I’ll be on the edge of my seat…

How long now, Darlene?  58 days?  

 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

Bob Parks Realty, LLC

Real Estate Broker

145 Maple Row Blvd

Hendersonville TN 37075

Phone: 615-826-4040

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Shane Ford
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2015 7:24 AM
To: GatorNews
Subject: [gatornews] [SUN]: Dupay attempting marathon 3-pointer record

 


Dupay attempting marathon 3-pointer record






  
<http://www.gatorsports.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=GS&Date=20150708&Category=ARTICLES&ArtNo=150709721&Ref=AR&imageVersion=Main&MaxW=445&border=0>
 

Former Florida point guard Teddy Dupay will attempt to break the record for 
most 3-pointers made in a 24-hour period.

Matt Stamey/Staff photographer/File

By  <http://www.gatorsports.com/personalia/kevinbrockway> Kevin Brockway
Gainesville SUN Staff writer




Published: Wednesday, July 8, 2015 at 11:21 p.m.


Last Modified: Wednesday, July 8, 2015 at 11:21 p.m.


Teddy Dupay made his mark at Florida for his ability to drain 3-point shots.

But the former Gator guard who helped lead UF to the 2000 national title game 
is embarking on his toughest long-range shooting challenge yet.

On July 15, at the Dream Center of Tampa Gym, Dupay will attempt to break the 
Guinness World Record for most 3-pointers in a 24-hour period. The record is 
10,381, which was set in 2012.

To accomplish that feat, Dupay would need to average 7.2 3-pointers made per 
minute. 

“Anything is possible,” Dupay said. “I’ve been training. I’m in great shape. 
I’m in the gym every day. I’m definitely prepared and somebody else did it so 
you don’t say it’s impossible. This is something where I’m going to have to 
shoot roughly 80 percent from the 3-point line for 24 hours to break the record 
and so we will see.”

Dupay is attempting the record not for publicity, but to raise money for 
charity. A friend gave him the idea of trying for the record after watching the 
Today Show and seeing someone get interviewed for breaking the Guinness record 
for most pull-ups.

“My knee-jerk reaction was no way, I’m old now,” said Dupay, who turned 36 on 
June 26. “I’m not a young kid anymore.”

But Dupay decided if he could find a charity to benefit from the event, he’d 
give it a shot. That charity is the Academy Prep Center of Tampa and St. 
Petersburg, a tuition-free school for middle school-aged children that provides 
high-level education for need-based students.

After visiting the school, Dupay was convinced it was the perfect charity for 
his mission to help kids.

“I was so impressed with how the kids were communicating, the skills that were 
being taught,” Dupay said. “It’s an amazing education. We’re talking about 
chess, golf, public speaking, mock trials. The kids are getting real-life 
experience that they may be getting at a ($20,000 to $40,000) per year private 
school.”

So Dupay is gathering sponsors to donate anywhere from a penny to a dime to a 
dollar per made shot. He’ll have a handful of celebrity observers during the 
event, including former Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive end Simeon Rice, WWE tag 
team champion and former UF defensive end Thaddeus Bullard (aka Titus O’Neil) 
and former Tampa Bay Storm owner Bob Gries.

Dupay also has received support from longtime ESPN college basketball analyst 
Dick Vitale, who took to social media to air a video to promote Dupay’s attempt 
to break the record.

Most Gator fans remember Dupay as “Teddy Trigger,” one of Billy Donovan’s first 
big-time recruits, an undersized 5-foot-10 guard who arrived at Florida in 1998 
and helped transform the Gators into a nationally relevant program. As part of 
a deep and talented team that included Mike Miller, Matt Bonner, Udonis Haslem, 
Brent Wright and Major Parker, Florida made its second Final Four run in school 
history in 2000 and knocked off North Carolina before falling 89-76 to Michigan 
State in the title game.

That turned out to be a high point of a college career in which Dupay suffered 
back problems and was forced to leave UF in 2001 amid allegations he gambled on 
sports. In 2009, a few years removed from his overseas basketball career, Dupay 
pleaded guilty to an assault charge in a domestic dispute. Dupay has tried to 
atone for his past by returning to the game he loves and cautioning others not 
to make the same mistakes he made. In 2014, Dupay opened the Teddy Dupay 
Basketball Academy in Tampa in an attempt to develop basketball at the 
grassroots level within the state.

“I’m just trying to turn everything negatively that’s happened to me into a 
positive for someone else,” Dupay said.


































Sent From Shane's iPhone

Go Gators!   &   Skål Vikes!

ALPCA #8756 

Europlate #1045

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