Quick Slants
by: tyhildenbrandt
Quick Slants: Super Bowl Awards
Feb 04, 2007 | 9:58PM | report this

Well, well, well… Peyton Manning finally beat someone from Florida in a big game.  He got his ring.  He got his MVP award.  He shed that #### from his back.  We're misty-eyed.

Here at Quick Slants, we are, of course, supremely excited about all this.  But not because of any personal accomplishments.  Mainly, we're just ecstatic that we won't be force-fed the same regurgitated cudd about Manning ever again!  Boo yah.

So, we've already moved on.

More to the point, it's tragic that, once again, the little guys have been overshadowed by the other, more popular Manning-esque aspects of Super Bowl XLI; the elements that made the event unique, comical, and everything in between.  In an effort to point out these overlooked Super Bowl nuances and give credit where its due, Quick Slants would like to hand out some hardware to a number deserving parties.

The Head-On “Mood-killing Commercial” Award

To the braintrusts at Snickers, who apparently thought the overwhelmingly male audience would be prompted to buy more candy bars after seeing two male auto mechanics accidentally kiss and then rip off their shirts.  Great idea.  What’s next?  Guys groping a truck?  (Oh, had that one too?  Thanks, Chevy.)  Not since the Head-On commercials have we been this taken aback. 

(For the record, we were at a small Super Bowl gathering made up of 100% guys.  The response to this commercial was a very awkward silence.  We could hear crickets.)

The Mike Martz “Curious Challenge” Award

To Tony Dungy, for inexplicably challenging a third quarter play in which he thought Chicago broke the huddle with 12 men.  Despite the fact that this offense did not occur within the first five minutes of the game, this was Martzism at its very finest, essentially donating a timeout to the corporate jackals looking for more commercial time.  Hell, we didn’t even think this was a challengeable kind of thing until Jim Nantz confirmed – in his normal, soothing tone, of course – that it really was.  For the record, we still think Nantz was full of ####, but we’ll go along with the call on the field.

The New Found Glory “All Downhill From Here” Award

To the marketing gurus that effectively compiled the 2007 class of Super Bowl commercials and batted the very best ad in the leadoff position.  Thanks.  No really, thanks.  With the exception of that first commercial – two guys playing rock-paper-scissors, literally, for a bottle of Bud Light – and the old coots rejoicing over “stronger streams” because of Flomax in the second half, this year’s ads were some of the worst in recent memory.  All told, the beer spots were incredibly weak, the soda commercials were remarkably uncreative – is Pepsi still making drinks (or tv ads) these days? – and the spots with animals were just plain stupid.  Somewhere, the Budweiser Frogs just rolled over in their graves.

The Jack Parkman “I’m the only player on this team” Award

To teammates Thomas Jones and Devin Hester, who tried their best to win Super Bowl XLI despite playing on a team that apparently had other ideas.  Jones was explosive with the ball, amassing 112 yards on only 15 carries; meanwhile, Hester was, well…  he did it again on the opening kickoff.  You gave it a run, fellas.  Unfortunately, it’s hard to win with five turnovers and, more specifically, a quarterback that gives away the ball like it’s a food sample in a supermarket.

The Jim Nantz “Gushing Commentator” Award

To Jim Nantz, for his, well… gushing commentary of Super Bowl XLI.  Simply put, Nantz was in the zone, firing on all cylinders and talking about everything from Black History Month to the “interesting” tales of Tank Williams.  Yes, Jim, "interesting," to say the least.  We were concerned that he’d eventually black out from the excitement during the Lombardi Trophy presentation, standing there, emceeing the festivities, and looking like a giddy schoolgirl.  But he managed.  And he’s our hero because of it.

On a side note, we were immensely disappointed that Nantz refrained from trotting out one of his patented lines like “Juan shining moment!” or “You can leave it to Cleaves!”  That would’ve validated the 12 hours of coverage we drudged through.

The Lloyd Christmas “I was WAY off” Award

To the shoddy weathermen, who inaccurately predicted a 40% chance of showers during tonight’s Super Bowl.  Seriously, that wasn’t “showers” or even rain falling from the skies of South Florida; it was the ENTIRE GULF OF MEXICO.  Good God.  The whole stadium couldn’t have been too far away from being swept away into the Atlantic by rising currents.  We blame global warming.

(Bonus points here to the forward-thinking stadium technicians that went the extra mile and opted for waterproof sheathing on all electrical wires.  A blown fuse and/or electricution could've hampered the festivities.)

The Scott Spiezio “Exaggerated Soul Patch” Award

To Jim Irsay, the owner of the Indianapolis Colts who might just be the first man to ever grow a soul patch north of his lips.  All right, all right… so what if it wasn’t actually a soul patch, but merely just a darker patch of facial hair mixed in with his grayed mustache; we don’t care.  We’re giving it some press.  That puppy stuck out like a sore thumb.

