Sunday, April 7, 2013

Final Four Coaches: Rick Pitino, Jim Boeheim Bring Strategy, Pedigree To NCAA Tournament

One of the classic adages in sports is that players win games and coaches lose them. The Final Four features two of the all-time great coaches in Louisville's Rick Pitino, and Syracuse's Jim Boeheim (920 wins), who becomes the first coach ever to reach a Final Four in four different decades.

A look at how each team embodies the strength and style of its head coach:

Syracuse, Jim Boeheim

2-3 Matchup Zone

No surprises here, but Boeheim, 68, continues to employ the matchup zone no matter the circumstance. In the tournament, the 'Cuse has allowed just 61 total made field goals. Perhaps more impressively, it has amassed a combined 69 steals and blocked shots. The beauty of this particular zone is its length and activity. Rakeem Christmas, Baye Keita and C.J. Fair are very active and the big guard duo of All-American Michael Carter-Williams and Brandon Triche loves to pressure from 22 feet. Per ESPN.com, the Orange is allowing 0.72 points per possession during the tournament and ranks first in America in total block rate.

Michigan, John Beilein

The System

We can talk about Big Blue's dynamic offense or trapping 1-2-2 zone, but with coach John Beilein, it's about getting kids to fit his system. What is that system? It's getting his son Patrick, a lightly recruited swingman who walked on to West Virginia, to score more than 1,000 points for his career. It's getting Trey Burke, a 3-star recruit, to be named the AP and Wooden Player of the Year. And it's getting Tim Hardaway, Jr. to become a future first-round pick despite hailing from Miami and not being recruited by the then-struggling Hurricanes or Florida programs. Beilein, who is at 60 coaching in his first Final Four, just has a way of gaining players' trust and getting them to buy in. He's 0-9 for his career against Boeheim and Syracuse, but Saturday night could be a night to toss those numbers out.

Louisville, Rick Pitino

Play Fast, Play Aggressive, Never Stop!

The Cardinals are the tournament's top overall seed, yet are probably the third most talented team in the Final Four, behind Syracuse and Michigan. Pitino though, trying to reach the national title game for the second straight season, has once again coached his team to its absolute peak. Take the Duke game in the Elite Eight. Duke's Seth Curry had been lights out, so when he faced Louisville, Pitino not only wanted to shut him down, but he wanted him to struggle just to get a clean look. Curry -- the Blue Devils' leading scorer -- didn't even attempt a shot until midway through the first half. The Cardinals, per KenPom, have the second best defensive efficiency in the country, and it's because Pitino has them conditioned to run, trap and be relentless for 40 minutes, no matter what else happens.

Wichita State, Gregg Marshall

Man-to-Man Defense

I've talked at length about the Shockers' overall toughness, but coach Gregg Marshall demands nothing less. According to Synergy Sports, his club has played a total of 2,221 defensive possessions in man and a mere 158 in zone. For most teams that don't have great length or a lottery pick-type shot blocker in the middle -- a la the Shockers -- being a man team is just not an option. Credit Marshall though, because that's his philosophy and it has worked very well. Per ESPN.com, Wichita State allows just 43 percent shooting inside the 3-point line.

Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related at @Schultz_Report.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/06/final-four-coaches-ncaa_n_3018130.html

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Comedy on Mexico income gap a big screen hit

MEXICO CITY (AP) ? A construction magnate's preppy son is forced to drive one of Mexico City's battered green buses, while his spoiled sister waits tables at a cantina in a miniskirt and non-designer shoes. Their credit cards have been canceled, their BMWs and mansion seized.

OMG!

The Mexican riches-to-rags movie, "We are the Nobles" has opened to packed theaters in a country with one of the world's widest income gaps ? and a love for laughing at misfortune. More than 1 million people showed up in the first week to see the story of an impresario who fakes a government raid on his riches to teach his children the value of work.

Only a Hollywood blockbuster featuring Bruce Willis and DreamWorks' latest 3D animation beat it at the box office last weekend, the second-biggest opening for a domestic film here in more than 10 years.

"Latin America is a region where middle class is very small," said writer and director Gary "Gaz"Alazraki. "So I thought if you want to capture the mood of the public with cinema, that's the first place to look, the contrast between rich and poor."

In the movie, patriarch German Noble's eldest son spends his days at daddy's company dreaming up big ideas, such as mixing the world's largest rum and Coke in Mexico City's storied Aztec Stadium. His daughter is engaged to a failed businessman and aspires to open a restaurant on her father's dime. The youngest is a hipster who preaches against capitalism, even as dad pays his private college tuition ? until he is expelled for sleeping with a professor.

