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The Daily DOPE

The Hot Box: Four Bold Predictions for Super Bowl LIII

February 2, 2019 by Staff Writer

Super Bowl LIII – between the New England Patriots and the Los Angeles Rams — is finally here.

And people around the world — sports fans and non-sports fans alike — have been making predictions about who will win and what will happen in the Big Game.

So we decided to try our hand as well.

But these aren’t your typical bold predictions — like Tom Brady will play well or Aaron Donald will get sick. No. These are under-the-radar hot takes that’ll not only come true but they’ll make you look super smart at your Super Bowl party.

I’m putting on my Romostradamus hat and delivering four bold predictions that will absolutely come true on Sunday.

1. Johnny Hekker Fake Punt

McVay and the Rams loooooveto pull a sweet fake punt that completely devastates the defense. So it’s almost a no-brainer that Rams punter Johnny Hekker — who has a pretty amazing arm — will attempt at least one pass in the Super Bowl, and he’ll probably toss a completion that makes everyone joke, “Why is he a punter? He could totally play QB.”

Bonus hot take: The Patriots will also attempt a fake kick — either field goal or punt — to prove that the Rams aren’t the only ones with some tricks up their sleeves.

We all know that Belichick refuses to be outsmarted.

2. James Develin Touchdown

Trying to figure out how the Patriots will use their wide array of running backs has long been an impossible task. And that won’t change in this year’s Super Bowl.

The Patriots will mix in runners Sony Michel, Rex Burkhead and James White throughout the tilt, but it’ll be fullback James Develin who hits paydirt at least once.

Hopefully his touchdown dance lives up to the quality of the Super Bowl.

3. Sean McVay Will Be Called the Next Belichick

Talking about how young Rams coach Sean McVay has reached the annoyance levels of “Ryan Fitzpatrick went to Harvard” and “Antonio Gates used to play basketball” when it comes to football parlance.

And there’s no doubt that his youth will be referenced during the broadcast, but we’ll also assuredly hear them compare the offensive genius to Belichick. Cue: eye roll.

While McVay might be on his way to being the best coach of the next generation, let’s pump the brakes on being the next anything other than the first Sean McVay.

4. There Will Be a Random Super Bowl Hero

It happens nearly every year, there’s an extremely random and mediocre player that becomes a legendary Super Bowl Hero.

Here are some of the candidates for both teams:

Rams: C.J. Anderson,Tyler Higbee, Dante Fowler Jr. and Cory Littleton

Patriots: Develin (of course), Phillip Dorsett, Cordarrelle Patterson, Kyle Van Noy

The post The Hot Box: Four Bold Predictions for Super Bowl LIII appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


The Hot Box: Four Bold Predictions for Super Bowl LIII
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Los Angeles Rams, New England Patriots, News, patriots, Rams, super bowl, Super Bowl LIII, Super Bowl Predictions, The Daily DOPE, the hot box

Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist

January 24, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Mexican Red Hair Cannabis

If you want to look back and examine the past, you better be ready. Like it or not, the past is never past. Look back with aplomb and revel in it, good or bad. There are lessons to be learned if you can unearth them, if you can dredge them out of the frozen waters of your mind and guide them to the surface. Like the 50 bales of Mexican Red Hair hauled up from the depths of Lower Merced Pass Lake in the backcountry of Yosemite in California, extracted from a downed airplane in the winter of 1967 and smoked with abandon amid gassy fireworks at Camp 4.

Nirvana

To the victor belong the spoils. When there is no one left standing but yourself, you either take what is left behind or you leave it. Up to you. But you cannot repeat, cannot let good pot go to waste. No way. So you take as much as you can carry and run. Free pot, come and get it. Bales and bales. Just waiting for you to get your hands on it. Nirvana, right? Oh shit, yeah!

Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist

6,000 Pounds

The climbers living at Camp 4 in Yosemite during the winter of 1976 became aware of an airplane crash high up in the mountains at Lower Merced Pass Lake. A plane laden with bales of pot went down in the mountains on a drug run. 6,000 pounds of marijuana was stashed onboard. Or so legend has it. The climbers weren’t the first to find out, though. The Yosemite park rangers and the DEA learned of the crash and, before the winter got too severe, went up in a helicopter and decided to confiscate the contraband. Like the remnants of dinosaur bones, part of the wreckage lay strewn along the shoreline where the plane hit, then tumbled into the lake, sinking up to its nose.

