Have you heard about Dwayne Wade?

wade515.jpgInasmuch as I’m somewhat ambivalent about the Houston Rockets, I tend not to follow the NBA Playoffs all that closely.
However, even while not following the playoffs closely, it’s a bit hard not to realize that Dwayne Wade is something special.
If you haven’t heard, after losing the first two games of the best-of-seven series, Wade has now led the Miami Heat to a 3-2 series lead over the Mavericks as the series shifts back to Dallas for the sixth game and, if necessary, the seventh.

Dan Jenkins on professional golf and growing up in Texas

dan jenkins5.jpgAlthough it was mildly interesting to watch Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk and Colin Montgomerie’s choking competition yesterday afternoon that handed the U.S. Open title to Geoff Ogilvy on an absurdly tricked-up Winged Foot Golf Club West Course, this Anthony Cotton/Denver Post interview of Clear Thinkers favorite Dan Jenkins is far more entertaining. Among Jenkins’ gems are the following:

Q: Do you like professional golf now?
I like the majors. I don’t care about the rest of it. It’s boring. If you take away Tiger (Woods) and Phil (Mickelson), there’s nothing. They’re the only two superstars out there right now. There’s no set decoration like there used to be, no 12, or 13 or 14 guys. It’s just a bunch of people you don’t care about. God forbid Tiger and Phil get hit by a truck, because I don’t know what they’d have left. . .
Maybe it’s just me, but I’m hearing [from] other people who don’t care either. That’s the best thing that’s happened to the LPGA. Everybody likes Michelle Wie and Paula Creamer and all of them. You’ve got to have glamour, you’ve got to have excitement in any sport. This is the worst period in (men’s) golf I’ve ever seen, in all of the thousands of years that I’ve been out here. [. . .]

Continue reading

Remember the space shuttle?

NASA4.jpgAlthough seemingly already mothballed, NASA chief administrator Michael Griffin announced late last week that NASA will launch the space shuttle Discovery as planned on July 1. It will be only the second shuttle flight since the shuttle Columbia disintegrated over north Texas on February 1, 2003 during re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere.
As noted earlier here, Griffin proposed the shelving of the space shuttle program by 2010 even before he became NASA’s chief administrator, and the latest mission will be the first of about 15 more flights between now and that projected cut-off date. The purpose of most of those missions is to continue construction and maintenance on the International Space Station and service the Hubble Space Telescope.
The Chronicle’s Eric Berger — who, by the way, is the best science blogger around — speculates here that Griffin’s patience for the space shuttle program is scant and that the upcoming Discovery mission is a “make or break” mission for the program. Consequently, if problems arise during any of the next few shuttle flights, then don’t be surprised when Griffin terminates the remaining shuttle flights and moves on. As noted earlier here, it’s time.

Understanding the next business scandal

backdating options_scandal.03.jpgCovering local business scandals and all, there has not been much time to address certain regulators and media members’ attempts to make the apparent widespread practice of backdating stock options (see this WSJ ($) chart of companies that engaged in the practice) as the next reason to bash business interests.
Inasmuch as the practice is really just another method of providing compensation to corporate executives, the issues surrounding the practice appear to be relatively straightforward — whether the options were properly disclosed (if so, then no big deal; if not, then that’s bad) and whether companies properly accounted for them. Clear thinkers favorite Stephen Bainbridge agrees while breaking down the issues pertaining to backdating options in this TCS Daily op-ed (blog post here):

Continue reading