Monday, December 27, 2010

A Thriller in the Chiller!

Also known as "MC and Dad's Annual Bears-Related Heart Attack." 

I will never stop saying this. It happens every year. I come home for Christmas, plop myself in our den/TV room wearing all sorts of Bears gear (this year, a brand new Bears hoodie that I got as a Christmas gift over my Devin Hester jersey), and the game we watch damn near kills us. Sometimes, it gets so bad, that I think my mom and sister leave the house/move to a distant part of it intentionally so that they don't need to hear my dad and I going utterly ballistic for three hours.

Ok. So here's what was so logic-defying about this game. We've got the #8 defense in the league (Bears) meeting the #5 defense in the league (Jets). Put these two teams out in extreme cold and snow and make them play on turf that's probably worse than frosted kitty litter. And what do you get?

A 38-34 shootout, of course! I thought it would be a Bears blowout when the Bears scored 10 points easily. Then I thought it would be a Jets blowout when the Jets scored 24 in the second quarter and the Bears looked like they couldn't remember if they put their underwear on backwards or not. The Bears went into the locker room down by seven. And then came the third quarter, a scoring frenzy of positively epic proportions in which the Bears staged a furious comeback and Jay Cutler threw three touchdowns in like, eight minutes and positively hung the Jets' secondary out to dry. 

It was like they took uppers at halftime, or entered a barbarian-esque berserker phase, or sold their souls, or borrowed the Scoring Machine from the University of Oregon or maybe the Saints. It was like watching someone who is really good at Madden 11 beat someone who is abysmal at the same game. I've never seen anything quite like it. The Bears' offense under Mike Martz has been struggling to find an identity all year as Martz has been experimenting with the playbook (sometimes with disastrous results), but I like the recent incarnations, in which the Bears' prime goal is to score in a manner as quickly and precisely as possible. Cutler was great, Knox was sensational, Hester was magical, Forte was tough as nails, Olsen threw some tremendous blocks, and the O-line even held pretty well. 

The Bears have now scored 78 points in two games in which the defenses ran circles around themselves trying to contain Cutler and Crew. Had Robbie Gould not missed his field goal, it would've been the first time the Bears have posted back-to-back 40-pointers since 1948. I call this the "Bat-out-of-Hell" offense. Here's a picture of what the Bears' offense looked like yesterday.

All we need now are a couple of 5'9" receivers and for Lovie Smith to cut the sleeves off his sweatshirts. Source: Getty images, Mike Zarrilli.

By contrast, here's a picture of what the Bears' defense looked like yesterday for most of the game.

Where "you" equals "giving up a gerjillion yards against the slant by playing ten yards off the ball. 

Until the end, of course. The fourth quarter was one of those quarters that was such a nail-biter that I nearly chewed off the first digits of several fingers. I'll skip past a couple of the intermediaries and cut to the positively stunning conclusion. Mark Sanchez had the ball with about a buck left on the clock, no timeouts, and the Bears jumped offsides. He found what he thought was a wide-open Santonio Holmes streaking down the sidelines, but at the last minute, Chicago safety Chris Harris flew in front of him to make the game-icing interception. 

Ok. 11-4, folks. I'm generally a pretty big Bears skeptic, but I'm starting to believe in this Martz-Cutler chemistry stuff, and a picture of the two of them now serves as the background of my iPhone. 

And here are a few other observations from yesterday.

Best Way to Get Into the Playoffs: Even though the Jest, erm, Jets lost yesterday, Jacksonville lost in overtime and sent the Jets to the postseason again anyway! They were allegedly cheering in the post-game press-conference when they heard the Jaguars blew it. Ok. I don't understand how the tiebreaker system works. I understand a lot of things about football, but I don't understand this complicated equation involving strength of victory and schedule difficulty and who beat whose division rival. Truth be told, my actual desire to know about how playoff seeding works is on par with the desire to ask Rex Ryan for a foot massage.

Worst Way to Get Knocked Out of The Playoffs: The St. Louis Rams finally pounded any postseason hopes out of utterly dysfunctional San Francisco 49ers. As a result, eccentric coach Mike Singletary was shown the door approximately thirty seconds after the game. A defensive coach with a funny name that I don't remember takes over as interim. So not only do the 49ers look ridiculous in the way they've played, but the brass of the organization looks equally ridiculous in firing the coach in week 15 out of 16. 

Worst Way to Get Literally Knocked Out of the Playoffs: During the Chiefs' stomping of the sleepwalking Titans, Tennessee QB Kerry Collins faced heavy pressure and threw the ball away, where it sailed to the sidelines and hit his own defensive end (William Hayes) in the head and knocked him out of the game with a concussion. (NFL.com) Head coach Jeff Fisher uttered my sentiment exactly, italics mine; "That's kind of how the game went." I kind of want to make a video mashup of the Titans' 2010 miscues and bloopers and dub Yakety Sax over it. I'd bet Colts and Jaguars fans would love it. 

Most Absurd Collapses: Remember when I said that historically, the Chargers are unstoppable in December, and the Cowboys are usually the absolute nadir of suckitude in December? Well, I retract that because they've both been awful this December. Exhibit A: The Chargers, who handed the AFC West title to Kansas City by being torched by the 3-11 Bengals (sans Owens and Ochocinco on top of it), and Exhibit B: the Cowboys, who lost by a single point to Arizona and reportedly made Jerry Jones' head pop like a giant zit.

December Capitalism! Chargers tickets are about $200. From Amazon.com, you can get these Chargers cufflinks for about $50. They look very pretty, but do not give them to your little kids - they're a choking hazard!

To come in the next several days: Second and One's Top Ten hilarious football quotes of 2010.

Friday, December 24, 2010

The Bronze Medal...

I can't believe it. We actually DO have a third-place winner for the Second and One Annual Pre-Bowl Train-Wreck Award. This award, given in mid-to-late December to the college football program that engages in the most unscrupulous activities prior to a bowl appearance, has already occupied its first and second place spots. The third-place spot goes to...

The Ohio State University Buckeyes!

Five Ohio State football players, although not suspended for the upcoming Sugar Bowl, are required to sit out the first five games in 2011 for selling their Big 10 championship rings, jerseys, awards, and miscellaneous tOSU memorabilia, along with accepting "improper benefits". The strangest part of the latter allegations? That the five players, including star QB Terrelle Pryor and four others, traded such goods (and who knows what else) for tattoos at a local tattoo parlor. (ESPN) Pryor insists that he paid for his tattoo(s) fair and square. Fans aren't entirely sure they believe him after it was revealed that even he sold special trinkets given to players as part of a ritual following a defeat of archival Michigan (no doubt twisting the knickers of a few sanctimonious Buckeye purists). As punishment, Pryor et al. are required to pay to charity a sum of money equivalent to that which they received for selling their items.


Join Ohio State's Touchdowns for Tattoos Program!

We give these guys third place because, fundamentally, selling your championship ring isn't really all that bad when compared to the druggies and sex offenders in the first two spots. 

