Super Bowl Recap

SadSeau

 

I would be remised as a football fan if I didn’t offer my humble observations on the Pats/Giants Super Bowl on Sunday.

I hosted a Super Bowl party with a dozen family and friends over at my place (thank you guys for coming!).  While I was a little nervous for the large crowd in my seemingly small living room, I think we all had a good time.

24 hours later, here are some observations I’d like to make about the Super Bowl experience, including the game, personal reflections from the game, and my experience in watching the game.  These are in no particular order.

  • I love fly-overs after the Star-Spangled Banner, but do you realize they flew over a stadium where the roof was closed?  Sitting in the upper levels at Mile High I can tell you that the open field is what makes the fly-over.
  • The first two series of the game resulted in scoring.  After that, we went 11 possessions until the next score in the 4th quarter (don’t ask me why I know this, I can only tell you many weren’t happy).
  • Seeing Giants TE Jeremy Shockey sitting up in a suite drinking beer, while his team-mates were duking it out only made me despise him more.  I realize he got hurt at the end of the season, but at least stand on the sideline with your teammates.  He better be in the crowd during the parade as well.
  • Watching Belicheat storm off the field with 1 second left to play was about the most classless thing a coach can do.  I realize nothing’s going to happen in that one second left, but when you blow out people the way you did all season, you need to take your medicine as well.
  • Fox’s Chris Meyers had about the crappiest job in interviewing Belicheat in the locker room. I bet he would have much rather been cleaning the toilets in there than having to deal with the awkwardness that was the bitter Hoodie not saying more than 7 words.
  • By brother-in-law-to-be (how’s that for hyphens) was rooting for the Pats to win, solely because he wanted to see the ’72 Dolphins go away with their antics.  With the way they did the ’98 Broncos, I can understand that.  But after thinking about it, I would much rather deal with the ’72 Dolphins for part of my life than the ’07 Patriots for most of my life.
  • The commercials weren’t all that good but if I were to pick my top 3 I would say it would be PepsiStuff with Justin Timberlake, the Budweiser Rocky Clydesdale, and the ETrade baby with the clown.
  • SadBrady2Watching that smug look wiped off Tom Brady’s face was the best part of the game. I love watching him lose his cool.  I bet that Brady hates Mannings.
  • Someday I’m going to be telling my kids about that catch between Eli Manning and David Tyree.  That was legend.
  • Take & Bake Pizza was definitely the way to go for the party.  There was minimal cooking involved, no stress on delivery, and not to mention the pizza was very good.
  • The next time I want to carry my TV down-stairs to give people a Wii-playing alternative during the Super Bowl – please talk me out of it.

Oh, and this isn’t technically a Super Bowl ad, but this was the "Perfect" way to end the Super Bowl.  This goes out to my future brother-in-law, Tony:

Spygate: Is the Senate this bored?

This came across my reader from ESPN:

With the Super Bowl fast approaching, a senior Republican senator says he wants the NFL to explain why it destroyed evidence of the New England Patriots cheating scandal.

“I am very concerned about the underlying facts on the taping, the reasons for the judgment on the limited penalties and, most of all, on the inexplicable destruction of the tapes,” said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., in a Thursday letter to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

Ok, does the Senate really have nothing to do that it enables them into looking at Spygate?!?

Look, I can’t stand Belicheat as much as anyone and the Spygate incident is definitely a stain on the Patriots franchise, but the last thing that needs to happen is for Congress to get involved.  What a waste of time, effort and tax dollars.  I wasn’t aware that the War on Terror had been won, or that the social security problem has been resolved, or that we’ve fixed immigration.  Apparently none of these are issues anymore if Senator Specter has time to waste on bugging the NFL.

This is different than Congress v. baseball & steroids, largely due to the fact that steroids and HGH are obtained through illegal means and baseball basically did nothing but look the other way for years.  There’s nothing criminally illegal about bringing a video camera on the sidelines of an NFL game, and the NFL did come down hard on Belicheat, fining him $250k and taking away their 1st round pick.  Although I think destroying the tapes wasn’t the best judgement, I can understand why the NFL did it to make this PR nightmare go away. 

Come on Spector, don’t you and the Senate have better things to do?

Did Roger do ‘roids? Justice thinks so

The jury’s still out on whether Roger Clemens is a juicer.  I saw the 60 Minutes Interview where he vehemently denied using steroids, but my skeptical self still isn’t convinced he’s innocents – too many things don’t add up.

