Sunday, January 23, 2011

10 Biggest Stories Of 2010 NFL Season: No. 9: Ben Roethlisberger Suspension

(Although this incident technically happened in the offseason, the punishment was handed down during the regular season.)

In March of 2010, Steelers’ quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was involved in a sexual assault investigation. This was centered around the acqusation of a 20-year old college student in a Georgia nightclub.

The Steelers immediately began contacting other teams about trading a top 10 pick in the draft for Roethlisberger, including the Rams, Raiders, 49ers, Jaguars, Bills, Seahawks, and Browns.

They didn’t receive much interest in Roethlisberger and kept him for the 2010 season.

Despite having no criminal charges being filed against Roethlisberger, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell suspended Roethlisberger for the first six games of the 2010 season. The suspension was later shortened to four games for good behavior.

Roethlisberger was the 16th player suspended under new commissioner Roger Goodell but he was the first to be suspended who hadn’t been arrested or charged with a crime. The NFL allowed Roethlisberger to participate in preseason games.


Goodell’s punishment was influenced by a previous incident in 2008 when Roethlisberger was also accused of sexually assaulting a woman while in a celebrity golf tournament.

No charges stemmed from that incident either. (However I always say if you’re accused once, you may or may not be guilty. If you’re accused twice, you’re guilty.)

The Steelers traded a seventh round draft pick to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for quarterback Byron Leftwich, adding depth to their quarterback rotation that already included Dennis Dixon and Charlie Batch.

The Steelers used Dennis Dixon in the season’s first game, which was won over the Atlanta Falcons, 15-9, on Rashard Mendenhall’s 50-yard touchdown run in overtime. Dixon threw no touchdowns, but had an interception.

In week 2, Dixon suffered an MCL sprain, which resulted in him being placed on IR. Charlie Batch came in and led the Steelers to a win over the Titans.

Batch quarterbacked the Steelers to a big 38-13 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in week 3, but the Ravens defeated the Steelers 17-14 in week 4.

In all, the Steelers won three of the their four games during Roethlisberger’s suspension, including impressive victories over the NFC’s top-seeded Atlanta Falcons and the eventual 10-win Tampa Bay Buccaneers. They lost to the Baltimore Ravens, which they probably would have won had Roethlisberger played.

After the bye week, Roethlisberger returned and led the Steelers to their usual 12-4 record and a bye in the first round of the postseason. For the season, he tossed 17 touchdowns, five interceptions, and posted a 97.0 passer rating.

In my opinion, the Steelers would have finished 13-3 and not 12-4 had Roethlisberger not been suspended. They still wouldn’t have landed the one seed in the postseason. Ultimately, the suspension didn’t affect much of the season.

Jerry McDonald Inside the NFL: Roethlisberger better equipped than Brady to beat Steelers

The season ended for New England Patriots quarterback and MVP-to-be Tom Brady in the confines of the pocket, searching in vain for receivers that never came free against a matrix-like New York Jets secondary that seemed to sprout extra defensive backs as needed.

Pittsburgh Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger won't play it that way.

If Steelers receivers are covered in Sunday's AFC Championship game against the Jets, Roethlisberger will bounce off a tackler, break to one side or the other and make a throw that may or may not be thrown with the correct balance.

It won't have the fundamental precision of a Brady pass, but it might be a first down "... or a touchdown.

"I'm probably not ever going to win an MVP, probably never going to win a passing title," Roethlisberger said this week. "But that's not why I play the game. I just go out and try to win football games and win championships."

About the time Michael Vick was re-establishing himself as an NFL star after nearly wrecking his life in a criminal enterprise involving dogs, Roethlisberger was serving a four-game suspension for behaving like one.

Commissioner Roger Goodell disciplined Roethlisberger with a six-game suspension (reduced to four for good behavior) after a sexual assault allegation in Georgia. That incident, plus a couple of others, had enough teeth for the league to find him violation of its personal conduct policy.

The Steelers went 3-1 in


Roethlisberger's absence with Dennis Dixon and Charlie Batch at quarterback. Roethlisberger returned and regained the trust of his teammates and is gradually doing the same in the city of Pittsburgh.

Roethlisberger, 28, must deliver two more wins to move alongside Brady and Troy Aikman as three-time Super Bowl champions. He still would have plenty of time to join or pass Terry Bradshaw and Joe Montana as the only four-time winners.

Brady's past three postseason games all have been losses -- to the Giants in Super Bowl XLII, to the Ravens in a January 2010 wild-card rout and last week to the Jets in a game more decisive than the 28-21 final score.

The playoff difficulties of Peyton Manning are well documented.

Roethlisberger, however, is 9-2 in the postseason and a game away from a solid week of Super Bowl scrutiny, which will ran the gamut from stories about him being a changed man to those that insist he got off easy.

Jumping to more Week 20 conclusions:

  • Tom Cable joined Bill Callahan, Norv Turner and Lane Kiffin as former Raiders' coaches who quickly got good jobs partly because they survived the Al Davis experience.

    As line coach and assistant head coach of the Seattle Seahawks, Cable figures to go hard after Robert Gallery if and when free agency begins, pending a collective bargaining agreement.

  • Nice rebound by Mike Singletary, as well. He ended up as assistant head coach and linebackers coach for the Minnesota Vikings and former Bears teammate Leslie Frazier.
  • A lot of people have doubted Bears quarterback Jay Cutler, including yours truly, likely because of the way he carries himself. But Cutler has a chance to prove a lot of people wrong against the Packers, with almost universal sentiment being that Aaron Rodgers is the better quarterback on the field.

    Cutler, by the way, is perfect for Chicago in one way, even if he's not getting a lot of credit even in the local media. He might be the league's best bad-weather passer, not losing a lot in the way of velocity or touch even in the worst conditions.

  • One reason a collective bargaining agreement isn't likely to be in place by March 3 despite commissioner Roger Goodell's plea for round-the-clock negotiations is that players are just fine with the thought of missing OTAs and offseason workout programs.

    How about this sense of urgency from Arizona running back Jason Wright, who visited Capitol Hill as the players avail themselves of the political process in dealing with a labor dispute:

    "We're not here to accomplish anything. We're here to meet people."

    QUOTABLE: "He will earn every cent they pay him. And that won't be much,"

    -- Ravens defensive coordinator and former Raiders defensive backs coach Chuck Pagano on former colleague Hue Jackson.

    BY THE NUMBERS: 0 -- The number of playoff wins for Tony Gonzalez, a Cal product and one of the most decorated tight ends in NFL history. Gonzalez's teams with the Kansas City Chiefs and Atlanta Falcons are 0-4 in the postseason.

  • Cam Newton to work with QB tutor

    Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton has arrived in San Diego to train with George Whitfield Jr., the quarterback tutor who mentored Ben Roethlisberger.

    Newton
    Newton

    Whitfield Jr. worked with Roethlisberger during his NFL-mandated four-game suspension earlier this season.

    Whitfield Jr. said he will start preparing Newton for pre-draft evaluations on Monday. Whitfield said that Newton came to him on the advice of Hall of Fame quarterback Warren Moon.

    "I'm excited and Cam is excited to get to work," said Whitfield. "We'll break it down, assess where he is physically, fundamentally, mentally, emotionally ... all of it."

    In one year at Auburn, the 6-foot-5, 248-pound Newton led the Tigers to their first national title since 1957 and a 14-0 season.

    Cutler: “They made the decision”

    NFC Championship Football

    With criticism of Jay Cutler mounting, the Bears quarterback spoke with the media in the locker room after Sunday’s loss in an attempt to explain his disappointing day.

    Cutler said he was hopeful he could keep playing, but he was unable to plant and throw because of his knee injury. He said the decision to come out of the game was not his decision.

    Coach Lovie Smith echoed that sentiment.

    “There was no decision at all,” Smith said. “He was injured. He was hurt and he couldn’t go. The trainers and doctors . . . made that decision.”

    Cutler said he was disappointed and that it was a “lonely feeling” to watch the game from the sideline. He “hoped” he wouldn’t require surgery, but didn’t know the extent of the injury. (Center Olin Kreutz thought Cutler had a torn knee ligament, but that may be guesswork at this point.)

    A reporter asked Cutler what he thought of all the criticism from other NFL player on Twitter about his toughness.

    “No comment,” Cutler said, his distaste for the question clear.

    And with that, Cutler’s resurgent season ended as he limped out of the locker room.

    Cutler lacks grit in loss against Packers

    CHICAGO

    Chicago Bears fans, the legions who are swearing and stinging from the bitterness of Sunday’s 21-14 NFC Championship game loss to their rival Green Bay Packers, may never get over the specter of quarterback Jay Cutler’s second-half disappearing act.

