Wednesday, January 30, 2008

the mayor of Boston was already planning a victory parade

From an article in the NY Daily News:


Bill Belichick has got to be cringing.

While his players were keeping their mouths zipped, as always, during Super Bowl week, the mayor of Boston was already planning a victory parade and the Boston Globe was offering an advance sale of a book on the Patriots' undefeated season.

It's called: "19-0: The Historic Championship Season of New England's Unbeatable Patriots."

...

Antonio Pierce wasn't ordering it, either. "No, because we're writing that last chapter this week and I think we're going to write a good ending," he said.

...

Belichick knows how these things motivate teams. His 1990 Giants defense was inspired by reports that the Bills were measuring themselves for Super Bowl rings. In 2002, he let his team know that the Steelers had already made Super Bowl reservations before they met the Pats in the AFC title game, and when he discovered that the Colts had already advertised AFC Championship T-shirts on their Web site before their 2004 title-game meeting, he plastered those ads across the locker room.

None of this motivational material is coming from Belichick or the Pats organization, of course. But this is the Super Bowl. Things tend to be taken somewhat out of context.

That's why Giants co-owner John Mara, hearing about the book and parade, said, "Please put that in a headline."

Of course, Belichick will probably be using the Giants' responses yesterday against them today. That's how it works this week.

Michael Strahan sings at media day

Strahan is funny.  I watched some of his Media Day Q&A live on nflnetwork.com.  This article captures his style, but doesn't capture his many other funny comments.  I was most impressed by how genuine and happy he was.  He handled all the weird questions with honesty and humor and really seemed to be enjoying himself.  Brady obfuscates when asked a difficult question.  Strahan turns it into a joke.  Two different styles, but both avoid giving an incendiary response that turns into bulletin board material.
--pws

from NY Daily News article

Michael Strahan sings at media day

Wednesday, January 30th 2008, 4:00 AM

GLENDALE, Ariz. - The best act of the Super Bowl performed for an hour Tuesday before a riveted standing-room only audience. And Super Bowl performers Alicia Keys, Jordin Sparks and Tom Petty were nowhere to be found.

Michael Strahan Unplugged was a smash as the defensive end was easily the media day MVP. No matter how silly or bizarre the questions, Strahan delivered gem after gem. He even broke into song with the Alicia Keys hit "No One."

Strahan was asked which actor should play him if Super Bowl XLII was made into a movie.

"Has to be someone who is funny," Strahan answered.

One reporter suggested Oscar-winner Forest Whitaker.

"Forest Whitaker?!?" Strahan screamed. "Come on man!"

How about Will Smith?

"We have to bulk Will Smith a little bit and put a gap in his tooth," the defensive end said. "Eli Manning would be Tobey Maguire. Tom Brady would be Brad Pitt."

Strahan was asked by an entertainment television personality which two celebrities he would invite to the Super Bowl to impress the most.

"Some actress that's hot. There are a bunch of them, but most of them are pregnant right now," Strahan replied. "I have no chance. If I am trying to impress you, I am not bringing you to the Super Bowl. Give me a chance to stare into my gap tooth. I need to do that in person at a restaurant or something."

There may actually have been more questions about Strahan's gap than Brady's boot or SpyGate. Strahan noted that celebrities such as David Letterman, Madonna and Lauren Hutton stick together when it comes to their gaps.

Comedian Guy Torry then asked the Giants co-captain about his rugged haircut and beard.

"Is that your Super Bowl hairdo or are you going for the 'Hotel Rwanda' look?" Torry asked.

Strahan replied: "This is a tribute to my man Don Cheadle. Hotel Rwanda. To my people. You know what this was? When I was in California in the offseason holding out, I said I don't care about the clean look so I went a little grimy."

"And then you know what happened?" Strahan continued. "The women like it. You know when I knew this hairdo was right and all that, the women were like, 'Ooh, you look sexy.' And then the guys were like, 'You need to cut that off.'

"When the guys start hating and the women like it, you know you are onto something."

Toward the end, Strahan was asked about his favorite musical acts and was asked if he likes Keys. That is when he held his own "American Idol" tryout.

"Noooo one, noooo one, noooooooo one," Strahan sang as several Giants started laughing at him from afar. "Look at all the haters back there. What do you want to hear? What do you want to hear?"

The media heard more than enough yesterday.

Plaxico Burress predicted Giants would win 23 to 16

An article from NY Daily News reports that Plaxico Burress predicted Giants would win 23 to 16.  How the Patriots responded was interesting:


Patriots defensive end Richard Seymour added, "It's not going to make us play any harder."

That may be what Seymour says, but you can believe a prediction like that - with the score in it - will drive the Patriots even harder, especially with them trying to make history. Belichick, Mr. Motivator, will blow up Burress' prediction to blimp size and drum the slight into his players' heads all week. The Patriots, and Belichick, have proven that they have a long memory. Ask Jets coach Eric Mangini.

The Patriots seem to have adopted Belichick's non-inflammatory form of communication with reporters.

Samuel said they spend 30 minutes each day during the team meeting talking about what to say and what not to say to the media. He called those sessions being "served humble pie." He does not recall anyone ever being disciplined or fined for saying something that Belichick thought was out of line.

If someone were to make a guarantee about a game, "practice would be pushed back by at least 30 minutes and we'd have to eat a lot of humble pie," Samuel said.

The Patriots obviously don't like the taste of humble pie. I wouldn't expect them to offer any return predictions to counter what Burress said.

"We're a veteran football team," Wilfork said. "We know what and what not to say. We do our talking on Sunday. Whatever I say in front of this microphone today is not going to win the game on Sunday."

Monday, January 28, 2008

Carrying Ball and Message: N.F.L. Rewards a 10-Year-Old

How lucky is this kid?  And his mom and grandfather?
Nick, you need to enter these contests for me.
--pws

Carrying Ball and Message: N.F.L. Rewards a 10-Year-Old

Published: January 28, 2008

Jared Doutt, a football player from Erie, Pa., will be making his first Super Bowl appearance Sunday.

