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Boston Marathon | Students go the distance in Boston Marathon

A group of Jumbos joined a sea of just over 26,000 runners yesterday to take part in the 113th annual Boston Marathon. Over 190 Tufts runners completed the 26.2 mile trek from Hopkinton to Copley Square in downtown Boston as members of the Tufts President's Marathon Challenge (PMC) Team. But for PMC coach and former Tufts men's swimming coach Don Megerle and most of the runners, the event started last night at the team dinner.


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Jeremy Greenhouse | Follow the Money

John Madden retired last week. Madden began his career as a pro football player, then became a coach who won a Super Bowl and went 103-32-7 by the time he was 42. For the last 30 years, he worked in the role for which he is best known: a commentator and caricature. He is a Hall of Famer who might even be the face of the NFL. How does his moving on impact the rest of the world? With apologies to Jon Stewart, let's go all Jim Cramer with this.     Sell: Frank Caliendo. Madden was the impressionist's go-to voice. First Bush, now Madden? What's next? It's a good thing Charles Barkley was allowed to return to TNT after his … incident, for Caliendo's sake. And comedy's sake. Sure, his Bill Walton and Jim Rome are great, but they're esoteric. Frank TV is on its last legs.     Sell: Brett Favre. Oh, Favre will continue to have his apologists in the media. Essentially everyone at ESPN would take a bullet for him. He is, after all, a gunslinger. He just loves playing football. Like a kid. But now that the two most relevant football personalities in the media are Cris Collinsworth and Jay Glazer, who don't hold their punches to say the least, I don't think Favre will be the focus of every NFL storyline. Favre clearly fell victim to the Madden Curse.     Buy: Cris Collinsworth.  He is undisputedly the top analyst of the National Football League. He's been known to watch as much game tape as Ron Jaworski and his voice is smoother than mahogany. Now, as he readies to take the booth for Sunday Night Football, he's been given one of the top play-by-play men in the business in Al Michaels, and he'll be calling the best games every week thanks to NBC's "flex schedule," broadcasting in front of America's largest audience most weekends.     Sell: Exxon-Mobil. John Madden hasn't taken a flight since 1979. Instead, he travels by way of the Madden Cruiser, an $800,000 bus with its own sponsor that travels 80,000 miles annually. With that gas-guzzling monstrosity out of commission, the Madden Cruiser will be retired as well.     Buy: "The Wrestler." Really good movie. Came out on DVD today. Do yourself a favor.     Sell: EA Sports. Let's be honest here. When it came to Madden NFL, the namesake of the game was the X receiver. You could always count on him when in doubt. Every "Boom," no matter how canned, was sheer genius. And what fun would it be going for it on fourth and 32 if the old, fat man didn't so strongly oppose your decision? At least Ethan Albright will be happy.     Buy: AARP. I guess.     Buy: Al Davis. The final remaining face of the old Raiders' dynasty. A very haunting and disturbing face at that.     Sell: The telestrator. Nobody works the yellow pen like Madden. Now, right here, I'm going to write this paragraph as if it was being telestrated. See it's developing, and you can see right there that he kind of lost track of where he was going with it. And then — boom! He writes a punchline. Right there. It wasn't very well executed, but it got the job done.     Buy: Yogiisms. Maddenisms were fun and all, but I prefer my incoherent thoughts presented in oxymorons and redundancies rather than merely circular reasoning. Berra is better.     Sell: Tough Actin' Tinactin, Horse Trailer and Turducken. I have never seen nor heard of any of these things outside of Madden references. I've never seen a Sonic, either. I am convinced that they do not exist.