***

There is a great article at Sports Illustrated today about the 32 worst (ie, saddest, gut-punchiest, heart-attackiest) game endings in the history of sports. Everything is covered from boxing to horse-racing. Last Sunday's "Miracle at the New Meadowlands" - in which the Giants blew a 21-point lead at home in seven minutes, failed to anticipate an onside kick, allowed an electrifying kickoff return for the winning touchdown, possibly knocked themselves out of the division title, and then blamed the whole sour mess on the punter - made #8. 



Time for some December Capitalism! Giants tickets? $150. Giants golf balls? $9.95. Getting to see the Giants whacked hard either way? Priceless. 
***

A couple of weeks ago, I went to a tacky Christmas sweater party. My friend John showed up dressed as Santa to distribute candy and small gifts to everyone - it's kind of tradition in my department, where everyone sits in his lap and tells him what they want for Christmas. I told him all I wanted was for the Bears to make the playoffs. And now, if the real Santa may read this in the next 12 hours or so - can we send Da Bears to the Big One?

Merry Christmas everyone. 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

And Now, A Few Thoughts on Bears-Vikes

I would have posted this yesterday, but I have returned home to my parents' house for the holidays, and most of Tuesday was spent waiting in airports for delayed flights. 

Here's a nice summary of the Bears' 40-14 romp over the Vikings. All pictures are from the AP (as in the news service, not Adrian Peterson), and the Chicago Tribune. 

I'm not going to lie. Considering the Bears got roasted like chestnuts the last time they played in a snow-globe, I was nervous as heck about this game, sitting in my boyfriend's apartment eating all sorts of cookies to steady my nerves.

And then, after the Vikings scored, came the sack heard around the world. Six-foot-six (and 270 lb) defensive end Corey Wootton may have very well ended Brett Favre's career last night with his first sack.

And from then on, it was pretty much all Bears. To quote the late Don Meredith: turn out the lights, the party's over.

Other than throwing a bogus interception after getting hit so hard he needed three stitches to his chin, Jay Cutler was terrific, throwing three touchdowns and completing passes to seven different receivers, including guys we haven't seen for a while, like Rashied Davis (nice to see you again, Rashied!).

Also: I have an idea. Since the NFL likes penalizing people for ridiculous things from "excessive celebration" to "disconcerting signals," and likes fining people for even dumber things, how about we fine any team that gets utterly torched by punting/kicking to Devin Hester? The penalty: sheer stupidity.

Of course, we can't neglect the defense. The Monsters of The Midway not only knocked Favre from the game, but had five turnovers, four sacks, three more QB hits, two batted balls, and a partridge in a pear tree.

10-4. See y'all in the playoffs, folks. 

Saturday, December 18, 2010

And We Have A Second Place Winner!

I thought we were done with unsportsmanlike conduct until I read the news!

The Second Place winner for the Second and One Annual Pre-Bowl Train-Wreck Award, given to the college football team most sullied by scandal prior to a postseason appearance is...

The Boise State Broncos!

Come on. Everybody knew that the charmed Broncos were headed toward a cliff. It started when BSU kicker Kyle Brotzman missed two field goals in overtime against Nevada, knocking BSU out of contention for the National Title (moot point, with Oregon/Auburn winning anyway) or any BCS bowl, thus potentially costing the school millions in revenue from merchandising and TV deals. If the shanked kicks weren't enough, some angry fans (in a stunning display of classlessness) harassed Brotzman - even making threats on his life - on various social media websites. BSU is now headed to the MAACO Bowl, whatever the heck that is, to play Utah.

Boise State plays here! Sweet! No, wait, that would be the NECCO Bowl. Apologies.

But it gets worse. A freshman wide receiver for Boise is facing sex crime allegations for some incredibly unsavory things he did in high school. Along with an Idaho State freshman and some other player at a minor school in Montana, BSU's Anthony Clarke is facing allegations of involvement in sexual hazing, in which members of the high school's boys' basketball team were beaten, restrained, and violated. (NSFW details c/o Reuters). This is seriously not funny*, folks, especially now that more victims are coming forward and BSU's bowl game is in four days.

Who will win the third place award? We've already had sex and drugs: is rock-n-roll coming up?

Also: I will be incommunicado for the next 3-4 days; I am traveling home for the Holidays.

*Ok. So this award is for comedy purposes. Maybe we all get a little Schadenfreude from watching a powerhouse get shafted. Maybe my brain brain did turn off when the phrases "tight end" and "forcibly penetrated" were used in close proximity in the above article. Sexual assault still isn't funny, no matter the context. Ergo, the disclaimer.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Drumroll, Please:

...It's time to announce the winner of the Second and One Annual Pre-Bowl Train-Wreck Award! This award, also known as the Tennessee Titans Trophy, is awarded to the college football team that suffers the biggest utter collapse of team morals - and subsequently, team morale - after earning a bowl bid. The dubious honor went last year to the Michigan State Spartans, who suspended at least a dozen football players for their role in a brawl at a fraternity party before the Valero Alamo Bowl.  

This year's winner: the University of Iowa Hawkeyes!

Just days after the announcement that the Hawkeyes will play Missouri in the Insight Bowl, star wide receiver Derrell Johnson-Koulianos was arrested on multiple drug-related charges, including unlawful possession of multiple prescription drugs, possession of controlled substances, and running a drug house. Johnson-Koulianos admitted to using both marijuana and cocaine. Additionally, Iowa's athletic program admitted today that there are "serious flaws" in the way they test their student-athletes for drug use and believes multiple people have been finding ways to buck the system. As if things can't get worse, starting running back Adam Robinson has been suspended from participating in Iowa's bowl game due to an unspecified violation of team rules. The second-stringer, sophomore Jewel Hampton, has transferred out of the program, and another running back, Brandon Wegher, has requested a transfer as well, leaving Ferentz to start true freshman Marcus Coker for the bowl game. Marcus Coker. Is there a greater name for a guy at a school with an apparent drug problem than that?!

These goofy characters are: (a) from a Dr. Seuss book; (b) Adam Robinson and Derrell Johnson-Koulianos; (c) the New Big 10 Divisions?

Speaking of messes in the Big Ten Et Al., the gerrymandering of the conference into divisions is complete, now with ridiculous re-branding. The two divisions will be named "Legends" and "Leaders", according to the BigTelevenTwelve Official Website. These names are silly. See, it's not hard to come up with names for divisions, but the heads of the conference have completely whiffed this one, and whiffing at naming things is like losing a fewest-interception contest to Carson Palmer. Here, in my opinion, are twenty division names which sound better than "Legends" and "Leaders," and I didn't even need two weeks in a boardroom to come up with them!

