Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Nov 2nd! American Gangster opens


"American Gangster" watched Washington on set daily

By Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Almost every day that Oscar winning actor Denzel Washington filmed scenes for his latest movie, "American Gangster," he was closely watched on the set by an old man in a wheelchair -- the drug lord he was portraying.
Both Washington and former Harlem heroin kingpin Frank Lucas emerged from the experience saying how impressed they were with each other.
Washington acknowledged that Lucas, now in his 70s, was a criminal who was responsible for many deaths. But he told a group of reporters recently he believed the drug lord would have been successful regardless of what career he chose.
"Had he gotten a formal education, had he gone in another direction, had he had different influences, I think he still would have been a leader or a very successful man," he said.
"I don't want to just say he's a product of his environment but I guess to a degree we all are," said Washington, who won a best actor Academy Award in 2002 for "Training Day" and best supporting actor Oscar for "Glory" in 1990.
Lucas, who was paid for his story, approved of Washington's performance, telling "New York" magazine in a recent interview, "He did a hell of a job. Nobody in the world's as good as Denzel."
The film, opening in theaters on Friday, follows Lucas' rise and fall. His empire undercut the price and quality of heroin sold by the mafia and when he was caught, Lucas turned informant.
Russell Crowe, who plays police officer Richie Roberts in the film, agreed with Washington that Lucas was smart. "He used the things that he learned to the best of his ability to change his life and change the lives of his family at that time."
Asked by Entertainment Weekly, what it was like to have Lucas on the set, Crowe said: "It's incredible when you've actually got the source, still alive, still erudite, still willing to discuss things with you."
The film grew from a "New York" magazine article in 2000 by journalist Mark Jacobson. Lucas said he turned to crime after seeing the Ku Klux Klan kill his young cousin in North Carolina.
Lucas told the magazine at the time he had no choice. "Kind of sonofabitch I saw myself being, money I wanted to make, I'd have to be on Wall Street," he said. "On Wall Street, from the giddy-up. But I couldn't have even gotten a job being a ... janitor on Wall Street."
His empire fell apart after a police raid in 1975. He was convicted in 1976 and sentenced to 70 years in prison. The following year, according to The New York Times, he began giving evidence that helped convict more than 100 people on drug charges.
As a result, in 1981 his prison term was reduced to time served plus lifetime parole. But in 1984, he was convicted on a new drug charge and spent another seven years in prison.
Director Ridley Scott said that after deciding to make the movie, which was filmed in Thailand and about 180 locations around New York City, he spent more than five hours talking with Lucas. When Scott was asked by reporters if Lucas had regrets about his career path, Scott said, "Never."
"As far as he's concerned that was (the drug addicts') fault, that was their problem," Scott said.
"Frank barely smoked, he didn't drink and never, ever even considered taking the drug."

Sup Big Papi?


HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

My costume is located in here somewhere... guess what it is?

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

I. CAN'T. TAKE. IT.

I have a general rule when it comes to guys. I have a serious case of jungle fever, so if you're black you've automatically got 10 points on the card. But, I do have my white boy exceptions... case in point: David Beckham. He is so hot it makes me mad. I can't take it. He removes my breath. Here he is on the cover on Arena Magazine.

He's so manly... like a Bull!




Guess who this is? Easy to figure out if I say so myself.

Papelbon's so animated


White boy's got ups.

Bromance!

Hehehe

This pic was taken by Reuters... someone played a prank on Dice-K during Game 4. He had no idea bubble gum was on his head.

Belichick- I hope you are preparing for this!!!

I often scan www.profootballtalk.com to see any updates and rumors going around the NFL, especially anything to do with my Pats. I came across this and I'm praying to God that Belichick got wind of this (I'm sure he has but you can never be too sure) and that the offensive line is going to do everything in their power to protect Brady. And that Brady is keeping an eye out for late hits. I hate the Colts. The Pats defensive line should be doing the same thing right back at Peyton.

POSTED 3:55 p.m. EDT, October 29, 2007
WILBON SUGGESTS TAKING OUT BRADY
I mentioned earlier in the day the possibility that "[s]ome crazy-ass defensive lineman" might decide late in the latest Patriots blowout win that he doesn't like the fact that quarterback Tom Brady is still on the field, and that said "crazy-ass defensive lineman" might opt to go Vince Wilfork on Brady's knee.
Though some readers have assumed that this means I'm actually encouraging some crazy-ass defensive lineman to take out Brady's knees, let's be clear on this. I'm merely recognizing the obvious. It would be reckless and irresponsible to argue that a player should actually target Tom's patellar tendon.
Of course, not every writer apparently feels this way.
Mike Wilbon of the Washington Post (whom we like) has openly advocated taking out Tom's kneecaps during a Monday chat session.
The question was as follows: "I can understand Bill Belichick's desire to crush every team in the NFL, but why keep your franchise QB in there to do it? One cheap shot helmet to the knee and it's goodbye Super Bowl unless [Matt] Cassell suddenly gets good."
Says Wilbon in response: "You're absolutely right. And if I was on the opposing team, I'd hit Tom Brady with everything I had as late as I could and take the penalty and join the fight that would surely follow. Football is a violent game and there's got to be somebody out there sharpening his fan[g]s for the Patriots Golden Boy in the 4th quarter one of these weeks."
We expect to hear more and more about taking out Brady as the weeks go by -- and we think that the team with the most to gain via his absence needs to be monitored closely for low hits this weekend, especially since Colts defensive line coach John Teerlinck has a reputation in league circles for teaching his pupils to aim for the ACL.

Ohhhhhhh man

I'm getting all tingly in anticipation for Sunday!!!
Defenses bracing for test
Patriots-Colts showdown to be a numbers game