Richard Justice’s column in the Houston Chronical pretty much sums up why I’m not convinced that Clemens isn’t a juicer, and why I’m still left with a lot of doubt.

Latest baseball debacle: The Mitchell Report

Today’s the day of the long-awaited Mitchell Report: the definitive study on the Steroids Era in baseball.  The news delivered as promised – some pretty big-named players have been named including Roger Clements, Andy Pettitte, and of course Barry Bonds.  George Mitchell concluded that there’s plenty of blame to go around.  I’m just glad to see that not any big-named Rockies (with the exception of Dante Bichette) weren’t on that list.

So the big question – now what?  Now we know that steroids were prevalent since the mid-90’s to only a few years ago, where does baseball go from here?  Many of the players named in the report are still active, so how do we treat those?  I’ve heard many advocate for leniency against the players, as there technically wasn’t a rule that they broke by taking steroids – since steroids weren’t banned until 2004.  However, I think Mitchell himself best states the players’ crime:

They violated federal law and baseball policy, and they distorted the fairness of competition by trying to gain an unfair advantage over the majority of players who followed the law and the rules. The players who follow the law and the rules — are faced with the painful choice of either being placed at a competitive disadvantage or becoming illegal users themselves. No one should have to make that choice.

They broke the law and used illegal substances.  I don’t know how much content from this report can be leveraged in a court of law, but one thing is clear: baseball needs to do something to deal with this ugly mark on their sport.  There should be consequences to this debacle, and I think the following should happen:

Don’t suspend or ban the current players – while there’s not necessarily a statute of limitations against this in baseball, it’s questionable to punish players for what they did many years ago when management shares as much blame for looking the other way. Fans will choose whether or not they want to come out and see the tainted players – don’t take that choice away from them by suspending them.

However, I do think that that if there is evidence that players perjured themselves when they testified in front of Congress or the Grand Jury, then they should be prosecuted under the fullest extent of the law (that includes McGwire and Bonds).

Burn the league individual record books from the steroids era – Any individual records attained by players found to have used Performance Enhancing drugs during the steroids era should be stricken from the record books – this includes any MVPs and namely the Home Run records attained by McGwire and Bonds.  I also think Bonds should be stripped of the HR crown as well. Any records attained by players that are not found on the report should be kept, but “written in pencil” and able to be removed if performance-enhancing news about that particular player were to surface.  Team records could still be maintained on a team-by-team basis, which would essentially create two sets of records (team-wide and league-wide), serving as a consequence of this era.

Granted, that’s pretty harsh, and I don’t really expect baseball to strike their records, but I do think it’s not unreasonable to expect an asterisk next to records of implicated players in the Steroids Era.

Bottom line – baseball is a great sport that is managed poorly and continues to give fans less and less reasons to want to be passionate about this sport.   Today is a sad day for baseball and sports.

HBO to make movie on Bond’s ‘Roids

This story came through my RSS feeds this afternoon, from ESPN:

“HBO Films is planning to turn a best selling book about Barry Bonds’ alleged steroid use and the federal government’s wide-ranging probe into performance enhancing drug use in sports into a movie, one of the book’s authors said Thursday …  Much of the book was based on secret grand jury testimony of Bonds and other famous athletes leaked to them by Troy Ellerman, a disbarred attorney sentenced to 2½ years in prison for denying under oath he was the reporters’ source. The book recounts how Bonds allegedly began using steroids in 1999 after becoming jealous of Mark McGwire setting Major League Baseball’s single season home run mark the previous season.”

michael_clarke_duncan I wonder who they’re going to get to play Barry Bonds.  Maybe by they can get Michael Clarke Duncan to play post-1999 Barry. 

In all seriousness though, I “read” (audiobook) Game of Shadows a few months ago, and what they compiled on this guy is pretty compelling.  I wasn’t a fan of Bonds to begin with, but what was in that book removed any doubt in my mind.  The book isn’t solely about Bonds, but also about the BALCO lab and their dealings with other athletes.  With the recent Marion Jones news, everything they alleged in that book was validated.

I’m anxious to see what a movie adaptation will be like, you know it won’t be a hack-job with HBO on board. It’ll be interesting to see how people react to not only the length Bonds and other athletes go to cheat, but also how Bonds treated the people around him.  If you’re looking for more light on the Bonds issue, you should definitely check out the Game of Shadows book, and then the movie when it comes out.