National Football League

Jared Doutt of Erie, Pa., part of the Play 60 Challenge aimed at child obesity, will deliver the game ball Sunday.

"I'm not too nervous," he said Thursday. "Not too nervous."

Immediately after the coin toss, Jared, a 10-year-old San Diego Chargers fan who plays intramural football at Grandview Elementary School in Erie, will run onto the field and hand the game ball to an official.

"I keep telling Jared not to worry," said David Bryan, Jared's stepfather. "After all, they can't start the game without him."

Two weeks ago, Bryan received a phone call from the N.F.L. and was told that Jared had been randomly chosen from among 50,000 entrants who had registered to be a part of the league's Play 60 Challenge. In the contest, participants pledge to be physically active for at least 60 minutes a day as a way of getting families to understand the dangers of child obesity.

"When I told Jared he had won, his eyes got as big as saucers," Bryan said. "He couldn't believe it."

Jared, who plays football, soccer, basketball and the piano, had no trouble keeping his commitment to be physically active. By getting selected, Jared and his family received three tickets to Super Bowl XLII at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz.; accommodations for seven days and six nights at a hotel; and a rental car with a car seat for Jared's little sister, Gemma, 4, who will also make the trip.

"I was in shock when I found out I had been chosen," Jared said. "I told my mom, and she thought maybe the whole thing was a scam."

His mother, Bridget Mooney, a Patriots fan who grew up in Northfield, Mass., soon learned it was no scam. She and her father, Patrick Mooney, will be accompanying Jared to the game, watching as he trots onto the field in front of thousands of fans, Giants and Patriots all around him.

"We're very excited for him," said Bridget Mooney, who will wear her Tom Brady jersey to the game. "For Jared, this contest didn't force him to change his lifestyle a whole lot. He has always been active in sports, which we encourage because we don't want him sitting home all day playing video games."

Jared, an aspiring kicker, said he would try not to let the crowd noise become a factor Sunday.

"I'm looking forward to running the ball out there, but I haven't really thought about how I will react to the crowd," he said. "Like I said, I'm not too nervous about it."

Jared's favorite player is Drew Brees, but he stuck with the Chargers even after Brees left to join the New Orleans Saints. Despite the fact that his mother and grandfather will be rooting for the Patriots, he said he would cheer for the Giants on Sunday.

"I always root for the underdog," he said. "I rooted for the Chargers in their playoff game against the Patriots, and now I'm rooting for the Giants, another underdog."

"The Giants had better win," he said without a trace of humor in his voice. "I'm missing my intramural sports just to be at this game."

Ruegamer (New York Giants offensive lineman) castrates lambs with his teeth

Do they do this on the ranches in Jackson Hole?
--pws

Grey's anatomy lesson baaa-d news for Patriots
January 28, 2008

Meet Grey Ruegamer, New York Giant, who has castrated lambs with his teeth.

Whether or not he will have a similar effect upon the New England Patriots' Super Bowl aspirations come Sunday remains to be seen. But isn't it enough, for now, to know there are more dimensions to the 6-foot-4, 300-pound offensive lineman than meet the eye?

There is no rock too large or small to get turned over and microscoped, microphoned and televised during the two weeks leading up to the big game. The rocks removed (so to speak) in Ruegamer's case, though, are unprecedented.

"You grab the forelegs and pin them to the ground," he tells the East Valley (Ariz.) Tribune in an article receiving massive Internet exposure, "and then you grab the back legs and throw them on their back." With the targets thus exposed, "away you go. It's the way the Basques do it. ... You pull them out with your teeth, spit them in a bucket, next one."

Ruegamer, rest assured, is not still involved in such impromptu veterinary practices. A native Nevadan, he was helping out a rancher friend, a Basque, several years ago when asked to sink his teeth into the meat of the moment. "I was hesitant," he tells the newspaper. "But it is what it is. She (the friend) needed help. There was beer. Good times. It was worth it."

Added Ruegamer, an Arizona State graduate who won a Super Bowl with the Patriots in 2001: "It's just a little lamb. It's not a big animal. I have pictures. The blood on your moustache is the worst part."

What plays more or less harmlessly on ranches and in locker rooms (athletes are all the time trying to castrate each other, figuratively) is sure to be at odds with more mainstream, urban sensibilities. Already burdened with the horrors associated with Michael Vick's dogfighting convictions, the NFL is sure, too, to be getting the inevitable feedback this week from organizations such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. No one has suggested, at least yet, that the ancient Basque practice is illegal or any more or less humane that the alternatives.

A nine-year NFL veteran, Ruegamer is in his second year with the Giants and has proven highly valuable during their remarkable run to the championship by filling in at different positions on the offensive line due to teammates' injuries. He has also seen some time on the other side of the ball, at tight end, in certain short-yardage situations. He'll see plenty of action in Sunday's game at University of Phoenix Stadium, a contest some have characterized as the New Yorkers playing the roles of lambs to the slaughter.

For the time being, though, Ruegamer is the early, runaway leader in terms of weird countdown-to-Sunday curiosities. He's the Ozzy Osbourne (bites the head off bats) of the gridirons, the Iron Chef of the prairie oyster set, the Hannibal Lecter of cowboy caviar, fava beans and Chianti.

Ruegamer is, too, a reminder that it takes all types to play this sometimes vicious game. "Grey is not someone you want to mess with," teammate Shaun O'Hara tells the Tribune's Jack Magruderin in his excellent article. "He keeps all of his toenail clippings and callous shavings all season long in a cup, and if anybody wrongs him and he deems it necessary, he will dump that cup in a personal belonging of theirs. He's known for that."

And much, much more.

Woods Renews Attack on the Record Book

This picture of Tiger and kids from his Learning Center was so cute, I had to share it.  If you want to read the whole article click here.
--pws

Woods Renews Attack on the Record Book

Denis Poroy/Associated Press

Tiger Woods, with children from the Tiger Woods Learning Center, won the Buick Invitational on Sunday.