The Smokey the Bear “Playing it safe” Award

To the NFL, which has now chosen aging, out-o####ate musicians to perform its last three Super Bowl halftime shows in the wake of Janet Jackson’s impromptu peep show.  Granted, all three acts featured historically significant artists, and perhaps this is us just being young and rebellious again, but we have a hard time believing that Prince was the best option here.  In fact, we’re curious as to who the NFL’s top five selections were for this gig.  We'd like to see that list.  Couldn’t a more contemporary selection have been made?  You know, an artist born sometime AFTER the Cuban Missile Crisis?  Apparently not.  We’re eagerly awaiting a performance by Tony Bennett in 2008!

The Nick Nolte “Bad Hair Day” Award

To one of our all-time favorite players, Phil Simms, whose puffy hair most closely resembled that of a newly-hatched chickadee when shown in the CBS broadcast booth.  We felt bad giving Simms an award levied with the namesake of Nolte’s horrendous hair – on his mug shot photo, no less – but we really had no other choices.  Forgive us, Phil.  We still love you for your epic years as a Giant, and especially for that cheesy graphic CBS always shows of you throwing a pass into our living room.

The Ron Burgundy “I immediately regret this decision” Award

To Rex Grossman, the beleaguered quarterback of the NFC champion Chicago Bears who looked like he was trying to bring rain – okay, at least that part worked – with the two cans of corn he lofted to Colts defenders.  We don’t feel it’s out of line to wonder if Grossman threw these on purpose to help out some old college drinking buddies relying on prop bets for  lunch money.

Honorable mention here to our friend “Steak,” who threw the most egregious incompletion of the night when he rifled his Nokia cell phone into a brick wall after the Bears were flagged for running into Adam Vinatieri in the third quarter.  The phone is still in surgery.  We'll keep you posted.

20 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NFL, Super Bowl, Super Bowl XLI, Indianapolis Colts, Chicago Bears, Quick Slants
 
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Norcalfella
Feb 4, 2007
11:51 PM
Hey Ty I was thinking you made quick work of this, but then again with a blog called "Quick Slants" I guess that's the point.

Does Peyton draw the MVP for not blowing the game? If the Bear defender doesn't blow the coverage on Wayne you can modify his stats to 24/38 194 yards with 0TD/1INT. Other than that throw he pretty much just dumped the ball to Addai who was basically the MVP.

Agreed. Worst commercials ever aside from the epic K-Fed ad. They even ran ads that weren't fresh. The axe/chainsaw beer ad was mildly amusing and the crabs got a slight smile out of us.

Can we vote Prince off the island, or planet as the case may be?

unbelogable
Feb 5, 2007
12:03 AM
Well done Ty. You read my mind. Surprised you failed to mentioned Jim Nantz's comment during the trophy presentation about "Peyton Manning handing off again....."

Keep up the good work. Enjoyable read.

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 5, 2007
4:52 AM
Norcal -- I think I would've voted Addai and Rhodes co-MVPs since they were really the dominating forces that helped Indy control the game and grind away at the Bears. But once Manning got up around 250 yards, you just knew Peyton was winning that award.

And you're right, that's why we're called "Quick Slants." (Actually, there is no reason I should still refer to myself as "we", but that's for me...err... "us" to work out.) Nantz would've called this "a blog of destiny."

unbelogable -- I definitely caught that Nantzism towards the end. With the way he was brimming as Goodell handed the trophy to Irsay, I was someone nervous that he'd black out and crash the party.

Last edited by tyhildenbrandt on February 5th at 9:20 AM.

tonyrlz51
Feb 5, 2007
7:31 AM
Hey Ty, great job here. The consensus amongst the people I watched the Super Bowl with was that the commercials were rather bizarre this year. I think that the Blockbuster commerical with the mouse was the best after that Bud Light commercial. The car commercial with the dejected robot was kinda funny but just a little too bizarre. Anyway, I think that Addai, Rhodes or both could have easily been the mvp. I think that if it wasn't raining yesterday and the announcers couldn't have made a big deal about the "conditions" with that same performance Manning wouldn't have been MVP.

tonyrlz51
Feb 5, 2007
7:32 AM
Oh yeah and the K-Fed commercial sucked

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 5, 2007
7:36 AM
Very good points, Tony. From an unintentional comedy perspective, I thought the Flomax commercial was second to none.

It just kills me that these companies are dropping millions on ads that are only mildly amusing, or even puzzling. SalesGenie.com? Huh?!? Where'd that come from?

I would urge everyone to go and check out the commercial critiques that some of the fine folks at FOXSports.com put together last night.

