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Toxic fan page not worth the fight

The 1993 film “A Bronx Tale” is one of my favorite movies, and it features one of the best scenes ever.
Young “C” sees a boy named Louie who owes him $20, and he starts to chase after him. After Louie runs away while making excuses, one of the mob characters said that “C” should hit the boy with a bat.
Thankfully, Sonny, the mob boss, stepped in with some sound logic.
Sonny: “What’s the matter?”
C: “This guy Louie Dumps over here. You know he owes me 20 dollars. It’s been two weeks now, and every time he sees me, he keeps dodging me. He’s becoming a real pain in the ass. Should I crack him one, or what?”
Sonny: “What’s the matter with you? What have I been telling you? Sometimes hurting somebody ain’t the answer. First of all, is he a good friend of yours?
C: “No, I don’t even like him.”
Sonny: “You don’t even like him. There’s your answer right there. Look at it this way: It costs you 20 dollars to get rid of him. Right? He’s never going to bother you again. He’s never going to ask you for money again. He’s out of your life for 20 dollars. You got off cheap. Forget it.”
I think about that scene every time I see people fighting with the two wannabe journalists running the fan-boy Montana AA Prep Football page on Facebook.
Every season for about the last five or six years, these two guys get high school football fans around the state fighting.
Of course, you remember Mac Daddy, the man who went viral with his angry rant right after his beloved Missoula Sentinel Spartans won their second straight Class AA football title in November of 2021.
Instead of celebrating the incredible accomplishment, Mac Daddy boiled over on a live Facebook video like a South Pole Alex Jones. Instead of being a proud fan, Mac Daddy stole the spotlight from a team deserving of recognition.
His wife tried to stop him, but Mac Daddy chose to pick fights with people. He even offered to meet some Butte fans in Rocker for some fisticuffs.
(It should be noted that when John Thatcher stepped up to say “I’m your huckleberry,” Mac Daddy dropped his fighting stance really quickly.)
High school sports should not include this much animosity. It is supposed to be spirited competitions between young athletes who are dedicating so much of their time to be the best.
We should cheer on our teams with everything we have, but we should also be respectful of the players and coaches wearing the other colors.
It is horrible enough when we forget such a thing when it comes to college football. It is disgusting when people wear “FTC” or “FTG” hats, displaying their hatred for the players for the Montana Grizzlies or Montana State Bobcats.
Former Butte High Bulldog Tommy Mellott, the current quarterback for the Bobcats, tried to get fans to stop this nonsense last year after his team beat the Grizzlies in Bozeman.
“Quit trying to dehumanize those guys over there, trying to get in their bus,” Tommy said in a live television interview after the game. “Don’t be messing with them.
“I know what it feels like. We felt it last year. Those guys work harder than 90 percent of the people just to put themselves in position to play this game. Please just respect them and take care of those guys.”
As bad as it is when college fans act like that, it is a million times worse when they do it for high school sports.
Adults should not be adding hot takes and vitriol to the games of high school boys, and that is exactly what Mac Daddy and his side kick do on the Montana AA Prep Football page on Facebook. They spew hate and ignorance. They get fans to fight with other fans.
When he is not going full-on Mac Daddy, Mac Daddy actually seems like a pretty good guy who just loses his compass when it comes to high school sports. We actually see that all the time when parents watch their children play sports.
I know. It is really easy to lose perspective.
Most people, though, regain that perspective after they leave the stadium. Most feel bad when they yell at the officials, coaches or opposing players.
Mac Daddy, though, steps into a Slim Jim and doubles down.
Yes, he has passion. When that passion steps over to poison the waters, though, it is not a good thing.
On the Montana AA Prep Football page on Facebook, Mac Daddy and his side kick have sprinkled ricin all over Montana’s football aquifer.
They are, after all, the guys who, back in 2019, pushed the insane claim that Butte High fans routinely throw batteries at the opposing players at Naranche Stadium.
Nearly four years later, they still have not backed down from that over-the-top ridiculous accusation.