By Christopher L. Gasper, Globe Staff October 30, 2007
FOXBOROUGH - Gentlemen, start your offenses.
That revving sound you hear is Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his Indianapolis Colts counterpart Peyton Manning tuning up their respective high-octane units for the showdown in the RCA Dome Sunday. Only this time, Brady (2,431 yards, 30 touchdown passes and two interceptions, 74.2 percent completion percentage) might have more horsepower than Manning, whose NFL record for touchdown passes, 49 set in 2004, he is threatening to dust.
The Patriots (8-0) have scored at least 34 points in all eight of their games this season - a feat matched only by the 2000 St. Louis Rams - and are averaging 41.4 points per game. They lead the league in yards per game (439.5), passing yards per game (303.8), touchdowns (43), and first downs (213).
The 7-0 Colts are averaging "only" 32 points per game, third-best in the NFL. They're third in the league in yards per game (399), are amassing 258.7 yards through the air (sixth-best), and are second in first downs per game (23.7) to the Patriots.
Last one with the ball wins.
"If I'm the Colts, the last thing I want is Brady with the ball with 1:20 left, and if I'm the Patriots the last thing I want is No. 18, who has such great control of that offense and stays out of bad plays, with the ball at the end," said ESPN analyst and former NFL quarterback Sean Salisbury. "If you're faint of heart, or scared about offense, or a defense lover, don't go to this game. This game is like Wrigley Field with the wind blowing out."
After losing the last three times to the Colts, including a heartwrenching 38-34 loss in the AFC title game in January, it appears coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots have taken a different tact to attacking Indy, bringing in wide receivers Randy Moss, Wes Welker, and Donte' Stallworth to keep pace.
Moss leads the league in receiving yards (779) and touchdown receptions with 11. Welker is tied for second in the league in receptions, with 56 for 613 yards and six touchdowns. Stallworth is averaging 15.8 yards per reception.
Call it keeping up with the Mannings, instead of the Joneses.
Of course you'll never get New England to admit it copied the Colts.
"I wouldn't say that," said Stallworth. "You don't ever want to base your team around playing one team. They were just trying to make the team better, and I think with all the guys that we've been able to bring in it's just made us a little bit better, and we're just trying to focus on getting better each week."
They'll have to be at their best this week. Manning's numbers might be a little off by his standards - 1,833 yards, 13 TD passes, and three interceptions - but the days of Belichick befuddling him are over.
In their past three meetings, dating to 2005, the Colts have scored 38, 27, and 40 points and punted just six times. During that stretch, they've outscored the Patriots, 105-75, averaged 420.6 yards of total offense to the Patriots' 318.6, and generated 84 first downs to New England's 58.
Manning has thrown for more than 300 yards in each of the three victories, completing 75 of 120 attempts (62.5 percent) for 996 yards, with six touchdowns and three interceptions. Brady has gone 63 of 102 (61.7 percent) for 698 yards with four touchdowns and five interceptions.
"I think you really kind of throw out the Colts [playoff game] last year," said former Miami Dolphins and Dallas Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson, now a Fox NFL analyst. "No. 1, it was at their place; No. 2, New England was coming off a difficult emotional trip to San Diego, and third they were all beat up in the second half and didn't have all their top people on the field. But having done that, you have to identify that they've done some outstanding things offensively, and you know you're going to have to score."
The Colts actually have been doing a lot of damage on the ground with second-year running back Joseph Addai, who has rushed for 592 yards on 123 carries and an NFL-leading seven rushing touchdowns. Addai has teamed with Kenton Keith, a Canadian Football League find, to form the fifth-rated rushing attack in the NFL at 140.3 yards per game.
"Joseph Addai is an outstanding running back, and he's really good in that style with them throwing the ball," said Johnson.
With Marvin Harrison missing two of the past three games because of a strained knee, Pro Bowler Reggie Wayne (44 catches for 668 yards and five TDs) and versatile tight end Dallas Clark (32 receptions for 388 yards and six TDs) have picked up the slack.
Regardless of the target, Manning usually has time to find him. The Indianapolis offensive line, which starts rookie Tony Ugoh at left tackle, has given up just five sacks in 239 dropbacks, the second-fewest in the league behind New Orleans.
So, which team will set the pace on Sunday?
"The Patriots," said Salisbury. "That doesn't mean I don't think the Colts are great, but I think the Patriots are beyond great. They're both great offenses with good offensive lines, good receiving corps, and the quarterbacks are just ridiculous. A healthy Addai might give Indianapolis a little advantage there, but if [Laurence] Maroney is fully healthy, I don't know. So much of offense is momentum and rhythm and with 30 TD passes and two picks that's just ludicrous. If both play their best I'm going with New England."
Christopher L. Gasper can be reached at cgasper@globe.com.

Maroney, I'm glad you're back!


Maroney getting up to speed
RB looks ready to contribute again

By Jennifer Toland, Worcester Telegram & Gazette October 29, 2007
FOXBOROUGH - Laurence Maroney, it seems, is recovered from the groin injury that kept him out of action for three weeks.
Yesterday against Washington, Maroney showed burst, explosiveness, and patience in leading a solid Patriots ground effort. New England's offense and defense ran all over the Redskins in a 52-7 rout at Gillette Stadium.
Maroney carried 14 times for 75 yards, including back-to-back runs of 11 and 13 yards on the Patriots' first possession.
The second-year running back missed games against Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Dallas before making a quiet return last week in Miami. He had just six carries for 31 yards, all in the first half. Four of Maroney's touches were during New England's opening drive. Maroney, making a bit more noise yesterday, carried six times for 36 yards on the Patriots' first drive, a 14-play, 90-yard march that finished with Tom Brady's 3-yard touchdown run.
Six of Maroney's runs went for first downs. The Patriots set a team record with 34 first downs.
"Laurence ran well this week," fullback Heath Evans said. "It was fun to see him out there. He ran hard, he did what was asked of him, and he was extremely productive. I like having 39 [Maroney's uniform number] back in there."
The Patriots rushed for 152 yards, their highest total in four weeks. The Redskins had ranked fifth in the NFL against the run, allowing just 80.7 yards per game.
"The backs did a great job, I thought, of making guys miss," Brady said.
Kevin Faulk (five carries, 32 yards) and Evans (five carries, 24 yards) also contributed. Brady went to Faulk extensively in the passing game as well. Faulk's seven receptions for 57 yards were second only to Wes Welker's nine for 89 yards. With a 7-yard catch in the first quarter, Faulk moved into sixth place on the Patriots' all-time receptions list.
"It was a patient game plan, poise, just to kind of take what they gave us," Evans said. "As an offense, it was fun doing that."
In the third quarter, on the drive that made it 31-0, Maroney took Brady's handoff and went right, broke defensive lineman Anthony Montgomery's tackle, reversed direction, and went for a 9-yard gain and first down. That was his last carry of the game.
Maroney also caught two passes for 37 yards. The first was a beautiful catch-and-run in the second quarter that went for 25 yards and took the Patriots to the Redskins' 5-yard line. Maroney's 3-yard gain on first-and-goal preceded Brady's 2-yard TD pass to Mike Vrabel.
"I thought when Tom hit him on that seam pass, he made a nice run on that," Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. "He cut back to the outside, broke a couple tackles in the running game, reversed his feet one time, which is always a little bit dangerous . . . but Laurence is fast. He showed his strength, breaking out of a couple of tackles, so he made some big plays for us today."
Maroney's still looking for his first touchdown of 2007.
The running back, who moved into the lead role after Corey Dillon departed, had offseason shoulder surgery, and the Patriots played it safe with him in the preseason as he wore a red, noncontact jersey for most of camp.
He had increased production in each of the first three games of 2007. He rushed for 72 yards in the opener against the Jets, 77 against the Chargers, and 103 against the Bills.
He missed the next three games, but New England's running game hardly took a hit. Sammy Morris filled in just fine with a pair of 100-yard efforts. Morris was injured in the Dallas game and has missed the last two weeks.
Maroney, who did not speak to reporters after the game, said last week he did not want to be labeled injury prone. Rib, knee, and shoulder woes dogged Maroney during his rookie season, in which he split carries with Dillon and rushed for 745 yards and six touchdowns. "You want to play," Maroney said, "and you want to contribute."
He did that yesterday.

Vrabel, you are sick nasty.

I LOVE MIKE VRABEL!!!

For Vrabel, both sides now
He earns 3 sacks and receiving TD

By Monique Walker, Globe Staff October 29, 2007
FOXBOROUGH - The list of receivers at Tom Brady's disposal is like a never-ending buffet. But that doesn't mean one more guy can't be added to the plate.
Linebacker Mike Vrabel, in his seventh season in New England, has been known to pop up as an eligible receiver at times. In yesterday's 52-7 win over Washington, he was at it again, catching his second touchdown pass of the season.
Brady completed 29 of 38 passes for 306 yards to eight receivers. Vrabel's touchdown accounted for 2 of those yards, and when the 6-foot-4-inch, 261-pounder steps in on offense he is efficient. His 10 receptions all have been for touchdowns.
Yesterday Vrabel, who also recorded three sacks, entered in the second quarter as an eligible receiver with the Patriots on the Redskins' 2-yard line. Vrabel was left open near the corner of the end zone for the touchdown.
"I think it was a good sell by the offensive line," Brady said. "He just slipped out there and another touchdown catch for him."
Not only does the offensive line help the play, but Brady said Vrabel, who didn't speak to the media immediately after the game, also has ways of setting himself up.
"He's very good at evading defenders and getting off the line of scrimmage," the quarterback said. "He's very quick and he uses his hands well."
Fullback Heath Evans said when Vrabel scores they all appreciate the talk that follows.
"We never hear the end of it," Evans said. "The joking goes on and on between the guys who can potentially catch the ball and Vrabel. We have our fun. He's definitely a guy you love to see have success."
Vrabel's first career touchdown was recorded in 2002 in a 21-14 loss at San Diego. His 1-yard catch from Brady made Vrabel the first Patriots defender to catch a touchdown pass since linebacker John Tanner did it in 1974.
Ever since, Vrabel has been the occasional end zone option.
In Super Bowl XXXVIII, Vrabel scored a 1-yard touchdown that helped the Patriots pull out a 32-29 victory over Carolina in the second of the team's three Super Bowl titles. In Super Bowl XXXIX against the Eagles, Vrabel caught a 2-yard TD pass in the third quarter in New England's 24-21 win.
The opportunities for a linebacker to not only catch a touchdown pass but also collect sacks is so unique that Dec. 26, 2005, Vrabel became the first player to have two touchdowns and a sack in the same game since sacks were officially recorded in 1982.
"He has great hands," receiver Donte' Stallworth said. "He's a big guy and a big target. He's a very valuable asset for us on defense and comes in and scores touchdowns on offense."
Vrabel entered for a second time on offense against the Redskins, but he was covered. Brady ran in on the next play for the 2-yard touchdown that gave the Patriots a 31-0 lead.
Defensively, Vrabel was part of a group that haunted Redskins quarterback Jason Campbell. All three times Vrabel sacked Campbell he forced a fumble.
The third forced fumble turned into the first NFL touchdown of linebacker Rosevelt Colvin's career as he returned it 11 yards in the third quarter to give New England a 38-0 lead.
Vrabel even recovered an onside kick late in the game.
Getting the chance to celebrate a touchdown was one that Colvin said he had been waiting for. "Last time I recovered a fumble like that I broke my hip, so I was just happy to come out of it uninjured," he said.
The Patriots' defense may be getting in on the scoring but it is not allowing teams to keep pace. Five Patriots opponents have been held to 14 or fewer points this season.
The defense appreciates large leads, but it also can add to the score if needed, Colvin said. "Opportunities are presented to players and they're taking advantage of it," he said. "It's creating momentum and it's creating points."
Monique Walker can be reached at mwalker@globe.com

