Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1332 of 1503)

Media overstating hatred in “Border War”?

Easily the college football game of the week – if not the year – occurs Saturday when #4 Missouri takes on #2 Kansas for the chance to possibly play for a national title. With what’s at stake in this year’s “Border War”, many members of the media (including Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star) have taken the opportunity to proclaim that the game is much more than your standard college football rivarly.

However, the guys at SPORTSbyBROOKS.com say that the media has gone crazy in overstating the hatred between the two schools (and states for that matter.).

The rivalry, despite two perennially horrible teams, is remarkably intense and compares favorably with others that we’ve experienced personally (OSU-UM, UF-UGA, USC-UCLA, Clemson-USC). But some of the things we’ve been reading this week about the contemporary conflict between the schools (and states) is downright ridiculous and completely untrue.

We grew up and lived in KC, smack between the two schools. We never, EVER heard someone mention anything about slave state-this or Jayhawk-rape-that. We’re sure the folks in KSMO would like to think that this is the most important sporting event the Western Hemisphere has witnessed since the Royals absolutely trounced the Redbirds in the ’85 World Series (thank you Jack Clark!), but it isn’t. But you wouldn’t know that by following media accounts this week authored by Missouri and Kansas carpetbaggers.

The media over-hyping the magnitude of a game? Never!

T-Giving Recaps

Here are recaps from Thursday’s Thanksgiving Day games:

Packers 37, Lions 26
Brett Favre (31 for 41 for 381 yards, 3 TDs) and Donald Driver (10 rec., 147 yards) were both amazing, but I thought this game was won by the Packers’ defense. Mike Martz surprised GB (and everybody watching for that matter) by running the ball on the opening drive. It was a great game plan by Martz because the Packers, assuming the Lions were going to come out passing, had kept their safeties back and out of the box. That created running lanes for the Lions and they were able to move the ball with a great deal of success at the start. However, the difference was when Detroit got into obvious passing situations, because GB completely put the clamps down on the receivers and nobody could stop Aaron Kampman (a.k.a. the beast). It was clear that not only were the Packers getting pressure on Jon Kitna, but he also had nowhere to throw the ball. It seemed that every time that the Lions and Kitna needed to convert a big third down, the Packers would come up with a sack. Favre deserves praise for another remarkable performance, but I thought the game plan and execution of the Packers’ defense deserves a ton of credit too (even though they started to wilt in the fourth quarter).

Cowboys 34, Jets 3
As many expected it to be, this was a laugher from start to finish. The Jets just didn’t have the manpower to stay with the Cowboys the entire game. New York’s defense put up a fight in the first quarter, but the game turned when Terence Newman picked off Kellen Clemons and returned it 50 yards for a touchdown. After that, the Jets couldn’t gain any momentum and the game turned into the Tony Romo (21 of 28, 195 yards, 2 TDs) show. This game just turned out to be a warm up for the Cowboys big showdown with the Packers next week.

Colts 31, Falcons 13
The 15 people who actually got to watch this game on the NFL Network were treated to a decent game in the first half. The Falcons came out firing, moving the ball well on their first couple of possessions and mounting a 10-0 lead. However, like a true heavyweight fighter, the Colts took the Falcons’ best shots and suffered no real damage. Indy used a bogus running into the kicker penalty on the Falcons to change the momentum and Peyton Manning then proceeded to light up an injury-riddled Atlanta defense for 272 yards and three touchdowns. The Colts weren’t overly impressive, but they did appear to get back on track both offensively and defensively in the second half. This should give Indy confidence heading into an extended rest period.

Holmes to call it a career, Jordan to Chiefs?

Following up on John Paulsen’s fantasy blog about Priest Holmes, it appears that the Chiefs’ running back has decided to retire according to Adam Schefter of the NFL Network. Holmes suffered a neck injury in the Chiefs’ loss to the Colts last week and is expected to announce his retirement within the next day or two.

One player that could essentially replace Holmes is LaMont Jordan, who has asked for his release from the Oakland Raiders. Jordan is upset at being benched the past two games and according to the San Francisco Chronicle, he might get his wish to be released with rookie running back Michael Bush healthy enough to be on the active roster.

Now that Jordan has asked for his release, the Raiders face two choices: Drop Jordan with nothing in return because the trade deadline was last month, or keep a disgruntled player at a time players are increasingly grumbling about the six-game losing streak and 2-8 record.
If the Raiders decide to release Jordan, today would be the perfect time because of the situation with Bush, Oakland’s fourth-round draft pick in April.

Rotoworld.com speculates that Jordan could wind up in Kansas City with Holmes likely on his way out of football. As Rotoworld noted, Jordan has worked with head coach Herm Edwards in New York and the Chiefs certainly need a running back with starting running back Larry Johnson expected to be out for a lengthy period of time.

Saban’s comments are ridiculous

Following back to back loses to Mississippi State and Louisiana Monroe, head coach Nick Saban turned to catastrophic events like 9/11 and Pearl Harbor as examples to make a point about the Alabama football team uniting heading forward.

Citing the 9-11 terrorist attacks and Pearl Harbor, Saban said Monday his team must rebound like America did from a “catastrophic event.”

“Changes in history usually occur after some kind of catastrophic event,” Saban said. “It may be 9/11, which sort of changed the spirit of America relative to catastrophic events. Pearl Harbor kind of got us ready for World War II, and that was a catastrophic event.”

“What Coach Saban said did not correlate losing a football game with tragedy; everyone needs to understand that. He was not equating losing football games to those catastrophic events,” football spokesman Jeff Purington said in a statement to The Associated Press. “The message was that true spirit and unity become evident in the most difficult of times. Those were two tremendous examples that everyone can identify with.”

I’m sorry, but even if he didn’t intend to compare football to tragedy, he’s still wrong for somewhat linking everything together. Saban’s comments are proof that we (and by we I mean the media, fans, players, coaches, etc) take sports way too seriously. Sports aren’t life, even though we want them to be sometimes. We want coaches and players to feel losses like we feel losses and we want the media to hammer them when they don’t. We love the emotional locker room speeches in movies and want sports to be something more sometimes, but everyone needs to keep things in perspective. Trying to unite a football team after losing to Mississippi State and Louisiana Monroe doesn’t pail in comparison to an entire country uniting after innocent people lost their lives in the tragic events of 9/11 and Pearl Harbor.

Right on as usual

It’s been a while since we’ve checked in with Kige Ramsey of “You Tube Sports”, but by golly if he didn’t hit another one out of the park with his commentary on Barry Bonds’ indictment.

Clear, concise and to the point – that’s Kige Ramsey (for You Tube Sports of course).

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