It’s the oldest political trick in the book: If you’re a lawmaker, you figure out what a piece of your legislation does, and give it a name that conveys the exact opposite of the bill’s intent. If you’re a Republican that wants to preserve the right to smoke in Wisconsin restaurants, you introduce a bill and call it the “Smoke Free Dining Act.” For Democrats, taxpayer funding of campaigns becomes the “Clean Elections Bill,” and censorship of conservative talk radio becomes “The Fairness Doctrine.” (If Barack Obama were President during Hurricane Katrina, he would have called it the “Bayou Modernization Act.”)
In recent months, Democrats have been taking a beating at the polls – despite spending hundreds of billions of dollars on “stimulus” spending, U.S. unemployment continues to hover in the double digits. Recent reports show that all this spending hasn’t actually created any jobs – and voters appear to be fed up, seeing as how they are now electing Republicans to statewide office in Massachusetts. (Which is a bit like Tim Tebow being elected president of Planned Parenthood.)
(Democrats argue that had the stimulus not passed, things would have been much worse – a fact that can’t be proven. They might as well say that the stimulus saved the Earth from being encased in lime jello. What we can prove is that their supposed “jobs” bill actually had nothing to do with creating jobs.)
Which brings us to this week, where both President Obama and Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle spent a substantial portion of their “States of” speeches to discuss the new fad in mis-naming bills: “Green Jobs.”
Democrats have figured out that in order to counter the perception that they are responsible for dramatic job loss, they have to throw the word “jobs” in front of every bill they offer. When they introduce a bill that will raise energy costs on everyone on the state, they call it a “green jobs” bill. Doyle insists his “green jobs” bill will create 15,000 new positions – about the attendance of a Wednesday night Milwaukee Bucks game – by 2025. It appears many of these new jobs will be the result of funneling money to politically connected lobbyists, whose businesses stand to profit directly from the legislation. (In some cases, they even get to write the bills themselves.)
In the meantime, our study here at the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute has demonstrated how higher energy costs will force current employers to cut nearly 43,000 jobs – and that estimate is as conservative as possible.
If a bill written by special interests to pad their own wallets at the expense of utility rate payers statewide is a “jobs” bill, then literally anything is a jobs bill. Spending a billion on new trains to run all over the state? It’s a JOBS bill.
Democrats are currently pushing a medical marijuana bill – how is that not a jobs bill under their definition? (And a true “green” jobs bill at that.) Marijuana users get hungry and buy a lot of Cheetos – won’t their bill keep Chester the Cheetah employed here in the state? (Last week, Chester was indicted on three counts of providing kickbacks to federal judges.)
This whole “jobs” crazy among Democrats is simply naked image rehabilitation – no different than John Edwards’ trip to Haiti with a personal videographer. It’s a verbal sleight of hand that has no basis in reality, and only serves to confuse the public.
To gauge the true effect of the bill, one needs only to listen to the businesses that actually create the jobs here in Wisconsin – who are nearly universally opposed to the climate change plan (except for those who State Rep. Cory Mason allows to write the bill to line their own pockets.) They argue, persuasively, that by jacking up energy costs, businesses will have less money to hire workers and re-invest in their communities.
On the other hand, the bill’s proponents want you to believe them because they…well… they belong to the Sierra Club. And their newsletter has a quote from Leonardo DiCaprio, saying climate change is bad.
(Incidentally, environmental groups are the best at mis-naming bills for their benefit. For instance, take the “Independent DNR Secretary Bill,” which eliminates the governor’s ability to choose the Department of Natural Resources Secretary. Because nothing says “independent” more than a cabinet secretary chosen by an unelected board of environmental activists.)
Asking liberal politicians to grow jobs in a bad economy is like trusting a doctor who amputated the wrong leg to get it right the next time. This climate change bill is nothing more than throwing good money after bad – giving Democrats an escape hatch from their disastrous job creation efforts of 2009.
In the last issue of WI Magazine, my end column explained how the traditional stereotype of union workers has become obsolete. While the idea of the typical union worker had always been a fat, mustachioed guy with work boots and a hard hat, union membership has fallen off significantly in the private sector. Thus the new typical union worker tends to be a high-earning, college educated female working in government – namely, teachers and librarians. Even more surprising is how fiscally conservative these new union members tend to be.
Even more intriguing, the typical union household is much more fiscally conservative than traditional stereotypes would suggest. Among union members, 52% listed either “holding the line on taxes and government spending” or “improving the state’s economy and protecting jobs” as the top priority of the Legislature. Traditional union priorities, such as making health care and prescription drugs more affordable (12%), scored much lower than expected.
Among union households, President Obama is still popular, with a 64% approval rating. Yet Gov. Jim Doyle, who is to Wisconsin unions what Hugh Hefner is to teenage boys, actually has a high unfavorability rating, with 49.7% rating him “somewhat” or “very” unfavorably. This is even higher than the 47.4% unfavorable rating Doyle received from the public at large.
For the first time in American history, a majority of union members are government workers rather than private-sector employees, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced on Friday.
In its annual report on union membership, the bureau undercut the longstanding notion that union members are overwhelmingly blue-collar factory workers. It found that membership fell so fast in the private sector in 2009 that the 7.9 million unionized public-sector workers easily outnumbered those in the private sector, where labor’s ranks shrank to 7.4 million, from 8.2 million in 2008.
The article also notes what we already knew: that despite the recession, the total number government employment grew last year, inching up 16,000, to 22,516,000.
Note: I will be on Sunday Insight With Charlie Sykes this weekend to talk about you know what. Chances of me swearing on the air stand at about 80 percent.
When the Bubbler first asked me to write something for Wednesday, of this week, I gladly acquiesced. Then, Black Tuesday hit, and word spread that Brett Favre had officially become a purple headed warrior.
Tuesday night found me sitting in front of my computer, staring blankly at my laptop screen, my head buried in my hands. I felt like the last guest at a 1979 three-day party at Paul Molitor’s house. I was confused and disoriented. I started using my tooth brush to comb my hair. I accused a house plant of re-arranging my CDs in reverse alphabetical order, just to mess with me. I started to actually believe it’s not butter.
People who know me know that I am rarely at a loss for words. But I had none. How was I supposed to bring a fresh perspective to a story that had been reported and blogged by thousands of others? How was I supposed to describe the deeply personal grieving process each Packer fan was dealing with on their own?
The task proved too immense for the cognitive limits of my own skull. It was bigger than me. It was bigger than Melissa Joan Hart during her pregnancy. I had to seek outside counsel. I turned to a place that deals with monumental concepts, like the meaning of life, whether we actually exist, and why food served as a “smorgasbord” is less appetizing just because the word “smorgasbord” is so terrible. I needed the world of philosophy.
In 1882, Friedrich Nietzsche published “The Gay Science,” in which he uttered his most infamous line, “God is Dead.” In making this assertion, Nietzsche was attacking the underpinnings of Christianity – that is, that God served as the basis for meaning in the lives of Europeans for centuries. Without God, Nietzsche argued, all universal perspective on things would be lost – thus, there would be no objective truth on which everyone could agree. People would be guided by their own perspectives, rather than those supposedly created by God.
Clearly, Nietzsche had Green Bay Packer fans in mind when he cooked this theory up. (Although his mustache really cries out “Oshkosh.”)
For 16 years, Brett Favre was the one thing on which all Wisconsinites could agree. He was the fabric that held us all together – regardless of race, religion, or vertical leap, we pulled for him every week. Brett Favre was our universal perspective. And now he’s dead to us. Much like Nietzsche conceived after the death of a Christian God, Packer fans have been cast adrift with the death of the Favre persona. Nothing makes sense anymore. Normally sane Packer fans have been heard to say things like “I hope the Vikings do well in the games they’re not playing the Packers.” People have started attacking our state’s mayors. The Octomom has her own television show. The State of Wisconsin has been thrown into a state of apocalypse.
(In another freak coincidence, God also has a torn rotator cuff.)
As the story goes, Nietzsche died after a nervous breakdown that caused him to carry jello around in his pants and wander the streets of Turin trying to teach stray dogs to play the harmonica.* (According to some historians, he tried to sign Eric Gagne to a $10 million contract – but others have pointed out that someone clinically insane wouldn’t do something that stupid.)
And now, I know how he feels. The chances of me running naked down the middle of the highway while wearing orange arm floaties and a coal miner’s helmet has increased to better than break even.** Brett Favre plunging Ragnar’s sword into the back of each and every Packer fan has left us a broken, listless state. The only thing we have in common now is our love of bratwurst and cheese curds, the combination of which will kill us within months. Which seems to have been Purple Judas’ plan all along.
* – This is not true.
** – This is true.
Speaking of the Packers, if you caught the exhibition game last week against the Browns, you may have seen Jesse Garcia’s interview with the newly Rubenesque Keith Jackson. Jackson was wearing his old Packer jersey and instead of number 88, he should have been wearing number “Ate-ate.” Jackson now clearly carries more pounds than he does career yards receiving.
This seemed to be a little odd to me, since skill players usually seem to stay in pretty good shape after retirement. Guys like Jerry Rice and Emmitt Smith get to go on “Dancing With the Stars” and live fairly normal lives within the bounds of society.
It’s always the linemen that I felt sorry for after they get cut or retire. Starting at the age of 12, most of them are on ridiculous super-calorie diets meant to fatten them up like a school lunch lady. But when they can’t play football anymore, they just become another giant fat guy with bad knees. Set aside the fact that 99% of their names are completely unknown to the public, so everybody could care less about their post-career well being. They fall victim to health problems, and even worse, women who don’t like fat dudes.
You’re telling me right now that Mark Tauscher isn’t sitting at home in his flannel underwear and slippers laughing hysterically at an episode of “Brooke Knows Best” while his cats lick KFC grease out of his unkempt beard?
By the way, has anyone else figured out how weird it is that the best Packer and Brewer players seem to resemble each other? Think about the years that Brett Favre and Geoff Jenkins were leading their respective teams, and being confused for one another. An example:
Now, 2009 NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers and Ryan Braun bear a strong resemblance, although Rodgers seems to be much more of a neck beard enthusiast, with his various facial hair creations:
Right? Am I crazy? (If I am, I blame Brett Favre – see above.)
More importantly, in order to keep this phenomenon alive, the Brewers have 20 years to find an all-star that looks just like my 3-year old son, who will obviously be quarterbacking the Packers in 2029. (I’m already willing to sell you his jersey – it’s a barely worn #4 jersey with our last name sewn over whoever used to have that number for the Packers.)
I actually wrote an article about Favre a couple of weeks ago, in which the opening line was “The Ego Has Landed.” On Wednesday, Mike Hunt at the Journal Sentinel wrote a Favre column with the headline “The Ego Has Landed.” I’m not saying, I’m just saying.
I actually really don’t have much to say about the Brewers, in the same way I probably won’t talk much publicly about my next anal rash. But I do have to express some disgust with the fact that they would allow newly called up Jason Bourgeois to wear number 16. How dare they disrespect franchise legend Pat Listach in such a callous manner?
Finally, my 5 year-old daughter was distraught by Tiger Woods’ collapse at the PGA last weekend. Not because he lost, but because she wanted to make sure he at least got a ribbon for coming in second place. I told her he’d probably be okay.
This column tries to pitch Ken Griffey, Jr. as the anti-Favre, because he promises to do the Mariners fans a favor and stay retired. But didn’t he leave Seattle for a boatload of cash once already? I’m just saying.
Okay, before I get started, let me pimp my blog real quick. There, that was harmless, wasn’t it? Oh, and if you haven’t listened to my podcast with Trenni Kusnierek last week, there is a hole in your life.
Before I expose my links, a few thoughts:
If you’re a Brewers fan, you have no doubt seen videos of Yovani Gallardo’s family sitting in the front row of his games against the Astros, enthusiastically cheering him on. They, honest to God, seem like the most fun group of brothers ever. They all look exactly alike, each with a more outrageous mustache than the other. I demand that the Brewers start leasing them out to events – you’re telling me your kids’ birthday party wouldn’t be 80% more fun with the crazy Gallardo Brothers party in attendance? Bring the Flying Gallardo Brothers to your next keg party, and you could charge 20 bucks a head, easy. This is my plea to the Brewers organization – THINK ABOUT THIS.
