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    About Me: I'm a special ed teacher by trade. Funny, I spend my day wanting to say shut-up to people and then do the same here. Just can't seem to. That would be rude and most uncivilized. I like to write and never met a thought I couldn't continue. My blogs, lik
    Marital Status Married
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    Location:
    About Me: I'm a special ed teacher by trade. Funny, I spend my day wanting to say shut-up to people and then do the same here. Just can't seem to. That would be rude and most uncivilized. I like to write and never met a thought I couldn't continue. My blogs, lik
    Marital Status Married

    A Heretical Yankee In King Manny's Court

    Thursday, October 18, 2007, 12:10 AM EST [General]

    I can't believe I'm doing this. As a die-hard Yankees fan I have absolutely no business defending anything within 100 miles of Red Sox Nation.  Unfortunately the responses regarding Manny Ramirez's admiration of his own homerun against Cleveland in the ALCS has brought me the brink of athletic sacrilege.

    In case you missed it (or live on Planet Man-Ram which is the imaginary home of Manny as envisioned by Jim Rome), the wildly eccentric Ramirez watched adoringly as his homerun traveled majestically through the night sky over Jacobs Field. Never mind that this only reduced the deficit to 7-3 in the Indians favor. Never mind that this capped back-to back- to back homeruns that included blasts from Kevin Youkilis and David Ortiz. Never mind that it was done in the national spotlight of post-season baseball. Never mind that it was one of the most impressive homeruns that anyone could ever hope to see. Never mind that it was the intellectually challenged Manny that broke one of those notorious "unwritten rules". Rule breakers must be punished (sarcasm alert).

    There's a reason those rules aren't written. It's because they're dumb and they typically bother wimps with sticks stuck up their butts the most. Take some other scenarios in baseball that are widely frowned upon. For example, it's been said that a player should never bunt to break up a no-hitter. Oh really now? If a pitcher wants to hurl a no-no then he better "know-know" how to field his position.

     How about the belief that it's improper to swing away on a 3-0 count when your team holds a big lead? That sounds counter-productive to me. The pitcher is probably going to throw a cookie and a batter is supposed to just let it slide by? The pitcher put himself in that hole in the first place. Besides, he'll probably follow the first cookie up with an equally enticing Oreo Double Stuff on the ensuing 3-1 pitch... but it's okay if the batter swings at that one. What an asinine concept.  

    Another one I just don't get is the disdain people have for players that make attempts at stealing signs. Maybe a team should do a better job disguising their signals and then they wouldn't have anything to worry about. Hmmm...does that mean I'm sticking up for New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick in a round about sort of way? I think I'm about to make myself sick just considering it. Forgive me New York.

     

     

    There are several more of these unenforceable standards that many people hold sacred. "Act like you've been there before when scoring a touchdown in football" & "Don't run the full court press with a big lead in basketball" come to mind. Who cares that touchdowns are typically hard to come by or that the full court press helped get the lead in the first place? These acts are totally classless and warrant swift retaliation (sarcasm alert #2).

     

    Which brings us back full circle to Mr. Ramirez. The most commonly held opinion about his elongated homerun trot from the other night is that C.C. Sabathia of the Cleveland Indians should promptly drill Manny with a 95 MPH fastball when he comes to the plate in Game 5 of the ALCS...and preferably right on his ear. How's that for totally classless? See what you get for watching your own homerun. A homerun that made everybody who saw it say "Holy $hit". If I could hit a ball like that you'd better believe that I'd watch it too.  But no...Manny should be sensitive and show compassion for the pitcher's witty-bitty hurt feelings. NEWS FLASH: serving up a meatball to Manny IS NOT a good idea.

     

    Let's not forget that this is Manny Ramirez we're talking about. As corny and tired as the "Manny Being Manny" cliche has become... the shoe does fit...and if the shoe does fit then we must acquit. Hey, if the glove thing worked for O.J. then this defense should certainly work for Man-Ram. Not to make excuses for him but face it people... he's a dimwitted nitwit and his actions over time have been as redundant as the term I just called him.