After the first week of the 2023 season, Mac Daddy was at it again. On the first Friday night, he took to his live Facebook videos to trash Kyle Mihelish, the head coach of the defending Class AA State champion Helena Capital Bruins.
Coach Mihelish, who truly is one of the good guys in the game, apparently said he didn’t want to talk to the guys running the Montana AA Prep Football page on Facebook. He didn’t want his players to talk to them either.
Mihelish, who recently served as head coach of the West Side for the second time in the Montana East-West Shrine Game, was doing what the other 15 Class AA coaches should do.
The coaches shouldn’t want their players talking to a couple of misguided fans masquerading as legitimate media members.
They shouldn’t want their players talking to a couple of guys who will likely be bashing their team in an effort to get a few more clicks down the road.
“I’m sure he’s butt hurt or something because I placed them at 10 or something in the preseason poll,” Mac Daddy said of Mihelish, who has won state and national championships in his 24 years as a coach in Montana.
Man, sometimes irony can be so ironic.
I agree that someone was “butt hurt,” but it certainly wasn’t Coach Mihelish. I can promise you the great coach did not lose a wink of sleep over Mac Daddy and his side kick.
Of course, this video led to people fighting with Mac Daddy and his side kick on Facebook and Twitter.
Those fights don’t usually last long, though. If you disagree with either of them on their Montana AA Prep Football page on Facebook, they will block you.
I was blocked years ago, and I consider myself one of the lucky ones. If you were blocked, you should feel the same way.
If you don’t believe me, just think of the words of Sonny on “A Bronx Tale.”
You don’t even like those guys. You don’t like that page and what it stands for.
There is your answer right there. They are never going to bother you again. They are out of your life. You got off cheap.
And it didn’t even cost you 20 dollars.
— Bill Foley, who learned most of his life lessons by watching mob movies, can be reached at foles74@gmail.com. Follow him at twitter.com/Foles74 before that billionaire weirdo ruins it. Listen to the ButteCast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
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Podcast No. 126: Robert Leipheimer

Robert Leipheimer was a 230-pound offensive lineman for Butte High’s football team. He said he was a “chubby” kid.
Today, Robert is a Spartan Race North American champion who weighs about 165 pounds. The 2018 Butte High graduate also earned a degree from Montana State University. Before he puts that degree to use, however, he is going to continue his career in Spartan Race.
He recently placed fourth in a race in West Virginia, and the North American Championships will be held later this month in Vermont. In November, he will compete in the Trifecta World Championship in Sparta, Greece.
Since Robert is the nephew of Olympic medalist and longtime Tour de France competitor Levi Leipheimer, it is no surprise that he is good at an endurance sport. He went for looking on his phone for something to compete in a few years ago to competing with the very best in the world.
Listen in to hear Robert talk about his football days at Butte High School, where he got to play with superstars like Dylan Cook and Tommy Mellott.
Listen to how he was influenced by Bulldog coach Arie Grey, and how the coach’s words of wisdom still affect his life. Listen as he talks about his future in Spartan Race and why he works so hard.
Today’s podcast is presented by Casagranda’s Steakhouse. Eat where the locals eat.
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Podcast No. 125: Curtis Smith

Today’s ButteCast features one of the most requested guests, Curtis Smith.
It has been more than 33 years since Curtis played basketball for Butte High School, but his name is still mentioned all the time. He was the best passer I have ever seen play. He was Butte High’s version of Magic Johnson, though he’d rather you compare him to Larry Bird.
Curtis was also a legendary character from Butte High’s Class of 1990, which was one of the wilder classes in school history. Curtis was always having fun, and he was always nice to everyone.
He is still that way.
Earlier today, I caught up with Curtis inside the Vault at the Metals Sports Bar & Grill for a fun conversation. It is a long one, too. Maybe even as long as the Mike Thatcher podcast.
It is all good stuff, though.
Listen in as Curtis talks about playing at Butte High and then for coach Casey Keltz at Montana Western. Listen to the names of the players he played with and against over the years.
