Week 7: NFL Games Can End in Ties?

Week 7 was a chaotic week. There were eight games decided by one possession but none decided by just one point. In fact, one game was closer than one point. It was a tie!

The tie occurred Sunday night between the Arizona Cardinals and the Seattle Seahawks. The ending to this game was like no other game ever seen. The game was sent into overtime tied 3-3. In OT, both teams kicked and made field goals on their first drives to tie the game at 6-6. Then the chaos began.  Whoever scored the next point would win the game. The Cardinals were setting up for an easy 24 yard field goal for kicker Chandler Catanzaro. This is about as easy as they come, even closer than an extra point. And he shanked it! The kick was no good, keeping hopes alive for Seattle with 3:19 left in overtime. The Seahawks drove down the field and set up an easy game-winning field goal of only 27 yards for their kicker Steven Hauschka. With 7 seconds left and the game on the line, Hauschka missed, ending the game in a rare, and unsatisfying, tie.

Some of the other close games included the Miami Dolphins 28-25 defeat of the Buffalo Bills in an AFC East battle. Dolphins RB Jay Ajayi rushed for 200+ yards in the second straight game and scored a touchdown. The San Diego Chargers topped the Atlanta Falcons 33-30 in an offensive showdown, with Chargers RB Melvin Gordon rushing for 2 TDs. The game in London this week between the New York Giants and Los Angeles Rams resulted in a Giants victory of 17-10 due to Rams QB Case Keenum throwing four interceptions.

There were a couple minor upsets this week: the Philadelphia Eagles beat the Minnesota Vikings 21-10 and the New York Jets defeated the Baltimore Ravens 24-16. The Jets got help from their RB Matt Forte, who rushed for 100 yards and a touchdown.

Some other standout players this week were AJ Green, the Bengals receiver who caught for 169 yards and a TD, and Saints QB Drew Brees, who threw for 367 yards and 3 TDs.

The Dallas Cowboys and the Carolina Panthers were the two  teams with a bye.

Stock Report: Apple, Inc.

Apple, Inc. was founded in 1976 with the purpose of developing and selling personal computers and has grown into a company that develops and sells its own consumer electronics. Some of Apple’s competitors are Samsung, Google and LG. Currently, Apple rules the market from a cellular standpoint with Samsung taking a dive after their Note 7 device was recalled with cases of exploding batteries. Apple is a large cap company worth $612.61 billion and is the most popular cell phone brand around the world with its iPhone. Apple dominates the consumer tech industry considering that I own an iPhone, Macbook air and an iPad.

Recent News

9/7/16: Apple Unveils iPhone 7

Apple unveiled its newest iPhone model in the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus. The iPhone 7 is the fastest iPhone to date containing Apple’s A10 chip. Some new specs are the upgraded cameras: iPhone 7 and 7 Plus have 12MP cameras, but 7 Plus has dual cameras. Each comes with upgraded screen resolutions and are both water resistant. Multiple reports reveal that the water resistance is much better than advertised. Both phones also come in Matte black, Jet black, Gold, Rose gold and Silver.

10/27/16: Apple, Inc. unveils Macbook Pro

Apple just announced its new Macbook Pro, which includes a touch bar on the top of the keyboard. This touchbar allows the user to access features such as volume and other controls as well as Touch ID. Touch ID is a feature that allows users to use their pre-loaded credit card or PayPal to purchase things easily from online merchants. The new personal computer is 17 percent thinner than its predecessor and has a 2x larger trackpad. It also includes Apple’s most advanced Retina display ever.

Stock

One share of Apple stock costs $113.72 with a $13.68 P/E ratio. Apple reported its earnings on October 28th and earnings are down. Based on recent news, the company is a bullish company and, despite declined earnings, should bounce back by the time the next iPhone season rolls around. For me, Apple is at a buy and will continue to be the most dominant electronics company in the market and gain Samsung customers looking for a reliable, safe phone. Overall, this company has shown what it is worth and will continue to win in the cellular and computer departments for years to come.

Who’s The problem: Bill Belichick Or Jamie Collins?

The NFL trade deadline is Tuesday, November 2nd, and the Patriots didn’t wait until Tuesday to make a big move. The Patriots traded linebacker Jamie Collins to the 0-8 Cleveland Browns for a third round draft pick. Collins is set to be a free agent this summer and reports say the Patriots and Jamie Collins were nowhere close to agreeing on a contract.

