NYT > Home Page: 49ers 45, Packers 31: Kaepernick and 49ers Dominate the Packers

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49ers 45, Packers 31: Kaepernick and 49ers Dominate the Packers
Jan 13th 2013, 05:40

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The 49ers' Colin Kaepernick rushed for a quarterback playoff record 181 yards and accounted for 4 touchdowns.

SAN FRANCISCO — There were 22 players on the field, dozens more on the sideline, 69,732 fans at Candlestick Park and millions watching from home.

But for much of Saturday night's playoff game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Green Bay Packers, it seemed as if they all revolved around a single, budding, shining star: Colin Kaepernick.

Kaepernick, justifying November's decision by San Francisco Coach Jim Harbaugh to hand the team's championship aspirations to an untested, strong-armed, second-year quarterback, dominated the field with long scrambles and pinpoint throws. He set records, kept the Packers' defense as off-balance as a slowing top, and outplayed the reigning N.F.L. most valuable player, Aaron Rodgers.

And on a cool, clear evening that may stand as the coming-out party for San Francisco's next great quarterback, he led the 49ers to a 45-31 victory and a spot in the N.F.C. championship game.

"Just a guy playing football," 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree said of Kaepernick. "Man, he's making it happen — with his feet, his arm, making plays. He's a playmaker."

The 49ers will either play the Falcons in Atlanta, or host the division-rival Seattle Seahawks at Candlestick Park next Sunday.

Kaepernick completed 17 of 31 passes for 263 yards, with 2 touchdowns and an early interception that was returned for a touchdown to open the game's scoring.

But Kaepernick was at his most damaging when he ran, not only outgaining running back Frank Gore and his 119 rushing yards. Kaepernick's 181 rushing yards were the most ever for an N.F.L. quarterback in any game, regular season or postseason.

His 56-yard touchdown run midway through the third quarter broke a 24-24 tie and the Packers' spirit.

Now Kaepernick, after only seven regular-season starts and armed with the element of surprise, stands one victory from joining Joe Montana and Steve Young as the only quarterbacks to lead the 49ers to the Super Bowl.

After the game, as he heaped praise on his teammates, Kaepernick was asked if he should be categorized as a passer or a runner. "I don't like to be categorized," he said.

The 49ers reached last year's N.F.C. championship game behind the cool efficiency of quarterback Alex Smith. Midway through this season, it appeared they were headed deep into the postseason again with the same mistake-free mantra: make Smith as invisible as possible. He would control the game, manage it, but not dominate it.

But Harbaugh worried that Smith, as solid and dependable as he had become under his tutelage, was the weakest link on a roster bulging with win-now talent. When Smith sustained a concussion in November, Kaepernick stepped in and dazzled in his first start.

Harbaugh had seen enough. He kept Kaepernick in the starting role, despite Smith's 6-2 record and position as the league's top-rated passer. Debate raged in San Francisco about whether the coach had abandoned a surer and steadier approach to the Super Bowl for a much riskier one.

As if to build drama, Kaepernick's second pass Saturday was intercepted and returned 52 yards for a touchdown by cornerback Sam Shields, giving Green Bay a 7-0 lead.

But Kaepernick quickly led the 49ers 80 yards, ending the drive with a 20-yard scramble for a touchdown.

Harbaugh noted that Kaepernick has led the 49ers on a scoring drive immediately after each of his turnovers this season. "That's a rare quality," Harbaugh said. "So far he's shown that he's got that ability to come back."

The game quickly morphed into a can-you-top-this duel between the quarterbacks, an odd and unexpected intersection of two men raised in California.

Kaepernick was born in Wisconsin and moved to California's Central Valley when he was 4. But he remained a Packers fan, wearing No. 4 in high school in honor of Brett Favre.

Rodgers played collegiately across San Francisco Bay at Cal and grew up in Chico, a three-hour drive north of the Bay Area, dreaming of becoming the next Joe Montana or Steve Young.

But when the 49ers held the first overall choice of the 2005 draft, they picked Smith over Rodgers. Rodgers fell through the draft until he landed with Green Bay as the 24th pick.

The San Francisco snub has driven him since, but it ceases to define him, especially after winning the Super Bowl two seasons ago and becoming the league's most valuable player in 2011.

He found himself in the unpredictable position of having to match a player who had beaten out Smith in November — not lost to him on draft day 2005 — for a chance to advance.

Rodgers completed 26 of 39 passes for 257 yards and 2 touchdowns, with a single interception. But he spent much of the night on the sideline, watching Kaepernick captivate fans and put points on the scoreboard. The 49ers dominated time of possession.

Kaepernick's ability to enthrall was highlighted on one second-quarter possession. On a third-and-9 play at Green Bay's 24-yard line, Kaepernick scrambled up the middle, collecting 15 yards before being sandwiched by two Packers. Kaepernick stood quickly and defiantly spun the ball toward the fallen defenders, drawing an unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty for taunting.

Two plays later, Kaepernick threw a pass so hard that it barely had any arc at all, landing in Crabtree's hands in the end zone.

Rodgers duplicated the scoring play moments later, firing a touchdown on a similarly slanting pass pattern to James Jones for a 20-yard touchdown.

But by the third quarter, Rodgers was stuck in a game of catch-up. And with Kaepernick in control, he never had a chance.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: January 13, 2013

A summary that appeared with an earlier version of this article misspelled the surname of the 49ers' quarterback. He is Colin Kaepernick, not Kaeprnick.

A version of this article appeared in print on January 13, 2013, on page SP1 of the New York edition with the headline: Kaepernick Passes and Runs and Dominates in 49ers' Victory.

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NYT > Home Page: Israeli Police Evict Palestinian Protesters from E-1

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Israeli Police Evict Palestinian Protesters from E-1
Jan 13th 2013, 04:30

JERUSALEM (AP) — Palestinians who pitched tents at a strategic West Bank site to protest plans to build a Jewish housing project there were evicted early Sunday, the police said.

The protesters put up tents in the area known as E-1 on Friday, saying they wanted to "establish facts on the ground" to stop Israeli construction in the West Bank. They were borrowing a phrase and a tactic usually associated with Jewish settlers, who believe establishing communities means the territory will remain theirs once structures are built.

Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman, said officers evicted about a hundred protesters from the site early Sunday morning after a court decision authorizing their removal. He did not know which court had allowed the eviction.

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that the eviction was carried out despite a temporary Supreme Court injunction preventing it.

Mr. Rosenfeld said that no arrests were made during the half-hour eviction and that no injuries were sustained on either side. He said that the tents were not dismantled, but that a decision on that would be made later in the day.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered roads leading to the area closed on Saturday evening, and had the military shut off access. Mr. Netanyahu's office said the state was petitioning the Supreme Court to rescind its injunction blocking the evacuation.

Israel announced it was moving forward with the E-1 settlement after the United Nations recognized a de facto state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem in November.

Palestinians said E-1 would be a major blow to their statehood aspirations, as it blocks East Jerusalem from its West Bank hinterland. They are demanding these areas, along with Gaza, for their future state.

The protesters said they wanted to build a village called Bab al-Shams at the site.

The construction plans drew unusually sharp criticism from some of Israel's staunchest allies, including the United States, who strongly oppose the E- 1 project.

Israeli officials have said actual construction on the project may be years away, if it ever happens, while Israeli critics have questioned whether Mr. Netanyahu actually intends to develop E-1 or is pandering to hard-liners ahead of the country's Jan. 22 election.

In a separate episode Saturday, the Israeli military said soldiers shot at a Palestinian who tried to enter Israel from the West Bank. The military said soldiers called on the man to stop, then fired warning shots in the air, and finally fired at his legs when he refused to stop.

The Palestinian police said he later died of his wounds.

It was the second shooting death on the borders with the Palestinian territories in two days. On Friday, Palestinian officials in the Gaza Strip said a man was shot and killed near the coastal territory's border fence. The Israeli military said he was part of a group who rushed the fence to damage it.

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NYT > Home Page: Ravens 38, Broncos 35, 2OT: Ravens Stun Broncos and Advance to A.F.C. Title Game

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Ravens 38, Broncos 35, 2OT: Ravens Stun Broncos and Advance to A.F.C. Title Game
Jan 13th 2013, 02:04

DENVER (AP) — No matter where his season or his career might end, Joe Flacco will always have The Fling.

And Peyton Manning will always have to live with that throw he made, too.

Flacco's desperation 70-yard touchdown pass to Jacoby Jones with 31 seconds left in regulation saved the game for Baltimore in regulation and Manning's throw across his body in overtime all but lost it for Denver.