East and West
Right and Left
One and Two
Blue and Red
A and B
Brain and Heart
Wisdom and Courage
Gin and Tonic
Prose and Poetry
Punch and Judy
Harold and Maude
Thing 1 and Thing 2
Divide and Conquer
Your Dad and My Dad
Starsky and Hutch
Booze and Drugs (Iowa leads the latter, MSU the former)
Watson and Holmes
Toilet and Bidet
Liberals and Conservatives
The Division with Nebraska and the Division Without Nebraska

More to come later.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Lots of Things

Let's see. We've got so much in the news these days. We've got the Saints and Patriots who are making the scoreboard spin, the Big 10 et al's horrible new logo, the choke-tastic Jets, the entire AFC South being garbage, Cam Newton winning the Heisman, Albert Haynesworth getting suspended for refusing to play in any defensive scheme that the Redskins could possibly dream up, the Fighting Nucleophiles winning three straight, my boyfriend shooting the television with a nerf gun whenever the Lions found themselves on the slamming end of a bogus call, and something about a quarterback problem in Cincinnati, but this is all just talk. My favorite piece of news from the past week: the collapse of the Metrodome. If it hasn't been jammed down your throat a million times, the roof of the Metrodome caved in because of a heavy snowstorm that whomped the entire Midwest. Not only is it amazing video, but it happens to be a ridiculously apropos metaphor for the Vikings' entire season! Check it out!


Monday, December 6, 2010

Futility!

The news breaks now that, amid a flurry of midseason coaching turnover, the Denver Broncos have booted out Josh McDaniels after approximately 1.75 seasons, citing both his abysmal record and allegations of cheating by videotaping the San Francisco 49ers at practice. (ESPN/AP). My comment on this is that at least Bill Belichick videotaped someone actually good at football.  

My mass spectroscopist and I (doing our usual routine of Monday morning quarterbacking) got into a discussion of which Coach is next on the hot seat. My vote: Jeff Fisher of the Titans. We hate to make fun of the Titans too much, but if you're 5-7, you haven't scored a touchdown in 13 quarters (and don't appear to be making progress on locating this "end zone," whatever that is), your team has legal and psychological issues, your defensive backfield has more punchouts than Manny Pacquiao, your quarterback is a nutcase, and Randy Moss can't even fix the problem, you're probably pretty well shafted.

Runner up: Marvin Lewis of the now historically awful Cincinnati Bengals, who suffer from whatever syndrome the Detroit Lions have which causes them to play for 48 minutes only (and additionally from whatever disease the Vikings have, which makes them awesome on paper but stinky trash in real life.)

Speaking of Detroit, the Bears are now 9-3 and I couldn't be happier. I'm hoping that the Bears meet the Saints in the playoffs (wild-card, anyone?), so that I can watch this game with my friend Catherine (occasional reader and Saints fan extraordinaire) - with me in Devin Hester's #23 and her in Drew Brees' #9. 

Friday, December 3, 2010

A Funny!

I'm unusually busy today, but this graph I made captures exactly what happens when we play fantasy football.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

The Second and One Christmas Party

Imagine this. 

We love ridiculous allegories around here, so now that it's the holiday season, let's assume that the NFL is one giant Christmas party. So who plays whom (or what) in this ragtag cast of characters that shows up at your apartment on a Friday night?

Brad Childress is like the turkey leftovers you find in the back of the fridge at some point during the first week of the month - You throw them out with a disturbing sense of alacrity as not to offend your guests.

The Dallas Cowboys are a nice, pretty Christmas present with nice, pretty wrapping paper. Always getting torn apart in December. 

The Chicago Bears are Santa Claus. He shows up to your party late, and everybody suddenly believes. How about those two safeties 20 yards deep, huh?

You're welcome, Eagles Fans. Source: Jose Osorio, Chicago Tribune

The San Diego Chargers are the Christmas Tree. Everyone oohs and aahs over how beautiful it is now, but everyone also knows that it'll get tossed out into the backyard come January. 

Halfway through the party, Vince Young walks out angrily and claims that he's not quitting on the party, he's just quitting on the host. 

Josh McDaniels is the obnoxious person who is videotaping the entire thing. Bill Belichick was the same person a couple of years ago - now he's just the guy who sits in the corner and never smiles because he thinks too much rum will make him sick.

Speaking of the rum, we'll have to give this distinction to the Pittsburgh Steelers. A bad encounter with them, and you're hammered.

"Yeah, Yeah. I'm going to be at your place a little late. I have a secondary to score on first." Source: chiefstailgate.net.

Dwayne Bowe is the star of the event, whom everyone wants a chance to talk to and catch up with. Hands down.

You know what happens when you invite a bunch of people over, who just cause mischief, run around, and knock over everything? Those people are the New Orleans Saints.

Brett Favre is the wheezy old guy whom nobody's seen in a while - but you invite him because you feel sorry for him. He wants to show you some pictures - everyone politely declines. 

The Detroit Lions are tacky sweaters. You're sure to see them one at least day a year - and they're still revolting.

Note to all: If you try this punch at my house, I will kick you out too. Source: David J. Philip, Associated Press.

Andre Johnson and Cortland Finnegan, are, of course, the punch. 

The Cincinnati Bengals are the fruitcake. They look pretty in theory, but then they get passed around, everyone has a bite, and the rest goes into the trash.

Derek Anderson has a major meltdown in the middle of the night as well, and walks out shortly after Vince Young does. 

Aye. Caramba!

The Fighting Nucleophiles (official fantasy team of Second and One) are what happens when someone (most notably, Tom Brady) knocks over a candle and burns the whole place down. Seven touchdowns between my receivers this week. (Psst, I'm on the left). Lordy, call the fire department!

Saturday, November 20, 2010

My turn

The Big Ten - A Poem

They beat each other, beat themselves
The Big Ten (Eleven? Is it twelve?)
Sorting out their situation
Needs poetic ministrations

Minnesota gets no liking
Playing lousy like the Vikings
The Gophers showed no rhyme or reason
And Brewster got the boot midseason

The Illini started in a rut
But halfway through, they just went nuts
The BCS now has a glitch
Buckeyes, Hawkeyes, which one's which?

Purdue embodies monstrous fail
By choking on an epic scale
Injuries have stopped them cold
Just like the Colts in black and gold

They could have made a bowl run, too!
But blew their lead to MSU
With one loss only - there to stay
Is Sparty going all the way?

IU just could not remember
That football started in September
Or August, but that doesn't matter
Crimson, creamed; they're stomped and scattered

The Wolverines are made to thrill
They score enough to claim some kills
Yet if out-gunned, it all turns hairy
What happened to their secondary?

Northwestern, Penn State, both together
Futile, fickle, like the weather
One worries about Wrigley's fences
The other, 'bout their coach's senses

Wisconsin only has one mission
Humiliate the whole division
A bowl berth they will surely clinch
By scoring eighty on Bill Lynch

Blowouts, beatdowns, might, and moxie, 
A carousel of loss-by-proxy
Though all these teams will get served lunch
Soon as Nebraska joins this bunch!

Thursday, November 18, 2010

The Amusing Announcing Compendium!

Ok.

I'll admit it.

