Bio

  • John Clay is a sports columnist for the Lexington Herald-Leader. A native of Central Kentucky and graduate of UK, he covered UK football for 13 seasons before being promoted to columnist in 2000. He lives in Lexington with his wife and two sons.

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Corrections

  • In my notes column for July 2, I wrote that Georgia mascot UGA VI was flown from Athens to Savannah for burial. It was actually the other way around. The bulldog was buried at Sanford Stadium.

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    May 13, 2008

    I can e-mail too, you know

    Edwards22 Should have blogged about this a while back, but about a month ago my friend Brian and I drove to Louisville's Headliners Music Hall to check out Kathleen Edwards. My friend Brian knows more about music, especially female musicians, than most anyone I know. Over the years, since our college days together at UK, from time to time, a cassette of new music would pop up unannounced in my mail box.  Brian is always touting some new female artist of which I admit I am either unfamiliar or vaguely familiar.

    That said, I am happy to say I discovered Edwards on my own. Loved her first album, Failer. Loved her second album, Back to Me. Always wanted to see her live. Was thrilled to find out she was going to be in Louisville to promote Asking for Flowers. Mentioned this to Brian at a UK basketball game. He said he'd like to see her, and a road trip was planned.

    Happy to say Edwards was terrific. My being a veteran of 17 Springsteen shows, most in sold-out arenas, Headliners was an entirely different venue. It's a bar. With an open dance floor. Very few tables. And unfortunately, on this night, there was not an overabundance of patrons. Maybe 200. Maybe. And yet Edwards played as if there were 2,000. She rocked. She had a great time, showcasing her famous foul mouth, her band's talents, and a taste for Kentucky bourbon. Played most everything I had hoped to hear. Thoroughly enjoyed it.

    (You can find an excellent review of the show and more pictures from the show at Backseat Sandbar. Photos by Cory Greenwell.)

    Img_1972 But the surprise of the night was the opening act. I didn't know much about Dan Wilson. The name didn't ring a bell. When we arrived, Brian informed me that he was the lead singer for Semisonic, the Minneapolis trio (I think) famous for "Closing Time." That rang a definite bell. My 15-year-old son, Alex, went through a brief period when nothing but "Closing Time" could be heard from his room. (Coldplay is his band of choice at present.)  Yet on this night, Wilson opened with a song called "Easy Silence." Immediately, I thought, I know that song. And I did. It's on the Dixie Chicks' Taking the Long Way. And Wilson introduced it by saying, "This is a song I wrote with three cool chicks from Texas." And, yes, it turned out that this is the same Dan Wilson who helped write half the songs on that Grammy-winning CD.

    The rest of Wilson's set was terrific. He was funny. The songs were good. Better than good in some cases. He engaged the crowd in a couple of sing-a-longs, and did a humorous intro into "Closing Time." Better yet, he joined Edwards for her first encore, a duet of his "Secret Smile." I knew I had to buy that song, which I did, purchasing Semisonic's Feeling Strangely Fine. I have also purchased Wilson's solo CD Free Life. It comes with my recommendation.

    Anyway, in my post-concert investigations, I stumbled upon Wilson's web page . On it, he encourages e-mail. So I sent him one. Explained that I saw his Louisville show, that I enjoyed the show, and he had a new fan.

    This morning, I found this in my in-box:

    John, thank you very much for the good word. I enjoyed that tour quite a bit and I'm glad you liked the gig.

    Peace
    DW


    So if from now on I use "Peace, JC" in my e-mail replies, you'll know the origin.

    Aug 16, 2007

    New music: Bruce!!!!! And E-Street!!!!!!

    Brucemagic Being a Boss Believer, today is a good day.

    Today is the day is the rumors stopped and the official word came. Columbia Records announced that, yes, Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band have recorded a new album (CD, whatever) to be released Oct. 2.

    "Magic" is the disk title. It's the first collaborative effort of Bruce and the band since the 2002 release of "The Rising." It is also produced by Brendan O'Brien, who produced "The Rising." Rumors are a tour will begin possibly next month.