On a frostbitten day on the frozen tundra known as Denver, the Ravens got a 47-yard field goal from Justin Tucker 1:42 into the second overtime Saturday to pull off a 38-35 upset over Manning and the Broncos, extending linebacker Ray Lewis' career by at least one game.

"Our team is so confident and everything went against us," Lewis said, "but we found a way to come here together and we're leaving together. It's just awesome."

Lewis, who led the Ravens with 17 tackles over this nearly 77-minute game, kneeled down to the ground and put his helmet on the rock-solid turf when it was over.

After Lewis thaws out, the Ravens (12-6), 9½-point underdogs for this one, will get ready for a game at either New England or Houston, who meet Sunday for the other spot in the AFC title game.

This game, the longest since the Browns beat the New York Jets 23-20 in 1987, was an all-timer — up there with San Diego's 41-38 double-overtime victory over Miami for drama. But Flacco's throw might best be bookended next to one made by Roger Staubach, who famously coined the term "Hail Mary" after his game-winning toss to Drew Pearson beat Minnesota in the 1975 playoffs.

How to describe the Flacco Fling?

On third-and-3 from his 30 with 41 seconds and no timeouts left, Flacco bought time in the pocket and saw Jones sprinting down the right sideline into double coverage. Defensive back Tony Carter slowed up and let Jones streak by him. Instead of staying step for step with Jones, safety Rahim Moore tried to leap and knock down the ball. Flacco, who throws the high, deep ball as well as anyone, got it over Moore's head and into Jones' hands.

"At that point, you have to start taking shots," Flacco said. "You have to get a little lucky. Had to take a shot and everyone came through."

Jones caught it and pranced into the end zone, blowing kisses to the crowd.

Moore was on the verge of tears after the game.

"The loss, it was my fault," Moore said. "I got a little too happy. It was pathetic. My fault. Next time I'll make that play."

The teams punted three times to start overtime, setting up Denver on its 7-yard line. Manning was moving the Broncos along slowly and steadily. But on second-and-6 from the 38, he rolled to his right, stopped and threw across the field to Brandon Stokley. Graham stepped in front of the receiver for the interception, bookending the pick he made in the first quarter, which he returned 39 yards for a touchdown and a 14-7 lead.

The temperature at kickoff was 13 degrees, and Manning fell to 0-4 lifetime when the temperature is 40 or less. He finished 28 for 43 for 290 yards and accounted for all three Denver turnovers — the two picks and a lost fumble that set up the touchdown that tied the game at 28 late in the third quarter.

The last throw was the worst one, though.

"Not a good decision," Manning said. "Not a great throw, either."

Those mistakes nullified a record-setting day for returner Trindon Holliday, who returned a punt 90 yards for a touchdown and a kickoff 104 yards for another score. Both were playoff records for longest returns, as was the 248 total return yards he had.

All for naught.

This was, more or less, the unthinkable for the Broncos (13-4), who came in on an 11-game winning streak and the odds-on favorite, at 3-1, to win the Super Bowl, in Manning's hometown of New Orleans, no less.

Instead, this loss goes down with the most devastating in Denver history. Right there with the 30-27 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Jan. 4, 1997 — another year when Denver looked very much like Super Bowl material.

But it's Baltimore and Lewis who are in the AFC title game for the second straight year.

Last year, Billy Cundiff missed a 32-yard field goal against New England that would have tied that game at the end of regulation.

This year, the Ravens had Tucker, and though the temperature was cold and the ball was hard, coach John Harbaugh showed zero desire to get the ball closer after Ray Rice ran for 11 yards to the Denver 34 near the end of the first overtime.

Tucker was making them from 67 yards in pre-game warmups.

He finished the day 1 for 1. Broncos kicker Matt Prater missed his only try, from 52 yards, when he hit the turf, then the ball, on an attempt at the end of the first half. Broncos coach John Fox will be second-guessed about the decision to go for the long kick, especially considering the way Flacco responded: Throwing and completing three straight passes after the miss for a 58-yard touchdown drive that tied the game at 21 going into halftime.

The touchdown was a 32-yard connection to Torrey Smith, marking the second time Smith beat Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey. Smith also got behind the 12-time Pro Bowler for a 59-yard touchdown in the first quarter.

Yes, these were uncharacteristic plays for the Broncos, who routed Baltimore on its home field, 34-17, less than a month ago.

But on this day, the coldest playoff game in Broncos history, these were different teams playing for different stakes.

Flacco finished with 331 yards and three touchdowns. Rice had 131 yards and a score. With Lewis manning the middle of the field, the Broncos offense didn't look like the well-oiled machine it had over 11 straight wins, dating to a 35-24 comeback win over San Diego in October.

The Ravens, meanwhile, looked more like the team that began the season 9-2 instead of the one that finished it losing four of their last five.

"That football game," Harbaugh said, "did football proud."

___

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NYT > Home Page: The Texas Tribune: Oil, Gas and Wind Industries Await Ruling on Prairie Chicken

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The Texas Tribune: Oil, Gas and Wind Industries Await Ruling on Prairie Chicken
Jan 13th 2013, 02:10

In a few months, a grouse known as the lesser prairie chicken will emerge from its West Texas winter hideaway. Males will do a loud and elaborate mating dance, delighting females — and bird-watchers.

Classifying the lesser prairie chicken as threatened could have an impact on wind farms and drilling operations.

But there will be less dancing now, because the chickens' numbers have declined. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service, acting under the Endangered Species Act, will decide by the end of September whether to put the birds on its list of threatened species. Such a move could have serious repercussions for wind farms, as well as oil and gas drilling, conceivably halting activity in some areas. Those industries are fighting to keep it off the list.

"Clearly, if there was some sort of moratorium on development, that would be catastrophic," said Jeff Clark, the executive director of the Wind Coalition, a regional advocacy group. He says that wind power and prairie chickens can coexist.

That view is not shared by some environmentalists. "The chicken is in serious trouble without protection of the Endangered Species Act," said Jay Lininger, an ecologist with the Center for Biological Diversity.

About 1,800 to 2,000 lesser prairie chickens are believed to inhabit Texas, primarily in the Panhandle and West Texas, according to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. It is difficult to quantify the decline in the population because of changing survey methods, biologists say.

Classifying the species as threatened would also have implications for Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico and Oklahoma, where the birds live, too. According to the Fish and Wildlife Service, the land area inhabited by the chickens has shrunk by 84 percent over the past century, as native grasslands have vanished.

Earlier this month, Gov. Rick Perry and the governors of the other four states issued a joint statement opposing a listing.

The governors said that efforts by states, industry and landowners to aid the chicken should "support a 'not warranted' listing decision" by the federal government.

Kansas still allows lesser prairie chickens to be hunted. Texas banned it in 2009.

Listing the bird as "threatened" would not be as onerous to industries as listing it as "endangered," a stronger classification. But it could still limit the places where energy activities take place.

A major problem, biologists say, is that prairie chickens fear tall structures, where predators like hawks can perch and spot them. Wind turbines, transmission towers and drilling rigs are generally the tallest objects on the plains.

The Fish and Wildlife Service will hold a hearing next month in Lubbock on the chicken's future, and the public can comment on the issue until March 11.

David P. Smith, an environmental lawyer with the law firm Graves Dougherty Hearon & Moody, said the Obama administration faces the challenge of deciding between two green priorities — endangered species and wind power.

"This is really one of the first times when they're talking about listing a species that could have direct and significant impacts on the ability to deliver renewables," Mr. Smith said. (Graves Dougherty Hearon & Moody is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune.)

The Environmental Defense Fund, a nonprofit group, is working to create "habitat exchange" agreements, in which energy companies pay landowners to preserve the lesser prairie chicken's habitat. The exchanges should be ready by May, said David H. Festa, a vice president of the group.

The development of similar exchanges helped keep a West Texas lizard off the endangered species list last year, to the relief of the oil and gas industry.

Regardless of the federal government's decision on the chicken, a raft of other possible listings under the Endangered Species Act is imminent in Texas and nationwide. That is partly a result of lawsuits settled between the Fish and Wildlife Service and some environmental groups that want the government to act more quickly.

