Tag Archives: larry fitzgerald

Steroid tests, shorter NASCAR races and Larry Fitzgerald: Three more things rattling around in my noggin

A Monday morning potpourri…

1) When it was revealed that Alex Rodriguez was linked to a positive drug test in 2003 (I love that weasly-speak, “linked to a positive drug test,”), it was also revealed that there were actually 104 players on a list who were “linked to a positive drug test.”

 

Huh? While the mainstream media continues to harp on A-Rod, doing its very best to destroy both Rodriguez and baseball, it has somehow ignored the other 103 players (I guess the names weren’t big enough for a decent witch-hunt) on the list.

 

Which brought about the first sane, rational response to this media-race-to-see-who-we-can-call-a-cheater this week…

 

“I feel a little violated, because this was supposed to be a survey test and those results were supposed to be confidential,” said the recently-retired Sean Casey. “The only reason we opened up the collective bargaining agreement was on those terms.”

 

Thank you, Sean.

 

The agreement between MLB and the Players Association was clear. NO names at all were supposed to be linked to these tests. In fact, the release of any name simply suggests that no one involved at baseball’s highest levels can be trusted to keep his word. Ever!

 

If in fact the release of this alleged list is true (Which, of course, it might not be. Who’s to say?), then Commissioner Bud Selig, and everyone around him is a two-faced sack of lying crap and the MLB PA should immediately strike and shut the sport down again.

 

I’m like most real fans — and by “real” that means, people who actually buy tickets to watch games. I don’t give a rat’s ass what happened in 2003, especially when you’re handing me something as nebulous as Rodriguez and Barry Bonds being “linked” to positive tests.

 

Explain how the names were released, explain how MLB reneged on its agreement, explain to me once again why steroids are bad for consenting adults, explain to me why I should care about the test results and not about the fact Major League Baseball lied when it negotiated these anonymous tests from the players.

 

Right now, I don’t care about Rodriguez’s test — positive or not. I care that the people who run MLB couldn’t tell the truth if the truth stepped on their pencil-necked throats.

 

2)  On Saturday night at Daytona International Speedway, Kevin Harvick won the Budweiser Shootout with a last lap pass of Jamie McMurray to win the 28-car, 75-lap manufacturer’s race. 

 

Frankly, as it is almost every year, it was a sensational event. Especially on HD TV.

 

In fact, this race was so good, so exciting, that it makes one wonder why every NASCAR race isn’t the same: 75 laps, 28 cars, 2 ½ hours, no more. 

 

If NASCAR really wants to save money, it should bury all of its 43-car, 200-lap monsters and cut the races off at 28 cars and 50-75 laps. That’s plenty of time and lots of competitive driving in order to declare a winner and it will also save the circuit billions in tires, fuel, cars, engines and sheet metal. 

 

And, frankly, NASCAR will also see its declining TV ratings rise because 43 cars, 200 laps and 4 1/2 hours of going around in a circle is getting B-O-R-I-N-G.

 

3) He is, arguably, the best player in football today and on Sunday, there was absolutely no doubt about it. 

 

Larry Fitzgerald, the 25-year-old Arizona Cardinals wide receiver whose dad is a sports writer in Minneapolis (and for full disclosure, a person I would call a friend) caught five passes for 81 yards and two touchdowns as he led the NFC past the AFC 30-21 in the Pro Bowl.

 

It might have been a meaningless game for a lot of players and even a lot of fans, but it wasn’t meaningless for Fitzgerald. He went to the all-star gakme and played as hard as he could and that tells you something about the kid’s character. 

 

He might not have been told this in so many words, but the highest compliment you can pay an athlete is to pay money to watch him play. Fitzgerald understands that. He plays hard and makes you believe that he’s the worth the price of admission every time he plays. 

 

That, in itself, makes him the best player in the game today.

 

Super Bowl XLIII: Steelers Defence Trumps Arizona Offence

TAMPA — It’s game time. Here is our pick for Super Bowl XLIII… and why.

SUNDAY EVENING

Pittsburgh Steelers, AFC Champions (14-4) at Arizona Cardinals (12-7) at Raymond James Stadium, Tampa.