I learned on the Twitter that the MLB All Star game was Tuesday night. Seemed to be a decent showing for Prince Fielder and Trevor Hoffman, but after going 0-for3, Ryan Braun ran into the dugout and demanded that the NL All Stars trade for better pitching.
After the game, the Twins’ Justin Morneau whined that the Canadian National Anthem was played via audio recording. SUCK IT UP, FRENCHIE – Isn’t that reasonable payback for us having to watch Michael J. Fox on those MLB commercials? We made Seth Rogen a millionaire, but they just want more, more, more.
This caption contest for a Braunie and Prince picture will depress you.
Tom Haudricourt stops the presses with this molten hot scoop: The Brewers are looking to play well in the second half of the season. In the meantime, Buster Olney is hiding out in Doug Melvin’s mustache, waiting for trade news.
I know the new Republican talking point is that President Obama throws like a girl (FYI, THIS is how you throw out a first pitch), but I think we need to be more critical of his attire. I mean, seriously – ’80s-style baggy jeans? Who told Obama that it was appropriate to throw out the first pitch dressed as Sinbad?
Since I’m a politics guy, I have to throw this in: Obama says Supreme Court Justice Nominee Sonya Sotomayor “saved baseball” by ordering MLB players back on to the field in 1995, following the players’ strike that cost us a 1994 World Series. Not so fast, says Bob Costas:
Oh, and having solved the economy, job losses, home foreclosures, health care, and the wars in the middle east, Congress is going to fix the BCS system.
I have two NFL jerseys hanging in my closet: Brett Favre and Michael Vick. Which is more embarrassing to wear in public? Discuss.
Speaking of Favre, I am rooting for John David Booty to bleed him dry for the right to wear number 4 for the Vikings. Make him pay more than $100,000, and we’ll forget all about the fact that you have a serial killer name, John David Booty.
From what I understand, during the tailgating for one of the Twins-Brewers games at Miller Park, one moron was spotted wearing a Favre #4 Vikings jersey. There is no judge in Wisconsin that would convict anyone arrested for beating that idiot to a pulp. As my friend Stephen Thompson routinely says, the whole Favre saga is akin to your parents getting divorced, and your dad filming porn with your mom\’s worst enemy and making you watch. I actually think that’s a bit understated.
The NBA’s summer league is underway, and if you want to watch it, you have to buy some kind of internet package at NBA.com. Young Money is turning some heads early. In watching the video, his body language is clearly influenced by Allen Iverson – of course, that might be a byproduct of the fact that he wears #3. (Which I thought the Bucks retired out of respect for Shawn Respert for being the worst draft pick in franchise history.)
If you have to publicly declare something you do isn’t racist, it’s at the very least a little racistey.
The British Open starts today, but wait – you’re only supposed to call it “The Open.” Maybe Justin Morneau complained that calling it the British Open left Canadians out.
Friday Night Lights is only going 2 more seasons, and Connie Britton says they’re not even starting to film Season 4 until this September. Oh, and please God, let Mad Men start again. (It does on August 16th.)
“There were many gay people in the audience, some notable Washington gays and lesbians, some of whom are involved, peripherally or otherwise, in “the movement.”
From now on, I demand to be identified as “notable heterosexual.”
Today’s fun fact: In 1949, both the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox sent scouts down to Birmingham to watch a promising youngster named Willie Mays. Both declined to sign him because he was black. In fact, the Birmingham Black Barons were actually affiliated with the Red Sox, but they refused to purchase his contract, as pitching coach Larry Woodall said Mays wasn’t the “Red Sox type.” And thus, Mays was denied the chance to play in the outfield with either Ted Williams or Joe Dimaggio because he was black. If we continue to praise teams like the Brooklyn Dodgers for being so “open minded,” shouldn’t we also continue to deride the teams that were the most notoriously racist? Maybe ESPN should throw this fact in when they devote every minute of their air time to covering Boston and New York.
Finally, today’s music: Considered by some to be the worst video ever made. On the other hand, in case you missed the ’80s, it sums the whole decade up in about 3 minutes.
It appears I can now go back to the adult theater and retrieve the “Favre 4 Ever” towel I gave them to assist in cleaning up after shows. Although both the towel and Favre’s reputation may be equally and irrevocably sullied at this point.
On Tuesday, Favre announced that he wouldn’t be playing for the Minnesota Vikings in the upcoming NFL season. At least he said it until he un-says it. Vikings fans can now look forward to the Sage Rosenfels Era, which is only slightly less anticipated than “The Love Guru 2.”
After 8 months of coverage, it may seem that every angle of this story has been thoroughly dissected. For instance, each Green Bay fan has had to go through the shock of learning that their infallible idol of 17 years was a self absorbed, narcissistic, jerk. (For example, check out this idiot with the bad haircut, who actually went on public television to say things like “Favre’s class, every day guy demeanor and toughness made him the best spokesman for Wisconsin we could ever dream of. And it can never be taken away from any of us.” I am now going to slam my head in my car door repeatedly.)
Finding out Brett Favre is a pompous ass is like finding out Darth Vader is your father. Or that Adam Lambert is gay. The trauma caused by knowing the last 17 years of your life is a fraud makes you think nothing is real. God is Dead. Charlie Sheen and Michael Jordan star in underwear ads together. In The Breakfast Club, they never actually eat breakfast. The combover remains an acceptable hairstyle. Nothing makes sense anymore.
But there’s a disconcerting point about the Favre saga that expands well beyond just his endless Hamlet routine. Favregate reminds us once again how disconnected players are from the experiences of the fans. I mean, Favre decided he wanted to come back to the Vikings. Let me repeat that – THE VIKINGS. One of the teams so reviled by Packers fans that merely mentioning their name in some quarters 200 years ago could have led to your tongue being cut out. (Or, in modern terms, withholding cheese curds from a Packer fan for 3 consecutive days.) My daughter is already aware that she will never date any young man that dares to wear a piece of Viking or Bear paraphernalia in my house. (Thankfully, she has held true to this rule, but only because she’s 5 years old.)
The problem is, players see other teams as potential employers. Fans see them as sworn enemies. Nothing is more galling than seeing Brewers and Cubs yukking it up on the field before the game. This is like finding out Seinfeld and Newman were secretly lovers.
In today’s sports, players are millions of miles removed from the fan experience. Just ask my wife, who walked in the room and encountered me doubled over in pain after watching Brewer Jeff Suppan give up a grand slam to the rigor mortis-inflicted Washington Nationals. Think anyone on the team felt as bad as I did? Imagine, for example, Ryan Braun going 0-for-4 with four strikeouts. He would be forced to drown his sorrows in a hot tub with four Bacardi Rum shot girls. Someday, he’ll probably have to go on the DL from all the paper cuts he suffers from bathing in $100 bills.
Not so in the old days, before free agency and big money. My Dad likes to tell the story of the day he rode his bike by Warren Spahn’s house, only to see one of the greatest lefthanded pitchers of all time out mowing his lawn. Warren Spahn! And the players used to actively buy into rivalries, since free agency didn’t allow them to skip from franchise to franchise in search of a richer deal. Jackie Robinson, then of the Los Angeles Dodgers, actually decided to retire when he found out he had been traded to the hated San Francisco Giants.
But now Brett Favre can’t even muster up enough effort to hate the Minnesota Vikings. It’s really not that hard to hate – I hate people because they have crazy sideburns, or because they drive too slow, or because they write checks in line in front of me at the grocery store. Surely Favre can muster up enough distaste for a team that took cheap shots at his knees for 17 years. I mean, come on Brett – let the hate FLOW.
I suppose I can cling to the theory that Favre hated the Vikings so much, he decided to string their fans along and crush their dreams at the last minute. It seems only slightly less plausible than the theory that Dick Cheney was controlling the 9/11 planes via remote control, but it makes me feel better.
In other news…
When rumors started circulating that the Mariners were offering Wisconsin native Jarrod Washburn in exchange for prized shortstop Alcides Escobar, I laughed them off. After all, if Escobar was too much to offer up for the Blue Jays’ Roy Halladay, he certainly had to be too much to offer up for a 35 year old with a lot of miles on his arm (although his 2.59 ERA is impressive.) But what is troubling about this Washburn-Escobar article is that it doesn’t contain a line like, “Melvin fell down laughing and urinated on himself when he heard the offer,” or the more desirable “upon hearing the offer, Melvin cordially invited the Mariners to engage in intercourse with themselves.” Could this have actually been in the works?
It would seem that having a stud shortstop in waiting like Escobar would actually depress the trade value for a guy like J.J. Hardy, who I (probably mistakenly) still think might have some value. But if you\’re a team looking to trade for Hardy and see that the Brewers have their shortstop of the future in waiting, why would you pony up much at all, knowing they almost have to get rid of him eventually? Even fantasy baseball players know this trading trick – along with trying to get your fellow owner as drunk as possible and throwing in a worthless player from their favorite team to sweeten the pot. (I once inexplicably heard the phrase “Oh, you’re adding Matt Mieske? Then it’s a deal!”)
It would seem that Mike Cameron might actually be the most marketable trade bait at this point. Good power, great outfielder, still has some speed, and a great guy in the clubhouse. For some reason, he’s enjoyed a Robert Downey Jr.-like career resurrection in Milwaukee. Prior to coming to the Brewers, Cameron averaged one home run per 24 at bats for his career – then, in 2008, at age 35, he began hitting a home run every 16 at bats, and hasn’t stopped. Maybe joining a bowling league and eating a steady diet of cheesy grillwursts has revived his youthful vigor.
(It should be noted at this point that we just passed the one year anniversary of Wisconsin State Journal columnist Tom Oates’ proclamation that C.C. Sabathia was “out of reach” for the Brewers, followed up a week later by his adamant declaration that the Brewers needed Sabathia NOW! After they actually traded for him.)
Speaking of Doug Melvin, is there another case in professional sports where a team’s General Manager looks exactly like their mascot? Has anyone ever seen Melvin and Bernie Brewer in the same room? Is Bernie the one taking calls from other GMs from up in the Chalet?
I can imagine the following phone call:
Receptionist: “Brewer front office. This is who? J.P. Ricciardi from the Blue Jays? Yes, Mr. Melvin is in, but wait… someone just hit a home run, and he’s heading down the slide. Can he call you right back?”
At least Melvin would have someone else to blame for Jody Gerut.
More Brewers: As hard as it is to fathom, is there a chance that Bob Uecker is actually underappreciated in Milwaukee? Sure, he’s been ubiquitous here for 30 years – but have a look at this video of Uecker on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson in 1984. (I’ll wait right here.)
It’s not just “sports” funny – it is legitimately funny, by actual comedian standards. Seth Myers from Saturday Night Live called that clip a “clinic” in deadpan comedy. Not only is Uecker one of the funniest guys in sports, he may legitimately be one of the funniest comedians working today. And we have the chance to listen to him on a daily basis. It is truly an honor.
In my last column, I offered up a suggestion to the Brewers marketing division – fly the wildly entertaining Gallardo Brothers up here and make them local celebrities. It appears my plea went unheeded. So I’ll try again.
A few weeks ago, when I was sick as a dog on my couch, I watched a good 14 straight hours of old World Series highlights on the MLB Network. And as the years go on, you can slowly see the quality of fans’ attire devolving. Up until the mid 1960’s, people actually got dressed up to go to games – suit, tie, and the whole deal. Now, people show up to games dressed like they’re going out to change their oil. How classy would it be to have “wear a tie to the game” night, like the old days? Everyone has at least one dignified outfit to wear to a game. It shows class, and reverence for the past – something baseball is always pushing. (The only problem I forsee would be that on those nights, women wouldn’t be able to vote for All-Star Game starters.)
