Monthly Archives: January 2010

All Charges Against Kelly Dropped

Remember that pesky sexual assault charge against former Blue Bombers head coach Mike Kelly? The one that if you had any idea about the circumstances, you would have laughed and said, “Those charges will be dropped.”

Well, guess what? Yesterday in a Pennsylvania court, all charges were dropped. Kelly has three months to take a one-day anger management course. Doubt he’ll get an apology from the mainstream media, but this can certainly be added to the MSM’s recent transgressions: “Judgment without knowledge is the greatest sin.”

Kelly spoke yesterday to www.rivercitysportsblog.com but could not comment on either the court’s decsion nor his buyout from the Winnipeg Football Club.

“I’ve signed so many confidentiality agreements, I can’t say a thing about anything,” he said.

Kelly, who got enough money out of the Bombers to give himself plenty of time to look around for a new job, should be pleased, not only with the players he brought to Winnipeg, but the players he coached up this season. In the past month, three players: Jonathan Hefney, Derrick Doggett and Dudley Guice signed NFL contracts; and kicker Alexis Serna, who was awful working for Doug Berry, was terrific under Kelly and was signed to a new deal.

Ultimately, Kelly left the Bombers in better shape than they were when he showed up. Today’s news that the bogus sexual assault charges had been dropped is a fitting end to a dreadful period of time for a decent man who was kicked around, bitterly, by some very nasty people.

It’s the Division Finals and it Just Gets More Fun Every Week.

It’s all pretty simple right now. As Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre said during his news conference yesterday, “Win and go on, lose and go home.”

Here’s the schedule for this week’s NFL Division finals – complete with point spreads.

The Cards will go into New Orleans this coming Saturday at 3:30. The Saints are 7-point favorities. Baltimore will play at Indianapolis, Saturday at 7:15. The Colts are 7-point favorites. On Sunday, Dallas will battle the Vikings at Noon. Minnesota is a 3-point favorite. While the Jets will go to San Diego, at 3:40. The Chargers are favored by 7 1/2.

As you will see below, we don’t necessarily buy into the odds.

That’s because there are problems with the spreads. For instance, there are a lot of people – the Vegas oddsmakers included — who don’t believe the Arizona Cardinals have a hope against the No. 1 seed in the NFC, the New Orleans Saints.

However, before writing off the Cards quite yet, consider this: against Green Bay last week, Kurt Warner threw more touchdown passes (5) than incompletions (4). If nothing else, that should tell you Warner is ready to make a game of it.

This is going to be a tremendous weekend. Let’s take a closer look…

Arizona Cardinals 11-6 at New Orleans Saints 13-3 ( -7 )

The Saints were already struggling before they rested their starters in the last couple of regular season games while the Cardinals are currently white-hot. Arizona has extensive playoff experience, and Warner, who is secretly one of the best postseason performers in NFL history, will not be rattled in the Superdome. Arizona is 6-1 against the spread as underdogs this year. Dr. Sports says that improves to 7-1.

Dr. Sports: Cardinals to win.

The Coach: New Orleans to win, but not cover.

Baltimore Ravens 10-7 at Indianapolis Colts 14-2  ( -7 )

What about the Colts? Not only did they sit their starters in Week 17; they also benched some of their main guys in Week 16. Without playing in a long time, I don’t think the Colts will be able to match the physicality of the Ravens. They were already weak versus the run, now, they’re being asked to stop Baltimore’s incredible ground attack after resting for three games. This is a Colts team that hasn’t won in a month. Oh, and here’s another fact; since 2005, seven teams have won a road playoff game in Round 1. Those seven teams are a perfect 7-0 against the spread in Round 2. Besides, the Football Gods must punish the Colts for rolling over and allowing the Jets into the playoffs.

Dr. Sports: Ravens to win.

The Coach: Ravens to win.

