Category Archives: The Rewindables – Sports and Movie Rewind

Papagrande and his co-hosts take a rip though the best moments from sports and movies, on tape. Be kind, rewind!

Instantly Rewindable – Long Gone Summer – ESPN

It was some of the darkest days in baseball. The sport was coming out of the 1994 lockout and had lost millions of fans from that debacle. Baseball was looking for something to rejuvenate interest in the sport and was desperate for anything positive to latch onto. Cal Ripkin and his iron man streak gave the sport a small boost in 1995 but it was short lived. This ESPN 30 for 30 documentary-story weaves us through the period of time where baseball overlooked the devil within to put baseball back on the map.

Before we look at the positives, you have to at least acknowledge the underlying issue built around the chase for the single season home run record. To that point, the record was held by Roger Maris who famously hit 61 home runs in 1961 and had his own challenges in surpassing the legend of Babe Ruth. Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa went toe to toe in the summer of 1998 and looked to be a sure thing to surpass the record despite the speculation about steroids being the impetus for the power surge. Years after the record was broken, it was proven that steroids riddles the statistics and records of that era but did anyone really care. Those who hold the records in hallowed grounds have never accepted that McGwire held the record at 70 (until Barry Bonds broke the record under his own cloud of steroids in 2001 with 73). Those who were riveted by the chase that year choose not to care and simply describe it as a magical summer. Here are our winners for the Rewatchables Long Gone Summer.

  1. Most Rewindable moment – the moment where you are flipping the channels and you catch this part only to be sucked into rewinding to the start of the movie.
  2. The “Did you touch my drum kit” award – not necessarily the quote that the world remembers but the one that someone who has seen the movie 25 times would know exactly what movie this is from. Bonus points if you know which show this quote is from.
  3. Best “microwave” actor – the actor who hits the screen with their hair on fire and owns their scenes in such a dominating fashion. Small scenes, big value.
  4. Best “Over the Top” acting moment – the actor who dials it up like this is the moment that he/she wants on the “In Memoriam” snippet at the 2044 Oscars.
  5. The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award – you know, the actor who you’ve seen in 100 shows and never know their name. Every movie has that person.
  6. The “That makes no sense moment” – You know what I mean when you see something that makes no logical sense. That moment.
  7. Bonus category – Unanswerable questions – I love this stuff where the movie ends but the questions linger on. I have no answers but lots of questions.

Most Rewindable Moment – Mark McGwire Batting Practice

The documentary was clearly focused on showing you what you came here for, the home run. Throughout the 2 hours, it shows you all of the major milestone dingers of the year for all players involved and those moments Bring you right back to where you were in 1998.

To me the rewindable moment came in the 30 seconds where it focused on McGwire hitting bombs in batting practice and having thousands of fans oohing and ahhhhing along with every laser off his bat. The sheer magnitude of the way he hit these baseballs and the length of distance was jaw dropping and sucks you in for the rest of the show.

The “Did you touch my drum kit” award – Sammy Sosa

There were some great quotes throughout this documentary.

“You would have 5,000 people at batting practice just there to watch McGwire hit”, Chip Carey, broadcaster

“No-one talks to me about getting to 50 homers, everyone wants to talk about 60 or 61 but you have no idea how hard it is just to get to 50.” McGwire press conference.

“Dad always regretted hitting 61 homers that year and was labelled as a on-hit wonder after that. He just dealt with it after he did it”. Maris’ son

The quote that struck me the greatest was the one that Sammy Sosa doesn’t actually answer. Sosa has repeatedly been asked about the rumour that he too took steroids throughout that era. It has haunted he and McGwire so much that neither one of them has been elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Sosa has taken a particularly large beating over the speculation and because he has not even acknowledged the issue, he was dropped from the HOF ballot. In the documentary, he is asked the question again around whether he took steroids during that season and his answer was more more confusing than ever, answering a question with a question.

Why do they focus on me when everyone in that era [took steroids]? I’m not a bad guy.” 

True but has the lesson of telling the truth not taught these guys anything? Pete Rose is paying the piper for 20 years of denial and is still not in the Hall while others who float the truth have been exonerated.

Best “microwave” actor – Roger Maris & the Maris family

I have always had an amazing amount of respect for Roger Maris. He was the epitome of class throughout his career and being an understated gentlemen, the chase of the Babe’s HR record took its toll on him. His son told the story how Roger was losing his hair in clumps under the undying pressure from the fans and media haunting him daily. On top of the chase, he has the added pressure that the Commissioner of Baseball, Ford Frick, claimed that the record would no be considered broken unless he did it in the same or less number of games than the Bambino did it in (154 games).

There are snippets of interviews with Maris laced into the documentary along with several interviews with Maris’ son. The Maris family was actively involved in the backdrop of that summer, following the frontrunner, McGwire around the country as he approached the number. They too said all the right things and showed their class when McGwire hit number 62. Deep down, they must also wonder whether the record was broken legitimately, or under the premise of drugs that you couldn’t fathom in 1961. No matter what, they never cracked and still haven’t and baseball is better for Roger Maris.

Best “Over the Top” acting moment – Jack Buck broadcaster

In fairness, it can’t be easy being the broadcaster who has the responsibility to tell the world that you have just seen something that you have never seen before. Many a great broadcaster has spent hours off microphone, crafting the perfect message for just that moment. Jack Buck was the St Louis Cardinals broadcaster for the previous 40 seasons and had seen it all. He had never seen anything like this travelling circus and the hype that followed these guys. As McGwire climbed the HR ladder 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, Buck needed to continue to weave the story for folks at home.

Buck was no stranger to baseball history. He has some of the greatest calls in the history of the game (You Tube Kirby Puckett Game 6 and Kirk Gibson 1988 for nostalgic purposes). When he called the 62nd homer, he literally had tears streaming down his face. If that’s not the most moving moment of the doc, you have no heart. Take a listen. It’s a worthwhile couple of minutes of one of the greatest broadcasters in sports history.

