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So, Say It Ain't Joe
Oct 16, 2008 | 8:20AM | report this

Hello, Joe. Whadya know?

As you probably know by now, this election isn't about you or me, It's allllllll about Joe The Plumber and maybe all the other Joes out there.

Look, my friends, I'm having this Joe problem this morning. After John McCain said "Joe The Plumber" enough times during last night's debate, Barack Obama felt obligated to speak personally through the TV screen to Joe as well.

It got so bad -- 21 times for McCain and 4 more for Obama -- that I started hearing that dreadful Falco tune, Rock Me Amadeus in the back of my harried brain.

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe, Joe, Joe the plumber

C'mon, everybody, you all know the words.

Look, in a way, I feel for poor Joe -- although, McCain did congratulate you for being rich last night. One day, you're asking a candidate, whatcha gonna do for me, and the next day, you're telling the Huffington Post how surreal it all is.

Still, all this Joe-centric coverage is making my head hurt. All of the morning talk shows including -- what else -- MSNBC's Morning Joe, had Joe on their minds. I was half expecting the Weather Channel is predict Joe flurries on the Eastern seaboard.

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe, Joe, Joe the plumber

Now, I know all about Fat Joe, Trader Joe, GI Joe, Shoeless Joe, Joltin' Joe, Smokin' Joe, Joe Willie and Joe Louis...I'm even wondering if I saw Joe Hill last night.

The only Joe that matters in sports these days is Joe Pa, the venerable Penn State coach. Still, if you think Penn State is looking past hapless Michigan -- especially after the way the Nittany Lions spanked Wisconsin last Saturday -- my friends, you'd be wrong.

"Some people are waiting for the other shoe to fall, and it usually happens against Michigan," said Penn State fan and Pancakes lineman Ben Lerman, a junior biology student from Rochester, Minn. "We just can't beat them for some reason."

Penn State football historian Lou Prato, who has chronicled every Nittany Lions victory (three) and loss (10) against Michigan since their series began in 1993, offered this: "Curse of the Wolverines."

Michigan has won nine straight against the Nittany Lions, including the past four games at Beaver Stadium. Of the six games played at Penn State, the Nittany Lions have come out on top once -- on Nov. 18, 1995, when Penn State defeated U-M, 27-17.

The game was played three days after a snowstorm dumped 18 inches of snow in Happy Valley, nearly paralyzing the area.

"Cold, windy, freezing," Prato recalled. "They got volunteers and prisoners and paid people five bucks to clear the snow from the field."

Better conditions await Saturday: The forecast at kickoff calls for partly cloudy skies, with the temperature in the mid-to-upper 50s.

Despite Michigan's dominance, the games between the schools have been astonishingly close: Eight of 13 have been decided in the fourth quarter or overtime, and defined by one series or play.

Prato recalled the 1993 game, the year Penn State joined the Big Ten:

"The first time we played Michigan ever: It was down here, and people here remember how our fans started getting real loud in the first 5 minutes of the game, and the officials were going to penalize us. Back then, you couldn't holler; it was ridiculous. We needed to be quiet? We called that the Michigan Rule."

In that game, Penn State saw its 10-0 lead disintegrate as the Wolverines took a 14-10 advantage after Derrick Alexander returned a punt 48 yards for a touchdown. Late in the third quarter, and into the fourth, the Nittany Lions had first-and-goal at the Michigan 1 but failed to score on four rushing attempts. The Wolverines won, 21-13.

The past four games between the schools have been decided by 4.25 points on average. A particularly heartbreaking loss for Penn State occurred in 2005 in Ann Arbor.

The Nittany Lions led, 25-21, with less than a minute left when Steve Breaston returned a kickoff to the U-M 47. The Wolverines quickly moved the ball downfield, advancing to the Penn State 10. On fourth down, and with no time left on the clock, Mario Manningham scored on a 10-yard pass from Chad Henne for the 27-25 victory.

It was the Nittany Lions' first -- and only -- loss of the season. They went on to win their last four regular-season games, grab a share of the Big Ten title and defeated Florida State in the Orange Bowl. Their record: 11-1.

"Magic seasons can go up in a wisp of smoke," said Prato, 71, who was news director at Channel 4 in Detroit in the mid-1970s. "And our last two magic seasons went up in a wisp of smoke based on Michigan games. One or two plays can change the game.

In Chicago, the Tribune's Mike Downey has a bigger problem this morning with Rays.

I'm a fan of Rays, as a rule. I like Ray Romano and Ray Lewis and Ray Bradbury and Ray Nitschke and Rachael Ray. I once drove a Sting Ray and went to a fight to see Sugar Ray. I dug that "Ray" movie with Jamie Foxx.