The oil and gas industry is monitoring the potential listing of more than 100 species, according to Debbra Hastings, the executive vice president of the Texas Oil and Gas Association. Among its top concerns will be the spot-tailed earless lizard, which inhabits the drilling grounds of the Eagle Ford Shale and is on the Fish and Wildlife Service's study list.

kgalbraith@texastribune.org

A version of this article appeared in print on January 13, 2013, on page AX of the National edition with the headline: Energy Industry Awaits U.S. Ruling on Prairie Chicken.
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NYT > Home Page: Ravens 38, Broncos 35, 2OT: Ravens Beat Broncos in Double Overtime

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Ravens 38, Broncos 35, 2OT: Ravens Beat Broncos in Double Overtime
Jan 13th 2013, 02:20

Joe Mahoney/Associated Press

The Ravens' Jacoby Jones scored the game-tying touchdown late in the fourth quarter.

DENVER — In Peyton Manning's 15 year career, there has been a lone dent in his legacy.

For all of his regular-season brilliance, Manning has, in all but one season, been unable to propel his team to the championship. Manning's teams have gone to the postseason 12 times, but in seven of the previous 11 trips, Manning's team has lost in their first playoff game.

On Saturday, with a new team, in what he said feels like a different body, Manning met that fate again, this time in a gut-wrenching 38-35 loss in double overtime that sent the Baltimore Ravens to the A.F.C. championship game for the second year in a row, where they will play the winner of the Patriots-Texans game next Sunday.

With the game nearing the end of the first overtime, Manning rolled to his right to avoid pressure, then tried to throw across his body to the left. Much has been made about Manning's arm strength since he had four neck operations last year, but this mistake was as much mental as it was physical. The pass wobbled, and the Ravens' Corey Graham stepped in front of its intended target, Brandon Stokely. It was Graham's second interception of the day — he returned the first for a touchdown — and this one set up the winning 47-yard field goal by the Ravens' rookie kicker, Justin Tucker.

The Ravens stormed the field and the Broncos, the top seed in the A.F.C., trudged into their tunnel. When they review this season, they may wonder why one of top-ranked defenses in the league could not hold a lead with 41 seconds to play, in part because they did not seem to trust Manning to throw to get a final first down that would have ended the game. That allowed the Ravens to have the ball one final time in regulation and the Broncos' defense, vulnerable to the deep pass all day, allowed Jacoby Jones to get behind it. He ran down the right sideline, and Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco, shifting in the pocket to avoid pressure on third down, launched a 70-yard pass for a touchdown that tied the score. Manning's résumé is lengthy, but Flacco's is still forming, and that throw will now be the headliner.

If the Patriots beat the Texans in their divisional game Sunday, it will be a rematch of last year's A.F.C. championship game, which the Patriots won when the Ravens dropped a pass in the end zone that would have won the game and then missed a field goal with 11 seconds remaining that would have sent the game to overtime.

The tone for a game of big plays and wild swings was set nearly immediately. The Ravens had to punt on the opening drive and Trindon Holliday, the Broncos' diminutive returner who was released by the Houston Texans after the fifth game of the season, returned it 90 yards for a touchdown (with the Ravens nowhere near him for most of it), the longest punt return for a touchdown in postseason history. The Ravens wanted to keep Manning off the field as much as possible, but this was clearly not what they had in mind.

What they did plan, though, was to attack the Broncos' cornerback Champ Bailey with the speed of receiver Torrey Smith, a mismatch that revealed that Bailey may no longer be able to cover the best receivers without help. When the Ravens got the ball back after the punt return, Flacco — playing one of his finest games, and facing little pass rush early in the game — drove the Ravens with the help of a 25-yard defensive pass interference penalty drawn on an incomplete pass down the right sideline that seemed designed precisely to draw the flag.

Once the Ravens got to their own 41-yard line, they set Smith loose on Bailey on a deep route down the middle of the field. Smith moved easily past Bailey and reeled in the 59-yard touchdown pass to tie the score with less than five minutes elapsed. Then the Ravens, who were beaten soundly at home by the Broncos in Week 15 of the regular season when their defense was struggling with injuries, served notice that they would not go as quietly in this game.

With the Broncos unable to run as effectively as they did in that regular-season game, when they ran 43 times, Manning was forced to throw more, even though he was wearing a glove on his throwing hand, with which he fidgeted during warm-ups in the single-digit cold. On the third play of the Broncos' next drive, Manning tried a short pass to his right for Eric Decker.

Decker bobbled the ball and it popped in the air, picked off by cornerback Corey Graham, who returned it 39 yards for a touchdown. In little more than five minutes, 21 points had been scored.

But then the teams settled down, perhaps numbed by the cold, and the Broncos went on a long drive, mostly made up of Manning passes, including a 21-yarder to Jacob Tamme in traffic on third down. Then, in a throwback to their days in Indianapolis, Manning lofted a perfectly placed throw to Stokely, who fended off a defender at the line of scrimmage and ran for the right corner of the end zone.

This might be the most complete team Manning has ever been on, but it took until the second quarter for the Broncos' pass rush, a hallmark of their season, to finally show itself. With the Ravens driving again, the rush finally forced Flacco into a throwaway with 11:20 remaining in the second quarter.

That gave Manning the ball back, and he finally began to get into a rhythm, driving the Broncos from their own 14-yard line. On first down from the Ravens' 14, Manning put another pass right over the defender's shoulder, this time for Knowshon Moreno and a 14-yard touchdown.

In the regular season, that might have been too much for the Ravens to overcome. When the Ravens failed to convert a fourth-and-one, and gave the ball back to Manning on the Ravens' 36-yard line, it seemed nearly certain that the Broncos would begin to pull away. But Manning had two incompletions and Coach John Fox opted to try for a 52-yard field goal with 1:21 remaining in the first half. But Prater's foot dragged in the dirt near the hash mark, and the field goal fell well short, giving Flacco and Smith another chance to go after Bailey.

Flacco completed two short passes. Then Smith took off down the right sideline again, this time letting Bailey go just a bit past him, before pulling in a 32-yard touchdown pass that tied the score at the half.

The Broncos had chosen to get the ball to start the second half, and that proved fortunate.

Holliday, deep in the end zone, took the kickoff out and returned it 104 yards for a touchdown that stunned the Ravens and seemed to give the Broncos another chance to put them away. But a game that started so quickly ground to a halt in the third quarter, accompanied by a series of penalties that required long conversations and reviews by the officials. Flacco fumbled, but the Broncos could not convert. Then Manning fumbled and finally, near the end of the third quarter, Ray Rice scored on a one-yard run to tie the score at 28-28.

The Broncos nearly pulled away again, this time on a touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomas that gave the Broncos a 35-28 lead. It was the most points the Ravens have ever given up in the postseason.

But Baltimore's offense, for so long in the shadows of its defense, gave the Ravens another chance. Flacco completed a pass in the middle of the field on third down to Anquan Boldin. The game, though, seemed to come down to a fourth-and-five play with 3:16 remaining. Flacco placed the ball perfectly for tight end Dennis Pitta. But Pitta, with the ball in his hands, let it loose, with the Broncos' Mike Adams poking his hand in to jar it loose.

The fans in Denver began to celebrate, shaking the stadium with their jumping. But when the Broncos could not convert enough first downs to keep the clock running, Flacco got one more shot. It was all he needed to begin to send Manning's home early again, in a new place but with the same result.

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NYT > Home Page: The Fifth Down: Live Analysis: 49ers 24, Packers 21

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The Fifth Down: Live Analysis: 49ers 24, Packers 21
Jan 13th 2013, 03:05

The 49ers prepare to play the Packers at Candlestick Park.Tony Avelar/Associated Press The 49ers prepare to play the Packers at Candlestick Park.
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Commentary and live analysis of Saturday night's N.F.C. divisional-round playoff game between the Green Bay Packers (12-5) and the San Francisco 49ers (11-4-1). The game is a rematch of the teams' Week 1 encounter, won by the 49ers, 30-22, but don't look to that game for too many clues about tonight's: Alex Smith started at quarterback for San Francisco, the replacement officials called 18 penalties and Randy Moss caught a touchdown pass.

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NYT > Home Page: Beijing Air Pollution Off the Charts

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Beijing Air Pollution Off the Charts
Jan 13th 2013, 01:24

Alexander F. Yuan/Associated Press

Fashionably masked women on Saturday outside an amusement park in Beijing. The World Health Organization has standards that judge an air-quality score above 500 to be more than 20 times the level of particulate matter in the air deemed safe.

BEIJING — One Friday more than two years ago, an air-quality monitoring device atop the United States Embassy in Beijing recorded data so horrifying that someone in the embassy called the level of pollution "Crazy Bad" in an infamous Twitter post. That day the Air Quality Index, which uses standards set by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, had crept above 500, which was supposed to be the top of the scale.