Published: January 28, 2008

SAN DIEGO — Tiger Woods began his 2008 season by once again opening the golf history books and stepping inside. On a blustery Sunday at Torrey Pines Golf Course, Woods won the Buick Invitational by a tournament-record eight strokes for his 62nd PGA Tour victory, tying Arnold Palmer for fourth on the career list and moving within two wins of Ben Hogan.  

2007 Majors

Jeff Gross/Getty Images

With his victory, Tiger Woods tied Arnold Palmer for fourth on the career list with 62 tour wins.

Woods's final-round score of one-under-par 71 on the South Course at Torrey Pines gave him his sixth Buick Invitational title and his fourth in a row. His 72-hole total of 19 under par won by eight strokes over Ryuiji Imada, who shot 67 Sunday, and was nine strokes better than Rory Sabbatini and Stewart Cink, who tied for third.

Grapplers now 18-0

Winchester Star article with photo.

Grapplers now 18-0

Thu Jan 24, 2008, 11:59 AM EST

Winchester, MA -

Winchester, MA - The Winchester High wrestling team upped its season record to 18-0 this past week with a dual meet win over Reading and three more wins at the Wilmington Quad Meet on Saturday.

At the Wilmington Quad Meet, the Sachems started the day off with a 49-9 win over Quabbin Regional High. After falling behind 3-0, the Sachems won the next five matches with a major decision from Michael Jumper (152) and pins from Mike Greco (145), Charlie Hale (160), Mike McHugh (171) and Connor McNamara (189). Quabbin was able to grab another win, but the Sachems responded with pins from Connor Gregory (103), Ryan Fitzpatrick (130) and Kevin Constantine (135), along with a decision from Miguel Tirado (125) to close things out.

Winchester kept the momentum going as they knocked off Pentucket Regional by a score of 67-6. They started things off with four straight pins from Max Kenion (145), Gregg Kelley (152), Hale (160) and McHugh (171) before Pentucket was able to get on the board.

The Sachems came right back at them with pins from Andrew Zani (heavyweight), Don Muir (103), Michael Barber (112), Constantine (135) and John Williams (140) and decisions from Peter Pantano (119) and Shaughn Crowe (130). Muir's pin was his first varsity win of the season.

In their third win of the day, the Sachems posted an amazing 11 pins en route to a 76-3 thumping of host Wilmington. Pins were registered by Jumper (152), Hale (160), McHugh (171), Gramlich (189), Zani (HWT), Gregory (103), Barber (112), Fernando Monroy (119), Fitzpatrick (130), Crowe (135) and Williams (140). The Sachems also recorded a win by forfeit for Tirado (125) and major decision by McNamara (215).

The Sachems were challenged early in their dual meet last week against Middlesex League rival Reading. Winchester got early pins from Jumper (152) and Hale (160), along with a major decision by McNamara (189) and a decision by Zani (HWT), but after eight matches, the Rockets were leading the Sachems by a 21-19 score.

The Sachems responded by sweeping the remaining six matches, getting pins from Gregory (103), Monroy (119), Tirado (125) and Fitzpatrick (130), plus a major decision for Barber (112) and a tech fall for Constantine (135) to pull away for a 52-21 victory.

The Sachems head to North Andover on Saturday for a tri meet to Watertown High and an always tough North Andover High squad.

Undefeated season threatened, literally

article from the Winchester Star

Undefeated season threatened, literally

By Eric Tsetsi/Staff Writer

Wed Jan 23, 2008, 11:10 AM EST

Winchester, MA -

Winchester, MA - The Winchester High School wrestling team has been targeted in what may be an attempt to disrupt yet another undefeated season for the crew of grapplers.

Through the past two weeks, several criminal incidents have occurred at the high school, as well as at the residences of wrestling team members.

One of the incidents, detailed in a press release, written by Police Chief Kenneth Albertelli regarding the ongoing criminal investigation, was a bomb threat discovered in the boy's bathroom at the school Tuesday, Jan. 15.

Although High school principal Thomas Gwin was unsure whether the bomb threat is part of the pattern of incidents that have taken place targeting the wrestling team, he did say in a recent telephone interview, "We think that the other incidents are connected."

The first police report was made at about 10 a.m. on Jan. 4 after a high school student found several pieces of wrestling equipment and clothing worth more than $2,700 destroyed and placed in a pile in the wrestling team's locker room, according to Albertelli.

Eight days later, on Jan. 12, high school athletic director Thomas Murray contacted Student Resource Officer Daniel Perenick and informed him about an email several members of the wrestling crew and their parents received stating that a scheduled wrestling meet was cancelled due to "technical problems" at the school.

"It appears the intent was for team members not to make this important meet," wrote Albertelli. "Due to the serious damage that was done at the high school on Jan. 4, the North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council Cyber Unit was called in to assist with the investigation."

The bomb threat, which was reported nearly two weeks later on Tuesday, Jan 15, stated simply, "Bomb this week." The words were scrawled on a boy's bathroom wall.

Perenick, who in addition to being the school's resource officer is commander of the regional School Threat Assessment Response Systems (STAR) team, determined the threat was "low level."

The school subsequently sent memos to teachers regarding the incident, which was read to students in class. Parents and guardians were informed of the incident through e-mail.

"Any type of bomb threat is not only a serious school offense, but also a very serious felony not tolerated in the court system," said Gwin in the letter sent to parents.

The most recent incident was reported at about 5:30 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 16. According to police, someone slashed the tires of three vehicles parked in the driveway of a residence where a member of the wrestling team resides.

Later in the same day, police responded to a call for vandalism to a mailbox at another wrestler's residence. According to Albertelli's press release, an accelerant, possibly gasoline, was used to light the mailbox on fire.

At both scenes, notes were left stating there was no intention to harm anyone, but the wrestling program must stop or "further action will be taken," according to police.

The Sachem wrestling crew is on a 14-0 win-streak this year, after an undefeated season last year.

Thomas Murray, the high school athletic director, could not be reached for comment for this story.

Gwin, however, stated the investigation is ongoing and the wrestling program is continuing to function normally, although with increased security.

"The wrestling team is trying to keep it in perspective," said Gwin.

