Crossing The 101

This is the remarkable story of Rob Holder, who through rugby, his own personal setbacks, his family and his faith provides inspiring lessons of how we should value humility above ambition, honesty above stature, altruism above entitlement. Most of all, Rob’s story teaches us that people should not be judged by color, class status _ or even their rap sheets. It is also an inspiring story of the Polynesian community in East Palo Alto. Across the dividing Highway 101 from the upper-class, even opulent city of Palo Alto. East Palo Alto was recognized in 1992 as the murder capital of the United States. It was none other than the Federal Bureau of Investigation that came up with the statistics, on a per capita basis, that cemented East Palo Alto with this dubious distinction.
With firm direction from coach Holder, these Polynesian young men from these poverty-stricken, drug-infested, gang-riddled East Palo Alto neighborhoods would soon become a remarkably disciplined unit that would win the USA Men’s Rugby Division II National Championship _ and bring honor and pride to East Palo Alto.
Perhaps, no player embodied how Rob and rugby changed so many lives of these troubled East Palo Alto players than Folau Niua. A high school dropout who had come to understand jail time during his youth, Niua showed up by chance at Rob’s first-ever rugby practice in East Palo Alto. Although Niua had limited competitive rugby experience, he was a natural athlete and Rob envisioned him as his fly half – a position Niua had never previously played. But on the eve of his first season opening game, Rob read in the paper that Niua had been arrested after he was involved in a fight at a party. Although a relatively minor offense, Niua’s criminal record and lack of legal or financial support meant missing Rob’s first season before it started. Niua eventually got it together, though, and with Rob working out satisfactory arrangements with Niua’s parole officer so his fly half could travel out of state, he eventually became the star of the national champion Razorbacks.
Today Niua, 31, is the starting fly half for the USA Rugby National Sevens Team, nicknamed the Eagles, who will play in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio De Janeiro.
A teammate of Niua's on the USA Rugby National Seven's Team, Rob's son Will Holder is another notable character in the story. Affectionately known as "Palagi," Will played for the high school Razorbacks, many of whom he met in Dad's Stanford Rugby Camps, because, in his words, "I'd rather not play against them." Will crossed the 101 and the experience had a major impact on his life.
Klis has worked as a Denver Broncos sports reporter for 9News KUSA-TV – Denver’s No. 1-watched television station – since April, 2015. He previously worked 17-plus years with the Denver Post. Among his awards, he was named Colorado Sportswriter of the Year in 2012 and 2013; he was the winner of the Associated Press Sports Editors “breaking news” category in 2013 for his coverage on Elvis Dumervil’s “fax fiasco” departure from the Broncos; and earned a top 10 APSE award for his coverage of the drive-by murder of popular Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams on Jan. 1, 2007.
Klis and Holder became friends during a period when they lived in the same subdivision, on the same street, in Golden, CO. At the time, Holder was making a 75-minute, one-way commute to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs where he coached the Zoomies’ rugby program. This is Klis’ sixth book.
Rob Holder has been married to the former Ann Wanner since 1989. They have four children – Will, Katie, Emma, Lizzie – and live in Stillwater, Minnesota.
Rob and his wife both attended the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., where they both graduated in 1989. It was while Rob and Ann were stationed in Germany during the end of the Cold War that Rob decided to join the Frankfurt American Rugby Club. The rest, as they say, is in the book.

