Friday, November 18, 2016

Q&A: Monica Puig On Olympic Gold And Giving Back to Puerto Rico

After winning Puerto Rico’s first ever Olympic gold medal, Monica Puig was welcomed by a crowd of 500,000 in the capital San Juan.
Now, she is giving something back.
Monica Puig reacts after beating world No. 1 Angelique Kerber in the gold medal match at the Rio Olympics in August.  (Photo: LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images)
Puig, who was born in Puerto Rico but moved to Florida when she was a baby, will be playing five-time major winner Maria Sharapova in an exhibition event in the capital San Juan on December 15.
Puig’s triumph handed fellow Puerto Ricans a rare reason to celebrate as the US territory struggles with a crippling debt crisis and stagnant economy that has seen many leave the Caribbean island.
Below is an email exchange between FORBES and Puig as she traveled to Doha, Qatar to be crowned Best Female Athlete of the Rio Games by the Association of National Olympic Committees earlier this week.
FORBES: As the tennis season has now come to an end, how do you look back on your Olympic medal?
MONICA PUIG: I have to say that each time I think about it, or I am reminded about winning the Olympic Gold medal, I still get goosebumps and sometimes even have to pinch myself to realize this really happened.
Danielle Rossingh
Q&A: Monica Puig On Olympic Gold And Giving Back to Puerto Rico

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Puerto Rico’s First Olympic Gold Medalist Scores Huge Honor

Tennis player Monica Puig made history when she won Puerto Rico’s first Olympic gold medal ever at this summer’s Rio Games.
And on Tuesday, Puig added to her victory when she won the award for Best Female Athlete at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) Awards held in Doha, Qatar. The ceremony honored the best sporting achievement’s at this summer’s Olympic Games.
The 23-year-old Boricua tweeted out a photo to celebrate: 
At the 2016 Rio Olympics, Puig, who was ranked 34 the in the world, beat out second seed Kerber for the gold medal.
I think I united a nation,” Puig said in an emotional interview following the match. “And I just love where I come from.”
We’re pretty sure the love is mutual.



Carolina Moreno

Tennis star Monica Puig clearly left her mark on the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Puerto Rico’s First Olympic Gold Medalist Scores Huge Honor

Thursday, November 03, 2016

Why Puerto Ricans in Florida Could Decide the Election

Tousands of Puerto Ricans who fled the economic crisis on their island and flocked to Florida in search of jobs could tilt the state to Hillary Clinton and effectively block Donald Trump’s path to the presidency.