 

What makes Super Bowl XLIII so simple in its scope is the fact this is a game about Pittsburgh’s defence and Arizona’s offence. They’re calling it Steel Curtain II here in Tampa, and there is little doubt that the reason the Steelers are seven-point favourites is the fact they possess the No. 1 defence in the NFL.  Since defence always trumps offence, we’ll go with the Steelers. But one thing could change it all: Kurt Warner-to-Larry Fitzgerald. If those two hook up early and put some points on the board, Arizona could run away and hide. Meanwhile, if strong safety Adrian Wilson does his job and helps stop the Pittsburgh running game, then Arizona could win it by half-time. Trouble is, I just like that Pittsburgh defence far too much — Troy Polamalu, LaMarr Woodley, James Harrison. Wow. By 9:30 tonight, the Steelers should be holding their sixth Vice Lombardi Trophy.

Take: Pittsburgh

 

Final score: PITTSBURGH STEELERS 20, Arizona Cardinals 10 

 

Championship Week: 2-0

 

Season: 159-106-1

The Boss Spices Up a Dull Super Bowl Week in Tampa

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 6, Friday Jan. 30, 2009

TAMPA — It took The Boss to add a little life to a Recession-dimmed Super Bowl Week in Tampa.

 

During Bruce Springsteen’s love-in with the sports media at the media centre this week, the halftime show told a story about how the 12-minute “party” is going to work.

 

Those familiar with Springsteen’s concerts know that his shows run between three hours and three and a half hours and anyone who has seen one will tell you its the best money he or she ever spent on a rock concert.

 

So yesterday, when Bruce arrived for his pre-Super Bowl visit, he explained how he’ll get his three-hour show to 12 minutes.

 

“The idea of the show is that you’re going to the Meadowlands, the regulars are playing and you get lost on the way,” Springsteen said.

 

“And you’re watching your clock … you stop in a bar and get some directions and the bar gets held up while you’re there. It takes another 45 minutes to get out of there. Then you come back and you miss your exit on the turnpike, see. And you drive around to get back around. And so you make it into the stadium at 2 hours and 48 minutes into the show. That’s what you’re going to see: the last 12 minutes.”

 

Clear?

 

2) In an effort to make this year’s Super Bowl more exciting, people down here have decided that a rivalry between Arizona’s Larry Fitzgerald and Pittsburgh’s Hines Ward.

 

It’s a crock for one reason. Larry Fitzgerald doesn’t care about Hines Ward and vice-versa. 

 

You have to give these two receivers credit. They are at the Super Bowl to help their teams win, not to help give bored sportswriters something to scribble about.

 

3) The following headline came blaring off a sheet of paper in the Super Bowl Media Centre on Thursday:

 

NFL NETWORK FEATURES 8.5 HOURS OF LIVE PREGAME AND POSTGAME COVERAGE FROM SUPER BOWL XLIII

  

“On Super Bowl Sunday, NFL Network features six and a half hours of NFL GameDay Morning pregame show coverage and two hours of NFL GameDay Final wrapping up Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa.”

 

What in heaven’s name could they possibly talk about for 8 1/2 hours?

 

It’s Pittsburgh’s defence vs. Arizona’s offence. There, save yourself 8 1/2 hours of tedium.

 

Super Bowl Week gets Duller: The Conversation is now Down to the Plight of the Lightning.

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 6, Thursday Jan. 29, 2009

 

TAMPA — Tomorrow night in Tampa, the Lightning will play host to the Philadelphia Flyers in a game that is expected to draw about 14,000 ticket buyers to the St. Pete Times Forum. It won’t. There will probably be 10,000 (maybe) in the building.

 

Still, that’s a lot better than Tuesday night of this week when maybe 8,000 showed up to watch the Lightning come from behind and beat Montreal 5-3. 

 

Of the 8,000 in the building, about 5,000 were wearing Canadiens jerseys. No wonder you can get an NHL ticket in this town for 10 bucks. There is nobody going to hockey down here. At least not at NHL rates they aren’t.