So what phrase is appropriate to describe Saturday's jaw-dropping reading of 755 at 8 p.m., when all of Beijing looked like an airport smokers' lounge? Though an embassy spokesman said he did not immediately have comparative data, Beijing residents who follow the Twitter feed said the Saturday numbers appeared to be the highest recorded since the embassy began its monitoring system in 2008.

The embassy's @BeijingAir Twitter feed said the level of toxicity in the air was "Beyond Index," the terminology for levels above 500; the "Crazy Bad" label was used just once, in November 2010, by an embassy employee using the Twitter account. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, levels between 301 and 500 are "Hazardous," meaning people should avoid all outdoor activity. The World Health Organization has standards that judge a score above 500 to be more than 20 times the level of particulate matter in the air deemed safe.

In online conversations, Beijing residents tried to make sense of the latest readings.

"This is a historic record for Beijing," Zhao Jing, a prominent Internet commentator who uses the pen name Michael Anti, wrote on Twitter. "I've closed the doors and windows; the air purifiers are all running automatically at full power."

Other Beijing residents online described the air as "postapocalyptic," "terrifying" and "beyond belief."

The municipal government reported levels as high as 478 on Saturday in central Beijing, according to The Associated Press. It was not immediately clear why the number was lower, but even that level is considered hazardous according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency standards. (By comparison, the air quality index in New York City, using the same standard, was 19 at 6 a.m. on Saturday.)

Pollution levels in Beijing had been creeping up for days, and readings were regularly surging above 300 by midweek. The interior of the gleaming Terminal 3 of the Beijing Capital International Airport was filled with a thick haze on Thursday. The next day, people working in office towers in downtown Beijing found it impossible to make out skyscrapers just a few blocks away. Some city residents scoured stores in search of masks and air filters.

Still, there was little warning that the United States Embassy reading would jump above 700 on Saturday. Some people speculated that the monitoring system, which measures fine particles called PM 2.5 because they are 2.5 microns in diameter or smaller, might have malfunctioned once it got beyond 500.

But Nolan Barkhouse, an embassy spokesman, said the monitor was operating correctly.

It was unclear exactly what was responsible for the rise in levels of particulate matter, beyond the factors that regularly sully the air here. Factories operating in neighboring Hebei Province ring this city of more than 20 million. The number of cars on Beijing's streets has been multiplying at an astounding rate. And Beijing sits on a plain flanked by hills and escarpments that can trap pollution on days with little wind. Meanwhile, one person hiking at the Great Wall in the hills at Mutianyu, north of Beijing, took photographs of crisp blue skies there.

Xinhua, the state news agency, reported on Dec. 31 that Beijing's air quality had improved for 14 years straight, and the level of major pollutants had decreased. A municipal government spokesman told Xinhua that the annual average concentration of PM 10, or particles 10 microns in diameter or smaller, had dropped by 4 percent in 2012, compared with one year earlier.

Chinese officials prefer to publicly release air pollution measurements that give only levels of PM 10, although foreign health and environmental experts say PM 2.5 can be deadlier and more important to track.

There has been a growing outcry among Chinese for municipal governments to release fuller air quality data, in part because of the United States Embassy Twitter feed. As a result, Beijing began announcing PM 2.5 numbers last January. Major Chinese cities have had the equipment to track those levels, but had refused for a long time to release the data.

The existence of the embassy's machine and the @BeijingAir Twitter feed have been a diplomatic sore point for Chinese officials. In July 2009, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official, Wang Shu'ai, told American diplomats to halt the Twitter feed, saying that the data "is not only confusing but also insulting," according to a State Department cable obtained by WikiLeaks. Mr. Wang said the embassy's data could lead to "social consequences."

A version of this article appeared in print on January 13, 2013, on page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: On Scale of 0 to 500, Beijing's Air Quality Tops 'Crazy Bad' at 755 .

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NYT > Home Page: Despite Protests, Upstate New York Gun Show Goes On

NYT > Home Page
HomePage
Despite Protests, Upstate New York Gun Show Goes On
Jan 12th 2013, 23:44

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — The line to enter the Saratoga Arms Fair at the City Center here had never been so long, and David Petronis, its organizer, said he had never shaken so many hands in one morning.

A customer inspected a pistol at the Saratoga Arms Fair in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., on Saturday. The gun show drew larger crowds than usual.

Graphic

High-capacity ammunition magazines at the gun show. They have been at the forefront of discussions in the debate over tougher gun-control limits.

"I appreciate you opening this show, not giving into the pressure," a man told him as he clasped Mr. Petronis's hand in the echoing convention hall, where hundreds of dealers of guns, ammunition, hunting equipment, war memorabilia and antiques were behind tables, talking up their wares.

Mr. Petronis grinned back. He had not had any intention of giving in, not when a resident recently started a petition to shut down the gun show he had put on in Saratoga Springs four times a year since 1984. Not when several dozen people showed up at a City Council meeting two weeks ago to speak out against his event — too soon after the tragedy in Newtown, Conn., they said, and too close by. Not when reporters began calling and his name appeared in newspapers as far west as Las Vegas.

And not on Saturday, the first day of the show, when thousands of attendees, three protests and a counterprotest made Saratoga Springs — more known for its racetrack and mineral springs — the latest American city to play host to the national debate over gun control.

The dispute has made for outstanding business. The deaths last month of 20 schoolchildren and 6 adults in Newtown prompted politicians to propose additional gun-control legislation. Since then, Mr. Petronis's shop in Mechanicville, N.Y., called Hudson River Trading Company, has sold out of assault-type weapons, said his wife, Cathy, the store's co-owner. On Saturday, a line of mostly male attendees stretched out the doors and around nearly two blocks.

For Mr. and Ms. Petronis, the attention amounts to free advertising. "The more people to the event, the more dealers are happy," he said. "I'll be answering my Web mail for months."

The show had not attracted so many people before, City Center staff members said. And it had never attracted so many protests. As traffic snarled and parking spots filled outside the convention center, about two dozen members of the newly formed Saratogians for Gun Safety held up 26 painted wooden angels, copies of those a Connecticut artist planted in Newtown after the Dec. 14 shootings.

The group's members say they oppose the use of the City Center, which is run by a public authority, to support sales of firearms. And there is the matter of sensitivity, they added: other towns in Connecticut and New York have canceled gun shows, with some officials saying they are concerned weapons would be sold that could someday be used in a mass shooting.

"Newtown just happened a few weeks ago," said Deirdre Ladd, 46, one of the protest's organizers. "There are lots of similarities between Newtown and Saratoga, but the difference is that Saratoga has a gun show four times a year."

Many in the area would say that is a difference to be proud of. Owning a gun or two, or even a dozen, is not uncommon, especially in the nearby Adirondack Mountains. Hunting, skeet shooting and target shooting are popular hobbies.

The protests had left more than a few gun-show attendees feeling beleaguered. Second Amendment advocates handed out fliers to reporters and gathered in small groups, talking anxiously of the state and federal gun-control legislations that many feared were soon coming. "I don't have enough angels to represent genocide by tyranny," read one of the signs in the pro-gun camp opposite the angel holders, attracting honks and waves from passing drivers.

"I feel we're kind of persecuted," said Sean Garvey, 60, the president of Dunham's Bay Fish and Game Club nearby, who has been coming to the Saratoga show for 20 years. He sighed and added: "Gun owners are blamed for certain things. We've been under attack for a long time, and we've been framed for things."

Donald Fangboner, 70, a retired police officer from Lake George, N.Y., said he had come not just to browse, but also to lend his support.

"I want to see a free America, and if we lose this, it's over," he said, patting an anti-Cuomo button on his chest. (Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo recently vowed to enact the country's "toughest gun assault weapon ban" in New York.)

A concession Mr. Petronis made was to bar dealers from selling military-style assault rifles similar to those used in recent mass shootings.

Mark Baker, the City Center's president, said that while he and other center officials were sensitive to the concerns of residents who said holding the gun show was inappropriate, they also wanted to honor the center's contract with the Petronises. The arms fair, which runs both days this weekend, is also "a significant piece of economic activity for this weekend," he said.

But he said the City Center authority would review future contracts, including that of the gun show, which, like all other organizations that exhibit at the center, must renew its contract yearly. The officials are also keeping an eye on proposed gun legislation in Albany and in Washington, which could affect the types of weapons that are sold in gun shows or how the sales are conducted.

Anticipating a larger crowd than usual, center officials brought in additional security guards, and the Saratoga police stood near the protest area. But as the day wore on, an uneasy truce appeared to hold.

