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    February 20

    2月19日

    好像我的blog渐渐地成为周记本、日记本,这又是一篇。

    今天过得不错。中午和ppmm吃饭,姑娘长得不错,衣服也穿得很时尚。不知怎么的,我碰到她第一句话竟然问她,穿裙子冷么-,-她说他们下面空调都开得热死了。然后我又开始抱怨,我们上面空调像没开一样,上班时候还要穿外套。anyway,应该称赞一下她的美貌,个么就在这里补一下。希望1在上班上得无聊时,可以看到呵呵一笑,就当放松了。audit真的很辛苦,我们这种audit support部门稍微好一点,但工作强度也是很大的。现在在看很多以前没看过的报表,一格一格慢慢对,做得很慢就当学习啦,也还是不太明白。还时不时会跳出来某mailing list的junk mail,这种东西闲下来看看挺好的,忙的时候还真妨碍我弄excel。不过凡事有利有弊,弄这个list的同学还是要表扬的,而且我也看不了多久,马上就要回学校去享受最后的校园时光了。

    晚上因为爸爸过生日的缘故去燕云楼吃烤鸭。烤鸭是不错的,那里的菜量也很大,我们都没吃掉。席间听他老人家按顺序背诵旧时南京路一家一家的店名,背得很是流利。爸爸小时候就住在附近,如今老房子的地方早就变成马路了,那些店一部分也不知道在哪里了。但是看似平凡的历史,回味起来还是很有意思的。吃完饭又去食品商店逛了逛,于是我明天有了凯司令的西点当早饭。回到家还看到了久违的英超比赛,曼联对阿森纳。不过曼联好像高出一个档次,本来势均力敌的比赛变成了屠杀,可怜的阿森纳。。。

    feel free to comment it or not
    February 07

    超级碗星期

     

    “早睡早起”这话一点都不错。上周日睡到中午起来,肚子饿过头了,吃了点饭就胃痛不止。本来想第二天去姚餐厅看超级碗的,结果也只能作罢。晚上接到电话说par要来了,明天去上班,真是哪壶不开提哪壶。早早睡觉,发觉不对了,量了量体温到38.5度,就去看医生。急性胃炎,吊了两瓶盐水,弄到晚上一点半。第二天起来,感觉好一点了,想想还是去上班了,老板interview的时候都没见过。早上瞥了一眼SMG,看到Tom被连着sack,不错不错;看到Eli差点被第二次int,心惊肉跳。

     

    上班无事,开始过年。发现真的没啥过年的气氛,无非是多了点假期,年三十的爆竹和不停的SMS除外。春晚基本上也没看,章子怡穿的是蛮好,可是就连假唱也那么难听。今天陪妈妈去买了个手机,百般劝说无果下,1还是买了一个Nokia 5200。也许是我被商家教育地比较彻底,我一直以为她应该用字大一点的或者6系列的,而那种音乐手机是年轻人用的。听从广告和推销介绍也许不是坏事。比如prism看上去是部别致的手机,然后Nokia花了很多钱给广告公司和电视台,告诉我这是“科技和时尚的完美结合”,“彰显非凡品味”等等。好吧,有人接受了,然后为此买单。一个愿打,一个愿挨,双赢。旁观者如我看看赏心悦目的宣传,也蛮好。

     

    晚上我就看了超级碗的录像。看录像没有看现场那样刺激,但还是看得我有点紧张。NYG打得不错,尤其是防守,但是他们在大多数时间里仍然落后。最后多亏Eli2 min drill1是有这方面才能的,我看过他好几次带领球队comeback,不过他的传球也还是会给人吓丝丝的感觉,啥辰光脑子不清爽就会被int。还好还好。本来我还是有点喜欢pats的,当我第一次cover Superbowl的时候,就是他们3分战胜eagles。不过总是感觉他们这学期太妖了,老头穿一件火红的衣服太惹眼,Tomperfect,给人感觉太假了。Espn的文章也提到,一场失败会让这支球队不朽,我想这是对的。差不多40年后,我们仍然会提到Joe NamathguaranteeSuperbowl III。再过40年我们也会记住EliescapeTyreecatch,差点全胜的pats和体育史上最大的upset之一,我上次转贴的Sports Illustrated专栏也会变成经典,这些就叫做历史。

     

    最后祝身边的人新年里身体健康,很多美好的愿望可以梦想成真。

    February 04

    History repeats - Giants take page out of Pats playbook in winning title

    //From Sports Illustrated

    GLENDALE, Ariz. -- That's the thing about perfection: it's so unforgiving. Just ask the previously unbeaten New England Patriots, who realized Sunday night that 18-1 just doesn't have quite the right ring to it.

    When we all get to fully dissect this one, the greatest upset in Super Bowl history for my money, we'll find that the miracle that was the New York Giants' 2007 season really boiled down to one play made, and one play missed. The Giants made the play and shocked the world. The Patriots failed to break up the play and will forever mourn the one that got away.

