Pit Spit takes Krause to his knees

Published 5:13 pm Monday, July 5, 2010

Rick Krause, 56, won his 16th International Cherry Pit Spit Saturday. (Daily Star photo/JOHN EBY)

Rick Krause, 56, won his 16th International Cherry Pit Spit Saturday. (Daily Star photo/JOHN EBY)

By JOHN EBY
Niles Daily Star

EAU CLAIRE – After winning 16 international cherry pit spit titles, Rick “Pellet Gun” Krause, 56, talks of retiring and giving other competitors a shot at his throne.

“This is my 16th one in 31 years,” Krause said Saturday. “I’m a little over .500, so I may be thinking about retiring soon. It’s getting too easy,” although this was his second-lowest winning distance after 2009, when he won with 48 feet, 1 1/2 inches.

“A big part of it’s luck,” Krause said. “I don’t know why I’m lucky at this instead of the lottery or the casino.”

Marlene “Machine Gun” Krause, whom Rick married on this very court 14 years ago today, won her seventh women’s title, and son Brian, whose 32nd birthday is today, was runner-up with 40 feet, 2 1/2 inches.

Brian set the world record, 93 feet, 6 1/2 inches, in 2003.

“Then I’ll spit the first one from my knees,” Pellet Gun fires back.

While Pellet Gun was heckled some for showboating Saturday when he won on his first try spitting on his knees, to Krause his winning flip of 51 feet, 3 inches, resulted from a strategic move to slip under the wind on a breezy afternoon.

“I’ve done this so many times I have a pretty good idea what the wind’s going to do,” Krause said. “If you’ve got any kind of headwind, it just knocks them down. You’d think if you just spit up into the air and let the wind blow it, but the wind knocks it down. It’s all about trajectory. I went to my knees because the wind was blowing pretty hard. I figured I’d get it down low, keep it low and try to skid one on the ground in a hurry. It worked. A little bit of it’s cocky. I knew if I didn’t win, my kid was going to win. We have a good rivalry between the two of us.”

Signing an autograph for a Texas girl brings to Krause’s mind spitting watermelon seeds, among other things.

“It was last weekend,” the Sparta native informs her. “I went down there one time because they give out great prize money. If you broke the world record it was like $5,000.

“They have a narrow court on a road, about half as wide as” Tree-Mendus Fruit Farm, home of the 37th Annual International Cherry Pit Spit west of Indian Lake.

“They’ve got all kinds of things you can do now,” Krause, of Tuba City, Ariz., said. “They’ve got frozen cricket spitting. They’ve got olive pit spitting which I almost went to this year out in California. For the cherry pit spit I’ve gone to California, Fish Creek, Wis., in the wintertime on the ice, Germany and Jay Leno’s show” on July 23, 1998.

“It’s hard to get pits in Arizona,” he explains, giving a glimpse into his lack of training regimen, “so as soon as I get here I get a bunch” so he’s ready if someone requests an exhibition or a photo (showing off his Mr. Ptui tattoo). I just grind some with my tongue. A lot of people (overdo it). They come out here and spit 200 pits. The first 10 to 20 are their quality ones. After that it starts going downhill. That’s why they qualify in the morning spitting a long ways. Then they practice. I got here (Friday) and spit maybe a dozen and no more than 12 to 15 today. The main thing is to take your time and get the pit cleaned off really well. Then it’s just a matter of sealing the pit with your tongue. You can tell the people who have potential to be really good by the ‘pop.'”

Krause, of course, sounds like a hydraulic city bus door when he releases his Montmorency stone.

Brian “Young Gun” Krause, finished second with 40 feet, 2 1/2 inches, and Dowagiac Union High School guidance counselor Randy Luthringer of Niles (40 feet, one inch), a close third.

In an entrance recalling his showmanship of old (like a ring of fire across Eureka Road), “Pellet Gun” rode into the arena aboard a roaring motorcycle, stripped off his black leather riding togs and coonskin cap.

Two additional spits standing up short of the first mark on his knees.

“I don’t think it’s my calling,” said Pastor Kevin Hester, who managed 35 feet, 6 inches.
In the women’s match, Marlene “Machine Gun” Krause, 47, out-spat Emily Johnson by 6 feet with a spit 34 feet, six inches, to take her seventh win.

Youth spitters flashed their propulsive techniques as Kevin Collins, Benton Harbor, finished first with a spit of 27 feet, eight inches, in the Youth 9-12 Division.

In the Dignitaries Match, Walt Frank, manager of the Farm Bureau Oil Company near Eau Claire, outdistanced international competitors from Italy, Spain, Australia and Israel with a distance of 30 feet, 2 inches. Avie Brand of Israel took second place with a spit of 27 feet, 7 inches.