Note to Vols Fans
February 27th, 2008
Being #1 is a bitch, isn’t it?
Categories: College Hoops, Sports | 2 Comments
The View From the Sinister Side of Life
February 27th, 2008
Being #1 is a bitch, isn’t it?
Categories: College Hoops, Sports | 2 Comments
April 13th, 2007
Some random reactions to the defenses and other thoughts about the Don Imus firing and a rumination on sports place in society.
The most fascinating thing to me in this story is how it intersects with sports. Don Imus has said much worse about politicians and reporters and gotten away with it for years. Indeed, there are precious few reporters and public figures who dared to ignore his show because of its place in the insider media food chain. But this first time — as far as I can tell — he personally attacked sports figures in this way he gets fired. Much of the discussion and the news I heard about Imus I heard through sports shows and sports talk radio. I don’t think its an exaggeration to say that millions more people heard his comments and about the uproar because of sports talk. I have to believe that it had an effect on the outcome. The more people who hear about the affair, the more people there were to put pressure on the sponsors. Rush Limbaugh went through a similar event. He made a racist comment about Donovan McNabb on ESPN and was fired. That comment was mild compared to some of the racist remarks he has made in the past, but it was that remark that caused him to lose a job and that remark that is the one I hear most often when his racist past is brought up.
I am not sure what this tells us. I suspect that it means nothing more than that sports is the one area where we still share a largely common culture in this country and that we, as a society, pay far, far more attention to sports than we do to journalism or politics. But it might also mean that sports — with it’s clearly measurable objectives and obvious markers of success — is the one are of our culture where racism’s inherent idiocy is most clearly revealed. It is easy, sometimes, for people not to see the effects of racism, to argue that minorities aren’t discriminated against in the real world, that they just don’t work hard enough. No one with a brain, though, could argue that the Rutgers players hadn’t worked hard and didn’t belong where they found themselves. No one could argue that Donovan McNabb wasn’t one of the league’s best quarterbacks or that he had gotten where he was because of some weird quarterback affirmative action. Sports fans expect their games to be honest and reflect of actual effort and ability. When someone implies the opposite, the fallacy is obvious and jarring in a way that it isn’t in almost any other activity.
Baseball is celebrating Jackie Robinson today. I have heard people say that Jackie Robinson the baseball player (the distinction matters; Jackie Robinson the man, it is often forgotten, was a tireless champion for civil rights from the day of his retirement to the day of his death) was the most important civil rights leader the country ever had. I used to think that was a ludicrous exaggeration. I still don’t believe it, but I think it’s a lot closer to the truth than I had believed.
Categories: College Hoops, Culture, Economics, MLB/MiLB, Media, NFL, Politics, Sports | 14 Comments
March 22nd, 2007
But my bracket is kicking ass and taking names. Currently ranked #277 out of nearly 30,000 entries in the USA Today pool.
If Georgetown, UNC, and Florida win, that probably goes up even further. (I had Wisconsin in the Elite 8 and already lost them, so the UNLV/Oregon game doesn’t help me; for a private pool, I need Oregon to lose…)
UPDATE: Well, that didn’t take long. Oregon won, which hurts me long-term. I had Memphis in the final four (oops). Kansas (my champion) is currently losing. And if Georgetown or Oregon win tomorrow, I won’t even win my private pool. That’s what I get for crowing. ![]()
Categories: College Hoops, Sports | 1 Comment
January 9th, 2007
Big win today over Ohio State. They almost blew it (a late 16-point lead shrunk to as few as 2), thanks in large part to excellent three-point shooting by the Buckeyes, but the Badgers held on, as the Buckeyes missed what would have been a tying 3-point shot. It’s a bad week to be an Ohio State fan, eh? Anyway, that’s not why I’m posting this. I’m posting this to point out that Chris Rock scored 25 for the Badgers in the win:
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(Actually, that’s not Chris Rock, of course. It’s Kammron Taylor. But you’ve got to admit the resemblance is striking. I’m not the first to notice it…)
Categories: College Hoops, Sports | 3 Comments
March 23rd, 2006
Sorry, Jeff, I couldn’t resist!
That’s the problem with having a one-man team: when that one guy has a bad game, you’ve got problems.
Meanwhile, my wife’s Memphis Tigers advance to the Elite Eight. In a way, I’m sad about the Duke loss, because I would have liked for it to be our Tigers who eliminated them. ![]()
Categories: College Hoops, Sports | 3 Comments
March 17th, 2006
Publius makes a solid objective case for Duke hatred.
Then again, he’s a Kentucky fan, and they’re only marginally better than Duke fans. Maybe one day I’ll make an objective case for Kentucky Wildcat hatred.
Categories: College Hoops, General, Sports | 4 Comments