As ballclubs go, though, the Rays represent everything a Cubs fan can't stand:

  • • A team that is 10 years old. Ron Santo owns hairpieces that are more than 10 years old. Wrigley Field has rats that are more than 10 years old.
  • • A team that in 2007 had an average attendance of 17,148 a night. Wrigley could draw 18,000 for a pie-eating contest.
  • • A team with a payroll below $48 million. My friends, the Cubs spent that much on a Japanese pinch-hitter.
  • • A team that has won 742 games. While the Cubs have won 10,082.

How many MVPs have the Rays had? None. Batting champs? None. Cy Young Award winners? None. No-hitters? None.

How many uniform numbers have the Rays retired? Two.

One belonged to Wade Boggs, who played there when he was 40 and 41 after playing for other teams from age 24.

The other is Jackie Robinson. A great man, but the most colorful memory of his time in Florida was not being permitted to use a restroom.

Not everybody loves the Cubs the way everybody loved Raymond, but almost nobody loves the Rays.

Meanwhile, Los Angeles is having their own Phil problem, but they're taking it out on their Dodgers.

The improbable Dodgers were impossibly wobbly, impossibly clumsy, impossibly booed.

Exactly 20 years later, something else sailed out over the right-field fence to a chorus of shrieks and stares.

It was the Dodgers' season, knocked into next year by the Philadelphia Phillies, who did everything the Dodgers couldn't.

Like, you know, pitch and catch.

As the Phillies hugged and danced and partied long into the night, Ethier was one of the few Dodgers to return to the field and wave to the fans, but you can't blame the ones who didn't.

They were probably worried for their safety in front of a crowd that spent the long evening lashing out like jilted lovers.

Dodgers fans booed in a way they've rarely booed before, from the leadoff homer by the Phillies' Jimmy Rollins to the final stranded runner by Nomar Garciaparra.

They booed sadly horrible Chad Billingsley, who couldn't survive three innings for the second time in a week, couldn't consistently throw inside again, his two worst performances in his two biggest games, and who knows when he'll recover?

"I tried to do everything I could," he said softly.

They booed the painfully awful Rafael Furcal, who tried to play with a sore neck and paid for it with three errors in one inning that led to two runs that finished them.

"To have this happen on the last game of the year, that is tough," he said, also softly.

They booed the just plain lousy Blake DeWitt, who hit into two double plays and ended the series hitting .077 before he was replaced by Jeff Kent.

Who stranded three runners by striking out twice.

It was like that.

In fact, the only Dodger who didn't get booed last night was a Joe, as in Torre.

In Houston, it's not Joe or Ray or Phil that they're mad at, but rather a guy named Matt.

Chanting for Sage Rose-and-the-ball-fell, who single-handedly gave away a sure Texans victory the last time he was on the field, is akin to saying, “Thank You, sir. May I have another?”

Is there something about the torture that y’all alike?

Have you married the wrong spouse more than once? Do you regularly take a second helping of spoiled milk? How many times did your mama have to tell you not to touch that hot stove before you stopped touching that hot stove?

For a city regarded as soft on sports figures, Houston has been rough on quar-terbacks. Dan Pastorini came in with flair and was quickly cooled down. Warren Moon arrived with fanfare and was almost driven out of town.

It was taken to a new level when David Carr hit town with high expectations and a huge salary, then departed as the most disrespected figure in Houston sports history.

Pastorini and Moon eventually earned fan love before leaving, though much of Pastorini’s came after he left. Carr was released, and fans almost threw a parade.
Schaub doesn’t throw balls as pretty as those Moon released. He doesn’t have the wild style of Pastorini. He’s probably not the angel most of you thought Carr was.

Outwardly, he is not a cool customer like The Snake, and he doesn’t bring the sweet milkshake breath to the huddle that Giff Nielsen did. With Gary Kubiak holding tightly to the reins, he certainly isn’t the gunslinger Jim Kelly was, and he is unlikely to be the quality soccer executive Oliver Luck has become.

Schaub is just the latest Houston pro quarterback on the hot seat. We’ve roasted almost all the others.

In the end, Schaub might be one of the few we should have liked from the start.

But like all the others save for George Blanda — the first on the block, and a champion to boot — he’ll have to work his way up from below the bottom.

Quarterbacks and Houston just don’t mix well. 

There are a million Joe stories in the heart of New York City. But Newsday's Shaun Powell would rather discuss a Stephon.

Remember Johnnie Taylor's Cheaper To Keep Her? Powell has much the same sentiments about the New York Knicks and Stephon Marbury.