     

    Keep in mind his oddball track record. He often likes to hang out during pitching changes at Fenway Park... behind the Green Monster. He commented in 2003 that he would one day like to play... for the Yankees. While in left field during 2004 he dove to cut off a throw...from centerfielder Johnny Damon which resulted in an inside the park homerun. He once requested a trade... to Boston's AAA team.  On the day the trade deadline passed in 2005 Manny stated, "Boston was the place to be"...even though it was widely reported that he had been trying to force his way out of Bean Town.

     

    If Manny was a stereotype for Halloween he'd be a ditzy blonde... and ditzy blondes all over America should be very insulted by the fact that I just wrote that.

     

    Maybe I'm crazy or maybe I just have a soft spot in my heart for those whose brains are a wee bit slow on the uptake. My own mind must definitely be slipping if I'm sticking up for a guy who plays for the Chowdah-Heads... but that's not the point.  Just leave the guy alone already. He's not too smart and probably has a mid-level IQ at best. All he did was break a rule that doesn't exist in the first place. A rule by that way that is idiotic to begin with.

     

    As simplistically moronic as Ramirez may seem, he is right about something else. If the Red Sox go on and lose to Cleveland, it really isn't the end of the world. Now go and rip him a new one for that too. It obviously means that he likes losing (sarcasm alert #3).

     

    Man-He sure can rake though. Get it...Man-He instead of Manny? Oh well, the jokes can't all be winners but that sure was one hell of a home run the other night. It was a winner even in defeat... and admit it...you'd have watched it for a while too.   

     

     

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    Mexican Standoffs and Shoot-outs...Upset Specials And Ugly Routs

    Sunday, September 9, 2007, 09:30 AM EST [General]

    The holiest of days is here. The FIRST full Sunday of NFL action. Can I get some hallelujahs from all the football Home Boys across America?

    With football comes opinions, or is it A-Holes. We've all got em' and love to share em' even if nobody else gives a crap. I've got 4 predictions in mind for you.  

     

    Mexican Standoff: The marquee game of the day has to be Bears-Chargers. Two stud defenses, two young QBS, two teams that love to pound the rock on the ground, two sets of unheralded big play receivers but only one Antonio Gates. Maybe the Chargers are able to run the ball a bit more effectively...maybe Grossman hits a couple of homeruns early with Bernard Berrien...maybe the defenses and special teams make the deciding plays in the game...nobody knows for sure but I'm watching.

    Prediction: A scrappy Bears team falls short and loses 20-16.

     

     

     

    Shoot-out: Dunt...dunt...dunt...dunttttt...dunt-dunt...dunt-dunt! Looking for some scoring this week? Look no further than Monday Night Football. Hope the folks on the East Coast are patient cause they'll have to wait until the second Monday Night special kicks-off at 10:00 PM when the Cardinals play the 49ers.  Matt Leinart, Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin and Edgerrin James look to outscore Alex Smith, Frank Gore, Darrell Jackson and Vernon Davis! What?!?!?!  In names alone this could become a fantasy bonanza especially since both defenses have much to prove.

    Prediction: San Francisco has done more to improve their defense and has the better offensive line. Arizona has the best duo of receivers this side of Marvin Harrison & Reggie Wayne. The 49ers outpoint the Cardinals 38-30.

     

    Upset Special: Tom Brady is in the house! Bill Belichick is in the house! Richard Seymour isn't. Rodney "Nobody Gives A $hit About Performance Enhancers in The NFL" Harrison isn't. Asante Samuel just showed up. Randy Moss just showed up (maybe). Somebody wake up old men Tedy Bruschi and Mike Vrabel from their mid-morning naps and tell them they need to go chase somebody. "Eric Mangenius" is in the house! Chad "Tom Brady Light" Pennington is in the house. Little Big Man Laveraneus Coles is in the house! Thomas Jones is in the house! And by the way they're playing in the Jets house...or is it the Giants house? So freakin' what.