Of course, everyone is down on certain Brewers for having subpar seasons – Bill Hall, J.J. Hardy, Corey Hart, and Manny Parra among them. But lost in the shuffle is the inexplicable greatness of Craig Counsell, who has hovered around the .300 batting average mark for nearly the whole year. (In a national broadcast two years ago, Geoff Jenkins let the world in on the fact that Counsell’s nickname was “The Grumpy Rooster,” a fact that I demand be repeated on TV broadcasts on a nightly basis.) Counsell’s drastic improvement has come at age 38, and directly following seasons in which he batted .220 and .226. In fact, given his historical track record, I dare say if Counsell ends up batting over .300, it will be one of the most impressive Brewer achievments of all time – right next to Molitor’s 39 game hit streak and John Jaha’s streak of going three straight days without a drunk driving arrest.
(Reminder: you can follow me on Twitter at @Schneider_CM)
We all love Brewers’ catcher Jason Kendall for what he is – he’s a gritty old guy who busts his tail, looks like he eats shards of broken glass for breakfast, grows funny beards, and marks his forearms up with cool tattoos. He’s exactly what we want in Milwaukee – a blue collar guy with a stare so intense, it looks like he’s constantly trying to avenge the death of his childhood family pet. If you worked in the same office with Kendall, you’d be afraid that if you accidentally ate his egg salad sandwich from the fridge, he’d tear your arms off and make you eat those, too.
But while all the things Kendall is are important, it is what Kendall isn’t that makes the most difference to the Brewers. Put simply, he isn’t a major league player anymore.
It hurts to say, but Kendall’s career has been dead for two years, but nobody seems to have noticed. (The sport equivalent to “Weekend at Bernie’s.”) In the first nine years of his career, all with the Pittsburgh Pirates, Kendall hit .309, making the All Star team three times (even after suffering a horrific ankle break in 1999). As recently as 2004, his final year with the Pirates, Kendall hit .319, with a respectable OPS (on base plus slugging) of .789.
Then, after being traded from the Pirates to Oakland, Kendall’s career at the plate has cratered. After joining the Brewers in 2008, Kendall has, simply put, been the worst offensive everyday player in the major leagues. His at-bats are so horrible, it often leaves television viewers at home flipping the channel to find something more comfortable to watch, such as a live human birth.
Baseball Prospectus keeps a statistic they call VORP – Value over Replacement Player – that measures how many runs a specific player contributes to a team relative to an average player at that position. According to this standard, Kendall ranks butt naked last among catchers in the National League, with a VORP of -8.5. In other words, Kendall actually costs the Brewers nearly 9 runs per year over just any nameless stiff they could plug in the catcher position. (Kendall ranks 89th out of 90 players to play catcher in the major leagues this year, just ahead of Dioner Navarro of Tampa Bay.)
It’s not as if this fancy pants statistic tells us anything we didn’t know just by using our own eyeballs. It appears that when batting, Kendall is using a bat made of balsa wood. The chances of seeing a Kendall extra base hit are about the same as the chances of seeing a yeti riding a unicycle by your house while smoking a pipe. When teamed up with Mike Rivera, Brewer catchers have hit zero home runs this year. Has any team ever gone a full season without a single combined home run from a specific position? (That’s a legitimate question – I couldn’t find a statistic on that.) UPDATE: Answer in the comments section.
“Baseball people” would counter that Kendall plays catcher, a position from which offense isn’t necessarily expected. (“People like me” would respond that he has actually managed to be the absolute worst at a position where no offense is expected.) So he must be some kind of defensive dynamo, right?
Not exactly. Kendall was run out of Chicago Cubs’ locker room after he managed to throw out only 5 runners out of 57 that attemped stealing – an execrable percentage of 9% runners caught. His time in Milwaukee hasn’t been much better, as he has caught only 21% of would-be-base stealers.
That leaves us with the last place a catcher can go when his skills completely leave him – the argument that he calls a great game. If so, he’s been calling great games for a Brewer team that currently has the second worst ERA (4.84) in the National League, with only the laughing stock of the league, the Washington Nationals, behind them. If the Brew Crew replaced Kendall with Whoopi Goldberg behind the plate, the Brewers ERA rank could only drop one more spot. (As this is being written, Kendall is orchestrating a 9-earned run masterpiece from Yovani Gallardo.)
Sure, there are plenty of disappointing players on the Brewer roster – Bill Hall, Corey Hart, J.J. Hardy, et al. Those guys get the most criticism, only because they have actually shown flashes of potential. Kendall gets a free pass because nobody expects him to hit it past the pitchers mound. (Which provides an important lesson in your life – never do anything well, as you will be expected to do it well all the time.)
To recap: the Brewers have an aging catcher who costs them 15 runs per year on offense, and who is captaining one of the worst starting rotations in the majors. Dr. Jack Kevorkian goes to prison for mercifully euthanizing patients, yet Jason Kendall roams free after quietly killing the Brewers. Where’s the justice? And isn’t there some random Molina roaming the earth?
***
Last week, I sang the praises of Craig Counsell, and how impressive it would be if he actually managed to hit .300 this year, improving his average by nearly 80 points at age 38. My buddy Matt pointed out how predictable this was once The Grumpy Rooster changed his batting stance.
You may recall that in the past, Counsell used to stand completely upright and spastically wave his bat around with both hands over his head, as if he just mainlined three Red Bulls. Nobody in the league had a stance like this – and yet, apparently, it took until we elected an African-American president for Counsell to make the connection that this bizarre stance may have actually contributed to his paltry hitting. It’s almost as if Counsell had been playing the last 10 years wearing red high heels, then decided to give wearing cleats a try. Shouldn’t fans have some kind of redress for a player being so stupid? Some kind of class action lawsuit perhaps?
In my Friday night co-ed softball league, we play with five guys and five girls. Often times, we can’t scrounge up enough girls to play, since girls actually have more important things to do than play softball (like going to bars and ignoring me). In the event that we only have 4 girls in the lineup, when the 5th girl’s spot comes up, they just count it as an automatic out.
As weird as this sounds, I pretty much figure this is how other teams pitch to the Brewers. They just count Bill Hall’s spot as the automatic out. They just imagine that the girl that normally hits in his spot is out at a sorority formal or something, and just count Hall’s at bat as a strikeout. In fact, other pitchers probably get irritated that they have to go through the formality of actually having to throw him the required three pitches to strike him out. The sight of Hall walking back to the dugout will be a familiar one in the next few weeks, as Corey Hart sits out following the dangerous surgical procedure he underwent to have his creepy beard removed.
Other notes:
I know sports are supposed to teach kids lessons about life, but not like this – while watching golf with my 5 year old daughter this weekend, she asked me what “erectile dysfunction” was. They cram so many boner pill commercials into golf telecasts now, it’s almost a PG-13 affair. What’s funny is that golf is the last sport you’d expect to have to shield your children’s eyes from, given all the trouble other athletes are getting into. (My daughter knows future Packer Michael Vick as “The guy who is mean to dogs.”)
If they have enough money to blanket network golf coverage with all these ads, can you imagine how many of these pills they’re selling? Next time you see a 60+ year old guy at the mall, there’s legitimately a 50% chance he’s hopped up on wiener pills, walking around aimlessly, gazing at teenage girls in the same way Wile E. Coyote gazes at the Roadrunner and sees a giant buttery turkey leg. This has zombie movie written all over it.
But after watching all these grumpy wiener ads, it’s starting to dawn on me – I might be their target audience. If that’s the case, I might just start taking cyanide pills.
ESPN’s strategy is easy to figure out: they try to get an otherwise indifferent public to care about a specific story, then just beat it to freakin’ death until their network becomes virtually unwatchable (see Favre, Brett.) This has been the case with the Plaxico Burress gun trial – can you name me more than 3 people outside the metro New York area who have given this issue more than 3 seconds’ worth of thought? The guy took a gun into a bar (something that happens every day in Wisconsin), and ended up hurting only himself. And now, we get a full day’s worth of interview clips from teammates about the role of Antonio Pierce, who helped Burress to the hospital. It’s ridiculous – if Burress played for the Kansas City Chiefs, one wonders if the story would make the network at all.
One of the articles from the “Best American Sports Writing 2007” compilation came from a blog just like this one. It goes into great detail regarding the famous Gas House Gorillas versus Teatotallers game in 1946. It is brilliant – although a little long.
Last week, a minor fracas broke out amongst bloggers regarding Brewer beat writer Anthony Witrado, with several blogs calling for him to be fired. Apparently, Witrado has committed the mortal sin of not being sycophantic enough towards the Brewers, answering demeaning e-mails with smart ass responses, and dressing like he’s at a Lil’ Wayne concert.
Well.
First of all, I have no idea who Anthony Witrado is. He could be next in line for the Nobel Prize, or he could be made entirely of feminine cleansing product. But, as a general rule, I’m usually against calling for regular people to be fired. It’s essentially the equivalent of calling someone a racist – it costs the accuser nothing, but damages the subject. The person calling for the firing goes on to live their life as is, while the target has to explain to his bosses why people want him fired. Just doesn’t look good. (My proposal: Anyone who calls for someone to be fired has to put $10 into a fund, payable o the fired person when they actually get the axe. Then you REALLY have to mean it when you say it. Furthermore, if you predict a trade is going to happen and it doesn’t, you have to pay $20 to the nearest Humane Society, unless one or more of the players is wearing a moustache.)
That being said, I may never have read a single word ever written by Anthony Witrado, who, given the current state of newspapers, probably doesn’t make enough money to actually buy a newspaper to read his own articles. It’s fun to call for the firing of millionaire athletes and managers, quite different to do so to regular shlubs. (That being said, the Journal Sentinel is likely paying as much attention to these bloggers as they are to my demand that obituaries be required to contain a counterpoint written by someone that hated the dead person\’s guts.)
Okay, enough about that – what really interests me about this whole issue is how the role of team beat writers has changed just in the past 10 years. (Warning: I am about to expose myself as a hopeless grayballs.)
There were days not long ago when, if you were lucky, you got to see your favorite team on TV maybe once a week. There wasn’t any internet, no blogs, no cable television. In 1987, during Paul Molitor’s 39 game hitting streak, I actually used to pick up the phone and call the George Michael Sports Machine telephone hotline every five minutes on game nights to see if Molitor got a hit. (Maybe our lack of call waiting was the reason no girls were calling me, since they couldn’t get through. There’s at least a 3% chance this is the case.)
In those days, a team’s beat writers and radio announcers were the fans’ eyes and ears. Most everything we knew about players was told to us by newspapers and play by play announcers. (It took me at least a half a season to figure out Greg Vaughn was black, for instance.) That’s why so many old baseball fans have such reverence for baseball writers and radio guys – they painted the pictures that the fogeys remember so vividly. (If you haven’t read “The Boys of Summer” by former Brooklyn Dodgers beat reporter Roger Kahn, you are missing out on some of the greatest of American literature.)
But now, beat writers have a tougher challenge. Everyone can see every game on television – so reading in the newspaper the next morning about what happened a half a day ago, and about something you saw with your own eyes, just seems superfluous. What happens is beat writers like this Witrado fellow have to demonstrate actual value to the newspaper, so they have to do these dopey online chats so fans feel “engaged.” And since every male in America that likes looking at naked women thinks they can do a better job at writing about sports than actual sports reporters, it has to be just a miserable job. (Which is generally why nobody hates sports more than sports reporters.)
So I don’t necessarily fault Anthony Witrado, Tom Haudricourt, or any of the other Journal Sentinel reporters that are being asked to be more fan-friendly. I don’t mind if every story they write isn’t a hagiography of Doug Melvin. We no longer need them to tell us, for instance, that Bill Hall has spent the entire season accidentally batting with a rainbow trout instead of a bat. We can see for ourselves. They’re fighting a losing battle against technology and a more knowledgeable fan base.
***
I recognize stories about my softball team are about as pleasant as an Eric Gagne highlight film, but we played a pretty awesome trick on a guy on our team this week. One that could, and by all means should, be replicated in competitive leagues around the state.
The “pitcher” on our co-ed team told us he wasn’t going to make it this week, and worried aloud how we would get along without his pitching ability. Eyes were rolled, and the plan was set into motion. We doctored up a fake letter from the league office, complete with letterhead and signature from the league director, telling this guy that he had been traded to another team (Mo’s Sausage Fingers), due to other teams wanting his pitching so badly. We made up the name of a girl that he was supposedly traded for, and mailed the letter to his house.