I wish I was home to see the parade...


Painting the town Red Sox
Faithful legions await victory parade today
By Donovan Slack and Peter Schworm, Globe Staff October 30, 2007
The confetti-blowers have been loaded, the route readied, the duck boats decorated.
At noon today, the Boston Red Sox will take to the streets in yet another victory parade, their second in four seasons, to celebrate a World Series sweep of the Colorado Rockies that marks the team not as a fluke, but a perennial powerhouse.
A now familiar caravan of duck boats will carry the Sox through the city on what is expected to be a raucous ride. Giant video screens in Copley Square, on Boston Common, and at City Hall will show the festivities from start to finish. Jonathan Papelbon is expected to reprise his Irish stepdance to the music of the Dropkick Murphys, who will join him on a flatbed truck in the procession.
"He promised the people he would do the dance, and he will do the dance," Mayor Thomas M. Menino said yesterday.
As a bleary-eyed city adjusted to its baseball club's championship habit, it was all Red Sox all the time yesterday. At Logan Airport, world-weary cargo employees openly shrieked upon the players' arrival. Around Fenway Park, hundreds upon hundreds of fans filled souvenir shops and snapped up championship memorabilia. In staid Back Bay, businesses along Boylston Street prepared for the onslaught of the parade.
On Yawkey Way, well more than a thousand fans gathered to catch a glimpse of their returning heroes and the glittering World Series trophy. While they waited for the buses to arrive they chanted "Let's Go Red Sox," sang "Sweet Caroline", and bounced around beach balls as if it were the bleachers. Many fans said that while 2004 erased years of frustration, this championship was every bit as sweet.
"Last time, it was for our parents, this time it's for us and our kids" said Maureen Fredette, 53, of Stoneham, who waited to greet the players at Fenway yesterday.
City officials declined to estimate how many spectators are expected, but if past "rolling rallies" for the Red Sox and New England Patriots are any indication, hundreds of thousand of fans - from suburban families with schoolchildren to downtown office workers - will descend on the city.
The parade, which city officials said will last two hours or longer, will begin at the corner of Kilmarnock and Boylston streets, head down Boylston Street to the Boston Common, then turn onto Tremont Street and continue past City Hall to New Chardon Street - a three-mile route. At the request of players, Menino said, the duck boats will not continue into the Charles River, as they did in 2004.
The parade will continue moving at all times, but will slow to a crawl at Copley Square, the Parkman Bandstand on the Common, and City Hall Plaza, where the Jumbotrons will be. Papelbon is expected to display his fancy footwork at each of those locations, and perhaps some others, if the mood hits him.
The mayor is encouraging fans to take public transportation to the parade. Parking restrictions along the route were scheduled to go into effect at midnight and road closures at 10 a.m. He is not encouraging Boston Public School students or administrators to skip school for the occasion.
"Attending the victory parade is not an acceptable excuse for an absence by any student or staff member," read a statement issued yesterday by Superintendent Carol R. Johnson.
At Fenway yesterday, some parents had taken their children out of school to celebrate the occasion and planned to keep them out a second day for today's parade.
"It's a special occasion," said Carlos Rincon, 45, from East Boston, who was wearing a Manny Ramírez jersey. His children, Stephanie, 13, and Steven, 8, said they never had a doubt that the Red Sox would win.
"Since the beginning of the season I knew they were going to do it," Stephanie said.
Laurel Sparks, 45, of Ashland was called into Boston yesterday for jury duty. She didn't get put on a jury, so she had time to head over to the impromptu rally at Fenway. She said she was happy they swept because she couldn't have stayed up another night. "In 2004, everybody was waiting for the other shoe to drop," Sparks said. "This time, it's just pure happiness."
After exiting the buses at Fenway, most players headed for their cars, while others gave media interviews. Owners John Henry and Tom Werner held the World Series trophy above their heads, before passing it on to slugger David Ortiz. Before the rally started, fans streamed into a Yawkey Way souvenir shop to snap up World Series paraphernalia. Staff said they had seen a nonstop stream of customers since about noon.
Along the parade route yesterday, preparations were underway for today's salute to the team. At Best Cellars Wine Shop on Boylston Street, general manager Jennifer John was busy selecting a handful of sparkling wines and champagnes for a "Celebrate Red Sox Wine Tasting" already advertised outside the store.
"I'm sure we'll make it a big party all day," said John, a third-generation Sox fan who settled on Veuve Clicquot, Saniger Cava, and a few others.
Down the street at Sir Speedy printing, owner Ed Borash said all his employees would wear Red Sox gear today instead of their usual uniforms. He said he doesn't really expect them to get much work done anyway.
"It gets really crazy; people aren't in work mode," Borash said.
While no businesses said they were giving their employees special dispensation to play hooky for the parade, Bank of America's official spokesman Joe Goode said he does expect to "see an increase in lunch meetings outside the office and Red Sox jerseys and hats."
City Sports on Boylston Street received its shipment of Red Sox Champion T-shirts at 6:45 a.m. yesterday. At lunch, the store was packed with fans who wanted to get their hands on the latest gear.
"We were folding, separating, and handing out shirts all at the same time. I think I've folded more than a thousand shirts," said Jeff Marcus, who was standing at the front door behind a table piled high with Red Sox World Champion T-shirts.
Marcus, who said he couldn't stay awake beyond the seventh inning Sunday night, said he is expecting even more people today.
"It will definitely be a lot busier than we are used to," he said. "Chaotic, that's a good word for it."
When the Sox arrived in Boston yesterday after clinching the Series in Denver at 12:05 a.m., a few intrepid fans awaited at the southern edge of Logan Airport. "I wanted to be the first fan to welcome them back," said Al Siciliano, 41, of East Boston, who took the day off from his job washing windows, donned his Sox cap and shirt, and headed to the south gate of Logan where VIPs such as the president often exit onto the tarmac. "If I could say one thing to them, it would be, 'Thank you, and thank you we don't have to wait another 86 years.' "
Jeff Mann, 22, of Newton and a friend found their way to the gate by following State Police troopers on motorcycles. "I just wanted to get up close and show them some support and to tell them, 'Good job-You're awesome,' " Mann said.
The team began rolling out about 3:30 p.m. in several coach buses, lead by a State Police cruiser, with Ramírez riding shot gun and holding up his index finger. When one of the buses passed with David Ortiz smiling broadly in the front, Pena Perez, 23, a secretary who works in the cargo department at Logan began shrieking.
"I'm going to die of happiness," she said.
Tania deLuzuriaga and David Abel of the Globe Staff contributed to this report. Donovan Slack can be reached at dslack@globe.com, Peter Schworm at schworm@globe.com.