    For the record: A left knee injury — “I got hit on the outside of the leg,” an emotionless Cutler said — eventually knocked the Bears starter out of the biggest game of the season. He was hurt in the final series just before halftime, but Cutler could not recall the specific play.

    He walked to the Soldier Field sideline slowly, with no visible limp.

    There was no obvious sign of how it happened. No pileup of bodies, no hideous slow-mo replay that showed the knee being crunched. Center Olin Kruetz said he thought he saw Cutler wobbling a bit as he walked to the halftime locker room. But why wasn’t Cutler’s knee immobilized for precautionary reasons if that was the case?

    The uproar began early in the third quarter after Cutler was ineffective as the Bears went three-and-out to begin the second half.

    Then trailing 14-0, second-string journeyman and 16-year NFL veteran Todd Collins lasted two unproductive series featuring four incompletions before the Bears looked to their No. 3 quarterback, third-year emergency man Caleb Hanie.

    And while Hanie surprised the Packers defense a bit and led the team to two scoring drives, that move meant Cutler was done for the game.

    In the wake of one of the Bears’ most crushing losses in their storied history, Cutler may very well be done in Chicago as well.

    His teammates publicly defended his toughness, but across the NFL where players past and present go to Twitter to offer their take, the verdict on Cutler was that he was gutless, a quitter, to hand over the ball to his backups with his team behind and a Super Bowl berth two quarters away.

    A Twitter sampling:

    Maurice Jones-Drew: “All I’m saying is that he can finish the game on a hurt knee … I played the whole season on one …”

    Asante Samuel: “If he was my teammate I would be looking at him sideways. … I luv my QB @mikevick he has the heart of a lion. I guess others are scared of success.”

    Mark Schlereth: “As a guy (who) had 20 knee surgeries you’d have to drag me out on a stretcher to Leave a championship game! #justsaying”

    Mark Sanchez

    Darnell Dockett: “If I’m on Chicago team jay cutler has to wait till me and the team shower get dressed and leave before he comes in the locker room!”

    Kirk Morrison: “If my knee was hurt or acl/mcl/pcl sprain, I would not be standing up on the sideline.”

    Ouch.

    Asked about others across the NFL openly questioning his toughness, Cutler abruptly cut off the questions.

    “No comment on that.”

    Could Cutler have played in the second half, after he said trainers taped his knee? The sometimes surly Bears No. 1 methodically peddled on a stationary bike along the sidelines. Then he stood in cold weather gear and a wool cap, as in no time that debate went from a raging Internet debate to a fully stoked virtual wildfire as the scoreboard ticked down to douse the Bears’ playoff run and send the Packers to Super Bowl XLV.

    “The last series (before halftime) really aggravated it,” a stone-faced Cutler (6-of-14 passing, 80 yards, one interception) said after the game. “It hurt. We’re gonna do an MRI tomorrow.

    Will the knee require surgery? “I hope not.”

    Was it the doctors’ decision for him not to play?

    “We gave it a go there that first series but (I) couldn’t really plant or throw,” Cutler said. “They kind of pulled me.”

    Watching from the bench, he said, was tough. “It’s a lonely feeling, fighting, going through training camp and everything else to get to this point and have an opportunity to get to the Super Bowl. It’s hard.”

    Did Cutler lobby to stay in the game?

    “I was going to keep playing, “ he said, “but, you know, they made the decision that giving Todd a shot would better suit the team.”

    Said coach Lovie Smith: “He was hurt, and he couldn’t go. Trainers, doctors and all, they are the ones who really made that decision. As far as Jay, he is like everybody else; he was disappointed he couldn’t go out and play to help his team win.

    Pressed further about Cutler not returning, Smith lost his trademark patience.

    “He hurt his knee and he was out, all right? There’s nothing else for me to tell you on that,” Smith said.”I don’t know exactly when it happened. He couldn’t go, and that was that. Let’s go on to some other questions, how about that?”

    Smith preferred instead to talk about Hanie, the unknown who entered the game with 66 NFL passing yards to his credit and completed 13-of-20 passes for 153 yards and a touchdown but also threw two interceptions, one of which Packers nose tackle B.J. Raji returned 18 yards for a touchdown.

    No chance. The second-guessing was focused squarely on Cutler, who stood and answered questions at his locker without any sign of discomfort and without a brace on his knee.

    Cutler, who finished with a 31.8 passer rating, said he tested the knee after having it taped but that he felt he was limited on his plant leg. “I knew that it was probably better that I didn’t (return),” he said. “I knew my knee. I know my body.”

    Off the record, several teammates looked at Cutler amid the postgame wreckage and shook their heads. “I aint’ gonna say nothing,” one Bears player said privately, “but I don’t see a brace on that knee. Do you?”

    On the record, the Bears defended him with all their might.

    Brian Urlacher lashed out at anyone across the NFL who wonders why Cutler left a championship game while he could still stand upright.

    "He’s a tough son of a bitch, hell yeah he is. He practices every day. You’ve seen the hits he’s taken his career. He gets up, he doesn’t bitch, he doesn’t complain, he just goes out there and competes and tries to win the game,” Urlacher said of Cutler. “If he couldn’t be in there, it’s because he was hurt, because he couldn’t go and probably thought he was hurting the team if he couldn’t be in there. That’s why."

    What about players questioning the QB across the NFL?

    "I don’t give a (expletive) about players around the league sitting, watching our game at home,” Urlacher snapped. What players? Did they put their names on it?"

    Kerry Rhodes, someone said.

    “Who’s he?"

    Maurice Jones-Drew was another, Urlacher was told.

    “Where’s he at now, home? I’m just saying. It’s easy to talk (expletive) about someone when you’re sitting on your couch watching their game,” Urlacher said angrily. That’s what I’m saying. I don’t understand it, I don’t get it.

    “Let them sprain their MCL or do whatever he did to his knee and then get back in the game. See if they can do that. See how well they run the ball, or whoever the other guy is, see how well he does at whatever position he plays. I don’t agree with it. It’s easy to write that stuff on the Internet."

    Vegas wins Hope Classic in playoff

    LA QUINTA, Calif. - Jhonattan Vegas' path to the PGA Tour started in the remote reaches of Venezuela, where the toddler imitated his father's golf swing with sticks and stones while growing up in an oil-drilling camp.

    Maybe that's why Vegas never gave up hope when he missed a 9-foot putt that could have won the Bob Hope Classic on the final regulation hole Sunday — or even when he put his playoff tee shot into the water moments later.

    The 26-year-old rookie needed a wealth of patience and perseverance just to make it to Palm Springs from that camp in the Orinoco River valley.

    And when Gary Woodland made a few mistakes of his own, the man they're already calling Jhonny Vegas hit the biggest jackpot of his pioneering career.

    Vegas made a 13-foot par putt on the second playoff hole to win the Hope Classic, holding off Woodland for his first PGA Tour victory in just his fifth start.

    Vegas is the first Venezuelan to win a PGA Tour event, but his remarkably steady performance over 92 holes in the five-day event suggests he's capable of winning again — and maybe even energizing an unpopular sport in his homeland.

    "Just to think about winning on the PGA Tour, that's something," Vegas said. "But to make it happen is something else, and it's a crazy feeling. It was tough today to stay neutral and play golf, and that's why. To my country, I hope this means a lot. I really hope it means people changing (their minds) about the sport."

    Vegas improbably became the first rookie to win the 52-year-old tournament with a spectacular up-and-down par after knocking his 92nd tee shot into the water 160 yards from the hole.

    With the light fading rapidly behind the San Jacinto Mountains, Vegas got help from two poor shots by Woodland, who also was seeking his first tour win. Woodland's approach shot landed in a bunker, and his sand shot trickled to the opposite side of the green.

    After his drop, Vegas confidently put a 9-iron right behind the pin. Woodland missed a par putt, and Vegas holed his $900,000 putt.

    "Seemed like we were out there forever," said Woodland, a former college basketball player from Kansas. "We were grinding all day. Jhonattan got off to a pretty good start, and I was just trying to catch him all day, so the playoff was no different. It was just sudden death, but who made the first mistake? And it looked like I did."

    Vegas and Woodland eliminated defending champion Bill Haas with birdies on the first playoff hole after all three finished the final round at 27-under 333. Vegas is the third straight player to get his first PGA Tour victory at the Hope, joining Pat Perez and Haas.

    Vegas and Woodland closed with 3-under 69s and Haas shot a 66.

    Playing one group apart, Haas and Vegas both missed short putts on the final regulation hole. A few minutes after Haas botched a 6-footer for birdie, Vegas couldn't connect, making his only bogey of the final day. Woodland, who shared the lead with Vegas after each of the final three rounds, got into the playoff with a birdie on the final regulation hole.