1123587377
Crossing The 101

This is the remarkable story of Rob Holder, who through rugby, his own personal setbacks, his family and his faith provides inspiring lessons of how we should value humility above ambition, honesty above stature, altruism above entitlement. Most of all, Rob’s story teaches us that people should not be judged by color, class status _ or even their rap sheets. It is also an inspiring story of the Polynesian community in East Palo Alto. Across the dividing Highway 101 from the upper-class, even opulent city of Palo Alto. East Palo Alto was recognized in 1992 as the murder capital of the United States. It was none other than the Federal Bureau of Investigation that came up with the statistics, on a per capita basis, that cemented East Palo Alto with this dubious distinction.
With firm direction from coach Holder, these Polynesian young men from these poverty-stricken, drug-infested, gang-riddled East Palo Alto neighborhoods would soon become a remarkably disciplined unit that would win the USA Men’s Rugby Division II National Championship _ and bring honor and pride to East Palo Alto.
Perhaps, no player embodied how Rob and rugby changed so many lives of these troubled East Palo Alto players than Folau Niua. A high school dropout who had come to understand jail time during his youth, Niua showed up by chance at Rob’s first-ever rugby practice in East Palo Alto. Although Niua had limited competitive rugby experience, he was a natural athlete and Rob envisioned him as his fly half – a position Niua had never previously played. But on the eve of his first season opening game, Rob read in the paper that Niua had been arrested after he was involved in a fight at a party. Although a relatively minor offense, Niua’s criminal record and lack of legal or financial support meant missing Rob’s first season before it started. Niua eventually got it together, though, and with Rob working out satisfactory arrangements with Niua’s parole officer so his fly half could travel out of state, he eventually became the star of the national champion Razorbacks.
Today Niua, 31, is the starting fly half for the USA Rugby National Sevens Team, nicknamed the Eagles, who will play in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio De Janeiro.
A teammate of Niua's on the USA Rugby National Seven's Team, Rob's son Will Holder is another notable character in the story. Affectionately known as "Palagi," Will played for the high school Razorbacks, many of whom he met in Dad's Stanford Rugby Camps, because, in his words, "I'd rather not play against them." Will crossed the 101 and the experience had a major impact on his life.
Klis has worked as a Denver Broncos sports reporter for 9News KUSA-TV – Denver’s No. 1-watched television station – since April, 2015. He previously worked 17-plus years with the Denver Post. Among his awards, he was named Colorado Sportswriter of the Year in 2012 and 2013; he was the winner of the Associated Press Sports Editors “breaking news” category in 2013 for his coverage on Elvis Dumervil’s “fax fiasco” departure from the Broncos; and earned a top 10 APSE award for his coverage of the drive-by murder of popular Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams on Jan. 1, 2007.
Klis and Holder became friends during a period when they lived in the same subdivision, on the same street, in Golden, CO. At the time, Holder was making a 75-minute, one-way commute to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs where he coached the Zoomies’ rugby program. This is Klis’ sixth book.
Rob Holder has been married to the former Ann Wanner since 1989. They have four children – Will, Katie, Emma, Lizzie – and live in Stillwater, Minnesota.
Rob and his wife both attended the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., where they both graduated in 1989. It was while Rob and Ann were stationed in Germany during the end of the Cold War that Rob decided to join the Frankfurt American Rugby Club. The rest, as they say, is in the book.

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Crossing The 101

Crossing The 101

by Mike Klis
Crossing The 101

Crossing The 101

by Mike Klis

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Overview

This is the remarkable story of Rob Holder, who through rugby, his own personal setbacks, his family and his faith provides inspiring lessons of how we should value humility above ambition, honesty above stature, altruism above entitlement. Most of all, Rob’s story teaches us that people should not be judged by color, class status _ or even their rap sheets. It is also an inspiring story of the Polynesian community in East Palo Alto. Across the dividing Highway 101 from the upper-class, even opulent city of Palo Alto. East Palo Alto was recognized in 1992 as the murder capital of the United States. It was none other than the Federal Bureau of Investigation that came up with the statistics, on a per capita basis, that cemented East Palo Alto with this dubious distinction.
With firm direction from coach Holder, these Polynesian young men from these poverty-stricken, drug-infested, gang-riddled East Palo Alto neighborhoods would soon become a remarkably disciplined unit that would win the USA Men’s Rugby Division II National Championship _ and bring honor and pride to East Palo Alto.
Perhaps, no player embodied how Rob and rugby changed so many lives of these troubled East Palo Alto players than Folau Niua. A high school dropout who had come to understand jail time during his youth, Niua showed up by chance at Rob’s first-ever rugby practice in East Palo Alto. Although Niua had limited competitive rugby experience, he was a natural athlete and Rob envisioned him as his fly half – a position Niua had never previously played. But on the eve of his first season opening game, Rob read in the paper that Niua had been arrested after he was involved in a fight at a party. Although a relatively minor offense, Niua’s criminal record and lack of legal or financial support meant missing Rob’s first season before it started. Niua eventually got it together, though, and with Rob working out satisfactory arrangements with Niua’s parole officer so his fly half could travel out of state, he eventually became the star of the national champion Razorbacks.
Today Niua, 31, is the starting fly half for the USA Rugby National Sevens Team, nicknamed the Eagles, who will play in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio De Janeiro.
A teammate of Niua's on the USA Rugby National Seven's Team, Rob's son Will Holder is another notable character in the story. Affectionately known as "Palagi," Will played for the high school Razorbacks, many of whom he met in Dad's Stanford Rugby Camps, because, in his words, "I'd rather not play against them." Will crossed the 101 and the experience had a major impact on his life.
Klis has worked as a Denver Broncos sports reporter for 9News KUSA-TV – Denver’s No. 1-watched television station – since April, 2015. He previously worked 17-plus years with the Denver Post. Among his awards, he was named Colorado Sportswriter of the Year in 2012 and 2013; he was the winner of the Associated Press Sports Editors “breaking news” category in 2013 for his coverage on Elvis Dumervil’s “fax fiasco” departure from the Broncos; and earned a top 10 APSE award for his coverage of the drive-by murder of popular Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams on Jan. 1, 2007.
Klis and Holder became friends during a period when they lived in the same subdivision, on the same street, in Golden, CO. At the time, Holder was making a 75-minute, one-way commute to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs where he coached the Zoomies’ rugby program. This is Klis’ sixth book.
Rob Holder has been married to the former Ann Wanner since 1989. They have four children – Will, Katie, Emma, Lizzie – and live in Stillwater, Minnesota.
Rob and his wife both attended the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., where they both graduated in 1989. It was while Rob and Ann were stationed in Germany during the end of the Cold War that Rob decided to join the Frankfurt American Rugby Club. The rest, as they say, is in the book.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940152938234
Publisher: Mike Klis
Publication date: 03/23/2016
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 207 KB