The very next day, our team captain got an angry voice message from the guy, demanding to know why he got traded. He then called the league office to find out. The league’s organizer (who the letter was supposedly from) told him he had no idea what he was talking about. At that point, he realized he had been had. But the fact remains. HE THOUGHT HE HAD BEEN TRADED. IN A CO-ED REC LEAGUE.
If this trick doesn’t work, feel free to go with our backup plan. Every team has some guy who thinks he’s an all-star. So send him a fake letter from the league office telling him he’s been voted league Most Valuable Player, and to come to the league office to pick up his award. Give him a specific time to go down there to get his trophy and have his picture taken for the newspaper – then camp out and watch as he goes in to ask for his nonexistent award. Laughs had by all.
***
A story apropos of nothing: I used to work for a guy who ran a golf course in the Madison area. He said he once had a kids’ day out at the golf course, and hired Bucky Badger, the UW mascot, to come entertain the children. But he said (and he swears this is true) that when Bucky got there, the guy in the mascot costume was drunk. Bucky then, in full costume, jumped on a golf cart, took off, and ran it into a tree, damaging the cart. The course owner had to sue UW for damages for the wrecked golf cart.
My question is this: When Bucky Badger gets on the witness stand, does he have to wear the full costume? When a lawyer asks him a question, does he just nod “yes” or “no?” Does he throw both hands up in the air to indicate “I don’t know?” Does he sit there with a steely resolve* when sentenced to life imprisonment? When he makes his one phone call after being arrested, does the other person on the line know it’s him and he’s in trouble? We deserve answers.
As of this writing, the Packers apparently are still interested in signing Michael Vick. I’m not only in favor of this move because I’m a Virginia Tech Hokie, but also because it almost guarantees that the Packers’ sound guy will stop playing “Who Let the Dogs Out” at Lambeau.
Seriously, this song, along with “Whoomp There it Is,” is setting race relations in America back 20 years. Someone PLEASE explain to the Lambeau PA guy that there have actually been songs recorded after 1999. (I’d even approve of him going with “Doggie Bounce”.) The one thing I would NOT encourage is replacing these songs with any songs that actually mention the Packers by name. There is nothing – and I mean absolutely nothing – in the world that is worse than Packer-themed music. (Even Hugo Chavez is like, “yeah, listening to that stuff is brutal.”)
This theory was crystallized last week with the release of Dan the Piano Man’s “Favre is Still a Packer,” which actually briefly made me envious of my hard of hearing grandfather. (Because he’s dead.)
Of course, this aural Armageddon was just the latest in a long line of abysmal Packer music. Who can forget the Wizenheimer’s famous “Go You Packers Go?” Sadly, not me. Or the Bubblers’ “Da Packer Polka?” I actually keep a cyanide-laced bratwurst on hand in case someone plays this song at a tailgate.
Other random notes: After I bemoaned Jason Kendall’s lack of power last week, he hit a home run in Houston. Even Mike Rivera had a good game. I fully credit my column for this power surge. In a related note, if anyone out there wants me to do a column criticizing their wife, within a day, your pancakes will be 15% tastier.
I have to give credit to the guy who commented on a completely unrelated post, calling me a “Rush Limbaugh wannabe” and an “ultra-conservative Puritan fascist.” I actually have all those things on my resume, right next to \”has unusually excessive ear hair.\”
This weekend, David Ortiz held a press conference saying he had never bought or used steroids. One important point: Human growth hormone, the alleged drug of choice for Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds, and others of that era, is not a steroid. So there’s that.
There can be no debate – Milwaukee sports fans are a quirky bunch. What else can be said of a fan base that shows up to baseball games and cheers on giant sized foam rubber facsimiles of encased meats racing each other? (In terms of uniqueness, this ranks well ahead of the fact Milwaukee is the only city in the past century to have elected three socialist mayors. The natural next step is for the city to elect a socialist sausage mayor. Free sauerkraut for the masses!)
There’s another characteristic unique to Milwaukee fans. Go to a typical Brewer baseball game and look around the stands. In every other major league stadium, you’d see fans wearing hats and shirts honoring their favorite team. In Milwaukee, it’s much different. At Miller Park, you see more fans decked out in gear honoring their favorite team from nearly three decades ago.
Everyone remembers the old ball-and-glove logo adopted by the Brewers in 1978. It cleverly incorporated the “M” for “Milwaukee” and “B” for “Brewers” into a baseball glove. Designed by contest winner Tom Meindel (for which he was paid the princely sum of $2,000), the logo graced Brewer uniforms for sixteen years, which also happened to be the golden years in the franchise’s history. In the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, 90-win seasons and playoff appearances were the norm for the franchise (when only the two division winners made the playoffs), and the “MB” logo became nationally recognizable.
The team cast aside the logo in 1994 (adding a short-lived green element to the new logo), then changed to the current logo and color scheme in 2000. As it turns out, the uniform change in 1994 virtually coincided with a 13-year streak in which the Brewers finished with losing records. (When Brewer fans hear the words “Scrap Iron,” they shudder like sea otters do when they hear the words “Exxon Valdez.”)
Yet even after nine years of the current version of the uniforms, the good ol’ ball and glove logo reigns supreme in Milwaukee. Fans flock to sports stores to buy Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun jerseys in the royal blue and yellow that identify them as old school.
Sure, other teams will revive old logos for “turn back the clock” games, and some teams have kept their uniforms and logos identical for decades. But in no other city do the team’s fans identify more with a team’s bygone era than in Milwaukee, where the old colors and logos actually seem to outsell the current hats and jerseys. Until this year, the Brewers actually cultivated this nostalgia by having the team wear the old uniforms for every Friday home game (now, they do it once a month.) But they still license and sell the old gear, due to fan demand.
So why do Milwaukee fans cling so tightly to the past? Certainly, other cities have nostalgia for their teams of a quarter-decade ago, but no other cities refuse to let go of their 1980s identity like Brew Town. Perhaps the answer lies not in the Brewers, but in the City of Milwaukee itself.
In the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, Milwaukee was a national powerhouse. The city had sports teams that dominated the national scene: The Brewers were always in the discussion for a World Series appearance. The Bucks were on their way to the third best record in the NBA for the 1980’s, behind only the Lakers and Celtics. Marquette was still glowing from a 1977 national men’s basketball championship.
Aside from sports, Milwaukee still had its long-earned identity as the place where the nation’s beer was brewed. Pabst, Miller, Blatz, and Schlitz, all of which were founded by 1856, were all still cranking out the suds and providing good union jobs. (In 1843, one historian counted 138 taverns in Milwaukee, one per every forty residents.)
In 1980, Milwaukee was the nation’s 16th most populous city. Its manufacturing base was strong, leading the nation not only in beer production, but in industrial control equipment, mining gear, cranes, independent foundries, and of course, one of the leading indicators of industrial muscle – Harley Davison motorcycles.
During this era, Milwaukee also had its place in the nation’s popular culture. Both “Happy Days” and “Laverne and Shirley” gave viewers weekly reminders that the city was still alive and well. If you asked people around the country, at least half of them would recognize “Shotz” as a real brewery in Milwaukee. (Although for the last three years of the series, Laverne and Shirley moved to California.) Laverne and Shirley was cancelled in 1983, while Happy Days held on until 1984 – yet the fact that Milwaukee just recently unveiled a statue of The Fonz is further evidence of the city’s nostalgia for that era.
Soon, both in sports and in life, things would begin to turn for Milwaukee.
Globalism and technology soon caught up with Milwaukee’s industrial base. Manufacturing jobs began leaving, and the stubborn city was slow to adapt to the new service and technology based economy. By 2009, only one major brewery – Miller – was left in the city, and it had been purchased by a South African company and merged with Colorado-based Coors. Milwaukee began to hemorrhage jobs. Incomes fell to 23% lower than the average American city. People fled Milwaukee, causing it to drop out of the top 20 most populous cities in the U.S. (it is currently 22nd.) By 2007, the city’s population had fallen 20% over its high in 1960. (It also didn’t help that Milwaukee earned a reputation as a city where there’s a decent chance you might be eaten alive by your neighbor.)
The world of Milwaukee sports was similarly affected by the change in times. New cable television technology allowed major league baseball teams to control their own television revenues. Large market teams used lucrative new television contracts to spend more on the best available players, leading to an even greater disparity in revenues. Teams like the Brewers were saddled with middling talent, in aging stadiums, with front offices that made bad decisions. Fans watched patiently as the next big Brewer star always seemed to evaporate overnight. (Billy Jo Robidoux and Joey Meyer, your phone is ringing.)
Aside from 2001, in which they were a Glenn Robinson baseline jumper from making the NBA finals, the Bucks have been mediocre at best, and more often, pretty awful. (Not coincidentally, the Bucks have also tried to lure fans from their glory years back to the fold by reinstating their original uniform colors.) The Packers, of course, had a glorious run through the late 1990s and into the current decade. Had it not been for these years of success, Milwaukee may have just collectively drowned itself in Lake Michigan. (Also, if the Packers ever tried to change their uniforms or logo, torch-bearing fans would burn down Lambeau field.)
So it makes sense that Brewer fans, more than fans in other cities, would choose to cling to the glory years – both for the team that they root for and the city in which they live. In this city, there will always be nostalgia for the time that nobody messed with Milwaukee. A time where you could get drunk and kiss a girl without having to sign a consent document. A time when you could throw an aluminum can into the trash without ending up on some neighborhood recycling watch hit list. A time when a cigarette dangling from your lip identified you as someone not to be crossed. An era when the size of your mustache was directly related to your ability to score chicks. A day where being spotted in a Trans Am didn’t mean you were going somewhere, it meant you had arrived.*
In a small way, the old logo and gear does that for us. But how does it make the current players feel? No matter how many home runs Prince Fielder hits, he always knows that he can’t match the fans watching Robin Yount pinball doubles off the County Stadium outfield wall for 20 years. The Brewers are almost like Kim Novak in Vertigo – “Here, dress like the old Brewers, and we’ll love you just as much.”
It may be time for the Brewers to either fully embrace the old logo or cut ties with it altogether. Brewer fans can continue to reminisce about the old days, but today’s team won’t always be seen as secondary to the teams that we grew up loving.
In his book “The Making of Milwaukee,” historian John Gurda noted the intense nostalgia of Milwaukeeans, saying, “It is impossible . . . to shed the accumulated weight of the past, to truly reinvent the character of either an individual or a community. History serves as both ballast and bedrock.”
The current Brewers are finding that out now. We want our old Milwaukee back.
***
The craziest part of this whole Rick Pitino scandal is the fact that the guy has written not one, not two, not three, but FOUR motivational books. For four volumes, he has presented himself as the guy who is going to tell you how to turn your life around. And now he sits here, disgraced, having admitted that he impregnated a 43 year-old woman in 2003 after a tryst at a local Louisville restaurant, then allegedly paid for her to have an abortion. (I read one of the books, called “Success is a Choice.” Apparently for Pitino, success means being pro-choice.)
The hypocrisy is astounding. The only way Pitino could look more like a fool is if he actually once authored a book called “How Not to Impregnate a 43 Year-Old Woman and Have to Pay for Her Abortion.”
What will be interesting is how fans at certain schools react to Pitino when he comes into town. I’m thinking primarily of Marquette, a Catholic, Jesuit-run university that most likely frowns on Pitino’s… errrrr… discretions. Certainly, not all students at Marquette are pro-life, in keeping with the Catholic tradition. Many aren’t Catholic at all. But those that are generally tend to be intensely pro-life, and not at all shy about expressing such views in public. If you’re an MU student who subscribes to the Catholic doctrine, then you believe that Pitino essentially paid $3,000 to put a hit out on an embryo. Certainly, at places like MU and Notre Dame, Pitino (who actually wrote a book on being a devout Catholic) will hear all about what those students think of his scandal.
It’s rare when such a sensitive political issue reaches the stands of a sporting event. Let’s just say I’ll be surprised if several Marquette students don’t show up to the game dressed like the Pope, and perform mock excommunications.
