Boston Breakers score with fans

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The halfway point of the Boston Breakers inaugural Women’s Professional Soccer season came Wednesday night in front of 3,128 fans at Harvard Stadium.

Boston, one of the better teams in the league on paper, started strong and remained in second place until two weeks ago. The Breakers now sit tied for fourth place with two other teams with a 3-4-3 record heading into tonight’s (Saturday’s) game at Chicago.

Wednesday night, the Breakers got a late goal from Jenny Nobis, her first of the season, to come back and earn a tie with FC Gold Pride. England’s Kelly Smith, Boston’s leading scorer, launched a well-placed corner kick to the far corner of the box in the 76th minute and Nobis leaped up over a pack of defenders to knock the ball into the net. Heading into Wednesday game, Nobis had played in only two of Boston’s first nine matches.

“One of the things I like to do is head balls, and I know if I’m in the box, give it to my head, not my feet,” Nobis said. “I saw it in the air, and one thing to do is get a body on it and hope that someone gets on the end of it.”

Boston played perhaps its most sluggish and sloppy first half of the season Wednesday. The team conceded a goal in the 15th minute after failing to clear a ball sent along the top of the 18 from Gold Pride’s Tiffeny Milbrett. Canadian international Christine Sinclair jumped on a deflection from Boston’s Candace Chapman and one-timed a rocket past Boston keeper Alli Lipsher, in her first start of the season.

Read more...

Ed McMahon: A salute to the king of sidekicks

Although he did other things in his 86 years, Ed McMahon, who died Tuesday in Los Angeles, will be remembered mostly as the man who sat next to Johnny Carson, except when more important celebrities came between them.

Notwithstanding the dozen years of hosting "Star Search," a role in the 1997 Tom Arnold sitcom "The Tom Show," a high-profile Cash4Gold ad during the last Super Bowl and all that knocking on people's doors in the name of the Publishers Clearing House, McMahon was a professional sidekick, a less-than-equal partner in an enterprise of which he was nevertheless a vital part: Thinking of Johnny, one proceeds quickly and naturally to Ed, who by dint of association was almost as famous as his boss -- I say "almost" to include that fraction of the world that may have seen or heard of Carson but never watched his show.

It's easy to underestimate his accomplishment -- or even to wonder whether it should be called an accomplishment at all. We live in a nation of aspiring quarterbacks, pitchers, lead singers and presidents, where we are told to dream big and have it all. (The vice presidency of the United States is regarded as a rarefied form of failure.) But in a world where everyone is innately a star, what does it mean to settle for life as a mere moon?

And yet, just as the moon plays upon the Earth, animating its tides and its werewolves, the sidekick is not without power of his (or her) own. His very presence is the proof that his presence is required. He may come as a straight man, a stooge, a teacher, an apprentice, a servant or pal, but he completes the star-hero in some way to their mutual advantage -- as a counterweight, an anchor, a witness, a frame for the picture, a setting for the stone. Like Jiminy Cricket, a conscience. Who is Prince Hal without Falstaff, Don Quixote sans Sancho Panza? Little John and Robin Hood, Horatio and Hamlet, Friday and Crusoe, Watson and Holmes, Tinkerbell and Peter Pan, Ethel and Lucy, Barney and Fred, Barney and Andy, Ed and Ralph, Rhoda and Mary, Willow and Buffy, and all those traveling companions to Doctor Who -- unequal, perhaps, yet inextricable.

We may reflexively regard him as slower, dumber, less handsome than the hero he shadows, but in practice the sidekick may be the smarter, funnier, faster, better-looking or more practical one. Less bound by convention or expectation, flexible rather than stiff-necked, he is free in ways forbidden the hero. His life is simpler, his soul less troubled. Ed Norton may be a dimwit, but he isn't tormented, like Ralph Kramden, by desperation and desire. Spock is cooler than Kirk. It seems like the better job.

Not every talk show host has employed a sidekick in the McMahon mold. Merv Griffin had Arthur Treacher, a very tall British character actor who earlier specialized in butlers, appropriately, and, after McMahon, the best of the breed. Regis Philbin played second banana to Rat Packer Joey Bishop on his short-lived 1960s late-night show. But Dick Cavett was a solo act; Mike Douglas relied on changing celebrity co-hosts; and Jay Leno had no one on his couch. Still, it seems a sign of respect to McMahon (and to the institution he served) that when Conan O'Brien took the reins of "The Tonight Show," he had a partner in place, original "Late Night" sidekick Andy Richter.