    Vegas cut a confident figure on the Palmer Private course, wearing a neon-peach shirt with starkly white pants and Nike hat. He was followed by his mother and his father, Carlos, who got his son into the game while selling food and tending a nine-hole course in that oil camp.

    Vegas left home at 17, moving to Houston to study golf and English before playing at the University of Texas.

    "Life for me hasn't been always the best," Vegas said. "I had to fight to get where I am. I'm a fighter, and if I set a goal in front of me, I'm just going to die just to get there, and fight hard to accomplish what I set out in my mind."

    Vegas' victory should give a boost to his desire to revive the sport in his native country, where golf has been under criticism from President Hugo Chavez, who has closed six courses in the past seven years. Vegas has expressed a desire to speak with Chavez, hoping to change the president's mind about the sport that Chavez has decried as a pastime of the rich.

    "I hope they know about the story, and that it is possible to get to the PGA Tour and win," Vegas said of his fellow Venezuelans. "I hope people realize that all over the world."

    The Masters will have a bit of Vegas flair this year — and not just from Jhonattan. His father wouldn't miss it for the world.

    "I know it's a dream that my dad and my American friends have to go to the Masters, just to walk around," Vegas said with a broad smile. "That's what they told me. It's like, 'Before I die, just please get me to the Masters."

    Ryan Palmer shot an 8-under 64 in the final round to finish fourth at 26 under, while Brian Gay's 10-under 62 shot him up from 37th place to a tie for fifth with Kevin Na (67) at 24 under.

    Rookie Vegas wins Hope in dramatic playoff

    Jhonattan Vegas, of Venezuela, watches his tee shot on the fourth hole of the Palmer Private course at PGA West during the final round of the Bob Hope Classic PGA golf tournament in La Quinta, Calif., Sunday, Jan. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)


    Jhonattan Vegas, of Venezuela, watches his tee shot on the fourth hole of the Palmer Private course at PGA West during the final round of the Bob Hope Classic PGA golf tournament in La Quinta, Calif., Sunday, Jan. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

    — Jhonattan Vegas believes his life has been one battle after another.

    A battle to rise above the roughshod 9-hole oil company golf courses he played as a child in his native Venezuela.

    A battle to make his way to the United States.

    A battle to learn English and go to college.

    A battle to reach first the Nationwide Tour and then the big leagues on the PGA Tour.

    So it was that he had another battle, both external and internal, Sunday to win the Bob Hope Classic. It was hardly a shock that Vegas prevailed.

    He three-putted the 18th hole in regulation to shoot 3-under-par 69 and fall into a playoff at 27-under with Gary Woodland (69) and Bill Haas (66). Then he drove his ball into the water on the second playoff hole, the 10th. But Vegas never once looked defeated.

    The first Venezuelan to play on the tour made a remarkable 12-foot par save at No. 10, and he beat Woodland, whose 6-foot putt for bogey was made meaningless when Vegas’ roll went in and he pumped his fist in triumph.

    Haas, last year’s champion who shot 16-under over the last two rounds, was eliminated on the first playoff with a par.

    The first rookie to win the Hope in its 52-year histopry, Vegas, 26, earned the $900,000 first prize and an inaugural trip to April’s Masters. It was only his second start as an official PGA Tour member and fifth appearance overall.

    He will play at Torrey Pines in the Farmers Insurance Open this week for the first time since his lone appearance in Junior World in 2002.

    “Life for me hasn’t always been the best,” Vegas said. “… I feel like I’m a fighter. If I set a goal in front of me, I’m going to die to get there. I fight hard and I accomplish what I get in my mind.

    “I wasn’t going to give up. I knew this was a great opportunity. Just by doing that, I won this week.”

    Vegas owned at least a share of the lead after every round but the first, and he looked like he was striding to a convincing victory. He had a two-shot lead when he stepped to the 15th tee, though Haas would soon halve that with a birdie at 16.

    Until the 18th hole, Vegas had been remarkably resilient. After a putting lesson on Saturday night from his father, Carlos, who told him to take a lighter grip, Vegas one-putted nine greens and produced some impressive up-and-downs.

    The highlight came at the par-3 15th, when he pulled his approach shot and it nearly went in the water, the ball settling just a few yards above the canal on a steep bank. From there, Vegas pitched up to 3 feet and saved par.

    Playing ahead of Vegas, Haas three-putted the 18th to remain at 27-under. Woodland lipped out a short putt at 17 to stay at minus-26. When Vegas hit his drive from the 18th tee, he held a one-shot lead.

    But his drive ended up in the right bunker, he had to lay up, and he cautiously played to the center of the green. After Woodland birdied, Vegas missed a 6-foot par putt to suffer his only bogey of the day and his only 6 in a week in which he made 34 birdies and an eagle.

    Vegas hardly looked crushed by the mistake, and his chip shot grazed the cup on the first playoff hole that he and Woodland halved with birdies.

    “I think being positive has been a key for me,” he said., “Throughout my career, I haven’t let anything get me down. … It was rough today. Someone could have gotten down after three-putted 18, but I still had a chance. I hit the water, and I still had a chance.”

    According to the Baseball Almanac, Venezuela has sent 256 homegrown players to the U.S. major leagues. Golf, meantime, has been a beleaguered and dying sport there because President Hugo Chavez is closing dozens of courses to use the land for other purposes.

    Still, Vegas produced an inspiring victory by a native son. He hopes it will be noticed in his own country.

    “It means everything to me right now,” Vegas said. “Just to think about winning on the PGA Tour – that’s something. … To my country, I hope this means a lot. I really hope it means change, and some people get a little different idea of the sport.”

    Locals watch

    -- Bill Lunde, in 121st place after shooting 74 in the first round, scored 66 on Sunday to tie for 13th at 21-under. Lunde followed his bad opener with rounds of 64-67-68-66. The winner of last year’s Turning Stone Championship birdied 15-17.

    -- Pat Perez, the 2009 Hope titlist, shot four of his five rounds in the 60s, but none of them were low and he tied for 54th at 14-under. Perez shot three 69s, one 68 and a 71. Kevin Stadler, tied for 21st after four rounds, shot 75 and tied for 61st at 13-under.

    FanBolt's 'Mean Girls 2' Set Visit

    ast summer I received word that Paramount Productions had begun work on its latest motion picture, Mean Girls 2. The film was shooting in Atlanta, Georgia close to our headquarters and was the long-awaited follow-up to the 2004 hit film starring Lindsay Lohan.

    When I arrived on set, I learned that I was just in time as the next day was the last day for the project. The girls had filmed for about a month in the hottest part of the year in Atlanta - which was one of the most challenging parts of the project for much of the cast. On this particular day, they were filming a soccer scene on the field at Sutton Middle School (just slightly north of Atlanta). There were air conditioned tents set up for the cast to escape the sun in between takes which is naturally where I set up camp to interview the cast as well.

    While Mean Girls 2 didn't bring back any of the original cast (minus Tim Meadows as the principle), the film did have a ton of fresh new faces including the ones I had a chance to speak with: Jennifer Stone, Meaghan Martin, Diego Gonzalez Boneta, Maiara Walsh, Nicole Gale Anderson, Claire Holt, and Patrick Johnson.

    The cast all seemed to get along really well. When I asked them about their favorite moments from filming, each actor had nothing but nice things to say about their time with each other, which surprised them as much as it did me...

    "Coming into this project I didn't know how it would go. Would we all get along? Luckily, we got blessed with a really cool group of kids." Nicole Anderson replied, "We've all been super tight this whole project. I think once we go back to LA, we'll all still hang out and still be friends."

    "I think having met the girls, that's kind of the nicest thing about it." Claire Holt answered, "I hope we'll stay friends after this. It's a really great group and I'm really happy to be apart of it."

    I also asked the girls what they're advise was for dealing with mean girls. Here's what they had to say:

    "Just have confidence in yourself, and don't let anyone knock you down" Nicole Anderson replied, "It's not you, it's them. Just know who you are as a person and stick with your true friends."

    The topic of mean girls or bullies in general seems to be really relevant right now with all the stories we've heard in the news over the last year. Bullies sadly aren't going anywhere. Mean Girls 2 tells a very similiar story to it's predecessor only this film is without a Lohan. The story revolves around a new high school student, Jo, who agrees to befriend an unpopular girl named Abby at the urging of Abby's wealthy father in exchange for paying all of Jo's costs for the college of her dreams. Jo and Abby team up to take on the school's mean girls, "The Plastics." The story becomes a high stakes battle of loyalty that ultimately comes to a head when one of our heroines finds out that her friendship has been bought and paid for.

    Be sure to check out my video interviews from set, and keep an eye out for the rest of the interviews which will be coming out on the same day as the DVD release (February 1st)!