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Inside the NBA | Cavs, Lakers still the favorites with NBA playoffs underway

     After just the opening weekend of the 2009 NBA playoffs, a few great storylines throughout the league are building, and glimmers of what promise to be a spectacular two months of basketball are finally emerging.     In Cleveland, the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers stomped on the Detroit Pistons 102-84 in their opener on Friday to continue their dominance on their home court. Coming into the playoffs with the league's best record at 66-16, the Cavs flaunted their swagger and made a statement that they are on a mission to win it all. LeBron James, the frontrunner in the MVP race, was nothing short of brilliant, netting 38 points and dishing seven assists while grabbing eight rebounds.     The Cavaliers have been practically unbeatable at home this season, and it looks like it will continue on into the playoffs. If the Pistons hope to stop the Cavaliers in Game 2 tonight at 8:00, they will need to find a way to limit James' productivity on both ends of the court. Detroit will need a better defensive effort and production from its bench if it wants to stay in the series.     Out West, Rick Adelman's fifth-seeded Houston Rockets torched a young and inexperienced Portland Trail Blazers team, 108-81. Rockets point guard Aaron Brooks led all scorers with 27 points, and Yao Ming did not miss a shot, nailing all nine attempts from the field as he tacked on 24 points and nine rebounds.     The seasoned and well-coached Rockets took the home crowd out of the game early, establishing their defensive prowess and limiting big man LaMarcus Aldridge to just seven points. Game 2 is tonight in Portland, and if the Blazers want to avoid going back to Houston down 0-2, they will need to improve on their 41.7 percent shooting and their abysmal 1-for-11 from three-point range.     The third Game 2 on Tuesday night pits the top-seeded Los Angeles Lakers against the streaky Utah Jazz. In the first game, the Lakers showed how deep and dangerous their roster is, defeating the Jazz 113-100. Kobe Bryant led the Lakers with 24 points and went 9-for-17 from the field. Swingman Trevor Ariza added 21 points and Pau Gasol had 20 points and nine rebounds.     The Jazz are outmatched at every position except point guard, so they will need players like Carlos Boozer, who scored 27 points Sunday, and Ronnie Brewer to step up in the second contest. This Jazz squad is a classic "Jekyll and Hyde" team, going 33-8 at home this season but only 15-26 on the road. If the Jazz can steal Game 2 from the Lakers, they will have a chance at making this series tight throughout. Last year when these two teams met in the conference semifinals, the Jazz took the Lakers to six games.     One of the biggest surprises coming out of the weekend was the sixth-seeded Philadelphia 76ers, who overcame an 18-point deficit in the third quarter on Sunday and beat the third-seeded Orlando Magic, 100-98. Andre Iguodala's fadeaway jumper with 2.2 seconds left clinched the victory for the underdogs and stole Game 1 from the reeling Magic.     All-Star center Dwight Howard did all he could, scoring 31 points and grabbing 16 rebounds, but it was not enough to hold off the young and scrappy Sixers. Game 2 will be in Orlando tomorrow night, and the Magic will need to get more production from forwards Rashard Lewis and Hedo Turkoglu, who scored just 21 points combined in Game 1. The Magic have a very shallow bench and it showed on Sunday, as fatigue set in and they could not hold off an impressive Sixers rally.     Meanwhile, down South, the fourth-seeded Atlanta Hawks thrashed Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat, 90-64, in the weekend's most lopsided game. Josh Smith, who dropped 23 points and notched 10 rebounds, led the young and hungry Hawks.     Atlanta was impenetrable on defense, holding Wade to under 20 points for the first time in over a month. On Wednesday, Wade and company will need to improve on a horrible 36.6 shooting performance overall, especially from three-point land, where they were 4-23.     In the Rockies, Chauncey Billups, also known as Mr. Big Shot, dropped 36 points and dished out eight assists while shooting 8-of-9 from three-point range in the Denver Nuggets' 113-84 win over the New Orleans Hornets in Game 1. With a healthy Kenyon Martin and confident scorers Carmelo Anthony and J.R. Smith flanking their championship point guard, the Nuggets could be a sleeper in the West. Chris Paul and the Hornets will look to slow the Nuggets' assault on Wednesday night and send the series back to New Orleans all squared up.     While none of these series are over yet, if teams don't make adjustments, coming back from a two-game deficit might be too much to ask for any squad, no matter how strong its regular-season record.


