US – Saturday, March 13
Run this town
No living man but Jay-Z could get a sold out Boston arena so excited about New York City. But for two hours last night, the sold out crowd at the Garden was in an Empire State of Mind, as “The Blueprint 3” tour rolled into town.
 
The 1 to really worry about
It was either the sign of pure genius or inculpable insanity.
 
After bitter fight, shovels hit dirt
Inside a tent overlooking the Atlantic Rail Yards, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. David Paterson celebrated the groundbreaking on Thursday with developer Bruce Ratner and rapper Jay-Z, a minor investor in the Nets, for the $1 billion Barclays Center. Set to open in 2012 — three years behind schedule — it was hindered by legal battles and the economic crisis. 
 
One ‘Delight’ after another
Don’t confuse Sophie Dahl’s new cookbook for any skinny girl mantra.
 
Pacquiao fight not the one we wanted to see
Manny Pacquiao will step into the ring Saturday, but not to face the opponent fans wanted for him: Floyd Mayweather Jr.
 
Cops on the hunt for man in vicious attack on woman
Waitresses at Social bar and grill on Eighth Avenue tried to put a cheerful face on happy hour Thursday, but patrons and passers-by recoiled at news that a woman was attacked and brutally beaten inside one of the bar’s bathrooms early that morning.
 
Don’t sleep on the Owls in Big Dance
Pacing the game. That’s what Luis Guzman has been credited with giving No. 17 Temple this season.
 
Updated 22:38, January the 8th, 2008
 

Green: Rocket’s career made for movies

On Oct. 7, 2007, the Yankees were down 2-0 to the Indians in the American League Division Series. Roger Clemens, who hadn’t pitched since mid-September, was set to take the hill for the Bombers. It had all the trappings of an historic moment. For a man who had already retired multiple times, this finally felt like the end. Here comes the old war horse, his team’s season on the line.

In fact, as my friend Nick pointed out on our blog, UmpBump.com, his situation was all too like that of Kevin Costner’s character in the movie “For the Love of the Game.” As Vin Scully, playing himself, put it: “After 19 years in the big leagues, 40-year-old Billy Chapel has trudged to the mound for over 4,000 innings. But tonight, he’s pitching against time; he’s pitching against the future, against age, against ending. Tonight, he will make the fateful walk to the loneliest spot in the world, the pitching mound at Yankee Stadium, to push the sun back into the sky and give us one more day of summer.”

The difference? Roger’s career was better than something Hollywood could dream up. At 45 years old, he’d weathered 23 years in the big leagues and racked up nearly 5,000 innings over 707 starts.

 Of course, as anyone who’s seen the movie knows (and if you haven’t, I’m saving you two hours of your life that you’d never be able to get back), Billy Chapel goes on to pitch a perfect game. But that eerily warm October night in Yankee Stadium, Roger Clemens turned in just 2 1/3 innings, while giving up four hits, two walks and one home run. Though the aptly nicknamed Bombers slugged their way back for the win that night, it was clear that Roger’s $28 million season — and almost certainly his first-ballot Hall of Fame career — was over.

Next week, when Roger makes the fateful walk to Capitol Hill to the loneliest spot in the world — the congressional hot seat — and swears up and down that he never did steroids, he’ll try again to push the sun back into the sky. Isn’t that what the lawsuit and the “60 Minutes” interview were about? Giving himself one more day of summer? This is the man who fought off destiny to revive his career — perhaps with artificial help — time after time after time. But there can be no comeback now. Roger is learning the hard way that not all choices can be taken back.

So this is how it ends. After 4,672 career strike-outs, 354 wins, 46 shutouts and seven Cy Youngs, we get 2 1/3 innings pitched, a name named and a lawsuit. It’s a made-for-TV ending for a silver screen career.

Sarah Green is a freelance writer who can be reached at  .

 
 
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