Listen as he talks about playing with the McKinley kids and how that toughened him up. Listen to how he threw a golf challenge match so he could go to a huge party on the East Ridge.
Simply put, this is 2 hours of pure Curtis, and it is gold.
Today’s podcast is presented by Lone Peak Physical Therapy. If you aren’t living your best life, call Lone Peak today and start feeling better as early as tomorrow.
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Podcast No. 124: Greg Leetz

We call him Peach.
That is the nickname Greg Leetz was saddled with as a young boy at McKinley Elementary School in Butte. He tried to shake a few times — like when he enlisted in the Navy and when he returned from serving his country — but it has stuck.
Peach, who might be the only person to listen to every single episode of the ButteCast, was a legend on the Northwest Little League fields because of his unnecessary head-first slides, aka the “Pete Rose slide.” Well, at least he was a legend on our Arctic Circle team.
The 1992 Butte High graduate came back to Butte after serving in the Navy and graduated from Montana Tech. He has worked and lived in Missouri, Louisian, Texas and New Mexico. He currently works and lives in Phoenix.
He left the 113-degree heat to come to town to cheer on the Montana Tech Orediggers as they open the football season Thursday night against Carroll College at Alumni Coliseum.
So, we met inside the Vault at the Metals Sports Bar & Grill yesterday for a great conversation.
Listen in as Peach talks about how he earned his nickname. Listen to him describe how a slow guy pulled off stealing bases in Little League. Listetn as he talks about our glory days hanging out at the Vu Villa. Listen as he talks about growing up in a large, unconventional family in Butte.
Today’s podcast is brought to you by Leskovar Honda of Butte. Leskovar Honda is the home of the 20-year, 200,000-mile warrantee.

Greg “Peach” Leetz makes makes an appearance on the Podcast inside the Vault at the Metals Sports Bar & Grill. (Photo courtesy Laurie Leetz) -
Lack of transparency in mine cleanup is scarier than the Centerville Ghost

Late at night on March 6, 1901, the Centerville Ghost made its first appearance in the Mining City.
According to The Butte Daily Post, two men missed the last streetcar to Centerville after attending a concert at an opera house. As they walked up Main Street, they saw a dark, robed figure emerge from an alley near Center Street.
The figure walked in a sort of easy, floating manner between the car rails ahead of the men.
As if it was waiting for them, the figure stopped in their path. Then, it suddenly whirled to face them, and a ghostly hand flung a veil from its earie face.
The men got a glimpse of its unearthly features shining with blue streaks of Sulphur-like lights.
As the men froze with fear, the ghost screamed with piercing loudness, turned and fled down the tracks, moaning as it ran.
The newspapers in town carried the account of the encounter with the Centerville Ghost, and the city was overcome with fright. During the weeks that followed, the ghost roamed about Centerville, Walkerville and the Dublin Gulch.
Women would not leave their homes alone after dark, and men went about armed with guns.
The Centerville Ghost made sporadic appearances over the next few decades. But on Oct. 31, 1939, a story in The Butte Daily Post reported the truth.
Joe Duffy, then a lanky, 62-year-old Butte alderman, laundry truck driver, poet, author and practical joker, revealed that he was behind the ghost story.
Duffy’s friends Jim McGlynn and Joe Cooney bet him that he could not fool all the people in Butte at any one time.
So, Duffy made up the story of the two men. He won his bet with the “power of suggestion.”
That’s all he did. He wrote a letter to the papers reporting the first sighting, and imaginations ran wild.
It seems that it never has been too difficult to get the people of Butte all riled up.
Maybe that is why the Environmental Protection Agency, Atlantic Richfield Co., the State of Montana and Butte-Silver Bow have been so secretive when it comes to Superfund cleanup around town.
Trying to sneak some contaminated dirt into the neighborhoods the Centerville Ghost once roamed seems to be the only possible explanation to the confidentiality in dealing with such a serious issue for the people of the Mining City.
That is exactly what the Consent Decree signed by former Chief Executive Dave Palmer was, too. It was secretive. It was negotiated in secret, and 3 and a half years later not one shovel has hit the ground to complete the cleanup work promised in the decree.