"Our goal is not to confront them, and I believe theirs is not to confront us," said Mike Winn, 52, as he hoisted a wooden angel into the air.

A version of this article appeared in print on January 13, 2013, on page A23 of the New York edition with the headline: Despite Protests, Gun Show in Upstate New York Goes On and Draws Crowds.
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NYT > Home Page: Two Men. One Sky. The Silent Realization of a Purer Form of Flight

NYT > Home Page
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Two Men. One Sky. The Silent Realization of a Purer Form of Flight
Jan 12th 2013, 20:22

Courtesy of Jonnny Durand

As they pursued hang gliding history on a July day over Texas, Jonny Durand, foreground, and Dustin Martin were often in sight of each other.

T HE CLOUDS stretched across the Texas sky like a highway. And soaring along those lanes, lofted nearly 8,000 feet by the hot air rising from the earth, two hang gliders raced in tight pursuit of the most prized feat in this high adrenaline niche sport: farthest ever flown.

Interactive Feature

Dustin Martin, just before a more recent flight, was used tobeing disappointed in his duels with Durand.

Jonny Durand of Australia rising in warm air in 2009 above Far North Queensland. His father introduced him to hang gliding.

Dustin Martin checking his gear before taking off. Each rig weighs more than 100 pounds and has to be lugged back to a road where the pilot can be picked up after landing.

Dustin Martin got his first job working at an airport, but even in the cockpit of a sailplane, he longed for something that was, as he put it, "more birdlike."

Afterward, Durand, right, and Martin pointed out, roughly, where they hadstarted and finished the south-to-north flights.

The men suspended underneath their aluminum and fabric wings, Jonny Durand and Dustin Martin, had already journeyed 438 miles in 10 hours, splitting up and converging repeatedly as each pursued his own path alongside the red-tailed hawks and turkey vultures. Against all odds, they were now flying nearly wingtip to wingtip.

Because of the consoles of gadgets mounted on their control bars, the two men knew that they had now flown farther than any person ever had using a hang glider. Farther than anyone had without the drone of an engine or the protective shell of a plane. They had flown, and were flying still, farther than anyone had in the manner dreamed of in centuries of tall tales, from Icarus to Superman — cheeks in the wind, like a bird.

Having launched near the southern tip of Texas in July, a few miles from Mexico, the two men had pushed north, propelled by the fierce flatland wind, and at times had reached more than 80 miles per hour.

They crossed low over desolate expanses of cactus and mesquite, which threatened shins full of thorns for any pilot forced into an early landing. They crossed over the concrete sprawl of small cities with houses that looked like pebbles, and over the tumbling, juniper-dusted canyons of hill country, and, finally, over the parched farmland that heralded the northern borders of the state.

There was Durand, dangling under his Red Bull-sponsored wing, who had prophesied that morning, "I've got a good feeling about today." The archetype of the adventurous Australian, he was known to friends as someone who operated best with a few margaritas or at least a decent hangover. There are those who take to the sky and revel in the silence; he filled it with whoops of delight.

And there, soaring alongside, was Martin, the quiet, perpetually destitute product of the American West. His youthful dreams of flight had never given way to more practical considerations. Since he started working at an airport as a teenager, earning less than he handed back for his flying lessons, he had scraped together just enough on the ground to spend as much time as possible off it.

They called themselves friends. But, as those who had spent the previous few days with them would attest, rivals better fit the jaunty, "sure you're up for this?"competitiveness of the daring prodigies. In the sky, where they snacked on protein bars and water and relieved themselves freely over the world below, they were as evenly matched as two hang glider pilots could be.

As they flew past the old world-record distance — close enough to hear each other yahooing in celebration — the question turned first to how much farther they could possibly go. But as the sun retreated and they began their inevitable, decisive descent, another, more pointed question began to nag at the two men: who would go the farthest?

"It was at the front of both our minds," Martin later recounted during one of the dozens of interviews with participants that were used, along with video and flight recorder data, to reconstruct the journey. "After all this, we just happened to be at the same spot. We were starting from scratch essentially."

And with the knowledge that both had broken the old record but only one might set the record, Durand and Martin began the final push.

Zapata, Tex.

A sports record offers a small claim to immortality: certified evidence that a person not only lived, but also excelled.

The pursuit of this particular record — farthest ever flown — had for more than a decade drawn some of the world's best hang glider pilots to Zapata, a dingy border town at the southern tip of Texas best known for oil wealth and drug violence.

The pilots almost universally hated the place, cursing the second-rate Mexican food and the motel room scorpions that kept them company during what could be weeks of waiting between flights.

The locals, too, wondered at this peculiar summer migration to their hard-luck community of 5,000.

The closing of the bowling alley and drive-in movie theater had left complaining about nothing to do as the most popular pastime. Even Falcon Lake, the bass-rich reservoir along the Rio Grande that served as the area's principal draw, was struggling to lure anglers after pirate-style attacks by members of a Mexican cartel who use it to smuggle drugs.

"There's nothing here," said Linda Cameron, the manager of Lakefront Lodge, the motel and campground that most of the pilots called home during their annual visits. "We're 54 miles south of Laredo and we're 52 miles north of Rio Grande, and there's a lot of cactus in between."

The low-lying area seems an unlikely home for a high-altitude sport. But the town had been identified by Gary Osoba, a former hang gliding pilot who studied decades of weather data to find the place with the best meteorological conditions for long flights.

Around the globe, Zapata stood out for its hot desert air — laden with enough moisture from the Gulf of Mexico to seed cumulus clouds — that bellowed northward for hundreds of miles as if out of a giant furnace.

In 2000, Osoba started what he called the World Record Encampment, which drew some of the best hang glider pilots each summer to chase various distance records. There was an entry fee — to pay for the special plane used to tow the hang gliders into the air and a few other shared expenses — but mostly it was a casual gathering, with fewer than a dozen pilots flying and socializing for a few weeks.

They returned year after year because the weather models had been right. Before the site was identified, only one pilot had ever flown more than 300 miles. By last summer, Zapata had served as the staging ground for four flights of more than 400 miles.

"Almost everyone who goes to Zapata has had the longest flight of their lives," said David Glover, a businessman in Oklahoma City who has attended most years.

That distinction has made the spot controversial among hang gliding enthusiasts, with some regarding the records set there as less than authentic, liking winning a slam dunk contest with the help of a trampoline or a weight-lifting title on the moon.

But for the cadre of pilots who attended the gatherings, the epic aerial journeys carried no asterisks.

The flying was, if anything, more difficult than in many places, requiring pilots to brave high wind and treacherous landings — in addition to the usual risks like a hang glider tumbling midair or crashing.

"The idea that you can use your wits and skills to defy the law of gravity and cross a vast stretch of this massive state is breathtaking," said Pete Lehmann, a part-time flight instructor from Pittsburgh who was among the Zapata regulars. "Why people go bowling or play golf is simply beyond me."

 

The Pilots Gather

Dustin Martin was at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., on the night of June 29 when his cellphone rang. Seeing the name on the screen, he guessed what was about to happen.

It was Jonny Durand. He and a handful of other gifted pilots had assembled in Zapata. They expected to be there for weeks. And Durand, aware of the risk, wanted his rival to join them.

The two men, both 32, had met more than a decade earlier at a hang gliding competition in Australia, when both were better described as promising rather than accomplished. Since then, Durand and Martin had become two of the top-ranked pilots in the world and had learned along the way that having the other in the air gave them an edge that helped fuel some of their best performances.

When the flying was over, often with them winning the top two places, they would spend the night together swilling beer and taking their chances with women.

"It's been a rivalry since the early days," Durand said. "But we're also friends and enjoy flying together."

The sport of hang gliding was not much older than these two youthful adherents. But its roots reach much further back.

The most famous design for what could generously be called an early hang glider remains Leonardo da Vinci's of a contraption seemingly pulled from a children's book. By the end of the 19th century, inventors had finally started to figure out the rough mechanics involved in getting a person airborne, birthing a series of gliding contraptions that were unwieldy, dangerous and usually flew only a few feet above the ground.

The invention of the airplane made unpowered gliding seem like an odd relic. But a dedicated few continued to work at it, convinced that motorized flight had eliminated a feeling of elemental conquest.

The modern hang glider emerged out of a simple triangular design, which made it lighter, stronger and more responsive to steering than previous gliding devices. Francis Rogallo, the NASA engineer credited as the father of the sport, predicted men would use them to fly off mountains. And in the early 1970s, scores of brave, perhaps foolhardy, pioneers started doing just that.