I am a delinquent blogger. For anyone who still reads this thing: I'm sorry. Things are so busy at work that there's not much else that I can pay attention to. Alas, it is November, and I realize that without a comprehensive update in weeks now, there is a lot of paper sitting around. I've essentially taken to writing down notes on everything during games. My note-pad normally used for chemistry ideas is full of scribbles; backs of envelopes, bill-pay stubs, receipts - nothing has been left unsullied. I also notice that most of it is of the amusing announcing variety. Ergo, I present Second and One's First Annual Amusing Announcing Compendium! (And a Bunch of Other Stuff).

During the Eagles-Redskins Game (the first, not the absolute blood-sport that was this past Monday's game), Eagles fullback Owen Schmitt made some kind of big play. I don't remember what this was because my notes are illegible. Maybe he scored. Maybe he sprung Michael Vick. Maybe he took off his pants and danced around the goalpost. Regardless, whatever he did made an announcer exclaim "Holy Schmitt!"How awesome is it to have a name that doubles as a minced oath (think Meet the Fockers)? Ok, maybe it's terrible.

Truly Special Special Teams: Ok, I've seen a lot of just lousy special teams play this season. Jeff Reed can't kick in his own stadium. The Giants can't punt without getting booed. Covering Devin Hester is harder than covering up government corruption. But we finally have a winner, and it's none other than...the Detroit Lions. Yes, the Lions! They ended a game by throwing a two-point conversion out the back of the end zone thus getting 0-8 Buffalo off the schnide - and this isn't even their biggest gaffe. During week 8, they had a chance to take down the Jets. They came to a point in the third quarter where the Big Losing Cats had just scored and taken back all of the momentum. The Jets had knocked kicker Jason Hanson from the game, and, instead of bringing in, I don't know, the punter or someone who can actually kick to put up the extra point, the Lions instead turned to...300-lb rookie defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh, who doinked the rock off the upright. If there is a worse use for a defensive lineman than this, I'd like to know about it. Short of entering him in a bikini contest, I'm out of ideas.



After Titans cornerback Alterraun Verner speedily returned an interception against the Cowboys, Chris "Boomer" Berman referred to him as "Alterraun After-Verner." Genius!

Graduates of the Bill Belichick School of Opponent Demoralization, Early Valedictorian Candidate: The University of Wisconsin Badgers, content on making a statement that the BCS had ranked them too low, defeated the IU Hoosiers by a jaw-droppingly absurd score of 83-20, setting the Big 10 et al's record for highest score. 83 points. 83 points. Let's do a comparison. The Bears have scored 174 points the entire year! Apparently, IU couldn't stand the right way up and UW thought it was basketball season.

Pseudo-Scientific Analysis: Here is a statistic I crunched. In four of the six Bears victories, Greg Olsen has caught a touchdown. He has not scored in any of the Bears' three losses. Analysts have pointed this fact out as well: seems like when Olsen's in the end zone, the Bears are winning, if we throw out the one game where the Bears were without Jay Cutler. As a scientist, though, I have to caution that we don't know if this is causation ("Olsen causes the Bears to win"), an unrelated correlation ("when the Bears are winning, they utilize Olsen more"), or something different altogether ("When Mike Martz accidentally puts his underwear on backwards, he runs more tight end routes.") Regardless, I have an experiment: keep throwing to him, see what happens. 

During the messy Colts-Bengals contest, the Colts, with their positively staggering (heh) injury report, were described as "a hospital dressed in blue and white" by CBS announcers. I didn't realize just how darn funny this was (the comment, not the Colts' injury report)* until, when I was driving later and I saw the universal road sign for "hospital."

Does this color scheme look familiar?

When Buffalo WR Roscoe Parrish scored against the Bears in week 9, Fox announcers described him as "quick as a hiccup." Needless to say, the hiccup came before the Bills vomited all over themselves by throwing a backbreaking interception at the end of the game.

Northwestern/Penn State. ABC announcers described a receiver's (gosh, I wish I could remember which team's receiver) seemingly effortless route and subsequent six points as "a little dipsy-doodle in the middle." 

Obligatory Fighting Nucleophiles Update: So I lost the Chemical Bowl. It was one of those days where everything fell on its face; c'est la vie. Want to know what was really funny? I won this past week and still don't know how. I did everything wrong. I left Beanie Wells in the lineup and he was inactive. I benched Tom Brady (four touchdowns) in favor of Donovan McNabb, who laid a positively enormous egg at home the day after signing his whopping new contract. I started the wrong everything. My defense (Arizona) had zero points. I had my lineup all bass-ackwards at wide receiver. I won because Dwayne Bowe caught everything thrown to him and because Wes Welker is finally starting to look like Wes Welker again.** I might try this contrarian approach more often!


*Trust me. It's not funny at all. The fantasy football gods, in Week 5 or 6 or whenever it was, decided that they hadn't made enough of a mockery of me at the tight end position last year, and promptly knocked Dallas Clark out for the season. 
**I've been sorely, desperately deprived of the Shrieking Welkergasm for way too long. I have since acquired this Rob Gronkowski character, and look forward to starting my Patriots Trifecta against the Colts, because you know this is going to be a bigger shootout than the end of The Matrix.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Best Poem of the Year

So, as preamble, the Steelers fired notoriously inconsistent (and eccentric) kicker Jeff Reed  - whose field goal percentage had been less than 50% at Heinz Field - and signed former Redskin Shaun Suisham in his place. 

In Sports Illustrated today, Steve Rushin penned this exquisite Ode to Kickers. Repeat: this is not mine. I wish it were: 

They're common men with names uncommon.
(Where have you gone, Uwe von Schamann?)
They're just plain Folks, they're Happy Fellers,
These Robbie Goulds, these Roy Gerelas.

A poet desperate for a segue
Is grateful for Raul Allegre.
And Vinatieri shilled for Snickers,
But no one else loves field-goal kickers.

Their teammates, each, are huge and freakish,
But they're more . . . Ali Haji-Sheikh-ish.
They're K-Marts in a world of Gucci.
(Where did you go, Dean Biasucci?)

*****

I'm sure the four Zendejas brothers
Were each beloved by their mother.
Otherwise -- brotherwise -- Canton plaques
Will never be cast for Gogolaks.

And Chester Marcol of the Packers,
Olindo Mare and Neil Rackers,
Have suffered fortune's slings and arrows,
With sundry Skips and Chips and Garos.

*****

Anderson, Andersen: Which one's which?
It's Pete, not Peja, Stoyanovich?
Del Greco, Daluiso: Which is which?
There's Toni Linhart and Toni Fritsch?

That Ace Ventura: Pet Detective
Was anti-kicker-filled invective.
The villain was a sicko kicker
Who dressed himself in ladies' knickers.

The movie Gus was even sicker:
It cast a jackass as a kicker.
A football horse, half-mule, half-man?
'Twas Bengal kicker Horst Muhlmann.

*****

Two Bahrs once meant field-goal perfection;
Two bars now mean poor phone reception.
Two Bahrs incarnate -- bros Chris and Matt -- 
Wore one-bar facemasks across each hat.

Dramatic Arts -- Ars Dramatica -- 
As performed by Bill Gramatica
Meant leaping, dancing, great emoting -- 
(An ACL torn while showboating).

