The Official Start of Spring

April 1, 2008

The official start of spring comes when baseball is back and games matter. Many “professional” sources are saying the Twins will finish below terrible teams like the White Sox and the Royals. Ridiculous. Sorry, but the offense is better. Delmon Young is good enough to make even the casual fan say, “Torii WHO” after this season. We also improved by subtraction in relegating Nick Punto to the bench (where he belongs). The rotation is sketchy, but exciting. Anyway on to the game….

Surprises:

1. Livan Hernandez with a quality start…amazing!…..DO NOT GET USED TO IT.

2.Carlos Gomez took a walk…..all the reports say he has no patience. He could be the first person to steal 100 bases since Vince Coleman if the patience wasn’t a one time deal.

3. Carlos Gomez caught a ball (at chest height) that Torii Hunter would have had to dive for. Now thats speed.

4. Craig Monroe gets a start over Kubel (and against a right handed pitcher) this is the reason that Gardy is overrated as a manager. Monroe has nothing left in the tank and Kubel is a very bright piece of the future. Kubel should get all at bats against right handed pitchers and most against left handed pitchers.

THINGS I NOTICED BUT WAS NOT THE LEAST BIT SURPRISED

1. When Kubel entered the game he got a hit…monroe was an OFER.

2. Torii Hunter 0-4. He looked like a fool against Nathan. Oh he also let a ball drop he could have caught. that should go in the surprise section after playing so many seasons here.

3. People cheer Torii, but Boo Pierzynski….unbelievable. AJ netted us Nathan, Liriano, and Boof. He never made a single negative comment to the press about our team while he was here. Torii netted us negative comments towards the team in the press on a consistent basis. He also tried to punch Morneau and hit Punto. He also dove for a ball against Oakland in the playoff series that basically led to getting swept.

4. Carlos Gomez is fast…and I mean the fastest player to ever play the game.

Anyway, I’ll end it there. Perhaps I will post again tomorrow when Torii goes 0-4 again tonite.

4.


A Great Favre Article

March 10, 2008

note: entire state of wisconsin is still on suicide watch. you would be too if you had aaron rodgers as your starting qb.

Sal Paolantonio, respected ESPN employee, wrote this. It is pure and beautiful and true.

We interrupt the continued deification of Brett Favre — a first-ballot Hall of Famer and the most durable player in NFL history — with the following reality check.Yes, Favre played long enough to throw the most touchdown passes and collect the most wins by an NFL quarterback. But let’s examine the second half of No. 4’s career. The truth is, Favre did little over the past decade to earn the gushing praise heaped upon him by our fawning brethren in the media.

Best-Ever Debate

In his 17 seasons, Brett Favre set numerous NFL records, including most yards passing (61,655) and most touchdowns (442).

But do those numbers, combined with Favre’s three MVP awards and one Super Bowl victory, put him among the top 10 quarterbacks of all time?

Recently, ESPN.com’s Mike Sando and Football Outsiders’ Aaron Schatz examined the best-ever debate.

Sando | Football Outsiders

After beating the San Francisco 49ers in the 1997 NFC Championship Game, Favre won just three of his last 10 playoff games. Eli Manning had more postseason wins in a 29-day span this past season than Favre had in his last decade with the Green Bay Packers.

Yes, Favre won a Super Bowl — 11 years ago! But as his career arc spiraled downward, the blind adulation only got worse.

Favre’s passer rating in his last 12 postseason games was a pedestrian 77.8. In his last five wild-card games, he went 2-3 with more interceptions (nine) than touchdown passes (seven). In his last three divisional playoff games, he went 1-2 with seven TDs and seven interceptions. That’s a 3-5 record with 14 touchdown passes and 16 picks.

In two of his last four postseason appearances, Favre threw two of the most unthinkable playoff interceptions in NFL history, both in overtime — to Brian Dawkins of the Philadelphia Eagles in 2003 and to Corey Webster of the New York Giants in January. In fact, Favre is the only quarterback in NFL history to throw overtime interceptions in two playoff games. In his last nine playoff games, Favre threw 18 interceptions.


Brett Favre’s career playoff record was 12-10. Fellow Packer star quarterback Bart Starr was 9-1.

In the first 81 years of the Green Bay franchise, the most hallowed in all of pro football, the Packers were 13-0 at home in the postseason. But since 2002, the Packers have gone 2-3 in playoff games at Lambeau Field, with Favre losing to three not-quite Hall of Fame quarterbacks: Michael Vick, Daunte Culpepper and Manning.If Manning had a decade like that, he’d be run out of New York. If Philip Rivers kept chucking ridiculous overtime interceptions in the postseason, he would be branded a first-round bust. If Drew Brees came up short in three out of five home playoff games, he’d be mocked.

But no matter how many dumb passes he threw and how many playoff games he lost, Favre remains immune to criticism.

Favre isn’t even the greatest quarterback in the history of the Packers. It’s not even close. Bart Starr won five NFL championships — four more than Favre — and retired as the NFL’s most accurate passer.

Oh, you say Starr was surrounded by a Hall of Fame roster with a legendary coach. But Starr still is the NFL record holder with a 104.8 career playoff passer rating, nearly 20 points higher than Favre’s. That wasn’t Vince Lombardi or Ray Nitschke throwing those passes for Starr, whose career postseason passer rating, by the way, is 38 points higher than Johnny Unitas’.

Favre’s career playoff record was 12-10. Starr’s was 9-1 — without the benefit of wild-card games. Favre threw 28 interceptions in 22 playoff games. Starr threw three in 10. Think about that — just three picks in 213 postseason attempts.

But Bart Starr gets the Ringo Starr treatment — underappreciated and overlooked. Favre gets put on a pedestal. Yes, he had a Pro Bowl season in 2007 with the youngest roster in the NFL. But his final moment on Lambeau Field was a wildly errant pass that turned into the NFC title for the Giants.

Indeed, a decade after his last moments of glory, the football hype machine continues to paint Favre as a hallowed icon of Americana, a symbol of all that is right with sports, a Wild West gun-slinging good ol’ boy. There’s Brett on the farm! There’s Brett with his family! There’s Brett on the cover of Sports Illustrated! There’s Brett throwing another overtime interception!

Favre was among the best in the game, once upon a time. Those days are long gone. Only the idolatry remains.

coincidence that Favre has the same amount of letters as FRAUD?