Those early years were filled with promise and tragedy. Images of a hang glider soaring through the Grand Canyon were offset by reports of dozens of pilots dying each year in accidents.

Hang gliding became safer as technology improved and training guidelines were established. But even as interest in other extreme sports has continued to swell, the number of licensed hang glider pilots in the United States has dropped by about two-thirds from its peak, to 5,000 last year. Instead, many would-be pilots have taken up the sibling sport of paragliding, the aerial equivalent of switching from skiing to snowboarding.

The hang glider pilots who remained, a group increasingly dominated by gray hair, remained fiercely dedicated to what they viewed less as a pastime than a calling.

Some of the most well-known of these pilots had gathered in Zapata in July, when the weather was ideal. The group included Osoba, who started the world record encampment; Davis Straub, who ran the Oz Report, a Web site that was an online watering hole for hang gliding pilots; Glen Volk, a former national hang gliding champion; Andre Wolf, a Brazilian pilot who had set the South American distance record; Glauco Pinto, another top competition pilot from Brazil; Glover, a former president of the United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association; and Lehmann, who was chronicling the gathering for Hang Gliding & Paragliding magazine.

Durand was regarded as the only pilot there with the ability to break the absolute distance record.

That changed after the phone call from the Steak House, where some of the pilots had gathered to trade the same old stories over dinner. A few drinks later, Durand and others decided that they were going to give Martin a hard time for skipping the gathering.

The conversation veered between genuine enticement and friendly trash talk. Durand told Martin that the weather was looking very good. He noted that his own sponsors had paid for his trip and wondered whether Martin's sponsors were being cheap. He mused that in Martin's absence, records might fall.

"I don't know if he really wanted me out there," Martin said, "but he was definitely egging me on."

Martin had attended three previous encampments, coming closer than any other pilot to breaking the distance record in 2008 with a flight of 410 miles. He intended to skip the 2012 gathering because he was broke and, as he frequently reminded anyone willing to listen to his trademark rant, he hated the place.

But the combination of Durand's needling and the prospect of missing a rare opportunity provoked Martin to make a few phone calls. He consulted with several other pilots in Zapata and confirmed that the sky seemed even more promising than usual. He connected with his main sponsor, the hang glider manufacturer Wills Wing, which said it would send a check for $2,500 overnight to pay the entrance fee and other costs.

Then he texted Durand that he was making the 1,100-mile drive. The response, he inferred, betrayed a mix of surprise and a little bit of nervousness.

"Really?" Durand asked.

His own car had no air-conditioning, so Martin rented a small hatchback. He lashed his hang glider to the top, crunching the roof sufficiently that he would have to hammer out the dents before he returned the car.

One thought above all had changed his mind: "I didn't want Jonny to fly 500 miles while I just sat here."

'See You Up There'

On the morning of July 3, Martin and Durand woke to a text from Osoba: "Today is excellent."

Not everyone seemed so sure.

Most mornings in Zapata begin with a long, sometimes heated, debate about the weather. The pilots, conscious that margins matter when it comes to breaking records, agreed they must wait for just the right day. They differed about what that would look like.

On this day, the conditions were something short of perfect. The sky was a bit too clear; only a few white puffs clouded the blue expanse. The wind could have been stronger. The ground was still moist from heavy rain a few days earlier.

But Martin and Durand, hoping the conditions would improve once they were in the air, and eager to escape the monotony of another day of waiting, readied themselves for flight. So did Straub, Lehmann, Volk and Pinto.

"You can't always expect to have everything perfect," Durand said. "You just have to try."

Martin had arrived in Zapata two days before. Durand's displeasure was unmistakable. And he wasn't alone. Some of the pilots resented Martin's decision to join them only after the conditions had turned so promising. Some were irritated that he had arrived without a driver to make the sometimes daylong retrievals, leaving him dependent on rides from the others.

Martin felt ganged up on, and he let Durand know it, stoking the tension.

Despite his late arrival and some mild protest from Durand, Martin was allowed to launch first because he was the first to get his hang glider assembled and on the runway.

Like the other pilots, Martin carried enough technology to fill a carry-on suitcase: a global positioning device that helped him determine his route, a variometer that measured how quickly he was rising or falling, a flight data recorder that tracked his movements for record verification, a two-way radio to communicate with other pilots and support crew, a rescue beacon that could be tracked online in case he found himself stranded in remote country, and a strobe light in case he landed after sunset.

His clothing was more basic. He wore nylon tights covered with a streamlined jumper. He strapped on a helmet, covered his face with a ski mask and sunglasses, and pulled on a pair of gloves.

He stuffed eight Balance Bars into his sleeves for easy midair retrieval. On a whim, he decided to switch from his usual Clif Bars, a decision he would soon regret when the chocolate coating melted into an irritating mess. He filled a bladder with 70 ounces of water, which he could drink through a rubber straw that hung over his shoulder. As extra protection against dehydration, he chugged a large orange Gatorade.

Then he strapped into his harness, which suspends the pilot into a prone position below the wing — the hang in hang gliding. On the ground he kept his feet free for launching, but once in the air, he would zip himself into the harness like a sleeping bag.

Finally he turned to Durand.

"See you up there."

Dustin Martin

At 9:57 a.m., the tow bridle attached to Martin's hang glider snapped tight.

There are two ways that hang gliders typically get into the air. The traditional approach is to run off the top of a hill, mountain or cliff. But pilots also use a technique that has made the sport far less beholden to local topography: towing.

A line is attached from a plane to the pilot and then pulled forward until the hang glider is brought into the air — a method familiar to anyone who has witnessed tourists parasailing behind boats in beach towns. In Zapata, the pilots used a slow-flying, experimental propeller plane designed for the task and called "the dragonfly."

And with the plane sputtering forward, Martin suddenly lifted into the air, riding its wake like a water skier.

The winds whistled and slapped around him. The next eight minutes, he knew, would be the most dangerous of the trip, with countless ways to make a mistake and little time to recover from one. But his ascent went smoothly.

Once he had reached 3,000 feet off the ground, he pulled a cord releasing him from the plane.

He was, at last, in the sky and on his own.

It is a speculative exercise to identify a pivot point in the course of any life, but Martin suspects just such a moment occurred when, as a teenager in Arizona, he picked up a book at his local library. It was a small volume, nearly three decades old, about sailplanes, a type of unpowered aircraft.

After reading the book, Martin noticed that a woman's name and home phone number had been written inside as contact information. He dialed the number, unchanged after years, and the surprised woman guided him to a local airport where he could learn to fly.

Martin headed there and got his first job, earning $2.50 an hour running alongside the sailplanes to make sure they did not tip over as they took off. But even when he was sitting in the cockpit himself, he longed for a purer form of flight, something that was, as he put it, "more birdlike."

He tried to replicate the sensation by building a homemade glider out of aluminum tubes and plastic tarps, which succeeded only in providing scrapes and bruises after each painful encounter with the ground. At 16, he took a six-day, $600 introductory course in hang gliding.

Soon he was flying every weekend around the dormant volcanoes around Flagstaff, Ariz. Then most weekdays. He was fired from the airport, the first of many lost jobs, accused of spending too much time looking at the sky.

Martin settled on an itinerant lifestyle: work a few months painting, fixing bikes or teaching hang gliding, and spend the rest of the year flying. He competed in Australia, Europe and South America, throughout the Rockies and then the Alps.

He was soon winning enough to get much of his equipment and travel costs paid by sponsors. Among the small circle of competitive pilots, he was known as shy, even reclusive, alternately funny and fussy, with a savantlike knowledge of the sport.

In 2000, Martin was one of the pilots present for the first record encampment in Zapata. The first day, he flew 202 miles. It was his personal best, but his celebration faded to disappointment when he learned that another pilot had set a world record with a 311-mile flight.

The world record continued to grow, but each time Martin traveled to Zapata, something would go wrong. One year, he was forced to sleep outside for a night while waiting for someone to pick him up after a flight. Another year, he hitchhiked and rode back to civilization inside a border patrol van that had been rounding up illegal immigrants. His 410-mile flight still ranked as the third longest ever, but somehow, the place felt cursed.

"You would never go here for any other reason," Martin said. "You're either moving drugs across the border, you're making money with oil, or you're killing it with hang gliders."

The Journey Begins

Once in the air, Martin assessed the landscape. The humid morning air, still cool on the skin, dulled the view, creating the illusion that the thicket of mesquite and prickly pear below extended forever.

Regardless of how far he hoped to go, he would have to make it past this perilous territory first.