Miracle
Feb 5, 2007
7:53 AM
Funny stuff Ty.

And thanks for the article showcasing the bloggers Super Bowl posts.

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 5, 2007
8:04 AM
No problem, I just hope the "salmon of Capistrano" line didn't confuse the tar out of people.

Last edited by tyhildenbrandt on February 5th at 8:05 AM.

ShooterB
Feb 5, 2007
8:18 AM
Nice job, on most of these. I can't let you get away with all of them though.

I think the biggest disappointment of the day was the commercials. Like you said, it went downhill. By the second half, there was no reason not to get up for another Molson.

But did you just suggest that Prince wasn't the right choice for the halftime show? I'm surprised the music gods haven't struck you down yet.

One of my friends at the party is a HUGE Prince fan...and we had to remain silent for the entire halftime. When I saw the lightning, I asked if it was real or part of the show. He said that it was, in fact, real lightning...but that it was caused simply because Prince demanded it. I still haven't stopped laughing from that one...

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 5, 2007
8:25 AM
Sorry, Shooter... the halftime show didn't quite do it for me. Mind you, it wasn't worse than last year's, but my biggest question is this: Why was Prince covering a Foo Fighters song? Couldn't the Foo Fighters have performed their own song? Doesn't Prince have something crazy like 1,000 songs to his name?

Last edited by tyhildenbrandt on February 5th at 8:26 AM.

MikeGM
Feb 5, 2007
1:23 PM
To Norcalfella,
No, Manning won the MVP simply for BEING Peyton Manning. So many have waited for this moment for so long in order to try to justify elevating him to the top. I'm from Indy and I know (when you look at the overall, big picture) he is wayyyy overrated. He's not even the best QB in the game today, let alone the best ever! So, all you jockriders out there worshipping at the alter of Peyton....... enjoy your moment.

ShooterB
Feb 5, 2007
1:44 PM
Ty, ok...the halftime show does deserve some criticism. But Prince himself (itself?) is exempt from any criticism for the rest of time.

I also didn't like the "Best of You" choice. He has plenty of his own songs, and I believe has written a lot of other songs performed by other artists. Plus, that's not even that good of a song to begin with. For my money (I guess I didn't really pay to watch), I wanted to see something from the Batman soundtrack.

Personally, I'd rather not have any respected artists performing at halftime. Way too much credibility to be lost. Remember when Bon Jovi used to be cool? Now they are lucky to get a 5 minute gig at a high school game.

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 5, 2007
1:57 PM
MikeGM -- Please illustrate how Peyton Manning is overrated. Thanks.

Shooter -- Agreed and agreed. Great points.

tonyrlz51
Feb 5, 2007
9:36 PM
Peyton Manning overrated?!? Maybe overexposed but not overrated.

Prince covered a lot of songs during a his performance. He started out with Queen's We Will Rock You, sang some of Bob Dylan's (and Jimi Hendrix's) All Along the Watchtower, and there were a few more besides Best of You. I think what we've seen even more than play it safe from the NFL is a "bridge the gap" mentality--the idea that they need to find acts that will be attractive to the over baby boomer crowd and still have some relevence among the younger generations. We saw this with the Rolling Stones last year and Paul McCartney the year before.

Finally, did any of you see Stevie Nicks performing a few hours before the Super Bowl druing the pregame hype? She was awful. You could barely understand what she was saying and she sounded way off key.

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 6, 2007
3:51 AM
No, but I did hear Gloria Estefan say "Welcome to SUNNY SOUTH FLORIDA!" in the middle of a rainstorm.

Miracle
Feb 6, 2007
10:25 AM
She may have been heavily medicated.

ReverendRhythm
Feb 19, 2007
9:47 AM
Yeah, man. Sorry I missed you on the brackets. I'm relatively new to the "blogosphere" and am still making my rounds.

We've been having some fun with it though, ey?

ReverendRhythm
Feb 22, 2007
7:36 AM
Stay tuned.

I'm rummaging through the comments in that "bracket" blog and will have the next round up shortly.

Consider yourself in.

Who do you go up against?

If I were you, I'd be worried.

tyhildenbrandt
Feb 22, 2007
9:24 AM
If this contest is to be decided by one-liners and snide comments, you might just wanna give me the title now and save everyone the trouble :)

Last edited by tyhildenbrandt on February 22nd at 9:36 AM.

ReverendRhythm
Feb 22, 2007
10:06 AM
You're in.

Stay tuned as I'll probably post the new brackets and blog by this evening.

Your next round opponent.... LSUFan.

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tyhildenbrandt
Ty Hildenbrandt was the winner of the inaugural Next Great Sportswriter contest on FOXSports.com
and the host of nationally syndicated Yankee Fan Club Radio. Ty is currently a writer for SI.com.
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