Bangladesh, July 31 -- Florham Park, July 31 (AP/UNB) - Calvin Anderson was in middle school the first time he watched in amazement as a football teammate deftly solved a Rubik's Cube.

Always the competitive type, he needed to know how to do it, too.

"I loved how it was a combination of hand-eye coordination," he said, "and keeping your mind buzzing the whole time."

So Anderson grabbed one of the popular six-sided puzzles and started unscrambling the 54 little colorful squares - white, blue, red, green, yellow and orange - a task that has stumped and frustrated millions around the world since it first became a pop-culture phenomenon in the 1980s.

Today, the New York Jets rookie offensive lineman is a master of the Rubik's Cube, able t...