News Cut

News Cut: February 3, 2010 Archive

Respect for the game

Posted at 11:02 AM on February 3, 2010 by Bob Collins (15 Comments)
Filed under: Sports

wrenshall_huddle.jpg



In the gym at Wrenshall (Minn.) High School, the girl's basketball team stretches before practice with a series of chants that end with an elusive wish. "Victory!"

A plaque dedicated to a not-long-ago tournament team watches over them. There will be no state tournament for this year's Wrenshall Wrens. Chances are there won't be a victory, either. The Wrens entered the week 0-17 and ranked 18,558th nationally.

In small towns like Wrenshall -- population 386 with a high school enrollment of under 100-- graduations can rob a team of talent in a hurry. The starters have to play most of the game; players on the junior varsity make up much of the bench, even though they've usually just finished playing their own game.

In December, Wrenshall lost a game to Moose Lake 65-0. The girls have every right to be dispirited. Amazingly, they're not. Not even close. In Wrenshall, you show who you are by showing up.

"Other teams have said, 'Why even show up or try?' You know, we're going to try because we like the sport and we're going to give it our all, because we want to play," says 11th-grader Christine Laveau, who was one of two current players who played on the 2008 Wrenshall state tournament team. Showing up and playing hard, she says, shows respect.

It's something the world didn't give her team when the 65-0 loss made national news. The jokes have died down now. "It's just a game. You're not going to die because you lose 65-nothing," co-captain Maria Burcar says.

NO MORE SHUTOUTS

The team set a goal for itself after the Moose Lake game: It wouldn't be shut out again. When Barnum High School, one of the best teams in the state, played Wrenshall last month, the Bombers scored 118 points on the Wrens, who were quick to find the positive; Wrenshall scored 12.

It takes a grown-up bunch of kids to see the value in a 106-point loss.

"Even though we didn't play our best, we still scored points against them and that made us feel better because we scored points against them. So it's like a positive thing for us," Natalie Peeney says.

"They're learning every day and they're open to learning, which is very important with basketball, and they show up. We haven't had anybody quit, and I really commend them for their commitment this year" says Wrenshall coach Michelle Blanchard, who turned to her big brother for help after the Moose Lake loss. Damian LaFave, along with Sheri Nelson, serve as assistants.

"Before every game, they're pumped up like they're the number-one team in the state and after every game, they're smiling and joking around," LaFave says. "They're wiped out, they're tired, but the other team coaches and players get a perplexed look like, "What are they so happy about? The score was this to this?'"



Talk to each Wrenshall girl about their memory of this season, and no one mentions losing. Samantha Gan, a 7th grader, scored a basket at the buzzer in a loss to Cromwell while having an asthma attack.

Transfer student Beth Stewart got the playing opportunity she couldn't get at a bigger school. "I like this school better," she says. "I like the smaller numbers because you don't get much opportunity at Denfeld. Coaches look for players from certain families."

Taylor Dagger picked up 8 fouls in an afternoon's work, playing first for the JV, and then for the varsity in consecutive games.

Franzi Schwarz is playing organized basketball for the first time in her life. She's an exchange student from Germany.

It's all fun, they say, except for the occasional jokes from classmates.

" It's like when we showed up at school the other (day) and and it was like, "did you guys win?" "No" says Burcar. "And they'd go off and make fun of us and it's like 'You weren't there, you don't know how we played.' It could be a good game and we lost by 30. But we still played well and we're still going to be positive the next day."

SPORTSMANSHIP ON THE COURT

What some of her classmates don't appreciate about the Wrens' positive approach, Laveau says, some of her team's opponents do.

"Some of them personally walk up to you and shake your hand and tell you what you've been doing good at," she says. "Even some of the parents have walked up to me and told me my team has lots of spirit and they've been giving their hearts to it." Opposing coaches have also counseled the kids.

Let's be clear here. Nobody likes losing. But "you're there to have fun," says Laveau. "You're not there to win every game. You're out there to have fun. And learn and get more experience doing things like learning from your coaches and teammates. Learning from other people."

Some schools have tried to take it easy on the Wrenshall girl's. "We had one school that wanted our varsity to play their JV and our JV to play their junior high.... and that wasn't going to happen because we're going to play at the level we're at," Burcar says.