Ed and Johnny were "as close as two non-married people can be," as McMahon wrote in his book, "Here's Johnny: Memories of Johnny Carson, 'The Tonight Show' and 46 Years of Friendship." McMahon, who was only two years older than Carson, began working as his announcer in in 1957, on the game show "Who Do You Trust?" and accompanied him to "The Tonight Show" in 1962, where they kept on for 30 years..

An uncharitable or undiscerning critic might say McMahon had an easy job: Laugh at the boss' jokes, read a few cue cards, sell a little dog food, cheerfully absorb whatever cracks are made at his expense, slide further down the couch as the evening's guests arrive. (Phil Hartman's "Saturday Night Live" impression of him -- the over-hearty laugh, the booming "You are correct, sir" -- has replaced the actual McMahon in the minds of a couple of generations of viewers.) But the way McMahon told it, that was the point: "My role was to make him look good while not looking too good myself," he wrote, and "to get Johnny to the punch line while seeming to do nothing at all." Carson, for his part, left the air saying, "This show would have been impossible to do without Ed."

There is a kind of genius in knowing how to live with a genius. Did anyone want to grow up to be Ed McMahon? Maybe not. (Though I would rather be Illya Kuryakin than Napoleon Solo.) But they also serve who only sit and laugh -- and cry "Hey-yo!" once in a while. Of all the things Ed provided Johnny, continuity was perhaps the most meaningful: Guests came and went; wives came and went; the world turned. But where there was Johnny, there was always Ed, the witness, the audience, one of us.

Read more...

Tehran protesters die for democratic ideals our senators in Albany

Think of our do-nothing state Senators up in Albany, trivializing democracy. Then watch the video of Neda Agha-Soltan dying on a street in Tehran. See the life drain out of her. Listen to the anguished cries of the music instructor who was standing next to her. Consider that the person who shot the video was risking his life. Ponder the risk faced by each and every person sending pro-democracy messages out of Iran. Remember other brave believers at other times and places, heroes such as the lone man who stepped before a tank in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Do not forget the many thousands of Americans who sacrificed all in the cause of liberty, in our city going back to the 400 young soldiers who charged into certain death in the long ago Battle of Brooklyn.

Think again of those 62 senators who sit in Albany. Each of those mutts owes his or her position to a system built on courage and sacrifice. Each took a solemn oath to faithfully discharge his or her duties. And there they sit in a disgraceful stalemate. As if they owed nothing to the gallant souls who made this democracy possible. As if liberty were the freedom to finagle and self-deal rather than a sacred right for which people in other lands are even now risking all. They are Republicans and Democrats who betray the republic and democracy. Compare their lame excuses and tired lies in the state Senate to some of the Tweets coming out of Iran Monday: "Clashes...street fires & tear gas - shooting heard - many militia." "Situation in Tehran very tense today - many roadblocks." "If you weren't old enough to appreciate the gravity of Tiananmen, pay close attention." "THIS IS THE DAWN - this is the new beginning - have hope and prepare." "Two young men injured...one dies...GRAPHIC VIDEO."

The video shows a young man who was shot in the upper thigh and another with grievous wounds in the back and head. As some comrades bend over them, others hold up cell phone cameras to keep the whole world watching. More shots erupt, but the comrades do not just flee. They pause to lift the wounded and carry them down a passageway, a camera recording it all. The young man hit in the head leaves a trail of red spatters. "If you want to help but are frightened of the streets - give blood - this is big help." To read these messages is to be taught anew childhood lessons about the universal human need for liberty and the nobility of those who place it before their very lives. The Internet was calling Agha-Sultan "the Fallen Angel of Freedom" and carried an interview with her fiance. "Neda wanted freedom and freedom for all," Kasamin Makan is quoted as saying. He said she favored no particular side in the disputed election and was just a bystander when she fell victim to a bullet. She was buried in Behesht-e-Zahra Cemetery yesterday as spiritual kin to the host of innocents who have died during other struggles for freedom, and to those sure to perish in the time to come.

Meanwhile, those mutts in Albany continued to behave as if such sacrifices meant nothing, as if there were nothing sacred about the votes that put them in office.The one action they have managed to take in recent days has of course been on behalf of themselves, ensuring they get paid. The mutts are due to get their regular paychecks tomorrow, along with a $160 for each day of a special session, a gross misnomer if there ever was one. The law says they have to be paid, but it does not say how. Give them pieces of silver.

Read more...

Bella Vita: what does La Bella Vita mean?

