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Martlets think pink while showing rivals the power of red

Alice Walker

The McGill Martlets improved their regular season record to 6-0 as they defeated the Concordia Stingers 72-61 Thursday evening in a game that doubled as a fundraising event. The “Shoot for the Cure” game was part of a nation-wide initiative by the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WCBA) which aimed to raise a grand total of $100,000 for breast cancer research. The Martlets, who have been collecting donations and promoting awareness, entered the stadium sporting special pink and white uniforms.

In the first quarter, the Martlets got off to a quick lead by promptly reading the Stingers’ strategy.

“They were trying to double team and trap, but my teammates were ready for that,” said senior forward Anneth Him-Lazarenko. As the Stingers warmed up, they were able to work on closing the gap, ending the first quarter only two points behind McGill.

As the second quarter started, McGill’s powerful defence succeeded in shutting down the league’s leading scorer, Concordia’s Yasmine Jean-Philippe. Jean-Philippe finished the game with only two points, both from free throws. Leading the defence was sophomore guard Marie-Eve Martin, who was also aggressive offensively, registering 14 points in the match, including two three-pointers.

The second half of the game started with a scrappy quarter that continued a trend of high turnovers by the Martlets.

“I wasn’t at all happy with the amount of turnovers we had, or the offensive rebounds we gave up, so those will be some areas to work on.” said Martlets Head Coach Ryan Thorne. Still, after a Martlet scoring streak, the team was able to push the lead to 60-40 at the conclusion of the third quarter.

The fourth quarter began with back-to-back dagger three-pointers by Martin and Frances Grout-Brown. Senior guard Natalie Laroque continued to drive the ball, creating opportunities for her teammates as she had throughout the game.

Thorne was satisfied with the starters’ performances on the court.

“I think it was an overall team effort,” he noted, “Anneth played big inside, scoring 22 points and pulling down 10 boards, but the tone was set with offensive rebounding by Helene Bibeau, tough defence by Martin, and easy transition baskets by Francoise Charest.”

Overall, McGill shot an impressive 46 per cent from the field and played well tactically throughout.

“We also made a point of attacking the paint, which put some of their post players in trouble early and gave us an advantage inside,” said Thorne.

On the Concordia side, the scoring campaign was led by freshman guard Kaylah Barrett who registered 21 points. Following Barrett was freshman forward Nekeita Lee with 14. The Stingers came away with an astonishing 20 steals.

As part of the fundraiser, the crowd was treated to a halftime show put on by McGill’s a capella group, Tonal Ecstasy.

The Martlets, who are currently ranked first in the Quebec conference, will travel to Laval as they take on the Rouge et Or on Sunday. Him-Lazarenko is looking forward to the next matchup in hopes of stretching their winning streak.

“We are really ready to be aggressive,” Him-Lazarenko said. “We are ready to play.”

Features

Tree Planting

Have you ever wanted to take a helicopter to work? Could you ditch hourly wages for self-motivated piecework? Despite the intensive labour, thousands of Canadian university students opt out of retail jobs and internships each summer to attempt to make a killing replanting Canada’s forests.

What is tree planting?

When a logging company wants to log an area, they lease the land from the government under the condition that it will be replanted according to specific species and density requirements. This is the basis for the silviculture, or tree planting, industry, composed of roughly 100 companies across Canada that specialize in completing the replant requirements.

Tree planting began as a prison activity in New Zealand in the early 20th century. The backbreaking labour was conceived as a form of productive punishment, but it fizzled out quickly. By the 1960s, in the age of peace, love, and free spirits, a few tree planting companies began to appear, offering to fulfill the demand of logging companies who needed their leased land replanted. Back then, the only people who would efficiently plant trees were hippies looking to make a quick buck in the summer and move on. Since then, the silviculture industry has been taken over by university students. Every May, students from schools across the country drop their books and pick up a shovel.

Each person is paid per tree, depending on a variety of factors including easiness of the land, species of tree, and travel time. This can vary from six cents per tree for trenches of loose soil in the Maritimes, to fifty cents or more per tree on the overgrown mountainsides in British Columbia.

