Quick Takes
If this paragraph looks familiar, it’s because I write it every year at this time. Once again, in its infinite stupidity, the Baseball Hall of Fame Veterans Committee admitted no one. That’s three years running. How does the Veterans Committee vote in Mazeroski (who doesn’t belong), as it did in 2001, and keep out the likes of Hodges, Blyleven, Santo, Oliva, Minoso, Kaat, Wills, Torre, Maris, Tiant, Bobby Bonds, plus those deserving players from the Negro Leagues, ala the legendary "Buck" O'Neil, still not in?!
Buffalo and Ottawa were in a fight last Thursday night, and a hockey game broke out. 32 penalties for 136 minutes. Pro hockey should finally adopt a rule that puts an end to players dropping their gloves to do combat. But my concerns go beyond that. Such a rule would still not prevent goons like Todd Bertuzzi from causing havoc with cheap shots ala the Steve Moore incident. Hockey cheap shots do far more physical damage than fists.
Story of the Week
LYNNE COX
Lynne Cox could well be the most amazing athlete I’ve ever heard or read about. On Christmas Eve last, I saw a 60 Minutes segment that astounded me. I couldn’t wait to go to my computer to learn more about this incredible woman. I found the entire 60 Minutes segment; it is captured below. As you read this article, keep in mind that Lynne Cox accomplished her Antarctica swim in 2002 at age 45.
Swimming To Antarctica
American Swimmer Spends 30 Minutes In Water Cold Enough To Kill
Sept. 17, 2003
(CBS) Correspondent Scott Pelley
Lynne Cox is an American woman who's among the best ocean swimmers of our
time. But there's something else about her that you may find hard to believe.
Science doesn't fully understand it, but she survives – she even thrives - in
water that is cold enough to kill. It is so remarkable that researchers have
been trying to figure out how she does it for 30 years.
As 60 Minutes II first reported last winter, when you
combine her unique talents with a stubborn streak, there is only one thing left
to do - try to swim a mile in the coldest water on earth.
In a world inhabited by penguins and seals, Cox decided to
see whether she could survive swimming to Antarctica.
A continent larger than the United States, Antarctica lies frozen across the
bottom of the world, hidden under cathedrals of ice in a world inhabited by
penguins and seals. It's beautiful but dangerous. And no place on Earth is
colder, more than 120 degrees below zero in winter.
Cox, 45, has traveled nearly 8,000 miles to test the limits
of her endurance there. Wearing only a swimsuit, cap and goggles, this world
champion plans to swim a mile in the kind of cold water that, even after all
these years, still takes her breath away. It's a feat that no one on record has
ever done and lived to tell the tale.
“It sort of just penetrates though your skin right away,” she
says about first jumping in, “and you’re immersed in it." After an initial
period of doubt about what she is doing, she says, she takes off like a shot.
“I’m trying to get warm. It’s freezing, it’s really cold, you know.”
60 Minutes II met Cox in southern California when she
was training near her home. She started swimming in cold water as a child and
taught herself to push the pain out of her mind. “If you focus on the cold, then
you’re focusing on something that’s not helping you get to where you need to
get,” she says.
At 14, she swam California’s Catalina Channel — 21 miles in
12 hours. At 15, she set the women’s and men’s record in the English Channel.
Then in 1987, in the midst of the Cold War, she was first to swim from Alaska to
the Soviet Union — a five-mile swim through 40-degree water that warmed the Cold
War.
The swim also fascinated scientists. Based on all they knew, Cox should be dead
after that swim. Professor Bill Keatinge of the University of London, a pioneer
in the study of hypothermia, brought Cox to London for experiments in his lab.
“We were able to confirm that she can maintain stable body
temperature with her head out of the water and in water temperatures as low as
44 Fahrenheit,” he said. “We’ve got one other person that we know can do that.
He was an Icelander who swam ashore from an overturned boat.”
Anyone else would immediately feel the pain like an electric
shock, their muscles would flail and the heartbeat would stop in minutes. “The
whole beating of the heart goes completely adrift,” says Keatinge. “In technical
terms, ventricular fibrillation. Then, you’re dead in a matter of minutes.”
Keatinge thinks Cox has somehow trained her body to keep most
of her blood at her body’s core and away from the skin where it’s exposed to the
cold. The blood stays warmer. But there is something else — call it her natural
insulation. “She’s got an extremely even fat layer going right down the limbs
and it’s an ideal setup,” he says.
To reach Antarctica, Cox and her team of friends, including
three doctors, set sail on a tourist boat from Ushuaia, Argentina, the
southernmost city in the world. They traveled, through the Drake Passage to the
Shetland Islands. There she takes a test swim in water that is colder than 40
degrees.
The greatest danger to Cox is when she gets out of the water.
Because she is no longer moving swiftly, her temperature plunges and the cold
begins to assault her heart. In half an hour, she manages to sit up, but it's a
struggle. It was only a practice swim, and she has never been this bad off.
In time, she warms, but she's paid a price. Her feet and
hands are numb. It's nerve damage and it could be lasting. Back aboard, she
rests as the ship sails south toward the colder Antarctic waters.
Two days later, the water's about as cold as water gets, 32
degrees. Skin freezes at about 32 degrees, and this water would kill nearly
anyone else in five minutes, but that's the water that Cox will be swimming in.
In a sense, everything that Cox has done in 30 years comes down to this. Her
goal is one mile, and that will take nearly half an hour.
She begins her swim to Antactica as doctors watch for signs
of trouble. Just minutes after it begins, it seems over. Cox is calling for
shore and the water seems much too cold. It's been 11 minutes but it feels like
an hour. But just when her team is prepared to take her in, she gets something
like a second wind, perhaps a second warmth, and tries to go the distance.
She's about 21 minutes into the swim. Penguins are coming
down from the glacier down to the beach. It almost looks like a welcoming party.
But she's done it. In all of 25 minutes, she's done it. And she's done better
than she hoped. Measured by a navigation satellite she’s covered 1.22 miles in
the coldest water in the world.
They get her back in the Zodiac and race to the ship, lying
on top of her for warmth. On board, her temperature rises, and so does her sense
of triumph. There's no gold medal for swimming the first Antarctic mile.
There’s just the satisfaction that your place in the world is unique and that
your record is certainly safe.
Last Week’s Trivia
The
National
Hockey League added six new franchises for the
1967-68 NHL season,
doubling the size of the league. The six teams added were the
California Seals
(later the Oakland Seals, California Golden Seals and Cleveland Barons, then
merged with Minnesota), the
Los Angeles Kings,
the
Minnesota North Stars
(now
Dallas Stars),
the
Philadelphia Flyers,
the
Pittsburgh Penguins
and the
St. Louis Blues.
Only the Flyers and the Penguins of those original expansion
teams have ever won the Stanley Cup. Philadelphia and Pittsburgh have each won
the Cup twice.
Trivia Question of the Week
Who is the youngest left-handed pitcher to win 20 games in MLB history? See next week’s Sports Junkie for the answer.