Several increased security measures have been put in place to ensure the safety of the wrestling team, according to Gwin.

Some of the measures include the presence of safety officials at wrestling meets, a campus aide is present at all wrestling practices and all the locks in the locker room have been changed.

There are still no suspects in the case, according to Gwin. The investigation is ongoing.

Eric Tsetsi can be reached at 781-674-7731 or etsetsi@cnc.com.

Wrestling equipment vandalized

Another well-written article in the Winchester Star by a HS student.
Too bad the Star publishes news 2 or 3 weeks after the event and the newspaper staff doesn't write as the guest authors.
--pws

Wrestling equipment vandalized

By Erica Walters/Special to the Star

Wed Jan 23, 2008, 12:32 PM EST

Winchester, MA -

Winchester, MA - Unknown vandals entered the Winchester High School wrestling team's locker room last week and destroyed $2,000 worth of equipment, according to police and school officials.

Vandals cut up uniforms, shoes, and other clothing, on Friday morning. The damage was discovered when a student entered the locker room during B Block and found that the equipment had been slashed, police said.

The door to the wrestling locker room was unlocked at the time of the incident, according to Officer Dan Perenick, Winchester High School's Student Resource Officer.

"This isn't just an attack on the wrestling team," Principal Tom Gwin said in a public address Monday. "It's a violation of everything that the high school stands for. The person or people who did this will be prosecuted to the fullest extent for destruction of public property and will make full restitution to the athletic department."

The vandals could be charged with malicious destruction of property, a felony when the damage amounts to over $250, Perenick said.

Vandals and thieves have targeted the school's locker rooms over the past few years. Clothing and iPods have been the most commonly stolen items, administrators said.

Most of the property has been stolen from lockers that were left unlocked. The wrestling team's equipment that was destroyed was either unsecured or pulled through the holes in the locker doors, Perenick said.

Several safety measures have been implemented in Winchester High School this year to prevent vandalism and theft, and Perenick said that the idea of installing security cameras in the gym area has been discussed following Friday's incident.

"We've been very fortunate this year with vandalism in the school," Perenick said, knocking on his wooden desk. "With the help of the school's custodial staff and Connect and Commit volunteers, we've been able to reduce vandalism and graffiti."

Security cameras could help decrease vandalism in areas of the school where adult supervision is limited. They could also act as a deterrent and help police investigate crimes, Perenick said.

Winchester's Student Council is raising money to replace the property destroyed in the wrestling locker room. Donations can be made in the high school library.

Editor's Note: Erica Walters, 16, is a junior at Winchester High School. She wrote this story for the high school newspaper, the Red and Black

Fwd: Bomb threat discovered at Winchester High School

Here is another example of a well-written article in the Winchester Star; again the author is a student at the high school.
--pws

Bomb threat discovered at Winchester High School

By Anna Meiler

Wed Jan 23, 2008, 12:21 PM EST

Winchester, MA -

Winchester, MA - A bomb threat, reading "Bomb this week," was found written across a boys' bathroom wall at Winchester High School on Jan. 15, according to School Resource Officer Dan Perenick.

The threat was reported to Officer Perenick shortly after B-block, which ends at 10:04 a.m. Winchester High School Principal Thomas Gwin made sure that students and faculty were informed of the threat via a memo that teachers were instructed to read to their students. However, many students were not read the memo until the afternoon, several hours after the threat had been discovered.

Many students felt that they should have been notified promptly after the bomb threat was found so that if they did not feel safe staying on the premises, they could have had the option of going home.

"Some students might be more scared about that situation than others, and no student deserves to stay somewhere where they don't feel comfortable or safe," said WHS senior Richy Gately.

Gina Scioli, also a WHS senior, agreed that the student body should have been immediately informed.

"I felt very unsafe being at school after I found out," she said.

Officer Perenick explained that after a threat is reported, the administration has a number of things to do. The administration's tasks include contacting the Winchester Police and Fire Departments, devising a safety plan with the Incident Management Team, and following a threat assessment to evaluate the severity of the threat.

Perenick assessed the threat as a "nonspecific, low-level" threat. If the threat had been more detailed – for example, had it warned that the bombing would occur that day – the school would have taken necessary measures and evacuated the students, he said.

"The students do have a right to know, but we have a job to do first," said Officer Perenick. "We assess and then we communicate."

"I think the students need to be notified as soon as possible, but the administration does need to figure out the situation in as much detail as they can so the students can be fully informed," said WHS senior Andy Parsons.

 However, the method of communicating the threat was deemed unsatisfactory by some students.

 One WHS student, who wished to remain anonymous, said that her teacher failed to read the memo to her class, leaving many students unaware of the threat.

"I left school that day and had no clue that there had been a bomb threat," she said.

 In order to make parents aware of the threat, the principal sent an e-mail to all parents and guardians that day. The e-mail detailed the nature of the threat and the actions to be taken in response. But some students and parents felt that an e-mail alone was not sufficient to ensure awareness, and several students have said that their parents were incognizant of the threat until their children notified them.

 "Some parents aren't very 'e-mail active,' so they definitely could have handed out sheets in school for the students to bring home to their parents and they could have left messages on the phones of different parents in the school. Even though it was seen as a minor threat, a lot of parents do not like to take chances," said Richy Gately, whose mother was unaware of the threat until he informed her.

 Winchester High School Vice-Principal Gerald Chapman admits that the communication issue is still a problem, but that "it's better now than ever."

 "The town has been investigating ways to improve the communication issue, and they are working on finding ways to be able to send messages out to everybody," he said.

 Officer Perenick explained a communication method called the Reverse Emergency Notification System which calls emergency contact phone numbers and a recorded message will explain the situation to the parents or leave a voicemail if the person does not answer their phone.

 "It is not in place in Winchester, but other towns have it," said Chapman. "It's a financial issue."

 But according to Officer Perenick, Winchester High School will have it "up and running soon."

Editor's Note: Anna Meiler, 17, is a senior at Winchester High School. She is enrolled in the high school's pilot journalism course and plans to major in journalism in college.