Just to recap your State of Kentucky basketball coaches: Louisville’s Pitino impregnates women on restaurant tables, new Kentucky Wildcat coach John Calipari escaped Memphis before they got drilled with NCAA sanctions, and recently deposed Kentucky coach Billie Gillespie just got popped with his third drunk driving arrest (although charges were dropped in a 2003 incident involving Gillespie.) If Charles Manson weren’t still behind bars, he’d probably be coaching at Western Kentucky.
***
Oh, and as mentioned on national TV last week, Big Papi is a Packers fan. He married Tiffany Brick from Kaukauna, whom he met while playing minor league baseball in Appleton. So there’s that.
Fort Atkinson’s own Luke Winn has a really good article in Sports Illustrated about Ken Griffey, Jr. and the death of baseball cards. Remind me to write more about this later.
Is there a better time of the year to be in Wisconsin than right now? The weather is cooling off just a bit, the leaves are starting to change, and tailgating season has begun. You get to exhume from the closet the one sweater you have that makes you look skinny. Young male high school graduates head off to college with the hopes of one day being able to have a sexual experience with someone else in the room. The Brewers complete their traditional disastrous August, leaving Wisconsin sports fans to dream about the upcoming Packer season. And Marquette fans don their red sweatshirts and head off to Madison to root for the Badgers.
Wait… what?
It’s true. In a phenomenon virtually unique to Wisconsin, we have two major universities who are bitter rivals; one with a major Division I football team, one without. And the UW holds a monopoly on big time college football in the state. So every fall, Marquette students and alums who want to root for an in-state football school dutifully don the cardinal and white and head to Camp Randall Stadium on Saturday afternoons.
It’s the height of what ESPN columnist Bill Simmons calls “sports bigamy.” But it’s even worse, given that the two schools are such fierce rivals on the basketball court. Wisconsin and Marquette have played 115 times in men’s basketball, with MU holding a 63-52 edge on the Badgers – largely on the strength of the Al McGuire-led teams of the 1970s. In fact, until their Final Four appearance in 2000, the enduring image of Wisconsin Badger basketball was a photo taken of Glenn Hughes, the father of Badgers Kim and Kerry Hughes, giving McGuire the finger after a Warrior victory in February of 1974.
But now, with both teams perennial Top-25 quality (Bo Ryan amassed a 173-60 record in his first seven years), the rivalry is as intense as ever. Both schools not only compete for recruits, but media time in the state. In March of this year, the New York Times highlighted the animosity between the teams with these stories from MU’s Wesley Matthews and the UW’s Keaton Nankivil:
Nankivil, who was two years behind Matthews at Memorial High in Madison, remembers Matthews showing up for open-gym games at Wisconsin and nobody selecting him. Marcus Landry, a Wisconsin forward from Milwaukee, said the former Marquette coach Tom Crean had sent an assistant to ask him to leave when he was playing pick-up games at Marquette.
And it’s not just in sports that the schools compete. They compete for both students and prestige in the state. Marquette students see Badgers as hippie drunks that they are forced to subsidize with their tax dollars. Badger fans see Marquette students as elitist drunks whose school can’t even settle on what to call itself. MU students want to get to know Jesus – UW students merely want to look like him. UW-Madison has a hilly, green campus where students dream of a world without war – Marquette has a gritty, inner city campus where students merely dream of a world where they still have a car stereo. Marquette has Freeway, UW-Madison has Scanner Dan. UW has the Wisconsin Idea, Marquette has Sobelman’s burgers. (A wash.) You get the picture.
So it’s unique that come football season, so many Golden Eagle/Warrior loyalists are able to compartmentalize their dislike of the UW and root on the Badger football team. But it’s also unsettling.
I tried to look at states where a similar situation existed: A private college with a top-25 level basketball team has its fans migrate over to one giant state school for football season. In most cases, there are more than one über-state school for which to root – Michigan and Michigan State, for instance. Or it’s a situation akin to the states in the Northeast, who don’t have any football at all of note, and only minor basketball teams (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, the Dakotas, Montana, etc.)
“Mr. Sportsbubbler” Dan Walsh mentioned Creighton, whose fans have to root for Nebraska’s Big Red if they want to stay in-state for football. But if your most notable alum is Kyle Korver, that probably eliminates you from the “rivalry” category. Other smaller basketball schools are stuck in states with limited football options, but none with the pedigree of Marquette.
So for the next few months, Warrior fans will continue to wear their Badger paraphernalia on game day, then throw it in the bottom drawer and pretend it doesn’t exist come December. Perhaps the state needs another football powerhouse – can’t we expand the UW-Eau Claire into Wisconsin State or something in order to give Marquette fans more options? Wisconsin Tech? Wisconsin A&M? Bret Bielema may need somewhere to coach after this year, anyway – it’s a win-win-win.
Lombardi Abuse
During the Packer preseason games, has anyone caught the Habush, Habush and Rottier commercials? The ones where personal injury attorney Robert Habush begins by quoting Vince Lombardi, saying “when you score a touchdown, act like you’ve been there before?” (Some credit these types of lawsuits with the high cost of health care, and studies have shown that medical malpractice ads have grown 1,400 percent in the past four years.)
This has me distraught on many levels. First, do we even care who gets to use Lombardi’s quotes anymore? Do we know what Saint Vince’s position on ambulance chasing trial attorneys was? This is a common Wisconsin problem: a textbook case of Lombardi abuse.
Maybe the next Habush commercial should go further in invoking Lombardi: “Winning job-killing settlements against businesses isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.” Or “when we chase down million dollar judgments, it’s like the old Packer sweep.”
Is nothing sacred anymore? Are we going to see butt cream commercials citing Lombardi? “Winners never quit and quitters never use Uncle Slappy’s Antifungal Anal Salve!”
How about this – can’t we just leave dead people alone? Remember the commercials where Fred Astaire was dancing around with a Dirt Devil vacuum cleaner? John Wayne was exhumed to sell Coors beer. Recall the ads where they had the deceased Bob Dole using a Visa card?
Wait… he what?
It gets even worse – in the future, who even knows what’s going to be a legal product? People could end up endorsing things that weren’t socially acceptable during their lifetimes. What if in 2030 some big legalization movement takes hold, and someday we have the option to buy “Bob Uecker’s Private Select Dime Bags?”
The Highest of Honors
While it was entertaining to watch Wisconsin’s own Steve Stricker with the Deutsche Bank Classic golf tournament, I had to chuckle when they talked about his hometown. Apparently Edgerton, Wisconsin (population 5,300) actually had a Steve Stricker Day! How did everyone get off work for that? Imagine how honored he must have been! Shouldn’t they hold a parade for any Edgerton native that manages to brush their teeth for three consecutive days?
Today’s fun fact:
Prior to 1961, attendees to Milwaukee Braves games could actually carry in their own beers. The practice ended that year, and Braves attendance dropped to 1,101,441, less than half their previous high, set in 1957. (Part of this had to do with the team’s decline in play, but don’t underestimate the effect of taking Milwaukeeans’ beer from them.)
Can you even imagine if they held even one “BYOB” night at Miller Park? Chances the stadium would still be standing by midnight: 1 in 20. Would we see the world’s first “three fisted slobber?” Someone would find a way, trust me.
Behind the Times
I spent last night watching America’s Sweetheart, Melanie Oudin, go down in flames in her quarterfinal U.S. Open match. Until Wednesday, Oudin had beaten so many women even Shawne Merriman was impressed.
But does anyone still find it strange that women only play best of three sets, while the men play best of five? Are we still under the impression that women don’t have enough endurance to last that long? (If anything, the opposite is true in my household.)
I’m certainly no feminist, but this practice seems a little out of place in today’s PC world. It seems ironic that in sports, which people credit with so much positive social change, there are still little pockets that refuse to adapt to the times – simply because we’re always done things that way. That’s why we’ll always have a team called the Redskins, and why we’ll still call it the Big Ten when it has eleven teams. (Which is infinitely more offensive.)
Finally, my buddy Jay wanted to show everyone his fancy new Aaron Kampman jersey:
Also available in Jarrett Bush (#24), Quinn Johnson (#45), Brandon Chillar (#54), and Jarious Wynn (#94), among others. My personal option would be to make it Vince Workman (#46), so it doubles in value as a throwback jersey. Always thinkin’.
Finally Bill Simmons talks to Patton Oswalt about “Big Fan,” a movie I desperately want to see.
So we all got excited on Sunday night watching the Packers graciously accept Jay Cutler’s gift wrapped win. Football season is upon us – it’s time to ignore your wife and kids, wear the jerseys of players 15 years younger than you, stare blankly at fantasy stats on your computer all day, and scream expletives at the television for 12 straight hours on Sundays. Seriously, if an alien dropped in on America between August and January, they would immediately deduce two things:
1. All Americans gather in front of their televisions every Sunday night to take their orders for next week from Al Michaels, and:
2. This magic elixir known as “alcohol” gives the jersey-wearing old men universal knowledge, and grants them power to speak extemporaneously about any worldly topic loudly and forcefully.
Perhaps you feel you are ready for the remainder of the season. You have your Packer jerseys, inflatable seats, and cheeseheads at the ready. Yet according to eBay, you have yet to scratch the surface of the wondrous products available to a rabid fan base.
What follows is a list of the 10 (or so) most ridiculous Green Bay Packer related items on eBay. Sure, the online auction site is full of what you would expect: jerseys, hats, obscure Packer football cards (Ingle Martin rookie card, anyone? Care for a Craig Newsome framed card? Longing for the simpler days of the George Teague era?), and Packer Mr. Potato heads. (No – wait: that’s actually pretty cool.) You can even buy a piece of one of Brian Brohm’s”game worn” jerseys, although it is unclear which game he wore it in. I think they mean he wore it while playing Madden ’09 once.
Like the Packers? Like marijuana? Then this is the shirt for you – flawlessly integrating the famed Packer logo with the famed image of a bong. Of course, if you own this shirt, you will rarely actually make it out to Lambeau Field to show it off, since remaining on the couch and ordering junk on eBay always takes precedence when the Golden Girls is on.
Sadly, you’re out of luck on this one – someone inexplicably just paid $60.00 to acquire this treasure. So congrats to the big winner – on getting the statue, and for wearing your “Green Bud Packer” shirt for the fourth straight day.
Last week, I complained bitterly about the use of Saint Vince’s visage to sell products. And now, we have a bottle of “Vince Lombardi Bourbon,” with an atrocious hand drawn picture of Lombardi wearing an expression that closely resembles what the coach’s face may have looked like if he knew someone was using his name to sell this crappy booze. (The ad says the artist has “masterfully captured Coach Lombardi in all his glory!)
Actually, this bottle is proof that Heaven doesn’t exist – if it did, Lombardi would have struck this guy with a lightning bolt by now. Oh, and if you’re interested in more of the artist’s execrable Packer art, here’s some for you.
This item is deemed by the seller as “incredible.” As if it is beyond human comprehension to imagine a pair of underwear emblazoned with the Packer emblem. Perhaps we need some kind of supercomputer to put it into understandable terms for us. Incidentally, this particular pair is size “large,” – we actually just got word that all the “junior miss” sizes have been purchased by Mark Chmura.
(There’s a scene on Family Guy where Quagmire attempts to buy a pair of women’s underwear, but it cannot be repeated here.)
In other women’s undergarment news, this item also graces the pages of eBay:
I should warn you – this item is a clever trick. Everyone knows that no woman who leaves the house wearing any Packer-related clothing has ever exercised. You’d be better off buying a giraffe a bowling ball.
(Footnote: As a lifelong Packer fan, I can make these loving jokes about other Packer fans. Much like Eskimos can only make jokes about other Eskimos.)
Someone just paid $39 for a fast food cup that’s been sitting in someone’s basement for 37 years. Ironically, after his playing career ended in 1978, Brockington lost boatloads of money after investing in a Ponzi scheme that went belly up and after investing in a nutritional supplement company that was found to have caused several deaths. So there was likely a point where you could have an ice milk actually served to you at Burger King by John Brockington.