    That was the difference between New York or New England winning Super Bowl XLII on Sunday night in the University of Phoenix Stadium. New York receiver David Tyree's mind-boggling 32-yard catch on third-and-5 with 59 seconds remaining -- a pass the heavily pressured Eli Manning had no business even being able to launch -- was the catalyst for the Giants' memorable 17-14 win. And it was the play that brought the Patriots' bid for perfection to an end in the most un-Patriot of ways.

    "There were two or three guys who had him, and he breaks free and throws up a Hail Mary that the guy comes down with,'' said Patriots safety Rodney Harrison, of the Manning-to-Tyree completion, which came four plays before Plaxico Burress' game-winning 13-yard touchdown catch. "I mean, everybody thought [Manning] was going down. But he didn't.

    "I think that play was kind of representative of them getting the breaks today. The kind of breaks we usually get.''

    Harrison had the best possible view of Tyree's circus catch. He was the defender on the play, and try as he might to separate Tyree from the ball at the New England 24-yard line, he couldn't do so. As he was falling backwards to the turf, Tyree clutched the ball one-handed against his metallic blue helmet, with much the same determination that the entire New York team clung to the dream that it could beat the mighty Patriots in this game.

    "I just wasn't letting it go,'' said Tyree, whose 5-yard touchdown reception with 11:05 remaining had jump-started the Giants offense and given New York a 10-7 fourth-quarter lead. "Somehow I knew we were going to get it done. We've been on a roll, and with the surge we've had in the second half of the season, even the crazy way we won in Green Bay ... (in the NFC title game). Those are things that honestly just don't make sense to the human mind.''

    Agreed. Improbable doesn't begin to describe Manning's escape from the clutches of Patriots defensive lineman Jarvis Green and others on the pass to Tyree. It doesn't sum up just how desperate things looked for New York when Tom Brady found Randy Moss for the go-ahead 6-yard touchdown pass with 2:42 remaining, giving the Patriots a 14-10 lead that looked to be right out of their history of making fourth-quarter magic in the Super Bowl.

    For the second time in five weeks, it looked like the Giants would have to settle for close, but not quite against the vaunted Patriots. Then Manning and Tyree saved the day on third-and-5, and forced us all to remember that there are no certainties in the NFL. Even at 18-0.

    "They were 18-0 and riding high,'' Tyree said. "They were feeling good. But we didn't treat them like an undefeated team. We didn't treat them like some Greek myth. There was no Godzilla out there.''

    But the Patriots this season were the NFL's version of Godzilla until Sunday night. They had destroyed everything and everyone in their path, building an aura of invincibility in the process. The Giants were really the first team all season that refused to back down to the Patriots, and believed just as firmly in their own special place in history.

    "We all respect the Patriots, but it was our time,'' Giants defensive end Michael Strahan said. "We wanted to start our own dynasty. Forget that parade in Boston. We're having one in New York City.''

    Maybe the most surprising thing about Sunday's outcome was that despite the Pats' 18-game win streak, the Giants, with their modest three-game winning streak in the playoffs heading into the Super Bowl, played like they were the hotter team. To quote the NFL's rather lame Super Bowl XLII catch-phrase, they wanted it more. They out-hit the Patriots, they out-hustled them, they out-played them at every key moment of the game.

    "I think their intensity from the beginning snap to the end of the game was really higher than ours,'' said Moss, with his usual blunt honesty. "We just couldn't meet that intensity. They had the intensity for four quarters.''

    One more win and these Patriots would have forced their way into the debate about the greatest NFL team of all time. The discussion may not have ended with them, but New England seemed poised and determined to make us mention them first before including the likes of all those superb Steelers, Packers and 49ers teams -- in addition to those still-unique 1972 Dolphins.

    But on this night, it was not to be for a New England team that had not lost in more than a year. The bid for perfection is over, and now these Patriots will be remembered first and foremost for not being able to close the deal that history had offered them. Those three three-point wins in the Super Bowl are still ever so sweet, but the Patriots' three-point loss to the underdog Giants made the kind of history that New England had never even remotely fathomed.

    "The Giants certainly deserve it,'' said Brady, unaccustomed to the role of gracious loser. "They made more plays than us. We just didn't get it done. Fourteen points, that's our lowest total of the year. That got us beat. It isn't something that any of us prepared for. We're usually on the better side of those three-point wins.''

    This time it was the Giants, not the Patriots, who were being hailed for their resiliency, for finding a new way to win every week. In some ways, this New York team is a mirror image of the 2001 Patriots, that plucky first New England Super Bowl championship club that went 11-5 in the regular season and then upset the heavily favored Rams on the strength of a great game plan and more will to win.

    "Every team is beatable, you never know,'' Giants head coach Tom Coughlin said. "The right moment, the right time, every team is beatable.''

    Coughlin's Giants proved it to us all once again. History comes in a lot of different packages, and it doesn't always follow the script. Sunday night wasn't the culmination of perfection we had spent all season anticipating. But it was a perfect ending, nonetheless. We just didn't see it unfolding until it was already upon us.