|
<>How can you be interested in a sport if
you have no team in
the hunt?
In
the case of
college football, I don’t know why I watch college football at all. If it were just for Rutgers, there would be
no way I could watch it. It’s hard to get interested in a game for
which your
local representative plays so poorly. Speaking
as a Rutgers alumnus, thank you very
much but I’d rather have
no football program at all than have to be embarrassed every week by
Rutgers
and the complacent Greg Schiano. Just to
put perspective around how bad Rutgers really is, Schiano’s defense
against the
likes of Cincinnati was torched for 60 or so points while Connecticut
just held
them to 17 points. I could grab a couple
of kids off the street who’d play better pass defense than Schiano’s
sorry
group in the secondary.
Nevertheless,
I’m sitting here watching
Michigan State start
to pound Penn State (it’s now 21-10) . And
why exactly? Well,
Penn State
after all has Joe Paterno as the head coach and it’s a clean program
too, as
far as anyone can tell. What’s not to
like about Penn State? They always play
defense and very seldom embarrass themselves. They
are the anti-Rutgers.
Ohio State too in the Big Ten
gets some of my attention if
only because my son went to school in Ohio and I can recall a great
time watching
an OSU game in a shopping mall in Columbus. I also had a friend and
co-worker whose daily fervor for the
Buckeyes was easily
enough to get me excited. But if it
weren’t
for those two teams, I wouldn’t be watching at all.
You have to have a team in the hunt…some skin
in the game. That rooting interest can spring from locale of course but
only as
modified by a team’s ownership and management and players from year to
year. Oh yeah, and whether they win or not.
If loyalties depended entirely
on wins and losses though,
everybody’d be a Yankee fan. Happily for
human nature and pocket books everywhere, that is not the case.
My chief interest this time of
year goes to professional
football, mostly, to be honest, because that’s where my skin in the
game resides. We live in the New York
area, of course, so
why would I like any other team besides
the Giants or Jets?
The
answer lies in fantasy
football, of course, a place to field my very own team.
So my rooting interest this Thanksgiving was
firmly with the Saints and Drew Brees, who had the skill and moxy to
throw long
down the field on a third down to hit Bobby Meachem in stride for about
60
yards before delivering a perfect strike to, who else, Lance Moore for
a
touchdown. And I managed to get a
glimpse in the 4 o’clock game of Miles Austin, wide receiver for Dallas
and Dem
Crabs, racing around the end for about 60 yards and a TD against the
Lions.
But
overall it was a
bad day. The Saints scored mostly on the
ground and Jahvid Best didn’t play at all, making my decision to bench
Ahmad
Bradshaw look ridiculous, despite Coughlin’s foolish decision to punish
him. My
opponent didn’t fare too well either though, starting with Mark
Sanchez, who
didn’t exactly shine in the Jets victory over the Bungles.
And his star player, Jacksonville’s Maurice
Jones-Drew, has to face the Giants on Sunday, a matchup that should
favor the
Giants, who aren’t as yet totally decimated on the defensive side of
the ball.
If I can be said to have a team
at all in the NFL, it is the
Giants, who are in trouble now after losing several key players to
injuries.
The Giants are owned by one of the most venerable football families in
the
universe, the Maras. They’ve won
multiple Super Bowls and have brought us great players and great
management
too. They have a long-time philosophy
that stresses the running game and defense. Their
GM’s and coaches have generally excelled
over the years. Although they might not
quite match the
Rooneys in Pittsburgh, they are a team well worthy of commanding my
attention.
On the other hand are the Jets. Although I like the head coach, the owner’s a
little too theatrical for me. He’ll always take the hit in my mind for
Brett
Favre becoming a Jet, thus single-handedly taking them out of the
playoffs. Their GM is totally heartless, a
reflection
of ownership too, I guess, as he has shown year after year, most
recently in
the dumping of Leon Washington. The
players themselves are a mixed bunch. They
have a bunch of guys that are hard to
warm up to, Bart Scott,
Braylon Edwards, and yes, even Santonio Holmes and his remarkable
elusiveness
in the end zone. But their success is
hard to ignore despite their frailties in the character department.
My point is, it’s easy to be an
NFL fan, less so for NCAA
football and, heretofore at least, it’s been almost impossible to
follow any
brand of basketball, be it NBA, NCAA or otherwise.
Once again, those feelings can be directly
traced to the sorry state of the Knicks, Nets, Rutgers and Seton Hall. If our local team in either MLB league were
the likes of the Chicago Cubs, it’d surely affect your love for the
game and
the league bringing it to you.
Happily for basketball fans, the
Knicks mismanagement has
considerably improved and the Nets have changed dramatically for the
better. The Knicks finally have some
players D’Antoni actually likes and the Nets under Avery Johnson have
begun to
show some predilection for playing on the defensive side of the ball. I’m enjoying basketball again.
I now find myself watching the
local games, the NBA Network
and yes, I even crave the witticisms of Charles Barkley.
I even
joined a public fantasy basketball league. Who’s
next? Hubie
Brown?
|
|
|