Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Bannered in Boston, Vol. 17

17
1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976, 1981, 1984, 1986, 2008

Monday, June 16, 2008

Winding Down


6 or 7
With the Celtics' loss to the Lakers in Game 5 last night, the NBA Finals will go 6 or 7 games. I really wanted to the Celts to finish this off, and they had the chance. It's been ...

57
Days since the first round of the NBA playoffs started. Between the Red Sox, Patriots, and Celtics, life has been very good to me as a sports fan this past year, so I don't want to whine, but I will anyway. We're closing in on two months of "must-see" games that begin at 8 or 9 p.m. EST. Every single Finals game has started at 9, even the ones on Sunday. It's left me exhausted half the time, and I'm looking forward to moving on with my life. Maybe spending some time with family and friends, taking up a new hobby, or reading an interesting book ...

... such as Bill Russell's autobiography, Second Wind: The Memoirs of an Opinionated Man. This is one of several books I've read this year, none of which I've reviewed yet. So on the eve of what I hope will be the Celtics' 17th NBA championship, let's pay tribute to the man who played on 11 of those championship teams.

5
Reasons why 'Second Wind' might actually be interesting to a non-basketball fan:

  • Segregation-era Louisiana -- The first chapter is about his family in segregation-era Monroe, Louisiana in the late 1930s and early 40s. It's revolting to read about the way his parents were treated, especially his mother, who was told by the local sheriff that she couldn't wear a dress because it was "white woman's clothing." After this, Russell's father decided that the family was going to move to Oakland, California. Of course, later in life, Russell was no fan of Boston, either. He called it a "flea market of racism" among other things. In recent years, though, Russell seems to have changed his opinion -- he's been to a bunch of Celtics games this year, and went to the Red Sox ring ceremonies for the 2004 and 2007 chamipnships.
  • Co-author Taylor Branch -- As one Amazon reviewer says, this book is a model for anybody who is interested in ghostwriting. Taylor Branch, who wrote the three-part series on America in the Martin Luther King years, pulls off a perfect balancing act. "Second Wind" is Bill Russell's voice all the way. Branch's craft, though, is evident in the flow of this book. It's not completely chronological, and it's far from a laundry list of Russell's championships and athletic feats. The chapters are more conceptually-based.
  • Motivation -- Bill Russell is an extraordinarily driven man, and it's inspiring to read what made him tick when he played. He won two NCAA championships, an Olympic gold medal, and 11 NBA championships. I sought this book out because of Bill Simmons' praise for the Championship chapter -- he said he'd never read anything better about what keeps a multi-time champion motivated to keep winning. What I loved even more was Russell's description on being "in the zone." To play at his highest level, he felt that he needed not only his teammates, but also his opponents to play at their peak level. Russell has high praise for his "rival" Wilt Chamberlain, and takes issue with the prevailing image of Wilt as a choker.
  • Hoops Perspective -- Before this season, it had been 10 years since I'd really followed the NBA. "Second Wind" gave me a new appreciation for the sport at the same time that Kevin Garnett made the Celtics, at long last, watchable again. I love Russell's descriptions of philosophizing with K.C. Jones, his University of San Francisco roommate and later his Celtics teammate. They'd talk about all endless possible patterns that 10 men on the floor can make, or try to concoct innovative defensive strategies at a time when they barely existed. Blocked shots and their aftermath remind me of this book -- I think it could give somebody an appreciation for basketball even if they had none before.
  • Opinionated -- The subtitle is no lie. Russell was pretty controversial in his day, but that makes him infinitely more interesting than many of today's top-tier athletes who speak like human press releases.

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Sunday, June 15, 2008

'Take Him to Detroit'

1701
Year that Detroit, Michigan was founded by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac. Kerrie and I went to Detroit -- actually the northern Detroit 'burbs -- for a wedding this past weekend. Gentle Reader, I'll spare you of any long-winded descriptions of the city, since we never actually set foot anyplace downtown. With an additional day, we'd have at least gone to a Tigers game, but we spent our few hours of downtime in the Birmingham and Royal Oak neighborhoods.

11
Stanley Cups the Detroit Red Wings have won, including the 2007-08 Cup 11 days ago. There were plenty of displays of championship pride that we saw around town, including the stand pictured here, at a gas station near the airport.

40
Years ago, Detroit musician Vincent Damon Furnier took on the stage name Alice Cooper. Kerrie and I are now back in Bourne, where tomorrow, public-school students get to say "School's Out!"

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Friday, June 13, 2008

Kobe Grief

24
Boston Celtics' maximum deficit against the L.A. Lakers in Game 4 of the NBA Finals tonight. The Celts trailed by 20 late in the third quarter before ...

21-3

... the Celts outscored the Lakers 21-3 in the last five minutes of the game, going on to win ...

97-91

... and pulling ahead in the best-of-seven series ...

3-1

... just one win away from NBA championship number ...