Because a hang glider is constantly descending — at roughly 200 feet a minute — a pilot must find columns of warm rising air, called thermals, to gain the altitude needed to stay in the sky for more than just a sled ride, as short flights are disparagingly called.

Invisible to the eye, thermals are recognizable to most people as the source of turbulence on airplane flights or what allow a bird to circle skyward without flapping its wings. The billowing growth of a cloud on a warm day is perhaps the clearest sign of a thermal, with the cloud capping the rising air as foam does the rising bubbles of a beer, which is why pilots use clouds to help plot their paths.

Strong thermals, which are sought and feared, are capable of lifting a hang glider thousands of feet in minutes. Lighter thermals, the ones Martin was hunting, require precise flying to find and then ascend. In most other places, pilots would simply wait until the day had warmed sufficiently before starting their flights. But for this record chase, every extra minute of daylight mattered.

So Martin traveled cautiously, watching for soaring birds and developing clouds to detect areas with lift, while eyeing the ground to make sure he had a backup plan if he kept descending.

Pilots hated this early stretch of the trip. Air conditions often force them to fly so low that they have to be ready to land at any time. But there was nowhere to land, except the clearings around the occasional oil pump, that did not risk shredding them and tearing up their gliders with thorns up to three inches long.

"Not to be too dramatic," Lehmann said, "but it's friggin' dangerous to land in some of these godforsaken places."

Even safely on the ground, pilots might have to spend hours lugging more than 100 pounds of equipment in search of a road where they could be picked up. One pilot who could not find her way to a road was rescued by police officers. She was dehydrated and delusional.

Avoiding that nightmarish situation was the main thought in Martin's mind as he struggled to stay aloft that morning. About nine miles after he disconnected from the plane, he sank to just 1,073 feet above the ground.

Jonny Durand

Durand took off at 10:10 a.m., 13 minutes after Martin.

His first goal was to survive that difficult early stretch. His second was to chase down Martin.

Growing up in a forested outpost not far from the Gold Coast of Australia, Durand had also come to the sport at an early age. His father, a skilled hang glider pilot, had purchased some property with an unusual perk: a private mountain.

After school, his father would take him up on tandem flights, during which Durand would toss paper airplanes, watching as they gently sank thousands of feet to the ground.

As soon as he was old enough to carry his own glider, at 14, he started flying himself. Nearly two decades later, his father was still the eighth-ranked pilot in Australia; the No. 1 spot belonged to Durand.

By then, Durand had built something recognizable to anyone in sports marketing as a brand. He was not just winning competitions, he was doing so with a charismatic flair that stood out even among the rugged daredevils around him. He was supremely confident in his skills and almost pathologically energetic, spending nine months of the year on the road and developing a reputation for his practical jokes and partying.

The sponsors embraced him — first industry stalwarts like Moyes Delta Gliders, an Australian manufacturer, and then mainstream brands like Red Bull, the energy drink maker with an eye on adrenaline seekers.

"Everyone likes Jonny unless you're a woman whose heart he broke," said Timothy Ettridge, who encouraged Durand to go to Zapata and volunteered as his driver.

In 2009, Durand flew 323 miles from the clearing atop his family's mountain, still the longest mountain flight in the history of the sport. For the purists, who believe that hang gliding should never require mechanical assistance like towing, it was perhaps the greatest prize.

But for Durand, the larger goal still loomed. He wanted the absolute distance record. And he knew where he had to go to get it.

After he spent a year bouncing among Brazil, Italy and Australia, his trip to Texas stood out not only for its lofty ambition but for its sheer unpleasantness. He had been to Zapata once, several years earlier, to endure three weeks of bad weather that allowed him to stage only a few disappointing flights, one of which ended with a terrifying landing, so he knew what to expect.

"Hot and dry, long days," Durand said. "I knew it wasn't exactly going to be a holiday out there.

"But the margaritas are fantastic."

Midair Meeting

Thirty miles from Zapata, Durand spotted Martin for the first time. The gray wing with blue and white stripes was just a speck in the sky, about three miles ahead.

The men were approaching Laredo, an old river crossing that had grown into a bustling hub of border country. It was also, because of the federally restricted airspace around the city's airport, the closest thing to an obstacle in the course the men were taking.

Among the more improbable dangers of the sport was the risk of being struck by an airplane. Martin had once come within a dozen feet of such an accident. But of greater concern was this: A hang gliding flight that crossed into restricted airspace was ineligible for the record book.

This was one of the few rules that the two men had to observe during their flight. They also could not be towed higher than 1,000 meters, travel too close to the clouds or fly for more than a half-hour after sunset. These rules were strictly enforced using the flight recording equipment they carried. The previous longest flight ever made — 438 miles — was not in the record book because of a technicality.

Durand kept clear of the Laredo airport, while Martin dared to get closer. But both skirted it safely.

"That was the first time I took a deep breath," Durand said.

The conditions had started to improve. The sky, which had been mostly clear when they took off, was filling with clouds. The air was warming, and the men were climbing higher with almost every thermal. The difficult morning flying was giving way to great afternoon conditions.

The fight for survival had now turned into a more straightforward test of endurance.

A key to a long-distance flight is to relax. When pilots are tense, flying can offer a Pilates-level workout as the core muscles strain rather than hang loosely in the harness. Maneuvering with the control bar — pulling in to speed up, pushing out to slow down, shifting left or right to bank into turns — should require about as much pressure as pushing a full grocery cart. But over the course of the day, the feat they were trying to pull off could be compared to pushing a full grocery cart across an entire state.

After coming close several times, Durand finally caught up to Martin near Carrizo Springs, 114 miles into the trip. It was 1 p.m. They had been communicating by radio, trading bearings and occasionally cracking jokes, and both men were anticipating flying together, with more a sense of relief than rivalry.

"I knew that if we could help each other out, life was going to be that much easier," Durand said.

After spending several hours hunting for thermals alone, each man could now watch the other as well, essentially doubling their chances of finding areas of lift. Martin compared the approach to professional bike racing, in which competitors cluster until breaking away.

And Durand and Martin flew together well. A few years earlier, the two men had jointly set the record for the longest flight on the East Coast, 283 miles, flying from Central Florida deep into Georgia, eventually landing side by side.

They had similar flying styles. Both made quick decisions in the air and remained steady through difficult moments. And, setting them apart from other competitive pilots, they flew unusually fast, which eats up altitude quicker, believing the increased risk of an early landing was offset by the extra gain in mileage.

"We both know what the plan is: stay up and try to go as fast as we can," Martin said.

After meeting up, the men took their first break: eating, stretching and taking pictures as they flew. And they shared a feeling they had until then been reluctant to voice: "The day is getting really good."

As if to prove the point, soon afterward, they hit their biggest thermal of the trip, circling each other as they rose 1,000 feet a minute. At that speed, the world retreats fast; entire landscapes dissolve into broad swaths of color.

They reached well over a mile above the ground, nearly high enough to scrape the underbellies of the clouds.

Endurance Test

At Uvalde, where the land brightens through a valley that nourishes herds of beef cattle, they forked west off U.S. Highway 83, which they had been following from above. They tracked State Highway 55, mimicking the curves of the Nueces River as it wound into the Texas Hill Country.

Though they were not tethered in any way to these roads, they used them like landmarks to help guide their flight, even as they occasionally diverted miles from them to pursue areas with better flying conditions.

The Hill Country was known as the most technically challenging segment of the trip. The ridges and folds in the earth stir up the wind, making the air more violent and unpredictable. The rising terrain eats at the altitude from below while providing few places to land. Many record attempts fell short there.

For the first time all day, nearly 240 miles into the journey, Durand seemed to have an edge, soaring comfortably at 7,000 feet while Martin descended to nearly 2,000 feet.

Durand, anticipating the difficult terrain, had decided to fly more cautiously, slowing to preserve altitude. He had once been forced to land in the area — "the scariest landing I've ever had," he said — and was not eager to repeat the experience.

Martin, though, had maintained his aggressive approach, costing him the height he had worked so hard throughout the day to gain.

At one point, hours earlier, Martin had been forced to enter what looked from above like a mini-tornado. It was a dust devil, a thermal strong enough to suck up a column of dust and other debris and which any experienced pilot knew should generally be avoided. But if he had not gone higher, Martin faced a difficult landing — and no record.

Experienced pilots are like risk calculators, rapidly weighing the dangers of any course of action. Martin carried two reserve parachutes, rather than the customary one, to provide the extra security he needed to push the odds.