Wow Pennington, you are being very understandable about this.



Clemens gets start for Jets against Redskins
Associated Press
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -- Eric Mangini summoned Chad Pennington into his office and broke the news that the New York Jets have a new starting quarterback.
It's Kellen Clemens' turn to see if he can turn around the season.
"Coach made it clear that I'm not the villain here," Pennington said Monday. "And I'm not the only one to blame for the lack of our success or our problems, but he did feel like Kellen deserved a chance."
Mangini's announcement Monday that he's going with Clemens as his starter for Sunday's game against Washington wasn't a huge surprise. It's a move fans and media have been suggesting for weeks as the Jets have struggled to a 1-7 start.
"I made this decision not based on singling out Chad for where we are, but based on the fact that I think Kellen has earned this opportunity," Mangini said. "I want to give him this opportunity. It's in no way an indication that Chad is solely responsible. We all are."
The 31-year-old Pennington, in his eighth season, has failed to move the offense effectively as the Jets have lost five straight and rank 30th in total offense; only Buffalo and San Francisco are worse.
"When your team is struggling, people look for answers and coaches have to look for answers and sometimes the first position that is looked at is the quarterback position," Pennington said. "I understand that."

Clemens, in his second season out of Oregon, replaced an ineffective Pennington late Sunday in the Jets' 13-3 loss to Buffalo. His entrance was cheered by those remaining at Giants Stadium, the same fans who booed Pennington when he failed to move the offense early in the game. Clemens was just 5-of-12 for 67 yards and two interceptions, but one of those came on a desperation toss as time expired.
"It's exciting to have the opportunity and I'm looking forward to the chance to play," Clemens said. "At the same time, there's a losing streak right now that this entire team needs to work hard to turn around."
After waiting until last Wednesday to keep Pennington as the starter, Mangini didn't need the extra time to make his choice this week. Mangini called each quarterback into his office separately and told them of his decision.
"He expressed, I guess, his confidence in me based on my preparation in weeks past and that was it," Clemens said.
Clemens has a much stronger arm than Pennington and is more mobile, perhaps able to add a few more elements to the offense than the veteran could. Although Mangini wouldn't commit to Clemens beyond this weekend, the 2006 second-round pick will be under center Sunday against Washington for his second NFL start.
"We're focused on the Redskins and he's going to be the starter for the Redskins game," Mangini said.
If Clemens holds on to the starting job, it's possible Pennington has taken his last snap with the Jets. He'll be a highly paid backup with a questionable arm after restructuring his contract in March 2006 to help relieve salary cap issues for the team, but he's due big money in the next few seasons. Pennington, whose contract runs through 2010, is due a $4.8 million base salary next season.
"It's not fair to my teammates in that locker room that I discuss my future with this organization or with another team," Pennington said. "They're working extremely hard to just get a win. We just want to get that winning feeling back."
Clemens' first start came in Week 2, when he stepped in for an injured Pennington and nearly led the Jets to a fourth-quarter comeback at Baltimore.
"Getting your first start out of the way I think is pretty big," Clemens said. "So now going into what will be my second start, I feel a lot better, a lot more confident."
The Jets have a bye week after Sunday, and it would seem highly unlikely that Mangini would go back to Pennington in what has now become an opportunity for the team to see what they have for the future.
"We're 1-7, so we're trying to do anything possible to get a win," wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery said. "He let us know that this wasn't the only change, so there will be other changes. It's the one that gets the most attention."
Pennington, one of the Jets' most respected and well-liked players, was having a disappointing season after overcoming consecutive rotator cuff operations and winning the NFL's Comeback Player of the Year award.
"By all medical accounts, I'm not supposed to be talking to you right now," Pennington said. "I shouldn't even be playing this game, so I take great pride in the fact that I've been able to overcome shoulder surgeries and play at a high level."
The second-most accurate passer in NFL history has thrown for 1,317 yards and nine touchdowns in seven games, but has seven interceptions -- including three that sealed losses.
"I'm disappointed and it's a frustrating time for me," Pennington said. "At the same time, it's not about me. It's about our team and our team moving forward and I understand that."
Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

Yea you should apologize, douche.

I hate the Yankees and I hate A-Rod. Thanks for the convenient timing of announcing your opting out of your contract during OUR GAME 4 WORLD SERIES SWEEP! Eff you A-rod.
Oh and i would say the same about his dick head agent, but Scott Boras is an agent- what do you expect. and if i was a professional athlete, i'd want him as my agent. but his doesn't mean i like him, he's still a jerk off. Boras you suck, but by god are you a great agent.

Yankees bid farewell to A-Rod after likely MVP opts out
ESPN.com news services
NEW YORK -- Major League Baseball had this message for Alex Rodriguez and agent Scott Boras: shame on you.
Boras announced during Game 4 of the World Series on Sunday night that A-Rod was opting out of the final three seasons of his contract with the New York Yankees. The timing left baseball officials livid, and Boras apologized Monday evening.
"We were very disappointed that Scott Boras would try to upstage our premier baseball event of the season with his announcement," Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief operating officer, said Monday in an e-mail to The Associated Press.
"There was no reason to make an announcement last night other than to try to put his selfish interests and that of one individual player above the overall good of the game," DuPuy said. "Last night and today belong to the Boston Red Sox, who should be celebrated for their achievement, and to the Colorado Rockies, who made such an unbelievable run to the World Series."

Boras said causing a distraction was an unintended consequence.
"I apologize to the Boston Red Sox and Colorado Rockies and their players, Major League Baseball and its players, and baseball fans everywhere for that interference," he said in a statement. "The teams and players involved deserved to be the focus of the evening and honored with the utmost respect. The unfortunate result was not my intent, but is solely my fault. I could have handled this situation better, and for that I am truly sorry."
Red Sox fans sure took notice fast. After their team won the title for the second time in four seasons, they stood behind the visitors' dugout at Coors Field and chanted: "Don't sign A-Rod!"
"Kind of strange timing," Red Sox president Larry Lucchino said after Boston completed its sweep of Colorado, referring to the Sunday announcement of Rodriguez opting out.
New York, which failed to make the World Series in all of Rodriguez's seasons, maintained Monday that it will not attempt to re-sign A-Rod now that he has opted out.
"No chance," Hank Steinbrenner, a son of owner George Steinbrenner, said Monday at Legends Field. "Not if it's made official."
Sources indicated Monday that Major League Baseball has received Boras' opt-out letter and that the Yankees also have received and reviewed the paperwork.
Rodriguez signed his record $252 million, 10-year contract with Texas before the 2001 season. By cutting the deal short, he will have earned $180 million over seven seasons in signing bonus, salaries and his assignment bonus from when he was traded. In addition, he has earned $3.65 million in award bonuses and is in line to gain as much as $1.8 million more for postseason awards this year.
Terminating the contract saved the Texas Rangers $21.3 million they owed the Yankees over the next three years, payments agreed to at the time of the 2004 trade.
Hank Steinbrenner did not make much of Boras' timing.
"It doesn't matter to me," he said. "But I'm sure there's a lot of people that aren't very happy about it. Other baseball people, the commissioner's office, the Red Sox."
Hank Steinbrenner said the team left messages with Rodriguez, and "we really wanted to meet with him."