    Prediction: An inspired Jet team gives the Patriots a first week black-eye and kick a late field goal to upset New England 20-17.

     

     

    Ugly Rout: The Pittsburgh Steelers go to Cleveland and play marching band as they head up and down the field at will. The chants of Brady Quinn---Brady Quinn---Brady-Quinn start in week one as starting QB Charlie Frye gets pummeled. Willie Parker will shred the Browns on the ground and the combination of Ben Roethlisberger/Hines Ward/Santonio Holmes will carve up the secondary...just like they all did last season. The new Pittsburgh staff led by rookie head coach Mike Tomlin is looking to make a statement that this isn't Bill Cowher's Steelers anymore and that they can still play SMASH MOUTH FOOTBALL!

    Prediction: Steelers trounce the Browns 31-10.

     

     

    Football is back...football is back!!! As Tom Cruise once said to Renee Zellweger in his role as Jerry McGuire, "You Complete Me." Well maybe not... but the sentiment is the same and I'm happy as can be.

     

     

     

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    It's All Good Until We Say It Isn't

    Saturday, September 8, 2007, 10:56 AM EST [General]

    I don't know. Call me a cynic. It just seems as though every time something new comes along to feel good about there's an unforeseeable scandal looking to cast a shadow on our "Hip-Hip Hooray Parade".

    Take Rick "HGH" Ankiel for example. Like Roy Hobbs out of the movie script The Natural, Ankiel emerged from obscurity to capture the hearts of baseball fans across America. In true Hollywood fashion, Rick returned from our distant Wild-Thing memories to slug homeruns at an astonishing rate and catapult his team back into pennant contention. Unfortunately we've now learned that he's a "cheater". That is if you consider a cheater to be a person who "broke" the rules prior to their existence (Ankiel is reputed to have received prescriptions for HGH in 2004 to recover from surgery). HGH was not banned in MLB until 2005.

    So what? Last I checked this is 2007. Let the man have his moment of glory and inspire our imaginations. Has our self-righteous society deteriorated so far that we are at the point where we would rather tear down an athletic nobody to uphold our pious standards of nothingness. Most people are overly competitive to a fault. Almost anyone of us would stoop to uncommon levels to gain a competitive edge that would allow us more notoriety, prestige and material assets. Why is it that when athletes do the same so many are quick to discredit their abilities?

    As much as we like feel-good stories they always come with a "standard". These tales must remain "pure" because otherwise they lose all relevance and integrity. It's almost as though us commoners believe we were capable enough and could have accomplished these achievements ourselves under different circumstances (Yeah, like we basically didn't suck too much to become professional athletes). I could use HGH for a decade, possess biceps like Hulk Hogan and yet still hit 4 homeruns a year in A-Ball if I was lucky.

    Inherently, for unknown reasons, athletics turn us into a bunch of blabbering hypocrites. I guess the more things change the more they stay the same.

    Peyton Manning couldn't win the "Big One" but once he did we were forced into watching two-dozen of his commercials on "Thursday Night Football" to open the NFL regular season. Now he is arguably the GOAT (Greatest Of All Time) and the Indianapolis Colts are a shoe-in to repeat.

    Alex Rodriguez was reduced to water-cooler insults for his unprecedented failures in the clutch, yet he is once again the "most talented" player in MLB. His former detractors now claim that the Yankees should pay him 30+ million dollars a year or risk losing him to the dreaded Boston Red Sox.

    Speaking of A-Rod, American tennis player Andy Roddick still can't beat Roger Federer and is therefore a no talent bum. Why bother mentioning that Federer just may be the most dominant tennis star that any of us has ever seen?

    Anyone checked the "Dream Team" lately at the FIBA Americas basketball tournament. I guess James Naismith's game hasn't passed America by. The word on the street is that the current Team USA just might be the "best" version ever.

    Michael Vick (and yes he's shady) has become Public Enemy #1. Who cares that people have been threatening to "sic" their dogs on those they do not like (and their pets too) since canines became domesticated centuries ago? And for the record I do not endorse dog fighting or abusing animals but did most Americans really not know that this happens?  