La Bella Vita or La vita è bella refers to “The Beautiful Life”. It is incidentally tattooed on Lindsay Lohan’s body. The Italian phrase “la bella vita” is scripted on Lindsay’s lower backwith a little flourish. This simple, black ink tattoo means “life is beautiful” and Lindsay intended the tattoo to be a dedication to and remembrance of her Italian grandfather.

La vita è bella is also a 1997 Italian language film which tells the story of a Jewish Italian, Guido Orefice, who must employ his fertile imagination to help his son survive their internment in a Nazi concentration camp.

Meanwhile, it has been reported that Lindsay Lohan has got a sixth tattoo on her left wrist “Everyone’s a star and deserves the right to twinkle.”

Read more...

Nine dead in D.C. Metro rail crash

A Metro commuter train smashed into the rear of another at the height of the capital's Monday evening rush hour, killing at least nine people and injuring scores as the front end of the trailing train jackknifed into the air and fell atop the first.

Cars of both trains were ripped open and smashed together in the worst accident in Metrorail's 33-year history. District of Columbia fire spokesman Alan Etter said crews had to cut some people out of what he described as a "mass casualty event." Rescuers propped steel ladders up to the upper train cars to help survivors scramble to safety. Seats from the smashed cars spilled out onto the track.

The District of Columbia Fire Department said rescue workers located three more bodies in the wreckage late Monday night. All three were declared dead at the scene.

Earlier Monday, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty said six were confirmed dead. They included the operator of the trailing train, Jeanice McMillan of Springfield, Va., a Metro official said.

Fire Chief Dennis Rubin said rescue workers treated 76 people at the scene and sent some of them to local hospitals, six with critical injuries.

Washington City Councilman Jim Graham described the wreckage with a single word: "Horror."

The crash around 5 p.m. EDT took place on the system's Red Line, Metro's busiest, which runs below ground for much of its length but is at ground level at the accident site, near the Maryland border.

Metro General Manager John B. Catoe Jr. said the first train was stopped, waiting for another to clear the station ahead, when the second train plowed into it from behind. It was unclear how many people were aboard.

Riders described chaos. In the train that was struck, passengers said the train had stopped three times in the moments before the crash. After the impact, many passengers had to jump from the side of the train to the ground. Other riders helped lift them down safely.

Tom Baker, 47, a District resident, was in the first car of the train that rear-ended the stopped train.

"You could hear all this crashing and glass breaking," Baker told the Washington Post. "I didn't hear any brakes at all." He said he couldn't gauge how fast the train was moving but said it was traveling at moderate speed. He saw the train lift into the air, he said.

"When the dust settled, the entire front of the train was gone" and riders could see down to the train below them.

More than 200 firefighters from D.C., Maryland and Virginia converged on the scene.

Jervis Bryant, a Prince George's County teacher, told the Baltimore Sun that he heard the collision from a house 2 1/2 blocks away and got to the scene within five minutes.

"We saw the folks banging on the windows trying to get out," he said, referring to the second train.

Rescuers pried the door open, he said, and people streamed out. "They just bum-rushed it."

Passenger Jodie Wickett, a nurse, told CNN she was seated on one train, sending text messages on her phone, when she felt the impact. She said she sent a message to someone that it felt as if the train had hit a bump.

"From that point on, it happened so fast. I flew out of the seat and hit my head." Wickett said she stayed at the scene and tried to help. She said, "People are just in very bad shape."

"The people that were hurt, the ones that could speak, were calling back as we called out to them," she said. "Lots of people were upset and crying, but there were no screams."

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating and has assigned a railroad investigator and two specialists from its office of transportation disaster assistance.

Investigators will probably focus on a failure of Metro's computerized signal system, designed to prevent trains from coming close enough to collide, as well as operator error, according to former Metro officials.

The system relies on electronic relays -- each about the size of a hardcover book -- aboard trains and buried beside the tracks along each line. When a train gets too close to another train, the system is designed to automatically stop the approaching train. It should work whether trains are being operated manually or by computer.

But even if the signal system failed to stop the train, the operator should have intervened and applied emergency brakes, safety experts familiar with Metro's operations told the Post.

The position of the second train after the crash -- the fact that its first car came to rest atop the other train -- indicates that the second train was traveling at high speed. In the section of track where the accident occurred, the speed limit is supposed to be 58 mph. Metro officials would not say how fast the trains were going because of the ongoing NTSB investigation.

President Obama sent condolences to the victims.

"Michelle and I were saddened by the terrible accident in northeast Washington, D.C., today," Obama said in a statement. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to the families and friends affected by this tragedy."

