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❤️ Todd Rogers 🐱

"Todd Jonathan Rogers (born September 30, 1973) is an American professional beach volleyball player who is an Olympic and FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championship gold medalist. He and his former partner, Phil Dalhausser, were the 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011 AVP Tour champions. Early life Rogers was born in Santa Barbara, California to David and Heidi Rogers. Playing career = Youth and collegiate = Rogers attended San Marcos High School from 1987 to 1991 where he played indoor volleyball for Jon Lee. Together with teammate Dax Holdren, Rogers won a league championship in 1990. The following year, Rogers led his team to the CIF Southern Section Boys' Volleyball Championship. In addition to volleyball, Rogers played soccer at San Marcos High School. After high school, Rogers enrolled at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He played for the men's volleyball team from 1993 through 1996 and was twice named a Second Team All-American by the American Volleyball Coaches Association in 1995 and 1996. Rogers set a school record for career digs with 783 (since surpassed) and placed second in career assists with 4,831. He earned a degree in religious studies with a minor in coaching. = Amateur = Rogers was originally turned on to beach volleyball by his San Marcos High School coach, Jon Lee, as a way to stay fit for the indoor volleyball season. Rogers' first teammate was then-San Marcos High School teammate Clay Holdren, a cousin of Dax Holdren, in 1987. He later competed with Dax Holdren and the two entered into professional tournaments starting in 1993. Rogers, however, could not collect any prize money in order to keep his amateur status with the National Collegiate Athletic Association as he was also competing with the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos while a student- athlete. The duo competed in the Manhattan Beach Open in August 1995, finishing 25th. = Professional career = = 1996–2001: starting with Dax Holdren = After graduating from UC Santa Barbara, Rogers turned professional and kept Dax Holdren as his partner. The duo competed in the domestic AVP Tour and the international FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour. Rogers took AVP Rookie of the Year honors in 1997. It took until the AVP Minneapolis Open in July 1998 for the pair to win their first tournament together while their first FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour tournament win came in June 2000 at the Mexico Open in Rosarito, Mexico. Rogers and Holdren spent 6 years as a professional tandem and achieved 5 first-place finishes on the AVP Tour and 1 first-place finish apiece on the FIVB Beach World Tour and the Beach Volleyball America Tour. He played every match during this span with Holdren, with exceptions being Kevin Martin for the 1997 AVP Tour Dallas Open, Canyon Ceman for the 1999 AVP Tour Cleveland Tournament of Champions, Stein Metzger for the 2000 FIVB Brazil Open, and various teammates for the 1998–2001 AVP Tour King of the Beach tournaments held in Las Vegas, before switching to Sean Scott permanently at the end of 2001. = 2001–2005: playing with Sean Scott = Rogers split with Holdren at the end of 2001 and partnered up with Sean Scott for the Rogers' last event of the 2001 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour, the Brazil Open. The duo narrowly missed out on participation in the 2004 Summer Olympics as the third-best American teams while only two are sent. The pair found moderate success, winning on four separate AVP Tour stops. As with his previous partnership with Dax Holdren, Rogers played the overwhelming majority throughout this period with Scott, with the few exceptions being the start of the 2003 AVP Tour with Eli Fairfield for 2 tournaments, the 2005 AVP Austin Open with Reid Priddy, various teammates for the 2004 Best of the Beach and 2005 Las Vegas Shootout, and Phil Dalhausser for the 2005 Beach Volleyball World Championships prior to making a permanent switch to Dalhausser in 2006. = 2006–2012: dominance with Dalhausser = 2006 While playing with Scott, Rogers took notice of a 6'9" up-and-comer named Phil Dalhausser. Recognizing his potential, Rogers partnered with him for the 2006 season and began coaching Dalhausser on the intricacies of the game. The pair won eight AVP events and one FIVB event in 2006. Rogers also won the season-ending round-robin tournament, earning the title, "God of the Beach". Despite their success, Rogers and Dalhausser finished the 2006 AVP season in second place, just six points shy of leaders Mike Lambert and Stein Metzger. 2007 Rogers and Dalhausser finished the 2007 AVP season as the dominant winners, finishing with more than 800 points over the second place team with 10 tournament wins. The duo also won the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships in Gstaad, Switzerland, the first such win in U.S. men's beach volleyball history. 2008 Rogers and Dalhausser have been a dominant force on both the 2008 AVP and FIVB tours. They have eight domestic wins, and three international wins, all in Grand Slam events. In 2011 Rogers and Dalhauser set new single season records for the most wins in a season on the FIVB, finishing the year as the world's number one ranked team. Olympics President George W. Bush poses with Rogers and teammate Phil Dalhausser as he visited the practice session Saturday, August 9, 2008, at Beijing's Chaoyang Park prior to their first matches of the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. = Athens 2004 = Despite being ranked as the #4 team in the world, Rogers and partner, Sean Scott, were beaten out for the top two available slots for U.S. teams. Rogers was named an alternate but did not play. = Beijing 2008 = Rogers and Dalhausser qualified as the number one team for the 2008 Olympics. After suffering a first round surprise defeat to Latvia, Rogers and Dalhausser won the gold medal in beach volleyball at the 2008 Summer Olympics on August 22, 2008 by defeating the Brazilian team of Fabio/Marcio in three sets. = London 2012 = In a straight set defeat, Rogers and Dalhausser failed to defend their gold medal at the London 2012 Summer Olympics, ousted in the round of 16, by the young Italian team of Paolo Nicolai and Daniele Lupo. Awards * AVP Best Defensive Player 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 * AVP Crocs Cup Champion 2007 (Phil Dalhausser), 2008 (Phil Dalhausser) * AVP Most Valuable Player 2006 * AVP Rookie of the Year 1997 * AVP Team of the Year 2007 (Phil Dalhausser), 2008 (Phil Dalhausser) * FIVB Best Defensive Player 2006, 2007, 2008 * FIVB Most Inspirational 2008 * FIVB Best Setter 2005 Coaching Rogers was the assistant men's volleyball coach at UC Santa Barbara from 2000 to 2005. He left coaching to devote full-time attention to his professional career. Rogers and his partner Dalhausser won the 2008 Beijing Olympics gold medal in men's beach volleyball, topping off a year that saw them win nearly every tournament they entered. Early in 2016, Rogers was hired as head coach of the Cal Poly Women's Beach Volleyball team. Personal life Rogers has been inducted into the Santa Barbara Athletic round table hall of fame for his achievements in the sport of indoor and beach volleyball. He is a surfer in his spare time. References External links * AVP player profile * Laureus player profile * UC Santa Barbara coaching profile Category:1973 births Category:Living people Category:American men's beach volleyball players Category:Beach volleyball players at the 2008 Summer Olympics Category:Beach volleyball players at the 2012 Summer Olympics Category:Olympic beach volleyball players of the United States Category:Olympic gold medalists for the United States in volleyball Category:Medalists at the 2008 Summer Olympics Category:Sportspeople from Santa Barbara, California Category:UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's volleyball players Category:Beach volleyball defenders Category:FIVB World Tour award winners "