Who goes tree planting?

The majority of tree planters are university students who need to make money quickly. The tree-planting season runs from May to July or August, which meshes perfectly with students’ semester schedule. There are also some non-students who choose to go tree planting, because it allows them to earn a significant amount of money in a few months.

Student or not, almost half of tree planters are women. This gender balance is unusual compared to other fields of manual labour, but tree planting is less about brute strength and more about speed, athleticism, and planning.

There is a general consensus that those who plant trees do it strictly for the money. Day after day of backbreaking work in the snow or hot sun takes a toll on one’s sanity. Some attempt tree planting as a character-building experience and quickly realize they have made a horrible mistake. But some say it’s a combination of the earning potential plus the lifestyle that leads them to return to tree planting year after year.

“Every year I swear I’m not coming back,” says Jonathan Gastaldi, who just finished his eighth season in the bush and third season crew bossing a group of tree planters. “But I always end up coming back. I miss all my friends too much.”

Good tree planters share a few important characteristics: they must be hardworking, intelligent, and excessively sarcastic. They complain a lot, but don’t take themselves too seriously (being labelled a complainer will result in a loss of respect). To gain respect, planters must be hard workers with a degree of modesty.

getting a job

Tree planting is not for everyone, but those who want to try it out can apply between January and March. However, the economic recession has resulted in less demand for timber, so logging companies are cutting and replanting less. Jobs, especially for rookies, have become much harder to come by. The application process is entirely online, and shortlisted candidates are interviewed by phone. Gastaldi, who has hired several rookies as a crew boss says, “When I speak to a potential rookie, I’m looking for specific answers. When I ask why they want to go planting, their answer should be ‘to make money,’ not ‘to get a tan and lose weight.’ Wanting a tan doesn’t show me they are a hard worker.”

Making money

The potential for making serious cash while tree planting is real, but there are many hidden costs. Transportation to rural areas can be hard to find and expensive. Tree planting companies provide water, food, and eating areas for $10-25 per day and planters are responsible for bringing their own shovel, bags, tent, and rain gear, which can cost around $1,000.    

Since tree planters are paid per tree, there is a huge variance in how much each person makes. Rookies generally make much less than those with experience. Some rookies even finish the season owing their company money because they ask for cash advances and don’t plant enough to repay the few hundred dollars they received.

For those who work hard and move quickly, the payout can be huge. A good planter can make anywhere from $5,000-15,000 in one summer. Eric Rowles, a McGill student and seventh year planter, put his millionth tree in the ground last summer. He said his strategy is, “focus, perseverance, hard work, lots of water, good equipment, and a good crew boss. It’s also about making sacrifices and the ability to be alone all day. If you can’t be alone, you’re going to go crazy.”

The experience

As with money, individuals usually end the summer having obtained differing benefits from the experience. Some people become addicted to the lifestyle of working hard and partying harder, which keeps them coming back year after year.

“When I think about tree planting, I never think about the days when I plant 5,000 trees,” says Jordan Green, a fifth-year planter from Manitoba. “I think about the nights off. People who say they plant just for the money are lying.”

    Planters typically try to forget the days they cried because it was snowing, or that time they were attacked by wasps. Instead, their fondest memories always come back to the most epic party night they can remember. Taking five shots of a “redheaded slut” shooter, then playing hide-and-go-seek with roman candles will stay with them forever, whereas the agony of the job somehow disappears from memory.

Some of the scarier moments in the wilderness even reinvent themselves in nostalgic ways. When a full-grown tree misses crushing someone by only a few feet, they retell the tale with a chuckle and describe how they could feel the earth shake as it crashed on the ground. Who could forget when all they had on was a rain jacket and spandex during a snowstorm? They barely broke even, but who cares now?

This doesn’t mean, however, that there aren’t bad days. The work is gruelling and the conditions are extreme. Falling in a river will make you cry. Getting eaten alive by blackflies/mosquitoes/no-see-ems/horseflies/deerflies will make you cry. Walking three miles with all your gear and horrible blisters on your heels will make you cry. Getting so sick you had to drink cough syrup out of the bottle in the middle of the forest will make you cry. Getting a sunburn that blistered for days will make you cry.