Another Lombardi item – for the low, low price of $1700.00. Someone once wrote that John F. Kennedy always paid for dinner with a check, knowing that the restaurant owner would never dare cash a check with his signature on it. So he ate for free for years. It’s likely Lombardi got the same treatment in Green Bay for the entirety of his tenure.
Strangely, if you look at the check closely enough, Lombardi used it to purchase a “Slap Chop.”
These signed jerseys are noteworthy only because of the accompanying photos on the ads:
“You know, I was wavering back and forth on whether to pay $150 for a signed Willie Wood jersey, but then I saw the picture of the GIRL IN THE BIKINI HOLDING IT, and I thought to myself, ‘any jersey quality enough to be held by an almost naked girl at a trade show is definitely good enough for me.’”
Gives “Willie Wood” a whole new meaning, don’t you think?
I know what you’re saying – how do we know that it’s actually “the soil that brought the Packers home six NFL titles,” as the ad suggests? THERE’S A CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICITY, JACKASS! In fact, if you don’t believe it comes with a certificate, I can make one and print it up right here on my computer. Maybe that’ll keep you from shooting off your mouth, smart guy.
We all know the elusive Reggie White was hardly ever photographed, and virtually never stooped to selling products. Which is why we should all thank eBay user “azusboy” for unearthing such a rare treasure – an actual photo of Reggie White in his Packer uniform selling Campbell’s soup from – I hope you’re sitting down – a newspaper insert from 1997. As clearly indicated in the ad for this rarity, “These ads were printed on thin paper and inserted into Sunday newspapers. Because they were on such thin paper, they were fragile and easily damaged.”
You see, he has gone the extra mile and cared for this item much as the Library of Congress maintains the original copy of the U.S. Constitution. A team of archivists likely cared for this document 24 hours a day for the past 12 years so it would find its way to your home in mint condition. If you don’t purchase this newspaper insert, you might as well be urinating on this guy’s lawn for all the work he’s done for you.
Finally, some ingenious Bears fans decided they would take the Packer logo and make it into… wait for it… A handicapped logo!
(I’ll give you a couple minutes to pick yourself off the floor and catch your breath from all the belly laughs you’re likely letting out. Incidentally, the name of the company is “O-Chit,” which tells you we’re dealing with some real Mensa candidates here.)
Here’s a tip for Bears fans, considering what happened Sunday night – take one of these handicapped logos and send it to Brian Urlacher to put on his car. I hear he’ll be needing it for the rest of the season.
OH YES I DID!
Of course, there’s plenty more: eBay boasts over 240 pages of Packers-related items. I didn’t even mention the $500 replica 1996 Super Bowl ring you can buy. What could possibly be the reason you’d want one of these? If you consider yourself to be a member of that team, then you’re a douche. Otherwise, people will think you paid Eugene Robinson $100 for his ring so he could score some hookers and perhaps a Mike Holmgren on a Harley statue.
But the best parts of eBay, naturally, are the ridiculously hyperbolic headlines people give their products. Take, for instance, your run-of-the-mill “We’ll Never Forget You Brent” t-shirts that seem to be all the rage these days. This guy’s headline reads thusly:
“Now wait a minute – I wanted to get myself one of these ‘Brent Favre’ shirts, but I couldn’t decide which one. But HOLD ON – this one is CLEARLY MARKED ‘FUNNY.’ I think I should probably go with that one over the thousands of other guys selling shirts that say the same damn thing. I need to buy the FUNNY version.”
The other, more disturbing, trend is that easily 30% of the Favre memorabilia dealers on the internet continue to spell his name “FARVE.” Honest to God, people – if you can’t spell his name after 17 years, you might as well give up. I know more than a decade ago, the state legislature had a big debate about the high school graduation test. I propose the following: Get everyone in a room, and ask them if they can spell “Favre.” If they can’t, they are clearly incapable of learning anything. We should then ship these people out to their own city where they can’t make the rest of us any dumber. (I believe Illinois has such a place, which they call “Joliet.”)
Other stuff:
Between 1994 and their resurgence in 2004, there were some thin years for the band Green Day. That’s why their 1998 video for “Nice Guys Finish Last,” which attempts to lampoon the old NFL Films videos, went virtually unseen. But check it out – they’re obviously making the “Green Bay” – “Green Day” connection, with moderate results. But it’s still kind of bizarre to see this popular band pay tribute to your team.
Obviously, nobody watches the NFL Network on Saturdays, since everyone’s watching college football. So here’s my solid gold idea to get people to watch the network when the NFL isn’t on:
Take players from the same NFL team whose former college teams are playing each other that Saturday, put them in the same room, throw a camera on them, and let the magic happen. You’re telling me you weren’t interested in the trash talk between Ryan Grant and Charles Woodson before the Notre Dame/Michigan game last week? Think any sparks flew between Clay Matthews and A.J. Hawk before USC-Ohio State? Watching them view the game together would be can’t-miss television. Most of these guys are world class trash talkers – and the look of dejection when a player’s team goes down would be priceless. This could be my favorite hypothetical show.
Also….
Former Viking center Matt Birk is donating his brain to science for concussion research. In related news, Aaron Rodgers is donating his mustache for awesome research.
Finally, yesterday the Bubbler conducted a “Who am I?” contest in honor of former Wisconsin Badger and 8 year NFL Veteran Jerry Wunsch. It reminded me of a story I believe I once heard Barry Alvarez tell that may or may not be true:
Before one of the Badgers’ games, Alvarez brought in the Reverend Jesse Jackson to talk to his team. Jackson went on at length about his relationship with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his commitment to the civil rights movement.
When Jackson finished talking, he asked the team if anyone had any questions. Wunsch raises his hand, and Jackson calls on him. Wunsch asks, “what was it like to hit three home runs in a World Series game?”
Alvarez yells out, “THAT’S REGGIE JACKSON, YOU IDIOT!”
As fans, we use the Packers for myriad purposes. We watch the games on the weekend to escape our real lives, where we’re constantly harassed by overpaid bosses, smelly co-workers, and oil change employees that pester us incessantly to buy all the worthless extra add-ons. We use Packer games for social events – as an excuse to get a group of friends together, and eat and drink until your arteries begin legal divorce proceedings against you.
Yet few people actually use the Packers for one of their most valuable purposes: to spark true love. In fact, once you’re married, many wives view sports as the primary antidote to romance. But if you play your cards right, you, too, can use the Packers to find a woman who is willing to officially declare herself an eligible receiver… OF YOUR LOVE.
In fact, merely listing yourself as a Packer fan is the first step to finding true love the same way Grandma and Grandpa did – by posting a personal ad on Craigslist. All across Wisconsin, the lovelorn masses are taking to the web to find that special someone. Their passion is so raw, not even spelling and punctuation can contain their priapic prose. And their affinity for the Packers is what they are banking on to lure themselves just the right suitor.
Here are some of the highlights from actual Craigslist personal ads in which the owners identify themselves as Packer fans:
If you’re in Eau Claire, here’s a 54 year old male seeking companionship from another male. Of course, there’s no problem with that – only, he says he’s both a Packer and Viking fan – which is actually more gay than the fact that he’s seeking companionship in the arms of another male.
For coming out of the closet, this guy deserves our respect. For liking both the Vikings and Packers, he deserves to be thrown off the roof of a Hardee’s.
Now if you’re a straight male in Eau Claire, you most certainly should look into this delicate flower of a woman – whose profile simply must be reproduced here in its entirety for you to get the full effect. Lay back and let the awesomeness of this wash over you as you soak it in:
I love football. Packers of course. Eli manning is my favorite player tho. I drink often enough. blue moon is my poison. I play a mean guitar hero. and kinda ok at D.D.R. I like chillin fishin cruisin booze cruisin but i dont do the drivin when i drinkin. My favorite show is secret life of the american teenager and my favorite movie is across the universe. favorite song is All i Want by Staind. If you havent heard it you should. My eyes are blue my hair is bonde…naturally. Right now its dark brown. I an 5 feet 3 inches tall on a good day usually i only amount to 5 foot 2. I broke my left ankle when i was 16 and now my foot flops around like a fish cuz i stretched a tendon…and i have a pinched nerve on my back right next to my right shoulder blade. I have alot of piercing ears nose other things. i have a really up beat personality i am usually high on life. i hope to be a probation officer or some other type of corrections work while working on going to law school and do the whole lawyer thing and i hope that one day to be a d.a. i know its a big dream but im going to make it happen. if you cant tell i am very confident when i comes to most things. Im am a great person but i wanna be greater than what i already am.
Are you hot yet? SHE HAS A FLOPPY FOOT! But don’t get her drunk, because she “dont do the drivin when I drinkin.” However, fortunately for you, she is a PACKER FAN, which she hopes pretty much cancels everything else out. So congratulations – you have found the one woman in Wisconsin who roots for the Packers, so don’t let this one wriggle off the hook, boys.
(Of course, as with everything else on the internet, this profile could be fake. This personal ad, in which a Milwaukee man claims to be seeking a female Packer fan with LONG BRACES ON EACH LEG (real… or pretend?) most certainly is bogus. Just like Barack Obama\’s birth certificate. (Let’s be honest – there are certain things the internet just can’t make up!)
Some Craigslist users supply multiple photos on their profiles so you can get an idea of what they look like. For instance, this Packer fan lawyer from Milwaukee (who, based on his write-up actually seems like a pretty nice guy) supplies this photo of himself:
But, just in case you don’t get the full idea of what he looks like, he throws in this completely different bonus pic:
Glad he cleared that up. (He also supplies a third photo, of his all-access pass to a Jethro Tull concert. So there’s that.)
Speaking of pictures, this young lothario from South Milwaukee, fresh off the disappointment of the Packers loss to the Bengals, decided to take to the internet to find a classy woman to console him:
So all cl seems to be is black women or trashy white women. Thats fine and all but i like asian women. If there are any asian women in milwaukee or the milwaukee area that like attractive athletic white guys hit me up and lets talk. Ive included a pic. Please dont reply to me if you arent asian or a woman. Put ASIAN in the subject so i know your real.
You see, women of South Milwaukee, this guy is all about class. He doesn’t settle for “trashy white women.” Which is why he decided to include a photo of himself shirtless – to attract ladies that enjoy the finer things. And who, apparently, are Asian.
(Chances of any Asian-American woman actually responding to this idiot with an e-mail that has the word “ASIAN” in the subject line: negative 43%. Under new legislation being circulated around the capitol, this personal ad might actually qualify as a hate crime.)
Other Packer fans on Craigslist aren’t as discriminating. Take this guy in East Madison, who’s “looking for a football watching buddy.” He’s a progressive lover – not “not hung up on age, race, or how tall you are.” He does, however, follow up by saying he doesn’t like “like people who want to smoke around me or who are heavy.”
As we all know, when dating, it’s important to keep an open mind about race, religion, and looks. Just as long as they’re not a fatty.
Speaking of fatties, this Packer enthusiast from Appleton would like to roll one and smoke it with you. In order to hook up with this young man, you must be willing to “indulge in the reefer,” and “like jam bands/hippie music.” (Or as B.J. Raji calls it, “Tuesday.”) He also likes his woman “with a little meat on her bones,” so all you supermodels who started e-mailing him after you read the first sentence need not apply. Fortunately, I think we found the guy who bought this t-shirt off eBay last week:
While you’re blazed up in Appleton, you can stop by this guy’s house to watch the Packers and the Cubs. Describing himself as a “huge cuddler” and an expert at giving back massages, this guy fills his profile with his entire life story – given how many exclamation points and smiley faces he uses, the chance of you wanting to hit him with a shovel after a half hour stands at about 98%. This “gender Judas” throws the rest of the world’s men under the bus, asking women not to judge him based on “the actions of the majority of his gender,” then throws out about fifty words to describe him and his ideal mate. He caps his tome off with a phony picture of him sleeping on a park bench:
Moving on.
While combing through Packer-related personals, a certain brand of man began cropping up: the guy with tickets who’s looking to use them to purchase a date with a woman. I believe there’s a name for women who accept payment to go on dates, but I’m drawing a blank right now as to what it is.
