

#YOUTUBE THE PROFESSOR TAKES ON A TRASH TALKER IN BASKETBALL PROFESSIONAL#
Most professional sports leagues - from Major League Baseball to the National Football League to professional tennis - have teamed up with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) to create a greener world through sports. After his professional football retirement, Mughelli started the Ovie Mughelli Foundation, a group that teaches youth about protecting the environment through sports.

Only 3 pounds of trash - mostly candy wrappers, straws and non-recyclable bags from chips and nachos - went to landfill.Īs an eco-friendly surprise for the fans, Ovie Mughelli, a former NFL fullback with the Atlanta Falcons and the Baltimore Ravens, fired up a frenzied Newman Arena crowd at halftime - offering a message that students can make a green difference by using the world of sports. 23, fans consumed hot dogs, chips, popcorn and soda - but helped to divert 96 percent of the Newman Arena trash away from the landfill.Ībout 2,694 fans helped to turn the game's consumed concession food into 17 pounds of compost - mostly popcorn bags, napkins and food scraps and about 65 pounds of recycling - including soda bottles, coffee cup lids, paper and cardboard. To ease our blue planet's environmental pressures, the Cornell Big Red turned green at the university's first Zero Landfill Game.Īt the Cornell-Princeton basketball game Feb. Dan Roth, associate director of the Campus Sustainability Office, throws out T-shirts celebrating Recyclemania during a break at the men's basketball game in Newman Arena Feb.
