January 15, 2009

Why I Hate The Pittsburgh Steelers

As we approach the AFC Championship Game, I feel compelled to share what I hate Pittsburgh and its Steelers. I should mention that the Ravens losing an AFC Championship Game to Pittsburgh is probably tied with Maryland losing an NCAA Championship Game to Dook in terms of potential for personal devastation.

1) The Fans


I will preface this by saying that I do personally know a Steelers fan from Pittsburgh who is actually a decent human being. He left after high school and never looked back, now living in New Orleans.

People from Pittsburgh and the surrounding area (Morgantown, WV, excepted) are the biggest assholes on the face of the Earth. Al Qaeda and Taliban are a close second.

I have been to New York. I have been to Boston. I have been to Philadelphia. I LIVE near D.C. I know assholes. The people of Pittsburgh are the biggest assholes of them all. They're not as loud. They're somewhat less likely to physically threaten or attack you (mostly because they're too fat and slow for fighting). They just hate life and everyone else living it.

Of course, there isn't much to be happy about in Pittsburgh. The steelworkers either lost their jobs or moved to Baltimore. Now the city has little in the way of jobs, is cold, is dreary, is in the middle of nowhere, and is known for absolutely nothing other than the Steelers and Andy Warhol.

All that being said, Steelers fans from Pittsburgh aren't really all that bad. It isn't the city of Pittsburgh's fault, but they were really good at football in the 1970's. Hence, they have fans all over the country. Unfortunately, those fans have begun to reproduce. Now there is a second generation of bandwagon morons who only root for the Steelers because their Dad did. Much like men with small penises (more on Hines Ward below) , these fans must compensate for being regional traitors by being overly enthusiastic about their fandom.

2) Hines Ward

This morning on Baltimore's 98 Rock, porn star Jesse Jane was asked about her relationship with Hines Ward. She said something along the lines of "Let's just say he's more Korean than Black."


That made my week. I guess Hines and Santonio Holmes average each other out.

(Related note: When Santonio hurdled the last Charger on his return last week, I thought about his dong. I'm not happy about that. It's not even that his dong is that massive, it's just that it's really the only thing I know about the dude.)

I hate Hines Ward more than any professional athlete, including Paul O'Neill and Mike Dunleavy (definition of "professional athlete" is loose). He is in the top 15 wide receivers in the league, and he is a good blocker. He also is the king of the annoying bitchy little cheap shot at the end of a play. Nothing illegal usually, but just enough to provoke a costly response.

Of course, an above-average NFLer who plays a little dirty normally would not bother me (I am a Ravens fan, after all). That is, unless he grinned like an idiot ALL THE F-ING TIME.

Even that might not bother me, except the Steelers' offense isn't very sexy. Hines is the only player the announcers know anything about other than Ben Roethlisberger. As is announcer protocol, they parrot the same four facts about him over and over again.

3) The Terrible Towel

blahblahblahblahblahblah My head just exploded.
Any other red-blooded sports fan in the nation would be mortified if his (or her) fan base was known for waving a urine-hued towel above their head. First of all, it's a distraction from what's happening on the field. Second, fan props are one slight step below "Quiet - Offense Is at Work" and "[Insert Team Color] Out". It indicates that someone in marketing recognizes that the fans are not capable of simply enjoying the product on the field.

The towel was introduced by radio voice Myron Cope in 1975 as a gimmick. Read the Wikipedia article. I'm not reprinting it here. It should have lasted one playoff season and then gone the way of the Rally Monkey, but frankly Pittsburgh had nothing else going for it.

Three Rivers Stadium was a dump, much like it's brethren in Filthadelphia, Cincinnati and St. Louis. I get that there was a time (the 1980's) that the Steelers sucked and the stadium sucked and a little something extra was needed to encourage fans to enjoy themselves. Sometimes The Wave, Iron City swill and YMCA just don't do it. Why they retain it in their nice new ketchup-sponsored stadium is beyond me. I know that towel must be an embarrassment to true Steeler fans on the level of the Cameron Crazies to a true Duke fan, but no one will ever admit it to me.

CONCLUSION

Cleveland : Pittsburgh :: Pittsburgh : Baltimore.

Discuss.

January 14, 2009

Club Polamalu: Men with Girly Hair and Effeminate Voices

Thanks to Mark Viviano and Damon "The Bulldog" Yaffe for discussing Brien's post about Joe Flacco and famous unibrows on their midday radio show on 1300 AM and 105.7 FM in Baltimore. I have been quietly seething since that went live, feeling it is unfair to make fun of Joe for a genetic variation. To point out how unfair it was, I feel that I should unveil my list of men with girlish hair and voices, in honor of Steelers safety and frequent deep pass victim Troy Polamalu.