The players credit their coaches for never yelling at them. The coaches credit their players for never quitting. "They're a great group of kids," Blanchard says. "And it's made our losing streak easier because they are a great group of girls. They stay positive and you've seen they work hard. We've had team meetings here and there. In fact, a couple of weeks ago, I just asked the girls, 'How do you feel about us coaches?' It's important to have their perspective, too. I'm not the type of person that just preaches and preaches and preaches."

A CHANCE TO BREAK THE STREAK

Monday night was parents night at the Wrenshall gym. The girls gave their parents flowers during introductions. But then it was time for work.

Wrenshall quickly fell behind the Cromwell Cardinals, 12-0. They trailed 29-6 at halftime.

When Blanchard called a time out, she had one piece of advice ("Calm down") and one observation ("You guys are doing awesome...").

If an attitude was all it took, the stage was set for a stirring Wrenshall second-half comeback. But attitude is not all it takes. Cromwell brought 18 players to Wrenshall. They were older, quicker, and, frankly, better.

Wrenshall lost, 54-20, and fell to 0-and-18 on the season. Though they held Cromwell scoreless over the last six minutes, that's not quite as exhilarating as a win. Neither is the fact that a 34-point loss on Monday night is substantially better than their 64-point loss to the same team last month. But it's progress.

The team is back practicing for an upcoming game against their rivals -- the Carlton Bulldogs. They predict a win.

Someday, it may be Wrenshall's turn to beat a team, 65-0. They already know what they'll tell their vanquished opponents. "Just keep going. Don't give up, just because you had a bad game," they said.

In other words: Be like the women of Wrenshall. (15 Comments)

Five at 8 - 2/3/10: Flying cheap

Posted at 6:57 AM on February 3, 2010 by Bob Collins (6 Comments)
Filed under: Five by 8

1) File this in the "coming soon" file. PBS is going to explore the life of pilots for "regional airlines" and what it means for your safety. The Flying Cheap documentary producer says:

The crash of Continental 3407 outside Buffalo last year, killing all on board, was big news, as any commercial crash is. But like many who were fortunate enough not to be touched personally by the tragedy, what most caught my attention was the news that followed. The co-pilot had been making less than $16,000.

While I knew the airline industry had been struggling through tough times since 9/11, I sure didn't know that some of the folks that fly me around are working second jobs and overnighting on lounge room La-Z-Boys. And I didn't know that regional airlines, once thought of as puddle-jumpers, had grown so fast that they now account for more than half the nation's daily departures. We are on our way to becoming a regional airline nation.

The show will apparently reveal the extent to which the nation's airlines hide the fact that you're not really flying on a "big airline" all the time. If only someone had mentioned something like this before.

Miles O'Brien is the reporter on the documentary. He talked about it this morning on PRI's The Takeaway.

Who's responsible for this problem? It depends on what factors go into how you decide which airline to fly. Would you pay more to fly with pilots who have more experience? How much more?

Coincidentally, the National Transportation Safety Board released the results of its probe into last year's Continental (it was really Colgan Air) crash in Buffalo. As I mentioned last year, it reads eerily similar to the Northwest Airlink (it was really Express Airlines) crash in Hibbing in 1993. Despite the perception that the NTSB is just now realizing there are "two levels of safety" in the nation's airlines, they were aware of it 16 years ago.

Here's the full NTSB report.

Update 9:26 a.m. Here's my weekly conversation with Morning Edition host Cathy Wurzer:

2) A sharp-eyed News Cut reader noticed a name missing from the list of Minnesota Olympians I published yesterday -- Lindsey Vonn, perhaps the most famous (at least by the end of the Olympics) of all of the team members. The local media will follow her because she's one of us, of course. But she's listing Vail, Colorado as her hometown instead. Vail Resorts is one of her sponsors. (By the way, see her very glitzy Web site.)

Who will we follow now? Curlers. Curlers don't have glitzy Web sites. And every four years, MPR does a story about curling. Today, Cathy Wurzer takes a lesson from MPR's Euan Kerr:

3) Is there a digital doomsday coming? What we know about the past we know because of clay tablets, pottery, and well-preserved paper. But most of what we're learning we're storing in a digital form. New Scientist considers how much of our knowledge would survive the end of our civilization and concludes that none of it would.