"We wanted him to stay a Yankee. We wanted to let him know how much we wanted him," he said. "The bottom line is ... do we really want anybody that really doesn't want to be a Yankee? How the heck can you do that? Compare him with [Derek] Jeter. Jeter, since he was a little kid, all he ever wanted to do was play shortstop for the Yankees. That's what we want."
New York was preparing to offer Rodriguez a four- or five-year extension worth between $25 million and $30 million annually and had hoped to meet with A-Rod to present the offer.
"We expressed our interest in keeping him in pinstripes, and requested the opportunity to convey those feelings to him directly with the Steinbrenner family in an open, face-to-face dialogue," Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said in a statement.
Cashman sounded as if Rodriguez's stay in the Bronx was over.
"Alex was a key part of our success over the last four seasons, and I appreciate having the opportunity to work with him," he said. "I only wish we could have raised a championship trophy together during his time here, which was the ultimate goal we all shared."
NotesAlso among the 57 players who filed for free agency on the first possible day were Yankees P Mariano Rivera, C Jorge Posada and 1B Doug Mientkiewicz; Minnesota OF Torii Hunter; Colorado Ps Jeremy Affeldt and Jorge Julio; Mets C Paul Lo Duca; and San Francisco OF Barry Bonds.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

The Office

Gossip, e-mailing "all" among top office peeves
Mon Oct 29, 5:05 PM ET
Work colleagues who spend their day gossiping, organizing their home lives, or who press "reply all" on e-mails are among the biggest nuisances in the office, according to a survey released on Monday.
A poll on the biggest pet peeves in the workplace by market researcher Harris Interactive found 60 percent of 2,429 U.S. respondents listed gossip as the biggest annoyance.
The online survey, conducted for staffing firm Randstad USA, found the second biggest peeve at 54 percent was poor time management which included people making personal phones calls at work or surfing the Internet during work time.
Messiness in communal spaces, such as unwashed dishes in the kitchen sinks, irked 45 percent of respondent while potent smells like perfume, food, or smoke, came in fourth in the list with 42 percent.
Rounding out the list of seven office peeves came loud noises such as speaker phones, loud talking and loud phone ring tones at 41 percent, overuse of electronic personal communications devices in meetings at 28 percent and misuse of e-mail at 22 percent.
Eric Buntin, managing director of marketing and operations for Randstad, said the survey indicated people had not changed their behavior as office layouts changed, becoming more open, so people heard colleagues talking and knew more about their home lives.
"If you were sitting in your office with the door closed no one would be able to hear you unless you were very loud but if you open the door then people hear everything, blurring the lines between personal and work lives," Buntin told Reuters.
"People are not taking into account that the workplace is very open now and they need to think about that interaction with their colleagues."
He said the misuse of e-mail was among the top peeves, with people particularly irritated when people e-mailed to "reply all" on an e-mail unnecessarily, or used blind carbon copying (bcc).
"And people who think e-mail is private? No e-mail is private. Everyone knows if they are bcc-ing an e-mail it is like standing up and shouting fire in the middle of a building," he said.
But when it came to taking action against the offending colleagues, people were not so willing to act.
About 42 percent said they would say something directly to a person being too loud but only 34 percent would raise their concerns about gossiping and only 25 percent address a person directly about misuse of e-mail.

Monday, October 29, 2007

AH-HEM! Amen!

Mmmmmm JT... can I help you with your zipper?

SOX WON! SOX WON! WORLD SERIES BABY!!!

Click on the link to read about how the Sox swept the Rockies!

Um, I thought the Redskins were good this season?



Running it up: Belichick, Pats take no prisoners

By John ClaytonESPN.com(Archive)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Patriots' zeal for stealing opposing defensive coaches' signals in the season opener against the Jets cost the team a first-round choice and $250,000. It also made coach Bill Belichick's bank account lighter by $500,000.
Now, the only hand signals worth mentioning might be the possibility of obscene gestures coming from the coaches and players he beats.
On Sunday, Belichick kicked a Hall of Fame coach while he was down, running up the score on Joe Gibbs' Redskins in a 52-7 win. This comes a week after Belichick reinserted quarterback Tom Brady midway through the fourth quarter of a 49-28 win over the Dolphins.
What seemed cute three weeks when Kyle Eckel scored late on a 1-yard run during the Pats' 48-27 win in Dallas has turned ugly.
Welcome to Belichick's no-mercy policy.
Although criticism and questions about Belichick's moves will further paint him as the bad guy in his showdown against Tony Dungy and the Colts next Sunday, the Pats coach simply doesn't care. He wore the black hoodie in the Week 1 spy incident and accepted his punishment. Now, he's making the league pay with blowouts.
That's why, on Sunday, he …
• … kept Brady on the field for an 88-yard drive six minutes into the fourth quarter despite already leading 38-0. On that 14-play drive, the Patriots went for a fourth-and-1 at the Redskins' 7 and ordered a 35-yard bomb to Randy Moss.
• … went for a fourth-and-2 at the Redskins' 37 on the next possession while leading 45-0. Backup QB Matt Cassel hit Jabar Gaffney with a 21-yard pass. Two plays later, Cassel scrambled for a 15-yard touchdown run to open up a 52-0 lead.
Asked why he would go for two fourth downs in a blowout, Belichick responded, "What do you want us to do, kick a field goal?"
Pressed further, he said, "It's 38-0. It's fourth down. We're just out there playing."
Still, there's no doubt what he's really doing. Redskins veterans Phillip Daniels and Marcus Washington, who have 18 years combined NFL experience, both said they had never seen a team run up the score the way the Patriots are doing.
Face it, folks, Belichick plans to lay waste to the NFL. Commissioner Roger Goodell took away a first-rounder, so the Patriots will take away your firstborn. Belichick has assembled perhaps the most dominating team in NFL history, and he's intent on destroying all opponents in his path.
Will the Colts be next? Although Indianapolis is also undefeated, has beaten Patriots in their past three meetings and is the defending Super Bowl champ, New England is the early 4½-point favorite.
Sunday's game shows how Belichick plans to handle the rest of the season. Anyone thinking he will rest Brady in the final month before the playoffs is wrong. He will allow his future Hall of Fame quarterback to shatter every record imaginable.
Against the Redskins, Brady threw for three more touchdowns, bringing his eight-game total to 30 and increasing his team's scoring average to 41.3. Oh, and Brady also ran for two touchdowns.

Yes, Belichick did rest a few defensive starters in the final six minutes, but he blitzed and did everything to keep the Redskins out of the end zone. Veteran players who weren't on the field encouraged those on the field to maintain the shutout. Belichick was clearly disappointed when the Redskins scored with three minutes left.
As for Gibbs, he didn't have a problem with Belichick's tactics, The two coaches shook hands after the game, although they certainly didn't make a lot of small talk.
"No, I have no problem with anything that they did," Gibbs said. "Nothing, no problems from me."
But Redskins players such as Daniels did have a problem, saying flat out that Belichick was running up the score.
Of course, the Redskins didn't have the ability to stop it. Their defense entered the game short-handed and left beheaded. Fred Smoot, the team's third cornerback, couldn't play because of a hamstring injury. Linebacker Marcus Washington was limited to passing plays because of a sore hamstring. On the Patriots' first touchdown drive, starting cornerback Carlos Rogers suffered an injury that could range from a sprained MCL (out for a few days) to a torn ACL (lost for the season). Linebacker Rocky McIntosh also was injured.
Consequently, the Redskins lost their opportunity to match up with the Pats' top four receivers. Gibbs had just three true corners left on the active roster -- Shawn Springs, Leigh Torrence and David Macklin. Brady completed 29 of 38 for 306 yards and three touchdowns.
To make matters worse, Gibbs and the coaches lost their communication system during the game. They couldn't work the headsets.
"There were issues," Gibbs said. "It's a problem across the league. I don't want to use that as an excuse for what happened to us today. We'll just continue to let the league know what happened to us today, and we'll just have to see how they deal with it."
Belichick was aware of the problem but, naturally, didn't care. He was communicating his own way -- sending a message to the 31 other teams that the Pats will take no prisoners.
It's an attitude that's going over big in the Patriots' locker room.
"It's just something the coaching staff wants to do," wide receiver Donte' Stallworth said. "We're behind them for whatever they want to do. Whatever play they call, we are going to run it.
"We've been attacked since the start of the season, so we don't care. Whatever is going on out there, we just go out and play and try to execute what we are doing."
That's exactly what the Patriots are doing. They are executing everyone. Next stop is Indianapolis.
Hide the kids.
John Clayton, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame writers' wing, is a senior writer for ESPN.com.

