health & wellness "I am Dr. Michael Paletta, Chief Medical Officer for Hospice of >> sports Houston Maccabi athletes win medals and respect. I lead a team of nine board-certified physicians specializing in end-of-life care — more than any other hospice in the state of Michigan. You deserve the experienced team of professionals from Hospice of Michigan. HOSPICE of michigan The original Hospice of Michigan, where compassionate end-of-life care begins. 888-247-5701 www.hom.org Serving southeastern Michigan since 1980 SCjOHN PROVIDENCE HEALTH SYSTEM' NEWLAND MEDICAL ASSOCIATES St. John Hospital & Medical Center The Maccabi 16U basketball team: Noah Witus (Berkley High), Jon Radner (Berkley), Jonah Kest (Birmingham Seaholm), Max Weiss (Birmingham Groves), Eric Weiss (Bloomfield Hills Andover), Johnny Narens (Andover), Sam Orley (Cranbrook-Kingswood), Jesse Arm (Frankel Jewish Academy). Steve Stein Contributing Writer etroit athletes have returned !Ifrom the JCC Maccabi Games held this month in Houston, Texas, and Rockland County, N.Y. Over the next couple of weeks, we'll report on their successes, challenges and experi- ences. NEWLAND MEDICAL ASSOCIATES is proud to welcome our newest physician, Andrew Muskovitz, MD. Dr. Muskovitz is fellowship trained in Hematology/ Oncology and is specially equipped to meet the needs of older adults. To make an appointment at one of our many locations with Dr. Muskovitz or any of our physicians, please call 248-552-0620 and visit our website at www.newlandmedical.com . 1778730 56 August 30 2012 Bronze Bombers Steve Weiss has been coaching Detroit Maccabi boys basketball teams for 10 years. The 16U (age 16 and under) group he coached in Houston was one of his favorites, not only because it won six of seven games and a bronze medal. It also was because of the way it went about its business. "We were relatively undersized, but the boys played with tremendous ener- gy and determination and were dedi- cated, hardworking and focused on the goal of winning a medal," Weiss said. "We played tenacious defense. We used traps to trigger our running game. I received many compliments from other coaches and venue directors about our hard work and hustle. Our success was truly a team effort. Each of our eight players scored in every game!" Not even losing 55-51 to a much big- ger Los Angeles team in the semifinals deterred Detroit from its goal of win- ning a medal. The boys regrouped quickly and pounded Phoenix 74-61 a few hours later in the bronze medal game. Los Angeles went on to win the gold medal. "The kids were disappointed about losing to Los Angeles. They were still in the game with 12 seconds to go. They expected to win:' Weiss said. "But they were all over Phoenix from the open- ing jump ball. Phoenix also lost a tough game in the semifinals, but they weren't as hungry as our guys!' Detroit was 4-0 in the round-robin portion of the competition, beating Baltimore 81-60, Northern Virginia 66-61 in overtime, Houston 70-40 and Las Vegas 85-30. It opened the playoffs with a 72-54 victory over Baltimore before facing Los Angeles. Sizzlin' Houston on page 58