About the Author

A quick study, I’m not.
I went to college to be a sports broadcaster. I was so good at it I became a sports writer.
On April 27, 2015, a mere 34 years after I received my degree in Radio/TV broadcasting from Murray State, I joined 9News to become their Broncos Insider.
I still write. My stories about the Denver Broncos can be read on 9News.com. It’s just now I occasionally show up on TV. Perhaps, I’m an inspiration to all college graduates who can’t find a job in their field.
The beginning of my story may sound familiar: I was the first born son of Joseph and Mary.
OK, so mom’s name is MaryAnn. And I wasn’t born in a manger in Bethlehem but a hospital in Aurora, Ill.
Still, I’ve felt pressure since the crib. I’m the oldest of six kids. We moved six miles down the road to Oswego, Ill., when I was 8.
I was a real good farmland/schoolyard/sandlot athlete in Oswego. I was a pretty good practice player in high school. I wasn’t very good when we put on game uniforms. To this day, the gag is my least favorite story angle.
After college, I worked as a gas station/convenient store clerk, a weed eater/snowshoveler, a part-time sports announcer for a now defunct Aurora radio station, a part-time sports writer for the Oswego Ledger-Sentinel, an umpire, basketball referee and player-coach of the Shuler’s Drugstore slo-pitch softball team.
In October, 1984, I threw it all away and moved to Colorado Springs, where one of my first jobs was scrubbing pots and pans at the Air Force Academy’s freshman cafeteria.
For extra money, I called radio play-by-play for Colorado Springs Christian High School basketball and then wrote about the game afterwards for the Gazette Telegraph. Double-dip, $25 times two. Except the radio station rarely paid me.
When the Gazette offered me a full-time job in 1987 at about the same time the sports radio station changed to a Spanish format, I became a sports writer.
I covered preps. One of my first leads, from a high school basketball game, was: “The Thrilla in Manila was nothing compared to the Thrilla in Sierra.” I was not fired but I believe my next assignment was a wrestling match.
I covered the Colorado College Tigers (4-33-1 in my first hockey season) and Triple-A Colorado Springs Sky Sox. I covered the Colorado Buffaloes and -- starting Aug. 17, 1990 when Gov. Roy Romer called a meeting at the downtown Denver Westin Hotel for prospective owners – the Colorado Rockies.
The Denver Post hired me in January, 1998 to cover the Rockies. I met my wife, Becky, at Coors Field, where she still works as a suite attendant. In July, 2005, I was switched to the Broncos’ beat.
While writing and reporting, I gained so much knowledge about the Broncos, I got a job at a TV station. Becky and I are still married. We have four kids – Brittany, Kaitlyn, Blake and Johnny. They make me go upstairs if I want to watch sports on TV.

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