Dallas Cowboys 12-5 at Minnesota Vikings 12-4 (-3)

The Vikings end of season decline was caused by a three major factors; (1) E.J. Henderson’s absence. Ever since the middle linebacker suffered a season-ending injury, the Vikings have been woeful against the run. Before the Giants game, they surrendered four consecutive 100-yard rushing performances. This is not good news for Minnesota. Dallas is rushing the ball extremely well right now, as they’ve collected 377 rushing yards the past two weeks with their three-headed attack. The Cowboys will continue to run effectively, opening up play-action and misdirection opportunities for Tony Romo. (2) Brett Favre has had lousy pass protection. Between Weeks 8 and 12, Favre had been sacked only four times. However, Favre took a whopping 16 sacks the next four games. Left tackle Bryant McKinnie has really been struggling and looked completely helpless against Julius Peppers in Week 15 (Was McKinnie actually ON roller-skates that day?). We have no idea how McKinnie plans to keep DeMarcus Ware out of the backfield, especially with Anthony Spencer and Jay Ratliff applying pressure elsewhere. (3) Adrian Peterson has become a non-factor on the ground; he hasn’t rushed for more than 100 yards or averaged greater than 3.9 yards per carry since Week 10 against the Lions. The offensive line simply isn’t opening up any lanes for him, meanwhile, the Cowboys haven’t allowed a team to rush for 75 yards or more since Dec. 6.

All of the pressure is off Tony Romo now. Romo can go on to play at a high level without the threat of being scrutinized or living through another off season of being labelled as a choke artist. All that being said, The Dome has become a impossible place to win in, and that will be the deciding factor. This is not the Cowboys vs. the Vikings, it’s the Cowboys vs. the Dome.

Dr. Sports: Vikings to win and cover.

The Coach: Vikings to win and cover.

New York Jets 10-7 at San Diego Chargers 13-3 ( -7.5 )

The Jets, after clobbering Cincinnati two weeks in row, will find out the hard way that the Chargers are not anything like the Bengals. Unlike Carson Palmer, Phillip Rivers has more than one weapon to work with in Antonio Gates, Malcom Floyd and Darren Sproles coming out of the backfield. As explosive as New York has looked in the last couple of games we believe the Chargers have something to prove after being ignored all season while attention was focused on the Colts and the Patriots.

Dr. Sports: Chargers to win and cover.

The Coach: Chargers to win and cover.

The Doc is 167-93 overall this season and 139-121 against the spread. The Coach is 163-97 straight up and 140-120 against the spread.

Why Are Steroids Bad For Athletes and Fans and Why is Using Them Called Cheating?

As Mark McGwire comes clean and the mutton-headed mainstream media allows Jose Canseco to take shots at him, my Grassroots News publisher Arnold Asham asked the following rhetorical questions (this is a re-working of a Scott Taylor column that was published in Grassroots News in 2008).

“What’s wrong with professional athletes using steroids? And who cares if they do?”

The questions are brilliant in their simplicity and I must admit, I’ve had a lot of trouble trying to come up with an honest, moral and ethical argument against either query.

Let’s start with Question 2: “Who cares if they do?” Evidently nobody. Recently, you couldn’t buy a decent Detroit Tigers ticket (for Grapefruit League or the regular-season schedule) even though four Tigers’ stars at the time, Gary Sheffield, Carlos Guillen, Magglio Ordonez and Ivan Rodriguez, had been linked to steroid use.

Now, on to Question 1: “What’s wrong with professional athletes using steroids?” Well, let me tell you, I’ve heard all the arguments:

“Steroids are bad for you.”

“Using performance enhancing drugs is cheating.”

“It’s not a level playing field if you use steroids.”

OK, but why? No one, not even the king of drug cops, the World Anti-Doping Agency’s former chair Dick Pound has ever been able to answer that question. Pound and his followers have created the bad rap, but they’ve never once given a clear indication as to why steroids are bad.

In November of 2005 in the publication “Virtual Mentor,” the American Medical Association’s Journal of Ethics, Dr. Norman Fost, director of the Program in Medical Ethics at the University of Wisconsin, wrote an article entitled “Steroid Hysteria: Unpacking the Claims.”

He answered the questions Pound and the mainstream media horde have never answered. Although, I would doubt neither Pound nor the mainstream media would have appreciated or agreed with his answers.