Fwd: How Are You an Everyday Environmentalist?

Being an environmentalist today calls for a whole new level of greener thinking — from what you choose at the grocery store to how you commute to work every day.

Check out these Everyday Environmentalist green tips from Nature Conservancy staff and leading environmental bloggers.
  1. bike commute
  2. turn off your computer
  3. compost
  4. use green body care products
  5. buy used stuff
  6. eat only certain kinds of seafood (I didn't understand this one)
  7. build homes for orchard mason bees
  8. use a reel mower (1 hour of gas mowing produces as much pollution as driving 100 miles)
  9. use the stairs
  10. do electronic meetings instead of traveling
  11. clean off your boots
  12. use compact fluorescent bulbs
  13. eat local or organic food
  14. use green household products

Carbon confusion

The Boston Globe has several articles about Global Warming's affect on New England.

This one particularly caught my eye because we were discussing carbon credits last week.

--pws

Carbon confusion

Buying emission offsets is a challenge for consumers

By Beth Daley, Globe Staff  |  March 12, 2007

This is the second in a series of occasional articles examining climate change, its effects, and possible solutions.

BARNET, VT. -- Sara Demetry thought she had found a way to atone for her personal contribution to global warming.

The psychotherapist clicked on a website that helped her calculate how much heat-trapping carbon dioxide she and her fiance emitted each year, mostly by driving and heating their home. Then she paid $150 to e-BlueHorizons.com, a company that promises to offset emissions.

But Demetry's money did not make as much difference as she thought it would. While half of it went to plant trees to absorb carbon dioxide, the other half went to a Bethlehem, N.H., facility that destroys methane -- a gas that contributes to global warming. The facility has been operating since 2001 -- years before the company began selling offsets -- and Demetry's money did not lead the company to destroy any more methane than it would have anyway.

Moreover, the project received a "dirty dozen" award from a New England environmental group in 2004 because it burns the methane as fuel to incinerate contaminated water from the landfill, emitting tons of pollution each year in the process. This method of destroying methane can emit more pollution than other burning methods.

"I really thought I was doing something good," Demetry, 42, said after being told what became of her money. "I thought if I contributed this much money it would be helping the environment that much more."

Demetry's $150 purchase is part of the fast-growing world of voluntary carbon offsets -- an unregulated, largely on line marketplace.

Although specialists say some of the money is well spent, it can be difficult for consumers to figure out if they are buying any new environmental benefit.

Sales of voluntary offsets skyrocketed worldwide from $6 million in 2004 to $110 million last year, according to Abyd Karmali of ICF International a consulting firm.

Everyone from the Dixie Chicks to Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain now invests in greenhouse gas-reduction projects to offset personal emissions. The projects can include planting trees, destroying methane, or harnessing wind, solar, or other types of renewable energy that reduce demand for fossil fuels. The trend is so hot that the New Oxford American Dictionary declared "carbon neutral" -- the balance between producing and reducing carbon -- the 2006 word of the year.

The Globe found more than 60 websites that sell offsets to US consumers, but there is no government oversight of these sites, nor is there a uniform standard for what constitutes a legitimate offset. Price and quality vary greatly.

Some websites provide scant information about the criteria they use to pick projects and how much they charge for overhead, making it difficult for consumers to sort out effective offsets from projects that have little true environmental value.

"It really is anything goes," says Anja Kollmuss, outreach coordinator for the Tufts University Climate Initiative, which published a detailed consumer guide to offsets last month.

Simple concept

The concept of carbon offsets is simple. Individuals can calculate how much carbon dioxide they emit using one of the many online carbon calculators, or they can pick the US average -- about 20 tons a year per person, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

On offset websites, consumers can pay for the emissions they produce when commuting to work, flying on planes, heating homes, or even celebrating weddings. Shoppers then decide what project they want to fund, to absorb, avoid the production of, or destroy an equivalent amount of heat-trapping gas elsewhere.

There are scores of projects, from paying for solar energy in the tiny south-Asian Kingdom of Bhutan to investing in a wind farm on a South Dakota Native American reservation. Most companies say their offsets are independently verified, but because there is no one standard, those claims can have little meaning for consumers.

The price for offsetting a ton of carbon varies greatly, from $5 to $25. Some companies don't clearly state on their websites how much of the purchase price actually goes to the offset and how much to transaction costs, salaries, other overhead and profit -- nor, in fact, whether they are for-profit.

Broader criticism of the concept of offsets is also growing as some environmentalists accuse consumers of trying to buy the right to pollute, instead of taking the more difficult step of reducing their energy consumption by buying smaller cars and homes. One website -- cheatneutral.com -- pokes fun at offsets, comparing them to trying to compensate for infidelity.

"If people really want to offset their emissions, they first should insulate their home," said Michelle Manion, climate and energy director for Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management, which provides technical advice to states. "Some offsets are valuable, but it's hard to tell which ones."

Seeing the 'Truth'

Last year, Demetry says she was "rocked" by watching Al Gore's Oscar-winning global warming documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth." She had already persuaded her fiance , Arthur, to invest in new energy-efficient windows in their two-story home.

After she saw the movie, the couple installed a more efficient furnace and boiler and replaced conventional light bulbs with energy-efficient ones.

But it was impossible to get their emissions to zero, so Demetry decided to do what Gore does: offset the rest.

Demetry chose e-Blue because it was one of five websites recommended by Environmental Defense, a national environmental group. Yet it does not appear that e-Blue meets at least two of the group's criteria: ensuring that the project's effect is positive and must "exceed business-as-usual."

Tom Murray of Environmental Defense said he was unaware of any controversy about the project and would investigate.

E-Blue and its parent company, CommonWealth Resource Management Corp. , insist that Demetry's -- and all customers' -- purchases make a difference.

Anton Finelli, a co-owner of CommonWealth, which also owns the Bethlehem methane project, said it doesn't matter that his methane facility has been operating at the landfill since 2001 -- what is more important is that it is measurably destroying methane. The impact of other offset projects, such as renewable power or tree planting, can be indirect and more difficult to measure, he said.