At the end of the day, what appeals to you more? Having a quiet, safe job and earning minimum wage, or taking a helicopter to work and pushing yourself harder than you ever have before with a huge payout?

As Green says, “It beats flipping burgers.”

Alice Walker will be returning to Manitoba in May to her third summer as a tree planter.

Tree planting lingo

Skreefing: the act of kicking pine needles and debris away from the spot you are about to plant a tree.

Cream: land that is very easy to plant in.

A piece: an area in which you are responsible for planting.

Flag line: pieces of colourful tape tied onto branches and logs to mark where your piece starts.

Shnarb: overgrowth, branches and debris that make it difficult to plant

Hi-baller: someone who plants considerably more than the average planter

Websites

replant.ca

tree-planter
.com

twisted-tree-productions.ca

Student Life

Crazy couponing

During the approximately 100 hours I spent watching TLC over the holiday break, I learned some important lessons: 19 kids are far too many, petite girls should never carry big purses, and Sarah Palin is a good shot. Some of the most useful information, however, came from a new show called Extreme Couponing, which follows diehard coupon collectors as they use coupons to reduce $2,000 grocery bills to $40. Although McGill students may not have the time or desire to knock on all their neighbour’s doors to ask for their coupons or have the space to stockpile enough rice, deodorant, canned soup and shampoo to last 10 lifetimes, as the people on this show do, there are some easy resources you can use to save money on items you buy frequently.

coupons.smartcanucks.ca

This website collects coupons and offers a database of printable ones. You can search by company or by category, like grocery, beauty, or garden. There’s also a list of the week’s most popular coupons which can help you find the best deals.

flyerland.ca

Instead of dealing with the waste created by a weekly flyer package, find out about the deals they contain by entering your postal code on this website, which provides online access to all the weekly flyers from your area. If you use some of these deals in combination with a coupon from Smart Canucks, you can often get something for close to free.

Groupon

Although it’s been around in different countries and cities since 2008, Groupon has recently seen a surge in popularity, and you may have already gotten emails or Facebook messages from friends who are using the service. Each day, one specific deal is offered for the city you’re in. However, the promotion is only valid if enough people sign up for the offer.

Company email listservs

While you might be hesitant to give your email address to the cashier at Gap for fear of being spammed with useless emails, the promotions these companies send out can help you save money. Some stores, like J.Crew, often offer online deals for limited periods of time, which you can only find out about through email. Consider creating a separate email account for emails like this so they don’t clog your inbox.

Student Life

WebCT quotation of the week

Subject: Assignment answers

Student 1: I don’t understand what resource utilization is. I’ve searched the slides and I haven’t found anything on it. Are we supposed to Google the answers???

Student 2: All the answers can be found from the textbook. I suppose Google could work too.

Student 3: I’m certain he said in class that everything we need to know is in the textbook, and that the answers are in there too. It would probably be wise to study from the textbook and not Google, since quiz and exam material will be from the book and what is taught in class.

Student 4: Don’t tell me it’s one of those “learn by heart” courses…

Student Life

Saucy explosion

I’d like to think that most criminals get their due. A horrible mishap that I had at my summer job this summer, though, has changed my mind. Now, I’m more inclined to think that for every criminal that gets punished, there must be 10 that fly under the radar.  

The scene:  my summer job  at a restaurant which will remain nameless. The players: me, a group of middle-schoolers, and a industrial sized jar of barbecue sauce. Every night at six, we served dinner to the whole group.  On this particular evening, we had a group of 85 sixth graders coming in for a chicken nugget supper. About 15 minutes before dinner time, my boss sent me downstairs to get a jar of barbecue sauce. I was about five hours into a long shift and feeling silly. Not violent, destructive, or drunk—just chastely, innocently silly.  I went down to the storeroom, picked up the jar of barbecue sauce, and put it on my head, like a Jamaican banana saleswoman. It seemed like a good idea. As I headed toward the stairs, I shook my hips left and right, imagining a crowd of admirers (let’s be honest, female admirers) oohhing and ahhing at how funny I was. I climbed the first two stairs before remembering too late that the ceiling was very low above the third.  