    Interviews:
    - Nicole Anderson
    - Claire Holt
    - Meaghan Martin


    Mean Girls 2


    Your Pop Culture Junkie,
    Emma Loggins

    “Mean Girls 2″ Movie Review


    On January 23, 2011 ABC Family Channel premiered the new movie “Mean Girls 2, right after airing the original movie “Mean Girls” starring Lindsay Lohan. In the new sequel movie, Meaghan Martin plays the character Jo, who is a bit of a tomboy who is used to changing schools. So of course, Jo is the new girl at school this year, her last year in high school before college.

    We’re introduced to the “plastics,” played by Claire Holt, Maiara Walsh and Nicole Anderson (from Disney Channel’s “JONAS L.A.”). And then we are introduced to quite the opposite character from the plastics, Abby, played by Jennifer Stone (from Disney Channel’s “Wizards of Waverly Place”).

    We’re excited that Tim Meadows reprises his role as Principal Duvall in the movie!

    Then we are introduced to all of the different stereotypes at school, so who will Jo decide to try to fit in with?

    Here is a list of actors in “Mean Girls 2,”

    - Jennifer Stone as Abby Hanover
    - Meaghan Martin as Jo
    - Diego Gonzalez Boneta as Tyler Adams
    - Maiara Walsh as Mandi DuPont
    - Nicole Gale Anderson as Hope
    - Claire Holt as Chastity
    - Linden Ashby as Rod Mitchell
    - Tim Meadows as Principal Duvall
    - Rhoda Griffis as Ilene
    - Tatum Etheridge as Little Jo
    - Patrick Johnson as Nick
    - Amber Wallace as Violet
    - Colin Dennard as Elliott Gold
    - Edward Bryan as Police Officer
    - Mike Pniewski as Mr. Giamatti

    At home, Jo finds out that her father invested and lost her college funds, and she might not be able to attend Carnegie Mellon University – her dream school. Will Jo be able to rebound from this disappointment? We hope so!

    We then find out that Jennifer Stone’s character Abby has lived next door to Maiara Walsh’s character Mandi since they were kids, and the two were on speaking terms, until Abby got the best parking spot in the lot at school – which is so not okay with Mandi! Mandi and her plastics decide to get help to ruin Abby’s life.

    Not only does Abby get covered in food in the school cafeteria, but then her car gets paintballed. Jo offers Abby a ride home, only to see how nice a house she lives in. Her parents realize that they need to help Abby make friends and they think that Jo is the best person for the role. Abby’s father makes a deal with Jo to be friends with his daughter, and in exchange Jo gets the money she needs for college.

    Uh oh. The plastics realize that all the guys at school think Jo is hot – so will they ask her to join their group, or will they try to make her life as horrible as possible? Looks like they want to invite her into the clique! Will she join them? So far that’s a negative, but we have a feeling things may change.

    Jo decides to spend her time living up to her end of the bargain with Abby’s father. She keeps trying to spend time with Abby, which makes Mandi super upset. Now the plastics are after Jo!

    Jo develops a crush on Tyler, played by Diego Gonzalez Boneta, who she sits next to her in class. But of course when Tyler asks Jo on a date Mandi finds out and she’s not a happy camper. Although, it turns out that Tyler’s friend set them up and recorded their conversation during the night to play for the entire school the next day. Uh oh.

    Oh. Well now we find out that Tyler is Mandi’s step brother. This isn’t going to end well.

    Mandi finds out that Jo and Tyler are the new hot couple in school. So what is she going to do now to sabotage this couple so that she and her BF can get back into the number one spot? The plastics end up ruining Jo’s fathers car by putting coffee and sugar into the gas tank. Oh, it’s officially on.

    So far we’re liking this movie, but it doesn’t have as many memorable moments as the original “Mean Girls” movie. We love that a lot of the stars have ties to Disney, we love recognizing actors in movies from some of our favorite TV shows and movies! The plot is predictable, making it easy to follow, and the characters are all over-the-top and extremely interesting.

    Now Mandi is throwing a huge party, and Jo decides to throw a party at the same time – uh oh!

    Oh great. Everyone shows up to Jo and Abby’s party and everything is going fantastic, until the pizza they get delivered is poisoned by the plastics. Don’t worry they got Chinese food instead! Yum!

    Jo is trying to win Homecoming Queen. She seems to be acting more and more like the plastics she hates. She gets more popular and starts ignoring the people who are most important to her.

    Jo finds out she was accepted to the school of her dreams, but will she have Abby’s father pay for her tuition?

    Nope. Jo returns the money to Abby’s father, but Abby ends up finding out about the deal. Jo loses all of her friends, her boyfriend, and her tuition money. Now what?

    Jo was set up by Mandi and it looked like Jo stole the homecoming dance charity money. Jo decides to challenge Mandi to a powder puff football game. But will anybody be on Jo’s team?

    Tyler finds out that Jo gave the money back to Abby’s father. Will this change his mind about his ex-GF?

    All of Jo’s ex-friends come to her house to say they want to help her with the football game, even though they haven’t forgiven her yet.

    Jo and her team win the football game while Mandi and her BF get taken away by the police for stealing the charity money. Everyone then attends the Homecoming dance – fun! So will Jo be named Homecoming Queen?

    Eliott gets named Homecoming King while Abby wins Homecoming Queen! Aww, so cute!

    Everything works out great for everyone, well, except for Mandi, who gets stuck with community service!

    Did you tune in for “Mean Girls 2″? If so, be sure to let us know what your review of the movie is!

    Get ready for “Mean Girls 2″ to arrive on DVD in February!

    Black Eyed Peas' Apl.de.ap Says He's Legally Blind

    apl.de.apHe's rocked stages across the globe and built a successful career as one-fourth of the platinum-selling group Black Eyed Peas, but member apl.de.ap had an obstacle in his way the entire time -- he cannot fully see.

    The Filipino rapper revealed to People magazine recently that he's legally blind due to a rare condition called nystagmus, a form of involuntary eye movement which can cause vision impairment.

    He says he's had it most of his life.

    "I doubted myself for a long time," apl.de.ap said. "I'm comfortable not using my vision. I weave around my problems."

    The condition is characterized by alternating smooth pursuit of the eye in one direction and saccadic movement in the other direction.

    It causes constant blurred vision, rapid eyeball vibrations, and nearsightedness. Apl says he can't read anything unless he's very close to it.

    "I'm good at shapes. If I'm not close, even if it's big, I can't read it."

    apl.de.ap was diagnosed with the condition as a child, and said that until he found hip-hop as an inspiration, Nystagmus left him feeling worthless.

    "Until I discovered hip-hop, I felt I wasn't going to accomplish anything."

    He's proved he can overcome the condition as a member of the Black Eyed Peas, who's sold millions of records across the world.

    Black Eyed Pea Reveals Disability: Are Blind Musicians More Talented?

    Looking for a little Tuesday-in-January inspiration?

    Black Eyed Peas rapper apl.de.ap managed to become a world-renowned, chart-topping, Grammy-winning hip-hop superstar -- all without having full control of his vision.

    The 36-year-old recently revealed to People magazine that he is legally blind. He was diagnosed with the rare disease nystagmus, which involuntarily makes the eye move.

    However, he now says he's overcome the obstacle.

    SODAHEAD SLIDESHOW: Are blind musicians more talented?

    "I doubted myself for a long time... I'm comfortable not using my vision. I weave around my problems," said the musician, who was born Allan Pineda Lindo Jr.

    So many musical geniuses have been blind that we almost wonder if the disability enhances their abilities. From Stevie Wonder to Ray Charles to apl.de.ap, let us know: Are blind musicians more talented?


    Hips don't lie: Shakira dons stunning tight black dress to join Usher, Black Eyed Peas and more at French music awards

    She-wolf Shakira was the belle of the ball as she stalked the red carpet at the 12th annual NRJ Music Awards in Cannes last night.

    The 33-year-old singer looked stunning in a tight black frock as she waved to the hundreds of fans from the red carpet at the glitzy bash.

    The star also played live at the event, belting out songs Loca, from her album of last year Sale El Sol, and her World Cup anthem of last summer, Waka Waka, while hypnotising the crowds with her trademark slinky hip moves.

    Dazzling: Shakira word a sparkly black mini dress that clung to her curves and black patent peep toes to the NRJ Music Awards in Cannes

    Dazzling: Shakira word a sparkly black mini dress that clung to her curves and black patent peep toes to the NRJ Music Awards in Cannes

    Hippy shake: The Columbian star wiggled her famous hips at the waiting crowds on the red carpet
    Hippy shake: The Columbian star wiggled her famous hips at the waiting crowds on the red carpet

    Hippy shake: The Columbian star wiggled her famous hips at the waiting crowds on the red carpet

    She also ended up one of the big winners at the ceremony, picking up gongs for International Female Artist of the Year and International Song of the Year for her World Cup hit.

