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Monday, January 21, 2008

Against Giants, Breaks Don’t Go Favre’s Way



GREEN BAY, Wis. - The ending felt all wrong. In this season, when almost everything went right for the Green Bay Packers and their quarterback, Brett Favre expected victory right up until the very moment that he lost.



He walked into the Packers' interview room, his face flushed and colored red. He stuck both hands into his pockets, where they remained for the rest of the interview. He looked crushed, like the quarterback who threw the interception that lost the game.


Which was exactly what had unfolded a short time before at Lambeau Field. That the interception came in a season otherwise described as magical or storybook was no consolation to Favre. This stung. His face said what his words did not.


"I'm very disappointed," Favre said. "Everything seemed to fall in line for us. I'd like to say I thought we had this game."


As this season wore on, the Packers started noticing all the breaks that went their way, all the plays made in key situations, all the expectations they exceeded. Favre did not buy into these notions as quickly as his teammates did. He said they told him: You just have to believe. It's all falling into place.


So Favre started listening, started buying in. When the Seahawks jumped out to a 14-0 lead over the Packers last weekend, Favre and his teammates returned fire. Everything, well, fell into place.


Then the Giants came to town Sunday for the conference championship. Their kicker missed two field goals that could have won the game, so the Packers lucked their way into overtime, won the coin toss and took the ball.


"This game, there was a sense that everything was falling into place again," Favre said.


The way this season went, Favre had every reason to expect another victory delivered from almost-certain defeat. This was the season in which Favre broke Dan Marino's record for career touchdown passes and John Elway's record for career victories by a quarterback. That magic, that storybook narrative, seemed to move further along in the second quarter, when Favre connected with his favorite receiver, Donald Driver, for a 90-yard touchdown pass.


Favre this season resurrected both the Packers and his career. He has talked for a few years about retiring, but after the Packers improved from 4-12 in 2005 to 8-8 last season, there was a sense they could take another step.


Instead, they took a giant leap, riding the rocket that is Favre's right arm. Now 38 and in his 17th season, Favre passed for 4,155 yards and 28 touchdowns. He also cut down on his interceptions, to 15.


After the game, during Coach Mike McCarthy's news conference, someone wondered if the old Favre - the wild, gun-slinging, prone-to-the-occasional-mistake Favre - had returned in the second half against the Giants.


"There were a couple opportunities where he threw to tight spots," McCarthy said. "Where he threw into tight coverage."


Favre's worst throw of his resurrected season also happened to be his last. After the Packers won the coin toss and all the fans in hunting jackets danced in the cold, Favre and the offense trotted on the field.


Everything was falling into place, again. Favre could sense it. It was time to add another chapter to his well-told legacy.


The Packers took over at the 26-yard-line with six seconds gone in overtime. Ryan Grant, the former Giants running back, gained 2 yards off left end. Everyone in the stadium knew who would get the ball on second down.


Favre dropped back. He looked right, toward Driver, who stayed near the sideline, guarded over his right shoulder by defensive back Corey Webster.


The ball came toward Driver's right shoulder, even a few feet off it. Favre wanted to throw it to the opposite shoulder, toward the sideline. Instead, Webster stepped in front of the pass and returned it 9 yards to the Packers' 34. Four plays later, the Giants kicked the winning field goal.


"It's too bad," Favre said. "We had our opportunities today. We put ourselves in this position."


The emotion showed on Favre's face as he trotted off the field. The ending, he admitted during his news conference, just felt wrong.


This was supposed to be one of his final chapters, the season when Favre took one of the youngest teams in football and taught it how to win. He would lead them to the Super Bowl, then ride off into a golden exit.


Not surprisingly, the talk at McCarthy's news conference turned to whether Favre would return next season. McCarthy did not appear to appreciate those questions. He grunted and grumbled after most of them, said he had not talked to Favre since the game ended and called the retirement discussion a "postseason conversation."


Pressed again, McCarthy said, "I don't have anything for you."


Neither did Favre, for whom the loss was far too fresh. He finished the game with 19 completions in 35 attempts, with 236 yards, 2 touchdowns and 2 interceptions. He expected a different ending, another game where everything fell into place.


Instead, his season ended after an interception, with the Giants celebrating on the "G" painted on the middle of the field.


"It's disappointing my last pass of this game was an interception," Favre said. "It gave them a chance to win."




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A big day for sunglass collaborations



If the Mulberry and Cutler & Gross pairing didn't do it for you, good news: Kris Van Assche and Oliver Peoples have also teamed up on a new line of shades. The line debuted today at the former's Paris runway show and will be available this summer for 500 bucks a pop. Hope you like the frames-they only come in one style for now, but at least the lenses are interchangeable.