“The long campaign to demonize and prohibit the use of anabolic steroids in sports—in the press, by the United States Congress, and by the offices of the leaders of sports—has been so strident and one-sided that a literate person would have little reason to suspect there is another side to the story,” Dr. Fost wrote. “But it is the business of ethics to present justifications for actions, and the claims that have been made for prohibiting the use of anabolic steroids by competent adults appear to be incoherent, disingenuous, hypocritical, and based on bad facts.”

The worst excuse is the one that suggests that because of steroids, the playing field is not level and competition is unfair. That would be true if performance-enhancing drugs were not easily available and if big league athletes didn’t make enough money to pay for them. And these are the same big league athletes who often take “legal” cortisone shots or naproxen sodium pills in order to play while injured. These are the people who eat legal painkillers “like M & Ms” and make regular use of the legal muscle-building supplement, Creatine.

According to Fost, “Competition can be unfair if there is unequal access to such enhancements, but equal access can be achieved more predictably by deregulation than by prohibition. It is hypocritical for leaders in Major League Baseball to trumpet their concern about fair competition in a league that allows one team (the Yankees) to have a payroll three times larger than most of its competitors.”

For years, we’ve heard the argument that taking steroids causes acne on the back, a large, square forehead, loss of hair, shrinking of testicles and, eventually, an early death. As an ethicist, those claims confuse Fost.

“Good ethics starts with good facts, and the claims on this point are, to understate the case, seriously overstated,” he wrote. “Articles abound in the mass media on the life-threatening risks of anabolic steroids: cancer, heart disease, stroke, and so on. What is missing are peer-reviewed articles in scientific journals to support the claims.”

Fost loves to site the case of former Oakland Raiders linebacker Lyle Alzado. According to Fost: “So Lyle Alzado, the NFL all-star, is presented on the front page of the New York Times and the cover of Sports Illustrated because of an alleged steroid-related brain tumor. What is missing is a single article, or evidence, or even a quote from any authority on the topic to support any connection between steroids and Alzado’s tumor.”

Another argument that makes Fost laugh in disgust is the one that suggests anabolics are unnatural and “undermine the essence of sport.”

“This claim seems predicated on the notion that there is some essence of sport. Oh, spare me,” Fost says. “Sports are games, invented by humans, with arbitrary rules that are constantly changing. Since the beginning of recorded history, athletes have used an infinite variety of unnatural assists to enhance performance, from springy shoes to greasy swimsuits, bamboo poles to better bats, and endless chemicals from carb-filled diets to Gatorade drinks. Why is there not a ban on training in high altitudes, or sleeping in a hyperbaric chamber, for the purpose of raising hemoglobin to unnatural levels?”

Here’s another one that gives our University of Wisconsin ethicist indigestion: “Steroids undermine the integrity of sports records.”

“Of all the proposed punishments for Rafael Palmeiro, the Baltimore Orioles slugger who was reported to have tested positive for steroids, the favorite seemed to be to abolish his home run records,” Fost recalled. “The implicit concern is that Babe Ruth or Roger Maris is being unfairly deprived of his place in history. But steroids are only one of many reasons why the old records keep falling. The fences are shorter, the pitching mound is lower, the ball is livelier, the strike zone keeps changing, and so on. The left field fence in Jacobs Field is more than 100 feet closer than it was in Municipal Stadium when it opened in the 1930s, so let’s have some asterisks for home runs at The Jake and every other stadium with shortened fences.”

Everyone will agree that kids shouldn’t use steroids. Kids shouldn’t use any drugs at all, frankly.

And don’t forget, scientific study provides clear proof that beverage alcohol is much worse for you – athlete or non-athlete – than steroids will ever be. Just ask former NHL all-star defenceman Rob Ramage who has gone to jail for four years because he drank too much and drove his car.

Strange but hypocritically true: Beverage alcohol is not only legal, our provincial government advertises it and encourages its use.

We live in a drug-centric society. All you have to do is watch the nightly news shows in the United States and you will see one drug advertisement after another. There is now a drug to get it up, take it down, wake up in the morning, go to sleep at night. There are drugs for acid reflux (burping), for restless leg syndrome (whatever) and too much cholesterol (change your diet). Our society now exists on drugs.