    It's the first time the star has been seen out in public since she announced the break-up with her Argentinian boyfriend of 11 years - who is also her manager - earlier this month.


    The couple revealed in a joint message on Shakira's website that they actually broke up last August, but had kept it private until their announcement.

    Shakira and Antonio de la Rua said they viewed their separation as temporary, and de la Rua will continue to oversee Shakira's business and career interests.

    Also at the do were Jermaine Jackson, Usher, apl.de.ap and Will.i.am of The Black Eyed Peas and David Guetta.

    Model Victoria Silvstedt had also donned a short black dress for the black tie event, run by French radio station NRJ.



    Martina McBride, Joe Nichols Have Football Fever

    Martina McBride photo courtesy of FrontPage Publicity; Joe Nichols photo courtesy of Universal Records South.

    This weekend’s AFC Championship Game between the Pittsburg Steelers and the New York Jets will have a distinct country flavor. Martina McBride will be singing the National Anthem and Joe Nichols will be the halftime entertainment.

    In the past, Martina’s been a good luck charm for the Steelers — and the Steelers wouldn’t mind her luck again. ”Martina is 2-0 and we hope she brings the magic to stay undefeated,” says John Wodarek, Steelers Marketing Manager.

    “Singing our National Anthem is always an honor,” says Martina. “I will always remember singing the anthem in Pittsburgh 2 years ago for the playoff game. It’s amazing to be there in the middle of all those football fans and all that excitement. I can’t wait!”

    “I am a sports fanatic,” says Joe, “and being able to perform at halftime for the fans of the Steelers and the Jets is such a thrill for me. One of these teams will be going to the Super Bowl—enough said! So being able to pump the fans up, even more than they already will be, is my goal. Thanks to the Steelers’ organization for making it happen.”

    To see Martina and Joe, tune in to CBS on Sunday, Jan. 23 at 6:30 p.m. Eastern.

    Who are you pulling for this weekend — Steelers or Jets?

    Martina McBride to Perform National Anthem at AFC Championship Game

    Frederick Breedon, FilmMagic.com Martina McBride has been tapped to perform the national anthem prior to Sunday's AFC Championship Game as the Pittsburgh Steelers play host to the New York Jets.

    The powerhouse vocalist has been a good luck charm for the NFL team in the past, and the Steelers hope she will be again for this weekend's game, which will decide who heads to the Super Bowl. "Martina is 2-0, and we hope she brings the magic to stay undefeated," declares the Steelers Marketing Manager John Wodarek.

    Martina, who is a self-professed football fan, is thrilled to hit the field prior to Sunday's game. "Singing our national anthem is always an honor," says Martina. "I will always remember singing the anthem in Pittsburgh two years ago for the playoff game. It's amazing to be there in the middle of all those football fans and all that excitement, I can't wait!"

    Martina is currently working on her 11th studio album, which should be released later this year.

    The AFC Championship Game will be broadcast live from Heinz Field on Sunday, January 23 beginning at 6:30 PM ET on CBS. The game gets even more countrified at halftime, as Joe Nichols has been tapped to perform at the AFC halftime show.

    Martina McBride Rocks The AFC Championship Game

    Martina McBride rocked the AFC Championship Game tonight! Martina McBride sang the National Anthem at the AFC Championship Game this evening and brought down the house.
    The country star belted out a spine-tingling version of the Nation Anthem before the Steelers and Jets game at Heinz Field for the AFC Championship game.

    I’ve been a fan of Martina McBride’s music for years. Her voice is amazing and she’s a star who doesn’t shy away from issues, such as domestic violence. McBride’s song Independence Day was about domestic violence, and Martina received a lot of heat for the song and the Independence Day music video. But Martina’s song about domestic violence did a great deal to create more awareness of the problem.

    Last year I had the pleasure of interviewing Martina McBride about being a mom and balancing work and family life. She was so great! Martina McBride is extremely down-to-earth, funny and we went way over our scheduled interview time, laughing about kids and motherhood.

    Martina is a 44-year-old mom who has been singing hits for almost 20 years. McBride was named 2007′s Top Grossing Country Artist of the year as well as earning the honor of Top Grossing Female Artist in 2007—Gwen Stefani was the only other female artist to out earn Martina McBride.

    Martina McBride: Electrifies The AFC Championship Game

    Martina McBride: Electrifies The AFC Championship Game

    Could you ever imagine singing the National Anthem in front of thousands of screaming football fans? That would most likely be a lot of pressure for a normal every day person but not for McBride. She gave a spine-tingling version of the Nation Anthem an fans loved it. Martina McBride also had experience singing the National Anthem in Pittsburgh two years ago.

    Martina McBride is not just a pretty face. She is a great singer and business lady. It seems that she is always busy doing something fun. Martina McBride just helped Kid Rock celebrate his 40th birthday as well.

    Did you know this young lady is actually 44. Wow what a knock out, I sure wouldn’t mind finding out what she does to keep her youthful appearance. In her 19 year career she has accomplished many things including being named 2007′s Top Grossing Country Artist of the year, and the over all Top Grossing Female in 2007 behind only Gwen Stefani. We wish you the best Martina McBride!

    Super Bowl will be old school: Packers vs. Steelers

    In an era of dizzying X-and-O game plans, climate-controlled stadiums and pyrotechnic halftime shows, what could be better than this?

    Packers vs. Steelers. Two franchises that conjure images of bruised bodies and blue toes. Two franchises that are like running, banging, grunting history books, one born in 1919, the other in 1933.

    One franchise is owned by the Rooney family, the other by 111,968 stockholders. Together, they’ve combined for 18 league championships, 44 Hall of Famers and two fan bases that unofficially hold all records for beer consumption.

    Cue the grainy film and the voice of John Facenda. Green Bay and Pittsburgh will play in the Super Bowl in two weeks. The only unfortunate thing is it will take place in Dallas at Jerry Jones’ $1.3 billion Football Stadium and Go-Go Club, which has a retractable roof and a thermostat and a blur of martini bars.

    Some frozen field in North Dakota, wood bleachers and a line of kegs would be more appropriate.

    The Packers defeated the Chicago Bears 21-14 for the NFC championship. The Steelers, after a late-game mini-meltdown, held on to beat the New York Jets 24-19 for the AFC title. Although these are two of the most successful franchises in NFL history, it will be the first time they’ll meet for the league championship.

    You may not think of this Green Bay team as a “Green Bay” team. The Packers are led by a strong-armed quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, who went to Cal-Berkeley.

    But they were led Sunday by their defense. Green Bay’s two biggest plays of the day: Rodgers’ tackle of Chicago’s Brian Urlacher at midfield following a third-quarter interception, which probably saved a touchdown; a fourth-quarter interception by the nose tackle B.J. Raji, whose 337-pounds of thundering blubber shook the earth with a fourth-quarter interception and 18-yard return for a touchdown that made it 21-7.

    The Steelers' defense held the Jets to 70 yards rushing (and LaDainian Tomlinson to only 16).

    The Steelers' defense held the Jets to 70 yards rushing, including only 16 yards on nine carries by LaDainian Tomlinson.

    One year after the first Super Bowl between two dome stadium teams — New Orleans vs. Indianapolis – this year’s finale will be played between two outdoor teams that have dealt with the elements. Outdoor teams from cold-weather cities generally have overcome more adversity than indoor teams.

    Falcons owner Arthur Blank wants an outdoor stadium. Who knows – maybe rain and chill would toughen his team up for future Januarys. Couldn’t hurt. Imagine if the Falcons last week were even as tough as Chicago was Sunday.

    The Bears trailed Green Bay 14-0 early in the second quarter and looked on the verge of being blown out. But their defense held the Packers’ offense scoreless the rest of the game – six punts, two interceptions – and mounted an improbable rally behind Caleb Hanie, an undrafted, third-string quarterback out of Colorado State. Hanie came into the game after Jay Cutler injured his knee and backup Todd Collins flopped. He wasn’t always accurate but he showed what we already knew – the NFL postseason is less about finesse than it is survival. He led two Chicago touchdown drives but threw a pick-six to Raji, which turned out to be the difference.

    If Falcons’ fans are looking for a small measure of solace, there’s this: The last three times they have been in the playoffs, they’ve lost to teams that reached the Super Bowl: Green Bay last week, Arizona in the conference semifinals in 2008 and Philadelphia in the NFC title game in 2004.

    Rodgers’ dominance at the outset looked similar to last week’s 48-21 game in the Georgia Dome. On Green Bay’s opening drive, he completed all four of his passes for 76 yards and finished it off with a one-yard touchdown run. But he went only 13 for 26 for 168 yards with two interceptions the rest of the game. The Packers intercepted Hanie and Cutler three times and held Chicago to one third-down conversion. They won with defense.