In my mind, this trade is absurd. There’s no true logical argument for it and many are left wondering why it happened. Typically if a team is out of playoff contention by the trade deadline, they will trade talent for draft picks in order to acquire young talent for the future. The Patriots sit atop of the AFC East and have the best record in the NFL. With the team nearly guaranteed to make the playoffs, trading an established talented player for a future draft pick is mind-boggling. Recall from two years ago when cornerback Darrelle Revis was a free agent and the Patriots passed on spending big money on him in order to re-sign other future free agents on defense. Chandler Jones, Jamie Collins and Dont’a Hightower were a core group of young stud defensive players on the Patriots roster last season. All of their contracts are up at the end of this season and the Patriots knew it would be difficult under the salary cap to re-sign all three. A realistic goal would have been to re-sign two of those three players, although which two could be up for debate. Jones was traded this past off-season for a fourth round draft pick and an offensive lineman that the Patriots cut early this year. The Patriots definitely lost on that trade, since the player they traded for is no longer with their team. Now with the Collins trade, it seems the Patriots won’t win this  trade either, as they lose one of the league’s best linebackers.

To recap the Patriots re-signing moves: They let go cornerback Darrelle Revis in order to save money for Chandler Jones, Jamie Collins and Dont’a Hightower. They then realized they weren’t going to be able to re-sign all three so they traded Jones. Then today they traded Collins, leaving only one player left out of the three they intended to re-sign just a season ago. The whole situation was awfully handled by Bill Belichick and the Patriots. These moves could truly come back to hurt the team, not just this season but in the future.

Although Collins’ play this season hasn’t been as productive as it had been throughout his career, trading him for a bad return isn’t the right move. Collins could have helped the Patriots win this season and if they ended up losing him after the Super Bowl,so be it. Belichick is great at having players use their strengths to help the team and hiding their weakness on the field. Collins is too much of a freak athlete and good football player to be traded based on performance. Belichick may have diminished Collins’ role on the defense because of his poor play so far this season and Collins may not have reacted well. If that’s the case and Collins was being a huge problem to the team, then that would make things different. Belichick isn’t one to give away talent. I’m not sure if it’s time to trust Belichick or truly question the moves he’s making with the team. If the Patriots defense continues to struggle this season, the blame may not fall on the players but on the coach.

Homecoming Weekend Features Big Football Win

There was a lot to celebrate at Homecoming last weekend, as Hanover’s top-seeded varsity football team beat Norton in the first round of playoffs and the student body came together for the Homecoming dance in the gym.

The Indians, undefeated since the beginning of the season, entered Friday’s game coming off of the heels of a major 37-0 win against Pembroke just two weeks before. Hanover was ranked first in the Division 3 South Sectionals, marking the fourth year in a row they made tournament, while Norton had struggled with a 3-4 record in the regular season. Friday night, Hanover continued its dominance, scoring twice before Norton was able to make any offensive gains. The final score was Hanover 53, Norton 8. Several highlights of the game were the multiple assists and a PAT scored by quarterback Wyatt Shisler, ’17. Wide receiver Matthew Lanagan and running back Brad Rogers, both seniors, added touchdowns.

Meanwhile, Hanover High  students from all grades dressed up for the dance Saturday night. The dance went from 6:30 to 9:30 and was a success from all reports. With the students’ ticket money, the school provided mac and cheese, pasta and sauce, salad, rolls, and chicken, as well as a DJ. The dance was chaperoned by some of Hanover High School’s faculty and held in the school gym.

School Reform: What Should We Change?

Everyone knows today’s school system has its flaws. From the piles of homework, to the hours of sitting for too many periods crammed into one day to the reinforced ban on food in the classrooms, there seem to be complaints about every aspect. So in recent weeks, when school administrators visited several classes to give students the chance to voice their concerns, there were some resounding answers. Below is what I heard from students, along with my own opinion, on several issues that popped up  in discussions repeatedly.