The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award – The 1998 Montreal Expos

One of the things that struck me greatly was the impact that the now defunct, Montreal Expos played in the race to the HR lead. They were a party to the best sequence in the documentary starting with Sammy Sosa overtaking McGwire for the HR lead on September 25, 1998. Sosa hits his 66th dinger that afternoon to take the lead leaving the exhausted McGwire wondering whether the record would be out of reach, with only a handful of games left in the season. Sosa had been in the groove to catch the leader and McGwire had been flagging in previous games. He needed a response and the poor Expos were the victim for his rebuttal. Take a look at the barrage that Les Expos endured once McGwire felt the heat to keep the record:

September 25Sosa462José LimaHouston Astros6566
September 25McGwire375Shayne BennettMontreal Expos6666
September 26McGwire403Dustin HermansonMontreal Expos6766
September 26McGwire435Kirk BullingerMontreal Expos6866
September 27McGwire377Mike ThurmanMontreal Expos6966
September 27McGwire370Carl PavanoMontreal Expos7066

After Sosa hits a 462 foot bomb vs the Astros, McGwire tortures the Expos for 5 homers in 3 games against a “where are they now” list of former Montreal Expos pitchers. Unfortunately for Canadian baseball fans, this may have been the last time that the Expos were playing in relevant baseball games with a national audience before they moved to Washington in 2002.

The “That makes no sense moment” – Tim Fornaris Cardinals groundskeeper

This was a part of the epilogue that I had forgotten about and has totally blocked out of my memory. The baseball’s that each of the men had hit for homers leading up to the record were worth thousands to the lucky patrons who caught them. The world speculated that the ball that eventually would break the record, could be worth $1 million dollars to the person who possessed it. Little would the world know that that September day, McGwire would hit his shortest homer of the season, basely clearing the 361 foot mark of the left field fence. This meant that it would not be a fan that would hold the ball, it would be someone in the Cardinals bullpen. That person, Tim Fornaris was a groundskeeper who was responsible to collect the falling streamers from the raucous Busch Stadium crowd. While sprinting to the field, he picked up the the rolling ball and stuck it in his pocket. The amazing part of the story; days later, he presents the ball to McGwire in a on-field ceremony and forgoing the potential riches he held in his hand. He will never know what it was worth but Spawn creator Todd MacFarlane purchased the 70th homer ball for $3 million months later.

Unanswerable Questions and Conclusions

Here is what I am left wondering:

  1. Would McGwire and Sosa both be Hall of Famers by now, if they had admitted to the steroids? I say No here as the fate of the HOF ballot is left to the writers, many of whom still hold these two responsible for selling the game. They may both be on the ballot still but I think they are still on the outside looking in.
  2. Would the season have as many warm feelings if Sosa had been the Home Run champion? Again, I say No here. The fact that Sosa was a Latin American born player with limited command of English (especially when he was under scrutiny), makes me doubt that the American audience would have soaked this in the same way.
  3. Would Ken Griffey Jr. have been a better foe for McGwire in the chase? I say Yes as KGJ was America’s baseball sweetheart in this era. He was a 5 tool player who would go onto hit over 600 homers lifetime and become a first ballot Hall of Famer. He was in the race until August when he went on a horrendous slump and ended up with 56 dingers.
  4. What event would have brought fans back if this never happened? The easy answer is Barry Bonds breaking this record a few years later in 2002 but I will say the first games after 9/11 would have bonded fans to coming back. What’s more patriotic than Lee Greenwood in a leather US flag jacket singing “God Bless the USA”. before a game?

Some will say that this season ruined the game for years to come. Baseball and the powers at hand, ignored the steroid issue during the year and reaped the reward of TV audiences and crowds not seen since. The documentary wasn’t hard hitting enough for my liking, eventually letting both combatants off the hook from telling the truth about their abuse of steroids. That was the true story here and an opportunity to set the record straight but ESPN missed the mark. MLB reaped the reward for the ignorance and sometimes you just need to take advantage of a positive situation when it happens. MLB certainly benefitted by the frantic chase these two put on and the game moved into the new century stronger than it left the old one. McGwire and Sosa should be in the Hall if for no other reason than they saved the game.

Let us know what you thought of the documentary at www.reppinthe403.com.

The Sports Rewindables #2 – Draft Day

There are definitely more deserving sports movies in the pantheon of great sports flicks but in a recent watch of Draft Day, it got my attention enough to make it Rewindable #2. It’s a flawed movie that entertains while it plays to the strengths of it’s main star, Kevin Costner, and overlooks some of the nuances that the NFL draft entails. The plot follows Sonny Weaver Jr, the GM of the Cleveland Browns on draft day and stitches an arc of his conversation and emotions around one of the busiest days in the NFL calendar. We see the trials in his relationship, his family life, the respect of his work colleagues and mostly the personal demons he faces. You can get a full review of the movie here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_Day if you want he blow by blow.

I had the pleasure of watching this with Mary and my older boys and I came away with a few immediate observations from them:

  1. Mary was surprisingly entertained. She doesn’t know the nuances of the NFL draft process so the football parts needed a few pauses to explain the back story but she stayed with it. She likely wouldn’t sit through many other sports related movies.
  2. My boys loved the drama of the draft day wheeling and dealing because it’s how they function in their fantasy football lives. They are always trying to trade some ball bag for a superstar, including future draft picks and no trade is too radical for them.
  3. It resonates well with younger football audiences because they dream to draft their own team and do so in their Xbox Madden experiences. Trading players is their favourite part of the game really.

As always, we will use a similar methodology in breaking down the highlights of the movie.

Our categories for the golden Rewindables  include:

  1. Most Rewindable moment – the moment where you are flipping the channels and you catch this part only to be sucked into rewinding to the start of the movie.
  2. The “Did you touch my drum kit” award – not necessarily the quote that the world remembers but the one that someone who has seen the movie 25 times would know exactly what movie this is from. Bonus points if you know which show this quote is from.
  3. Best “microwave” actor – the actor who hits the screen with their hair on fire and owns their scenes in such a dominating fashion. Small scenes, big value.
  4. Best “Over the Top” acting moment – the actor who dials it up like this is the moment that he/she wants on the “In Memoriam” snippet at the 2044 Oscars.
  5. The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award – you know, the actor who you’ve seen in 100 shows and never know their name. Every movie has that person.
  6. The “That makes no sense moment” – You know what I mean when you see something that makes no logical sense. That moment.
  7. Bonus category – Unanswerable questions – I love this stuff where the movie ends but the questions linger on. I have no answers but lots of questions.

Most Rewindable Moment

This is a hard one to peg. The indelible scene is likely the draft day sequence where Sonny makes a sequence of trades that would blow the minds of the most seasoned NFL veteran. We’ll save that for later as you will definitely stop and watch that last 20 minutes but would you rewind it?

