History is filled with epic feuds: Hamilton-Burr, the Hatfields-McCoys, but none so great as New York-Boston. The rivalry is legendary.
So, how does a company like MSLGROUP Americas come to terms with network collaboration when it has offices in competing cities for one of the biggest sports contests in the world?

David Tyree at the heart of it all!
This week, the MSLGROUP Americas “Together Works Better” internal agency award winners were announced. But, as the New York Giants and the New England Patriots take to their final practices, the competitive sarcasm is gaining steam at MSL New York and Schwartz MSL Boston. On this issue, together we’re not.
So, MSL New York extended a “transparent” challenge to its colleagues up at Schwartz MSL Boston, a wager as to whose team will win this epic rematch from 2008. Boston leaders Meghan Gross and Dave Close agreed.
At stake: the office from the losing city will send a delegation to host a victory happy hour for the other. Now that’s “boundless collaboration” with some honest competitive pride shining through. This “Big Boundless Bet” was inspired by our company credo to “Be Boundless” in all we do.
Now, how about some boundless cheering for our teams? Read below as Peter Gau of MSL New York and Dave Close of Schwartz MSL Boston share their perspectives on the game.
The Giants Will Rock

by Peter Gau, Senior Account Executive, MSL New York
My name is Peter Gau of the New York office and I’m certain the Giants are going to win the Super Bowl.
For you Patriots fans who will be stalking my Facebook to make a dartboard from my headshot or lighting up my Twitter with colorful tweets, I sincerely do apologize in advance for boring you with this. In fact, I wanted to do something more interactive like post a funny video to Noovoo, but Belichick took all my extra tapes.
Eli Manning and I live in the same wonderful town of Hoboken, NJ – and we have a lot more in common than you may think. For example, we both wear the #10 jersey each Sunday. Our apartments also share the same view of the greatest city in the world and coincidentally our firm’s FLAGSHIP office location, New York City.
But enough about me, and more on why the Giants are going to win the Super Bowl. The Giants are going to win the Super Bowl because I am planning on taking a sick day Monday. Seriously though, history tends to repeat itself and what better way to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the famous “Helmet Catch” than with a victory parade in the Big Apple.
The Giants are going ‘All In’ and quite frankly they have nothing to lose. Nobody expected them to make the playoffs, let alone reach the Super Bowl. But they did and as a result, salsa dancing studios in the tri-state area are experiencing a 50 percent increase in enrollment, according to a survey I made up for this post.
Note to our colleagues in Boston: Wherever you watch the Giants emerge victorious this Sunday, don’t forget to wash the wings sauce off your hands before reaching for a Puffs (client) to wipe away your tears.
Enjoy the game.
Peter Gau is a senior account executive in the MSL New York corporate practice . He has more than six years of experience working with clients in financial services, technology, healthcare, accounting, insurance and shipping and logistics. His current responsibilities include providing media relations support and account management duties on Citi ThankYou Rewards and Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.
The Patriots Will Restore the Natural Order

by Dave Close, Managing Director, Schwartz MSL Boston
Until I was 22 I lived within sight of the New York skyline and the Giants were my team. Then I moved to Boston and slowly switched my allegiance to the Patriots, which was not an easy thing to do during the Patriots’ long tenure as the doormat of the NFL. But eventually my loyalty was rewarded with the team’s 10 years of consistent success – success that will culminate in their fourth Super Bowl win this Sunday. The reasons have nothing to do with talent and everything to do with fate. (Well, maybe something to do with talent, too).
Four years ago, when the Patriots lost the Super Bowl in the last few moments through the divine intervention of David Tyree’s circus catch, it tore a hole in the fabric of the universe. 19-0 was the normal and natural course of events – this abomination tilted the universe on its axis, and if you consider the generally negative world events of the past four years, you can see the result.
In nature, eventually, ORDER IS RESTORED. The current state of events cannot last, and it will not. The Patriots’ win this Sunday will complete and correct a chain of events that was supposed to end four years ago. The natural order of football will be restored and we’ll all be relieved and happier. The song will end with a pleasing major chord, not the dissonant and disturbing chord that’s been echoing through space since the last Giants/Patriots Super Bowl.
It has nothing to do with Brady, Gronk, Welker, Wilfork or Belichick. They are merely the pieces in a cosmic chess match that will end appropriately on a field in Indiana, and save the planet.
Dave Close is managing director of Schwartz MSL Boston. Dave has been leading communications campaigns in the technology industry since 1981. During the early 1980s, he was a writer and editor at World Information Systems, Inc. He joined Schwartz Communications in 1994 and sometimes goes by the pseudonym, “Pat Patriot.”