Homework

As always, the overbearing subject has been treated with opposition; students to a large degree wish it was eliminated altogether, made optional, or at least held to a minimum. It can be argued that if you know a subject well, you have no need to practice it. Proponents of homework, though, argue that it reinforces schoolwork or teaches you what you can’t get in class. Studies on the effectiveness of homework on learning have shown highly varying and controversial results, and during class discussion this was reflected. Each student had a different idea on how outside work should be handled, but for the most part, students were hostile toward it. To me, at this point in time, optional homework seems most helpful to the full school community. For those like me who need it to reinforce our studies, it will remain a helping hand. But for the students who don’t need that extra help, the massive time slot taken by homework would be more valuable if used to extend and explore other interests.

Personalization

This intriguing topic could have drastic results if implemented properly. Many students share the belief that a way to personalize school would be to cater to their interests by reading topic-specific books for English or eliminating core subjects that don’t seem relevant to what they want to do. For example, an engineer and a historian need drastically different learning courses to take them on their way to success. Why should either take, say, a foreign language? And why should someone who wants to be a playwright have to take chemistry? On the other hand, the question arises that if a student wants to change careers in the future, could narrowing their field of study in high school come back to hurt them? Letting students elect out of the core courses would allow an infinitely more concentrated learning path, but would eliminate the chance that students may find a new interest if they had taken the classes required now by law. For me at least, I totally shifted my stance on history classes in two years, and I don’t know if taking away that option is right. Whether the school customized pathways similar to college “majors” or eliminate core courses,  more teachers would be needed — which brings up a question for another time: how much should teachers be paid?

Interestingly, as a quick vote in class showed that some students if given the choice would remain on a general path incorporating multiple subjects, while others would personalize greatly. Students oriented towards STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) were generally fixed on one- or two- subject paths, while those interested in arts and humanities preferred the multi-subject path.

Personalizing certain classes while maintaining the five required subjects — English, foreign language, history, sciences, math — would give a more customized workload. For example, assigning work for each class concerning topics each individual found interesting would allow students to be intrigued where they weren’t before. Someone interested in dance, for example, could learn about its evolution throughout the course of history, and read technique books in English class to exercise those two cores.

Length of the School Day

With the change to school start time implemented this year, there has been a lot of debate. Does the later start really reduce tardiness and give students more energy? Are any benefits worth the price of ending the school day later, which sometimes interferes with jobs and extracurricular activities? Many students feel the day should be shorter; block periods could help with that as students would have fewer subjects to concentrate on during each day. Additionally, going to a four- or five-day cycle, as the middle school does, could allow for a more even spread, and possibly fewer periods per day. I’m really really exhausted by last period each day, partly due to how much lunch I eat and partly from how long I’ve been sitting. Maybe changing the school day’s length could help. Or, as some suggest, bigger breaks can be placed between periods, allowing time to stretch, snack, move, talk, or whatever you need to keep yourself going.

Teachers & Teaching

The way the new school building is structured can have an impact on how teachers are able to work together. While the old building had wings for each subject so teachers of the same could coordinate, the new one is structured by grade.  Although this was originally done to help students become more of a priority, it ends up hurting everyone as effective lesson plans, organization and ways to meet up become increasingly hard to manage. Some teachers don’t even have their own classrooms. Why take a helpful system and instead of improving it, replace it with a worse one? This new downside for teachers hurts everyone, and reverting the way the school is organized could help both student and teacher groups.

The last topic is teaching; how it should be done. As the old belief goes, everyone has a different way of learning, be it reading, writing, hearing, speaking, drawing or more. How should this be handled? Should there be more interactive classes, more movement, more time outside? Should all teachers be required to incorporate more diverse lessons, no matter what their style has been for years? Or do students benefit from interacting with varied personalities and teaching styles, like they will in college and the workplace?

What do you think?

 

World Series: Which Championship Drought Is Coming To An End?

No matter which team wins the World Series, one of the most unbelievable streaks in all of sports will come to an end this year. The Cleveland Indians have not won the World Series in 68 years, and the Chicago Cubs have been waiting 108. It is a matchup between perpetual underdogs, and while one will celebrate the end of a championship drought, the other will go home empty-handed one more year.

The Indians defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in 5 games to win the American League Pennant. The Indians were 7-1 going into the World Series and dominated basically every game during that run. They silenced the loud of bats of the Boston Red Sox and beat a hot Toronto team in easy fashion.  The Cubs were the favorite to win the World Series before the season started and are the champions of the National League. They had the best record in Major League Baseball this season, and if you weren’t predicting all season that the Cubs would win the World Series, you were backing another team just to be different. All year they’ve performed the best of any team and have the best roster in all of baseball.