Friday, October 26, 2007

SportsGal!

SPORTS GAL'S RANT
Last week, I was getting coffee with my friend Robyn and the barista was kind enough to point out maybe I shouldn't drink coffee because I'm pregnant. I thanked him for his concern and told him that I start my day with coffee and finish it with a glass of red. Then I told him to consider wiping down his counters since the risk of me getting a virus from them would be far worse for my unborn child than a cup of Joe in the morning. He shut right up. As you can tell, I have a short fuse after nine months of carrying a living being; biting my tongue just isn't in the cards anymore. So I wanted to send out some apologies for my behavior over the past few days. Sorry to the guy who thought it was OK to stand in my potential parking spot so his family could get the prime spot in front of Pinkberry -- I wasn't really going to run you over. Sorry to the lady who thought it would be cool to talk on her cell while swerving into my lane, cutting me off and then driving 10 mph under the speed limit while I tailgated her and slammed my horn. Sorry to the guy who cuts our lawn -- I'm still not sure why you thought it was OK to move our Halloween props and ruin them, but I'm sorry just the same and you're not really fired. Sorry to the guy in front of me at Ralph's who had 20 items in the 10 item express lane. Sorry to the lady who thought it would be a "good idea" to balance her checkbook at the Citibank ATM. And sorry to the guy in the Astroburger drive-thru line who changed his order six times. Sorry to the woman at the Doctor's office who coughed 20 times without covering her mouth, then asked to borrow my magazine -- you don't know why I'm sorry, but I am. Sorry to Bill for erasing the NBA games from 20 years ago that hogged our valuable Tivo space, then pretending it was an accident. Sorry to the female driver who accused me of not planning to pick up my dog poop when I was already holding the poop bag in my hand and figuring out how to bend over when I'm pregnant, and sorry for threatening to throw the poop at her car when that's probably against the law. Sorry to my daughter for everything you've witnessed lately. And sorry for everyone who has to read this lame rant. Just don't complain to Bill about it if you know what's best for you.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

The Hills is... Fake?! OMG I had no idea!

Gavin, the guy Lauren went on a date on to get Brody jealous, spills the beans on the "reality" of the Hills. Click here to read his interview with Best Week Ever:
http://www.bestweekever.tv/2007/10/25/reality-victims-unit-meet-gavin-my-friend-who-went-on-a-date-with-lc-from-the-hills/
This is the photo of when Gavin did a photo shoot with Lauren back in the day.

Work it Mariah!!!

I L-O-V-E Mariah Carey (and so does Roommate). Here she is at Macy's Herald Square promoting her new fragrance, M. I havent smelled it yet so I can't give an opinion on the scent, although I can give an opinion on how she looks and that is FA-BU-LOUS!!!
I want that Herve Leger dress that so many celebs are rockin these days. It looks like I wouldn't be able to breathe- but I'd look damn good!

Another angle

This is the back side of Halle's dress from the premiere in the previous post below. I liked the dress when i saw the front, mainly bc her boobies are so envious, but now I really LOVE this dress! hot back!

Halle's Berries

I'd like to put in an order for these, thanks.

Posh and Becks

I finished reading this biography the other day by Andrew Morton about Posh and Becks. It was very interesting and gossiply wonderful. I highly suggest it to anyone who is intrigued and/or annoyed by one of Britain's famous couples.

I cannot stand Gym Grunters



Experts Sound Off on Workout Grunting
By E.J. MundellHealthDay ReporterWed Oct 24, 7:00 PM ET
WEDNESDAY, Oct. 24 (HealthDay News) -- Jane Ross, a 42-year-old Boston area gym buff, is honest about it: When exercising, she sometimes grunts.
"I think it's part of going to a gym -- I grunt during a workout, and I think that most people do," said the mom and former personal trainer. "When you are exerting yourself, it's a release."
But not everyone is so accepting of those loud fitness club exhalations.
Late last year, Albert Argibay, a Wappinger Falls, N.Y., bodybuilder and state correction officer, was escorted by police out of the Planet Fitness gym he was a member of, after another member complained to management of his loud grunting during weightlifting.
Planet Fitness, a national chain, has a solid "no-grunting" policy in place and Argibay's noisemaking -- along with a resulting verbal tussle with management -- cost him his membership, The New York Times reported.
The story spawned headlines and much debate, with the grunt-prone lined up on one side and annoyed non-grunters on the other. The former say grunting boosts their workouts, while the latter claim it's just so much hot air.
Each side has its advocates.
Dennis O'Connell is a certified strength and conditioning specialist and professor and chairman of physical therapy at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas. He has led two studies assessing grunting's ability to maximize exercise output.
During the research, O'Connell had a variety of people lift a heavy dead weight and pull that weight upward until they straightened their bodies into an upright position. Participants were told to either grunt or stay quiet during the lift.
"Very experienced lifters that normally grunted when they lifted did have about a 1 percent improvement with grunting," O'Connell said.
That pattern was repeated with the other lifters who grunted, he added. "A group of college football players -- they, of course, also lifted weights fairly regularly -- showed a 2 percent improvement. And the untrained group -- graduate students in physical therapy -- had about a 5 percent increase," he said.
When these improvements were spread across the total group, they did not reach statistical significance, O'Connell noted, so there's no firm conclusion that grunting will always boost a gym-goer's performance.
"But, for some people, there was actually a small percentage increase when they grunted, in terms of the force produced," O'Connell said. For that reason, "I wouldn't be trying to tell people not to grunt," he said.
Just how these loud vocalizations might improve force output remains unclear. O'Connell said studies done elsewhere have suggested one theory -- that grunting quiets inhibitory nerves cells in the spinal cord. Those cells would normally impede the ability of muscles to contract and generate force, he said.
But other experts aren't sure any of that holds water.
"As far as anything going on physiologically [with grunting], I'm not aware of any data or studies that have revealed that," said Larry Birnbaum, an exercise physiologist based in Duluth, Minn.
"The only thing I can think of is that it's a psychological thing," he said. "But psychology is very important in sports in general -- if you think you can, it raises the possibility that you can."
Belisa Vranich, a sports psychologist for Gold's Gym Fitness in New York City, believes that for the average workout fan, grunting is probably unnecessary.
"Some people grunt to give others the impression that [the grunters] are doing a lot of work. It's just like flexing and strutting, trying to attract attention," she told the Orange County Register. "The other reason is a more physical one -- they're not breathing properly. In order to grunt, they have to hold their breath and exhale forcefully."
O'Connell said there might be a means of ending fitness-club feuds linked to grunting.
"I think that [gym goers] might look at deep breathing in and out without necessarily the vocalization," he said. Instead of that loud burst of sound, "they may try and practice giving a little less 'auditory stimulation' for the rest of us," O'Connell advised.
But Ross believes people should lighten up and accept the occasional grunt as part of the gym experience.
"I'm kind of in my own world when I'm at the gym, and I think most people are like that," she said. "So, between songs or if your iPod breaks, you're sometimes aware that people are grunting. And that's just the deal."
More information
Find out how you can maintain a good exercise regimen at the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

I wanna be like New-New

Lauren London is simply gorgeous.

NYC MTA: YOU NEED TO UPGRADE!!!

My adventure in the MTA this morning as told to roommate through an irate email:

The tracks ran out of power this morning. It just stopped service. I was on the A, went to hoyt schermerhorn where it promptly stopped; transferred to the G across the tracks; transferred to the F (bc that’s a line that goes to my final destination); ended up going on the wrong direction on the F; had to go to the other side to go into manhattan and not coney island; took the F to Jay street where I saw the A running; transferred to the A across the tracks; got off at W4th and transferred to the B/D to get here. The last step I always do but it just seemed more exasperating today than usual. I got in at 9. luckily I was able to call marissa when I was on the wrong direction on the F (it went above ground) to tell her that I was coming in albeit slowly bc of the trains. The mta seriously needs to do something about the A line. It’s completely Effed.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

*SIGH*

The day after the Pats won, Brady stayed in Miami with Gisele... damn it. so hot. I wanna see their sex tape!!!