Client #9 in this saga is this guy from Green Bay, who claims to have “first row” seats to Packers games, and tells women to call him “if they like what they see.” Of course, if there was much to see, he wouldn’t have to bribe them with front row tickets. (There’s an 80% chance these tickets are in “first row” of the folding chairs in his mother’s basement.)
Even better is this guy, who also craves female companionship at a Packer games. In a bid to lure a “lady packer fan,” [sic] he expresses his desire to go to the game with a “fun paacker-fan girl.” Only this guy… wait for it… EXPECTS THE WOMAN TO HAVE THE TICKETS.
That’s right, ladies, it’s a double winner for you. Not only do you get to go to the game, you get the profound honor of supplying this guy with a ticket. What Packer hottie with a spare ticket wouldn’t jump at that chance? Oh, and just to show you he’s on the level, he supplies a picture of his shirt:
That should clear up any misgivings you might have about going to a game with a complete stranger.
As one works their way through Craigslist ads, another type of personal ad comes up: the aggrieved lover. The person who obviously just got their heart ripped out and they go into WAY too much detail explaining what happened.
Hey. I got out of a very disfunctional relationship about four or five months ago. The girl was still on my mind and in my heart. We started talking a little bit after a tragedy that affected both of us. Feelings for this evil woman started stirring again. But then I got punked. She was just screwing with my head to hurt me and it worked. Now I\’m feeling lonely as ever… I have a lot to say and no one to say it to. My ex said that no one will ever love me again. I hope she\’s wrong. Are you out there?
My computer is currently in the shop, but I can check email from school or from my phone. Please dont be involved in any sort of ambush directed at me, as I wouldnt put it past some people in this messed up world. Thanks for reading my post.
Holy crap – what well adjusted, attractive young woman wouldn’t jump at that chance?
There are plenty of men and women who make this same mistake. It’s as if you can tell exactly what horrible things happened to them in their last relationship just based on what they don’t want from their new partner. Stuff like:
“I’m looking for a man with a good sense of humor who won’t have sex with my sister right upstairs while I’m downstairs eating my Chef Boyardee ravioli and watching Dancing With the Stars! Serious inquiries only.”
One other trend that pops up among Craigslist personal ad users is that it’s almost always men who mention the Packers in their personals. A few “women seeking men do,” (with floppy feet, as noted above) and only one “woman seeking woman” popped up. (There was one woman seeking an “Ebony and Ivory” relationship with another woman, but I sincerely doubt that was a reference to Eddie Lee Ivery.)
However, the one “woman seeking woman” Packer ad that surfaced is noteworthy primarily because it can’t be reprinted here in this column. Just read it yourself and make sure you have a cold shower nearby. Good Lord. (Deep breath.)
As is demonstrated above, single Packer fans need not suffer in silence anymore. They can simply take to the internet and find the best online romance the web has to offer. No longer do they have to find Packer love the old fashioned way: by leaving your part time job at Boston Store, running for State Treasurer, taking expensive trips on the taxpayers\’ dime, hiring all your relatives in your office, then using your newfound and unexpected position of authority to meet Donald Driver and grab his ass:
And now that you have secured a date from the best the internet has to offer, here’s my last tip (as if I haven’t given you enough already:) Make sure to play this song for your date – since no woman can resist the sheer sexual power of a jheri-curled mullet:
Please remove your hats while my son gets this party started:
I was walking down the street some time ago, when I happened upon a little gray bird hanging out on the sidewalk. Next to the bird was a giant bag of popcorn that someone had just thrown on the ground. The bird was just standing there, looking amazed at his good fortune. Here was a pile of free popcorn at least three times his height, and he probably didn’t really have to be anywhere for a while – so he was ready to dig in for a meal unmatched in his short life.
As I stood and watched him, I started to think: what would be the human equivalent to a bird finding a giant bag of popcorn? It would have to be something so insanely terrific that you couldn’t even express yourself in any rational way. Natalie Portman feeding you Krispy Kremes? A horrific Zamboni accident involving Janeane Garofalo?
Then, it came to me. Next Monday night could be my giant bag of popcorn.
If the Packers beat the Favre-led Vikings in the Metrodome, it will eclipse any non-Super Bowl Packer experience I’ve had. (Until, of course, they play again in a few weeks.) As I’ve been sitting at work all week, I feel like I’m baking in my own skin waiting for this game. I can’t sleep. Can’t eat. Can’t conjugate Latin verbs. (Although I couldn’t beforehand, so there’s that.)
The flip side of that, of course, is that if the Packers lose, it could easily mean the end of me. I almost feel like I should be making funeral arrangements, just in case. (Cause of death: “Exploding head.”) I’m dangerously close to calling a friend of mine to tell him where I’ve hidden all my “adult” materials, just so nobody finds them all after I’m dead and realizes what a dirtbag I was.
(Side note: it seems strange to me that the words we use for looking at naked women always equate maturity with prurient desires. In fact, it’s the exact opposite. Think about it – movies targeted to “mature” audiences. Going to a “gentlemans’ club.” What is so mature or gentlemanly about stuffing dollar bills into a naked woman’s garter? In fact, I think it makes a lot more sense to consider those things “immature.” I understand a teenage boy looking at pictures of naked women a lot more than I can understand a grown man doing the same. Then, it just gets a little…creepy.)
Oh, and if my head does end up exploding, I just wanted to say… I have always loved you. Not you, the other one over there.
Of course, the game is already partly rigged, due to a federal court in Minneapolis overturning a 4-game league-imposed suspension on the Vikings’ Williams Sisters, Kevin and Pat. Without this homer court stepping in, these ‘roided up cheaters would be out for Monday night’s game.
Just exactly what kind of courts do they have there in Minneapolis? Is there no actual crime in the Twin Cities that need the attention of the judicial system? Shouldn’t they be scouring the Minneapolis airport bathrooms looking for horny U.S. Senators? Then again, this is the kind of justice you should expect in a state that puts Alan Page on the Supreme Court.
In other news:
I was at a concert on Saturday night, and while standing in the lobby, I overheard a comely young 23-ish old woman explain her Packer tailgating experience from the week before. “I went to some team-sponsored tailgate,” she explained to her male friend., adding, “and I ended up dancing with all these old Packers. Some guy named Furry or Fuzzy or something. They were all so cute.”
That got me to thinking – how easy would it be for old dudes all over Green Bay to pull this racket? Just play they “I’m an old Packer from the ‘60s” card, and you’re totally in with the ladies – whether you actually played or not. There are really only two steps to this strategy:
1. Give yourself a fake colorful nickname from back in the day. Just say all the other players called you “Stinky Nuts Nelson” or something – sounds realistic enough, right?
2. Make up some fake crazy story about how you and Paul Hornung snuck into the Green Bay Zoo one night and tried to teach the giraffes how to play poker. Hornung was so sauced all the time, he not only won’t remember the story, he’ll probably actually believe he played with you.
All you really have to do is be old and walk with a limp, and you can score some nice young hotties. But even if that fails, you can always go down to the local tavern and do the Lambeau Leap into the trousers of some chain-smoking handbag.
(Side note: you may laugh, but remember, this is the state that almost elected a woman to statewide office solely because she claims she had sex with a bunch of Packers.)
(Double-secret side note: I always laugh at people that go to rock concerts wearing ear plugs. You know these people don’t have wives and kids, because they’d actually prefer to be deaf. But doesn’t this kind of cancel out the whole idea of going to a concert? Isn’t this somewhat like going to a Bucks game wearing a blindfold? Actually, come to think of it, that may be the best way to watch the Bucks this year anyway.)
I have a standing rule that I don’t want to hear anything about anyone else’s crappy fantasy football league team. But last week, I sunk to 0-3 in my league – a league in which five of the owners are women, one team has three tight ends, and three teams have two kickers. I blame this anomaly completely on the execrable scoring system, in which running backs and receivers only get a point for every 25 rushing or receiving yards – so basically, unless you get lucky and your team scores a lot of touchdowns, you’re out of luck.
For instance, I had Steven Jackson rush for 117 yards last week, and only get 4 points for it – yet my kicker, Jeff Reed, scored 8 points on 2 field goals and 2 extra points. So you tell me – which is more valuable? (I have no idea whether this would have helped me win any of my games, but I am 100% certain it helps me feel better to bitch about it.)
I’ve been meaning to talk to our commissioner about some of the other rules, too. For instance, you get:
10 points if a player with a mustache completes a backwards lateral;
6 points if your quarterback retires and unretires in the same game;
20 points if your punter completes a “direct punt,” or kicking it out of the air without actually catching it first;
8 points if your defense gets some phony federal judge to overturn steroid suspensions for two of your players;
3 points if your running back has had sex with former Wisconsin Secretary of State candidate Sandy Sullivan; and
1 point for every three dogs electrocuted; and
14 points for injuring any player who stars in a Subway commercial with Jared. 36 points for taking out Jared himself.
One of the main reasons I’m excited about watching the game on Monday night is seeing if Johnny Jolly can pick off another pass. (I think the one he had against the Rams was technically a fumble recovery, but whatever.) Seriously, the guy has the best hands on the team – they should split him out at wide receiver. We’ll see if he can break the Packer record for interceptions by a lineman, currently held by Stinky Nuts Nelson, the season before he was trampled to death by a giraffe that caught a bad river card.
I was alerted by a friend to a little known rule in sports: apparently, they actually continue to play baseball games while the football season has started. I know, I looked it up on the internet. It’s true.
The funny thing is, remember early in the season, when only a handful of Brewers games were in high definition? Obviously, they were stacking all the HD games to the end of the year, when presumably all the Brewers’ games would be tense, playoff-level clashes. So how’s that working out now?
TULOWITZKI! COREY HART’S CREEPY BEARD! LIVE IN HD ON FOX SPORTS WISCONSIN!
Finally, I’d like to welcome the SportsBlonde to the ‘Bubbler. Notice how they haven’t asked me to be on any live video feeds. She does one blog post, and she’s off talking to Andrew Bogut. (Admittedly, I couldn’t do it, because I don’t speak Australian.) Then again, if someone saw me on camera, they’d think they accidentally stumbled onto an online meatball eating contest.
So in honor of the new contributors, I wrote this entire post while wearing a bikini. Seems to be the new uniform around here.
I’d like to welcome everyone to the 10th Annual Milwaukee Bucks’ White Stiff Hall of Fame induction banquet. I know for some of you, this may be somewhat shocking and somewhat confusing. But trust me, it’s true – Milwaukee actually does have a professional basketball team. I actually looked it up on the internet. But when I couldn’t find anything online about this supposed “NBA team,” I went to the history books.
These books told me that when David Stern took over as NBA commissioner in 1984, he had to fight the perception that the league was too black for the average white ticket buyer. Apparently, this news never got to Milwaukee, where the team began importing a murderer’s row of immobile Caucasians over the next 25 years.
In fact, things got so bad in Milwaukee, even when they tried to draft a Chinese guy, it turns out he learned how to play basketball by watching the Chinese version of “Space Jam,” starring Frank Brickowski in the Michael Jordan role. When the Bucks made the 5th pick in the draft in 2007, nobody told Bucks GM Larry Harris that “Yi Jianlian” means “Marty Conlon” in Chinese.
While you’re here at the Bucks White Stiff Hall of Fame (BWSHOF), be sure to stop off in the exhibits wing, where you can gaze upon Jack Sikma’s home perm kit, as well as Brian Winters’ beard. (He actually shaved it off as part of the “Locks of Love” program to give it to a sick five year old boy that could no longer grow a beard.) If you’re bringing kids, make sure you stop off and get them a replica Joel Pryzbilla tattoo, and pick up a Brad Lohaus “Vanilla Gorilla” stuffed animal as a keepsake.
In the south wing, you’ll see an entire wall dedicated to the 1988-‘89 Bucks team, which will go down in history as the ’27 Yankees of inflexible honkies. This murderer’s row of pasty giants included Paul Mokeski, Jack Sikma, Randy Breuer, Larry Krystkowiak, and new import Fred Roberts. (Naturally, Roberts was drafted by the Bucks in 1982, but traded to the Spurs before he played a game in Milwaukee. Coming back home was clearly part of the Creator’s blueprint for the universe.)
