Twitterview with World Series Champ Chase Utley
Sunday, May 31st, 2009I am extremely excited to announce that I will be conducting a live “twitterview” with Philadelphia Phillies‘ star 2nd baseman and 2008 World Series Champion, Chase Utley at 3:00pm EST on Monday June 1, 2009. We will be discussing how and why athletes are utilizing social media outlets like Twitter and Facebook. You can follow Chase on Twitter @chase_utley.
Topics will include marketing, branding, the power of social media and obviously some baseball talk. I will be picking Chase’s brain about the how athletes benefit from embracing their fans and the world through social media. Chase is a complete rockstar in Major League Baseball and carries himself with a style and flair that I appreciate and admire. He understands image and branding unlike many professional athletes. This should be an awesome twitterview!
Get involved! Chime in!
Feel free to direct any pertinent questions you’d like me to ask Chase to @johnraser (both @replies and DM’s are fine) or simply comment below. You can also chime in live through tweetchat.com. Room: #utleychat
Related post: “The Dangers of Social Media: Posers, Pranksters, and PR Problems”
Related Category: Baseball, branding, marketing, social media, twitterview

















And then the heavens opened up. We got rained on for most of the back nine and I managed to still keep my compossure and press on. I knew I was in contention for one of the 5 spots up for grabs, I just needed to string a few solid holes together coming in. I stuck a 3-iron to 12 feet on the 230 yard par 3, 7th and had a great look at birdie that just skirted the edge of the hole. I roped a Drive on the 8th hole that left me w a 125 yard pitching wedge, uphill to a sucker-pin tucked back right. The tounament director rode out to join the circus that was forming around our group on #8, as my finish determined not only my fate, but the fate of several others. He informed me that I needed to make a birdie coming in to qualify. At this point I experienced a complete mixture of emotions. My head was spinning. On one hand, I was still in contention and could control my own destiny. But the other half of my brain was making me nautious thinking back to that 12 inch tap in that would have all but secured getting through and qualifying. I had to take it straight at the pin and try to stick one, and I nearly did. I flushed a wedge and was posing on it thinking I stiffed it. It flew straight over the pin took one hop from 3 feet behind the hole and took a huge hop over the green. Now, I faced a mega-flop shot to a green elevated at least 8 feet above me with no green to work with. I could only see the top of the pin and pulled off a miraculous shot that lipped out to 5 inches. I almost stole the birdie I needed to get in. 