 

Super Bowl Week should have helped the NHL draw a big crowd here in Tampa. Instead, it’s done nothing to get people interested in a team that has won six-of-eight and is playing very intriguing hockey these days.

 

The NHL is in bigger trouble than we thought.

 

2) You know you’ve reached the point of “Dull Super Bowl Week” when the biggest story making the rounds is the one where Arizona wideout Larry Fitzgerald will happily restructure his contract to make it possible to keep teammate Anquan Boldin in Arizona for the long term.

 

The NFL controls the words and actions of these players so carefully, that if one of them said anything that could even remotely inspire the opposition, it would be news for a week. In fact, the biggest story here in Tampa this week has been how few people care about the Lightning. 

 

At least Celine Dion, Rihanna, Fall Out Boy, the Eagles and Randy Moss have arrived in town. Finally, got some real celebrities in this place. 

 

3) According to the NFL, despite the downturn in the economy, media from 28 countries will cover all the preparations and game – the most countries ever to be represented at a Super Bowl site.

 

Japan and Mexico have sent the most media organizations to Tampa Bay — 22 outlets apiece. Next comes Canada and the United Kingdom, which are sending 18 media outlets each to Super Bowl XLIII. Including Winnipeg’s own 92-CITI-FM.

 

There will be a total of 141 international media organizations in Tampa this year, compared to 116 for Super Bowl XLII in Arizona last year.

 

However, the number of media credentials issued for the Super Bowl is down for the first time, according to the NFL’s media department. In fact, the NFL said there were fewer requests.

 

Although there are more media outlets receiving credentials than ever before — 633 this year compared to 576 last year — the number of specific credentials requested dropped from 4,786 for last year’s game in Phoenix, Ariz., to 4,589 for Sunday’s game in Tampa.

 

It’s a brave new media world out there. In fact, as newspapers die a slow death, there are more internet sites at the game than ever before.

Somebody needs to get caught trying to solicit a hooker.

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 4, Wednesday Jan. 28, 2009

TAMPA — Here in Florida’s Bay Area, there appears to be one major problem with Super BowlXLIII. Other than Cardinals wideout Larry Fitzgerald’s offer to restructure his contract to keep teammate Anquan Boldin in Arizona, there is no compelling story.

 

Both teams are filled with nice guys. The quarterbacks each have good stories as professionals, but no one is overcoming a debilitating disease or a horrible childhood. It’s just a nice collection of former college stars who have grown up to be solid pros.

 

Sadly, there is also a feeling that this game will be over before it starts. Pittsburgh is a seven-point favourite today and could be an 8 or 10 point favourite by Sunday. 

 

Obviously, somebody needs to shoot himself at a strip joint (and there are a million strip joints in Tampa) or somebody needs to get caught soliciting a hooker. Somebody? Anybody?

 

2) Down here on the West Coast of Florida and over in Orlando/Lake Buena Vista, you would not know the Arizona Cardinals were in this coming Sunday’s Super Bowl. This place is dominated by Pittsburgh Steelers fans.

 

Steelers shirts and hoodies are everywhere and it makes you wonder if either Cards fans have yet to arrive from the West or if they’re ever going to arrive at all. It would appear that on Sunday,  the Cardinals will be the home team in name only.

 

3) You might not think these two Super Bowl Teams have much in common. The Pittsburgh Steelers, the AFC champs, are from a hardscrabble industrial town and will be playing in their seventh Super Bowl. The Arizona Cardinals, the NFC Champs, are from the hot, dry desert and will be playing in their first.

 

However, there is one thing that keeps these two franchises forever linked. 

 

Way back in 1944, there was a shortage of players – and men for that matter – because of the Second World War, so the Steelers and Cardinals merged for a season and formed a team called Card-Pitt. The Cardinals were based in Chicago at the time and the teams split home games between’s Chicago’s Comiskey Park and Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field. 

 

So how good were they? Sportswriters at the time nicknamed them “the Carpets.”

 

Fitzgerald Ready: “It’s just like playing at Martin Luther King Park in Minneapolis.”

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 4, Tuesday Jan. 26, 2009

TAMPA — It was Media Day today, the annual Tuesday of Super Bowl week where allegedly serious journalists get all tangled up with the circus freaks from MTV and Nickleodeon. 