My prediction before the series started was Chicago over Cleveland in 5 games. Cleveland has played great this postseason, overachieving and playing quite possibly the best baseball they are capable of playing. But they have not played a complete team like Chicago. In Game 1  of the World Series, Cleveland beat Chicago 6-0. Cleveland threw their ace Corey Kluber and star Andrew Miller out of the bullpen in their win. Basically everything Cleveland has, they used in their Game 1 win. Game 2 had no Kluber or Miller involved, and the Cubs won 5-1. I don’t believe there is any coincidence in that. How Cleveland is having the success they are having this postseason is beyond me. I think the Cubs are too talented of a team to lose four out of seven games to Cleveland. Chicago’s pitching staff is the best in baseball, its lineup is filled with young and veteran talent, and their bullpen has gotten progressively stronger this postseason lead by Aroldis Chapman. With the World Series being a 2-3-2 format, the next three games are at Wrigley Field. I believe that, with the way the Cubs looked in game 2 and their sheer talent, the series won’t be going back to Cleveland for a game 6.

 

Should Sophomores Have to Take PSAT?

The 2016 PSAT has come and gone. What did people think of them?

There was definitely a negative edge in the air after the testing concluded. While some students argued that the PSAT allowed them to gain scholarships and grants, others thought it a waste of time. One argument was that since the sophomore PSAT did not count toward scholarships, they should not be mandatory for all students. However, these PSAT — like the acronym implies — were aimed to be a practice test for the SAT that most colleges require students to take. But why take it so many times? For those sophomores who did the practice given in class before the week of the PSAT, they were essentially taking a practice test for a practice test for a practice test. Understandably, a number of students didn’t like the idea.

The difficulty of the test was up for debate as well. The general consensus was that the calculator-free section in math was the hardest. With a very short time limit, and no aid in calculations, who could blame students for struggling? Despite this, some students had more trouble with other sections; while most students disliked the phrase replacement in the English portion, others struggled with the reading comprehension. In the math section, some even found the calculator problems harder than the calculator-free– but that was not as common.

The value and difficulty of the PSAT was a controversial subject — what side are you on?

Week 6: Must-Win Situations?

Week 6 of the NFL season was yet another week of close games and upsets. After Week 6, some teams are in a must-win situation in order to keep hopes alive for a chance at the playoffs. There were a total of eight games that were decided by one possession, and one game decided by only one point.

Some upsets that occurred in Week 6 included the Thursday night game where the San Diego Chargers defeated the Denver Broncos 21-13. Chargers kicker Josh Lambo  made 4 out of 4 field goals. In another upset, the Miami Dolphins topped the Pittsburgh Steelers 30-15 after Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger was injured early in the second half. Dolphins RB Jay Ajayi rushed for 204 yards and 2 touchdowns.

The Carolina Panthers were defeated 41-38 by the New Orleans Saints in an offensive showdown that seemed to be a must-win for the Panthers. The Panthers were 15-1 last year and made the Super Bowl, but this year have dropped to 1-4 and likely will have to win every game from here on out for a chance to make the playoffs.

A key story in the NFL is how well the Dallas Cowboys have been doing without their veteran QB Tony Romo. Both rookies on this team, Ezekiel Elliott and Dak Prescott, are in very important offensive positions and have not disappointed the Dallas franchise with their young talent. The Cowboys defeated the Green Bay Packers 30-16. Elliott rushed for 157 yards and Prescott threw for 247 yards and 3 touchdowns.

A couple of close games included the Jacksonville Jaguars defeating the Chicago Bears 17-16 with Jaquars QB Blake Bortles throwing for 271 yards and a touchdown. The Cleveland Browns, in one of the few games the 0-6 team had a shot at winning this year, lost to the Tennessee Titans 28-26. Titans QB Marcus Mariota threw for 284 yards and 3 touchdowns.

The Minnesota Vikings and Tampa Bay Buccaneers had a bye week.

Stock Report: Under Armour

So, let me start by saying that Under Armour is an athletic apparel business valued at $16.52 billion, which makes it a large cap stock. Some of UA’s competitors are Nike and Adidas. To compare, Nike, Inc. is also a large cap stock, valued at $86.21 billion and Adidas is valued at $34.22 billion. Under Armour was founded in 1996 and is one of the top suppliers of sports and casual apparel. It now endorses many big name athletes such as Cam Newton, Stephen Curry, Tom Brady, Bryce Harper, Jordan Spieth and many more.

