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  • Super Bowl XLII's "Dirty Dozen"

    Editors | Jan 31, 2008 12:40 PM

     Blogger and NEWSWEEK Contributor Robert Cox continues to file from the Super Bowl:

    At the airport, preparing for the long plane ride out to Phoenix (with a layover in frigid Chicago) I loaded up on the local New York papers as well as sports magazines to get up to speed on the media’s narratives for Super Bowl week. Media Day was Tuesday where the main story appeared to be a reporter in a wedding dress proposing to Tom Brady, Eli Manning and even a few second-stringers. Surprisingly, the Giants were not even the lead story in the New York tabloids--The New York Post and New York Daily News both featured the Mets blockbuster trade for Twins ace Johan Santana. Talk about a tough media town.  You can it even make the front page when you go the Super Bowl.

    After reading all the New York papers and national magazines on the plane, then reading and watching the local coverage in Arizona, eight primary narratives emerged:

    • Can the Patriots go 19-0?
    • Is Tom Brady’s ankle OK?
    • Tom Brady as all-around stud
    • Are the Giants talking too much about winning the game?
    • The coming of age of Eli Manning
    • The enigma that is Bill Belichick
    • Tom Coughlin’s transformation from Taciturn Terror to Teddy Bear
    • The Giants road win streak of 10-0   
    There are three non-sports narratives:

    • The Cost – tickets, hotel rooms, rental cars, events
    • TV Ratings – expectations are for a ratings bonanza for Fox
    • Parties – the celebrities are arriving and the paparazzi are out in full-force

    By my count these 11 themes made up about 90% of the stories.
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  • Starr Gazing: New England’s 60-Minute Men

    Mark Starr | Jan 31, 2008 12:38 PM

    When the New England Patriots last lost a game, in last year's AFC Championship at Indianapolis, the team blew a huge first-half lead to the eventual Super Bowl champion Colts. The Pats wasted little time in the off-season seeking remedies, adding Pro Bowl linebacker Adalius Thomas to chase Colts receivers across the middle of the field and a totally new receiving corps, led by Randy Moss, that finally gave Tom Brady targets to rival those of Colts QB Peyton Manning.

    But the Pats were aware that payback would require more than just adjustments in the lineup. Recalling how the team couldn't finish off Indy (and how the players were sucking wind in the fourth quarter in the steamy RCA Dome), coach and team talked a lot about being prepared to play a full 60-minute game.

    In the first half of this season, when the Patriots were routing opponents in unprecedented fashion, writers kept chiding Bill Belichick for keeping his starters on the field too long and for running up the score. It was more fun to attribute his motives to a desire for revenge in the wake of "Videogate" than to accept that his approach might be consistent with a renewed emphasis on conditioning and focus for the complete 60-minute game. That approach appears to have paid off in the second half of the season, when the Pats came from behind four times in the final quarter—including from being 10 points down in the RCA Dome against the Colts—to salvage victories.

    Those who are looking for the *** in the Pats' armor point to how tough their last three contests have been—the New York Giants in the final game of the regular season and first Jacksonville and then San Diego in the playoffs. There are parallels between all three games, the most striking of which is that in each a relatively inexperienced quarterback—Eli Manning, David Garrard and Philip Rivers—was able to move the ball effectively through the air.

    But they were mostly successful early in those games, throwing against defenses that were primarily geared toward shutting down the run and that featured a soft zone in the secondary. Take a look what happened late, when the Pats were in control and those quarterbacks had to throw against a more aggressive pass defense. Manning was 15-21 and three touchdowns for 216 yards, or more than 10 yards a pass attempt through three quarters. In the fourth quarter, Eli was 8-12 for just 46 yards, or less than five yards per attempt, with a fumble and an interception.

    It was the same story in the playoffs. Garrard was absolutely brilliant through three quarters, 14-18 (a 78 percent completion rate) for 191 yards. But in the fourth quarter he was just 8-15 and couldn't get the ball into the end zone. Same for Rivers a week later. With three minutes to go in the third quarter he was 16-24 for 181 yards. But the Chargers' quarterback was just three for 10 after that, including three straight incomplete passes from the Patriots' 36-yard-line in what turned out to be San Diego's last gasp. The Patriots then punctuated the 60-minute message by steamrolling the ball down the field for the final 9:13 of the game, until Tom Brady's last knee to the ground.

     

    Read the rest of the column here 

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The Peek
 
 
PROJECT GREEN
NWK Caption: At the Excel High School in Oakland, California a group of students, their teacher and members of community groups pose with air pollution monitors in front of a mural at the school.  July 26, 2008.       Left to Right:   Randy Colosky, a member of Global Community Monitor  wearing brown shirt ,Juan Hernandez, student (seated) ,   Ina Bendich, teacher Danyale Willingham,student in blue top).Elizabeth de Rham far right, member of the Rose Foundation.

Young pollution sleuths and community activists fight for healthier air.

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