The real moment that sucks you in is when Sonny walks into the Cleveland war room and tells the front office that he has acquired the #1 overall pick and likely prospective draftee Bo Callahan. The banter between he and Coach Vince Penn (played by Dennis Leary) is classic dick-swinging material and it sets up the chaos of the remainder of the movie. Sonny is a flawed man. making flawed decisions without the advice or backing of his team and it’s here that you realize that the countdown to the draft is going to be memorable.

The “Did you touch my drum kit” award

The most memorable quote comes at the end of the movie where after baiting the Seattle GM into trading his 3 – first round picks back to Cleveland, he caps off the baiting with the classic “trade me back my picks, you pancake-eater motherfucker”. It’s a reference to an earlier scene with that same Seattle GM was prioritizing his breakfast over the discussion with Sonny.

I also enjoyed the part where Sonny educates Vontae Mack (Chadwick Boseman) on the reasons he should get off social media. It goes something like this:

Sonny.: Don’t Twitter. For the love of Jesus, just stop. Delete your profile, get off the web, do not do this to yourself.
– Vontae Mack: I don’t know why you care what I do. I can do whatever I want, right?

The best quote happens between Ali Parker (Jennifer Garner, cap specialist) while spitting barbs at Coach Penn. She stops him dead in his tracks and asks:

“How is it that the ultimate prize in the most macho sport ever invented is a piece of jewelry?”

Fair question and something that really had never occurred to me before. Leave it to the Salary Cap specialist to blow your mind.

Best “microwave” actor

There is zero question that the person who lights the fire under this movie is Dennis Leary playing Coach Vince Penn. Even his back story is full of awesome:

Inherited the Cowboys on their ascension, coached them to a Super Bowl win, let go a couple of years later, wife hates Cleveland compared to Dallas, took the Browns job to prove he could build a team.

The fact is, he adds the confrontation that football represents, directly into every scene. He is an asshole, brazen and sure that everyone around him is inferior. Pure awesomeness as a coach and he is electric in this scene:

Best “Over the Top” acting moment

Well the end of the movie could fit into several categories in the Rewindables but it fits best here. It’s somewhat implausible but intriguing while the drama of what gets pulled off is fascinating. It starts with him convincing the rookie GM of the Jaguars to trade out of the number 6 pick by sweating him through the options he faces:

Once that manipulation is sealed, he then leverages the position of the Seahawks, who want to draft the stud QB, by trading them back for their original 3 first round picks capped by the “pancake-eating MFer” crescendo.

And to cap it off, he then sticks to the smug Seattle GM with the now infamous “I want all my picks back and David Goddamn Putney, just because I want to.” Classic dick swinging at its best. Enjoy the bravado.

The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award

This one has to go to my man Patrick St. Esprit who gamely plays the Seattle General Manager and one of the main antagonists in the show. Backed in discussion by another “who’s that guy?” Chi McBride, the two make a formidable team in maneuvering the draft day wars. This ultimately was the best role he has played on the silver screen but he has played other key roles in TV and movies such as Hunger Games, Smokin Aces, and War Dogs. Take some pride in this role Patrick, you made this movie flow and provided some sage experience up against Costner’s Sonny Weaver.

The “That makes no sense moment”

Where do you start here? Let me rattles some off for recap.

You wouldn’t take a linebacker with the number 1 pick, ever, ever, ever. You also rarely see a team take a running back in the top 10 (which they do at number 7)The Browns owner, after being embarrassed at the draft in not drafting Bo Callahan, flies back to Cleveland and arrives back BEFORE they have made 5 picks in the draft. The trading of picks through the last 10 minutes are equally improbable and indefensible but there was one glaring error in the film.

It is a well documented tradition that when the Commissioner of the NFL walks across the stage to kick off the event, he walks to a resounding boo. Does this sound like a boo to you? Forward to the 1:52 moment in this clip.

Unanswerable Questions and Wrap up

Who gets fired after this mess of trades is sorted out? – Sonny appears to have avenged himself here and will get a chance for the next few seasons. The Jacksonville GM is too green in his job and will get a pass for dumping the pick. Seattle’s GM did the right thing in the end and probably drafted the best player in the draft. He survives. Let’s go with Coach Penn getting canned first. He continues to shoot his mouth off and eventually Sonny swings the axe on him and his act.

Is Bo Callahan the franchise player everyone predicted? – Yes he was. He has too much going for him and the weaknesses that Sonny exposes, although it takes him time to work through the yips. $ Pro Bowls and he takes his team to a couple of Championship games before he’s done.

Do Sonny and Ali make it as a couple and as parents? – No chance. Sonny is too headstrong and won’t allow for her to take full control of his heart and family. It ends bad for Sonny, losing his girl, his child and eventually his job when he turns to the bottle after blaming his parents for his messed up life.

Draft Day is a flawed but amazingly enjoyable sports themed drama. There is something for everyone and even more if you like the football parts. It wouldn’t hurt to have someone watching the movie who can explain the nuances of football and the NFL Draft as it certainly overtakes the end of the movie. If you have football fans in the house, it’s got to be on your short list of movies to take in.

Let me know what you think. Message us back on Facebook or Twitter if you agree or disagree here.

Marco

Instantly Rewindable – The Last Dance

Being a basketball guy, I have had a lot of questions from friends about my thoughts on the latest ESPN/Netflix documentary regarding the final year of the Chicago Bulls dynasty. The season of 1997-98 season was certainly a tumultuous one for the franchise and its main players and cast of characters surrounding it. It was fascinating theatre to watch in the way it weaved its way through MJ’s entire career arc while tying it back towards the storylines of the 97-98 season. I was a fan of the era and a fan of the players and I learned more than I thought I would over the series.

There are hundreds of breakdowns of the series, episode by episode, that will give you a much better breakdown than you will get here. My take is that even if you are a modest basketball fan, not a fan of the Bulls, or not even a sports fan, you will get something from this series. There is something for everyone. Of greater value is to watch it with younger sports fans in the home with you. My younger boys, who knew nothing about Jordan other than his “greatness” and his shoes, were captivated from start to finish and I sucked up every moment I spent with them, explaining the nuances of these rivalries and the relationships with the other players they only knew by name. If marketing was MJ’s plan with the documentary, it was pure brilliance on his part as he will capture a whole new group of NBA2K aged fans through this.

In typical Rewindables fashion, we will use the same category structure that we have used for other movies etc.

