How fickle is the God of Sports? You only need to have witnessed the recent incredible rise and fall of the New York Mets’ Daniel Murphy to figure that one out. Murphy hit seven home runs this postseason, six of them in consecutive games.
Yet dollars to doughnuts the historical record will gravitate toward this:
Which brings us to Colin Kaepernick.
Multiple news sources
Not to mention Twitter, which is doing what it does best: rubbing it in:
Just remembered Colin Kaepernick got 100 mill, that's awkward
— Ian Stirling (@BiGiaN12) November 3, 2015
Plus today is Kaepernick’s birthday! :<
And that’s why we thought it would be a nice gesture to repost Alice Daniel’s Feb. 1, 2013, story for The California Report, headlined “Turlock Goes Nuts Over Hometown Hero Colin Kaepernick.” (Listen to the audio here.) The report ran a couple of days before the Super Bowl, when the QB was dazzling football fans and opponents alike with his uncanny running ability and rifle arm.
Daniel reported that “Kaepernick’s meteoric NFL rise has put Turlock, a Central Valley agricultural town of about 69,000, on the map. And no one is prouder than the folks who live here.” She talked to the editor of the Turlock Journal, who dutifully said the Turlock Tornado was a good guy. The Journal had run a 2010 article about Kaepernick’s boyhood and family, reprinting a letter he’d written to his 18-year-old self for a class project when he was 11.
Today Kaepernick is 28.
Happy birthday, Kap.
Turlock Goes Nuts Over Hometown Hero Kaepernick
He’s been called the Turlock Tornado, but most folks watching the Super Bowl probably hadn’t heard of 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s hometown until this year. Kaepernick’s meteoric NFL rise has put Turlock, a Central Valley agricultural town of about 69,000, on the map. And no one is prouder than the folks who live here.
During a recent visit by a reporter, Ruben Hernandez slowly turned his red vinyl barber’s chair as he dried a client’s hair in his shop downtown. Coca Cola signs and autographed celebrity photos line the walls here, and there’s also an antique cash register and a barber pole.
“It’s got the atmosphere of the barber shop in ‘Andy of Mayberry,’” Hernandez said. “I tell everybody we try to solve the world’s problems here.”
But this week, any problems the world may have are being trumped in Turlock by excitement over hometown hero Kaepernick’s appearance in the Super Bowl, which is a frequent topic. “We were just talking about him,” Hernandez, in fact, said.
Hernandez said anything with Kaepernick’s name on it is flying off the town’s shelves. He pointed proudly to a Number 7 jersey hanging on the wall, which he found at a local flea market.
“We’ve seen some of these out at the mall in Modesto going for about $260, and we were able to get this one for about $60.”
Hernandez said he’s met just one person who isn’t keyed up about the Turlock Tornado: his current customer, James White, who looks like he’s under interrogation while talking about his Kaepernick ignorance.
“Actually I did not,” he said, when asked if he knew before all the hoopla who Kaepernick was.
“Isn’t that sad?” said Hernandez. “I mean Kaepernick is here from Turlock. Everybody’s trying to Kap in on the Kaepernick phenomenon, you know.”
Kristina Hacker, the Turlock Journal’s lone editor, couldn’t agree more. She reels off a list of items. “The Kaepernick cakes, the Kaepernick hotdogs, the Kaepernick hamburger.”
Hacker said she gets calls every day at her Main Street office about new Super Bowl promotions from local businesses. She said the excitement is at a fever pitch. “The last time we had this much attention in Turlock was when Sarah Palin came to talk at the university.”
Hacker covered Kaepernick as a sports reporter and says he’s a nice, down-to-earth guy. He excelled in football, baseball and basketball at Turlock’s Pitman High. Before that, he played youth football as a 9-year-old quarterback. In fourth grade, he wrote a now- famous letter for a time capsule project:
I’m 5 ft 2 inches 91 pounds. Good athelet. I think in 7 years I will be between 6 ft — to 6 ft 4 inches 140 pounds. I hope I go to a good college in football Then go to the pros and play on the niners or the packers even if they aren’t good in seven years. My friend are Jason, Kyler, Leo, Spencer, Mark and Jacob
–Colin
Over at Lisa’s Cookie Jar, owner Lisa Fernandez said she can’t make enough of her Kaepernick cookies. “It’s a traditional shortbread covered in fondant with a royal icing,” she explained. She couldn’t find a jersey-shaped cookie cutter, so she uses one in the shape of a baby’s onesy. “We’re cutting out the onesy and cutting off the bottom of it to look like a jersey.”
There’s also a Kaepernick special at Main Street Footers, where twenty-year-old employee Molly Amant said their foot-long hot dog comes with chili, coleslaw, jalapenos and special sauce. “Unique, spicy and hot,” she said, comparing them to Kaepernick. Amant has worked here four years and said sales have doubled in the last week. “It’s been crazy busy, like insanely busy,” she said.
Others said some are even driving from places like Reno, where Kaepernick played college football, so they can watch the big game in his hometown.
Back at the barbershop, customer James White was getting ready to leave. Barber Ruben Hernandez asked him one more time if he’ll watch the Super Bowl.
“I probably will have to now,” said White, laughing.
“He has a change of plans,” said Hernandez. “Earlier he said ‘probably not.’ I thought ‘oh my gosh.’”
There’s a tailgate party in town this weekend — and the mayor has proclaimed Saturday and Sunday “Go Colin Kaepernick and the San Francisco 49ers Weekend.”