Homeland Security Department spokeswoman Amy Kudwa said less than two hours after the crash that federal authorities had no indication of any terrorism connection.

Read more...

Lucas Glover gained focused, friendly style in SC

Lucas Glover always led the way in practice and workouts at Clemson, his former college coach says. So it's no surprise to Larry Penley that his former All-American became the first Tiger to win a major championship with his U.S. Open victory Monday.
"Lucas was pretty much out front in everything, first one to practice, first one to work hard," Penley said through tears after watching Glover's victory.Glover capped a grueling week with a 3-over 73, securing a two-stroke victory at Bethpage Black over Phil Mickelson, David Duval and Ricky Barnes.

Glover is a Greenville native who learned to play from his grandfather, Clemson football Hall of Famer Dick Hendley.The 82-year-old Hendley remembers his grandson having good balance when he put a club in his hand at 3 years old."I thought he had something special that a lot of children don't have," Hendley said by phone from his home Monday.When Glover was 9, Hendley took him to the late golf teacher Dick Harmon — who was instrumental in Lucas' development until his death in 2006. After excelling at Wade Hampton High, Glover signed to play golf at his grand dad's college in 1997.

The Tigers were in the midst of producing several PGA Tour regulars, including Glover's Clemson teammates Charles Warren, Jonathan Byrd and D.J. Trahan.Right away, Penley saw the steely, cap-pulled-low focus on display at Bethpage on Monday.Penley recalled how Byrd and Tiger golfer John Engler were tossing a football on the practice range once while Glover was hitting balls. Each time the ball came a little closer — and Glover grew a bit more irritated.Finally, Glover picked up the football "and threw it, I mean a frozen rope, about 75 yards," Penley said.There were few as dogged and determined when it was time to get down to business, Penley said.Glover won three consecutive South Carolina amateur titles from 1998 to 2000."Never been done before," Hendley said with pride.

He helped the Tigers finish in the top 10 nationally three of his four seasons there. He exhausted his eligibility in 2001 and was still four credits shy of his bachelor's degree. So after gaining his PGA Tour card and in the midst of a breakout season in 2005, Glover chose to finish school.Glover took classes online and came to campus after tournaments or during off weeks to complete his requirements with a biology class. He walked with Clemson graduates that December, two months after his first career victory in the Funai Classic at Disney.In 2007, Glover joined his grandfather in Clemson's hall of fame, the first grandfather-grandson duo enshrined.
Many thought Glover was poised for more victories and bigger things. Instead, Hendley said his grandson put too much pressure on himself and his game. While Glover earned more than $5 million the previous three seasons, he could not break through. When Glover didn't make the Ryder Cup team last summer, he took the rest of 2008 off.

"He was disgusted and discouraged," Hendley said. "I told him, 'Luke, that's the best thing you could do.'"Glover spent time at home with family and reset his mind. Turned out to be just what he needed. Hendley said Glover returned to the game sharper yet less burdened by expectations.Soon after his win on Monday, South Carolina's U.S. Senators, Republicans Lindsey Graham and Jim DeMint, introduced a resolution congratulating Glover for bringing "great pride and honor to his family, friends, his alma mater Clemson University, and the citizens of South Carolina with his victory."Hendley watched his grandson's clinching two-putt on the 72nd hole. He didn't make the trip because the course's layout was too hilly for him, but he called at Glover through the TV.

Read more...

Crooked Houses on Jon and Kate Plus 8

While Crooked Houses probably weren't aware their product would be showcased side-by-side with the downer of the Jon and Kate divorce announcement, those were the cards they were dealt, and while cute whimsical playhouses and the dissolution of a family of 10 aren't simpatico, the company certainly gained a lot of eyeballs on their product.

So what are they?, It's actually a neat idea that takes a structurally sound playhouse and puts a facade on the outside that makes it look ramshackle and as if kids had built it themselves. I'm a big fan of whimsical stuff, and think this would make a great addition to my backyard.
At least, I thought it would, until I saw the price tag.

It seems you have to make Jon and Kate type money if you want a custom design such as the ones that appeared on the show -- a custom Crooked House runs about $5,000. So easy math there -- $5,000 x 4 houses = $20,000 worth of free stuff for the Gosselin kids.

If that's a bit out of your league you can pick up an original Crooked House for a "modest" $1,249. The one pictured which includes dormer and porch will set you back $2,549.

Read more...

Soccer Live

NHL Live

NFL Live

Back to TOP