I missed the clearance. The barbecue sauce flew backwards and exploded. Many people exaggerate with the word “exploded,” but I don’t. There was barbecue sauce seven feet up on the walls. It had gathered in pools on the stairs. It looked like I had brutally and messily murdered a giant cockroach.  

After a few seconds of numbness, I started to panic. If anyone saw this, I would be fired. Not because it was necessarily such a big deal, but because it looked so bad.  

I came back upstairs, trying to be cool. We were only 15 minutes until dinner, so there was a lot to do. Upstairs, I would act as though nothing was wrong, and then go downstairs to scrape barbecue sauce into a bucket with a dough scraper. Bring the boss an onion, then go leap up and down with a bleached cloth to reach the highest signs of the explosion.  

Miraculously, the end was eventually into sight. I had soaked five rags completely through with sauce, but it started to look better. After about 30 minutes of on-and-off-again cleaning, the job was done.  

I am still waiting for the arm of justice to come down on me. Until it does though, the only traces of my crime are a slight discoloration in the wall around the third stair and a faint hickory smell.

Recipes, Student Life

Baked brie

blogspot.com

Having holiday bread and cheese withdrawal? Fear not. This baked brie is easy, oh-so-delicious, and guaranteed to disappear in 10 minutes or less. It’s served with caramelized onions and wrapped in puff pastry. If you don’t like onions, you can use cranberry relish and almonds, or even raspberries tossed in a little flour and sugar. Get some friends together, grab a bottle of wine (or several) and a couple baguettes, and relive the food comas of winter break.

 

Ingredients

One 8″ wheel of brie

One package puff pastry, thawed

3 large onions, julienned

3 cloves garlic, minced.

1/2 cup dry white wine

1 tsp brown sugar

1 egg yolk

Fresh thyme, minced

Flour for rolling out pastry

1 sliced baguette

A note on cooking wine: If you wouldn’t drink it, don’t put it in your food. A couple of good cooking wines are La Chamiza Chardonnay ($8.65 at SAQ) and Caliterra Reserva Sauvignon Blanc ($12 at SAQ).

Directions

1. Pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

2. Grease a 9″ pie dish. Roll out each square of puff pastry. Cut one into a disc the same size as the brie. Roll the other out thinly enough that you can fold it around the sides of the wheel of brie.

3. Melt some butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Sauté onions until translucent and add the thyme. Reduce heat to medium and cook until onions are golden, stirring often, about (25 minutes).

4. Add the minced garlic and cook for a couple minutes. Add the first 1/4 cup of wine. Stir until liquid evaporates.

5. Sprinkle in the sugar and cook the onions until they are soft and brown (about 10 minutes).

6. Add the remaining 1/4 cup wine and stir until the liquid evaporates. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

7. Place the wheel of brie on the larger of the two pieces of pastry. Top with caramelized onions. Place the 8″ disc of pastry on top of the wheel and fold the larger pastry around the cheese so that you have covered the whole wheel without holes.

8. Place in a pie dish. Whisk the egg yolk with a little water and brush it over the top of the pastry.

9. Poke a few holes in the top of the pastry to let the steam out.

10. Bake in the oven for 25-35 minutes or until the puff pastry is nice and golden. Let it sit for at least 15 minutes before serving with  sliced baguette.

Student Life

Showering like a pro

There are only a few reasons to take a shower. One possible reason is that you are so smelly that strangers tell you as much. If a stranger complains that you are smelly, it means that you are so smelly that the stranger felt the need to tell you about it, an uncomfortable act for anyone. If a friend or family member tells you that you are smelly, you can probably just ignore it and write it off as playful teasing. But if you are so dirty that you raise dust clouds as you walk around sterilized areas, you may want to consider showering. It is important that you diagnose your level of dirtiness in sterilized areas since unsterilized areas comes with their own dirt and grime, which could easily mix with your dirt and grime and give you an inaccurate measurement of your filthiness.