Marbury has a year left, a year that will not exactly break the Knicks. They're not going anywhere special. They're not bracing for a championship journey. There's no precious and delicate "chemistry" at risk here. If anything, this is a year to throw away, a year that'll serve as a free pass for Walsh and coach Mike D'Antoni, no matter how many games they lose.

Knicks fans know better than to invest emotionally in this season. They're saving their deposit for 2010 and beyond, and if a trade of Marbury were to either postpone or ruin plans for the future, there would be hell to pay. So keep him.

They won't buy him out. Would you write someone a check for $21 million to do nothing? In this economy? No, they should keep him primarily because this is the year to keep someone like Marbury. He's in his walk year. It's in his best interest to play hard when his number is called and shut up when it isn't.

Marbury wants another contract and another chance with another team next season, and while he's been accused of being a weirdo over the last 18 months, he ain't crazy. He knows this season, basically, will be spent auditioning for his next paycheck.

Keep him, and if he does feel compelled to go nuts, the Knicks can suspend him without pay, citing insubordination. That's a win-win for the club, the best scenario possible.

Look, my friends, is this the kind of change we need? TV Guide's Matt Matovich asks the question after Obama's plan to broadcast a 30 minute program on prime time in the week before the election.

A Fox spokesperson confirms for TVGuide.com that the network will push back the start of its World Series Game 6 coverage (if needed) by some 15 minutes, to make room for the half-hour of airtime recently purchased by White House hopeful Sen. Barack Obama.

Last week, Obama purchased 30 minutes of prime time from Fox, CBS and NBC, to deliver a final message to voters on Wednesday, Oct. 29 (starting at 8 pm/ET). Major League Baseball and Fox were to start Game 6 at 8:20, but agreed to hold the ball for a few and accommodate the program (for which Fox is fetching some $1 million in ad revenue).

"We are pleased that Major League Baseball has agreed to delay the first pitch of World Series Game 6 for a few minutes in order for Fox to carry [Obama's] program," Fox Sports says in a statement. "If requested, the network would be willing to make similar time available to Senator McCain's campaign."

Of the Big 3's 8 o'clock programs, only ABC's Pushing Daisies remains unaffected by the half-hour delay. CBS is shuttling Old Christine to 8:30 (bumping Gary Unmarried), while NBC's plans for that gap (where the back end of Knight Rider usually airs) have yet to be announced.

So, hello Joe, whadya know? I'm learning about Joes I didn't even know existed after this All Joe All The Time cable coverage. Apparently, there's a Joe who sings and is a seven-time Grammy nominee -- not that I've ever heard of him.

Okay, Okay, it's all MY fault...for being so clever as to call the Bucks' rookie Joltin' Joe Alexander yesterday.

Look, my friends, it won't happen again. Now, sing along with me.

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber

Joe the plumber, Joe the plumber

Joe, Joe, Joe the plumber

3 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NCAA FB, MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies, Penn State, Houston Texans, New York Knicks
 
Which is the better bargain: Manny, Phillies' tickets or Favre's House?
Oct 09, 2008 | 7:59AM | report this

Aren't hockey moms embarrassed enough?

In this economy, it might be a buyers' market as many will be forced to sell low.

So, which baseball team will be the winner of the Manny Ramirez sweepstakes? Your first guess might be the team that always throws money at the game's top free agent to be, the former Best-Team-Money-Can-Buy, the New York Yankees.

The NY Daily News' Lisa Swan and Jon Lewin, while bemoaning the cancellation of a proposed closing ceremonies event at Yankee Stadium, cite the following reasons why the Steinbrenners will want Manny.

  • He’s perceived as a winner, and it’s in the Yankees’ best interest to have Manny, not Torre, as the face of the Dodgers’ success. Plus, the hope is that Ramirez will do for the Yanks what he did for the Dodgers
  • He puts fannies in the seats, and will get people talking about the Yanks again.
  • The Yanks need a hitter who does well wih runners in scoring position. Manny is a monster at the plate.
  • Manny is a Yankee-killer, and that’s the type of guy who usually gets a free agent contract from the team. Look at Carl Pavano - all he had was one World Series against the Yanks, and he got $40 million!
  • He’s getting older, and wants a lot of money. Those factors are usually irresistible to Brian Cashman.
  • Signing Ramirez could stick it to the Dodgers, Red Sox, and Mets. How can the Yanks pass that trifecta up?

 The baseball playoffs will finally resume tonight with the Phils and Dodgers squaring off in Philly. If you're thinking of attending, the Philadelphia Daily News' Paul Vigna reveals that a ticket to Game 1 will be the least expensive of any of the NLCS games to be played at Citizens Bank Park.