*****

They don't deserve your scorn or laughter
This band of men who kick points-after.
Kickers and goalposts both, I've found,
Are just built up to get torn down.

Seldom is heard on ESPN
That glorious surname: "Septien."
A Vikings fan, I'm purple-hazy --
My dreams are still Fuad Reveiz-y.

The tank that's named for General Pershing
Is not as strong as leg of Wersching.
In Oslo this man's fans are legion:
Jan Stenerud kicked in Norwegian.

*****

Alone among his fellow kickers
Mike Vanderjagt misspoke while "liquored".
Or so his quarterback insisted.
Before the kicker got C-listed.

And so my eyes got somewhat misty
When gazing on the Bills' Steve Christie.
The Raiders' kicker sure likes his food.
That Cowboy Buehler's a righteous dude.

Has any avis been more rara
Than Dallas great Efren Herrera?
The Dow, the Nasdaq and the Nikkei
Have fewer points than Igwebuike.

******

You couch-bound slobs, ruled by inertia:
Bow down and worship Rolf Benirschke!
The Toe (Lou Groza)! The Foot (Fred Cox)!
And barefoot freaks wearing single socks!

The opposite of bland was Blanda,
Kicked black-and-white, like Kung Fu Panda;
And nerves? Jay Feely could not feel 'em,
And nor can colleague Jason Elam.

They're shunned and roughed and waiver-wired;
One day they're iced, the next they're fired.
John Carney still has not expired.
Joe Nedney has not yet perspired.

******

The chicks might dig a perfect spiral;
Favre's every utterance goes viral.
Americans though still revile
All things described as "soccer-style."

But when these fans go meet their makers,
If heaven's run by David Akers,
He'll cast aside those heathen sinners
Who shunned him when he missed game-winners.

He'll call the roll in Kicker Heaven:
"Bironas, Rob!" and "Butler, Kevin!"
Dempsey's a Saint, Norwood's a martyr.
The Holy Grail's an 80-yarder.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/steve_rushin/11/17/kickers/index.html#ixzz15bNbAdN6

Reposted from: Here.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

The Polamolecule!

It's not very often that my two favorite things (chemistry and football) overlap, but when the stars happen to align and they actually do, hilarity usually ensues. You get things like the following Head and Shoulders ad, featuring a compound - the Polamolecule - made of element No. 43. Genius!

Via Hilobrow, submitted by reader Michael.

FYI, actual element #43 is Technetium, which is radioactive and dangerous, so they're not that far off the mark. Don't forget your, um, safety goggles.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Monday Fallout

The news breaks today that, after a positively nightmarish 1-7 start, Dallas Cowboys coach Wade Phillips has been given the boot. (ESPN Dallas). Offensive Coordinator Jason Garrett has been named in his interim. The change comes less than 12 hours after the Cowboys were murdered on national TV by Green Bay in a 45-7 contest. I'm not sure firing Phillips was the right choice, but someone had to get canned for this fiasco because the last time such naughty and scandalous things happened to Cowboys, Brokeback Mountain won Oscars for it.

***

And now, here's an amazing bloop play that someone sent me earlier, c/o Driscoll Middle School. What is this, a fake timeout? an uncalled false start? The best trick play of the year has just been executed by...twelve year olds. See for yourself! 


To come later: a children's treasury of Truly Special Special Teams.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

The Chemical Bowl

Boyfriend and I are playing each other in fantasy football this week. The 'Nukes take on the Adamantane Assault in the Chemical Bowl* in about 40 minutes. Leading the charge on my end are the always-present Tom Brady and Wes Welker, along with Dwayne Bowe and Steve Breaston (bye week replacement). At running back, we have Beanie "I'm Not Sick But I'm Not" Wells and San Diego fullback Mike Tolbert, who appears to be the new valedictorian in the Joseph Addai School of Goal-Line Powerbacking. I'm starting Tony Moeaki at tight end this week. Readers will recall my love-hate affair with this position last year. It's very firmly "hate" this year, as my team seems to have collapsed like a house of cards the minute Dallas Clark was placed on IR. And I have Robbie Gould at kicker and the Saints' defense. Against Carolina. 

What we hope the Chemical Bowl will be like! Danger! Chemical Weapons Testing! Source: original unknown.

Official Boyfriend of Second and One is starting Carson Palmer, Pierre Garcon, Dez Bryant, Marques Colston, Ahmad Bradshaw, Willis McGahee, Jeremy Shockey, Neil Rackers, and the Jets' D. It's predicted to be a big shootout, but knowing the way our predicting algorithm works this season (read as: not very well), neither of us will get off the ground.

Probably a more realistic depiction of the Chemical Bowl. Source: shutterstock.com.

*Boyfriend is also an organic chemist. "Adamantane" is a funny-shaped, oddly greasy molecule and has nothing to do with him "adamantly" insisting that he's going to win this game.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Good Heavens

Today's completely rideekulous college football score: Michigan survives Illinois in triple overtime in the highest-scoring game of the season. 67-65. 132 points. Six turnovers. 1,237 total yards of offense. Good gravy, these guys are more offensive than the way my trash currently smells. Someone told me earlier this season "Michigan has no defense." Whoever said this: I believe you know. 

Oh. And a few more interesting facts about this game. This also the most points ever scored in a Big 10 et al. conference game. And the last time Michigan played Illinois in basketball, the score was only 51-44. Out-freakin'-rageous. 

Thursday, November 4, 2010

The Plot Thickens!

So it appears the Tennessee Titans have capitalized on the waiver wire and claimed Randy Moss. Hopefully they're trying to rebuild a receiving corps that plays inconsistently (and historically, secondarily to the Titans' ground game). They're often injured (now Kenny Britt is hurt on top of it) and have the general offensive cohesiveness of a bunch of guys that Jeff Fisher found playing catch in an abandoned lot in Nashville.

With this move, Moss joins a completely loco cast of characters who filled the headlines all summer long with their drama, legal woes, and (apparent) propensity for punching people.* Like any soap opera relationships, I give it about a year.  

In even more hilarious news, some people are speculating that the reason the Vikings released Moss was not due to on-field production, team chemistry, or the way he reacted to the media, but rather because of...catering. (USA Today) Reportedly, Moss did not like the food served at a Vikings post-practice buffet last Friday. So, my readers, suppose you play for the Vikings and get served something nasty, like dog food or maybe Sidney Rice's gimpy hip joint. What do you do?

(a) Don't eat it. Simple.
(b) Force yourself to eat a few bites to look like a good citizen. Image is everything, right?
(c) Launch into a profanity-filled diatribe at the catering company and completely mortify your teammates.

Guess which one Randy Moss did? A member of the Vikings staff allegedly told the head of the catering company that Moss threw similar tantrums "every time [the Vikings] had food." 

Note to self: do not invite Randy Moss to dinner. Mouth-watering picture courtesy of Nadia's Kitchen Online.

Other things of note from the Vikings dinner: Brett Favre rigorously avoided the weiners, Jared Allen tackled the waiter, and someone handed Adrian Peterson the gravy. Which he dropped. Everyone groaned.