Susan MacManus, a distinguished professor of political science at the University of South Florida and an expert on the state’s politics, said in an email yesterday: “The influx might help Hillary win the state because Democratic registration groups like Mi Familia Vota have aggressively worked to get the new arrivals to register as Democrats.”
Trump has a 1-point lead in Florida today in a four-way race, according to the Real Clear Politics average, but that is a margin-of-error edge in a state that he must win if he has any path to victory. If Clinton can block Trump in Florida, he will – barring some act of the gods -- be finished.
The Washington Post today posits four ways Trump could win. In each scenario, he must take Florida.
As part of an online fund-raising message yesterday, Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s spokesperson and campaign manager, released a map showing Florida too close to call. But she said if Trump won there and in Iowa, Ohio, Maine, Nevada and North Carolina, he would have 266 Electoral College votes and would need a win in only one of battleground states of Colorado, New Hampshire or Pennsylvania to get over the 270-vote top. That’s true. But if he lost Florida, he would need to be victorious in all three of those states to claim the presidency.
One major Clinton backer who recognizes the critical role Puerto Ricans in Florida may play is billionaire investor George Soros. According to Univision, he has bankrolled a PAC, United for Progress, that was set up just last month to mobilize Puerto Rican voters in Florida. Marco Vilar, a veteran of Hispanic voter registration organizations, including Mi Familia Vota, is running the effort. Attempts to contact Vilar were unsuccessful.
The number of Puerto Ricans living in Florida has increased 110 percent since 2000, according to a 2015 Pew Center for Research report, with a big spike in the past few years. There are now more than 1 million Puerto Ricans living in Florida, Pew says, and they are poised to pass Cuban-Americans as the largest Hispanic group in the state.
There is some disagreement about the percentage identified as Hispanic out of Florida’s almost 12.7 million voters. Most reports say 15 percent, but Mi Familia Vota, which has received money from Soros’ Open Society Foundations in the past, says there are 2,557,000 Latino voters in the state, or about 24 percent.
Most of the new Puerto Rican arrivals in Florida have registered as Democrats, Univision says, and overall, more new voters have registered as Dems than Republicans in the two most recent months recorded, according data on Florida’s Division of Elections website. In September, 41,873 new voters registered as Republicans, while 67,546 registered as Democrats.
Of course, those new voters aren’t all Latino, and there is no guarantee they will show up at polling places on Nov. 8.
MacManus says that among the newly arrived Puerto Ricans “there is an impetus to register as Democrats, but the reason they are more likely to vote for Hillary is less party than an anti-Trump sentiment traceable to his negative comments about immigrants.”
At a street festival in Orlando on Oct. 25, Republican Senator Marco Rubio, who has distanced himself from Trump but not disavowed him, was booed off the stage by a largely Puerto Rican crowd. 
And Latino Decisions, a polling firm employed by the Clinton campaign, found some 70 percent of Puerto Ricans in Florida supporting Hillary, with an even larger percentage among those born on the island, according to Bloomberg Politics. As American citizens, the new arrivals are immediately eligible to vote. But will they?
Puerto Rico, Bloomberg pointed out, has one of the world’s highest voter-turnout rates.
By 



Why Puerto Ricans in Florida Could Decide the Election

Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Georgia women’s tennis has successful trip to Puerto Rico

The Georgia women’s tennis team began its two-week road trip this weekend traveling to Palmas Del Mar, Puerto Rico.

The weekend featured a strong showing from doubles teams, winning five out of six matches and earning 10 singles victories.

Head coach Jeff Wallace has noted the importance of experimenting with doubles pairings and put that experiment on display this weekend, as a variety of players were tested, including Caroline Brinson, Mariana Gould, Laura Patterson and Kennedy Shaffer.

“Our doubles have been great this weekend,” associate head coach Drake Bernstein said.

Georgia’s duo of Brinson and Patterson was able to sweep Virginia’s No. 38-ranked Rosie Johnson and Meghan Kelley, 6-1.

Eleni Christofi, continuing on her hot start to the fall, was paired with Shaffer and the two defeated Cassie Mercer and Chloe Gullickson, also of Virginia, 6-4.

Gould and Marta Gonzalez finished up the doubles matchups for Georgia with a win over Camille Favero and Hunter Bleser, 7-5.

Singles matches for the Bulldogs started off slow, as they earned just five victories in 14 matches through Saturday.

Sunday proved to be different for Georgia, as the team earned five singles match victories highlighted by strong performances from both Shaffer and Brinson.

"We had a much better day today," Bernstein said. "The girls found their competitive gear and looked tough from start to finish. As a group it may have been our best day mentally this whole fall. As coaches, we are proud of the girls for bouncing back to play well after some difficult matches and hot conditions."

Brinson, the No. 21-ranked senior, was matched with Borislava Bothuarova of Old Dominion, defeating her in a match tiebreaker 6-0, 4-6, 10-5. While Shaffer, ranked No. 14, defeated Holly Hutchinson 6-3, 6-2.

Gould, Patterson and Gonzalez wrapped up the weekend for Georgia with wins, with Gould defeating Nataliya Vlasova of Old Dominion 6-2, 6-1, Patterson edging out Ingrid Vojcinakova 6-3, 3-6, 10-3, and Gonzalez outlasting Natlya Malenko, 6-2, 6-1.

The wins put Brinson at 10-4 on the year, Shaffer at 9-4 and Marta Gonzalez with an impressive 10-2 record so far this season.

Laura Patterson

  • Michael Hebert
Georgia women’s tennis has successful trip to Puerto Rico