One goes up, the other goes down

Curb this past Sunday was hilarious. In real life, Larry David just got divorced from his wife, Laurie David (the environmentalist) and he incorporated it into the show. Cheryl Hines, who plays his tv wife, Cheryl David, leaves Larry and all their friends have to pick sides. Let's just say, it's sad that he got divorced but it'll make for great television.
Also, let me just say that this season's Grey's Anatomy is wearing thin. I believe the show has lost its magic. I'm sticking it out to see if it gets better, but I'm getting more annoyed than wanting to watch the next episode quite honestly.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Moss is freakin NASTY

If anyone saw yesterday's Pats game vs. the Dolphins, the Dolphins became tuna in a can. Moss is INSANE!!! Two of his TD catches were unbelievable. The throws (by Brady of course) right into the pocket of Moss and Moss's ability to catch them were things of pure beauty. Just mind blowing.

Moss seems to get it
Plan wasn't fancy, but he makes it work

By Mike Reiss, Globe Staff October 22, 2007
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. - After watching fellow receiver Randy Moss haul in two long, high-arcing touchdown passes while being smothered by defensive backs, the words rolled off the tongue of Donte' Stallworth.
"Like a dog going up to catch a Frisbee," he said.
Well said, as Moss and the Patriots played the part of the angry pit bull in yesterday's 49-28 win over the overmatched Dolphins, pouncing early and never relenting.
Sure, there is strategy and Xs and Os to dissect from yesterday's dismantling, such as the offense going away from the two-tight end formations that have traditionally been the norm to counter Miami's pressure, and instead favoring more of a spread attack.
But forget the inner workings of how the Patriots dismantled the Dolphins, because as cornerback Ellis Hobbs said: "You can draw up the schemes, draw up the coverages, you can put the guys in the right position, but at the end of the day it comes down to who's going to make the play?"
Yesterday, it was Moss, and in a big way.
His 35- and 50-yard touchdown catches in the second quarter were remarkable plays, in part because they looked like they were drawn up at the bus stop. It was nothing fancy, nothing that came from a page deep in the Patriots' playbook to set him free.
Instead, it was about Moss running down the field and quarterback Tom Brady lobbing up offerings that, in his own words, simply gave Moss a chance to make a play in the end zone.
On the first, Moss had safety Cameron Worrell draped over him, with some late defensive help arriving after he made the catch. On the second, it was Worrell and Renaldo Hill attached to both hips.
Each time, Moss positioned his body to shield the defenders, then treated the football like the Frisbee to which Stallworth referred. On the second catch - which came on a third-and-18 play - Moss made it with one hand, securing it close to his body.
Great plays by Moss? Bad plays by the defense?
Some will see it both ways, but there is no question which side the quarterback is on.
"I can't take credit for Randy's touchdown catches," Brady said. "That's all Randy Moss."
Moss finished with four catches for 122 yards and the two touchdowns, and also made a dazzling one-handed catch that didn't count, on a fake-spike play in the second quarter in which he was out of bounds.
Moss declined comment after the game but his teammates had no problem speaking on his behalf.
"It's just one of those things where you're just shaking your head saying, 'You've got to be kidding me.' It just doesn't even look fair," tight end Kyle Brady said. "It kind of reminds me of what Brett Favre does when he just throws the ball up there and lets his guys go get it. Randy is so tall and rangy, with such long limbs, and he just has tremendous ability to track the ball in the air and make great judgments when to go get it."
Receiver Jabar Gaffney said he played with another top talent with the Texans, Andre Johnson, "but Moss is different, a whole lot different. Those were two amazing catches."
Fellow receiver Kelley Washington saw Moss morph into something else when he went up to snare the long balls.
"He's a football player but once the ball is in the air, he turns into a basketball player, using his height and his long arms," Washington said. "It's just tough for defensive backs, because he's 6-4 and with long arms. He's a perfect combination when you're talking about down the field and making plays like that. We see that all the time in practice, but it's unbelievable to do that out here on this stage, with two people on him."
Dolphins cornerback Will Allen said Moss, "lets defenders jump, and then he can kind of shoulder us up to the ball. He doesn't really go up and really attack the ball. He's just good at judging the ball and shouldering people off, kind of like rebounding."
The style of throw to Moss - the long, high-arcing delivery into coverage - is a new addition to the Patriots' repertoire. Remember, as the quarterback, Brady often talks about how the Patriots' passing game is designed to throw to the open man. So why make throws to Moss when he's clearly covered?
The answer was on full display yesterday: Because Moss, who has 44 catches for 732 yards and 10 touchdowns on the season, still can make them.
"I just put it up there and he jumps up and makes the catch," Brady said. "He's such a mismatch out there. He has a size advantage, a speed advantage on most every defensive back he plays. So you have to give him a chance."
But even on third and 18 - a down and distance in which there are few plays to call upon - did Brady really think it would work?
"I just put it up there and he has as good a chance as anybody," Brady said. "He just jumps up there and it's pretty fun."
Stallworth, once again, put it best.
"Moss is nuts, man. He's a freak," he said. "They don't call him the Super Freak for nothing."
Mike Reiss can be reached at mreiss@globe.com.

7-0!!!