He says he could sell the offsets to businesses but chose instead to sell them to individuals, and notes that once bought, they are "retired" and can never be resold. Consumers are getting even more than businesses would, he says, because his company donates half of all proceeds to The Conservation Fund to plant trees. Burning methane reduces its ability to trap heat in the atmosphere, lessening its contribution to global warming. That's why it can be sold as an offset.

"We are giving something of value . . . that is in the ground working today," he said.

Finelli said the environmental complaints about his project originate with Bethlehem residents who don't want the landfill to expand in their town.

Demetry says she wishes she had known more about the project, before paying her money. But e-Blue doesn't list where its projects are located. Demetry said she is disappointed that her money went to support an existing facility -- rather than creating new offsets -- and that it was controversial.

In 2001, Finelli's company began using methane as fuel to incinerate about 2 million gallons of contaminated water that seeps out of the landfill each year. New Hampshire officials say the project, called a leachate evaporator, emits about 25 tons of pollution each year as the contaminants are burned -- well within its regulatory limits.

Finelli said his project helps the environment by destroying the methane and the contaminants in the water.

Burning the methane in this way also allows the company to avoid trucking the contaminated water to a treatment plant in carbon-dioxide-spewing trucks.

Still, two years ago, the project was declared one of the most polluting in New England by Toxics Action Center, a regional environmental group.

Some Bethlehem residents say state pollution limits for the project are set too low.

"These people who are buying these offsets think they are helping the environment, but the tragedy is it's going to pollute our air," said Lon Weston, a Bethlehem, N.H., selectman.

Standards vary

Demetry's purchase gets at a key concept in the offset world, called additionality. For consumers, it boils down to this question: What am I making happen with my money?

"Consumers don't even ask this question, because they assume their money is going for something additional, something that is new," said Oregon-based Mark Trexler, who is director of EcoSecurities Global Consulting Services and has studied carbon offsets.

But offset companies use different definitions of what's additional.

Finelli said e-Blue's offsets are verified by Environmental Resources Trust Inc., a nonprofit that says projects meet its key additionality standard if their reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions are not required by law.

Other standards, such as World Wildlife Fund's Gold Standard, are far stricter, requiring that a company prove it is not selling offsets for older projects or for ones it was going to build without money from offsets.

"Because there is no one standard in the voluntary market, the offsets being sold to people are often like money made with your own Xerox machine," said Seth Kaplan, senior attorney for the Boston-based Conservation Law Foundation. "People can't be sure if what they are buying has any value."

Demetry said she's learned to be savvier. Next time, she'll do more research before she pulls out her credit card.

"I still believe in offsets, but we need help to be able to make informed decisions," she said. "They have to be doing something real."

Beth Daley can be reached at bdaley@globe.com.  

© Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
 

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

If steroids are cheating, why isn't LASIK?

human nature: Science, technology, and life.

The Beam in Your Eye; If steroids are cheating, why isn't LASIK?


Listen to this story on NPR's Day to Day Listen to this story on NPR's Day to Day.

Illustration by Mark Stamaty. Click image to expand.

And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?

Matthew 7:3

A month ago, Mark McGwire was hauled before a congressional hearing and lambasted as a cheater for using a legal, performance-enhancing steroid precursor when he broke baseball's single-season home run record.

A week ago, Tiger Woods was celebrated for winning golf's biggest tournament, the Masters, with the help of superior vision he acquired through laser surgery.

What's the difference?

At the steroid hearing on March 17, numerous members of the House Committee on Government Reform, led by Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., denounced performance-enhancing drugs. They offered three arguments: The drugs are illegal, they're harmful, and they're cheating. But illegality doesn't explain why a drug should be illegal, and the steroid precursor McGwire took, andro, was legal at the time. The director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse conceded at the hearing that steroid precursors weren't banned until last year, that steroids "do, in fact, enhance certain types of physical performance," that some are "prescribed to treat body wasting in patients with AIDS and other diseases that result in loss of lean muscle mass," and that "not all anabolic steroid abusers experience the same deleterious outcomes."

Don't get me wrong. If you buy a steroid off the street or the Internet today just to bulk up, you're taking a stupid risk. But much of that risk comes from your ignorance and the dubious grade of steroid you're getting. A star player with access to the best stuff and the best medical supervision isn't taking the same degree of risk. Furthermore, steroids are a crude, early phase of enhancement technology. Chemists are trying every day to refine compounds and doses that might help pro athletes without bad side effects.

Already the medical objection to doping has holes. At the hearing, lawmakers displayed a supposedly damning list of "Performance Enhancing Substances Not Covered by Baseball's New Testing Program." The first item on the list was human growth hormone. But the Food and Drug Administration has approved human growth hormone for use in short, healthy children based on studies showing its safety and efficacy. The National Institutes of Health says it's "generally considered to be safe, with rare side effects" in children, and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists has found the same pattern in adults.

That leaves one comprehensive complaint: cheating. At the hearing, I heard six lawmakers apply this term to performance-enhancing drugs. They compared the drugs to corking bats, deadening baseballs, and sharpening spikes. "When I played with Hank Aaron and Willie Mays and Ted Williams, they didn't put on 40 pounds of bulk in their careers, and they didn't hit more homers in their late thirties than they did in their late twenties," said Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky. "What's happening now in baseball isn't natural, and it isn't right." Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind., chairman of the House subcommittee on drug policy, recalled that baseball had harshly punished players who threw games. He asked why such punishment didn't apply to "players today who systematically cheat through steroids and performance-enhancing drugs to alter the games." Davis, who presided at the hearing, announced that he would co-chair "Zero Tolerance: The Advisory Committee on Ending the Use of Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Sports."

Zero tolerance? Wait a minute. If the andro that helped McGwire hit 70 home runs in 1998 was an unnatural, game-altering enhancement, what about his high-powered contact lenses? "Natural" vision is 20/20. McGwire's custom-designed lenses improved his vision to 20/10, which means he could see at a distance of 20 feet what a person with normal, healthy vision could see at 10 feet. Think what a difference that makes in hitting a fastball. Imagine how many games those lenses altered.