After surviving a heart attack and getting a second chance at life, Noble decides to stage a raid on his Beverly Hills-like home.

"Can someone please explain why they are confiscating all our stuff, as if we were in Venezuela?" the agitated daughter, Barbie, demands to know in the Mexican equivalent of Valley speak.

"They discovered fraud," German Noble tells her.

"Jesus Christ," she answers in English.

People like the fictitious Nobles appear on any ritzy corner of the city, where Mexico's carefully coiffed, wearing the highest fashions, can be seen stepping from the running boards of their enormous SUVs, their bodyguards lurking outside as they go for a workout or pedicure. They have been to the best schools in the world and the finest malls in Texas, but never to one of the city's ubiquitous, crowded marketplaces or a street-food stand.

"I haven't seen the archetypes of urban Mexico portrayed on the big screen so well in a long time," said Oscar de los Reyes, an expert on cinema and society at the Technological Institute of Monterrey.

It's not surprising that the social contrast is playing big in the cinema. In Mexico, 10 percent of the people held nearly 40 percent of the wealth in 2010, according to the Economic Commission for Latin America. The world's richest man, Carlos Slim, holds more than 6 percent himself. While Americans look up to the rich, believing they too could be among them one day, the dream is mostly unattainable in Mexico, where upward mobility is smaller and slower.

Videos and tweets displaying the arrogance of Mexico's privileged class periodically go viral.

One video, recorded by a passer-by, shows two rich girls, dubbed "the Ladies of Polanco" after one of Mexico City's most exclusive neighborhoods, shoving, slapping and insulting a traffic cop who pulled them over suspecting they were drunk. In another clip drawn from surveillance cameras a man in an affluent suburb beats up the valet of his luxurious apartment building for not providing a jack to replace a flat tire on his Porsche.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto's daughter reacted to people who laughed at one of her father's campaign gaffes by tweeting that they were "a bunch of idiots who form part of the proletariat and only criticize those they envy," causing a national uproar. The tweet disappeared and Pena Nieto apologized.

Alazraki said he was trying to capture the behavior behind Paulina Pena's tweet in his film, whose hashtag is (hash)WelcomeToTheProle.

He acknowledges he comes from the very society he is lampooning. His father, Carlos Alazraki, is an influential advertising businessman behind several presidential campaigns and publicity for Slim's restaurants and phone company. When he was younger, Alazraki has said in interviews, all he cared about was having the prettiest girlfriend and going to the hottest club. After attending film school at the University of Southern California, he now pities people who stay inside the bubble of Mexico's rich.

"It's very interesting to see our characters transform," said Luis Gerardo Mendez, who plays eldest son Javi Noble. "You get to see on one side how this group of people spends so much money, and on the other end, the everyday jobs people have to do to survive. People who think there is no racism here, there is. It is called classism."

The script was inspired by the 1949 film "The Great Madcap" by surrealist Luis Bunuel, in which a rich man wasting his money and life is fooled into thinking he lost his fortune. It leads his family members to take low-paying jobs as seamstresses, shoe shiners and carpenters.

The three Noble offspring end up working as a bus driver, a waitress and a bank teller.

"What is your biggest problem?" Javi asks a fellow bus driver.

"There is this chick from my town who says that her child is mine and she wants me to send her money. But she can't prove it. So, until I send her money, she will send her cousins with sticks and machetes..."

"For that, you need bodyguards," Javi tells him.

Barbie, meanwhile, ends up falling for her nanny's nephew, a youth she once teased for being poor.

When he tells her that he used money her father loaned him to open a stand selling pirated CDs, she scolds him: "Did you know that drug traffickers run those informal CD shops ... Seriously, you are only fostering crime in this country."

He becomes enraged.

"The criminals are your little friends," he says. "Don't tell me you don't know about the two friends who were at your most recent party. The politician's sons. Haven't you seen the videos? Everyone did. If you are really worried about your country, don't feed them, don't invite them to your parties, don't get on their yachts."

Moviegoers said they find a lot of reality in the humor. Arturo Lopez, who works in construction, said he has friends like the Nobles.

"Here, your social status depends completely on what you have," he said at an exclusive movie theater in high-end Polanco. "It's really ugly, but there are many people like that."