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Men's Lacrosse | Late rally helps Jumbos light up Camels

    The men's lacrosse team is back on track and beginning to round into postseason form at exactly the right time.     On Alumni Weekend at Bello Field, the nationally ranked No. 8 Jumbos (11-2, 6-2 NESCAC) defeated Conn. College (6-8, 1-7 NESCAC) 12-9 in an important conference game. Tufts grabbed sole possession of second place in the NESCAC standings with the win.     Senior tri-captain Clem McNally tallied four goals to push his team-leading count for the season to 44. McNally now leads the NESCAC and additionally has set a new career high for goals this season. Sophomore attackmen D.J. Hessler and Ryan Molloy both added two scores while Hessler had an assist to bring his conference-leading assist total to 36 and overall point total to 67. Hessler, McNally and Molloy hold the NESCAC's top three spots in overall point total with 67, 52 and 51, respectively. Senior midfielder Kevin Williams and junior defenseman Eytan Saperstein each contributed one goal and one assist apiece.     Tufts opened the fourth quarter with a slim 8-6 lead, but with less than eight minutes remaining in the frame, the Camels trailed by only one goal at 9-8. Conn. College then won the faceoff and went for a goal, but a save and clear by senior netminder Matt Harrigan sent the Jumbos on a counter-attack. Saperstein passed to McNally, who finished with 6:33 on the clock. Tufts then netted two goals in the next 83 seconds to seal the victory.     The win seemed to be forecast by the Jumbos' ability to mount multiple offensive spurts despite struggling all afternoon to keep any distance between themselves and their visitors. Tufts initially jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first quarter, but the Camels came back to tie it up 3-3 in the second frame. The Jumbos then managed a three-goal spurt to put them back in control.     McNally scored two of his four goals on opposite ends of Saperstein's first score of the year to push the score to 6-3 at 5:28 in the second. After a Conn. College tally late in the first half, the Jumbos opened up the third quarter by converting a man-up opportunity by junior midfielder Jamie Atkins, followed soon thereafter by Hessler's second goal of the game to increase the lead to 8-4.     The Camels responded with two scores at the end of the third quarter and proved that they could hang with the Tufts offense, while the Conn. College defense kept the Jumbos' potent attack unit scoreless for the remaining nine minutes of the quarter.     McNally opened the fourth quarter with a beauty to beat junior Camel goalie Mark Moran, but the Camels rattled off two more scores on Harrigan and pulled the score to within one before the Jumbos' encouraging offensive finish.     "It was a pretty close game and they kept fighting back all afternoon," junior midfielder Zach Groen said. "We went up 2-0, but they kept coming back and responding to our goals for the majority of the game. We finally got that four-goal lead late in the fourth quarter and put it away, but they gave us a tough battle."     Despite playing a close game with Conn. College on the scoreboard until late, the Jumbos worked hard to maintain possession of the ball — dominating the groundball battle 44-28 — to keep their offensive unit at work.     Tufts has now responded nicely after a loss against No. 2 Middlebury on April 11 with an 18-13 win over No. 15 Endicott and the 12-goal showing on Saturday.     "In the Middlebury game, we had plenty of opportunities, but we just didn't finish around the cage," Harrigan said. "On Saturday, being at home was nice, and we avoided coming out flat after being on the road so much. Our shot selection was a lot better, and we converted more on our opportunities."     "[Conn. College] came out pretty aggressively on defense, shutting off [Hessler] some early on," Groen added. "But all three of [our attackmen] played really well together, and they were able to put up some good points."     This season, the NESCAC Tournament has been expanded to eight teams from seven in past years. Whereas in years prior the No. 1 seed would automatically earn the right to host the semifinals and finals, now it must also play a first-round game in order to advance.     The Jumbos understand that with a win at Bowdoin on Friday, they have a chance to host the final four section of the NESCAC Tournament if Middlebury loses its first-round matchup. Even if Middlebury wins as expected, Tufts needs to accrue as many in-region wins as possible to secure an NCAA at-large bid if eliminated in the NESCAC Tournament.     "The Bowdoin game is of critical importance," Harrigan said. "It's a league game and an in-region conference win that would count for NCAA criteria. It's very important that we win this game on Friday. If for some reason, Middlebury were to lose in the first round, then we would host the NESCAC Tournament, which would be ideal, so we also need the win to secure the No. 2 seed."     "Seedings are still up in the air," Groen added. "We're fighting for that No. 2 seed, and if we get this one on Friday against Bowdoin, then we have it locked up. You always want to have momentum heading into the playoffs, and it's really important to keep that winning streak going into the postseason. We want to be winning when it's most important."


