facing a fourth and goal on the three, Monroe elected to avoid the field goal attempt in favor of the siren song of the potential of six points; that proved to be a mistake, as the Chelsea defense made the stop at the one.  On the next play, quarterback Brian Paulsen connected with receiver Mason Borders for 33 yards, and before Monroe could blink as many times as one might blink in a minute and a half, Chelsea had finished its 99-yard, 90-second scoring drive with a nine-yard Paulsen touchdown pass to Chris Ballow.

The rest of the quarter was relatively uneventful; Monroe fumbled once, but Chelsea couldn’t capitalize on the turnover.  Still, Chelsea retained its 19-7 lead at the end of the half.

Third quarter:
The start of the second half was a mirror image of the first, with Monroe forcing a Chelsea three and out and moving down the field to score.  A second Chelsea punt paved the way for another strong drive by Monroe, but it ended in disaster when the Scrub Brushes fumbled the ball away inside the Chelsea 20.  The Bulldogs offense ate up the last two minutes of the third quarter…

Fourth Quarter:
… and the first two minutes of the fourth quarter on its way to a 17-yard Paulsen touchdown pass to Borders.  Monroe soon fumbled the ball yet again, and three minutes later a one-yard Paulsen touchdown run to provided a considerably more comfortable 31-13 lead…that lasted all of 14 seconds thanks to a 77-yard Monroe touchdown run.  Oops.  Chelsea recovered Monroe’s onside kick, but an interception gave the Scrub Brushes the ball on the sunny side of midfield with just under five minutes to play; however, though Monroe worked its way into another first and goal, the Chelsea defense again stood tall on fourth and goal, making the stop on the five yard line with only 59 seconds left in the game.  Two knees later, the game was done.

Final Score:
Chelsea: 31
Monroe: 20

Don’t Forget My Number:

  • Joey Newland led Chelsea in rushing with 121 yards on 18 carries.  Berkley Edwards followed with 62 yards and one touchdown on 14 carries.
  • Mason Borders led Chelsea in receiving with 122 yards and one touchdown on five receptions.  Also, for the second consecutive week, Borders caught a pass from receiver Nate Udell.
  • The Bulldogs committed no turnovers this week, but they did have a problem with one particular penalty: five of their nine penalties were defensive offsides.
  • The bulk of the statistics were remarkably even, with Chelsea having only an eight-yard advantage in total yardage.  However, two numbers doomed Monroe: they lost three fumbles, and they were only 2 of 11 on third down conversions.

Photographic Evidence:

Chelsea linemen practice an alternative to the Heimlich Maneuver.


This is not a stickup.  They’ve just got spirit.  Yeah!


Coach Scheese is begging you to gain yardage.  Please?


Conor Tait is singin’ in the rain, but without the rain.  And the singing.


Joey Newland has a strict no-hitchhiker policy, but some hitchhikers are persistent.


There used to be a lineman over center, but David Slusser vaporized him with his glare.


It’s the newest Olympic sport: synchronized footballing!


Apparently someone made the mistake of telling Logan Yordanich to “take his head off.”


Mason Borders does his best Blues Brothers imitation.


It’s so hard to stiff arm a defender when nobody volunteers to be stiff armed.


Obviously, it is the opinion of this jury that the Chelsea football team is good-looking.


Andrew Koch is always ready to comfort those who mourn.  Even if they’re mourning the end of the play and he’s the one ending the play.


Truman Hadley must be looking for #1, Matt Gillespie.


Braylon Edwards’ beard can actually prevent concussions.


Charlie Kempf will not let you derail the Berkley Express.


It’s hard to tell if the defender is running towards Brian Paulsen or away from the edge of the frame.  Either way, he’s in trouble.


Yes, Mason Borders.  The goal posts are that way.  But don’t tear them down just yet!


Cal Bauer and Ray Zielinski must have just seen Justin Bieber!


Matt Gillespie is so happy, he feels like he’s floating.  He looks like it, too.

Next Week:
The Bulldogs face the Controversial Mascots of Ypsilanti.  The game is in Chelsea on Friday at 7pm.  Be there!