But as Dr. Fost maintains, the media has decided that the use of anabolic steroids in sport should be illegal. Trouble is, no one has made it very clear as to why. How is it that beverage alcohol and prescription painkillers are “good” for us, but muscle-building designer drugs are not?

Personally, I don’t doubt steroids should be outlawed in sport. I’m not sure our publisher, Mr. Asham, would argue that steroids should be outlawed. It’s just that we’d both like someone to give us a good reason why.

A Weekend In the Trenches.

After a weekend of watching football, basketball and hockey and, for the most part, it was quite enjoyable. Then, on Monday, the sports world hit the proverbial fan. So to speak.

From Mark McGwire to the Green Packers and from bad announcing to a general load of mainstream media bullcrackers, it’s been quite a few days.

Let’s review and discuss…

1) On Monday, Mark McGwire, the new hitting coach of the St. Louis Cardinals and the man who saved baseball in 1998 sent out a release saying that he used steroids during his big league career.

Wow! Who knew?

I wrote a lot about Mark McGwire’s use of Androstenedione in 1998 and was told quite clearly by a Winnipeg Free Press editor that I should leave the man alone. Funny, how the mainstream media mob changed after people realized that andro was, indeed, a steroid precursor and a pretty solid stacking agent.

These scoops just keep on coming.

2) Monday, Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers played down the alleged facemask penalty that was missed (what else is new?) during his overtime fumble, the one that cost the Packers the game.

While a group of Packers fans threatened to sue the NFL for the non-call, Rodgers said his team had a couple of chances to win that football game, but the defence didn’t have an answer for the Cardinals offence.

Meanwhile, it was still a penalty and it was missed (or ignored). But what else is new in the NFL?

3) My old friend, Bruce Dowbiggin had a great item in his Usual Suspects column in the Globe and Mail on Monday. Dowbiggin wrote: “Why we’ve missed Joe Theismann, Master of the Obvious. ‘When you don’t have a field-goal kicker who can make the kicks, it’s so deflating for everybody.’ Deflating. We know how that feels. ‘It’s so important to get into the visual sight of the quarterback,’ the former CFL QB told us Saturday. Yeah, that invisible sight is a real beyatch.”

I tend to watch a lot of football with the mute button on. I have no problem with the play-by-play guys. Jim Nantz, Joe Buck, Don Criqui, Gus Johnson, they’re fine. It’s the colour analysts that drive me nuts.

Thiesmann is bad, Jon Gruden is like fingernails on a chalkboard. But Darryl Johnston and Phil Simms take the cake. They just talk for the sake of talking. Or cheerlead for the sake of cheerleading. And by the fourth quarter, they’ve contradicted half the things they said in the first quarter. After awhile, it just gets silly and annoying.

Thankfully, we have a mute button.

4) Received this from my good friend, Fort Rouge Ted on Sunday:

“PLEASE I NEED YOUR HELP. Does anyone know how to cancel an e-Bay bid?

“I put in a bid for a ‘Mickey Mouse Outfit,’ and now it seems I’m only six minutes away from owning the Toronto Maple Leafs.”

I know it’s cruel. But it IS funny.

It’s the Wild Card Playoffs This Week. Hard Not to Like the Cowboys.

Romo, Romo, Romo, everybody is worried about Tony Romo.

Seems even my buddy, the great Dr. Sports, is worried that Romo, who has never won a playoff game, will choke again this weekend.

Well, Romo might indeed take the pipe, but I’m afraid that as the NFL post-season gets underway, he’s not the issue.

This weekend Romo’s Dallas Cowboys are four-point favorites in their re-match with the Philadelphia Eagles and there is a very good reason for that.

Last week’s 24-0 win over Philly in the final regular season game, comes a week after they shut out the Redskins. In fact, according to nflmedia.com, those two shutouts came right after they held the Saints to 17 and after they kept the Chargers to 20. In fact, in the last seven weeks, Dallas has allowed just 11.5 points per game.