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Baseball | Jumbos scorch Polar Bears to strengthen hold on second place

    In the most pivotal series of the season to date, the baseball team came out guns blazing, taking the first two of a three-game set against NESCAC East rival Bowdoin, including a 15-3 romp in the opener.     Having won the series, the Jumbos now hold the tiebreaker over the Polar Bears, with whom they are currently deadlocked for second in the division with records of 4-5; Trinity has locked up first place with a 12-0 mark. If Tufts sweeps Colby, which is in the division cellar at 1-8, next weekend, the team will be guaranteed a spot in the playoffs.     Tufts struggled in its final game with Bowdoin, as the Polar Bears scored two runs in the top of the first and never looked back, holding the lead from wire to wire in a 13-7 victory.     "It was our goal going into the series to take two of three," junior catcher and co-captain Alex Perry said. "We wanted to take all three, but we knew we needed two to keep our playoff hopes alive. We didn't put forth our best effort from the seventh inning of game two on, [however]. We did what we needed to do, but going forward, we still need to get better."     The Jumbos saw more success in the first game of the doubleheader, managing an 11-9 victory over the Polar Bears. After both teams plated three runs in the first inning, they would go scoreless over the next two and a half innings until Tufts broke through with another run in the fourth. The Jumbos then proceeded to erupt again in the fifth, as the team put seven runs on the board to seemingly put the game away.     Nevertheless, even with the score 11-3 heading into the final inning, the Polar Bears would not go away. Sophomore starter Derek Miller, who had gone five scoreless innings with six strikeouts and no walks since the first inning, whiffed another batter to open the frame but then loaded the bases on two singles and a walk. He was replaced by freshman hurler Chris DeGoti, who promptly surrendered four straight singles and six runs, allowing all three inherited runners to score. DeGoti would give up an additional run on a fielder's choice but was finally able to get out of the inning with a strikeout, giving the Jumbos a two-run win.     "I think the biggest thing for us is to keep playing the game and not waiting for it to be over," Perry said. "We can't just hope for that final out to be made, and that's what we did."     The Jumbos held a more comfortable lead on Friday, as they led the series off as well as they could have hoped for, scorching the Polar Bears 15-3 on Huskins Field. Senior Mike Stefaniak continued his stellar year, throwing eight innings while allowing three runs — all of which came on solo homers in the seventh and eighth innings — to improve his ERA to 3.16 and his record to 4-1. Stefaniak scattered seven hits and two walks, striking out 10 in the victory.     "That was one of the biggest series of the season so far, so we definitely wanted to set the tone early, especially for the next day," Stefaniak said. "I just went out with the mindset that we had to win and knew I had to get ahead with fastballs and come back with off-speed stuff. They tended to swing at most of the off-speed and not hit it very hard, so that was the game plan."     The Tufts offense also had quite a day, compiling a 6-0 lead before exploding for eight runs — all with two outs — in the sixth inning to put the game firmly out of reach. The Jumbos had five singles and two walks in the inning, while senior co-captain third baseman Kevin Casey and sophomore outfielder Ian Goldberg did their parts to clear the bases; Casey had a three-run double and Goldberg contributed a two-run triple four batters later.     "It was big to come out and hit the ball and for our pitchers to do well," Perry said. "It was really one of the first times this year we've had an offensive explosion, especially against a conference opponent. We need to continue that and be consistent. We've been inconsistent in pretty much all aspects of the game all year. We need to do it for a series instead of one game."     Despite Bowdoin's win in Saturday's nightcap, the damage had already been done by the Jumbos, who now are in pole position in the race for the final spot in the playoffs. All Tufts has to do is win as many games as Bowdoin does over the final weekend of NESCAC competition, and the team will be locked into its fifth straight NESCAC Tournament.     "We need to take all three games; it's all in our hands right now," Perry said. "We need to go out and play Tufts baseball and be consistent, effective and efficient in all aspects. After a week of practice, I think we'll be ready for Friday."


