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Southern Iowa Fair still on for July

On Monday (5/4), the No Coast Network told you the Wapello County Fair would be cancelled this year.  We reached out to the Southern Iowa Fair Board and have been told plans to hold a fair this year are still on.  Southern Iowa Fair Board Chairman Shawn Van Engelenhoven says “at this point, there are no plans to cancel” the fair, which is scheduled for July 20-25 in Oskaloosa.  Van Engelenhoven went on to say that Diamond Rio’s concert set for Saturday, July 25 is also still on.

Oskaloosa & Mahaska County approve grant request

Both the Mahaska County Board and Oskaloosa City Council voted at their regular meetings Monday (5/4) to authorize a grant application to study the building of a bypass on Highway 163 northwest of Oskaloosa and other future bypasses.  The County and City will both contribute $40,000 as a local match for the $850,000 federal grant, with the Mahaska Chamber and Development Group pitching in $20,000.  This grant is only to study the building of bypasses, rather than going toward construction.

Eric Church & Brothers Osborne Give Fan Club Members A Year Free

Eric Church is giving fans a break when it comes to fees for his fan club. The singer sent a letter to the members of his Church Choir over the weekend, letting them know that he is picking up the tab for their membership dues for the next year.

“I hope this finds everyone safe and doing well. We miss you guys terribly and can’t wait to see and fellowship with you again,” Eric wrote. “Until we do, I want to offer a year of free dues starting May 1. You guys are the heartbeat of everything we do and I realize times are difficult right now. That includes finances. So, this year is on me.”

He added, “I don’t know for sure when we will be allowed to resume playing shows and I hope it’s sooner rather than later,” explaining, “It’s important to me that we can do that safe and in a non-socially-distanced way. Yes, I’m going to jump right in the middle of you. I am certain though, it will happen, and it will be glorious. We will gather again. And we will roar.”

And Eric isn’t the only one making such an offer. Over the weekend, Brothers Osborne also said they were picking up the tab for their premium fan club members. “We know right now that times are really tight for our fans…things are really weird,” they shared on Instagram. “As a sign of appreciation for you guys being so awesome and there from the very beginning we’d like to give all of our premium fan members a year free.”

Source: CMT

Wapello County Fair cancelled

There won’t be a county fair in Wapello County this year.  The Wapello County Fair Board has released a statement saying “this decision to postpone until 2021 is the best choice we have at this time considering the issues with COVID-19.  Our major concern is for the health of Wapello County Fair attendees and volunteers.”  If you have bought tickets for this year’s Wapello County Fair, you can either get a refund or get credit for the 2021 County Fair.

Miami Dolphins say Don Shula, the winningest coach in pro football history, has died at age 90

By STEVEN WINE

MIAMI (AP) — Don Shula, who won the most games of any NFL coach and led the Miami Dolphins to the only perfect season in league history, died Monday at his home, the team said. He was 90.

Shula surpassed George Halas’ league-record 324 victories in 1993. He retired following the 1995 season with 347 wins, 173 losses and six ties, and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1997.

“Don Shula was the patriarch of the Miami Dolphins for 50 years,” the Dolphins said in a statement. “He brought the winning edge to our franchise and put the Dolphins and the city of Miami in the national sports scene.”

Shula became the only coach to guide an NFL team through a perfect season when the 1972 Dolphins went 17-0. They won the Super Bowl again the following season, finishing 15-2.

The 2007 Patriots came close to matching the achievement by the ’72 Dolphins, winning their first 18 games before losing in the Super Bowl to the New York Giants.

Shula appeared in six Super Bowls and reached the playoffs in four decades. He coached three Hall of Fame quarterbacks: Johnny Unitas, Bob Griese and Dan Marino.

During his 26 seasons in Miami, Shula became an institution and looked the part, with a jutting jaw and glare that intimidated 150-pound sports writers and 300-pound linemen alike. His name adorns an expressway, an athletic club and a steakhouse chain.

Shula’s only losing seasons came in 1976 and 1988, but he drew increasing criticism from fans and the media in his final years and retired in January 1996, with Jimmy Johnson replacing him.

Shula’s active retirement included plenty of travel and social events, but in 2000 he admitted he missed coaching.

“When you do something for 26 years with an organization and have all the memories — some not so great, but mostly great memories — that’s when you miss it,” he said.