More to come later.

*If you go to a party and someone on the Titans asks "did you try the punch?" make sure to duck.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Oh, the Drama!

Breaking News (c/o ESPN and NFL Network): Today, on All My Vikings, uber-disgruntled wideout Randy Moss has been waived by the Norsemen of the Apocalypse. The Vikings are reportedly frustrated with Moss' treatment of the media (refusing to speak to them despite being fined, general disrespect and snark) and have thus severed ties with them. Will Favre, and his smashed-up chin and gimpy ankle, be heartbroken? Will Randy be at last re-united with the love of his life, Tom Brady, or cut loose into the devastating wasteland of free agency? Stay tuned to find out!

***

This morning, boyfriend and I were driving to work, and he asked if November First was "All Saints' Day." Well, owing that their defense got me a lot of points in fantasy (even though I lost my game) and those folks in the black and gold pads (a) are still crazy fun to watch and (b) somehow turned Halloween in New Orleans into the biggest freak show this side of the Barnum and Bailey Circus, yes. I will answer that I do believe it is All Saints' Day. 

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Bye Week for the Bears

...But it doesn't mean I'm not thinking about them anyway. I carved this yesterday morning. I hope some Packers fan kid doesn't smash it!


Another one bites the...MWA HA HA HA!

As like every other week in college football, a bunch of highly ranked teams ended up, well, buried, by unranked or lower-ranked teams. Upsets happen. C'est la vie, right? 

This time, to celebrate October 31st, Second and One was able to provide photographic evidence of these untimely deaths! Click each for spooky, in-yer-face Hi-Res.





Mwa ha ha ha ha ha!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Some Humor, c/o Facebook, Now with More Halloween Goodies!

Someone saw this posted on Facebook this morning and was nice enough to send it my way:

"Put this on your status if you know someone/are related to someone who suffers from being a Dallas Cowboys Fan. Being a Cowboys Fan is a real disorder and should be taken seriously. There is still no known cure for DCF and sympathy does not help. But we can raise awareness. 90% of Cowboys fans won't repost this because they don't know... how to copy and paste."

So I got to thinking about an interesting question, namely, "if every team in the NFL could collectively dress up as anything for Halloween, what would they go as?" The results of this amusing experiment (that is distracting me from my actual experiments) are posted below. Let's start with the NFC North:

Chicago Bears: A large, fuzzy teddy bear. Nothing to fear, right? The costume has to provide more defense than Cover-2, whatever it is.
Green Bay Packers: A zombie. They're walking dead but they're somehow still alive.
Minnesota Vikings: A pumpkin, because those tend to get carved up this time of year.
Detroit Lions: My boyfriend's car. Something's always broken somewhere.

New Orleans Saints: An obscure character from an obscure cartoon, whom everyone looks at with narrowed eyes and asks, "who are you supposed to be, again?"
Atlanta Falcons: An elevator. Always up and down.
Carolina Panthers: does anyone remember that scene in The Sixth Sense where we see that kid who turns out to have half his head missing?
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: A clown. 'Nuff said. 

Seattle Seahawks: A Rubik's Cube. Yeah, we can't figure them out either. 
San Francisco 49ers: A dead, rotting corpse.
Arizona Cardinals: A mouse. Squeaks and runs away scared. 
St. Louis Rams: A dog. Chases its tail, makes a lot of noise, and sleeps all weekend.

The famous, perplexing Seattle Seahawkcube. Alternatively, the whole NFC West can just dress as an outhouse. Or maybe cat vomit. Or a bag of ebola.

New York Giants: Frankenstein. Suddenly zapped to life.
Washington Redskins: A Jack-in-the-box. Surprise!!!
Philadelphia Eagles: Bride of Frankenstein. She also got tangled up with some not-so-nice guys.
Dallas Cowboys: A tiny rubber ball. Insignificant and poses a choking hazard.

Indianapolis Colts: Everyone the morning after the Halloween party who is too hung-over to get out of bed.
Tennessee Titans: Dexter Morgan. Or Freddy Krueger. You generally don't survive if you meet either of them on a bad day, either.
Houston Texans: A SCUD missile. Offensive, but inaccurate. Blows up.
Jacksonville Jaguars: Toilet paper. Do I even need to explain this one?

Baltimore Ravens: A hammer. Pounds people.
Pittsburgh Steelers: A sledgehammer. Pounds people harder. Those so inclined to pervert this into a Roethlisberger joke can do so at their own discretion.
Cleveland Browns: You know that disgusting feeling you get in your mouth when you wake up at 1PM and feel really nasty but you're just glad you actually woke up? That feeling.
Cincinnati Bengals: What's depicted in the picture below. 

Rawr!! When I grow up, I wanna be just like Carson Palmer and totally blow it against Cleveland! Source: the adorably-named babyanimalcostumes.com

New England Patriots: Casanova. Man, that guy scored a lot
New York Jets: My car. Frequently drives over people who are in the way and then makes the news.*
Miami Dolphins: A refrigerator. Always running. Plus, it keeps you cool in Miami.
Buffalo Bills: A bee. Flies around; gets whacked.

Kansas City Chiefs: A maniac with a chainsaw. Scary as hell. 
Oakland Raiders: a screwdriver. Well, they're always finding a way to screw someone, and it's a lot more PG than the other jokes I could come up with.
Denver Broncos: A hippie. High, but going absolutely nowhere. 
San Diego Chargers: A treadmill. Kind of cool in theory if someone could dress up as a treadmill, but they'd soon realize that they're still just for walking on. 

Did anyone hear the joke about Norv Turner dragging Philip Rivers into an electronics store? "Please" Norv pleaded. "I need a refund on this Charger. We can't get any power." Source: Indianapolis Examiner

Everyone, have a safe and happy Halloween weekend! More posts to come soon.

*Facetiousness here. I've never been a car accident.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Ten Questions for The Bears

What a lousy football weekend. Both the BCS and the NFL make no sense right now. My fantasy team is playing against someone who doesn't have a quarterback - and they are still struggling. My favorite college team got Belichicked*. I didn't even watch it, and instead, boyfriend and I ran through a corn maze and picked pumpkins. So I felt ok. 

And then I saw the Bears game. Trying to find out what's wrong with the Bears right now seems like it would require a team of therapists, a room full of couches, and a costly government grant to fund the whole thing, but I'll try and offer a surrogate. Let's pretend I'm in a press conference with Lovie Smith and Co., wearing my best power-suit and a press pass in my hat. Here are the questions in my note-pad. A lot of this may seem intuitive, but with the five collective brain cells in the Bears organization, I'm not even sure they understand intuition.

1. Why do your receivers continuously show poor field awareness and low football IQ? As much as I'd like to stop being a Jay Cutler apologist, I can't help but put stick some of the blame on his receivers. Yes, if a quarterback is a reckless gunslinger who chucks the football wherever he damn well pleases, the soup will hit the fan eventually just due to the law of averages. But if a receiver fails to run his route, hesitates in his route, or just isn't paying attention to who is covering him (and what said gentleman is doing), what can be done? 