Who cares about Tony Romo? Defence wins championships (is anybody playing better than Demarcus Ware these days?) and Doomsday is back in Dallas. That’s why The Coach likes the Cowboys.

Let’s take a closer look at this week’s Wild Card playdowns, courtesy of the keyboard of Dr. Sports…

SATURDAY

New York Jets 9-7 at Cincinnati Bengals 10-6 (-2.5)

The Jets completely humiliated the Bengals with their ground attack last Sunday night. Thomas Jones, Brad Smith and Shonn Greene helped the team compile 257 rushing yards on a 4.5 YPC. As NBC’s Cris Collinsworth repeatedly pointed out, the Bengals were being pushed around and looked like they were playing on roller skates. That will not happen again. Cincinnati was really porous against the run Sunday night for two reasons:

1. They didn’t play hard, as they seemingly were content to battle these Jets in the first round of the playoffs.
2. Stud defensive tackle Domata Peko and left end Robert Geathers (who specializes against the run) were both out.

The Bengals have a great defence that dominates versus the rush. It’s been a bit leaky lately because Peko has been out since Dec. 6, but he and Geathers are both expected back. Between Weeks 5 and 12 (the final week Peko was in the line up), the Bengals hadn’t allowed a single opponent to gain more than 92 yards on the ground. The Jets will not run all over Cincinnati this time, meaning Mark Sanchez will be asked to move the chains on his own. The Bengals have an excellent pass defence with two shutdown corners – Leon Hall did a great job on Braylon Edwards on Sunday night – so we just can’t see Sanchez having much success, especially considering the fact that he’ll be playing in a road playoff game in a hostile environment.

Dr. Sports: Bengals to win and cover

The Coach: Bengals to win and cover.

Philadelphia Eagles 11-5 at Dallas Cowboys 11-5 (-3.5)

The one thing people seem to be asking about the Cowboys is if Romo will choke. Romo has never won a playoff game, so there are still some believers out there who think that he’ll melt down again. The smart money says the Eagles are just too good a football team to be blown out/shut out by the same team, two weeks in a row. If they hit the big plays that they just missed by inches last week, this contest could come down to a field goal.

Dr. Sports: Cowboys to win but not cover.

The Coach: Cowboys to win and cover.

SUNDAY

Baltimore Ravens 9-7 at New England Patriots 10-6 (-3.5)

The loss of Wes Welker is huge. That should go without saying, but there are many out there who believe that Julian Edelman will be able to fill Welker’s shoes, allowing the Patriots’ offense to keep on clicking. Well, not Dr. Sports. Sure, Edelman will catch 9-10 passes and collect 90-110 yards, but it’s the stuff that doesn’t show up in the box score that will be paramount. Over the years, Tom Brady and Welker have developed a strong rapport. When the opposition is blitzing, Welker knows exactly what to do. In the 2-minute drill, Brady is confident in Welker and throws his way often. Edelman is just a rookie, and his inability to read what’s going on will hurt New England. With Welker out, the Ravens can double Randy Moss and blitz more. Dr. Sports doesn’t think the Patriots will be able to fix this in seven days. The Coach disagrees.

Dr. Sports: Baltimore to win.

The Coach: New England to win and cover.

Green Bay Packers 11-5 at Arizona Cardinals 10-6 (-2.5)

Even though the Cardinals attempted to rest their starters last week when the Packers beat them 33-7, they’ll still enter the Wild Card rematch with injury concerns. Anquan Boldin is questionable to play after spraining his ankle last week. The Cardinals still have Larry Fitzgerald and Steve Breaston, but Boldin will be missed. The Cardinals still have some depth to their offense, but Boldin’s health could be a factor in Arizona’s productivity given that they aren’t likely to have much success running the ball. Packers Charles Woodson is expected to play despite suffering a shoulder injury last week. Green Bay has been on a roll offensively, with QB Aaron Rodgers completing 80 percent of his passes last week and giving up no interceptions for four straight games. On the other side of the ball they’ve allowed just two 100-yard rushing performances to opponents since Week 3. Except for the Steelers, no team has passed for more than 217 yards on them since Nov. 1. They also excel at getting to the quarterback; rookies Clay Matthews and Brad Jones have been terrific this year, especially during the team’s 7-of-8-game winning streak.

