US – Sunday, March 21
SXSW ’10: Get your dance on, great songs optional
The trends that emerged from the SXSW Music Conference in Austin last week are still bubbling to the top as I make sense of the hundreds of songs that filled the city for four days, but one thing I definitely noticed is that popular music may soon have a lot more emphasis on flexibility.
 
Cinderella still alive as NCAAs reach Sweet 16
The bracket-busters are out in force this year.
 
Subway work unearths past
Pointy shoes, oyster shells, clay pipes and other detritus of the Dutch who founded New Amsterdam, the British who followed and the early New Yorkers were among the 65,000 artifacts uncovered during construction of the $400 million South Ferry subway terminal.
 
At AKC, it’s score one for the mutts
Founded in 1884 as a registry for pure-bred dogs, the American Kennel Club didn’t traditionally offer many perks for your beloved lab-poodle-schnauzer mix. But as of April 1, the AKC Canine Partners Program will offer mutts not only membership benefits, but opportunities to compete at dog sporting events.
 
Orange puts on clinic in NCAAs
One day after No. 9 Northern Iowa shocked the tourney’s No. 1 overall seed, Kansas, Syracuse showed how top seeds should play on the big stage.
 
Drastic changes just down tracks
On Wednesday, MTA board members will cast a historic vote on $94 million worth of service cuts, slashing bus routes and subway lines and restructuring dozens more.
 
Excitement schemes too much
“This is what happens, Sarah. This is what happens when there are weeks and weeks of meaningless spring games and nothing else to talk about. This is what happens.”

 
Published 20:39, May the 15th, 2008
 
Sam Cassell and the C’s have gotten a boost from the fans at the Garden during the playoffs. Sam Cassell and the C’s have gotten a boost from the fans at the Garden during the playoffs. 
Photo: GETTY IMAGES
 

Home is where the victories are

C’s head to Cleveland looking to break road hex

Not alone

Heading into Thursday night, home teams were 49-15 in the playoffs, including a 19-1 mark in the conference semifinals. “I hate to throw other teams out, but I don’t think anyone is playing very well on the road in the playoffs,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “We’re going to get one. When, I don’t know when. It would be great if it was Game 6, but if not, we come back here, and we’re just going to keep playing.”

JH/METRO
 

NBA. Have you heard the one about the team that couldn’t win on the road in the playoffs?

So have the Celtics, and they’re getting pretty sick of it.

“There’s no place like home for us,” said forward Leon Powe, whose Celtics are 7-0 at home and 0-5 on the road in the postseason heading into Friday’s Game 6. “The record shows it, but we still are going to have to get one on the road eventually to get the monkey off our back. We want people to stop asking us about it, seeing it on TV.”

In order for everyone to move on, though, the Celtics must stop face-planting over this major hurdle, which seems to grow with each road defeat. Their transgressions against the Hawks were innocent enough, as Atlanta never posed the slightest threat at the Garden.

And no harm, no foul against the Cavs, at least so far. Obviously, the Celtics have the luxury of homecourt advantage and don’t have to win on the road to capture the title, but the pressure to continuously hold serve at the Garden will eventually take its toll.

Their poise has already been flawed in tight games in Atlanta and Cleveland. But if the Celtics are staring in the face of a home loss in the game’s waning minutes, they could potentially be fighting to win two games at once with the thoughts of road failures creeping into their heads.

On the surface, the answers to the Celtics’ road woes seem so trivial: stay intense on defense, maintain aggression on offense and don’t lose sight of pounding the ball inside with Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce.

For a team that’s had little trouble sticking to that plan at home, it’s clear there’s a mental block that is acting like a sixth man for the opposing team on the road.

“We’ve got our work cut out for us as we go out here on the road and try to close it out, which is the most important thing for us right now,” Pierce said. “We’ve got to work on somehow, some way to close out this series.”

 
 
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Metro Life Panel