    Links: [Los Angeles Times] [Backstreets] [Rolling Stone]

    Jun 02, 2006

    Imperfect 10

    An imperfect 10:

    1) UK plays host to NCAA baseball regional

    Mpython As Monty Python used to say, "And now for something completely different." The host Cats would seem to have the advantage. Their a power-built club playing in a small park. My nephew, a freshman on the Miami of Ohio baseball team, informs me that Ball State is also a club built for power playing in a smallish park. The MAC is no pushover, either. Last year's MAC champ, Miami, was knocked out by eventual NCAA champ Texas. Could come down to pitching. That is if they play today. The skies are threatening over Lexington this morning, and the forecast predicts a stormy Friday.

    2) What becomes a Legend's Legend most

    We live in a news-now time. Wednesday was proof. No sooner had word leaked out on radio, TV and internet about Roger Clemens appearance next Tuesday in a Lexington Legends uniform, than a traffic jam formed on Broadway as patrons rushed to Applebee's Park in search of tickets. It's a once-in-a-lifetime shot to catch a glimpse of an icon at work.

    3) Brandon Webb's scoreless streak

    Webbbrandon_2 He is not yet Roger Clemens, but Brandon Webb is headed in that direction. The Ashland native and former Paul Blazer High School star has stretched his scoreless innings streak to 25 innings for the Arizona Diamondbacks. He's also 8-0, with a 2.01 ERA, best in the majors.

    4) Horse racing dissed

    Cincinnati Enquirer columnist Paul Daugherty, writing in his blog, "Barbaro's ugly breaks in the Preakness won't set horse racing back the way Ruffian's broken leg did in 1975. That's only because racing had lots of fans to lose in 1975. Now, racing's as relevant as boxing and track and field."

    5) E-mail of the day

    One of my more faithful e-mailers shot me this after my column Wednesday criticizing a push by college basketball coaches to expand the NCAA Tournament, "One of only five articles in the past year that I agreed with. One of us is in trouble."

    6) Dixie Chicks new CD

    Dixiechicks2 They're not albums anymore, remember? Doesn't matter if you agree or disagree with what Natalie Maines said about the president -- "Just so you know, we're ashamed our president is from Texas," the Chicks' lead singer told a London audience back in 2002 -- or if you backed your Ford F-150 over a stack of the Chicks' earlier work, you have to admire Maines' pugnacity. She doesn't back down. "Not Ready to Make Nice," makes that clear. And loud. Personal fav: "Lubbock or Leave It."

    7) Mark Cuban's Mavericks

    Cubanmark Of what little I watch of the NBA playoffs, the site of a courtside Mark Cuban yelling at officials remains a bit jarring. You just don't expect an owner to act like that. Or dress like that, either, with a t-shirt and jeans, or some other casual attire. Actually, though, it makes me want to root for the Mavs. If I watched. And if I did watch, I'd probably pull for the Suns and their crusade to rightfully return hoops to the run-and-gun.

    8) Reds woeful defense

    If Edwin Encarnacion handled this post, it would bounce into left field.

    9) Dan Werner gets Florida treatment this weekend

    The 6-7 forward from New Jersey continues his informational tour. He visited UK a couple of weeks back, and could still end up at his originally planned destination of North Carolina State. Werner has also visited Notre Dame and Pittsburgh is believed to be in his mix.

    10) Ten reasons why you should watch the NCAA Baseball Tournament

    SI on Campus 
    gives its 10.

    Feb 16, 2006

    Sports reflects society, or vice versa

    Montgomeryjohn Poor Eddie Sutton has company. Country music star John Michael Montgomery plead not guilty today to DUI and various other charges after being stopped at 2 in the morning on a Lexington street. Turns out Sebastian Telfair isn't the only one who makes a practice of having some ammo on hand. [kentucky.com]

    Dec 19, 2005

    Bonoriffic

    Time_man_of_year_4 Ain't love the sweetest thing?

    Nov 17, 2005

    Ring of fire

    Man should not live on sports alone, therefore I reserve the right to venture outside the lines from time-to-time.

    Though a shameless commercial for the movie, starring Joaquin Phoenix and the ever-so-cute Reese Witherspoon, last night's I Walk the Line Dwight1 television tribute to the late Johnny Cash had more than a few moments, none better than Dwight Yoakam and the heavenly Alison Krauss combining talents on "If I Were a Carpenter."

    An additional highlight: The on-screen appearance of a now 70-year-old Jerry Lee Lewis provided me the golden opportunity to introduce my 12-year-old to the details of "The Killer's" colorful past.

    FYI: Dwight is scheduled to be in Louisville tomorrow night at Coyote's.