The reasons for that are, you guessed it, secret.
It seems like they have not settled on a place to dump the contaminated dirt they will be taking out of certain sites around town.
The Consent Decree is an agreement to finish the reclamation work in Butte, as if there really is an end in sight.
In 2020, some neighbors of Copper Mountain Park got word that the plan was to dump next to the park, which they still considered an open depository — even after the park and baseball stadium were built there.
The outrage expressed over that short-sighted plan forced the EPA, ARCO, the state and Butte-Silver Bow to reconsider. Days after the outrage began, the groups announced they would not dump there.
The not-in-my-neighborhood meeting goers seemed satisfied with the decision. It wasn’t my neighborhood that would be affected, so I was in the group of not-in-any-neighborhood folks.
I raised my hand and asked what other places were proposed as possible dumping sites. I was in the back, and I didn’t get a good view of the map of such places that so briefly appeared on the powerpoint presentation.
I didn’t get a good answer, so I emailed officials of every organization. Weeks went by and I got nothing but the runaround from all of them.
Eventually, Jon Sesso, the former director of the Butte-Silver Bow Planning Department and former Democratic minority leader of the Montana Senate, called me to tell me why I got the runaround.
Sesso said they didn’t want me to have a copy of the map because — and I swear on the life of my children this is true — they didn’t want me to “write another column to get everyone all riled up.”
He told me that they were considering sites by the Williamsburg neighborhood — because “Williamsburg people don’t care about anything” — behind Montana Tech and behind the Granite Mountain Memorial.
He told me what I already knew, that they had a map of the proposed sites. But no matter how hard I asked, they would not give it to me.
At the meeting, it seemed like there was no difference between the state, EPA, ARCO and the local government. After that conversation, I knew that was true.
Hopefully, they had the best interest of the people at heart when they made their agreements. But if that was the case, why the ongoing secrecy?
It appears that even the Butte-Silver Bow Council of Commissioners is still in the dark about the proposed plans to dump. That is why some proposed a resolution demanding transparency.
Without transparency, we can only fear the worst. That is why some people have begun to become riled up when they saw some officials sniffing around the Dublin Gulch neighborhood.
Is that where they are going to dump?
If that is the case, they better be ready to arrest a few people every day they try it — starting with me. That neighborhood should be rebuilt, not buried under toxic slime.
What an insult that would be to so many people whose families proudly came from “The Gulch.”
Why is it that Butte people don’t seem to matter to organizations like the EPA, ARCO and the State of Montana, anyway?
When they cleaned up the Milltown Dam, they shipped the contaminated materials to Opportunity. They never considered dumping near a neighborhood near Missoula.
In Butte they seemed to be just fine dumping it next to little kids playing on the swings.
When Judge Brad Newman ordered the cleanup of Silver Bow Creek, his order was simply ignored. Apparently, they are going to get away with ignoring that court order, too.
Don’t try that at home.
In response to the grumblings of some commissioners, the EPA set a community meeting for 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Emergency Operations Center at 3615 Wynne Ave. That is the site where the Copper Mountain Park neighbors shouted down the possibility of dumping in their neighborhood.
The EOC is in the same building where you get your driver’s license renewed, and we should pack the place to let the officials making such a very important decision know we are watching.
One thing we have going for us is that we know that they don’t like it when we get all riled up. So, slip on your riling shoes and let’s hold the feet of all the officials and agencies involved to the fire.
This time, the EPA is promising to offer some transparency as it continues to move at a snail’s pace when it comes to doing its job, which is supposed to be putting the needs of the environment and citizens over the financial worries of a multi-billion-dollar company.
So far, though, we know those promises have proven to be as real as Joe Duffy’s Centerville Ghost.
— Bill Foley, who is always wearing his size 13 riling shoes, can be reached at foles74@gmail.com. Follow him at twitter.com/Foles74 before that billionaire weirdo ruins it. Listen to the ButteCast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.


