Dr. Sports: Packers to win.

The Coach: Packers to win.

The Doc went 165-91 for the season and 138-118 against the spread. The Coach, after going 13-3 last week, finished 162-94 straight up and 139-117 against the spread.

BBWAA Doesn’t Let Anyone Down. They’re Still a Collection of the Mindless, Arrogant and Ignorant.

The Baseball Writers Association of America is an antiquated little organization that once played a legitimate role in electing the members of the Baseball Hall of Fame. After all, there was a time when the members of the BBWAA attended all or most of the games, even the post-season, and truly had an impact on the day-to-day operation of Major League Baseball.

Today, however, this traditional old boys club, is just another relic from the past. Because their employers’ don’t have the ready cash they once did, very few newspapers even bother to cover the post-season anymore. There are many members of the BBWAA who see fewer games, live in a season, than I do.

On Wednesday of this week, the BBWAA proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that just like newspapers, the time has come to put this obsolete, snot-nosed old boys club to rest. It’s time to create a committee of baseball people to decide who gets into the Hall of Fame.

Baseball writers can’t do it anymore. They were important once, but it’s reached the point that this gigantic collection of booze-swilling non-athletes, old men who can’t even read statistics, let alone understand what they’re watching, has to be relieved of their Hall of Fame duties.

Now I have no problem with Andre Dawson being inducted into the Hall of Fame, but if a lifetime .279 hitter (9,927 ABs) with 438 homers, 1373 runs, 1,591 RBI, 314 stolen bases, 503 doubles and no championships gets into the Hall, then it’s time to open the doors to everybody. This is a guy who never played in a World Series. I mean, how do you possibly induct Andre Dawson into the Hall and NOT Roberto Alomar? That’s just insane.

Of course, the idiots of the BBWAA already proved their shocking group insanity when they elected light-hitting Ozzie Smith to the Hall. Smith did backflips and turned some routine plays into highlight-reel spectaculars, but he had a pea-shooter for a bat. Sure, he could flash the leather, but he was a marginal hitter.

In 19 seasons, Smith hit .262 (9396 ABs) with with 28 home runs (28??? That’s not a Hall of Fame number, even for a middle infielder), 1257 runs, 793 RBI, 580 stolen bases, 402 doubles and won one World Series championship. He had a lifetime fielding percentage of .978. With 1,072 walks, Smith had a lifetime on-base percentage of .337.

Meanwhile, as these mindless knobs proved yesterday, they don’t even look at careers or statistics when they cast their ballots.

Once again, Detroit Tigers legend Alan Trammell was kept out of the Hall. In fact, Trammell received only 121 votes. These BBWAA people are an embarrassment to humanity, not just baseball. Bad enough that they enabled Mark McGwire and now hate him because they knew he was fooling with steroids, but didn’t have the guts to write anything about it when he was saving baseball in 1998, now they ignore Trammell’s class and numbers while voting for people who couldn’t carry the former Tigers’ shortstop’s cleats to the park.

Trammell hit .285 (better than Dawson) in 20 major league seasons, all with the same team. He had 8,388 at bats, 2,365 hits, 1,231 runs, 412 doubles, 185 homers, 1,003 RBI and 236 stolen bases. He had seven seasons in which he hit .300 or better. His on-base percentage was .352 (better than Smith). He won four gold gloves, three silver sluggers and was an all-star six times. In 1984, he was the World Series MVP as the Tigers won their only title in 41 years.

He also has exactly the same lifetime fielding percentage as Ozzie Smith.

He has generally better numbers than Hall of Fame infielder Red Schoendienst and has considerably better numbers, over a longer career, than Hall of Fame shortstop Phil Rizzuto (both, by the way, deserve to be in the Hall).

And while we’re at it, Barry Larkin had a nice career, but not 157 votes better than Alan Trammell’s career. The voting is a freakin’ joke. These people are messed up.