You could confiscate McGwire's lenses, but good luck confiscating Woods' lenses. They've been burned into his head. In the late 1990s, both guys wanted stronger muscles and better eyesight. Woods chose weight training and laser surgery on his eyes. McGwire decided eye surgery was too risky and went for andro instead. McGwire ended up with 70 homers and a rebuke from Congress for promoting risky behavior. Woods, who had lost 16 straight tournaments before his surgery, ended up with 20/15 vision and won seven of his next 10 events.

Since then, scores of pro athletes have had laser eye surgery, known as LASIK (Laser-Assisted In Situ Keratomileusis). Many, like Woods, have upgraded their vision to 20/15 or better. Golfers Scott Hoch, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, and Mike Weir have hit the 20/15 mark. So have baseball players Jeff Bagwell, Jeff Cirillo, Jeff Conine, Jose Cruz Jr., Wally Joyner, Greg Maddux, Mark Redman, and Larry Walker. Amare Stoudemire and Rip Hamilton of the NBA have done it, along with NFL players Troy Aikman, Ray Buchanan, Tiki Barber, Wayne Chrebet, and Danny Kanell. These are just some of the athletes who have disclosed their results in the last five years. Nobody knows how many others have gotten the same result.

Does the upgrade help? Looks that way. Maddux, a pitcher for the Atlanta Braves, was 0-3 in six starts before his surgery. He won nine of his next 10 games. Kite had LASIK in 1998 and won six events on the Champions Tour over the next five years. Three months after his surgery, Irwin captured the Senior PGA Tour Nationwide Championship.

According to Golf Digest, Woods aimed for 20/15 when he signed up for LASIK. This probably didn't strike Woods as enhancement, since he was already using contacts that put him at 20/15. Now ads and quotes offering 20/15 are everywhere. One LASIK practice takes credit for giving Irwin 20/15 vision. Another boasts of raising Barber to 20/15 and calls the result "better than perfect." Other sellers promise the same thing and offer evidence to back it up. Last year, they report, 69 percent of traditional LASIK patients in a study had 20/16 vision six months after their surgery, and new "wavefront" technology raised the percentage to 85. Odds are, if you're getting LASIK, you're getting enhanced.

The medical spin for LASIK, as opposed to the entrepreneurial spin, is that it's corrective. Your eyesight sucks, you go in for surgery, you hope for 20/20. Maybe you get it, maybe you don't, and that's that. But it isn't that simple. If you don't like the results, your doctor might fire up the laser for a second pass. In the business, this is literally called an "enhancement." Hoch, the golfer, got four enhancements in 2002 and 2003. He ended up 20/15 in one eye, 20/10 in the other.

Nor do you need poor vision to find a willing doctor. Most states think you're fine to drive a car without corrective lenses as long as your eyesight is better than 20/40. Cirillo, then a third baseman for the Seattle Mariners, was 20/35 in one eye and 20/30 in the other when he went in for LASIK two years ago. He came out 20/20 and 20/12. Cruz, an outfielder for the Toronto Blue Jays, was 20/30 when he went for an eye exam. Five days later, he was under the beam. "The doctor kind of talked me into it," Cruz told the Toronto Star. He came out 20/15. According to the Orange County Register, Gary Sheffield, then an outfielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, had eyesight better than 20/20 when he asked for laser surgery to raise his batting average. His doctor talked him out of it.

Why risk surgery for such small increments? "Every little half-centimeter counts," Cruz told the Star. Last year, the Seattle Times reported that Troy Glaus, a power hitter for the Anaheim Angels, had gotten LASIK because he "felt his contacts were sufficient, just not always ideal. A windy day or a wave of dust could tip the advantage back to the pitcher." Often, coaches play a role. The Minnesota Twins training staff successfully encouraged several players to get LASIK. Maddux told the Atlanta Journal and Constitution that the Braves gave him "a little push" to get LASIK in 2000. Meanwhile, the Braves' manager, having talked to the same doctor about getting LASIK, in his own words "chickened out."

This is the difference between therapy and enhancement. You don't need bad vision to get the surgery. Wavefront, if you've got the bucks for it, reliably gives you 20/16 or better. If your vision ends up corrected but not enhanced, you can go back for a second pass. Players calculate every increment. Pro golfers seek "to optimize any competitive advantage," a LASIK surgeon told the Los Angeles Times. "They're already tuned in to the best clubs, the best putter, the best ball. ... Clearly having great vision is one of the best competitive advantages you can have." Eyes are just another piece of equipment. If you don't like 'em, change 'em.

The sports establishment is obtuse to this revolution. Leagues worry about how you might doctor bats, balls, or clubs. They don't focus on how you might doctor yourself. Look at the official rules of Major League Baseball: A pitcher can't put rosin on his glove, but he can put it on his hand. A batter can't alter the bat "to improve the distance factor," but the rules don't bar him from altering his body to get the same result. Baseball now has a dope-testing policy, but it isn't in the rules; the players negotiate it. That's why it's weak.

At last month's hearing, baseball commissioner Bud Selig testified that in 1998 and 1999 he sent his executive vice president to Costa Rica to check out reports that juiced-up baseballs were causing an epidemic of home runs. Selig was looking for the wrong kind of juice. The U.S. Golf Association's Rules of Golf share the same blind spot: You can't use a device to warm the ball, but you can use it to warm your hands. You can't use a device to measure distance or "gauge the slope of the green," but you can get the same powers through LASIK. In the age of biotechnology, you are the device.

Read the testimonials. At 20/15, Kanell can read the eyes of defensive backs. Tom Lehman, who will lead the U.S. golf team in next year's Ryder Cup, says Lasik improved his ability to " judge distances"—a common benefit, according to the technology's purveyors. Woods says he's "able to see slopes in greens a lot clearer." Woods' eye surgeon told the Los Angeles Times , "Golfers get a different three-dimensional view of the green after LASIK." They "can see the grain" and "small indentations. It's different. Lasik actually produces, instead of a spherical cornea, an aspherical cornea. It may be better than normal vision."