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Softball | Jumbos finish perfect in NESCAC

    Early in the fall, the softball team established a list of goals designed to keep it motivated throughout preseason training and to stay continually focused during the season itself. After this weekend's sweep of conference rival Bowdoin, Tufts can cross off its first goal: an undefeated regular season in the NESCAC.     The Jumbos steamrolled through Brunswick, Maine, this weekend, ceding only four runs in three contests to the Polar Bears while bombarding Bowdoin pitching for 20 runs. Tufts improved to 32-0 on the year and a perfect 12-0 in the NESCAC to remain the only unblemished squad left in Div. III softball.     After being held hitless for her first eight at-bats of the series, junior shortstop Casey Sullivan exploded in Saturday's nightcap, tallying five hits from the leadoff spot in addition to two solo home runs. A testament to the team's confidence in its hitters, coach Cheryl Milligan left Sullivan in the top spot in the order against the same pitcher that the Jumbos faced on Friday, and it paid off in spades. Sullivan, in addition to her two solo blasts, tallied a double, a bunt single and two runs, showcasing her versatility.     "Casey just dominated that game," senior quad-captain Cara Hovhanessian said. "It's really a reflection of our confidence. Casey knows she's one of the best hitters in the NESCAC and possibly in the region, so everyone knew she was going to get it done. We have a lot of great hitters on this team, and no one ever doubts themselves or each other. Confidence is huge for us."     That confidence in their own abilities transferred over to the Jumbos' pitching staff as well, as junior Stefanie Tong took the circle in the latter game on Saturday. Tong, who came into the contest having logged just 22 innings, scattered seven hits and two earned runs over five and a third innings of work. The knuckleballer also struck out six Polar Bear batters, far surpassing the .57 strikeouts per inning that the Tufts staff has posted thus far. Senior Lauren Gelmetti worked 1.2 innings for the save, allowing one hit.     "It was awesome to use all three pitchers this weekend and to have all of them pitch well," Hovhanessian said. "I think Tong showed what she can do, and that's great. Obviously the more pitchers we have, the better, but the important thing is that they're all different. All of a sudden, here comes Tong with the knuckleball, and it's going to throw the other hitters off."     Freshman Lena Cantone remained hot, recording hits in all three at-bats and driving in two runs in game two on Saturday. Junior Christy Tinker, additionally, had two hits and one RBI. All told, Tufts had 14 hits in the 6-3 victory, with production coming from both veterans and underclassmen up and down the lineup.     "It takes veteran players who know our capabilities and a lot of motivation to do what we've been doing," senior quad-captain Roni Herbst said. "But also, we have really great young players on our team and they bring a lot to the team in terms of both personality and talent. I don't look at them as underclassmen so much as I look at them as teammates. They've been doing so well for us. They fit right into the program."     The Jumbos recorded their only mercy-rule win of the weekend in the first contest on Saturday, scoring three runs in the top of the fifth to win 9-1. Sophomore ace Izzie Santone remained solid in the circle, giving up five hits in as many innings and one unearned run.     On the offensive end, Tufts capitalized on five Bowdoin errors, tallying 11 hits in the shortened contest. Senior quad-captain Laura Chapman, classmate Maya Ripecky and Hovhanessian each had a pair of hits, while Hovhanessian and Tinker each drove in two runs.     In the lone game on Friday, Bowdoin junior Julia Jacobs did a relatively effective job of shutting down the Jumbos' bats, giving up only four earned runs in seven innings of work. But as good as Jacobs was, Gelmetti was that much better, as the Tufts senior let up just two hits over a complete-game shutout, striking out seven in the 5-0 victory.     The Jumbos struck early in the second frame when Hovhanessian scored on a Cantone single. But Tufts hit gold one inning later, as senior Danielle Lopez homered down the left field line, scoring Chapman in the process. The Jumbos tacked on two insurance runs in the seventh frame when Tinker and Ripecky slugged back-to-back RBI doubles.     With the weekend sweep, Tufts rounded out its perfect NESCAC campaign and now turns its attention to doubleheaders against Endicott and Brandeis before the start of the conference tournament, which the Jumbos will host on Spicer Field beginning May 1. Still, with a perfect record on the line, Tufts insists that it will not be looking past its non-conference opponents in spite of the thrill of going undefeated during the regular season.     "It's nice that we got it done, but our bigger goals are ahead of us," Herbst said. "It's a relief to have accomplished that first one, but that in itself is a team goal, and it doesn't necessarily affect the postseason and the rest of the things that we want to accomplish. We've gotten a little bit ahead of ourselves in the past, so we're trying to bring our focus to that certain out, that inning or that game before we get ahead of ourselves to the bigger picture of what we want to do.     "We've tried to focus on this idea of ‘right now' so far this season," Herbst continued. "Until we finish the games against Endicott and Brandeis, you can't overlook four important games and not focus on them. Our team can't afford to do that."