If, alternatively, you are not smelly or dirty enough to meet these requirements but still want to take a shower, you should probably do something to get dirty or smelly enough to warrant the use of enough water to hydrate a mid-sized village in Siberia. Maybe you should join an intramural team, like volleyball or ball hockey. Ultimate Frisbee is also very popular in warmer months. Intramural sports are great for this because even though you aren’t good enough to play the sport at a competitive level, you still really like the sport and will probably get really into the game and work up a sweat. You could also just run in place for a few hours until you get sweaty enough to take a shower. This would be an especially good option if you don’t like spending time with other people, but do like showering.

If you have, probably begrudgingly, decided you need to take a shower, the first step in the process is to find a shower. Most showers are located in bathrooms or bathroom showroom stores. Some showers in bathroom showroom stores are not fully functional, so they will not be very useful for this instructional guide. At this point, you need to find a bathroom. Many bathrooms can be found in public places—these are called “public bathrooms.” Although these can be very useful in tight situations, they are often gross and sometimes do not have showers. Remember, locating a shower is a key part of this process, so don’t give up! Try looking in your own bathroom at home; you may be surprised to find exactly what you are looking for there.

Upon finding a shower, you should now attempt to bathe yourself. Most doctors agree that you should be naked when taking a shower, but some are just not comfortable with this. Don’t be embarrassed to wear your swim trunks in the shower the first few hundred times you attempt this tricky operation.

The next step is to turn on the water. This is probably one of the most difficult parts of the process. Although most showers differ in their setting for adjusting the water temperature, most shower knobs share one characteristic: every setting except one is excruciatingly hot or terrifyingly cold, and adjusting the knob or knobs by more than 1/16 of an inch will make the water temperature unbearable. You’ll probably need to spend a good 15 to 20 minutes determining a good temperature for your upcoming shower. Trial and error is a good method, although some showerers will collect samples of water in containers and measure them with an instant read thermometer, but this is best left to the pros.

At this point, you may have spent up to 20 minutes standing naked (or in swim trunks) in your bathroom testing the water temperature. After 20 minutes in the bathroom with the shower running, your roommates probably think you are just playing with yourself in the shower, which is totally not cool, so you should probably turn off the shower and pretend to dry off.

You may be upset that you didn’t actually bathe yourself, but hopefully you are honing in on the perfect setting for the water temperature. You probably weren’t even smelly or dirty enough to need a shower anyway, so don’t worry about it. Just put some gel in your hair, rub your face with olive oil, and you’ll be fine.

Sports

Redmen rally riles up rambunctious Carnival crowd

Holly Stewart

In front of the largest home crowd of the year, tied 2-2 in the third period, and killing off a five-on-three penalty, goaltender Hubert Morin and the McGill Redmen kept their composure and held off one more Carleton offensive onslaught. Following the successful penalty kill the Redmen were able to rally with three goals in the final period to defeat the Carleton Ravens 5-4 on Friday night and give the Management Carnival crowd of 1,355 something to celebrate.

“We stayed composed, and that was one of our keys tonight before the game,” said McGill Head Coach Kelly Nobes. “To keep our emotional composure, knowing we were going to have a big energetic crowd. And knowing that Carleton was going to come out hard—they’re a physical team and a high energy team so we were going to need to stay composed.”

“That’s our team—we never give up,” echoed Morin. “We have to work harder and stay focused all the time and even if they score a couple goals, we [have to] work through it and give our best and that’s how we came back.”

The third ranked Redmen (19-0-2) trailed 2-1 after the first period, and Carleton (11-6-2) continued to outplay the Redmen in the second. The Ravens created many scoring chances in the slot but Morin answered every time with clutch saves in traffic.

It wasn’t until captain Evan Vossen rocketed a slapshot into the top right corner of the net with six minutes left in the second that McGill was able tie the game at 2-2.  However, the Redmen got into penalty trouble to begin the third period after Vossen was sent to the box for roughing to end the second and Morin was given a delay of game penalty a minute into the third. Despite being two men down, Morin and the McGill penalty killers neutralized the Raven attack without conceding a goal.