If you’re counting at home, that’s 35 feet of Grade A rigor mortis on one roster. A sight that will never be seen in the NBA again. The league hasn\’t seen that much stiffness since Shawn Kemp stopped fathering children on road trips. The last time that many white guys were on the floor of the Bradley Center, the Allman Brothers were playing their farewell show.
(Without question, the highlight of the 1988 season was when a college biology class visited a Bucks game and accidentally removed Randy Breuer’s kidney while he was shooting a free throw, mistaking him for a cadaver.)
Sadly, the band broke up the next season, when Mokeski clearly got too big for his britches after winning a slew of prestigious awards:
The news hit local tavern owners hardest, as rumor has it Mokeski’s drinking prowess was unmatched by any Milwaukee athlete before or since. However, his mustache retains the second spot behind Rollie Fingers epic cookie duster.
(SIDE NOTE: If the 2009 Bucks were to somehow honor the 20 year anniversary of this unprecedented team with a halftime ceremony, I vow to buy season tickets. The offer is on the table, boys.)
Yet despite Mokeski’s emotional departure, the ’89-’90 season saw the seminal moment in White Bucks history. Milwaukee fans were treated to the sight of bald 35 year-old assistant coach Mike Dunleavy, who had been retired from the NBA for five years, suiting up for five games and jacking up three pointers as if the mob had given him a week to live. In 43 minutes of playing time, Dunleavy got off 9 three pointers, making two of them.
In the next two seasons, future BWSHOF inductees Brad Lohaus, Frank Brickowski, and Danny Schayes joined the team. (In case you’re counting, the Polish former Bucks include Brickowski, Mokeski, Mike Gminski, Mike Peplowski. I dare you to find me another NBA team with four guys whose names end with “ski” in their history books. In fairness, Gminski and Peplowski each played less than 10 games apiece as Bucks, but it was because they were both corpses at the time. )
This isn’t to say that every white guy that’s ever played for the Bucks is a stiff. The Original Buck, Jon McGlocklin, wasn’t a stiff as a player. (He is as an announcer.) However, the highlight of his career remains the time Lew Alcindor allowed Jonny Mac to carry his bags to the airport for him.
In fact, the original stiff, and first inductee into the BWSOF, is Len Chappell, who somehow managed to play for 10 teams in his 9 years in the NBA and ABA. Actually, some of the stiffs were good players at some point. Jack Sikma made seven All-Star games prior to coming to Milwaukee. He made zero with the Bucks. At the time he was drafted, Keith Van Horn seemed a reasonable alternative to Tim Duncan – and averaged nearly 20 points and 10 rebounds over his first five seasons. By the time he got to the Bucks in season eight, he was only slightly less mobile than the Fonzie statue.
And even when the Bucks manage to draft a non-stiff, they manage to screw it up. Remember drafting Dirk Nowitzki and trading him on draft day for donut enthusiast Tractor Traylor? (Be sure to stay after tonight’s induction ceremony, where there will be a presentation entitled “Foreigners: Should We Consider Them White?” If so, we have to have a separate ceremony to retroactively induct Jiri Welsch, Zaza Pachulia and Toni Kukoc. Andrew Bogut gets a free pass for now, pending how his back heals.)
So thanks everyone for coming to tonight’s gala. With the selection of Joe Alexander last year, the Bucks have made an ongoing commitment to keeping the tradition of terrible white players alive. (Special recognition goes to Alexander for winning the NBA\’s “Stiffest Rookie of the Year” award, narrowly edging out the Nets’ Brook Lopez.) As long as there’s a team in Milwaukee, marginal college Caucasian players can continue to pursue their dream of one day playing in the NBA. (Don’t give up, Brian Butch!)
Finally, be sure to pull out those checkbooks and give generously to our latest charity – we’re raising money so the Bucks can finally correct one of the greatest injustices in NBA history: the fact that Greg Ostertag was never able to wear a Bucks uniform. With just the cost of 18 cups of coffee per day, we can make this dream a reality. Just hand your check to our honorary treasurer, Joe Wolf.
These days, it seems like an impossibility. NFL teams in both Green Bay and Milwaukee? But in the league’s nascent years, it actually happened. And the NFL’s Milwaukee Badgers almost killed the league by participating in one of the NFL’s most notorious scandals.
This weekend, NFL fans were treated to the sight of the Tennessee Titans being destroyed by the New England Patriots by a 59-0 score. Yet on December 10, 1925, the Milwaukee Badgers took part in a 59-0 pounding that historians say corrupted the league, and cost Milwaukee their NFL franchise.
In 1925, the NFL was a very different league. Teams such as the Pottsville Maroons, Akron Pros, Frankford Yellow Jackets, Canton Bulldogs, Hammond Pros, and Duluth Kelleys dotted the Midwestern landscape. Early versions of the league also featured teams in Racine and Kenosha. (In 1921, the Twin Cities hosted the Minneapolis Marines, which is fitting given the Vikings\’ future love of boats.) In many cases, games in these middle-sized cities outdrew matches in cities like Detroit and Chicago, where professional football remained a fringe sport. (Football would soon see an explosion in popularity with the Chicago Bears’ signing of Red Grange out of the University of Illinois.)
In addition to the league being geographically smaller, the way the game was played was also very different than the game we know today. Teams had sixteen players, most of whom played both ways. There were no hash marks on the field, so the next play began wherever the last play ended – if the runner went out of bounds, the ball was placed adjacent to the out of bounds line, and the team usually had to waste a play just to move it back into the middle of the field.
Incomplete passes into the endzone were ruled touchbacks, with the team on defense receiving the ball. Yards were often so hard to come by, teams would often punt on second and third down when backed up in their own territory. In fact, if a punt returner fielded a punt near his own end zone, he would often just turn around and punt the ball back to the other team rather than attempt a return. Coaching from the sideline was forbidden (a strategy employed by the Packers during Ray Rhodes’ season as coach.) The forward pass was seen as a desperation move.
Since many teams operated either at a loss or with a very small profit margin, the league allowed teams to discontinue play in the middle of the season if things weren’t going well. This was the case in 1925 for the ragtag Milwaukee Badgers, who began the season 0-5 and were outscored 132-7, which forced them to fold up shop for the remainder of the season. Playing at Borchert Field, this Badger team featured future Packer NFL Hall of Famer (and River Falls native) Johnny “Blood” McNally. The team was barely newsworthy in Milwaukee, with most of the sports section headlines granted to either Marquette men’s basketball or Red Grange’s 1925 barnstorming tour with the Chicago Bears.
As the season came to a close, the Chicago Cardinals trailed the Pottsville Maroons in the standings by mere percentage points. The Maroons finished the season 10-2, capping the season with a 21-7 win on December 6th against the Cardinals, who dropped to 9-2, with one tie. The game, which was presumed to be the league championship game, barely warranted a mention in the Milwaukee Sentinel.
(And if you want a wildly entertaining look at how sports stories were written in 1925, read the actual story here. The article ends with: “There is a peculiar paradox in the final summing up of the game. The defeated Cardinals scored the most first downs, counting seventeen to the Miners’ eleven. The Chicagoans also completed sixteen forward passes from a total of thirty-five attempts, while the Pottsvillers scored only five out of ten attempts. But that is football!”)
But the Cardinals weren’t about to accept defeat. Instead, their owner, Chris O’Brien, scheduled two more games at the end of the season in order to push their record ahead of the Maroons. One of these games was scheduled against the Milwaukee Badgers, whose players had quit mid-season. Since many of the Badgers’ players weren’t available to play in the game, the team recruited four high school boys, gave them fake names, and sent them out to the field. In fact, it was Art Foltz, a Cardinal player, who recruited the high schoolers from his old school, Englewood High.
Naturally, the Cardinals pounded the Badgers, winning 59-0. The local newspaper made no mention of the game before it was played, and no admission fee was charged to fans. According to the report, “a few hundred” fans took advantage. The write-up in the Milwaukee Sentinel barely measured two column inches:
The Cardinals also went on to beat the Hammond Pros 13-0 two days later, at which point they declared themselves league champions after going 11-2-1. During the time the Cardinals were lining up those two games to pad their record, Pottsville played a game against a team of Notre Dame all stars, which the league strictly forbade.
Soon, League Commissioner Joe Carr learned of the use of high school players for the Badger-Cardinal game and sternly punished the team and its owner. The team was fined $500 (the entry fee for teams was only $50 at the time), and the owner, Ambrose McGurk, was ordered to sell the team within 90 days. McGurk was also banned from any further association with the NFL for the rest of his life. (The Cardinals’ Foltz was also banned for life, and O’Brien was fined $1,000, despite claiming he didn’t know about the high schoolers. The boys were barred from participation in Big Ten College football.)
Yet despite all the penalties handed down by the league, the Cardinals were declared league champions, and all the records from that year have stood. The Badgers attempted to field a team in 1926, but the $500 fine for the Cardinal game nearly wiped them out. They did win two games in 1926, but quickly disbanded – many of their players went to play for the Pittsburgh Pirates football team, leading many to mistakenly think the Badgers eventually became the Pittsburgh Steelers.
In the meantime, their cousins to the north, the Green Bay Packers, flourished in a much smaller town. (In the 1925 season, the Badgers, coached by Johnny Bryan, went 0-2 against the Packers, losing by scores of 31-0 and 6-0.) The only touchdown the team scored all season was on a fumble recovery by left end Clem Neacy, against the Rock Island Independents.
Perhaps one of the Badgers’ most notable accomplishments was employing one of the first two African-American players in NFL history. In 1922, after one season with the Akron Pros, Fritz Pollard came to Milwaukee, scoring three touchdowns and kicking two extra points on his way to leading the team with 20 points. Pollard was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005.
***
In fact, the Green Bay Packers themselves didn’t have the smoothest of entries into the NFL, either. In 1921, Commissioner Carr found out that the Packers had actually been recruiting college students, giving them fake names, and allowing them to play in games. (Incidentally, it is believed that this was Brett Favre’s first season in the league.)
Carr ordered the Packers to disband as a franchise as punishment. But Coach Curly Lambeau desperately wanted back in, pointing out that he had the $50 necessary to purchase a new franchise. But he couldn’t make it to Canton, Ohio for the league owners’ meeting.
Lambeau mentioned his problem to Don Murphy, the son of a Green Bay lumberman, who offered to make the trip down to Canton on behalf of Lambeau in exchange for one thing: he wanted to be on the team the next year. Despite Murphy clearly not being a football player, Lambeau acquiesced, and Murphy went to Ohio and bought the team back.
In 1922, in the first game of the year, Murphy played tackle for the Green Bay Packers for one minute. He then walked off the field and “retired” from football forever.
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It bears repeating that the NFL was a wild, loosely organized gang of misfits in its first years. Probably the most entertaining team in the league at the time was the Oorang Indians, who called LaRue, Ohio their home (pop. 900.)
Many of the NFL teams at the time were formed strictly as advertisements for certain companies – The Acme Packers, the Decatur Staleys (after the A.E. Staley Company, later the Chicago Bears), etc. But the Oorang Indians were formed to advertise the Oorang Airedale puppy breeding business in the village.
The owner, Walter Lingo, was also a fan of Native Americans – so he staffed the team completely with Indians, who would have the job of advertising his Airedale puppies. As such, he utilized the team extensively during pre-game and halftime shows, which served to promote his breeding business. At several points, Lingo would pluck one of his players from the bench and have him wrestle a bear at mid-field. Other times, there would be Indian shooting exhibitions, with Airedales fetching the marks. The high point, according to historians, was the time Indians were used in a World War I re-enactment against the Germans, with Airedales providing first aid to the fallen soldiers.
Not surprisingly, the team was terrible, finishing 3-6 in 1922.
One of the benefits of poring over newspapers from 1925 is finding gems like this. Here’s an actual headline from the Milwaukee Sentinel on December 18, 1925:
Today’s melancholy song: Nick Drake (who killed himself before he gained any notoriety for beautiful songs like this one.)