    Offense got the Packers to the playoffs. But defense got them to the Super Bowl. Defense always has been the engine that drives the Steelers.

    It should be perfect old-school theater.

    By Jeff Schultz

    Packers' thoughts on the Steelers

    Chicago — It's official. Green Bay (13-6) will meet Pittsburgh (14-4) in Super Bowl XLV on Feb. 6 in North Texas.

    As many remember, the Steelers defeated the Packers, 37-36, on Dec. 20, 2009. In that game, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger hit wideout Mike Wallace with a 19-yard touchdown pass on the final play of the game.

    Green Bay's defense is much-improved from that day. The Steelers, who went 9-7 last year and missed the postseason, are winning close games this year after losing them a season ago.

    After Green Bay defeated Chicago, 21-14, in the NFC Championship Game, many Packers talked about what they remembered about the Steelers they faced 13 months ago.

    Ryan Pickett, defensive end: “They scored a lot of points on us. We were a different defense then and we’re definitely a better defense right now. They moved the ball on us, but our offense did a good job of moving the ball on them, too. It was like a shootout and they had just a little more firepower.”

    Josh Sitton, right guard: "They’re big and stout up front. They’re great at stopping the run and really getting after people. But we had some pretty good success on offense that day, too.”

    Brandon Jackson, running back: "They’re just a team that knows how to finish. Those guys, they play four quarters hard, every game, every day. You have to come strong against those guys or you won’t beat them. We have to come out and play four quarters to have a chance.”

    James Jones, wideout: “They’ve got a really good defense. They put a lot of pressure on quarterbacks and it’s hard to run against them. Great team.”

    Super matchup: Packers vs. Steelers more contemporary than classic

    The Packers have won 12 NFL championships, most of any team. The Steelers have won six Super Bowls, most of any team. With the two franchises having such rich winning traditions, Green Bay-Pittsburgh feels like a classic matchup for Super Bowl XLV.

    Forget the past, however, because this year's Packers and Steelers represent the modern NFL better than any of the league's 32 teams. In a passing league, they have the ideal offense-defense combination: a strong-armed, mobile passer and top-notch 3-4 pass rush. In other words, both teams excel at avoiding and applying pressure to make game-changing plays.

    Super matchup: Packers vs. Steelers more contemporary than classic It's on to Super Bowl XLV for the Steelers and Packers. Vinnie Iyer says the two old-school franchises represent the best of today's NFL on the field.

    The quarterbacks in question, Aaron Rodgers and Ben Roethlisberger, both are great athletes blessed with strong right arms.

    The defensive coordinators are known for their mastery of the zone blitz -- if Dick LeBeau is the godfather of that attack scheme, then Dom Capers, formerly Pittsburgh's play-caller, is its consigliere.

    The Steelers have an elite edge rusher in James Harrison. The Packers have one in Clay Matthews.

    Safety Troy Polamalu is Pittsburgh's do-everything defensive back. Green Bay similarly likes to move cornerback Charles Woodson around as an ace jack-of-all-trades. Green Bay's B.J. Raji is an up-and-coming nose tackle; Pittsburgh's Casey Hampton has set the standard at the position.

    The Steelers already have won a championship with this makeup. The younger Packers have built themselves in a similar image, and are on the verge of the first of perhaps many Super Bowls with Rodgers.

    Green Bay vs. Pittsburgh sounds old-school, but the two teams are part of today's elite class. And that should make for a most memorable game on Super Sunday.



    Wind power case may cloud industry’s future

    A panel of Ontario Divisional Court judges will begin hearing a challenge today that, if successful, could throw a wrench into the province’s burgeoning wind power industry.

    The case, brought by Ian Hanna, a resident of Prince Edward County, 200 kilometres east of Toronto, argues that regulations in Ontario’s Green Energy Act, governing how far turbines must be from houses, are illegal. If the court agrees, new wind development could come to a standstill.

    The case will also be an opportunity to air the views of those who feel wind turbines are unhealthy. Mr. Hanna’s argument is based on the premise that the minimum setback in Ontario – 550 metres – does not take into account the possible negative impacts to human health that turbines may cause.

    Essentially, he argues, there is no medical evidence that the setback is safe, and that by publishing its regulations without sufficient proof, the province has breached the “precautionary principle” in its own environmental bill of rights. That principle says the government has to show an activity is safe before it is approved.

    Indeed, Mr. Hanna’s court filings say, the government knew there was literature that raises concerns about turbines, and spells out that not enough was known to settle the setback issue.

    A court victory, said Mr. Hanna’s lawyer Eric Gillespie, would essentially put a moratorium on building any new wind farms in Ontario. That would be a huge victory for wind farm opponents, who say there need to be far more studies done on health impacts. “If the court determines that [Ontario] has insufficient science to support its decision, then governments, the wind industry and communities will have to look very closely to determine in a more scientific way where industrial wind turbines should be located,” Mr. Gillespie said.

    Increasingly, opponents have been protesting the spread of wind turbines, insisting that they cause health problems and calling for more detailed studies before the devices become even more ubiquitous. Both sides have cranked up the rhetoric recently; last week, one anti-wind group complained that a wind farm developer had called it a “group of terrorists.”

    To support his client’s case in court, Mr. Gillespie will present evidence from three physicians who say turbine noise and vibration can cause high stress, sleep deprivation and headaches among people who live near them.

    The government argues, in a document filed with the court, that the doctors’ conclusions are suspect, and that it reviewed all the literature available on the issue, and held public consultations before creating the guidelines.

    It also says that complaints about possible health effects from turbines come from a small number of people, while the government’s role is to try to clean the air for all residents of Ontario by shifting to renewable power.

    There is “no conclusive evidence that wind turbine noise has any impact on human health,” the government filing states. Available information suggests a 550-metre setback is adequate, it adds, and that that distance is “clearly conservative,” given the existing studies. It dismisses the data about health problems as “anecdotal hearsay.”

    The government also argues that a new environmental review tribunal set up under its Green Energy Act is the right place to air health issues, not the provincial court.

    Dianne Saxe, a Toronto lawyer who specializes in environmental issues, said she would be very surprised if Mr. Hanna wins his case. She said he is stretching the precautionary principle beyond what it actually covers. And the government “should have no trouble at all proving that it considered the health concerns of the anti-wind activists, because they were very vocal,” even appearing at legislative committee meetings, she said.

    Ms. Saxe thinks it is likely the court will deal only with the narrow legal aspects of the case and not make any substantial ruling on the health effects of wind turbine placement.

    Throwing a bucket of cold water on an already-cooling housing sector is not a step any government takes lightly.

    This week, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty did just that. As of March 18, the government will no longer insure mortgages with amortization periods of more than 30 years. That will keep some potential home buyers out of the market, and in theory, help stop already debt-burdened households from going even deeper. Ottawa will also make home refinancing rules tighter, among other moves.


    The consumer debt habit is widely viewed as a risk to the economy, and the move to curb its growth seen as necessary. But when it comes to the housing market, Ottawa has waded into muddy waters.

    While the effective elimination of the 35-year mortgage could diminish housing prices, economists say it's not possible to calculate the degree of dampening with any certainty.

    That's in part because some homeowners take long mortgages initially and then change the terms later, paying more than required in order to retire the debt sooner.

    And there are a host of other factors that determine housing prices such as interest rates, employment growth and housing supply.

    “Given the structure of the mortgage market, this is like a surgical strike,” said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets. “They are able to aim without too many side effects because of the way the mortgage market is structured in Canada. The impact is insignificant.”

    There’s little data examining the issue.

    The new rules can be expected to dampen both home sales and prices as potential home buyers face new limits on how much they can borrow, encouraging them to opt for cheaper homes, economists said.

    Douglas Porter, deputy chief economist with BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc., said the changes would reduce the amount that people can borrow by up to 7 per cent.

    Corresponding price declines, though, are hard to predict. Canada’s housing market has been cooling for months and interest rates are widely predicted to begin rising again during the latter half of this year.

    “I suspect that what we’ll end up seeing is home prices about flat this year,” Mr. Porter said.

    Bank of Nova Scotia economists Adrienne Warren and Derek Holt suggest the new limits on amortization will add about $100 to the monthly principal and interest payment on an average priced house, compared with a 35-year mortgage.

    “Looking further ahead, as interest rates begin to move higher in 2012 and beyond, the cumulative impact from shorter amortization options on housing affordability could be substantial,” their report said.

    The Bank of Canada hinted at a link between prices and amortization rates last year, when deputy governor Sheryl Kennedy said “financial innovations” such as longer amortization rates can “encourage speculation in quick flip financial investment.”

    That surge in home buying helped drive up prices, particularly in large urban centres. As a result, since 2007, increasing numbers of Canadians have opted for mortgages with amortization periods stretching well past 25 years.

