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Steelers continue with heart-attack endings

Wallace with a winning attitude

Wallace with a winning attitude

Who would have thought that Coach Tomlin’s decision for the on-side kick would have left JUST ENOUGH TIME on the clock for Big Ben and company to come back for the winning touchdown?  Me, that’s who!

Once in a very llllooooonnnnnnnnggggg while I get something right.  On this one,  I have two witnesses, Julie who was across the room from me and her Uncle John Koslosky who was on the phone with her during the final minutes of the game.

Yes, I too had doubts that the defense could hold Green Bay scoreless in the final 3:58.  And us with a lead that they could beat with a field goal?  I thought it needed to be a two-possession game… one for them and one for us.  Ben, thank you!  Wallace, you keep that game ball, you deserve it!  And Coach Tomlin, good call!  I never thought of the on-side kick until you called it.

(Next time, let’s just recover the ball on the onside kick and run the clock out, ok?)

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I believe that part of what propels science is the thirst for wonder. It's a
very powerful emotion. All children feel it. In a first grade classroom
everybody feels it; in a twelfth grade classroom almost nobody feels it, or
at least acknowledges it. Something happens between first and twelfth grade,
and it's not just puberty. Not only do the schools and the media not teach
much skepticism, there is also little encouragement of this stirring sense
of wonder. Science and pseudoscience both arouse that feeling. Poor
popularizations of science establish an ecological niche for pseudoscience.
                -- Carl Sagan, The Burden Of Skepticism, The Skeptical Inquirer, Vol. 12, Fall 87