Our categories for the golden Rewindables  include:

  1. Most Rewindable moment – the moment where you are flipping the channels and you catch this part only to be sucked into rewinding to the start of the documentary.
  2. The “Did you touch my drum kit” award – not necessarily the quote that the world remembers but the one that someone who has seen the movie 25 times would know exactly what movie this is from. Bonus points if you know which show this quote is from.
  3. Best “microwave” actor – the actor who hits the screen with their hair on fire and owns their scenes in such a dominating fashion. Small scenes, big value.
  4. Best “Over the Top” acting moment – the actor who dials it up like this is the moment that he/she wants on the “In Memoriam” snippet at the 2044 Oscars.
  5. The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award – you know, the actor who you’ve seen in 100 shows and never know their name. Every movie has that person.
  6. The “That makes no sense moment” – You know what I mean when you see something that makes no logical sense. That moment.
  7. Bonus category – Unanswerable questions – I love this stuff where the movie ends but the questions linger on. I have no answers but lots of questions.

Most Rewindable Moment

I couldn’t get enough of the detail of the NBA Finals series vs the Seattle SuperSonics in 1996. I was following that series closely but didn’t fully follow the nuances that were happening during that series, specifically regarding the matchups that were or weren’t being played during the series. That was a great Seattle team who just peaked at the wrong time in their era and had to run up against the greatest team in the history of the sport.

The series was ugly at the start where the Sonics went down 0-3 and were home fighting for their lives when Coach George Karl changed his matchup to have Gary “the Glove” Payton matched up against Jordan. This was widely contested at the time as Payton was a much smaller but tenacious defender who should have been no match for Jordan’s size and skill. The Sonics handily won games 4 & 5 and it set up a game 6 showdown where the Bulls were reeling. The Rewindable moment from the documentary-series came with the split banter from the egregious “Glove” talking frankly about the matchup and his banter with his coach and MJ’s rebuttal. Watch this instant classic moment from the series here.

The “Did you touch my drum kit” award

There were some great quotes throughout the series. Some classic characters from the 80’s & 90’s NBA lore had their say on what MJ meant to the league and the sport. Some of them were brutal in their approach to his style of play, trash talking and commitment to being a team player. Will Perdue

“Let’s not get it wrong. He was an asshole. He was a jerk. He crossed the line numerous times. But as time goes on, and you think back about what he was actually trying to accomplish, you’re like, ‘yeah, he was a hell of a teammate.'” — Will Perdue

Others were more succinct about his possible baseball career. I’m sure Tito Francona will live by this quote but won’t live it down either.

“In my opinion, with 1,500 at-bats, he wou’d’ve found a way to get to the major leagues.” — Terry Francona

The best quote came from Reggie Miller who rationalized that while the Indiana Pacers thought they were perched to knock off the Bulls, he realized that MJ was simply not going to let that happen. After taking a royal hammering from the Bulls in that stretch he summed it up with the infamous “Black Jesus” quote here.

My rookie year we were playing the Chicago Bulls, and this is Michael Jordan’s third or fourth year in. And we were playing an exhibition game…most veterans do not like to play in exhibition games, they want to get to the real thing. I’m a wide-eyed, energetic rookie and…Michael’s going through the motions. And Chuck Person—who’s on my team—who is a trash-talker as well, is like, “Can you believe Michael Jordan, the guy everyone’s talking about, who’s supposed to be able to walk on water? You’re out here killing him, Reg! … You should be talking to him!” And I was like, “You know what, you’re right!” “Michael…who do you think you are? The great Michael Jordan? That’s right, there’s a new kid on town!” He kind of looks at me and starts shaking his head. So at half I have 10, and he has four points…end of the game, the second half, he ended up with 44 and I ended up with 12. So he outscored me 40-2. And as he’s walking off, he’s like, “Be sure, and be careful, you never talk to Black Jesus like that.”

Best “microwave” actor

There is no question that very scene that Dennis Rodman is in continues the legacy of the man. When ever he talks, you pay attention just to see what he will say next. What ever he says is more captivating than the sentence prior. There is no end to the mystery around Rodman and there is no doubt that they don’t win the last 2 championships without him in tow. This would have been a very different series without him on the broadcast and the fact that he vanished during the 1995-96 season for a 48 hour Vegas blowout will live on in sports infamy.

Best “Over the Top” acting moment

There could have been several members in this category. Jerry Krause had passed away by the time this was filmed but his demeanour and legacy was all over this thing. He was the architect of the roster, other than Jordan, and continued to add the true antagonist to the organization. Having someone to hate is a powerful motivator for a team. Rodman supplied his own level of drama and there is no doubt that he was generally, over the top in everything he did or said. All that aside, the most over the top moment of the series was the Food Poisoning Game versus Utah in the 1997 championship. Jordan was incredibly sick overnight and barely could get his shoes on to play. The crazy part that was exposed in this series was that his reason for sickness was related to a 2am pizza that he had ordered because he was so distraught about his performance from the previous night’s game. The issue: speculation was that the Salt Lake City pizza joint had “poisoned” the pizza to make him sick. Their strategy worked except they didn’t know that MJ could play through anything to win and poured in 38 points on no sleep and low energy. Truly incredible.

This is not really the kind of show where you don’t know who the actors are but there were a few “new” characters introduced in the series, who the world never knew:

Gus – the fatherly, trusted security man. Jordan loved him so much he brought him to the ROAD games too.

The perm haired security guard – named as the “Sniff Brothers” for the way they sniff the jocks but full of colour in the way he roams the old Chicago Stadium. He is also one of a few people in the world who successfully trolled MJ enough to become his own meme.

Scottie Burrell – He’s a rookie in the second of the 3 championship and the constant whipping boy for MJ’s threats and barbs. He needed to voice his frustrations at parts of the team and had to pick his victims well. The constant there was that Burrell was calm and cool under the heat of the spotlight and though Jordan tells him after the 6th championship that he better not see him again in the future, deep down Burrell gave the greatest gift to these teams, an outlet for MJ to bully and an outlet that he could sound off to.

The “That makes no sense moment”

It comes from the most shocking revelation in the series. Dennis Rodman left the team for 3 days to go on a binge or whatever the hell he wanted, in Vegas, with Carmen Electra, during the middle of the season AND MJ had to go to Vegas and pull him out! What the hell just happened!

Can you imagine the chaos that should hav created on a normal team? The all-star and future HOFer going AWOL on a drug and sex filled binge on the greatest sports team of all time and only topped by the fact that the greatest player bails him out. Can you imagine the conversations that were being had in that Vegas hotel room between he and Jordan. You could tell that MJ had a smirk on his face while reflecting on his moments getting him out. I’m sure Jordan has his own skeletons to hide but that one may have even impressed him. It’s worth the watch again.