The only way baseball can fix the idiocy that’s been created by the BBWAA is to end the association’s hold on the Hall. These guys are as dead as the industry in which they work and it’s time to get them away from baseball’s greatest shrine.

Favre Spectacular. Rice Wonderful. Defence Solid. Vikings Ready for Post-Season.

MINNEAPOLIS — While the Indianapolis Colts were blown out again and the New Orleans Saints lost their third straight, the Minnesota Vikings prepared for the NFL post-season by destroying the New York Giants.

A final score of 44-7 is one thing. The surgical beauty of Sunday’s evisceration of the Jints was even more impressive, now that the post-season looms.

And there is no doubt that the Vikes are ready for the post-season. On Sunday, Favre completed 25 of 31 passes for 316 yards, four touchdowns, no interceptions and an eye-popping 148.7 passer rating. He was replaced by Tarvaris Jackson with the Vikings leading 41-0 with 4 minutes, 39 seconds left in the third quarter.

The four touchdown passes tied Favre’s season high, and it was the sixth time he’s thrown for 300-plus yards this season. Since the end of the first half at Chicago last Monday night, Favre put up 71 points in a little more than four quarters. He completed 46 of 62 passes for 601 yards, six touchdowns and no INTs.

Funny, but it appears the mainstream media has forgotten the bullshit story it created two weeks ago, suggesting there was dissent in Minnesota. The big numbers have chased the fiction away.

Meanwhile, Favre’s brilliance — along with the brilliance of Chester Taylor, Visanthe Shiancoe, Sidney Rice, Bernard Berrian, the offensive line and a defence that appears to be adjusting to the loss E.J. Henderson –  provided the Vikings faithful fans, the 65,000 that sell out Mall of America Field at the Metrodome every single week, with something to get all giddy about.

Now that’s professional sports.

There was no coaching scared, no worry that precious Brett might get his undies dirty. This wasn’t the candy-assed approach of the lily-livered Indianapolis Colts (have they returned the ticket money from Week 15′s dishonorable debacle yet?). Vikes head coach Brad Childress sent the playoff-bound Vikings out to win a football game on Sunday and he got all $12.5 million worth out of his 40-year-old quarterback.

“It would appear that we picked up right where we left off (in the second half in Chicago),” Favre said during his post-game news conference. “I thought that what we did at the start of the game was what we needed to do. I think it’s proof of what we are capable of doing. For whatever reason we have been inconsistent at times. I think there were 20 first downs in the first half and 22 in the second half of last week’s game. That’s 42 first downs in a game or so. Not that you would expect that all of the time, but that’s what we are capable of doing.”

Nobody is quite sure what some of the other playoff-bound teams are capable of doing. The Colts, the team that threw Game 15 and allowed the New York Jets to eliminate the Houston Texans from the playoffs, were just brutal for the second straight week. Fact is, the Colts were  lucky to get past such powerhouse teams as Jacksonville (the Colts beat the Jags 14-12 and 35-31), Miami, Baltimore, New England and San Francisco, it’s hard to imagine they’ll be ready for anyone in two weeks time.

In fact, by the time the Colts play a post-season game (on Jan. 16 or 17), they will not have won since Dec. 17.

Of course, it could be worse. The New Orleans Saints have lost three straight and when they play again on Jan. 16 or 17, they will not have won a game in five weeks. The Colts and Saints will essentially be starting a new season (and not just in the hyperbolic sense) when they play their next game.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Arizona were dreadful this week, but while Arizona played nobody in the butt-kicking they took at home against Green Bay, the Eagles went all-out in the 24-0 shellacking they received in Dallas while the Bengals played all their stars in that 37-0 whooping they suffered in New York.

Right now, the best teams in the NFC are Minnesota, Dallas and Green Bay while the best teams in the AFC are San Diego, Baltimore and the Jets.

And if anybody suggests even for one second that the signing of Brett Favre was a mistake — no matter what happens in the playoffs — then that person knows absolutely nothing about football or professional sports. Favre is spectacular and the Vikings are great to watch.