Before his 1970s triumphs with Miami, Shula had a reputation as a coach who thrived during the regular season but couldn’t win the big games.

Shula became the youngest head coach in NFL history when the Baltimore Colts hired him in 1963 at age 33. The Colts finished 12-2 the following season and were widely seen as the league’s dominant team.

But they lost 27-0 to Cleveland in the title game, and for the next few years they continued to come up short.

The humiliation was greatest in the Super Bowl to end the 1968 season. The Colts steamrolled through the NFL, finishing 13-1 and outscoring opponents by a nearly 3-1 margin. After crushing the Browns 34-0 in the title game, they were overwhelming favorites to defeat the Jets of the upstart American Football League, which had lost the first two Super Bowls.

But the Colts lost 16-7, blowing numerous scoring opportunities and allowing Jets quarterback Joe Namath to control the game. The result is still regarded by many as the biggest upset in pro football history, and it contributed to Shula’s departure from Baltimore after the 1969 season.

In 1970, following the NFL-AFL merger, Shula joined the Dolphins, a fourth-year AFL expansion team that had gone 3-10-1 the previous year.

Miami improved to 10-4 in his first season and made the playoffs for the first time, and the 1971 Dolphins reached the Super Bowl before losing to Dallas. The following season, when Miami took a 16-0 record into the Super Bowl against Washington, Shula considered his legacy on the line.

“If we had won 16 games in a row and lost the Super Bowl, it would have been a disaster, especially for me,” he said in a 2007 interview. “That would have been my third Super Bowl loss. I was 0-2 in Super Bowls and people always seemed to bring that up: ‘You can’t win the big one.’”

The Dolphins beat the Redskins 14-7, then repeated as champions the following year by beating Minnesota in the title game.

The post-Shula era in Miami has only magnified his achievements. More than two decades after he retired, the Dolphins haven’t been back to an AFC championship game, much less a Super Bowl.

Five times under Shula, the Dolphins had a winning streak of at least seven games. They haven’t had one since.

Shula was about more than winning. He supported many charities, and the Don Shula Foundation, formed primarily to assist breast cancer research, was established as a tribute to his late wife, Dorothy.

They were married for 32 years and raised five children before she died in 1991. Shula married Mary Anne Stephens during a bye week in 1993.

His oldest son, David, coached the Cincinnati Bengals from 1992-96. When Cincinnati played Miami in 1994, it marked the first time in professional sports that a father and son faced each other as head coaches.

Don won, 23-7.

Another son, Mike, is a longtime NFL assistant coach and was head coach at Alabama in 2003-06.

Shula spent more than 20 years on the powerful NFL Competition Committee, which evaluates playing rules as well as regulations designed to improve safety.

“If I’m remembered for anything, I hope it’s for playing within the rules,” Shula once said. “I also hope it will be said that my teams showed class and dignity in victory or defeat.”

Born Jan. 4, 1930, in Grand River, Ohio, Shula was raised in Painesville, Ohio. He played running back at John Carroll University in Cleveland and cornerback in the pros for seven seasons with Cleveland, Baltimore and Washington.

He entered coaching as an assistant at Virginia in 1958.

Near the end of his career, Shula’s biography in the Dolphins’ media guide began with a quote from former NFL coach Bum Phillips: “Don Shula can take his’n and beat you’n, and he could take you’n and beat his’n.”

Shula is survived by his second wife, two sons and three daughters.

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More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

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Follow Steven Wine on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Steve_Wine

What Would Have Been: Red Sox-Yankees, NHL conference finals

By STEPHEN HAWKINS

With the sports calendar still mostly on hold because of the coronavirus pandemic, The Associated Press takes a look at some of the live sporting events that would have taken place the week of May 4-10:

MLB: The 162-game regular season would have been about one-fourth complete after the Boston Red Sox played this coming weekend in the Bronx against the Yankees. It would have been the first series this season between the AL East rivals after New York won 14 of 19 games last year, including both games played in London.

New Atlanta Braves pitcher Cole Hamels (shoulder) might not have been ready to pitch in Philadelphia. Hamels began his MLB career with the Phillies from 2006-15, and was the 2008 World Series MVP. In his only start in Philly as a visitor, the lefty allowed eight runs in two-plus innings, an 11-1 loss by the Chicago Cubs last August.