❤️ Bad penny 🐱

"Bad Penny may refer to: In aircraft * "Bad Penny" (aircraft), a nickname for an Avro Lancaster involved in Operation Manna In media and entertainment * "Bad Penny" (song), a song by Rory Gallagher * Bad Penny (TV series), an English sitcom * "Bad Penny Blues", a jazz piece by Humphrey Lyttelton "

❤️ Albert L. Smith Jr. 🐱

"Albert Lee Smith Jr. (August 31, 1931 - August 12, 1997) was an Alabama politician who represented the 6th district in the United States House of Representatives during the 97th Congress (1981-1983). Early life Smith was born in 1931 in Birmingham, Alabama. He attended public schools in Jefferson County and graduated from Ramsay High School before he enrolled at Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. He graduated from Auburn in 1954 and entered the United States Navy. He worked thereafter as an insurance agent before entering political life.SMITH, Albert Lee Jr. – Biographical Information Politics Smith was elected as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1968, 1972, and 1984. In 1978, Smith challenged 12-term Republican John Hall Buchanan, Jr. in the primary for the Birmingham-based 6th District. Buchanan was one of the more moderate Republicans in the House, and Smith ran well to his right. Smith lost fairly handily, but took another run at Buchanan in 1980. With support from conservative Christian activists, Smith defeated Buchanan by a surprising 10-point margin. He then narrowly defeated Democrat Pete Clifford by three points. Smith served only one term before being defeated by Democratic Jefferson County commissioner Ben Erdreich. To date, Smith is the last Republican congressman to be unseated by a Democrat in Alabama. In 1984, Smith unsuccessfully ran for the United States Senate against incumbent Democrat Howell Heflin. Private life With his wife Eunie, Smith had three children and six grandchildren. In 2016, following the death of Phyllis Schlafly, his widow Eunie Smith became President of the conservative campaign group Eagle Forum.Eunie Smith bio at eagleforum.org, accessed October 30, 2017 Later life Smith remained active in a variety of conservative political causes until his death in 1997 at the age of sixty- five. He is buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Birmingham. References External links * - Category:1931 births Category:1997 deaths Category:Members of the United States House of Representatives from Alabama Category:Alabama Republicans Category:Politicians from Birmingham, Alabama Category:Auburn University alumni Category:Businesspeople from Birmingham, Alabama Category:Military personnel from Birmingham, Alabama Category:United States Navy personnel Category:Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives Category:20th-century American businesspeople Category:20th-century American politicians Category:Burials at Elmwood Cemetery (Birmingham, Alabama) "

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