Just ask Tom Davis. "I was in and out in less than one hour," the congressman reports in a testimonial for the Eye Center, a Northern Virginia LASIK practice. "I was reading and watching television that evening. My reading was not impaired and my distance vision was excellent."

Good for you, Tom. Now, about that committee you've established for zero tolerance of performance enhancement. Are you sure you're the right guy to chair it?

Monday, January 14, 2008

Jimmy Johnson - philosopher

Jimmy Johnson (former Dallas Cowboys head coach) makes some good points about human nature in his article about the NFL Playoffs.
So when you want something, try your hardest.  And learn to value that "constructive criticism" in addition to the praise you get when you do well.

--pws

...

It's human nature for the Chargers to believe they can't beat New England. But they must find a way to prepare and overcome those thoughts. People don't try (to win) because they don't want to be hurt and they don't want to be disappointed. That's why a lot of people don't try in life. A lot of people don't try to attain things because the mental process is too much for them. They don't want to be hurt by failure and disappointment. So rather than put out the effort to prepare, they give themselves an excuse and don't prepare, believing that they can't win anyway.

Well, I think Turner has to really explain this to his players. He has to say, 'How do you know you can't win?' Maybe there is only one chance in a 100, but if you don't try and if you don't prepare, that one chance won't come into play. That approach is a hell of a lot better than not trying.

...

Finally, I want to say that I'm not really sure what happened to the Cowboys over the last month of the season. I don't know if they simply got caught up believing what people were saying about them. I mean, we were all saying they were really good.

But they were not efficient in the end. It is only human nature to pull back from your preparation and effort when you are having success. This is why I say that being a head coach is so hard. It is such a difficult job because you are dealing with highly paid athletes who are constantly being told how great they are. When that happens, the players don't work as hard. I don't know if that's the reason or not for the Dallas collapse. For some reason, the Cowboys did not get better as the season went along, and that's shocking to me because they do have so many great players.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

An inside look at keys to New England's dominance

How the Patriots do it

An inside look at keys to New England's dominance

Posted: Monday December 31, 2007 12:17PM; Updated: Tuesday January 1, 2008 11:03AM

 

By Ross Tucker, SI.com

Having sandwiched some time as a Patriot in 2005 and 2006 with stints on other teams both before and after, I've seen firsthand why New England is so successful.

Nobody likes the team that wins all the time and perhaps that leads to the healthy antagonism a lot of players have for New England. But deep down, guys who who haven't played there wonder what makes that organization so special.

Where do they get that unfailing confidence and belief that they are going to win every game? Why does it always seem like they know what to do in order to beat opponents, and also precisely what other teams are going to try to do to beat them?

There are many reasons why the Patriots have won three Super Bowls this decade and had the first 16-0 season in NFL history. From top to bottom, they seem to do everything better. Here are the five biggest elements of success I've observed in my time with and against New England.

Clearly identifying keys to the game

Every coach talks about the keys to victory but they tend to do so in broad terms, like "run successfully," "stop the run," and "take care of the football."

Bill Belichick specifically details what must be done for the Patriots to win. He's more likely to say: "We can't let Hines Ward beat us on crossing routes on third down," or "we have to be successful running our scat screen early in the game".

He states the keys on Monday and reinforces them every day of the week to the point where all 53 players on the roster have it ingrained in their consciousness by game day. Players realize that if they take care of these things, they win.

Developing the perfect game plan

New England may do something like go no-huddle against Buffalo in 2003 to tire out mammoth defensive tackles Sam Adams and Pat Williams. Or they'll have four or five linebackers walk around before blitzing in order to confuse a young center or quarterback. You can be sure that the Patriots are going to bring something new to the table every week

Most coaches pay lip service to taking away opponents' strengths, but Belichick practices what he preaches. If he identifies Pittsburgh LB James Harrison as the Steelers best pass rusher, he will make sure right tackle Nick Kaczur always has help. If Ben Roethlisberger making plays on the run is his biggest fear, he will devise a disciplined pass rush scheme that forces Roethlisberger to throw from the pocket. They will go out of their way to ensure that their opponent doesn't beat them with their strengths.

Being proactive in acquiring personnel

I got released by the Bills at the end of training camp in 2005. I had a plethora of workouts that fall for teams that had injuries to offensive linemen.

I worked out for the Patriots later in the year. Personnel man Scott Pioli told me they really wanted to sign me after the season for the next year. Here they were going for a third straight Super Bowl title and they were working on next year.

Building a team, not a collection of athletes

The most critical ingredient in the Patriots' success is the people they select to be on their roster. They put more research into a player's character, work ethic, and most importantly, love of the game of football than they do in his 40-time or vertical jump.

The more guys you have in the locker room who truly love football, the better chance you have to be successful.

Tom Brady

It would be foolish to talk about the Patriots' success without singling out Tom Brady. He is given a great deal of freedom to change plays and protections at the line of scrimmage. Their scheme allows him to re-identify the opposing Mike linebacker in both run and pass plays to always put the Patriots in a more advantageous situation. This critical ingredient allows Brady to consistently audible into running plays in which his linemen have better angles and pass protections that pick up the blitz and allow him to throw deep against man coverage.

Just as important is Brady's unique combination of magnetism and confidence that single him out as the team leader. Every player in that huddle believes they are going to win because of Brady's presence.

During my time in New England I worked as a backup lineman and often had to snap to Brady while playing center. In spite of all of the other chaos that he had to sort through, he always found the time to look me squarely in the eye and say, "C'mon Ross, me and you, let's get a great snap first."

I never wanted to snap a ball so well in my life.

I was a veteran in my fifth and sixth years in the league while in New England and I had started over 20 games, but Brady's ability to single me out and make me feel important for the success of the play was unlike anything I had experienced.

Imagine 52 other guys feeling that way every Sunday and you will begin to truly understand why Brady and the Patriots are redefining perfection.

Ross Tucker has played for five different teams in his NFL career and is currently on Injured Reserve with the Washington Redskins. He has joined SI.com as a regular contributor on the NFL beat.