Maria Larios, a nurse, paid a third of the luxury theater's ticket price to see the same film in the middle-class neighborhood of Santa Maria La Ribera.

"This is real," Larios said. "There are people who are very picky and stuck-up. When the roles are reversed, it changes them, brings them down to earth."

_______

Adriana Gomez Licon is on Twitter http://twitter.com/agomezlicon

Source: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/world/article/Comedy-on-Mexico-income-gap-a-big-screen-hit-4412321.php

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Fallon's 'Tonight' hire dominates late night talk

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

Wednesday's announcement that Jay Leno would be stepping down from "The Tonight Show" hosting duties on NBC to make room for "Late Night's" Jimmy Fallon in Spring 2014 clearly had the staffs of every late night show scrambling to rewrite their opening monologues -- because everyone had something to say!

First, there was the back-patting; this transition is being done with an air of friendliness that did not necessarily characterize the one that brought Conan O'Brien into "Tonight's" seat for a few months in 2009.

"He is a hell of a guy!" said Leno last night to his audience about Fallon. "He's going to do a great job. I just have one request for Jimmy: We've all fought, kicked and scratched to get this network up to fifth place. Now we have to keep it there! Jimmy, don't let it slip into sixth! We are counting on you."

Over at "Late Night," Fallon acknowledged that his shift was the big news of the day: "Hello! Welcome!" he began. "This is 'Late Night With Jimmy Fallon'?-- for now," he said. "You guys probably heard the news -- I?m going to be taking over 'The Tonight Show'?next February! But don't worry. Until February, our focus is right here on whatever this show is called."

Added Fallon, "I want to thank everyone here at 'Late Night,' the staff, the crew and, of course, The Roots. I have to say thanks to Jay Leno for being so gracious. It means so much to me to have his support. I just want to thank the fans for staying up to 12:35 a.m. and watching us."?

Over on the other networks, former "Late Night" host David Letterman played up the story for laughs on CBS' "Late Show." Letterman was notoriously angered not to have been offered the "Tonight" show gig himself in 1992 when Leno was tapped, and that feud hasn't faded over the last 22 years.?

"I got a call from my mom today," said Letterman, who also devoted his Top 10 list to Leno. "She says, 'Well, David, I see you didn't get 'The Tonight Show' again."

Leno wasn't about to let it go unsaid, either, quipping, "Folks, I got to be honest with you, I had a really awkward day today," he said in the opening. "I had to call David Letterman and tell him he didn't get 'The Tonight Show' again. Awful! Terrible!"

The Hollywood Reporter noted that Letterman also referenced the O'Brien issue, questioning not Fallon but the choice to make another switch: "Didn?t we just go through this?" he said. "Jay Leno now is being replaced, and this is the second time this has happened. I mean, it?s crazy. He?s being replaced by a younger late-night talk show host -- what could possibly go wrong? Honestly. They had pretty good luck with this in the past."

Speaking of O'Brien, he also addressed the topic around the 30-minute mark of his TBS show "Conan." "I want to congratulate Jimmy. That is a really fun gig." His audience laughed, and he followed up: "You laugh, he said, but it really is. Jimmy is the perfect guy to do it. ... He's going to do a fantastic job. So congratulations, Jimmy."

The one broadcast late night host who doesn't have any dog in this race, Jimmy Kimmel, also had something to say.?

"It is a big one for the world of late-night television," said Kimmel in his "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" monologue on ABC, according to The Hollywood Reporter. "As you probably heard -- it was announced officially today -- that, starting in February of next year -- after the Olympics -- I will take over as new host of?'The Tonight Show.'?I spoke to Jay on the phone today." A member of his staff interrupted. "Excuse me for one moment.?...?OK.?Um, apparently it was a different Jimmy."

He read one of the headlines about the changeup on his cell phone and added, "Turns out I will not be hosting 'The Tonight Show.' Does anyone know what the return policy is on yachts?"

In the end, though, it was largely friendly banter and Fallon's ascension to the throne (which will move, along with the show, to New York City), seems to have gone over well. But Leno had one last warning: "NBC says in five years, they plan to replace Jimmy with Justin Bieber," he said. "They are moving too quickly!"

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

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Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/04/04/17597388-jimmy-fallons-tonight-show-transition-dominates-late-night-monologues?lite

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Invest refund in you ? St. Albert Leader

You?re doing the happy dance because you?re getting a tax refund. Well, dance some more because motivational speaker Steve Siebold says you should spend it, not save it.