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Interview: Don Megerle | Megerle talks to the Daily about PMC

    Yesterday, Don Megerle, the director of the President's Marathon Challenge, sat down with Jeremy Greenhouse of the Daily's sports department to discuss the annual event, which will take place this Monday, April 20. Megerle is in his fifth year heading up the program. Jeremy Greenhouse: Give us an overview of this program. Don Megerle: I used to be the swimming coach here, and then I almost left Tufts, but [University President] Larry Bacow got me involved in this marathon challenge. I took this fledgling group of ragtag runners, and it blossomed into this huge program. This year we started with 200 and are now down to 196 ... We have training sessions on Wednesdays at 7 a.m. and Sundays at 8 a.m., with intervals outside of Gantcher. We get 40 to 70 people per session. We've competed in a couple of road races, with the longest being 20 miles so far … Right now, [the runners have] been tapering down and cutting down considerably. Some are doing nothing from now until the marathon. JG: Why run the Marathon? DM: President Bacow will be first to tell you, of all the things he's accomplished in his life, aside from being president of Tufts, his first marathon completion was the most significant thing he's done. And for a guy of his stature to say that, that's pretty cool. And when you train for it and you run it and you see the people at the finish line — the sense of accomplishment — you become a select number of the "one percenters." Less than one percent of [the] world has completed a marathon. It's a real select group. There's a lot of emotion, a lot of feeling, a lot of history. And to be there and see it with my own eyes … it's indescribable. JG: Is President Bacow running it this year? DM: He didn't last year or this year because of his schedule. But he might next year. My first experience five years ago greeting the runners at the finish line, I didn't know what to expect. I've had national champion swimmers and 90 All-Americans, so I know what that's like. But I didn't know what meeting a couple hundred runners at a finish line would be like. And it's indescribable.     The president asked me a couple years ago what's it like at the finish line, and I said I can't describe it. You gotta be there yourself. So last year, he was there. He had a ball. He went absolutely to another place. He's running along the road with them at mile 9, he was going nuts. Some of the runners commented about meeting myself and Larry at the end and said it was a life-changing experience for them.     There [are] feelings of joy, there [are] feelings of defeat, extreme emotion. It's not as painful as people think. They transcend all that stuff. Thousands of people are lined along the course, and being with other runners going through the same thing, they transcend the difficulty. Nobody thinks about the pain, the hardship, the agony, the cold weather. No one talks about it. All they talk about is what they just accomplished. It's extraordinary. JG: Take us through the race itself. DM: It's an interesting course. It starts at Hopkinton. There are bumps and hills going along, but the course itself is downhill. You're way above sea level and running downhill, so we caution the runners to begin running easy and comfortable. The best advice is to go easy and try not to run ahead of others at the beginning. Begin the pacing right when the run starts. If they run too fast too soon, they'll pay for it. You may feel good for 10 miles, but if you run too fast, it catches you around mile 18, 19, 20.     Or if they don't drink enough or eat properly, it affects them tremendously. The best research available about how to carbo load found that it doesn't have to be done until the last three days, but those three days can be crucial. If you do it right, you can avoid hitting this wall. The worst thing is you overeat the night before since you have to get up in the morning and have your digestion take care of itself. Mild eating, but eating carbos is important. One of the best things to eat, believe it or not, is a peanut butter jelly sandwich.     