PATRIOTS 49, DOLPHINS 28
Not fish stories

Brady throws for 6 TDs; Patriots 7-0 for 1st time
By Christopher L. Gasper, Globe Staff October 22, 2007
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. - There was a fan in the end zone at Dolphin Stadium yesterday wearing a No. 72 Dolphins jersey with Undefeated where the player's name would be. Maybe the Patriots Pro Shop should start loading up on 07 Patriots jerseys with Unstoppable on the back.
Playing the unworthy successors of that 1972 team, the only one in NFL history to record an unbeaten and untied season (17-0, including playoffs), and with its coach, Hall of Famer Don Shula, in attendance, the Patriots continued their march toward perfection with a 49-28 evisceration of the winless Dolphins.
So, can the Patriots go undefeated like those '72 Dolphins?
"I don't know, nor do I care, really," said Miami defensive end Jason Taylor. "I know the '72 team will talk about it at some point, but it is still early. It is tough to go undefeated in this league, as evidenced between the period of time between now and when it was last achieved.
"They're good enough to play in the Super Bowl, I know that, and win it. They're a heck of a lot better than they were last year and heck, they should have been there. They kind of gave it away in Indy."
There was a better chance of snow squalls in South Florida than the Dolphins (0-7) handing the Patriots (7-0) their first loss. New England, which had been shut out (21-0) the last time it played in Dolphin Stadium, in December, scored a franchise-record 42 points in the first half on its way to a 42-7 advantage.
Tom Brady, who has had his struggles against Miami, turned Dolphin Stadium into his personal playground, throwing for a franchise-record six touchdowns - five in the first half - and completing 21 of 25 passes for 354 yards.
By the time Brady, who now has thrown 27 touchdown passes this season, three more than last season, threw his first incomplete pass when he bounced a ball into the ground to avoid a sack with 5:23 left in the first half, the Patriots were ahead, 35-7.
No. 12 completed his first 11 passes for 220 yards and four touchdowns. The 220 yards were 2 more than he threw for against Miami in two contests last season.
"I thought our team played well, offensively, especially," said Patriots coach Bill Belichick. "I thought our team moved the ball and scored a lot of points, something that we haven't done very much of down here, so it was good to feel that and experience it."
Brady was 16 of 19 for 291 yards in the first half, as the Patriots rolled up 336 of their 443 yards of total offense.
Wes Welker finished with nine catches for 138 yards and two touchdowns in his return to Miami. Randy Moss had four catches for 122 yards and two more touchdowns, giving him 10 on the season. Moss is the first Patriots' receiver since Stanley Morgan in 1986 to have 10 or more touchdown receptions in a season. Both Moss and Welker had 100-yard receiving games by halftime, and Donte' Stallworth kicked off the scoring with a 30-yard catch-and-run on the Patriots' first drive.
"Man, your eyes are just as good as mine. They are amazing," running back Laurence Maroney said of the Patriots offense. "I'll be on the sidelines sometimes and I feel like a fan just seeing our offense go out there and do the things they do."
If this were the video game version of football, Miami simply would have hit the reset button after Moss's pair of jaw-dropping touchdown receptions. Moss gave the Patriots a 35-7 lead.
The first, with 10:44 left in the second quarter, had Moss posterizing Dolphins safety Cameron Worrell, who was in perfect position to knock down Brady's 35-yard parabola.
Instead, it was another Moss Moment.
For an encore, Moss hauled in a 50-yard heave from Brady with 6:47 left in half. This time Worrell had some company, as Moss fended off Worrell and fellow safety Renaldo Hill. Adding injury to insult, Hill hurt his knee on the play and never returned.
Here's a scary thought for defensive backs: Patriots cornerback Ellis Hobbs said we haven't even seen the best of Moss.
"You all are seeing good catches, but he's making the best ones in practice," said Hobbs. "Those are the best ones. You're missing [them]. He does his thing and it's not a secret."
After Welker's first touchdown, which came 25 seconds before halftime, most of the Patriots could have headed to a South Beach soiree for the rest of the game and it wouldn't have mattered.
After backup Matt Cassel briefly replaced Brady in the fourth quarter and threw an interception that Taylor returned for a touchdown, Brady returned on the next possession and threw his sixth TD pass of the day, much to the delight of the remainder of the pro-Patriots crowd of 71,951, which was chanting, "Let's go Red Sox!" during the second half.
"We got our [tails] kicked in the first half and the second half, and if they turned the scoreboard off we were still getting our [tails] kicked," said Taylor.
Miami showed why it is winless following its only first-half score, a 4-yard run by Cleo Lemon. The Dolphins' Jay Feely tried to kick away from Hobbs and pin the Patriots to the left sideline. Willie Andrews fielded the short kickoff and took it back 77 yards for his first NFL touchdown.
Even 35 years older, the '72 Dolphins may have been better competition.
Obviously, the '07 Dolphins aren't the measuring stick for the Patriots. They're not chasing the '72 Dolphins either. They're pursuing perfection. Hobbs said the only message the Patriots were trying to send was to themselves.
"Let's not play down to their level. Let's play at our level, the Patriot way," said Hobbs. "We're not just trying to win. We're trying to win in good Patriot fashion, and that's what we're trying to do all the time."
Christopher L. Gasper can be reached at cgasper@globe.com.

Red Sox! Red Sox! Red Sox!


Red Sox roar into World Series
By Dan Shaughnessy, Globe Staff October 22, 2007
The game was played on the 32d anniversary of Carlton Fisk's World Series walkoff homer and though the score indicated little drama, the final play was no less spectacular.
At 11:56 last night, Casey Blake hit a towering shot toward the 420 (foot) sign in the deepest part of center field at Fenway Park. The ball descended from the October sky and settled into the outstretched mitt of a galloping Coco Crisp, who crashed into the bullpen fence and dropped to the ground holding the American League pennant in his hand.
Completing a comeback from a 3-1 series deficit, the Red Sox won their 12th pennant last night with an 11-2 thrashing of the Cleveland Indians. Japanese rookie Daisuke Matsuzaka picked up the victory with five innings of solid pitching and fellow rookie Dustin Pedroia (home run, double) knocked in five runs as the Sox blew it open with eight runs in the seventh and eighth innings. Dating to the historic sweep of the Yankees in 2004, it marked the sixth win by the Red Sox in their last last seven elimination games.
"It's the biggest event of my life," said Pedroia.
"This team is appealing for a lot of reasons and that's a good sign for Red Sox Nation," said Sox CEO Larry Lucchino. "Home-field advantage has never meant as much as it does to me right now."
And so the Sox are in the World Series for the second time in four years, which hasn't happened since James Michael Curley and George Herman Ruth prowled the narrow streets of Boston.
The Series starts Wednesday night at Fenway with ALCS MVP Josh Beckett pitching for the Sox against the Colorado Rockies, who have won 10 straight games and 21 of their last 22.
Clearly, these Red Sox fear no team and no situation. Faced with three consecutive must-win games, Boston outscored Cleveland by an aggregate, 30-5.
This must have been what it felt like in the early days of Fenway when the Royal Rooters ruled and the Red Sox were regular hosts of baseball's autumnal showcase. From 1915 through 1918, the Sox won three World Series. They did not win again until 2004, the beginning of a magical October run that has resumed over the last four days.
On the heels of back-to-back wins in which the Sox outscored the Tribe, 19-3, fans came to Fenway expecting to see another champagne celebration on the Fenway lawn. Former Sox slugger Kevin Millar, a fabled member of the '04 champs, was flown in to toss the ceremonial first pitch, but fans were more concerned with the throwing skills of Matsuzaka, the $103 man who failed in his first two postseason appearances.
While Matsuzaka threw his final warm-up pitches just after 8 o'clock, the Dropkick Murphys performed "I'm Shipping Up To Boston" from a temporary stage on the dirt adjacent to the Sox bullpen. The crowd roared when a team of Irish step dancers emerged from the center-field door and hopped up on stage. It was a pretty safe bet Dice-K never saw such a demonstration before any games he pitched against the Nippon Ham Fighters.
Showing none of the nervousness that marked his first two October starts, Matsuzaka mowed down the Tribe in the first inning on 13 pitches. It was 9:30 Monday morning in Japan.
Good fortune walked with the Sox against Jake Westbrook in the first when a would-be double-play one-hopper bounced crazily off the infield dirt and clanged off the glove of shortstop Jhonny Peralta to give Manny Ramírez an RBI single.
The Sox made it 2-0 in the second when Jason Varitek led off with Wall double, took third on a single by Jacoby Ellsbury, then scored on a double play grounder by Julio Lugo - one of three twin killings that hurt Boston in the first four innings.
The locals added another run in the third when scalding Kevin Youkilis led with a double down the left-field line, took third on a ground out by Ortiz, and scored on Mike Lowell's sacrifice fly. The way Dice-K was throwing, a 3-0 lead looked pretty safe.
Doubles by Travis "Meet the Flintstones" Hafner and Ryan Garko pushed a run across for the Indians in the fourth, then the Tribe cut Boston's lead to 3-2 in the fifth. Kenny Lofton led with a single off the Wall but was erased going for second on a perfect throw from Ramírez. Franklin Gutierrez and Casey Blake followed with singles, then Grady Sizemore scored Gutierrez with a sacrifice fly to center. Matsuzaka fanned Asdrubal Cabrera on a changeup to get out of the jam, his final pitch of the night.
Dice-K's countryman, Hideki Okajima, came on to start the sixth and got the side in order.
There was a moment of infamy for Cleveland's third base coach, Joel Skinner, in the seventh. Lofton was on second with one out after Lugo dropped a popup in shallow left that would have been a can of corn for Ramírez. Gutierrez followed with a shot over the third-base bag that bounded off the wall in foul territory and shot back into left. Ramírez had no shot at getting Lofton at home, but Skinner held the speedster at third. Naturally, Blake followed with a double-play grounder and Cleveland fans had new reason to believe in the Curse of Rocky Colavito.
Pedroia, the smallest man on the field, crushed a two-run homer into the Monster seats off reliever Rafael Betancourt in the seventh, then cleared the bases with a two-out double in the eighth to erase all doubt.
Jonathan Papelbon got the final six outs for the Red Sox before performing Riverdance 2 near the mound during a lengthy postgame celebration.
Like Crisp's catch, Papelbon's dance put an exclamation point on the comeback and sends the Sox into the Series with as much momentum as the team that's won 10 in a row.