Siebold says you should follow the example set by rich people and get a return on your return. Invest in yourself.

If you've got a tax refund coming your way, motivational speaker Steve Siebold recommends investing it in yourself  in any number of ways ? including taking that vacation you've been dreaming of. (Sun Media News Services)

If you?ve got a tax refund coming your way, motivational speaker Steve Siebold recommends investing it in yourself in any number of ways ? including taking that vacation you?ve been dreaming of. (Sun Media News Services)

Dumping the average refund into a bank account won?t make a significant impact in terms of the big picture. ?It?s like attempting to bail water from the Titanic ? saving or investing $3,000 isn?t going to even make a dent.?

Siebold suggests thinking like a rich person. The average Joe is taught to focus on saving money, while the rich learn to focus on earning money.

Following conventional wisdom about saving money will keep you broke. ?Rich people rarely follow conventional wisdom when it comes to money,? says Siebold.

He offers the following ?think rich? strategies to make the most of that return:

? Invest in yourself: ?Formal education will make you a living; self-education will make you a fortune,? says Siebold, adding that specialized skills and knowledge are the key to financial success.

?If you want to see a massive return on your tax refund, invest it in ways to better yourself such as self-improvement audio programs, business workshops and seminars or coaching and mentoring programs. School is never out for the great ones.?

? Start a business: Invest your refund in your business idea, invention or service, suggests Siebold. ?You can have an online business up and running within a few months and start-up costs are minimal.?

Think lawn-care service, maid service, handyman business, pool cleaning company, grocery shopping service, etc.?

? Get fit and healthy: Taking control by losing weight, quitting smoking and exercising more will build your confidence, increase your energy and boost your self-esteem. ?Not only will you feel better, but your confidence will carry over into everything you do, including your ability to earn more money,? says Siebold.

? Take that vacation: The enemy of creativity and clarity is cognitive overload ? or having too many things to think about, says Siebold. ?It?s like having dozens of programs open on your computer. All it does is slow your processor down.?

Rest and relaxation helps clear out the mental clutter, create space between your thoughts and frees your mind for enhanced creativity, he says.

? JOANNE RICHARD, Sun Media News Services

COMMENTS

Source: http://www.stalbertleader.com/2013/04/04/invest-refund-in-you/

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High-profile rapes threaten India tourism business

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, German tourist Carolina De Paola, 22, walks near the landmark Gateway of India in Mumbai, India. A fatal gang rape in New Delhi didn't deter Germans De Paolo and Canan Wahner from traveling to India for a six-week tour. On a train, a man grabbed De Paolo's breasts from behind but she never reported the crime, deciding there would be no point. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry with a new study showing tourism has plunged. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, German tourist Carolina De Paola, 22, walks near the landmark Gateway of India in Mumbai, India. A fatal gang rape in New Delhi didn't deter Germans De Paolo and Canan Wahner from traveling to India for a six-week tour. On a train, a man grabbed De Paolo's breasts from behind but she never reported the crime, deciding there would be no point. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry with a new study showing tourism has plunged. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, a tourist family walk near the landmark Gateway of India in Mumbai, India. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry with a new study showing tourism has plunged. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, a foreign tourist Amy Manson from England takes photographs as Indians watch her near the landmark Gateway of India in Mumbai, India. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry with a new study showing tourism has plunged. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, foreign tourists look for a hotel near the railway station in New Delhi, India. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry. A new study shows tourism has plunged, especially among women, since a 23-year-old Indian student was raped on a New Delhi bus and later died from her injuries, a case that garnered worldwide publicity. (AP Photo /Manish Swarup)

In this Tuesday, April 2, 2013 photo, an Australian tourist gets temporary a henna tattoo painted on her body at a shop in New Delhi, India. in New Delhi, India. Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry. A new study shows tourism has plunged, especially among women, since a 23-year-old Indian student was raped on a New Delhi bus and later died from her injuries, a case that garnered worldwide publicity. (AP Photo /Manish Swarup)

(AP) ? A fatal gang rape in New Delhi didn't deter Germans Carolina De Paolo and Canan Wahner from traveling to India for a six-week tour. The attack was awful, but there is crime everywhere, they figured, and they'd take precautions.

Then a man sidled up to Wahner on a train to Goa and ran his hand up her leg a few weeks into the trip. On another train, a different man grabbed De Paolo's breasts from behind.