The strand was littered with bales of pot, and the rangers collected these first and stashed them in the helicopter. Then, with chainsaws in tow, they ventured out onto the frozen lake and cut holes through the ice near the plane and managed, with the help of divers, to extract a few more gunny-sacked bales of marijuana. When the weather began to deteriorate, the rangers had to abandon their mission. But their job was far from over. More bales remained lodged in the submerged fuselage of the plane. They intended to return in the spring to pick up the remainder of the pot, thinking no one in their right mind would dare venture up into the backcountry in the dead of winter. The rangers left the wreckage and the two dead pilots in the ice and took off with what they had gotten. They stored the stash at the Yosemite firehouse, which also served as a jail, and went about their business as usual managing the park.

Lodestar Lightning

Some say the plane that crashed was a Lodestar Lightning PV-1 Ventura. Others say it was a Howard 500. Seems no one really knows. Myth has a way of verging into truth, and vice versa. Regardless, the aircraft originated in the Baja in Mexico, bound for the Black Rock Deserta hundred or so miles from Reno, Nevada. When the starboard engine fell off as the pilots throttled up over a ridge in the High Sierra, the plane soon followed the engine and crashed into the lake.

Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist

Dope Lake

The Stonemasters found out about the crash and the incredible amounts of pot stashed inside the plane. So after the rangers had finished, they began to make trips up into the high country. Being top climbers in top shape, they were well-conditioned to survive the inclement winter weather. Still, the winter had been warmer than usual, and this helped them in their quest to score the bales of pot. After their first visit, they consequently named Lower Merced Pass Lake “Dope Lake.” Trip after trip, in secrecy, saw them haul back bales of pot out of the backcountry. Some say 200 bundles of the magic stuff was removed, each weighing around 50 pounds.

The Heist Masters

The Stonemasters had to cut through the ice after they reached their destination. The holes the rangers had cut were now frozen shut. Using ice axes — and regular axes — they got through and were able to pull out bales from the fuselage. The going was rough, though. Airplane fuel saturated the water around the plane. One by one, the bales were removed and taken back down to Camp 4, hidden carefully where the authorities couldn’t find them — if they came looking. Which they didn’t.

The Yosemite Gold Rush

Most of the climbers, if not all, were dirt poor. Some of the Stonemasters called themselves the Dirtbags. But they reveled in their poverty, throwing off all pretense about money, choosing to live like they lived — out on the edge. Questioning authority at every turn. This is where they wanted to be — in Camp 4, not beholden to society at large. Still, money is money, money is power and money buys material goods such as climbing gear, which is expensive. Money also buys time, as well. Some of the climbers took their pot and went down to LA and San Francisco, where they sold their wares. With their newfound wealth, some ended up buying houses, others used it for college tuition, some gave it away. Others smoked their shares down to the sticks and were left with nothing except the experience, which, to them, was the whole point of the operation.

Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist

Fire-Brewed Pot

When they got the pot down off the mountain, they of course partook of the stash, the Mexican Red Hair, blowing the tops of their heads off in more ways than one. More than a few of the bales were saturated with airplane fuel, but that didn’t stop the Stonemasters from having their due. When they lit up, the joints would sometimes explode or flare up, singeing the smokers’ hair and beards. The pot tasted of gasoline and tar, but this didn’t thwart the Dirtbags. It still got you off, adding to the wild experience of living on the edge,living around the campfire, partying with friends. Or attached to a rope on the vertical walls 2,000 feet up on the Dawn Wall of El Capitan, lighting up the fuel-laden joints that exploded around their heads. From the base you could look up and see the flares, and you knew they were having a good time. 