Recent News

Oct. 16: Under Armour will replace Majestic as MLB on-field jersey supplier

Under Armour makes deal with MLB, and reportedly will become on-field jersey supplier for MLB players starting in 2020. For the company, this is huge. Every MLB player will wear jerseys with UA branding. This is great advertisement on-field, as well as off. Anyone who sports a new Bryce Harper jersey will have a small Under Armour logo on their chest. This will increase earnings and advertisement for the company in general.

Oct. 21: Under Armour unveils the Curry 3 basketball shoe

underarmour2This past Friday, the Curry 3 was unveiled in San Francisco, set to release on October 25th. Under Armour’s popularity has skyrocketed along with the Curry shoes over the past few years. Stephen’s first signature model, the Curry 1, retailed for $120. The Curry 2 retailed for $130, the 2.5 $135, and the upcoming 3 will be $140. The Curry line is one of the best-selling players’ sneaker lines out right now. Presumably, the popularity of the brand will only increase when the Golden State Warriors, seemingly the most overpowering team in basketball history, begins its season on October 25th. Stephen will receive more press than ever and should drive up the stock of Under Armour substantially.

Stock

The stock itself costs $37.94 and is brutally overvalued with a 98.55 P/E ratio. (The P/E Ratio is used to measure a company’s current share price relative to its per-share earnings.) The company will report its third quarter earnings and there should be no surprise earnings. Based on recent news, this stock is a long-term buy and hold for investors. Even though overvalued, the company is slated to do well beyond 2020. Within the next year, earnings should be up with what will be one of the top-selling basketball shoes on the market. Overall, the company is overvalued with a bright future and large upside.

Why Do Today What You Can Put Off ‘Til Tomorrow?

By: Kristen Plahn and Chris Acampora

It is a week before the project is due, you’ve gotten all the supplies and are ready to get down to business and suddenly something catches your eye. It could be your phone, the TV, even your laptop. Suddenly the project that was once your main priority has gone to the back of your mind; it’s still there, just causing you a little bit of stress.

Now it’s been a full week of doing anything but that project. You become anxious, wanting t to do anything but that project, yet at the same time you know you have to. So, you pull out all those supplies, the rubric, the instructions, the notes, and then you have a small panic attack, knowing it’ll become another all-nighter like last time. When you finally finish at around three in the morning, giving yourself a measly two hours of down time, you scold yourself with one little word: procrastinator.

Yes, that is what you are (and don’t you deny it): a procrastinator. Maybe someday you’ll learn to just do your work and get everything done ahead of time, but for now, you’ll continue to put things off as long as you can.

Are YOU a Procrastinator? Do you:

1) Leave everything for the night before it is due?

2) Think that instead of looking up information, playing a game would be better?

3) Read a 500 page book and then write a three page essay about it in one night?

4) Get a panic attack just thinking about all the work you need to do?

5) Find that working under pressure helps you achieve your goal quicker?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, then you, my friend, are a procrastinator!

Wikipedia defines procrastination as “the avoidance of doing a task that needs to be accomplished. (often accompanied by) the practice of doing more pleasurable things in place of less pleasurable ones, or carrying out less urgent tasks instead of more urgent ones, thus putting off impending tasks to a later time.”

Some people become “pro procrastinators,” where their long history of procrastinating teaches them the skills they need to complete a weeklong project in one night, a monthlong essay in an afternoon, and a 400 page book in a weekend. The biggest aid to procrastination is holidays. Weeklong breaks, Thanksgiving and Halloween are the biggest culprits. Just think, you have to read that book over winter vacation. There’s snow, festivities, and so much to do; reading Charles Dickens suddenly becomes a lot less interesting.

There’s also the type of procrastination where, even on a fun project, you know you’ll have time to do it later. Always later.

Some teachers have found the dagger to stab in the heart of procrastination: check-in dates. It’s the simple solution to procrastination. Some who don’t struggle with procrastination may find these to be a nuisance, but these deadlines can save those of us who otherwise would put off everything until the final due date. We suggest that if your teacher doesn’t give you multiple due dates, create your own. The procrastinator in your mind won’t thank you, but maybe your tired body — weary of yet another all-nighter — will.