TRIVIA BREAK: When the NBA season was suspended after March 11 games, the Lakers were the only Western Conference team that had clinched a playoff berth. Los Angeles had gone a franchise-worst six consecutive seasons without making the playoffs. What are the only two Western Conference teams with longer active postseason droughts? (Answer at bottom).

NBA: The playoffs would have been in the middle of the second round, with eight teams still in contention for the NBA title.

NHL: The quest for the Stanley Cup would have been down to four teams, with the Eastern and Western Conference finals getting underway.

TENNIS: The clay-court Madrid Open was supposed to be this week, one of the key tuneups for the French Open, which normally begins in late May but this year has been postponed until September. Known as the “King of Clay,” Rafael Nadal has won the title in Madrid five times, but surprisingly lost in the 2019 semifinals there to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Novak Djokovic wound up with the trophy.

PGA TOUR: The Byron Nelson tournament was to be played for the final time at Trinity Forest Golf Club. Plans had already been announced for the tournament to move after only three years on the links-style course built on a former landfill south of downtown Dallas. The Nelson moves next year to TPC Craig Ranch north of Dallas.

NASCAR: A week before the return of actual live Cup Series racing in South Carolina, NASCAR is missing what would have been its latest spring race at Martinsville, Virginia, in a half-century. The paperclip-shaped half-mile track is the shortest on the circuit, and hasn’t hosted a spring race past April since 1970.

TRIVIA ANSWER: The Sacramento Kings have missed the playoffs the past 13 seasons and the Phoenix Suns have gone nine seasons in a row without making the postseason. That doesn’t include this season that is still on hold with both teams in the bottom-third of the Western Conference standings.

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More AP sports: https://apnews.com/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

5 things to know today – that aren’t about the virus

By The Associated Press

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. MLK’S TRAFFIC STOP A CATALYST FOR CHANGE Martin Luther King Jr. was pulled over, with a white woman in the car, issued a citation and illegally sentenced to a chain gang. Georgia’s segregationist politicians sought to silence King before he could mobilize great masses of people. But, it backfired.

2. EX-GREEN BERET CLAIMS HE LED FOILED VENEZUELA RAID Jordan Goudreau’s comments capped a bizarre day that started with reports of a predawn amphibious raid near the South American country’s heavily guarded capital aimed at overthrowing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

3. JOE BIDEN WINS KANSAS DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY The former vice president had been expected to prevail in Saturday’s vote, conducted exclusively by mail, and capture a majority of the state’s delegates to the Democrats’ national nominating commission.

4. TOP 2 GEORGIA DEMOCRATS DEBATE VIRTUALLY Ex-Columbus mayor Teresa Tomlinson and ex-congressional candidate Jon Ossoff are vying to take on Republican Sen. David Perdue in November.

5. LAPD OFFICER CHARGED IN SHOOTING A Los Angeles Police Department officer was arrested early Sunday on suspicion of shooting and wounding a fellow officer while they were off-duty at a Southern California recreation area.

Pate addresses voter fraud concerns

By now you should have received a card from the Iowa Secretary of State’s Office asking you to get a mail-in ballot for the June 2 primary election.  You may have read articles that say voting by mail is a leading cause of election fraud.  Secretary of State Paul Pate says that isn’t possible with Iowa’s system.

“Those are states that actually mail you a ballot.  Whether you ask for it or not.  There’s where fraud can happen.  In Iowa, we’re voting absentee so you have to send in your request for that ballot.”

Pate says you still can vote in person on June 2 if you wish.  But he is asking Iowans to vote through absentee ballots to ease social distancing.

Weekend coronavirus update

Two people from Poweshiek County have died from coronavirus.  The two deaths reported Sunday (5/3) were both adults aged 81 or over.  This makes four deaths from COVID-19 in Poweshiek County.  14 more deaths from coronavirus were reported in Iowa over the weekend for a total of 184.

Almost 1300 new cases of coronavirus were reported in Iowa over the weekend, making it 9169 cases for the pandemic.  44 new cases were reported in Wapello County over the weekend for a county-wide total of 61.  38 new cases were reported in Jasper County, 2 in Mahaska County, 11 in Poweshiek County, two in Marion County and Monroe County reported its first coronavirus case Sunday.  Monroe County had been one of the few Iowa counties that had zero reported cases of the virus.

Remember, you can hear Governor Reynolds’ daily news conference every weekday morning at 11 on the No Coast Network.

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