Unanswerable questions & Conclusions

I have one amazing takeaway from the end of the series. Jordan swears they could have won their 7th chip if they had come back but the world will never know. Jordan feel robbed of the opportunity even to this day. Would they have won if the came back?

I speculate that they would have been back in the finals, had they put the band back together. A few reasons:

  1. The 1998-99 season was strike shortened with a lockout. This would have helped the old guy Bulls get some rest and come back for the sprint that a 53 game season provided.
  2. The East was a mess. Miami was the best team but was knocked off in the first round by New York, who ran the table to the finals thereafter. Indiana took a step back and Orlando was a year away. It was there for the Bulls to run that table.
  3. San Antonio was good, winning it all, but young and soft. They would have had a hard time taking the pounding from the veteran Bulls. The mauled the Knicks in the final as NY was softer than they were.

All in all, this was basketball royalty gold. Sure, I’m a round ball fan and would probably watch a 3 show series on almost any NBA start from 1970-2000 but there would be very few that could fill in the basketball story with more commerce, scandal, death, gambling and passion. He had it all and they told most of it here. MJ is no dummy when it comes to marketing and you couldn’t pick a better time to remind the world of your importance to it, than to hit us during a lowdown. He pulled the strings to launch early and the rest is COVID history. We are all better for the decision.

The Sports Rewindables #1 – Hoosiers

Where else would I start but to review, arguably the greatest sports movie in history. The 1986 sports spine tingler, Hoosiers remains the pinnacle for sports movies and to this day, gives me the chills during the crescendo of the film. Directed by David Anspaugh, better known for his work on TV hits like Hill Street Blues and Miami Vice, pulls the real life tale of the 1954 Milan, Indiana high School basketball state champions into the fictitious Hickory Hoosiers. The names and faces aren’t real but the drama and character building feel like a true movie classic.

You can go to Wikipedia and get a full recap on the plot and cast here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoosiers_(film) but on the Rewindables we will focus on the awards that should have been given out for the movies we select. Our categories for the golden Rewindables  include:

  1. Most Rewindable moment – the moment where you are flipping the channels and you catch this part only to be sucked into rewinding to the start of the movie.
  2. The “Did you touch my drum kit” award – not necessarily the quote that the world remembers but the one that someone who has seen the movie 25 times would know exactly what movie this is from. Bonus points if you know which show this quote is from.
  3. Best “microwave” actor – the actor who hits the screen with their hair on fire and owns their scenes in such a dominating fashion. Small scenes, big value.
  4. Best “Over the Top” acting moment – the actor who dials it up like this is the moment that he/she wants on the “In Memoriam” snippet at the 2044 Oscars.
  5. The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award – you know, the actor who you’ve seen in 100 shows and never know their name. Every movie has that person.
  6. The “That makes no sense moment” – You know what I mean when you see something that makes no logical sense. That moment.
  7. Bonus category – Unanswerable questions – I love this stuff where the movie ends but the questions linger on. I have no answers but lots of questions.

Most Rewindable Moment

Like many movies, the climax of the show will always grab you but there are more subtle moments throughout where you see it and the remainder of the movie is like a freight train rolling downhill from there. The moment where the movie finally captures you and you are “all in”. for me that moment is when the town of Hickory is having a referendum about whether Coach Dale (Gene Hackman) is to be fired because he has crossed a line with the boys and the team. Basketball is a religion in Indiana, after all. Jimmy Chitwood, the team star player enters the town hall and egos the famous line to the community “Coach stays, I play. He goes, I go”. The captivating selflessness by the star player, saved the coach and turned the angry mob around. The rest of the movie is pure gold from here. Try and turn it off.

The “Did you touch my Drum kit” Award

I came around to the moment where Coach Dale walks the team into the cavernous championship stadium and the boys are immediately intimidated by the size and the possibility of the sheer number of fans who will come to watch them play. In a classic coach move, he tries to alleviate their concerns by proving to them that the dimensions of the court are exactly the same as the one on their small town school of 60 kids back home. Coach Dale pulls out the measuring tape to prove that the hoop is still 10 feet high and states “I think you will find that it’s the exact same measurements as our gym back in Hickory.” Concerns alleviated and instant chills for an old ball coach like me.

Best “microwave” actor

Only one actor completely takes over the screen, every time they are on it even though they are not in more than a handful of scenes. Dennis Hopper hits the screen as Shooter Flatch, the father of one of the players and the local town drunk. Besides his favourite drink, he knows basketball and hits the screen hard with his mixture of a man who is grappling with his issues but grasping the opportunity to show his worth to the town folk and more importantly, his son. He is magnetic to the scenes he’s in and convinces the viewer that he is a fallen man who wants to do better. Magnetic.

Best “Over the Top” acting moment

Although, he is a tour de force in the movie, Gene Hackman (as Coach Dale) is always on the verge of over-hamming the world of coaching into something unrecognizable. He is by far and away the best performance in the movie but his desire to do it “his way” and make the whole community despise every move he makes is, at times, too much. Would I change a thing about the way he plays it? Not a chance. It’s this type of strong character that makes the whole movie work and leaves an indelible impression on the typecast for future movie coaches. Congratulations Gene!

The “What show have I seen him/her in before” award

This one has to go to our man Chelsie Ross, who plays the parent of one of the main players on the team but also represents the main antagonist in the movie. He speaks for the town folk and provides the biggest threat to Coach Dale until he can prove his hard-ass style is a winning style. Where has he been before? Most famously are his sports movies roles as the “only” starting pitcher the the Major League, Eddie Harris and in Rudy as Notre Dame head coach Dan Devine. He shows up here and there as “that guy” who builds the plot but no one knows who he is.

The “That makes no sense moment”

You could go a bunch of different ways here:

Why would a renowned college coach come to a hick town and coach a bunch of scrubs? What would he hire the town drunk to assistant coach when he knows it will go bad? What would possess him to take on the whole damn town that is clearly crazy for basketball?

I’m going with the final shot. It makes no sense to me as an amateur coach that the veteran coach of the South Bend Bears would allow Jimmy Chitwood (who has been dismantling them in the second half) isolate on the final shot of the game. I’m thinking the conversation went like this:

Coach: “Here’s what were going to do. Number 15 has been tearing us up for the past 25 minutes. He’s got about 30 points, made 1 layup and is lights out from the perimeter. We’re going to put Bobby on him straight up and force him to shoot from 20 feet.”