Sean Pate, of StubHub, said yesterday that prices had slowly decreased during the week.

"If I look at the last few days, it has been creeping down," he said. "Monday it was at $238, Tuesday at $241, Wednesday $239. Probably [today] you'll see $225 potentially. But again, that's going to be the steady average. As far as getting in, the low end probably will be in the $120 range.

"What might be interesting to look at is see what the tickets are listed for, maybe even in the morning. That's when you start to see some people getting desperate and wanting to get rid of these tickets."

 Chicago Tribune's Mike Downey reminds us that it's never too soon or too late to make fun of the Cubbies.

I know thousands of you must have had a World Series with the Cubs on your bucket list—things to see before you croak.

Sorry, my friends. It doesn't matter how much lipstick you put on this goat.

Your Cubs are still baaaaad.

Wednesday was the 63rd anniversary of the last World Series game won by the Cubs, for those of you at the assisted-living center in your "Party Like It's 1945" shirts and funny hats.

Tradition matters. But don't you worry, if Mark Cuban does buy the Cubs, he will make sure that they continue to be total losers in the very same way his basketball team is.

Still, in the spirit of equal time, he also finds time and space to slam the crosstown White Sox for being the first team to lose a playoff series to the fledgling Tampa Bay Rays, which he equates with, "a little like becoming the first Democrat or Republican to lose a presidential election to the Green Party."

 If you have some spare cash and are looking for that final piece of Brett Favre memorabilia to complete your collection, the Appleton Post-Crescent reports that the former Green Bay Packers quarterback’s home is on the market.


 There’s no “for sale” sign in front of the ranch-style home at 2085 Shady Lane, at the corner of Shady Lane and Morris Avenue, but it’s listed by local real estate agency Micoley and Company for $475,000. The nearly 3,000-square-foot home includes four bedrooms and three baths, according to Micoley’s Web site.

Say what you will about Adam "Don't Call Me Pacman No Mo'" Jones, who was involved in a fight with his Cowboys-installed bodyguard early Wednesday morning. On Mike and Mike In The Morning, Mark "Roc Hoover" Schlereth noted that Wednesdays are usually the day for special teams practice EARLY...so the former Pac-person was out in yet another bar fight just hours before he was due at practice.

Still, his former agent, the freshly fired Manny Arora, claims in the Dallas Morning News that his troubled ex-client is "a wonderful person."

I think he really turned the corner," Arora said over the phone. "I don't know how accurate everything that's being reported is. As far as I'm concerned, he's a wonderful person. He knows my family.

I helped him as much as I could. Unless somebody tells me that this is true, I'll stand by him. If this is true, unfortunately it's a step back, and there's going to be consequences."

Finally, the country's most famous hockey mom will be at center ice this weekend, also in Philly. (Editor's note: Sheesh, as David Letterman might say -- if he was still talking to McCain, that is -- this is almost too much entertainment!)

The puck stops here -- at the Wachovia Center for Sarah Palin as the Alaska governor is to drop the ceremonial first puck at the Flyers' regular-season opener.

"We are very excited she has accepted our offer and we are very proud of the publicity she is generating for hockey moms and the sport of hockey," said Comcast-Spectacor chairman Ed Snider, who runs the Flyers.

Last month, after Palin spoke in her acceptance speech about being a hockey mom, the Flyers launched a search for the area's "ultimate hockey mom." The winner will be on the ice with Palin for the faceoff.

No word on what the second place winner received.


1 Comment | Add a comment   categories: MLB, NHL, NFL, Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Flyers, Philadelphia Phillies
 
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ABOUT ME


talkingsportsLIVE
John Shivers is in his 25th season as a journalist -- for the least two years producing and hosting a funk music show -- Back In The Day w/ Johnny Rasta -- on WSUM 91.7FM Madison, WI. Started in radio as a Morning Sports Reporter and Late Night DJ with WMAD 92FM. Served a quarter-centu
ry as a sportswriter most recently, for the Milwaukee Shepherd Express, including stints as a beat reporter covering Major League Baseball (Milwaukee Brewers) and college football and basketball (Wisconsin, Marquette & UW-Milwaukee)
. Born on January 5, 1957, John is the great-grandso
n of slaves who first homesteaded in Wisconsin in the 1840's. He holds a BA in Broadcast Journalism (2001) from UW-Milwaukee with a Minor in Africology. John, now single, resides in Madison, WI with his beloved kittie: Black Jack (McDowell)
Time stamping is done in Pacific Time.