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Hire Me! Hire me for your writing assignment or event. I'm reasonable and reliable. Also looking for additional writing gigs. Email me at rclimpert003@yahoo.com

Based in Atlanta, GA - Rick Limpert is an award-winning writer, a best-selling author, and a featured sports travel writer.

Named the No. 1 Sports Technology writer in the U.S. on Oct 1, 2014.

Entries in stats (6)

Thursday
Sep242020

A Quieter Halloween

When it comes to one of the most iconic Halloween traditions, trick-or-treating, data suggests that neighborhoods across the country will be eerily quiet.


42 percent of Adults said they’ll observe Halloween in 2020, a double-digit drop from the share who said they celebrated last year (57 percent).

Only 7 percent of adults said that they or their children plan to trick-or-treat the same way they usually do.

About a quarter (26 percent) of adults said they plan to purchase candy for trick-or-treaters this year, down from about half (51 percent) who indicated they did so last year.

As Halloween approaches and spending for the holiday is predicted to drop from $8.8 billion in 2019 to $8 billion this year, Morning Consult will continue to deliver our state of the 2020 holiday shopper series in order to provide you with important insights into how major shopping events are likely to change and the way consumers plan to celebrate, travel, spend and shop this holiday season.

Tuesday
Oct102017

Halloween Industry Booming

Americans are looking forward to splurging on their favorite candy and costumes this Halloween season. According to the National Retail Federation’s annual survey conducted by Prosper Insights & Analytics, total spending for Halloween is expected to reach $8.4 billion, an all-time high in the survey’s 11-year history.

U.S. consumers are expected to spend an average of $82.93, up from last year’s $74.34, with more than 171 million Americans planning to partake in Halloween festivities this year.

Saturday
Nov302013

Infographic On Smartphones and How Global They Are


Global Smartphone Sales

 

This Infographic is produced by Coupon Audit (provides Express coupons) and RickLimpert

Should you wish to have a copy of this infographic, here is the code:

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Sunday
Apr212013

Greater Gwinnett Championship - By the Numbers

Play wraps up on Sunday at the first Greater Gwinnett Championship, a brand new event for 2013 on the PGA Tour Champion's Tour.

Let's go inside the numbers a little for the final round.

Greater Gwinnett Championship

Total purse - $1,800,000

Winner's share - $270,000

TPC Sugarloaf playing to 7,259 yards

Golfers teeing it up on Sunday - 78

Leader going into final round - Esteban Toledo at 138 (-6)

Number of birdies in Saturday's second round - 239

Bernhard Langer hit 86.1% of his greens in regulation for the second round

Tom Pernice Jr. only needed 25 putts for his second round

Players within 4 shots of the lead entering Sunday's final round - 15

 

PGA Tour Champion's Tour

Events on tour for 2013 - 26

34th anniversary of the Champion's Tour

Number of major championships each year on Champion's Tour - 5

Age of "rookies" on Champion's Tour - 50


Charles Schwab Cup

Payouts awarded to top-five finishers in Charles Schwab Cup for 2013 - $2,100,000

Years of Charles Schwab Cup - 13

Players that have won the Charles Schwab Cup more than once - 5 (Hale Irvin, Tom Watson, Jay Haas, Loren Roberts, Tom Lehman)

Friday
Dec032010

Ron Santo Dead at 70: Can We Now Put Him in the Hall of Fame

Legendary Chicago Cubs player and broadcaster Ron Santo died Thursday night in Arizona. He was 70.

Friends of Santo's family said the North Side icon lapsed into a coma on Wednesday before dying Thursday. Santo died of complications from bladder cancer, WGN-AM 720 reported.

Cubs Chairman Tom Ricketts released a statement: "My siblings and I first knew Ron Santo as fans, listening to him in the broadcast booth. We knew him for his passion, his loyalty, his great personal courage and his tremendous sense of humor. It was our great honor to get to know him personally in our first year as owners.

"Ronnie will forever be the heart and soul of Cubs fans."

The former Cubs third baseman had continued to work as a Cubs analyst on WGN, the team's flagship radio broadcast, despite his health issues. He was expected to return for the 2011 season. He missed several road trips in 2010 but insisted he would return.

Former Cubs President John McDonough compared Santo to Harry Caray, another baseball broadcasting legend, noting neither had a filter, broadcast with unvarnished emotion and were enormously entertaining.

Santo mangled names, sometimes lost track of what was going on in a game and occasionally didn't realize some player had been on the roster for months, but none of that mattered because people loved it, McDonough said. "We almost thought he was doing it on purpose," he said. "It added so much entertainment value."

You had to like Santo because he was a Cubs fan and made no apologies for his on-air cheerleading or his utter frustration over a Cub's misplay.

Santo never witnessed his longtime goal of election to the Baseball Hall of Fame despite career numbers that mark him as one of baseball's all-time great third basemen. He finished with a .277 average over 15 major league seasons, with 342 home runs and 1,331 runs batted in.

Though Santo came close to Cooperstown enshrinement in the last decade in voting by the Veterans Committee, he always fell short. In 2007, Santo received 39 of the 48 votes necessary to reach the 75 percent threshold of the living 64 Hall of Famers to cast a ballot. His 61 percent lead all candidates and no one was elected to the Hall.

It was the fourth straight time the Veterans Committee had failed to elect a member, leaving Santo frustrated.

Santo was up for the Hall of Fame on 19 occasions, and first appeared on the Veterans Committee ballot in 2003. He got his hopes up on every occasion.

"Everybody felt this was my year," he said after the last vote in December 2008. "I felt it. I thought it was gonna happen, and when it didn't. ... What really upset me was nobody got in.

Santo began his major league career with the Cubs in 1960, and spent one season with the White Sox in 1974. He earned National League Gold Glove awards five straight seasons from 1964 to 1968 and was a nine-time NL All-Star. He was one of the leaders of the 1969 team that blew the division lead to the New York Mets, a season indelibly etched in Cubs' history.

Though Santo never made the Hall of Fame, his number was retired by the Cubs. He said that was equivalent to being inducted in Cooperstown. Being a Cub, and playing at Wrigley Field, meant the world to Santo.

In recent years, Santos had a couple wild mishaps while announcing, his toupee caught fire in the Shea Stadium press box in New York on Opening Day 2003 after he got too close to an overhead space heater. And last spring in Mesa, Ariz., Santo lost his front tooth while biting into a piece of pizza.  He gave his body and soul to the Cubs while playing and while broadcasting.

Here are Santos' lifetime stats.  You tell me if he is Hall worthy.  The 343 home runs are like hitting almost 500 today, the hits and RBIs are huge, and his contribution to baseball speaks volumes.

             
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