Players:

The rest is history and with it so went the Indiana lore of one Jimmy Chitwood. No doubt, it’s the exclamation mark on the movie and a well-shot sequence but equally perplexing why that was their strategy. On the other side, Coach Dale is going to be run out of town on a rail if he misses but everyone knew that shot was going in. Here is the moment for the sake of it.

Conclusion and Unanswerable Questions:

All in all, Hoosiers is a sports classic that isn’t without its flaws but completely rewindable if you come across it on TV. I was left with questions at the end of it:

Did Jimmy go to College or maybe even Pro? I say he had lot’s of interest from colleges in the area but his silent demeanour and tricky past always got in his way. He’s selling insurance in the nearest “big” town to Hickory.

Did Shooter actually kick the booze after drying out? Again, I say no. The sweet taste of Cherry Whiskey gets the best of him again and he succumbs to the pressures of fatherhood. The ending is not great for the Picket Fence mastermind.

Did Norman and Myra stay together after? I’m going yes here. He’s lucky to have a younger woman in his life and she is happy that he is going places with this coaching gig. He ends up coaching Div II college and she likes the fact that she can teach at the bigger high school in the area.

Truly unanswerable but awesome to think through. Add your comments on your favourites and watch for more Rewindable reviews in the coming weeks.

Papagrande

Great Canadians who could stop the world

The title doesn’t quite tell the whole tale. In the past week, Canadian music lovers are mourning the passage of one of the greatest singer songwriters we have seen. Gord Downie of the Tragically Hip passed away this week and as Mary said to me upon hearing the news, “They were the sound of my university life.” What has been more amazing to me has been the media attention that his battle with terminal brain cancer has garnered. Certainly, his story is tragic, if for no other reason that at 53 years old, he left behind a wife and family and like so many other Canadians, he didn’t reach his full life plan. This story is one told daily by hundreds of Canadians who battle disease and sometimes lose so what makes him different? The answer of course was his footprint on Canadiana and the audio legacy he left behind. Most of us leave a footprint on the family and friends we touched along the path of life. His arc allowed him to touch so many more with his committment to cancer research along the final months of his life.

This raised a fascinating question this weekend, while sharing a dinner party with our friends Michelle and Alan. The question was posed, “If Gord Downie’s life made Canada stop for a few days, which other Canadian passing would reach the same impact?” From there, we needed to set some parameters to guide this wine fuelled debate.

Criteria:

  1. They must be 50+ and be in the stages of life where a passing could become probable. Although a plane crash carrying Justin Beiber would make world-wide news, the probability was not likely, nor predictable.
  2. They must have been relevant to us Canadians for 20+ years. Someone who has entered our conscious in the latter years of their life, cannot be held in the same reverence as someone who spans generations of families.
  3. The criteria were that their passing would be major news on Canadian media for 3 or more days while they had to make news in the US or world markets for at least a day. Of course, this became a limiting step on scientists or writers who may not have the national media notoriety needed.
  4. No Prime Ministers allowed. Of course, they would grab attention all over the world regardless of how long ago they were in office. No debate needed here.

This was no easy task to run through the names of people who would stop the Canadian clock if they passed away today. We narrowed the list from hundreds, down to 50 and then to a dozen, who we agreed would have an impact.

 

Honourable Mention:

Howie Mandell

Pamela Anderson

Keanu Reeves

In their own way, they all have reason to be within the top 12 but fell just outside of it. Howie Mandell has seen a resurgence in his reality TV career but really never was huge 20 years ago. Pam Anderson was massive during her Baywatch days but doesn’t fully resonate today. Keanu Reeves is the most interesting of the discussion because he was huge 20 years ago and again today but ultimately was too average in the middle to get 3 days worth of Canadian press because of it.

Canadian Legends:

Alex Trebek

The man is truly an institution in the game show industry. He continues to be relevant within the vernacular of Canadians as well as within any trivia contest you may play. The man has made a complete persona out of smug let apologetic answers to useless trivia. You are lying if you say you haven’t mimicked him when answering with “Ooh no, is was What was the Pythagoras Theorem.”

Donald Sutherland

We had our struggles separating the two Sutherland boys but ultimately Papa Sutherland met the criteria. He was relevant in the 70’s with MASH and Kelly’s Heroes and remains the same today with THe Hunger Games. At 82 he is now reaching legendary status with accolades planned to present him with a honourary Oscar for lifetime achievement. You don’t earn the golden statue without being great.

Neil Young

Buffalo Springfield, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and his solo career make him a surefire hall of fame Canadian. The man is one of Canada’s greatest singer songwriters and continues to be a draw in concert well into his 70’s. Heart of Gold is one of the best songs sung by a Canadian artist and the man owns countless Grammy’s and Juno’s. Revere his magic while you still can.

Canadian Gold:

Shania Twain

I had no idea how worldly popular this artist was until this debate. She has 5 Grammy’s with 4 number one hits on the US charts and was THE biggest country star of the 1990’s. She remains relevant today with sell out concerts to new generations of fans and appearances on the Voice. Replay some of her hits and you will remember why she is the biggest Canadian cross-over star.

Bryan Adams

For people born in the 70’s and who grew up in the 80’s, Bryan Adams was Canadian music. The remainder of the 80’s stars who came after him should kiss the ground he walks on. His 13 number one hits including “Everything I do, I do it for you” lasting an incredible 16 weeks at number 1 in the US, make him an untouchable. Tack on 15 Grammy nominations and several Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for soundtracks and you realize what a gift he is.

Bobby Orr

You could debate that Bobby Orr had the greatest 10 year career of any pro athlete in any sport, ever. He is revered by a generation of hockey fans who will not accept any argument that there is anyone better. He is the only defenseman to lead the league in scoring, twice and scored an incredible number of points in a career shortened by knee injuries. He had 8 Norris trophies for best defenseman  and left us with countless highlights of a player who was before his time in skill. Number 4, Bobby Orr!

Don Cherry

The man has been the Canadian TV star for the past 30 years. Incredible considering he is literally on the tube for 6 minutes a week but has become appointment TV for millions every Saturday night. His crazy pattern suits and high collar dress shirts are part of the image as much as the bold statements and personal attacks on any other nationality except Canada. That stance alone has made him a God to hockey fans and the world would come to stop should he not be on air next Saturday night.