Be warned, this blog has never looked so gay while still remaining totally straight. That is also in honor of Troy Polamalu (allegedly).


RICHARD SIMMONS


TINY TIM


AXL ROSE


RUSSELL BRAND


CHYNA


SANJAYA

KEVIN GREENE

*Kevin Greene has a masculine speaking voice, but squeals like an American Idol fan when he watches his favorite show, Gossip Girl. He also likes American Idol, but swore off it after Sanjaya was booted.

January 12, 2009

2009 NFL Draft Order After Divisional Round

The first 20 spots are locked in. Here's how the rest shakes out based on the four possible Super Bowl Matchups.

1) Detroit (0-16)
2) St. Louis (2-14)
3) Kansas City (2-14)
4) Seattle (4-12)
5) Cleveland (4-12)
6) Cincinnati (4-11-1)
7) Oakland (5-11)
8) Jacksonville (5-11)
9) Green Bay (6-10)
10) San Francisco (7-9)
11) Buffalo (7-9)
12) Denver (8-8)
13) Washington (8-8)
14) New Orleans (8-8)
15) Houston (8-8)
16) San Diego (8-8)
17) New York Jets (9-7)
18) Chicago (9-7)
19) Tampa Bay (9-7)
20) Detroit via Dallas (9-7) (Roy Williams deal)

Philly v. Pittsburgh
21) Arizona (9-7)
22) Minnesota (10-6)
23) New England (11-5)
24) Atlanta (11-5)
25) Miami (11-5)
26) Baltimore (11-5)
27) Indianapolis (12-4)
28) New York Giants (12-4)
29) Philadelphia via Carolina (12-4)
30) Tennessee (13-3)
31) Super Bowl Loser (Pittsburgh or Philly)
32) Super Bowl Champion (Pittsburgh or Philly)

Arizona v. Pittsburgh
21) Philadelphia (9-6-1)
22) Minnesota (10-6)
23) New England (11-5)
24) Atlanta (11-5)
25) Miami (11-5)
26) Baltimore (11-5)
27) Indianapolis (12-4)
28) New York Giants (12-4)
29) Philadelphia via Carolina (12-4)
30) Tennessee (13-3)
31) Super Bowl Loser (Pittsburgh or Arizona)
32) Super Bowl Champion (Pittsburgh or Arizona)

Arizona v. Baltimore
21) Philadelphia (9-6-1)
22) Minnesota (10-6)
23) New England (11-5)
24) Atlanta (11-5)
25) Miami (11-5)
26) Indianapolis (12-4)
27) New York Giants (12-4)
28) Philadelphia via Carolina (12-4)
29) Pittsburgh (12-4)
30) Tennessee (13-3)
31) Super Bowl Loser (Baltimore or Arizona)
32) Super Bowl Champion (Baltimore or Arizona)

Philly v. Baltimore
21) Arizona (9-7)
22) Minnesota (10-6)
23) New England (11-5)
24) Atlanta (11-5)
25) Miami (11-5)
26) Indianapolis (12-4)
27) New York Giants (12-4)
28) Philadelphia via Carolina (12-4)
29) Pittsburgh (12-4)
30) Tennessee (13-3)
31) Super Bowl Loser (Baltimore or Philly)
32) Super Bowl Champion (Baltimore or Philly)

The draft tiebreakers are as follows:

1) Super Bowl Winner picks 32nd

2) Super Bowl Loser picks 31st

3) Teams are ranked in inverse order of their record. Ties count as a half win and half loss.

4) A playoff team always picks after a non-playoff team with the same regular season record. If two playoff teams have the same regular season record, but one was eliminated in an earlier round, that team picks first.

5) Ties are then broken using strength of schedule (average of all 16 opponent's winning percentage, divisionmates count twice since they were played twice. Or count the wins of all opponents, same result). Weaker schedule picks earlier.

6) If SOS fails to break the tie, and the teams are in the same division, apply the division playoff tiebreakers (except the "loser" picks higher).

7) If SOS fails to break the tie, the teams are not in the same division, but the teams are in the same conference, apply the conference playoff tiebreakers (except the "loser" picks higher).

8) If the teams are still tied, or are in different conferences, a coin toss decides the order. If three teams are tied such that the tie can be broken as to two teams, but not between any of those two and a third team, the "loser" of the two-team tie flips against the other team first. A scenario where all three teams are stone tied is nearly impossible since there are only two conferences and intraconference tiebreakers go very deep before a coin flip.

As it currently stands, all ties can be broken using just strength of schedule and assumed playoff exit for still active playoff teams.