    Initially, 40-year mortgages saw the most explosive growth until Mr. Flaherty took action in 2008 to do away with those unconventional loans.

    The following year, however, marginal consumers increasingly turned to 35-year mortgages to fill the void, a trend that continued well into 2010.

    With files from freelance reporter David Milstead

    Obama names GE’s Immelt to head economic advisory panel

    As the U.S. recovery enters a new and challenging phase, U.S. President Barack Obama is turning to a high-profile corporate executive to act as his top outside economic adviser.

    On Friday, Mr. Obama appointed Jeffrey Immelt, the chief executive officer of General Electric Co., (GE-N19.741.317.11%) to lead a panel of experts charged with boosting job creation and competitiveness.

    General Electric (GE-N)
    19.74 1.31 7.11%
    As of Jan 21, 2011 4:00


    Mr. Immelt is replacing Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the Federal Reserve, at the head of the panel. The shift from a titan of economic policy to a sure pair of corporate hands is a telling symbol of where the recovery stands and where Mr. Obama sees political obstacles.

    Mr. Volcker’s skills played to a moment when the U.S. economy required a form of triage. Today’s dilemma is more akin to long-term rehabilitation: The economy is growing and corporate profits are thriving, but jobs remain scarce.

    “The past two years were about pulling our economy back from the brink,” Mr. Obama said in an appearance with Mr. Immelt at a GE factory in upstate New York that manufactures steam turbines. “The next two years, our job now, is putting our economy into overdrive.”

    By appointing Mr. Immelt, Mr. Obama is taking another step in his campaign to mend bridges with corporate America, a political priority ahead of the 2012 elections. The President recently appointed William Daley, a former executive at JPMorgan Chase & Co., as his new chief of staff. He has also called for streamlining the tax code and overhauling business regulations.

    Mr. Immelt, 54, will take on a highly visible role working on what is perhaps the President’s top concern – bringing down the stubbornly elevated U.S. jobless rate. “Persistent and high unemployment – and the pessimism it breeds – should not be accepted,” Mr. Immelt wrote in an opinion piece Friday in The Washington Post. “We must work together to construct an economy that creates more opportunity for more people.”

    In December, the U.S. jobless rate fell to 9.4 per cent, the lowest figure in 19 months but still painfully high for millions of out-of-work Americans. Some of the improvement came from increased hiring, but part of it stemmed from a chunk of people dropping out of the labour force, often a sign they’re too discouraged to keep looking for work.

    One of the key pieces of the U.S. job puzzle remains the hiring behaviour of large businesses. After slashing expenses and staff during the downturn, they rode the economy’s gradual improvement. Publicly listed firms have seen a return to bumper profits – in the third quarter of 2010, earnings surpassed the prerecession high. Many have amassed stockpiles of cash that they remain reluctant to deploy in ways that would spur economic growth.

    According to the latest figures available from the Federal Reserve, U.S. non-financial firms are holding a greater percentage of their total assets in cash than at any time in the last 50 years. But uncertainty about the vigour of the recovery and policy ambiguity leading up to the midterm elections have kept companies from making large commitments on hiring and investment.

    In one example of corporate America’s robust health, GE, an industrial and finance conglomerate, reported Friday that its pipeline of new orders had increased to its highest level since 2007. The company’s profit, meanwhile, jumped 52 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2010 compared with a year earlier, surpassing expectations. Mr. Immelt said he saw “encouraging” signs in the U.S. economy, pointing to a “broader and deeper” recovery.

    In a conference call, Mr. Immelt reassured analysts that his role on Mr. Obama’s panel wouldn’t diminish the energy he brings to his day job at GE. “I am committed. I am a hard worker. I am focused on the company,” he said.

    Mr. Immelt is one of several high-profile business leaders who have voiced support for Mr. Obama’s policies. They include the CEOs of Boeing Co. and Motorola Solutions Inc., and the chairman of Honeywell International Inc.

    With files from Bloomberg News

    Plaintiffs get green light to press Bear Stearns case

    Plaintiffs in one of the biggest U.S. investor lawsuits stemming from the financial crisis got a boost from a judge, who said a case against fallen investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. and its outside auditor, Deloitte & Touche, can go forward.

    The decision means that one-time Bear Stearns investors can move ahead with a proposed securities class-action fraud case, though the judge threw out two related lawsuits that had been rolled into the litigation. The investors accuse former Bear chiefs of painting a wildly misleading picture of the firm’s finances ahead of its unravelling in March of 2008.

    Among the defendants is former Bear chief risk officer Michael Alix, who joined the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in November of 2008 as a top bank regulation adviser. Mr. Alix’s lawyer was not immediately available to comment.

    Representatives from JPMorgan Chase & Co, which bought Bear Stearns at a bargain price at the start of the credit crisis, were also not immediately available for comment.

    “It is important to recognize that in ruling on the defendants’ motions to dismiss, the court was required to assume that the allegations in the plaintiffs’ complaint were true. At this stage of the case the court was not permitted to and did not consider whether those allegations actually are true or whether the plaintiffs have evidence to support their allegations,” a Deloitte spokesperson said in a statement.

    “Deloitte believes that the claims asserted against it are meritless and intends to defend this case vigorously,” the spokesperson said.

    Bear Stearns disintegrated when the firm faced a run on the bank following enormous mortgage losses. Bear became the first investment bank to collapse in a credit crisis that later claimed Lehman Brothers Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co Inc.

    The fraud case is one of many investor lawsuits to grow out of the crisis, although plaintiffs in such cases have typically faced an uphill battle to prove their claims. Auditing firms so far have been largely successful in fighting investor lawsuits, although in this ruling the judge said Deloitte would also have to remain a defendant for its role as Bear’s auditor.

    In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet in Manhattan refused to dismiss a lawsuit against plaintiffs led by the Michigan Retirement System, which held Bear Stearns shares in its portfolio. That means the fund can continue to press their claims and possibly bring it to trial.

    Reached on Sunday afternoon, Thomas A. Dubbs, a partner at Labaton Sucharow and co-lead counsel for the state of Michigan said: “We are pleased by the thorough and comprehensive opinion of the court and expect a detailed announcement from Michigan in the coming days.”

    But the judge tossed out two related cases. One was a separate investor lawsuit; the other was brought on behalf of Bear employees who held the firm’s stock in a retirement plan.

    The written ruling was made public late on Friday.

    At the heart of the securities fraud case is an allegation that Bear Stearns and top executives inflated the investment bank’s stock price by using misleading mortgage valuations to conceal potential losses in the housing market.

    The investors also accuse Deloitte of recklessly ignoring red flags about Bear’s financial statements and did not adequately scrutinize its mortgage valuation models. Deloitte’s audits “were so deficient that the audit amounted to no audit at all,” the plaintiffs argued in court papers.

    Reuters

    Flames edge Canucks in shootout

    Alex Tanguay didn't know where the puck was.

    And the referees didn't think his backhanded shootout attempt crossed the goal-line until a video review revealed Roberto Luongo slid into the net with the puck caught in his pads.

    That controversial goal gave the Calgary Flames a 4-3 win on Saturday, and sent the Vancouver Canucks to their fourth consecutive loss.

    “I had no idea,” Tanguay said. “I've made that move a couple of times before and when I put it on my backhand I have no idea where ... I can't see the puck go in.”

    The shootout was tied 1-1 when Tanguay skated in on Luongo and got him to sprawl as he went to the backhand.

    “He's a goalie I've had some breakaways against,” Tanguay said. “He knows some of my tendencies so I was trying to throw something different at him.”

    The goal was waved off at first but the video review showed the puck caught up on Luongo's thigh as his body slid into the net.

    “I'll say they made the right decision but I ... didn't see it,” said Tanguay who is looking to surpass 50 points for the first time since he last played for the Flames in 2006-07.

    “It's always a tough call to make but for us it's the right one tonight.”

    Luongo didn't know he'd been scored upon.

    “I didn't even see them take the puck out of my pads, so I don't know,” said the netminder who has not lost in regulation time in 15 consecutive games, going 10-0-5 over that span.

    Brendan Morrison, Curtis Glencross and Tim Jackman scored for the Flames in regulation time. Alex Edler, with two goals, and Ryan Kesler replied for the Canucks.

    It was the second win in as many nights for the Flames, who are seeking to challenge for a Western Conference playoff berth.

    Calgary improved to 22-21-6 with their fourth win in six games while the conference-leading Canucks dropped to 29-10-9.

    Vancouver picked up a single point for the third consecutive game to move three ahead of second-place Detroit.

    Calgary's wins came after a 6-0 home loss to Minnesota and Morrison, who signed with the Flames after he couldn't crack the Vancouver roster at training camp, said they came at the right time.

    “We've been battling at .500 off and on for four or five weeks,” said Morrison who erased a 1-0 Vancouver lead with a power-play goal .

