Everyday Should Be Saturday

January 2, 2009

YOU KNOW WHAT I LIKE ABOUT BEING A FOOTBALL PLAYER AT UTAH?

Hi. I’m an anonymous African American football player at the University of Utah. On the eve of this game you might wonder: why would a talented young black man such as myself go to a place that doesn’t have many of my people in it?

You’d be surprised as to the reasons why. First, Coach Whittingham has done a great job making sure everyone’s comfortable here. He has prayer groups for the Mormons so they feel comfortable. He makes sure we know about churches here in our community, too, and lets us know how welcome and valued we are.

Second, it’s a great community: clean, quiet, and with just enough things to do if you want to stay busy. The outdoor sports scene is great if you like it. There are clubs, and you can hang out with the Utah Jazz if you want to–it’s a big city, sure, but it’s got that small town vibe, too.

Third, it really is a great football program. I’ve learned so much here, and grown so much as a person. I owe the fans and the program so much, and will be a Ute for life.

You know why I really went here? (more…)

FURTHER FREEKERY: DABO GETS SPIKED

Bo Pelini’s face lends itself to photoshoppery so, so well:

A NOTE OF CONDEMNATION TO THE SUN BOWL, PLEASE

As we are most years, we sit shocked at how good most of the bowls have been. They don’t have to be; on odds, we’d bet that most teams relegated to meaningless exhibition would take what we regard to be the logical path of least resistance for 18-22 year old men doing things for vague, poorly defined reasons, which would be slacking off, drinking, and mumming through their assigned task with something less than rigor.


This is the second image result for “Sun Bowl Pitt.” Harumph.

This only seems to have been the case in one bowl game thus far, an execrable exercise in football called the Sun Bowl. The Sun Bowl takes place in El Paso, Texas, and this may explain it as the dystopian Disneyworld of Juarez, Mexico is but a trot across a body-filled gutter away. Only a night of smoking Mexican Crunk Broccoli and guzzling paint thinner with the locals would explain how, oh how Pittsburgh and Oregon State managed to show up for four quarters and score exactly one field goal for a whole fucking game.

Oregon State had excuses, sure: the loss of the Rodgers brothers to injury was a substantial one, while the wind–blowing in hellgusts at up to 40 miles an hour during the first half–made even Lyle Moevao’s one-speed passing difficult. (Lyle Moevao only throws one kind of ball: directly through your chest, even on screens.) They had reasons, and at least apologized by scoring.

Pitt, slyly sliding in the door in the clothes of a competent team, immediately disrobed and revealed themselves to be a team coached by that Dave Wannstedt: the one who lets his offensive coordinator call passes on 4th and 1 with LeSean McCoy in the backfield, the one who sits with his hands on his hips and wrinkles his upper lip in theatrical bafflement, the one whose game management has passed unimproved and unimpeded through the ranks of the NFL and now college football for over fifteen years as a head coach. If you’d like to go blind, please see Bill Stull’s line: 7/24, 54 yards, and one INT. The box score is a fucking desert. Go ahead and look at it. We dare you. Vomit does not come out of computer keyboards easily.

It was agony, and when Verne Lundquist and Gary Danielson said things like “Well, Pitt’s going for it here,” we know what they really meant. “Please, death. Swing your sweet scythe through our willing flesh before we see the end of this game. Screw you, Sun Bowl, for even existing this year. Next year, just stage a shot contest between the coaches and a donkey show for the remaining two hours of the broadcast. Repellent as that would be–especially if Dennis Erickson’s ASU team goes–watching Pitt lob 30 yard fades into gale-force winds was far, far worse.

LSUFREEK ON THE ROSE BOWL: HE IS THE GREATEST

Nah, Pete. I’ve had enough.

CURIOUS INDEX, 1/2/2009

Abuse of reality and the terms that describe it. Nittany Lions qb Daryl Clark on USC’s handy 38-24 victory over Penn State, demonstrating a healthy ability to forget the bad and inconvenient things that happen to you, which is very psychologically healthy but should not be confused for genuine analysis in any way, shape or form:

“We were ready for everything they threw at us,” said Penn State’s Daryll Clark.

Except for precision passing and Mark Sanchez’s ability to roll out of the pocket and USC’s defense, which for one half at least was in such a lather they were taking each other out of the game with vicious applied force.

Now please cue the overreaction and possible suggestion of a split national title, especially now that ESPN will point out that the Pac-10 went 5-0 this bowl season against BYU, Pitt, Oklahoma State, Miami, and Penn State. Okay, 4-0 against BYU, Oklahoma State, Miami, and Penn State, since you can’t count the three hours of stale fart constituting the Sun Bowl.

10 penalties, 100 yards. The most physical play South Carolina made all day long involved Eric Norwood throwing Clifton Geathers to the ground to prevent him from brawling with Iowa players and increasing the atrocious penalty yardage total for the Gamecocks. Steve Spurrier the White sat on the sideline contemplating white shores and addressing Hobbits stoically about fate while watching his team take hammers to the face from Shonn Greene, because the real Steve Spurrier died in a plane crash in 2001, and we continue to believe this to keep our worldview intact.

Cullen Harper likes to pirouette. Corn Nation is flipping out gleefully, but they should thank Cullen Harper’s bizarre tendency to pirouette into pressure for the red zone stand preserving Nebraska’s 26-21 win in the Gator Bowl. Harper clearly hit the point you see rookie qbs hit in the NFL when they attempt to scramble out of trouble and find themselves covered in 500 pounds of angry linebacker, but did it at a most unfortunate time: three minutes to go, and with Carl Pelini pouring pressure on him from every angle.

Hey! That happened! Orange Bowl, Virginia Tech won, and nothing interesting happened whatsoever outside of 265 pound TE Glenn Boone running that most cleverly named of Wildcat variations, the “Wild Turkey.”

NOOOOOOOOOO. EDSBS All-Awesome team qb Rohan Davey has made some poor career choices. We’d worry more, but Davey was 54 when he started for LSU, making him near retirement age at this point. Jail may be a kind of freebie retirement home at this point.

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