Today in collaborations, part 12
Coming this spring to the already crowded field of sunglass makers: A five-pair collection from Mulberry and British vintage brand Cutler & Gross. The line (including a set of aviators, naturally) is said to be inspired by the latter company's archival frames and will set you back around $440 a pair. And if you need something to carry them in, Bob Geldof has an idea for you.


Finally, a men's shop for Boomtown Rats fans

DNR reports today that up-and-coming designer Adam Lippes has opened his first store in NYC's Meatpacking District. The 2,500-square-foot shop will carry the Adam sportswear line, as well as his better-known womenswear. Meanwhile, over in London, Mulberry has launched its first ever freestanding menswear shop. The tiny Covent Garden space-all 300 square feet of it-will carry both accessories and clothes. The real draw? The Bob Bag (above), a $1,900 leather travel case designed by Live 8 impresario-slash-manbag-lover BobGeldof.




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Money And The Meaning Of Life


money


What is more elusive or more compelling? More personal or more a part of society? More on everyone's lips or more difficult to talk about? More linked with success or more separate from it?


Money takes some understanding. To help us come to terms with it, Fast Company turned to Jacob Needleman, philosopher, author, and lecturer. His book, "Money and the Meaning of Life" (Currency/Doubleday, 1991), captured the wisdom of his 30 years of teaching at San Francisco State University; his experiences in seminars with the wealthy, successful members of the Young Presidents' Organization; and his encounters with high-achieving businesspeople around the world.


As a "worldly philosopher," Needleman has made a career out of talking honestly about a subject that eludes most people and listening thoughtfully to people talk about a subject that most find hard to discuss. In fact, says Needleman, "Money today has become like sex was to previous generations. It's damn hard, in fact nearly impossible, to think about money honestly. It has an immense influence on everything we do. Yet few people are able to acknowledge the power of money."


Because of his insights on money and meaning, Jacob Needleman has become a popular consultant to businesses and philanthropic organizations; he also appeared as a memorable subject in Bill Moyers's PBS series "A World of Ideas." Fast Company interviewed Needleman in his Spanish-revival home in the elegant St. Francis Woods section of San Francisco. He was, as always, opinionated, self-effacing, bawdy, and brilliant -- a down-to-earth intellectual who shares many traits of the successful businesspeople who have sought his advice.


How does money change people?


Having lots of money can be like a drug. It can make you feel powerful and giddy. It can convince you that everything's going to be okay. Years ago they asked the great fighter Joe Louis what he thought about money, and he said, "I don't like money very much, but it calms my nerves." Money makes us unjustifiably feel that we're better and more important than we really are. When money can make you feel humble, then I think it's really useful. But if it fattens your ego, which it often does, then look out.


That way lies madness. That's what all the Greek tragedies are about -- hubris -- and that's part of the problem with money. It is greatness, it is power, it is beauty. Money is about love and relationships. It has a wonderful power to bring people together as well as tear them apart. You can't escape money. If you run from it, it will chase you and catch you. Even Thoreau today would need a real estate agent to help him buy the cabin at Walden Pond.


If we don't understand our relationship to money in this culture, then I think we're doomed. If you don't know how you are toward money and really understand that relationship, you simply don't know yourself. Period.


From your experiences with people who've made a lot of money, is there something different about the way people get rich today?


The incredible pace of change triggered by modern technology has affected how people acquire wealth. There's no precedent in human experience for the speed, scale, or age at which people today can get incredibly wealthy. When everything is quick and fast and easy, a certain part of ourselves is fed while another part withers away. Worse, we don't even know it.


In the past, wealth tended to be something you built up over a long time, or inherited from your family. Today people are getting wealthy quickly in what used to be a long, hard-earned process.


Let's see if we can make it more specific. Say that I'm a 25-year-old working in a company that just went public, and my options are now worth $10 million. What should I do? How do I keep this money from overwhelming me?


You need to find someone you can talk to. You need to see if there is any wisdom out there beyond the calculus of just getting and spending. Maybe you have a priest, a parent, a professor, or a friend. Maybe there are a couple of other people in your same situation who are also asking, "How are we supposed to navigate this life that suddenly is so weird?"


You need to realize that you are only 25 years old and that you aren't wise enough to know what to do with this $10 million. Think about it: $10 million! Suddenly you can have anything you want. And just as suddenly it is going to be obvious to you that getting everything you want is not going to do anything for you. Pretty soon you are going to feel just as empty with $10 million as you did before.


Doesn't having that much money mean you no longer have to worry about the basic necessities of life? Doesn't that free you?


No. If you are worrying about vegetables now, you'll be worrying about yachts then. You're a worrier. It's in you, not the money. Life, except for the obvious physical needs, is not so much defined by the external situation as by the inner one.


Having money won't change your internal makeup. If you're an anxious sonofabitch without money, you're going to be an anxious sonofabitch with a lot of money.





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