Smoke it if You Can

No one was ever caught or prosecuted. The rangers never found the climbers’ stash. By the time they learned the bales were missing, the climbers had already smoked or sold it. The Stonemasters had beaten the rangers and the DEA at their own game. To the Dirtbags belong the spoils of a good high — and the money to go along with it. Like a pirate wreckage plundered by the inhabitants of a coastal town in the 1600s, the plane was stripped of the contraband and distributed among those at Camp 4. They dared to look down into the icy waters and find fortune smiling back at them in bale after bale of Mexican Red Hair, ready and waiting to be smoked or sold. It is as true today as it was back then. The past is never past. Go and smoke it — if you dare.

 

The post Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Throwback Thursday: The Great Yosemite Pot Heist
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Camp 4 1960s, Camp 4 Yosemite, Lower Merced Pass Lake found cannabis, Max T.E. Lawrence, Mexican red hair strain, News, The Daily DOPE, the Dirtbags climbers Yosemite, Throwback Thursday, Yosemite, Yosemite climbing culture

The Hot Box: Ranking Every New NFL Coach in 2019

January 18, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

The Final Four in the NFL is set: the Kansas City Chiefs will host the New England Patriots while the Los Angeles Rams will battle the Saints in New Orleans.

But we’re already looking ahead. Our crystal ball has the capability to look waaaaaypast the NFC and AFC Championship Games, beyond the Pro Bowl, and, heck, even further than the Super Bowl. This crystal ball can see the likely outcome for all eight new coaches that were hired.

Below we’ve ranked the new hires, from first to worst.

1. Cleveland Browns: Freddie Kitchens

The fast-rising assistant coach started the 2018 season as the QB coach for the Cleveland Browns, and, now, less than a year later, Kitchens is the head man in charge in Cleveland.

The former interim offensive coordinator quickly proved that the Browns’ talented offense was being held back by Hue Jackson. Kitchens transformed the lowly Browns into one of the most entertaining teams in the NFL, and not because of how laughable they are.

The Browns have blue-chip talent throughout the roster, and a young core that should continue to develop. It’s no sure thing, but Kitchens could be cooking in Cleveland as early as next season.

2. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Bruce Arians

Only a year ago, Bruce Arians retired from coaching the Arizona Cardinals and rode off into the sunset as a CBS color commentator. And now Arians has brought the Cardinals to Tampa, the offensive mastermind is tasked with turning around a talented but young offensive squad, while turning the Bucs defense into a playoff caliber group.

Arians, who has dealt with health issues, is a year-to-year proposition in the NFL, but he’s worth the risk — especially if he can help Jameis Winston realize his potential.

3. Green Bay Packers: Matt LaFleur

LaFleur’s first year as offensive coordinator with the Tennessee Titans left a lot to be desired, but there’s no questioning LaFleur’s resume.

The Packers new coach learned under Jay Gruden, Kyle Shanahan and Sean McVay. Green Bay will hope that running the LaFleur will match the success of those offensive masterminds while letting star QB Aaron Rodgers operate the Shanahan/McVay offense.

The success of this hire will depend largely on if Rodgers buys into the young LaFleur as coach.

4. New York Jets: Adam Gase

Gase’s tenure with the Dolphins might not look great, but the former Miami coach continues to get the most out of the talent on his roster.

The Dolphins routinely had one of the least talented rosters in the league, but Gase was able to overperform.

He might not be a player’s coach who gets along with everybody, but Gase should be able to help Sam Darnold reach the next level of his development.

Unfortunately, Gase might be on a short lease, depending on if the Jets are able to have a successful year in 2019.

5. Arizona Cardinals: Kliff Kingsbury

One of the biggest surprises of the hiring cycle was the Cardinals hiring former Texas Tech coach Kliff Kingsbury.

Despite having a losing record in college, Kingsbury is an offensive wizard. He’s been able to develop players such as Patrick Mahomes, Baker Mayfield and Case Keenum while in the college ranks. His next task will be to turn Josh Rosen into a franchise QB.

Although the Kingsbury hire might be slightly confusing, he’s a talented play caller who won’t have to deal with non-NFL talent on defense. Kingsbury is the epitome of a boom-or-bust coaching prospect.