    “We keep talking about making a move up in the standings and if we want to do it we've got to beat good teams and we did that tonight.”

    Morrison said he feels Calgary is poised to move up the closely packed West standings and into a playoff position.

    “A lot of people still don't believe we can do it but the guys in the room aren't going to give up until the numbers actually say we can't get in [the playoffs].”

    Calgary goalie Miikka Kiprusoff, who had surrendered 10 goals on 57 shots in two previous losses to the Canucks, gave up another on Vancouver's first shot.

    Then he found his game as the Canucks peppered him with 44 shots.

    “It's a big challenge, pretty good team here and they have some offensive talents but I felt pretty good and just tried to do my job,” he said after being beaten by Edler's long shot.

    The Canuck defenceman's second goal was his eighth of the season and fourth in five games.

    Both goalies had anxious moments in overtime as the two teams had power-play time. Kiprusoff was especially sharp with his glove.

    “I felt he would come in and be rock solid and he was,” said Flames coach Brent Sutter.

    “He made some big saves, especially early. The puck was hitting him in the logo and he was very under control in his game.”

    Kesler, who tied a career high when he scored his 26th goal of the season when his shot hit Tanguay's stick on a short-handed rush, said the Canucks haven't pushed the panic button.

    “We're getting points,” Kesler said. “We had a power play to win it in overtime and that just didn't happen.

    “You're going to have cycles like this and the main thing is we got the point.”

    He said the Canucks will have to work more on shootouts and rekindle the power play that sparked a 17-1-2 run from Nov. 24 to Jan. 8.

    “We took the momentum [after the tying goal], generated a lot in the third and had a lot of good opportunities in overtime.” said Kesler who missed the net in the shootout.

    “The power play has to get the job done and it didn't. It's a shootout loss — something for the fans. Obviously we're not very good at it right now and it's something to work on.”

    Notes: Canuck defenceman Kevin Bieksa left the game with a swollen eye after a brief first-period scrap with Tom Kostopoulos and did not return. The Flames winger returned to the lineup after serving a six-game suspension for the hit that broke the jaw of Detroit's Brad Stuart ... Sergei Shirokov, benched in the third period of Thursday's 2-1 shootout loss to San Jose, was a healthy scratch from the Canucks' lineup ... he scored his first NHL goal in his season debut Tuesday, a 4-3 overtime loss to Colorado ... The grittier Aaron Volpatti returned to the lineup instead.

    Forsberg practises with Avalanche

    Avalanche coach Joe Sacco proclaimed after practice that Peter would play against St. Louis.

    Not Forsberg, the former NHL MVP who's contemplating a comeback.

    But Budaj, the backup goalie.

    A clever, though unintentional, tease by Sacco, whose team hosts the Blues on Monday night.

    As for possibly when — or even if — Forsberg might return to the NHL, that's still unknown. Forsberg went through his first practice with the Avalanche on Sunday in a tiny arena packed with people wearing No. 21 jerseys and waving Swedish flags.

    And Sacco put the squad through a laborious workout after two straight lopsided losses. The Avs were on the ice for around 90 minutes, squeezing in some extra skating drills at the end that left Forsberg bent over and gasping for air.

    Still want to return?

    The 37-year-old Forsberg insists he does if his bothersome right foot can handle it, the one that's hampered him over the latter part of his career and caused him to consider retirement even though he felt like he could still play.

    “It's good. Can't complain. It's been worse,” said Forsberg, who has yet to sign a contract with Colorado or been promised anything beyond a chance to measure his conditioning level against the team. “I'm not going to talk about it exactly, but it felt OK today.”

    Forsberg came away impressed with the speed of his younger teammates, struggling at times to keep up. Wearing a white Avalanche jersey, Forsberg looked solid in a scoring drill against forward Daniel Winnik, even showing he hasn't lost his offensive flair on a spin move that nearly beat Budaj in net.

    After players headed into the dressing room, Forsberg remained on the ice to hone his game. He would've been out there longer had a Zamboni driver not honked a horn so he could prepare the ice for a youth game.

    Only reluctantly did Forsberg call it a day.

    “I'm excited to be out there and see how it goes,” Forsberg said. “Keep on practising now and hopefully get better and better and see where I'm at.”

    Forsberg's return this time is much different from 2007-08, when he joined the Avs late in the year and finished with one goal and 13 assists in nine games. A nagging groin ailment hindered him back then.

    “I feel better than I did — I can't say I played well then,” Forsberg said. “Most of the goals and stuff you could barely see me in the highlights, if you didn't see the extended version. I have to be better than I was back then.”

    He's not leaning toward a direction after just one practice. He will take his time, assess his conditioning and skill level before deciding on a return.

    But he's definitely ahead of where Sacco envisioned he would be.

    “I thought he looked well. I thought he played well,” Sacco said. “He worked hard, considering the terms of the practice. It was a hard practice out there today. But I thought he looked like he had energy.”

    At first, his teammates were in awe of him. Being such a young squad, many grew up idolizing the Swedish sensation. That includes 20-year-old Matt Duchene, who had pictures of Forsberg, Patrick Roy and Joe Sakic adorning the walls of his bedroom.

    “It was definitely pretty amazing to get on the ice with him, get a chance to see up close what I watched as a kid,” Duchene said. “A buddy said to me, ‘This is 12-year-old Matt's dream.’ Pretty crazy — eight years later, getting to skate with him. I'm thrilled to get this opportunity.”

    He's also taking advantage of the opportunity, frequently asking Forsberg questions.

    “It would be cool if he gets in the lineup,” Duchene said. “He looked great. I don't think he's missed much of a beat.

    “Obviously, he hasn't been in the NHL for a while, but for a guy like him, a player of that calibre, it's going to be pretty easy to get back into it.”

    Forsberg had his most productive seasons with Colorado, winning two Stanley Cup titles and the league's MVP in 2003. He's still a fan favourite as they flocked to see him in action Sunday at the team's practice facility, filling every seat in the tiny venue and then standing along a stairway.

    “I had to work harder on every drill,” Forsberg chuckled. “It's awesome to be back here and putting on an Avalanche jersey again. I'm going to be out there with the guys and hopefully I can stick.”

    Sens move into rebuilding mode

    It’s over.

    The Ottawa Senators have taken a corporate decision to pull the plug on the 2010-2011 NHL season and move full force into a rebuilding program the likes of which the Edmonton Oilers are currently undertaking.

    The decision was taken in the days before the team’s latest embarrassments on the ice: a 7-1 loss to the Montreal Canadiens Friday night and a 6-2 defeat by the Philadelphia Flyers the previous night.

    Quietly, the franchise has solicited key members of its fan base and corporate support and subsequently concluded that disgruntled fans are eager for a shift in direction. They are sick of the losing.

    A decision was made to have faith that the often-fickle Ottawa fan base will enthusiastically embrace a re-building program, even at the cost of this year’s faint hopes – and perhaps even at the cost of some of the team’s most beloved veteran players.

    Owner Eugene Melnyk broke his silence on his team’s season from hell on Saturday when he told the Ottawa Sun that, “The time has come to make some of the most difficult decisions that any owner can make.”

    Melnyk said he has a plan “in motion” but refused to elaborate.

    The Globe and Mail, however, has learned certain aspects of the plan.

    - General manager Bryan Murray will finish out the year in his position but will move on to a senior advisory role similar to that held by coaching legend Scotty Bowman with the Chicago Blackhawks. Murray, who stayed on this season at Melnyk’s request, is open to this change as friends say the results of this season have left him “sickened.”

    - coach Cory Clouston will also play out the year, but is highly unlikely to stay on as head coach. The new GM will have full responsibility for naming the coach of his choice.

    Murray’s immediate task will be the “selling off” of player assets heading into the Feb. 28 NHL trading deadline. If playoff-bound teams are interested in the likes of forward Alexei Kovalev or defenceman Sergei Gonchar, two unhappy and underperforming expensive veterans, deals could be forthcoming. It is even possible that longtime stalwarts such as captain Daniel Alfredsson and defenceman Chris Phillips could be moved it they agree to the deals.

    The team is not planning any announcements, but rather to let actions speak for themselves.

    The new general manager – tentative interviews have already taken place, with deeper interviews to come – would be in place for the June entry draft. At the moment, the presumption is that the team will finish low enough to qualify for the lottery that determines the first five picks. A top pick is considered a priority for the rebuilding process.

    Over the summer, the new GM, with Murray acting as consultant, would be expected to re-calibrate the team by chasing prospects rather than expensive free agents, as has been the case in past summers. Re-signing veterans whose contracts are expiring is no longer a priority.

    Nor is saving this season.

    It is, as of this weekend, considered a lost cause – and the first step toward a necessary fix.