Let's suppose, however, that something less cataclysmic occurs, that many buildings remain intact and enough people survive to rebuild civilisation after a few decades or centuries. Suppose, for instance, that the global financial system collapses, or a new virus kills most of the world's population, or a solar storm destroys the power grid in North AmericaMovie Camera. Or suppose there is a slow decline as soaring energy costs and worsening environmental disasters take their toll. The increasing complexity and interdependency of society is making civilisation ever more vulnerable to such events

4) Psst. Hey, buddy. Want to see some pictures of Brett Favre's ankle and and leg after the game against the Saints?

5) Lies, damned lies, and statistics. There's a faint buzz emanating from the Hot Stove now that PECOTA projections have been released, showing the Minnesota Twins will win the AL Central Division with 83 wins, three games ahead of the Chicago White Sox. Well, good for all the guys with a baseball glove on one hand and a slide rule in the other. Now let's take a look at how they did last year. Winning the Central Division, the projections said, would be the Cleveland Indians with 90 wins. Cleveland ended up losing 97 games and finished dead last.

TODAY'S QUESTION

On Tuesday the legendary groundhog saw his shadow, which is supposed to predict that winter will last six more weeks. But in Minnesota, it's a safe bet that winter will be interminable. Why do you choose to live in Minnesota?

WHAT WE'RE DOING

Midmorning (9-11 a.m.) - First hour: As scientists explore the human genome and medicines tailored to particular genes, a provocative question emerges about whether there is a genetic marker that could explain why some treatments work better for different racial groups. And some say the narrow focus on race misses the point of social disparities and what we now know about genetics.

Second hour: Acclaimed author Tracy Kidder on Paul Farmer, a doctor credited with improving the health of thousands of people in Haiti and around the world.

Midday (11 a.m. - 1 p.m.) - First hour: Gov. Tim Pawlenty in studio to answer questions from Gary Eichten and MPR listeners around the state.

Second hour: MPR political analysts Todd Rapp and Maureen Shaver will sift through the tea leaves from Tuesday's precinct caucus results.

Talk of the Nation (1-3 p.m.) - First hour: Political trivia quiz with Ken Rudin.

Second hour: A new biography of Mark Twain reveals its subject within a narrow window of time - the last five years his life. The great writer knew he had little time, and found his relationship with God, and with his only living daughter, strained. Author Michael Shelden
discusses his book, "Mark Twain: Man In White."

All Things Considered (3-6:30 p.m.) - My radio piece on the Wrenshall High School girls basketball team airs this evening. The blog piece will be posted here at 11 a.m.

In the spirit of the new frugality, MPR's Euan Kerr introduces us to artists creating pieces out of frozen water, preparing for a weekend event in a St. Paul Park.

From NPR: During World War II, when Britain stood alone against the Nazis, Londoners
loved U.S. Ambassador Gil Winant. He would go out on the streets of London during the raid while bombs were falling, and he would ask people he encountered what he could do to help. Winant is largely forgotten, but he's one of the subjects of a new book.

(6 Comments)

One giant clinical trial

Posted at 10:25 AM on February 3, 2010 by Bob Collins (2 Comments)
Filed under: Health

"We have gone away from the community we are; the fact that we really do love each other and want to care for each other," Jamie Heywood says in a TED video that's just been posted.

He describes an alternative to the health care discussion we've heard for the last year: What if we shared more about our illnesses, and converted all of that into useful data?

His inspiration for the idea was his brother's spiral from ALS. The result, he says, would put medical care in the hands of people.

Here's his Web site.

(2 Comments)

Fresh Eye on the Radio: Communicating with the near-dead

Posted at 4:47 PM on February 3, 2010 by Bob Collins (5 Comments)
Filed under: Mary and Bob, Science

Researchers at the University of Cambridge and in Belgium have developed a new brain scanning method that allows them to communicate with people in a vegetative state. The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, shows that scans can detect signs of awareness in patients thought to be closed off from the world.

It tops today's discussion with The Current's Mary Lucia. But, of course, it never stops there.

You can also subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or by going here.

(5 Comments)
February 2010
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