Nobes credited Morin with keeping the Redmen in the game and until the offence were able to orchestrate the comeback.

“Hubert made saves at the right time tonight so that the momentum didn’t swing in the wrong direction,” Nobes said. “And that’s the sign of an experienced goalie and that’s oftentimes the difference in hockey games.”

Morin credited the massive crowd with helping energize him in the game’s tense moments.

“The crowd was pretty loud with all the energy and emotion—you’re so into it—you’re so focused and [that’s] how I made the key saves,” Morin said. “You’re on your toes the whole time and you just try something, and sometimes it works. It worked fine tonight.”

Leading the Redmen attack was playmaker Alex Picard-Hooper, who scored the first goal of the third period to give McGill their first lead of the game. He also set up the other two Redmen goals in the period. On the Redmen’s fourth goal, he made an incredible pass into the slot on the powerplay that defenceman Hubert Genest buried, and also assisted Vossen’s empty net goal. The three-point night extends Picard-Hooper’s CIS leading point total to a 47 points in 21 games.

“[Picard-Hooper’s] been pretty consistent for us,” said Nobes. “He’s a smart player and the puck sticks to his stick. He makes great passes and his head [is] always up.”

The hockey game was part of the Management Carnival schedule, which resulted in 1,355 fans showing up. The McGill crowd was extremely loud throughout the game celebrating the Redmen goals and taunting the Carleton players, namely their goalie Matthew Dopud, and defenceman Brad Albert.

“That was unreal,” said Morin. “It was our biggest crowd of the year and people were so loud and it brought us a lot of energy, it was good for us.”

Nobes agreed that the crowd energized the Redmen and created an amazing atmosphere to play in.

“It was great. It was awesome. It was outstanding,” he said. “It’s unfortunate it isn’t like that every night but [it’s] great to see all the McGill fans [come out to the game]—it made for a lot of fun.”

McGill’s next home game is on Wednesday, January 19 in a rematch against Carleton. While the crowd will not be nearly as big or energetic, the Redmen will hope to duplicate Friday’s result.

Behind the Bench, Sports

Steroids clouding MLB’s Hall of Fame judgements

Let’s start with the truth about Major League Baseball: 1) We’re still in the “Steroid Era.” 2) We’ve always been in the Steroid Era. This week’s example: a player under suspicion of juicing has been retroactively accused and it may jeopardize his Hall of Fame chances. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.

In the wake of last week’s Hall of Fame induction vote, a donnybrook erupted amongst baseball writers and fans. Jeff Bagwell, the legendary first baseman with the funny batting stance and tremendous power, received a shockingly low number of votes in what has been widely accepted as an accusation of past steroid use. Until now, Bagwell’s name hadn’t appeared on the juicing marquee alongside Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, and Mark McGwire.

Like Bonds and Clemens, Bagwell never failed a steroid test, and put up his best numbers before rules or a testing system were in place. By the time he entered the twilight of his career in 2001, he was already considered to be the fourth greatest first baseman of all time by stats analysis guru Bill James. Admittedly, this was BAP (Before Albert Pujols), but his numbers are fantastic. He was a pillar of his team and his community, and spent his entire career with a single team—the Houston Astros. In any other era, his Hall of Fame candidacy would be unquestioned. Unfortunately, Bagwell played amongst the juicers on the field and the jesters in the press who are all too happy to keep the steroid story mill churning. Unlike Bonds and Clemens, Bagwell wasn’t under suspicion during his career—he seems to be a victim of circumstance. Unlike many other baseball fans, I believe that juicers like Bonds and Clemens belong in the Hall. Put them in the “steroid wing,” or with some stupid asterisk, but get them in there, and fast. Hank Aaron and Mike Schmidt were admitted amphetamine users. Even the great Mickey Mantle used a primitive form of steroids late in his career.

Another legend on this year’s ballot, Rafael Palmeiro, has the on-field numbers to expect a first-ballot induction but barely got enough votes to stay on the ballot for next year. He lied about his steroid use before failing a test, and now he may never get in. The Hall of Fame is clearly romanticizing the past, and is caught up in a witchhunt zeitgeist.