"I wanted to scream and do something, but he ran away," De Paolo said. She never reported the crime, deciding there would be no point. The two women, both 22, say there were times they didn't feel safe, but they insist they still would come to India again.

That separates them from many tourists, who are choosing not to come at all.

Violence against women, and the huge publicity generated by recent attacks here, is threatening India's $17.7 billion tourism industry. A new study shows tourism has plunged, especially among women, since a 23-year-old Indian student was raped on a New Delhi bus and later died from her injuries ? a case that garnered worldwide publicity. The government denies any fall off in tourism.

Concerns only grew after the reported gang rape of a Swiss woman in central India last month and after a British woman jumped out of her hotel room window fearing the manager was trying to break into her room to sexually assault her. That incident happened in Agra, home to the Taj Mahal, one of India's chief tourist attractions.

Merchants say India is being unfairly singled out, but perception is everything in the tourist business. And businesses catering to tourists are already suffering.

Foreign tourist arrivals have dropped 25 percent since the December gang rape in New Delhi, and the number of female travelers fell by 35 percent, according to the study by the New Delhi-based Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry. The study, which surveyed 1,200 tour operators across the country, indicated that "concerns about the safety of female travelers" have changed tourists' plans. Instead, they are going to countries perceived to be safer, including Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines.

Tourism Minister K. Chiranjeevi disputed the survey Wednesday, saying that foreign tourist arrivals into India in January and February grew by 2.1 percent.

But Mehraj Shora says it is hard to see that as business dries up in his Mumbai carpet shop.

"Every day it's getting worse," Shora laments. "Tourists are coming, but not like before."

In good times, Shora used to sell two or three Kashmiri carpets a day to foreign visitors at prices starting at $300. Now, days might go by without a single rug sold. He estimates sales are down 50 percent and says the rape cases have added to the strain of a stalling economy.

He blames the international media for hyping recent cases when crimes occur in any country. "Actually, India is quite safe. In some ways it's safer than other places."

Still, just as the New Delhi gang rape sparked a national outcry over the mistreatment of women, the attacks on female tourists have highlighted what has long been known: Women traveling in India, especially alone, frequently face unwanted advances from men.

Crimes against female tourists happen everywhere. Thailand has, for instance, seen at least three rapes of foreign tourists this year. In the Philippines, a local man was arrested in January on charges of raping a 23-year-old British woman on the resort island of Boracay. Over the weekend in Brazil, an American woman was gang raped and beaten aboard a public minibus she had boarded in Rio de Janeiro. Still, in India it is particularly easy to find stories from foreign women who, like some Indian women, have been harassed, followed or fondled.

Italian model Ginevra Leggeri, 21, says she had no warning when a man groped her from behind while she was walking with a friend in Mumbai, where she came to work a few months ago.

"I was completely covered and we were just walking, and this man touched me, and I started screaming and I slapped him," she said.

Her friend and co-worker Amy Manson, 19, quickly pointed out that a pair of Indian men on a passing motorbike saw the incident and stopped to confront the attacker.

"An Indian guy grabbed her, but then two other Indian guys came and helped us," Manson said. "So it's like a 50-50 situation."

But she hesitates when asked if she would recommend a friend visit, and she agrees India's tourist business will be damaged if it doesn't take action to protect women. Last month, the government passed new, more stringent, laws against sexual violence.

"It's not just the girl in Delhi ... this has been happening for years and years and years," Manson said. "It's just coming out now, which is good, because maybe things will change."

Imran Latha, owner of the Visit India tour company in Mumbai, said some Indian men assume when they see foreign women drink or do drugs that they also are eager for sex. The only solution, he said, is for tourists to dress modestly and protect themselves.

"Trust me, India cannot do anything. The Indian government is the worst in the world. If we can't protect our own countrywomen, what can we do for foreigners?" he said.

At the end of their six-week trip, De Paolo and Wahner say their groping incidents are not the only thing they'll remember about a vast and richly cultured subcontinent.

Still, Wahner said, "Now, after this trip, I would for example never travel alone as a woman in India."

They quickly learned to take precautions: always dressing modestly in long sleeves and trousers outside major cities, rarely venturing out of their hotels after dark. Being friendly, but not too friendly, to men and trying to find Indian women for company.

"It's strange. You don't want to judge every man who sits next to you," Wahner said. "But sometimes in the end, yes, they do touch you."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-03-India-Scared%20Tourists/id-cc61cdc673cb4d93a348b2b83e50f729

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