The royalty of Canadiana:

Michael J Fox

He was only the sweetheart of American comedy TV in the 1980’s. Hit shows such as Family Ties, Spin City and the epic Back to the Future Trilogy make him a legend of modern TV. His public battle for and against Parkinson’s disease make him completely relevant to today’s Canada. He has handled this debilitating disease with the grace and honour that all of us can be proud of and all the while, he continues to act his way through role in movie and TV. True class.

Jim Carrey

For most of the 1990’s, Jim Carrey was the biggest comedy star on the planet. starting with his classic role on “In Living Colour” and through massive hits like “The Mask”, “Ace Ventura”, and “Dumb and Dumber”, he became a legend. Countless hits followed, many with critical acclaim including a Golden Globe award. The man could star in a movie about building sand castles or ice fishing and have it gross $100 million. That’s truly the sign of a star. His shines brightly for all Canadians.

Celine Dion

Simply said she is one of the biggest recording stars on the planet and proudly Canadian. She was massive worldwide with her hits and her Vegas show pulls people in year over year to catch a glimpse of her brightest moments. Titanic was a huge hit but her music within it is as much a part of its legacy as the movie ever was. She gracefully managed her life through the death of her husband and continues to be relevant to the newest of her fans with her voice attached to the best of the TV reality shows. There will not be a greater music star in our generation.

Wayne Gretzky

He is Canada. He brought the country something special when the Oilers won all of those Stanley Cups in the 1980’s. What we didn’t know then that we do know now is that through those years he became the face of the country around the world. His hockey accolades aside (and they are mind boggling), he became a national treasure whether you cheered for other teams or not. Today he is back involved with the Oil and continues to say and do the right things in the mold of the Greatest living Canadian would. The Great One is really the Greatest One.

You may agree or disagree but that’s what makes this such a fun topic. Have your own debate and let us know what you think.

Another awesome night of classic rock

If I said that a top 100 all time rock group rolled through Calgary this week you might be left thinking, who was it? Duran Duran? The Police? Starship?… The concert was so entertaining that it forced Mary to Google and remember just how big these guys really were in their heyday. We agreed that they were BIG-TIME.

Billboard Top 100 artists of All-time

Foreigner came and went through Calgary on Wednesday night and left the packed crowd at the Jubilee raving about their energy and 40 years of hits. We were entertained by the classic Canadian 80’s hair band, Honeymoon Suite, in the opening act. These guys are personal favorites of Mary’s and myself and have been known to carry its own concert in this city. They shredded their way through their biggest hits, still nailing the hard notes while throwing a lot of energy into rousing the crowd up. Although this group will not make anyone’s top 100 artist list, they were a significant player on the Billboard charts from 1983-86 and their hits still get your attention on classic rock stations around the world.


The crowd was ready for Foreigner and they hit the stage hard with a rousing rendition of Double Vision and the energy never stopped all night. Over 90 minutes, we heard hit after hit with this partially reconstituted group and we loved every minute. Mary and I struggled to narrow our favorite 5 songs from the night, to make this list.

  1. Urgent – Foreigner

Reaching #1 in Canada in 1981, this crushing song and beat made the entire night for me . The saxophone solo that was played in the studio version was masterfully replicated on stage with amazement to us all. When you listen to the song on radio, you lose the passion that goes into that solo and the compliment that the sax plays to the overall song. Plus who hasn’t sung the words “urgent, urgent…..emergency” in this shower singing life?

2. Love Changes Everything – Honeymoon Suite

This hit reached #9 in Canada in 1988 and the beat and lyrics bring you right back to that date. This is a classic Canadian rock song with everything you want in a fast beat, hard guitar song. Put it on in your car and feel the 80’s again. You also better prepare for the amazing 80’s hair in this video.

3. Jukebox Hero – Foreigner

Simply put, one of the best rock ballads of all-time. This classic song which reached #2 on the Billboard charts may be better known to younger kids from it’s difficulty to play on Guitar Hero. To us grey beards, it is one of those songs that 100 years from now, future rock cyborgs will play this songh and still chant the slow chorus “JUKE BOX HERRRRRRRO!”

4. Wave Babies – Honeymoon Suite

You know the line. “Waaaaaaaaaave Babies when they’re lying on the sand”. It’s one of those songs that even non-Suite fans hear on the radio and immediately know the tune of the chorus. In 1984, this was a massive Canadian hit which made Honeymoon Suite relevant on the US charts as well. You won’t mind the classic 80’s beach body video that celebrates its arrival.

5. I Want to Know What Love is – Foreigner

This was the only #1 hit that Foreigner ever had and it is a classic through and through. “I’ve got to take a little time, a little time to think things over….” You know that you know every word in the first stanza and you can yell the chorus. That’s what makes this one of the all-time greatest love songs sung between dudes with huge hair and girls who think said dudes are still awesome, even though the 80’s are long gone. Refresh yourself on the greatness

Mary and I continue to knock off our list, classic band after another. Stay tuned for the next one.

Marco

 

Must see TV – The Vietnam War documentary

Ken Burns and Lynn Novak spent the better part of 10 years to try and repaint the graphic picture of the Vietnam War. Their 18 hour epic is possibly the most gripping documentary I have been subject to.

Like many of us who did not live during this war, our knowledge of this period of time can be summed up in the following:

  • Vietnam war movies like Platoon, Full Metal Jacket & Apocalypse now
  • The Kent State shootings of 1970
  • The treatment of veterans by American protesters upon their return

These issues certainly are presented in depth during the documentary but there are so many more nuances to the war and its affect on the people who fought it. Of fascination to me were the dissection of the way that the Vietnam draft process shaped the discord with the USA during those years. It is now said that those of wealth or influence who were able to have their service deferred for a year, forced another, poor American son into action for 2 years. The commentary by military leaders about their experiences and relationships during the battle, give you chills. These leaders knew that they were sending these young men to their inevitable death and there was nothing that could be done to stop it. The other interesting aspect of the documentary was the political impacts that the war had on the US Presidents and the logic that was being rationalized to remain in this conflict, when much of the nation was against the reasoning. The Cold War and the threat of the Communists taking hold of another country, drove the USA braintrust to compound bad decisions and remain in a war they couldn’t win.

In the process, almost 58,000 men and women lost their lives and thousands more came hame injured, many critically. The psychological scars from the war have tormented those who were there, from the day it ended. The participants of this war, gave brutal context to the scene that played out and were ready to tell their stories.

