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Dickeven allowed group-singing of Eddie Arnold s great yodeling ballad,  The Lonesome Cattle Call, which, Dan says,  would attract cats from all over Pacifica. <br>When he lived in the Bay Area, Dan was fortunate to be around many of the best throwers in the world. What did Dan take from associating, and sometimes training, with these athletes?  In the late 70s it became very obvious that to be competitive in throwing you needed to be accomplished in the Olympic lifts and the power lifts. Everybody, I mean everybody, was snatching, cleaning and jerking, and doing the three power lifts. John Powell was a world-record holder in the discus at that time, but he also competed in Olympic lifting and powerlifting. Al Feuerbach, who was a world-record holder in the shot put back then, won the national championships in Olympic lifting and the shot put during the same year. You need to be explosive and strong to throw far, and these lifts were the way to get explosive and strong. <brWhile at Skyline Dan earned a scholarship to Utah State, where he majored in history.  It was a tough decision to go to Utah State because I would be leaving such a great environment for lifting and throwing, but I knew I needed to grow and to extend my vision of the world. After graduating Dan worked briefly in a cheese factory cleaning up, and it was at this point in his life that he made a criticl discovery:  I don t like cleaning up burnt cheese. Thus enlightened, Dan returned to school to get a master s degree in history and religious education.<br>At his athletic best, Dan was a competitor in what many regard as the  Golden Age of Throwing.  When I was a senior I threw 190, which was just a remarkable throw  until you compared it to national records, says Dan.  It s funny, because I was up at a track meet in Las Vegas this fall and I met a college coach from Delaware. When we got to talking about the numbers that I threw on Sunday, he said I would have dominated his conferenϽ ? ought,  A 46-year-old man would have won his conference  that s amazing.  <br>Dan s athletic accomplishments and practical coaching wisdom eventually caught the attention of BFS President Dr. Greg orx H 's about as good as it gets for a teenager.<br> Leigh Anne has always been a step ahead of everybody else, says Ryan Carter, AJGA tournament director,  Now, she's a step above. <br>Her victory aired on ESPN2 and she continues to receive incredible coverage in all the national golf journals. Her win also opened the door for LPGA events and what appears to be a lucrative and long-lasting career in the sport. All this, while maintaining a 4.43 GPA at Martinsville!<br>Leigh Anne's success is due to her dedication, regimented training program and innate athletic skills. She has been following the Bigger Faster Stronger program under coach Marc Anderson's direction. She's performed a 240-pound squat and 135-pound bench. She doesn't perform the clean. She also has a 24-inch vertical jump.<br>Preparing for the Junior Nationals, Leigh Anne spent countless hours practicing at the driving range at nearby Foxcliff Country Club in Martinsville. There she worked under the watchful eye of her father, Steve Hardin. Steve played basketball at Butler University for legend Tony Hinkle. No one prepared a team more thoroughly than Hinkle, and Steve had learned to pay close attention.<br>As Leigh Anne meticulously hit 100 chip shots then began lofting 100 half-wedge pitches, her dad scurried from place to place with quick, short strides, studying his daughter's stroke from a--Yo!N%ars. Since the new staff has been there an = `:EFFXw3!!:/@ݼzV9C 7>@REVrtic3f ,