2. Why did you go through all of this work to acquire a jumbo-sized tight end from San Diego if he can't catch a ball and has the blocking ability of a folding chair? I'm talking about you, Brandon Manumaleuna. Five yards receiving all season? I don't like it. 

3. Chester Taylor showed he can run today. Why, instead of sharing carries with Matt Forte, does Taylor stand on the sidelines and pick his nose the other 97% of the time? He had 6.7 yards per carry today. Why aren't the Bears getting their money's worth if they can block for him like this? Having two running backs trading carries (think Greene and Tomlinson, Mathews and Tolbert, or Wells and Hightower) is just good strategy as it confuses defenses and reduces the risk of injury. If Forte is still alive at the end of this season after being rammed into the line with the aplomb of one chopping up a stump, I won't be the only one surprised.

4. Why does Mike Martz hate Greg Olsen? Why does Olsen have one game where he's doing something every snap and then two games where he's held without a catch? I can partially answer this myself. Typically, tight ends in Martz's scheme get relegated to blocking roles. We get it. Olsen is not incredibly big and, suffice it to say, not a strong blocker. He does, however, have pretty good hands, especially in the red zone (or, historically, anyway). Still, when the Bears find themselves on their opponents' 20, where is Olsen, doing Sudoku on the bench? 

Dear Mr. Martz: Why are you breaking up this bromance? Source: don't remember, nice picture.

5. Why has Julius Peppers seemed thoroughly disinterested in the game since the Bears played in Carolina? Let me re-phrase the question. Assuming that Peppers isn't missing his days with the Cardiac Cats, why is it that the only defenders who consistently show up to play are Israel Idonije, Brian Urlacher, and D.J. Moore, whoever he is? 

6. If DeAngelo Hall had Jay Cutler's number (it's "six", by the way), why did Cutler even try to throw to receivers covered by said cornerback? One of the simplest rules of playing the QB position is knowing when to throw the ball and when to, well, not throw it. What does a quarterback gain by showing off his arm strength forcing a ball into coverage besides making people think he's a blithering idiot when the defense comes up with the pick? Run some multiple wideout formations to fake out zone coverage, and if nobody is open, either run or throw the rock away.

7. Why are you huddling when you're in two-minute-drill mentality? If you're down by any number of points and it's just before the half, what's the point of standing around and sucking wind (and sucking away your team's momentum) while the clock's-a-ticking?

Can you spot Jay Cutler's new #1 target? Hint: He's not wearing the number thirteen. Source: Scott Strazzante, Chicago Tribune

8. When the Bears are on the one-yard-line, why can't they score? How many times has this happened now, where the Bears have been in an incredibly short-yardage situation (where any other team would be all but guaranteed points), and they either commit a turnover or are forced to settle for three? Why aren't they trying everything? Try everything. Have the quarterback tuck the ball and run. Try a draw play. Run a four tight-end set. Have a lineman report as eligible. Try some play-action and scatter that secondary! Pump-fake. Wildcat. Fake field goal. With as many permutations as there are for offensive play sets, something has to work. Hell, let's hire Sherm Lewis and have him turn the offensive play-calling into a bingo game, while we're at it.

9. What, psychologically, happens to the Bears at halftime to make them unable to score in the third quarter? The Bears have not scored in the third quarter this entire season - and no other NFL team has been held scoreless an entire quarter! So why is this? Why not shoot out the scoreboard and pretend it's the first quarter? Light some aromatherapy candles, blow in some paper bags, and calm down. 

10. Do you really think you can fix this offensive line? No matter how many combinations the Bears run up front, nothing's ever changing. In the last three games he has played, Jay Cutler has been sacked nineteen times. This line is an undisciplined, lopsided, witless, amorphous pile of silly putty, and either people should start getting activated from the practice squad, or people should start getting fired.

More news later. I hope.

*Yeah. I used it as a verb. Sue me. A "Belichicking" is any game in which you lose by more than 45. 

Friday, October 22, 2010

Check out the Blogroll

The new sidebar to the right - "Teammates" - is the beginning of the Second and One Blogroll. Currently it's not much, but for now, I encourage people to check out The Sports J.A.R., just started by my friend (and fellow analyst/humorist) Judy. She's a fan of Cleveland everything and soccer. There are a few potty words (if anyone may be offended), but it's a pretty amusing commentary nonetheless.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

...The Punter?!

This came to me from another website earlier today. Colts punter Pat McAfee was arrested and charged with public intoxication after drunkenly leaping into the canal that runs through the Broad Ripple part of Indianapolis and then apparently running wet and shirtless into the street. (AP/ESPN) ...the punter? Seriously? We've stated before that punters and kickers are arguably one of the most trouble-free positions on a team. The guy who goes to a bar and punches someone's lights out usually isn't the punter. If we believe the stereotypes, the punter would more likely be the guy with braces arguing violently at a Star Trek convention over whether Kirk or Picard is the better captain.

I mean, McAfee fundamentally didn't do anything terribly wrong beyond getting tankered and freezing his jock off (which, for all I actually know, may be illegal in Indianapolis), but I suppose that's what happens when a guy, whose entire job consists of essentially signaling that the offense has failed, finally, erm, snaps

***

I'm finally feeling better. I'm congested and gross, however, and I'm thoroughly convinced that I'll end up giving my symposium talk tomorrow sounding like Lou Holtz. Let me practice: "Noder Dame isth the besth theam there ith!"

Monday, October 18, 2010

Finally Unloading My Collection of Stuff

Ok. Today is the day when every random football-related comment I've saved on my computer makes its way up here, because I am home with a cold and have nothing better to do because it is 50 ˚F and raining outside. Without further ado...

Another One Bites The Dust, and I mean, Really Bites It: On Saturday, the #1, #5, #10, #19, #22, 23, and 24-ranked teams all lost - to teams ranked lower or to unranked teams. The smallest margin of defeat, one point, was the upset of #24. The largest, 13 points, the upset of #1. I don't even think they will even get the famed BCS computer to run for a day without bursting into flames at the rate we're going. Updated BCS standings can be found here. (ESPN) 

Bonus Statistic: The Indianapolis Colts' away record is better than every other NFL team's home record - except for the Patriots. 

Amusing Announcing: During the Bears' ugly loss to the Giants in week 4, after Jay Cutler was sacked yet another time, NBC Announcer Al Michaels quipped, "someone put a tent over this circus, this is unbelievable." I laughed for ten minutes.

Graduates of the Bill Belichick* School of Opponent Demoralization, Masters' Degree Edition: On Saturday, Boise State, Oklahoma, and Texas Christian (#3, 4, and 6, with a combined record of 19-0), won by a combined score of 131...to a total of three points scored by opponents with a combined record of 6-15. The valedictorian of the week: the Division I-AA Jacksonville Dolphins, who beat the Valparaiso Crusaders by an astonishing 86-7, in a game where Jacksonville actually lost the time of possession battle by about three minutes. Eighty-six to freaking' seven! Highlights of the game include touchdowns from two interception returns and a blocked punt. Jax's only mistake: missing their last PAT. Apparently these guys are repeat offenders - 35 is the fewest points they've scored all season.