17
It's 12:30 a.m. and I just can't sleep. This game was such an adrenaline rush to watch. I cannot believe the comeback the Celtics mounted on the freaking road! I want to ramble on and on right now, but I don't want to jinx anything. I'll sign off with some Grateful Dead lyrics that fit the moment:

West L.A. fadeaway
West L.A. fadeaway

Little red light on the highway

BIG GREEN LIGHT on the speedway, hey, hey, hey

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

True Fiction

"It began to dawn on me that although fiction was undoubtedly fictitious it could also be true or false, not with the truth or falsehood of a news item but as to its disinterestedness, its intention, its integrity."
-- Chinua Achebe

50
Years ago since Chinua Achebe's masterpiece Things Fall Apart was published. I love his above quote, because many great novels give me a feel for a place or historical period better than a historical work can do. I know more about the 19th-century U.S. whaling industry from Moby Dick than any of the non-fiction I've read about the times. Same goes for Magic Mountain and pre-World War I Europe, and Tender is the Night and post-World War I Europe (well, the French Riviera and Switzerland, anyway). I haven't read "Things Fall Apart" since college, but Ruth Franklin's New Yorker essay on him is a good read.

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Monday, June 9, 2008

Brood Awakening

17
Every 17 years, cicadas emerge from the ground, and swarm the region in plague-like numbers. They mate, lay eggs, and die about a month after coming out of the ground, and their larvae will not appear for another 17 years.

15
Different broods of 17-year or 13-year cicadas have been identified around the United States. Each of these broods populate different regions of the country and emerge in different years.

XIV

Brood XIV is swarming Upper Cape Cod right now. Yesterday, I saw several cicada exoskeletons clinging to the house. Today there were more, including a few that were emerging from their shell. Today I heard the first hum of one -- I think they sound like UFOs, or maybe a soft, high-pitched power drill. When you hear one cicada calling alone, you question whether it's really an insect -- when hundreds of them are calling, there's no longer any doubt. One of the best things about Brood XIV is that I don't need Photoshop to treat red-eye on any of the cicada pictures I take.

15
Cicadas needed to make Cicada Granola Chews. Don't forget to break off the legs and wings before cutting them up and putting them in the batter!

4

Four years ago, Cicada Brood X flooded the skies around Washington, D.C., where I lived at the time. So I'm starting to feel like a bit of an expert on cicada infestation. They're giant and terrifying-looking, but they're harmless to humans. Enjoy them while they're around.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Rivalry Resurrected


16
NBA Championships for the Boston Celtics, the most of any NBA franchise.

14
NBA Championships for the Minneapolis/L.A. Lakers, the second-most of any NBA franchise.

1986
Boston's last NBA Championship.

2002
Lakers' last NBA Championship.

8-2
Celtics' record against the Lakers in the 10 years (prior to this one) that they've met in the NBA Finals.

2-1*
Lakers' record against the Celtics in the NBA Finals during the Magic Johnson/Larry Bird years. Boston beat L.A. in 1984; the Lakers beat the Celts in 1985 and 1987. But the Celtics' best team of the Larry Bird Era -- the 1986 squad -- faced the Houston Rockets, not the Lakers, in the Finals. The Lakers were eliminated by Houston in the Western Conference finals that season.

21
Years since the Celtics met the Lakers in the NBA Finals. For the conspiracy theorists who claim the NBA rigged the playoffs to ensure this classic rivalry resumed, all I can say is, "Well done, David Stern." I'm hooked. It's been 10 years since I've watched the NBA Finals. (The 1998 championship was Chicago Bulls/Utah Jazz series, the one that preceded the second of Michael Jordan's three retirements.) And make no mistake, a lot of that is because I couldn't stomach watching during all the terrible Celtics years. But I also think it was a pretty unwatchable brand of basketball in the NBA for a lot of that time, and I like what I've seen a lot better this season.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Manny's Moonshot, No. 500


500
Manny Ramirez of the Boston Red Sox hit career home run No. 500 at Baltimore this past Saturday.

23
Other major-league baseball players have hit 500 or more career home runs.

6
Of those 23 players with 500 or more home runs are still playing -- that's if you count Barry Bonds (762 career HRs) and Sammy Sosa (609); neither is currently playing, but neither has formally retired. The other four are Ken Griffey Jr. (599), Alex Rodriguez (526), Frank Thomas (520) and Jim Thome (517).

36
Manny's age; his birthday was one day before he hit No. 500.

$20,000,000
Manny's salary this season, the eighth of his eight-year contract with the Red Sox. There's a club option for two more seasons.

2
World Series championships for the Red Sox -- 2004 and 2007 -- since they signed Manny as a free agent before the 2001 offseason. He was the MVP of the '04 World Series (.412 BA, .500 OBP, .588 SLG, 1 HR, 4 RBI over 4 games). The Sox signed him after losing out to the New York Yankees in a bidding war for Mike Mussina. At the time, it felt like another smack in the face for the Sox to get one-upped by the Yankees, but in what might be the final season of Manny Being Manny in Boston, this is one massive free-agency contract that I think was worth every penny.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Ascent of the Green Beans

40
Different countries now grow organic coffee. The leading organic coffee producers are Peru, Ethiopia and Mexico. Other countries that produce organic coffee include Rwanda, Haiti and Vietnam.

33
Annual growth percentage of the organic coffee sector between 2000 and 2007, according to Sustainable Markets Intelligence Center in Costa Rica.

$3.99
Cost for a gallon of regular gas at Monument Beach this past weekend. When I worked for a Northern Virginia dot-com in 2000, we'd go on twice-daily Starbucks runs. Out there in Suburbia, this required us to get into a car and drive to a mall a couple of miles down the road. This worked fine when we were all paid handsomely, single, childless, and gas was less than $2 per gallon. It is also the type of practice that people may want to rethink as we stand on the brink of the $4 Gas Gallon Era.

My INeedCoffee article for this month is Ascent of the Green Beans -- 5 Ways Cafes, Chains and Consumers are Going Green.