If you deplete all your energy and don't replenish yourself with water or sugar or Gatorade, you're going to suffer. They have water stands that start around mile three and alternate sides of [the] road. At mile 16 and 17, Gatorade stations are set up. We tell our runners to take a little bit at each stop. … We tell runners to drink before they think they need it. If you drink too late, people get in trouble. The mantra we have with our runners is never do anything on race day you haven't already done. Nothing is new. From the clothing you're wearing to your thoughts about pacing to your eating to your drinking, nothing is new. You've trained for it. You expect it. You know what you're going to encounter. JG: What's your style? DM: I'm a nurturer. I like to comfort them. The last couple of days have such excitement, but what I like to say is do the best you can but don't think about it. If you're talking about it, you're going to get a little nervous. So what I say is stick your fingers in your ears. You're prepared, you're ready, you're all going to be fine. And they're fine.     I sort of live by a certain code: "They don't care how much you know until they know how much you care." What amazes some of the runners is how I extend myself. I do things for them that they're unfamiliar with because they've never been part of a team before. I call it the handshake. When you shake someone's hand, there's a commitment on both ends. And that's how it works. It's an unconditional support from my end. JG: Is there ever any competition between runners? DM: Our goal as a neophyte runner is completion, not competition or a timed goal. To qualify for men's, you have to do 3:10. So if this is your first marathon and you complete it in 3:30, but in your mind your goal was 3:10, you let yourself down. So I say two things: "You completed the marathon, and you just did 3:30. Are you kidding me?" JG: Do either men or women derive some advantage? DM: I think a lot of it is genetics: your weight, your body type. If you're lean and don't have a lot of restrictive movements, you can run for a long time. Look at the Kenyans and Ethiopians. You turn those guys sideway and you can't see them. It's the ones that are real muscular and have limitations physically that struggle. Women might in some ways be more conducive to a longer run. JG: How about personalities? DM: All types of personality can run it. We have a professional football player, a breast cancer survivor … mild-mannered men and women who never imagined they would run for a marathon. You train the right way, anybody can do it. JG: Talk about the charity. DM: We're asking students to raise a minimum of $1,000. We ask alumni, parents, friends, staff and faculty to raise a minimum of $2,500. ... It's for schools, adjunct schools like the [Friedman School of Nutrition] that help study adolescent obesity. They found out that when people go to college they gain weight. Larry Bacow said college is bad for your health. Right now, we've raised over $300,000. It's an amazing program. Harvard has their program and it has 15 members and they call us the big team. Craig Rogers, their coach, says our level of energy and enthusiasm is overwhelming. JG: Where does the Boston Marathon stand among all marathons? DM: Unquestionably, it's one of the hardest marathon courses because of the elevation. That's why people don't run world-record times here. It's one of what we call the five worlds along with the marathons in Berlin, London, New York and Chicago. JG: What would the world be like had the Greek dude not run 26 miles? DM: Right. He had to go 26. Why couldn't he go a block or two?