    Speaking of surprises how about NBA referee Tim Donaghy and point shaving? Haven't we truly always known this went on? I think commissioner David Stern certainly has. The outrage...YAWN!!! Just ask homophobe and former Miami Heat player Tim Hardaway about Dick "Knick" Bavetta.

    Heaven forbid if the Yankees should happen to win the World Series this year. Then everybody and their mother would claim that they "saw it coming all along".

    While we're at it what if the J-E-T-S beat the New England Patriots to open the season? Will Eric Mangini really earn genius status... or will the Patsies simply have an old group of linebackers, truly miss the often injured defensive end Richard Seymour, rue the day that Rodney Harrison failed the drug test that nobody this side of MLB seems to care about, blame it on Randy Moss' hamstring, claim that Asante Samuel isn't in game shape or fail to mention that Tom "Wedlock" Brady has a sore throwing shoulder from swinging so many hot chicks? God I sure hope so.

    Yes it's root-root-root for the home team and as long as they win it's the same...or it's one...two...three strikes your out at the public opinion game.

    Can't they all just play ball? Oh yeah wait...that's already the case. That is what they do. We're the ones getting our panties in a bunch.

    I got a game to watch and so do you. Just do it...Nike style...or doggie style...whatever you prefer...cause it's all good until we say it isn't.

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    A Smack-Talk Pictorial Is Worth 1,000 Words

    Monday, August 13, 2007, 08:34 AM EST [General]

    "I don't wanna work...I wanna bang on the drum all day!"

    I've got the next 3 weeks off for vacation and JUST in time for some prime-time August baseball.  I was away this weekend and noticed that the Yankees-Red Sox smack talk REALLY heated up here at Fox Sports while I was gone. Me-thinks the pressure cooker is just getting warmed up and tempers will soon start a-flarin'. Rather than stoke the flames with words here is some "picturesque" smack talk for your viewing pleasure.

    Enjoy...and as an early disclaimer...where the hell is your sense of humor?

     

    Click the links to find out what both fan bases are thinking.

     

    D

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    The True Curse Of The Bambino

    Wednesday, August 8, 2007, 03:38 PM EST [General]

    The All-Time homerun record: 756 and counting. It's been called the most hallowed record in sports and Barry Bonds has finally broken it. Bonds can now place this accomplishment alongside the single-season homerun mark he already held with 73 round-trippers in 2001.  Let's call that the most hallowed record in sports 1A. For some reason whenever a player approaches any significant homerun milestone, the atmosphere becomes more Halloween-like than hallowed. Why is that?

    It all starts of course with Mr. George Herman Ruth. (714 career HRs, 60 HRs in 1927) The one and only Bambino. There began what can only be considered a sinister trail of long-ball woe. This is the true "Curse of the Bambino". If Babe could "keep" World Series conquests away from Boston for 86 years he surely was capable of making a plague out of all future homerun records. Unless you don't believe in curses of course. Then we just call it "an unexplainable and coincidental string of bad luck that feels like it will never end".

    Most people admit that Babe Ruth was arguably the first ever superstar athlete. He was Hollywood while everybody was still watching silent films. He partied like a rock star before they existed.  He lived to excess when there was little excess to be found. People loved him for it and created a legend not always fabricated from truth.

    Did you know that Little George Ruth was placed in the St. Mary's Industrial (i.e. reform) School for Boys at the age of 7 by his parents because he was "incorrigible and vicious" beyond their control?  He lived there for the next 12 years of his life. It's also where he learned to play baseball. If not for the Xaverian Brothers of the school, Ruth likely wouldn't have amounted to much.  Even so his wild spirit was never tamed.