6. Cincinnati Bengals: Zac Taylor

After sixteen seasons as the Bengals coach, Marvin Lewis is no longer in charge in Cincinnati. Rams QB coach Zac Taylor will lead the rebuild for the Bengals.

A big theme this offseason was trying to capture the magic that Sean McVay brought to Los Angeles. Taylor has learned under McVay and the Bengals are hoping that he can replicate that success.

The Bengals are run differently than any team in the league, so Taylor should have some job security but it won’t be easy to win in Cincy.

7. Miami Dolphins: Brian Flores

In charge of the Patriots defense, Flores has rumored to be a hot coaching candidate for years — and the Dolphins love to poach coaches from fellow AFC East teams.

The Dolphins are already reportedly considering tanking the 2019 season to get one of the highly sought after QB prospects.

A talent-depleted team, Flores has a lot of work ahead of him.

8. Denver Broncos: Vic Fangio

Fangio has long been one of the best defensive coordinators in the NFL, and his hiring as a head coach is long overdue.

Unfortunately for the former Bears DC, Fangio has a tough hand in Denver.

The Broncos have an aging defense that’ll most likely improve under Fangio, but it’s the offense — and the staff — that could torpedo his tenure.

Fangio — along with general manager John Elway — will need to overhaul the offense and find a franchise QB. And their offensive coordinator pick, Gary Kubiak, won’t be there to help them.

The post The Hot Box: Ranking Every New NFL Coach in 2019 appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


The Hot Box: Ranking Every New NFL Coach in 2019
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: arizona cardinals, cincinnati bengals, Cleveland browns, denver broncos, football, Green Bay Packers, Miami Dolphins, new york jets, News, nfl, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, The Daily DOPE, the hot box

Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley

January 10, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

“I want to see mountains again, Gandalf, mountains,” says Bilbo in “The Fellowship of the Ring,” “and then find somewhere I can rest. In peace and quiet … ”And I might add, for myself primarily, to partake in a good toke — or two or three. Not from a pipe piled high with the Hobbits’ Longbottom Leaf or Old Toby, but from my Dopen 2.0, filled with a smooth, free-flowing sativa winding its way down into my lungs. Throw in a swig or two from a jug of Gallo Paisano Wine, a big old dog huffing and puffing at my side, and I’m suddenly free of all the BS mankind throws at me. Yes, I want to escape from the bane of civilization in whatever way I can. That’s how I felt in the ‘60s and how I feel today. Wanted to get out from under all of it and onto the road to find my way along the way. And back then I did, and still do. Mountains, I need mountains. Bilbo lives.

Climbing Out of the ‘50s

The first new wave of climbers to descend on Yosemite arrived in the late ‘50s, ascended its storied walls throughout the ‘60s, then into the ‘70s. They embraced the counterculture. In fact, they werethe counterculture, escaping from authority and all the rules and regulations society imposed on them and the rest of us. These outlaws of the rock tuned in, turned on and dropped out, ending up in Yosemite Valley at Camp 4, rejecting all that society stood for. Question authority.

Camp 4

Camp 4 was their home away from home for many years, changing only when new climbers with new values came to join them and take up residence. It was one of the farthest campsites away from the tourists, situated in the rear of the campground near a rock wall and boulders where the climbers could practice and party. The wild parties, fired by weed, acid and booze, alienated the climbers from the pampered tourists, who were housed comfortably in their cocooned motorhomes with all the amenities of home: refrigerators, stoves, queen beds and TVs. The tourists, of course, complained about the loud music and mad hijinks to who else? The authorities. All this back-and-forth fueled an ongoing fight over the years throughout the ‘60s — between the tourists, climbers and the U.S. Park Service.

Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley

The Crazies

I’ve climbed many mountains in my time, burning up the gentler grades and occasionally glued to a steeper pitch with ropes. I’ve never been on one of the big walls of Yosemite, though, much less stoned 3,000 feet up suspended by ropes, staring down into the vertical abyss. Yes, there were those that drank and smoked (and were stoned and drunk most of the time) while putting up some of the most successful routes American climbing had ever seen. Before the crazies arrived, there were other less crazed individuals that migrated from the cities in the early ‘60s and planted themselves in the valley to put up radical climbs that had never been seen or done before. I knew some of the crazies, though, and even though I was crazy back then, too, I would never follow them up those crooked paths into the far reaches of the sky. Stoned.