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Hamilton to become full-time member of NESCAC in 2011

    The presidents of the NESCAC's 11 member institutions voted on Wednesday to make Hamilton a full-time member of the conference in time for the 2011-2012 school year, the NESCAC announced yesterday.     Since 1995, 21 of the Continentals' 28 sports programs have competed in the NESCAC, while the remaining seven squads have been members of the Liberty League. Wednesday's vote means that Hamilton's field hockey, men's and women's soccer, men's and women's basketball and men's and women's lacrosse teams will retain their Liberty League affiliation for two more seasons before joining the NESCAC.     See next week's Daily for further coverage.


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Inside Pro Cycling | Tour of the Battenkill: Through thick and thin

Just one week after the dust settled over the infamous cobbles of Paris-Roubaix in Northern France, amateur racers from all over New England, as well as professionals from throughout the country, will convene in the otherwise-obscure upstate town of Cambridge, N.Y. tomorrow to pay the race homage by kicking up some dust of their own.


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Sports

Gideon Jacobs | The Pooch Punter

They run routes with Sharpies in their socks, "Cheddar Bob" themselves in nightclubs and overdose on sleeping pills. They are the instigators of the most NFL scandals, are the biggest trash talkers in the league, and rarely survive more than a few years with a franchise before getting the boot. They are the modern-day NFL wide receivers -- a position unlike any other in the sports world.


The Setonian
Sports

Sailing team stumbles amid stiff competition

The perennially top-10 ranked co-ed sailing team is on a slippery slope. It will have to start turning things around if it doesn't want to miss the mark for both national championship events for the second straight year.


The Setonian
Sports

Field hockey coach McDavitt named to Team USA for 2009-10

Last week, Tufts field hockey coach Tina McDavitt was named one of 24 members on the Team USA field hockey roster for 2009-10. McDavitt will have the opportunity to play in the 2010 Indoor Pan Am Cup next March -- an opportunity she turned down this past fall in order to lead the Jumbos to an appearance in the NCAA title game -- and potentially have the opportunity to represent the United States in the 2011 Indoor World Cup.



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Sports

Men's Lacrosse | After Middlebury loss, Jumbos rebound against Endicott

The nationally ranked No. 7 men's lacrosse team relied on its powerful offense to rebound from a disappointing loss to Middlebury over the weekend with a 18-13 victory against No. 15 Endicott Tuesday night. Playing on the road in Beverly, the Jumbos never trailed against the Gulls as they finally succeeded in putting the game away with seven fourth-quarter goals.




The Setonian
Sports

Softball moves to 27-0 with mercy win at Bridgewater State

    Just two days removed from their closest game of the year, a 6-5 win over Wellesley College, the Jumbos rolled to an 11-2 non-conference win at Bridgewater State College on Tuesday afternoon, led by freshman Lena Cantone.     Cantone, who was just a triple away from the cycle, accounted for eight of Tufts' runs against the Bears, driving in seven and scoring one herself. All of Cantone's RBIs came with two outs and helped put the stamp on the five-inning victory, the second time this season that the Jumbos have mercy-ruled Bridgewater State.     In the top of the second inning, Tufts broke open a scoreless match with four runs, as Cantone plated three runners on a double to the right-center gap. The first-year then tacked on a two-out, two-run single to cap off a five-run third inning. Cantone finished her day with a two-run home run to deep left field in the fifth.     Aside from Cantone, the Jumbos, who pounded out 13 hits, were led by senior Maya Ripecky, who was a perfect three-for-three, and senior quad-captain Roni Herbst, who scored three runs and drove in another. Tinker added two more hits for Tufts, which improved to 27-0 on the year.     In the pitcher's circle, sophomore Izzie Santone got the win, scattering four hits and one unearned run over four innings of work, walking just one Bears batter and striking out a pair.     The Jumbos return to action on Wednesday with a doubleheader at Babson (16-16) before traveling to Bowdoin for the last weekend series of NESCAC play.