     

    During his playing days Babe was just as famous for his gluttonous activities off the field as for his exploits on it. He was a regular visitor to the illegal speakeasies of the day during the era of prohibition. He lavished himself with expensive automobiles that were frequently wrecked in high-speed escapades. He was most likely an alcoholic as well as a serial adulterer. He thumbed his nose at authority and openly defied direct instructions from the commissioner of baseball resulting in suspensions. He publicly feuded with the legendary Ty Cobb and they often had to be physically separated from one another. The Babe was no saint. In fact I'd say he'd fit right in with many of the athletes of our modern day. The press was far different in his time though.  Back then his antics were glossed over or ignored entirely.  In our era the media would probably have torn Mr. Ruth in half.   

     

     

    Not surprisingly Ruth's fame and fortune couldn't buy happiness. According to his daughter Linda, The Babe "died with a saddened soul and took the grief to his death-bed". His only wish during the years after his retirement was to manage a team.  How could a man with no self-control lead a group of players? No club ever gave him the chance to find out. In essence he was forsaken by baseball. The very same game that he'd once played with the privilege of a crown prince. Seems even the Babe had to pay a price for the glory of homerun records. A price that would be passed to many others. Consider these:

    1932: Jimmie Foxx hit 58 homeruns. Oddly enough he lost 2 additional homeruns that year when games were called due to rain before becoming official. Technically the Babe was the record holder. Truthfully he should have shared the honor. Foxx became just another old-time slugger most have forgotten.

    1938: Hank Greenberg tied Jimmie Foxx with 58 homeruns.  The Jewish baseball star was stuck on this number during the final week of the season. He had long faced taunts and insults because of his heritage and this season was no different. The thought of a Jew passing Babe did not sit well with many. It's been widely speculated that some pitchers refused to give him any good pitches to hit. Greenberg was later quoted as saying, "When I was playing, I used to resent being singled out as a Jewish ballplayer. I wanted to be known as a great ballplayer, period. Lately though, I find myself wanting to be remembered not only as a great ballplayer, but as a great Jewish ballplayer."

     

     

    1961: Roger Maris was the first player to initially surpass Ruth's single season homerun mark as he became famous for hitting 61 in '61. The abuse he withstood from fans who openly rooted for teammate Mickey Mantle was unmerciful.  He not only persevered and broke the record but also won his second MVP Award in a row. The permanent side effects were the loss of his hair, aging ten years in one season and a heart embittered for the rest of his life. 

     

     

    1974: Hank Aaron passed Babe Ruth with homerun number 715. Along the journey he handled death threats, racial epithets and hate mail with dignity and class. It certainly ruined the experience for him and his family, as well as robbed them of much-deserved happiness. Like Roger Maris, and probably worse, Hank was no doubt affected for the rest of his life. So much in fact that he showed zero desire to participate in Barry Bonds' controversial chase of his own record. Even 30+ years after the fact, once was enough for Mr. Aaron. Can you blame him?

     

    1998: Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa engaged in an epic homerun race and were credited with "saving baseball" after player strikes and owner lockouts had infuriated fans across America. Big Mac clubbed 70 and Slamming Sammy stroked 66, as baseball was reborn.  Along the way a reporter noticed a bottle of Androstenedione in McGwire's locker (then legal) and one could say the "steroid era" officially bared its ugly head. Still unresolved, Mark and Sammy may find themselves permanently black listed from the Hall of Fame.

    Yesterday 8/7/07: Barry Bonds broke Hank Aaron's all-time homerun mark. No more needs to be said other than most fans will NEVER recognize his achievements even if he is NEVER convicted of anything. That's tragic. 

    Not so distant future: The Alex Rodriguez watch has officially begun. How ironic this is indeed. How can possibly the most openly despised and reviled baseball star ever, assume the mantel of "peoples' choice" for homerun king?  Personally I call it "Hatred-Displacement-Theory".

     

     

    Ahhhh...CURSES!!! Who knows why foul air has followed homerun chases throughout time? It's worse than trying to figure out that Madden Jinx. Maybe "Chicks digging the long ball" wasn't such a good thing after all. I remember a certain story about an apple in a garden somewhere that some chick really "digged" too.  Yeah...that's the ticket...let's just blame it on women. Although for the record that never works either (Shrugs shoulders...sighs... walks away... but never stops wondering why).

     

     

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