Bonds and Clemens should be in the hall eventually, and they probably will. It would be tough to keep Barry Bonds out, and in retrospect we can say that the way he was railroaded into villainy by both the game and the media was both unprecedented and unparalleled. His demonization speaks to the mostly arbitrary nature of whom we as fans decide to like. There’s very little doubt that Barry Bonds is a total prick on and off the field. There’s also no question that he is one of the best left-handed hitters of all time.

Compare him to Roberto Alomar, one of this year’s inductees. In addition to a famous incident in which he spat in an umpire’s face, Alomar is also under suspicion of having had unprotected sex with an ex-girlfriend while suffering from AIDS.

Cheating in a game, which everybody else is doing anyway, is judged more harshly than lying to somebody about not having AIDS before having unprotected sex.

Did Jeff Bagwell cheat at baseball? Maybe, but that’s not the point this year. I’m not saying that the Steroid Era should be forgotten, but we already have our villains, our heroes, and our admitted juicers that people have forgiven and forgotten about, like Andy Pettite. There’s no need to look for more people to point the finger at.

Sports

Tennis Preview: Australian Open

The first Grand Slam event of 2011 began Sunday evening on the hard courts of Melbourne Park, Australia. While you’re shivering in front of your TV and watching the temperatures at centre court rise as the mercury in your apartment plummets, check out some of our picks for the men’s and women’s brackets.

Without question, the biggest story of the tournament is Rafael Nadal’s bid for a fourth straight Grand Slam win. Nadal, who won the Australian Open in 2009, was forced to retire last year in his quarterfinal match against Andy Murray because of tendinitis in his knee. Twenty-four-year-old Nadal, who has nine Grand Slam trophies to his name, made an incredible comeback in 2010, winning the French Open, Wimbledon, and the U.S. Open. He will now try to become the first man since Rod Laver in 1969 to win four majors in a row.

Roger Federer, regarded by many as the favourite, will try to stop the Spaniard. He proved that he’s capable by defeating Rafa at the Barclays ATP World Tour Final on November 28; he also won three majors in a row in 2006 and 2007 but was thwarted in his attempt for a fourth on both occasions by Nadal at the French Open. Can Roger repay the favour in Melbourne?

Finally, don’t forget about veteran Andy Roddick. Still possessing one of the most powerful serves in the game, the former world number one is now 28 years old and knows he doesn’t have much time left to capture a second Grand Slam title.

Prediction: Nadal over Federer in the final

Sleeper: Andy Roddick

On the women’s side, defending champion Serena Williams is sidelined with a foot injury and won’t be able to defend her title. In Serena’s absence, Kim Clijsters is the favourite to capture her first Australian Open.

Two other players to watch are Francesca Schiavone, who won her first Grand Slam at Roland Garros in 2010 at the age of 27, and the woman that Schiavone beat in Paris, homegrown talent Samantha Stosur. Stosur is the best hope for Australia on the men’s or women’s side. She broke the top five in the WTA rankings July and is sure to get raucous support at Melbourne Park.

Caroline Wozniacki, who finished 2010 as world number one, has never won a Grand Slam tournament but has been excellent on the WTA tour. Wozniacki has never beaten Clijsters, Henin, or either of the Williams sisters. She was runner-up at the 2009 U.S. Open and reached the 2010 year-end WTA Tour Championships where she lost to Clijsters in a compelling final. She may yet get another crack at Clijsters in Melbourne to prove her number one ranking is merited.

Maria Sharapova has an outside shot to return to her former winning ways. She missed significant action due to injury in late 2008 and early 2009, and hasn’t been the same since. If Sharapova is to get through her bracket she will need to get through 31-year-old Venus Williams and 21-year-old talent Viktoria Azarenka.

Azarenka has never made it past the quarterfinals of any Grand Slam event, but may benefit from a relatively weak bracket to go on and challenge Wozniacki in the semi-finals.

Prediction: Wozniacki over Clijsters in the final

Sleeper: Viktoria Azarenka

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