Attached here is the NY Times review of this epic and it frames the story for you. Make some time for this story and be forever changed from the voices who lived to share the story.

Marco

The Vietnam War Documentary review

A slave to sport….again

Here we go again. The summer is long over and school is starting to hit the homework phase where kids are now coming home with the first waves of math and science review. The leaves are starting to turn to colour and there is a nip in the morning air. What does all of that mean…. We are again a slave to sport.

I don’t want to make it sound like it’s all bad but it sure sneaks up on your weekend plans. Mary and I were discussing what was on the go this weekend. She is a week into the recovery on her surgery and under doctor orders to not drive. When we started running through the agenda for Saturday, it was spretty clear that we were going to become the lowest paid UBER driver in the city, shuttling kids to and from sports events.

We have been down this road before. We knew what we were getting into when the boys were signed up for hockey/basketball. Like all parents, we want to spend time watching the boys play and get great enjoyment out of their successes while agonizing in their struggles. The part that shocks us every year is how quickly it takes over your life and dictates what your schedule looks like. For some reason, we just cannot get our act together in the weeks prior to this kick off, and that has a carryover into sport season.

Groceries… no chance. Thankfully Superstore is open until 11pm nightly or we might not eat. Clean up the house…choose your poison. Unless you are out of dishes or underwear, it is difficult to make the time needed. Walk the dog….think again. The days are shorter and shorter so your pooches will have to enjoy a run around in the backyard. Sleep in on the weekend…..are you kidding? You have a better chance of passing out in your mashed potatoes on a Saturday night. See some friends….what friends? The memory of a summer BBQ floated away like the waft of that steak you cooked yourself in July. The more kids you have in activities, the smaller your chance is of salvaging anything in the fall schedule.

September really is an incredible economic boost to your community. Back to school costs, school fees, sports/activities fees, childcare fees and costs that re-emerge with working, all take it’s toll on families. Besides or pocketbooks, we are poorer in time. The blessing of the summer months sure kicks us square in the balls in September. We milk th summer right up to Labour Day and when the calendar turns to September, you have to look back at those months and ask yourself, “could I have been better prepared for this onslaught?”

We all know the answer here is “I should have but summer is so short!” Canadian summers are in short supply and should be enjoyed and relished. To hell with organization in your life. Most families pay the piper for that fun and we are all ok with it. So while you are stuck in traffic to get to dance school, shoving Tim Hortons into your kids on the way to basketball practice or walking from 12 degree weather into what seems like -100 degree flash freezing in the proverbial Canadian ice rink, smile about what your August looked like. We earned that time away from the grind and equally, we earned the shock of what sport season does to your family. Hang in there everyone. Hockey season is over in March.

Marco

Huey Lewis & the News rocks the 403

Huey Lewis turned a regular Tuesday night into a fantastic blast back to the 80’s. Mary and I have seen an array of “classic” artists at various facilities around Calgary and we usually go into these events with tempered expectations. Every once in a while, we realize that father time has not latched onto someone the way it’s supposed to. Tonight’s shocker was that Huey Lewis and the News can still bring it, in their late 60’s.

Pre-concert, Mary and I shared some stories around our favorite songs of the News. We hoped that we would see some of the hits and that he wouldn’t get too cute playing his new stuff (they all have new stuff don’t you know…). They didn’t disappoint us and hammered the hits for 2 hours.

Mary’s top 3:

If This is It

Stuck with You

Doin it all for my Baby

 

Marco’s top 3:

Jacob’s Ladder

The Power of Love

Walking on a Thin Line

To our surprise, they started off the show with an energy and gusto that we didn’t see coming. Heart of Rock and Roll, I Want a New Drug, Hip to Be Square and a crushing rendition of Heart and Soul brought the place to their feet early. He is an affable guy who played to the crowd in Calgary by reminding everyone of the previous concerts he was here for, right back to his first run in ’85. He mixed in some new music to, as he described, “make the band happy” while playing a couple of acapella songs, just to prove he had the range left. He may have slipped a bit but the band was fantastic and his showmanship was top notch.

When the encore cheer went on for 4-5 minutes, the band returned to crank their only Billboard #1 hit, The Power of Love to which he noted, “when we wrote this song we had no idea that……we would have to play it every day of the rest of our lives!” This was met with a raucous cheer and they didn’t disappoint. Mary got her wish with the love ballad, Stuck with You and the night was complete.

The Grey Eagle Casino is a great venue to watch a concert, with virtually no bad seats in the house. We continue to find reasons to attend these concerts from yore and always come away with an appreciation that we went to see these guys live, one more time. Foreigner is next up in October.

Find a way to be there if you can before these guys are gone. You won’t regret the experience.

 

 

 

The greatest 11 games of the year

With apologies to the World Series, NBA Championships and Stanley Cup Finals, the greatest 11 games of the year and coming up in the next 4 weeks. Correct, that represents the 11 games that encompass the NFL playoffs and the glory starts this weekend.

Sure, I am biased towards my teams and the games they play in. This weekend, I hope to enjoy my Pittsburgh Steelers whollup the Miami Dolphins  this Saturday night and hopefully make a run into the latter parts of the playoffs. This weekend and the following one are tremendous TV weekends. There are 4 games each weekend starting with wildcard weekend and following up with the divisional round next weekend. Eight games and a wonderful display of smash mouth football.

Each game is an event to itself. The media attention from the national media is intense and you could watch this content all day long. The games are staggered between Saturday and Sunday making the attention on each game so much greater. The fans are completely immersed in the event and the tailgating before and after the events is off the charts. Go to any bar in this city and they will have the games on AND the sound will be turned on in the establishment. It’s a big deal.

This is no guarantee that the games will be entertaining though. Often the games that look the best on paper (Giants vs Packers) turned out to be duds. The games that no one cares about (Raiders vs Texans) can become instant classics. This is not the CFL. This version of football is as brutal as it is graceful. They literally punch each other in the mouth and wow you on the same play with the speed and skill of the finest athlete you will find. This is football, American style, and I can’t get enough of it.

Of course, it will end up with the Superbowl on February 5th which to many is a national holiday and to others it represents a party to hang with friends and watch the TV commercials. The reason it crosses those borders and appeals to everyone is because it is the greatest sport spectacle there is with the media attention of the paparazzi. The 10 games that determine the combatants for that game are for the true NFL fan. Make some time to watch a bit this weekend and see whether you agree.

Go Steelers!

Marco