Apparently, Jacksonville thinks they're a high school team running the A-11 No-Punt Offense, and Valpo thinks it's basketball season. Source: Jacksonville.com

More Amusing Announcing: During MNF's Fastest Three Minutes, Chris "Boomer" Berman referred to Steelers WR Mike Wallace as "The Sixty Minute Man" after the news commentator with the same name. Magnifico!

Dumb, Daft Defenses: Oh, Minnesota. Nothing stings like starting 1-6. On Saturday against purdue, while down 14-0 against the Purdue Boilermakers, Gophers' LB Gary Tinsley intercepted a botched wideout screen and was in position for a pick-6. As he dived and stretched his arms out to push the ball over the goal line, the ball squirted out of his hands and knocked over the pylon. The fumble was ruled a touchback, Purdue got the ball on the Minnesota 20-yard line and made the game 21-0, and Minnesota's coach (Tim Brewster) actually got fired the day after. D'oh. I will here use my significant other's rule for show-offy defenders: "just fall on it, jackass!"

Loony Bonus College Statistic: Until Saturday, Nebraska and Nevada were the only teams that, this season, have never trailed at any point during a game. Nebraska had never been in a tie at any point during a game, except for starting 0-0. Both teams were subsequently upset by unranked teams. 

Crappy Commentating: A friend of mine remarked on Facebook that he wanted to "punch Cris Collinsworth." I'm pretty sure this was the reason: on Sunday night, the commentator animatedly described the day's head injuries (complete with video of Eagles WR DeSean Jackson getting literally knocked out of the game). His emphasis seemed placed on the sensationalism of it all. This sort of violence is not sensational or funny. I like to regurgitate a Wayne Gretzky quote when I watch/hear things like this: "Why must the best shot in the game be on someone's nose instead of in someone's net?" These are serious injuries that, although rarely, can have life-threatening consequences. Such as is the case for Rutgers DT Eric LeGrand, who suffered a spinal cord injury in a helmet-to-helmet hit on a punt return and may be paralyzed from the neck down. (Larry Brown Sports) Come on, announcers. Grow up and realize the gravity of the situation, will you? You can see the video of the tackle that injured LeGrand at the link above, but it is rather cringe-worthy and I don't recommend it. We here at Second and One wish the best for LeGrand and his family.

Really Goofus Bonus NFL Statistics: In the NFC North, the Packers have lost two games in overtime and three by three points this season. In the two most recent games that Jay Cutler has played, he has been sacked fifteen times. The current point leaders in the NFC North: The Detroit Lions, who have also allowed the fewest sacks out of the entire division. The San Diego Chargers lead the statistical categories of pass yards per game, total offensive yards per game, total yards allowed per game, and pass yards allowed per game. They are currently 2-4. The Dallas Cowboys are also in the top five in these categories. They are 1-4. If anyone can give me a concise reason why these two teams are a combined 3-8, I'll be sure the Nobel Committee calls you tomorrow. Not a whole lot makes sense in the NFL right now.

No! We're the worse team! No, we are! Source: images.morris.com

I've Waited More Than a Year To say This, but...Don't Kick To Devin Hester!!: After a lackluster 2009 season on special teams, people thought Chicago WR/punt returner Devin Hester had lost his magic. Until, of course, 2010. Thus far, he's run back two for touchdowns this season, including in the Bears' dramatic upset of the Packers. If I were a special teams coach, I would tell my kicker to swallow the football before I'd tell him to kick to Devin Hester.

Amusing Announcing, "Because I'm Twelve" Edition: During a college game, the following comment was made about a player: "Every time he holds the ball, he finishes." I'm not saying anything else because my foot is dangerously close to my mouth already. 

Obligatory Fighting Nucleophiles Update: So I officially hate my perma-screwed, uber-deep fantasy league. I think our waiver system is horse puckey. I think our defensive scoring rubric makes less sense than NCAA recruiting rules. I think our scoring predictor has a lower success rate than monkeys throwing darts at a board. The Fighting Nucleophiles, official fantasy team of Second and One, are at 1-5. I'm getting decked harder than whoever is unfortunate enough to line up opposite Cortland Finnegan every Sunday.** No matter who I start at running back or wide receiver, they always do absolutely nothing. Things like the Randy Moss trade, Demaryius Thomas' neck injury, and the very existence of LaDainian Tomlinson don't help, either. In order for my team to have a fighting chance, I need the Cards' O-line to learn how to block, for Ryan Mathews, Brandon Jackson, and Braylon Edwards to all break their feet at the same time, for every member of KC's receiving corps except for Dwayne Bowe to come down with leprosy, and for every defense in the league to forget Dallas Clark exists. Subtle irony: the one week I did win, I won because someone else started the wrong tight end for once. I can't talk about this any more. 

Whatever this thing is, I can guarantee that my fantasy football team currently blows harder than it ever could. Source, aoc.gov

Life Imitates Art, Which Imitates The Saints (Truly Special Special Teams): In week five, both the St. Louis Rams (on a 2-win streak) and the Kansas City Chiefs (on a 4-win streak) opted to begin their games with an onside kick. Both attempts failed. Both teams lost (and the former, horribly) Ugh.

Poetic Afterthoughts: Say what you will about Jaguars-Titans tonight. Here's what I have to say:

Will the Jaguars keep playing like dolts
Or will the Titans look worse than the 'Bolts?
Let me open my mouth
About the AFC South
They've all look'd bad - even the Colts.

And we conclude with our latest installment of Football Foods. I came up with this delicious meatloaf burger recipe while trying to figure out what to do with the pound of ground beef that boyfriend had in his freezer, all while watching Iowa beat up Michigan on Saturday:

BCS Buster Burgers:

1 lb ground beef
1 egg, lightly beaten like Florida on Saturday
1/4-1/3 cup bread crumbs
1 tbsp ketchup
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
1/8 tsp salt
1/8 tsp black pepper
1/8 tsp garlic powder
pinch of cayenne pepper (as, like former Oregon Duck LeGarrette Blount did, it gives a little extra punch)

Combine ingredients in a large mixing bowl. Mix with your hands to be sure everything is well-incorporated. Shape into patties and broil or grill to your desired degree of doneness (although I don't take responsibility if you get food poisoning and throw up all over yourself like Michigan seems to do every week). Top with your favorite fixins' and serve on buns. This recipe serves 2-3. 

Remember kids: if you think turnovers are what you order for dessert at Arby's, you shouldn't be playing linebacker.


*I just realize I have been spelling Belichick's name as "Belicheck" for the past five weeks. Oops. I guess he's the Toby Gerhart of this season: I didn't get his name right until week 13 of last year, just in time for the Heisman balloting.
**For those who don't get the joke, Finnegan has received three consecutive fines from the league for unnecessary roughness or something like that, and every player on Denver's offense is crying for a pound of his flesh. You can Google it if you really want to read about the drama (complete with Chuck Cecil's middle finger).