Stay Stoned, My Friend

I preferred to stay planted on the ground in front of a roaring bonfire, drinking and smoking or staying home and drinking and smoking, never setting foot on one of those towering walls that seemed to abnegate the sunlight. I preferred watching them take off and climb, wiped out of their minds. How they could do this, I didn’t know. I’d only been stoned hiking to the top of 14,000-foot peaks. Not vertical walls. Stay stoned, my friends. With two feet on the ground.

Royal Robbins vs. Warren Harding

Royal Robbins was one of the first to come to the valley. Although he wasn’t much of a party animal, like so many others who accompanied him, he was an integral part of the counterculture, dropping out and staying in Yosemite in the early ‘60s. He pioneered clean climbing, one without drilling bolts to clip your rope into unless you absolutely needed to. Robbins was a rival to Warren Harding, a surveyor nicknamed “Batso” who climbed with abandon, lived for days on the sides of rock walls with abandon, drank with abandon and smoked with abandon. Harding was the first to scale the 3,000-foot wall called The Nose on El Capitan. But it was the way in which he climbed that irked most of the other climbers, especially Robbins. Harding attacked the wall in siege fashion with fixed ropes that one could climb back up and down on like a freeway and thus renew the route the next day, until slowly, over time, you got to the top. It took Harding and his companions two years to complete the route. Harding thumbed his nose at authority along the way, guzzling wine and smoking bongs 2,000 feet up on the wall. Later, Robbins, to prove his adversary wrong, climbed the Nose, which took him a week. Without fixed ropes.

Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley

Jim Bridwell and the Stonemasters

Then came Jim Bridwell and his band of hardmen and hardwomen stoners. They called themselves The Stonemasters and, as Lynn Hill, one of their prominent members, said in the film “Valley Uprising,” The Stonemasters should have been called  the “stoned masters.” That’s when things got crazy. Not only the way Bridwell partied, but climbed, usually stoned or on acid, saying that he climbed on the edge of being stoned and totally out of his mind. He and his band of merry climbers put up routes Royal Robbins and Yvon Chouinard, another pioneer (and founder of the clothing company Patagonia) could only dream about. Was it the pot? Might have been.

Between Sanity and Darkness

To climb or not to climb? To smoke or not to smoke while climbing? Do the two go together? For some they do, and they say it makes them climb better, keeps them on the knife’s edge. For others like me, no. I didn’t have the stomach to climb stoned. I’d lose my marbles and watch them bounce off the rocks all the way down the cliff face. It would be too hair-raising, as some of the participants have said when they followed their fearless leader, Bridwell, up into the lofty heights, as he tripped on acid, dangling on the edge of sanity and darkness. There is only one exit if you fall three thousand feet.

Talking to the Ents

I want to be in the mountains, sitting on a rock with a dog beside me, both of us overlooking a peaceful valley, me having a good, long hit from my Dopen 2.0 and filling my lungs with a glow that travels up to my head and beyond. The dog, he’ll get some good clean fresh air. I’ll lean back against a tree, preferably into the branches of an Ent,and have a conversation with him about the untoward wiles and ways of the world, the beauties of the forest and solitude, happy to be away from it all with the dog and the tree and my imagination sailing in the breezes. That’s what I want, what I desire. Hyggein the great outdoors. The crazies hung out with my younger self, a self that today, although still young at heart, has paled into a wan evening sunset, with my crazier self looking down at me from the fading light beyond the mountaintop. The road goes ever on. Bilbo lives.

Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley


Up Next: The Climbers and the Great Pot Heist

The post Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Throwback Thursday: Early Climbing Counterculture in the Yosemite Valley
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: counterculture, early climbing counterculture, El Capitan, Jim Bridwell, Lynn Hill, News, rock climbing, Royal Robbins, The Daily DOPE, The Stonemasters, Throwback Thursday, Warren Harding, Yosemite first climbs

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