Inside that dust devil, the air had churned violently around him. A roller coaster, which provides momentary loss of gravity during drops and the accelerating forces of it during fast turns, may be the most apt analogy. At the time, the gamble had paid off, giving him thousands of feet of extra altitude.

But now he was uncomfortably low again, searching for any promising thermal as he watched Durand all but disappear ahead of him.

The Race Is On

It took Martin almost an hour to catch back up. Both men had made it through the Hill Country, onto the spare, short grass savanna of the Edwards Plateau.

By 4:38, shortly before some of the workers of the world below finished the labors of an unremarkable Tuesday, the two men were flying side by side again. They had traveled 280 miles.

Durand was mugging for his video camera, describing his excitement and, occasionally, not forgetting how he financed his lifestyle, giving shout-outs to his sponsors.

"I think we're going to do it," he said. "I'm a real happy man right now. Oh my God."

By then, the other pilots who had launched that morning were already on the ground and heading back to Zapata. Volk had gone the farthest, about 230 miles, followed by Lehmann at about 215. Pinto, dealing with an equipment malfunction, had landed after just 40 miles. Straub had set down at 160 miles after a particularly violent thermal.

"Basically, I got scared," Straub said. "Dustin and Jonny experienced the same thing, and they stayed in it."

As the other pilots drove south, they marveled that Durand and Martin remained in the air and on pace for the record. The wind remained strong and steady, averaging 23 m.p.h. The sky was still thick with clouds. The sun was still high. And on nearly every climb, they were soaring to nearly touch the clouds.

"That is when we knew they had a chance," Lehmann said. "Everything was on their side. Now it was just a matter of staying up."

The contest between the two men had developed a leapfrog rhythm. A mistake by the pilot in front was seized upon by the pilot in back, and the lead changed. Then another battle to catch up. And then a repeat. They had by now traded the front spot more than a dozen times.

After two hours of flying close together, suddenly, Martin shot miles ahead.

They were above a lonely stretch, where the few signs of civilization included fields of enormous windmills. Durand strained his eyes to the horizon: "He's really far in front."

The day was getting late, and Durand was getting low enough that he was more concerned about landing than he was about catching up. He forced himself to switch his mind-set from winning the contest to staying in the air long enough to break the distance record.

"Before I knew it, he had 10 or 15 miles on me again," Durand said. "I thought, that's it, he's got the world record."

The Record Falls

Though the official record was 435 miles, the real number to beat was 438 — the farthest anyone had ever flown in a hang glider.

As that moment approached, Martin, having built a seemingly insurmountable lead, watched his GPS to see when the number ticked over. It was like watching a clock on New Year's Eve, using technology to confirm a landmark that would otherwise be impossible to recognize.

"I was already celebrating my record," Martin said.

And then suddenly, there was Durand, flying in shouting distance.

The two men were shocked to see each other again after nearly two hours apart. Durand, who had also been fixated on his GPS to mark the moment, was so surprised that he initially suspected that this was simply a random encounter with another recreational hang glider.

"I couldn't believe my eyes," Durand said. "I thought I'd never see him again."

They circled each other as they exceeded the longest distance.

For Martin, though, the accomplishment was dulled by a growing dread. He thought he had traveled safely ahead of his competitor, but Durand had pushed hard to regain his altitude and flown fast enough to make up the lost ground. Now the two men were even.

The contest was falling into a pattern that he knew too well. He would build a lead, and at the last minute, Durand would seize it. In competitions, the two men often finished first and second, but as Durand noted, "Usually it's me in first."

Martin said: "I had made the breakaway, and it didn't really work. Here's the guy I've got to beat, and now we're neck and neck and there is no energy left in the atmosphere and nothing really to separate us."

Around the world, hang glider pilots were calling one another with the news that Durand and Martin were competing for the longest flight ever in the sport. Thousands of pilots gathered around computer screens to track their progress online.

In California, workers at the Wills Wing factory tracked the flight on computers and smartphones, rooting on Martin.

"There was a lot of excitement for sure," said Mike Meier, a co-owner. "You're watching someone do something that's never been done before." 

In Australia, where Durand is popular, hang glider pilots roused themselves from sleep to watch the final hours unfold in an act of national solidarity.

Driving 70 m.p.h. to keep up with the hang gliders from below, Ettridge started receiving dozens of calls and text messages from pilots around the world, wanting to know if the reports could really be accurate. He eventually stopped picking up his phone.

The Final Push

The cooling air was calming after the restlessness of the long summer day.

It was 8:15. The thick cover of clouds had whittled to one tiny puff, under which Durand and Martin converged to make their final climb. The phrase pilots use for this moment, when the thermals disappear almost at once, is "switched off."

A modern competition hang glider has a "glide ratio" of 15 to 1, which means for every foot it descends vertically, it will travel 15 feet horizontally over the land. That descent is almost imperceptible, but the reality was that Durand and Martin were proving the old saying about what goes up.

As they fought gravity's grasp, tiny decisions would make a huge difference.

Martin, dogged by his past failures, was almost resigned to defeat. Over the course of the day, he had held the lead for more than six hours, while Durand had led for just an hour and a half. The rest of the time, like now, the two had flown side by side.

"I thought, there is a damn good chance he's going to outfly me at the end here," Martin said. "It seemed inevitable."

Durand was no more confident. He was elated but also worn out. The night before, when Martin had made an early retreat to bed, Durand had stayed out shooting pool and buying drinks. Now Martin could see him rocking in his harness, stretching his neck, looking ready for the long day to end.

"I knew he was wasted," Martin said. "I took note of it because I was feeling strangely fresh."

But it was more than just the physical toll. In races, there are finish lines, a clear moment when a goal is met, an event ended. But setting a record like this is an open-ended proposition.

After battling so hard just to catch up with Martin, Durand had filled with relief when they broke the old mark.

"I let my mind slip a little," Durand said. "I wasn't really thinking about trying to fly as far as I could at that point. It's like running a marathon, and once you reach the finish line, you aren't really eager to keep running."

The pilots flew cautiously as their margin for error continued to erode. They stayed close as they circled, blown along by the wind. Durand was restless, leaving tiny pockets of lift before they were tapped out. Martin, worried that his rival would catch something better, trailed just behind him defensively.

Then, at 8:34, Martin hit a small thermal. The pocket of lift was so light that earlier in the day he might not have even noticed it. So light, in fact, that he was not even going up at all; he was being lifted just enough to offset his descent, a phenomenon pilots call "zero sink." Martin circled for six minutes, staying even to the ground but gaining 262 feet of height on his rival.

The realization hit Durand at once. In a journey that had lasted hundreds of miles, these 262 feet would be the difference.

Durand, speaking to his video camera, made a painful peace: "He's going to get me by a little bit." 

The Journey Ends

As they glided toward the earth, details that had been lost for the better part of the day re-emerged one by one. Patches of green revealed individual trees, trees revealed leaves. They crossed over some cliffs and above an expanse of farmland, a welcome sight for pilots looking for a place to land.

Durand, no longer concerned about going as far as he could, lined up his landing along a road so he could be picked up easily. He skimmed low over a dry field, approaching a farmhouse shaded by a cluster of trees. He unzipped his harness, feeling a sense of relief as his feet dropped under him. He turned into the wind to come to a gentle stop.

He had flown more than 472 miles, or about the distance from New York to Detroit. So far, in fact, that the sun was setting as he landed, 26 minutes later than it had in Zapata. The flight would have taken about an hour in a commercial plane; by hang glider, it had taken nearly 11 hours.

As soon as his feet reunited with the ground, Durand sent a message from his flight tracker that was seen by people watching the final moments online around the world: "I just landed and would like a margarita."

Martin had taken his chances, putting the wind squarely at his back to gain as much extra mileage as possible. He no longer had any fears about where to land. He just wanted to keep flying.

Later, after he had landed three miles farther, near the small town of Lorenzo, the two men had an awkward reunion, full of celebration and freighted humor that continued during the 12-hour drive back to Zapata. Durand remained there for a couple of more weeks, cultivating a list of excuses for his second-place showing as he tried again and again to break the record. Martin left as soon as he had submitted the paperwork for the record book.

But in his final airborne moments, Martin was in no hurry for the ground to resume its claim on him. The sun was disappearing beneath the horizon, and the moon had already emerged. There was no euphoria, no exhaustion befitting the conclusion of an epic race. Just the quiet contentment of a man in his element, savoring the end of the longest flight of its kind ever made — cheeks in the wind, like a bird.

A version of this article appeared in print on January 13, 2013, on page SP1 of the New York edition with the headline: TWO MEN. ONE SKY..
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