 

Fact is, Tuesday of Super Bowl Week is usually a circus and it’s usually great fun.

 

At least, in most other years, it’s been a circus. Today, however, it was eerily subdued. There was one freak from Telemundo who had a five-o’clock shadow and yet dressed like a blonde hooker — wig, cocktail dress, too much makeup, the whole Hallowe’en costume. OK, so he was more like a fat, old hooker and it was truly disgusting, but he was so quiet and he was around so little that he was hardly noticeable. 

 

This year, at the Recession Bowl, most of the talk among the media members has had more to do with when their respective newspapers would fold, not whether Larry Fitzgerald would catch nine more passes for 150 more yards and three more touchdowns on Sunday.

 

In fact, sitting on the bus in front of a couple of New York writers, it sounded as if the end was near for the heavily-indebted New York Times.

 

“I just don’t understand the new business model,” said one 50-ish writer. “You take the product that you used to charge people for, put it on the web and give it away. The people who run this business have absolutely no clue how a business works and now they sit around and wonder what happened.

 

“The Tucson Citizen, the Rocky Mountain News, the Seattle P-I, and more are threatening to go. These papers still make money, but the owners have so much debt service, they can’t make it work.”

 

“It’s just so silly,” said the other 45-ish journo. “The web is a voracious beast. You just feed it and feed it and it’s still hungry. Everyday, we feed it more and more copy and yet it can’t make any money, but we now work harder on the web than we do on the paper. Meanwhile, the core business can’t keep up with its debt financing.

 

“It’s true, editors and publishers are editors and publishers. The concept of business completely eludes them.” 

 

So on Tuesday at Media Day at Super Bowl XLIII, there were plenty of so-called serious journalists, but very few women dressed up like strippers, girls dressed up like trees or vegetables and men dressed up like hookers. There were very few questions like this: “If you were a pizza, what kind of pizza would you be?”

 

“The freaks aren’t here, because very few of us are here,” said Dave Perkins of the Toronto Star. “Every year, there are fewer and fewer of us. They say the business is changing. It’s changing faster than we think.”

 

So on a very interesting Media Day, here are a few interesting responses…

 

1) A little more than a month ago, Mitch Berger was in B.C. kicking a football all by himself. This week, he’s preparing for Super Bowl XLIII. He can’t believe it.

 

“I really thought I’d go when I was in Minnesota in 1998,” Berger said, surrounded by a handful of Canadian media types.

 

“That was a great season. We were 15-1 and Randy Moss was rookie of the year,” Berger said. “I thought that was my one and only chance. Then we got another chance in 2001, but we went into New York and got spanked by the Giants in the NFC Championship.

 

“And that was it. I thought I was done. I was home in B.C., kicking by myself, and nobody called. Not even a CFL team called. I think Winnipeg still has my rights and I thought they might call, they had kicking problems all year, but they didn’t call, so I thought I might have to wait until training camp next year.

 

“Then my agent got a call from the Steelers and now here I am. I’m enjoying Super Bowl Week, my family gets in tomorrow, it’s going to be a great, great time.”

 

Berger owns four restaurants and a bar in Vancouver and Victoria and he’ll never be broke. But to get one more shot at the Super Bowl is just about as good as it gets.

 

2) Larry Fitzgerald Jr. said yesterday that his dad, sportswriter Larry Sr., will be all over him this week. 

 

“But in a good way.”

 

“He’ll tell me to get plenty of rest, to eat right, to stay out of trouble,” said the Cards gifted wideout, a young man on the verge of setting every playoff receiving record in NFL history.  

 

“Having my dad around is great. He’s done so much for me because he allowed me to be a big part of his life. I got to hang around with some of the greatest athletes in history. He’s the reason I’m able to do what I love to do today. When you’re a youth and you see what you want you want to do for the rest of your life and you eventually get to do it, then that’s really living the dream.

 

“Right now, I’m living the dream.”

 

Fitzgerald said that with his dad staying with him in the team hotel, he’s able to take the distractions out of his game.

 

“I look at this game this way: It’s the same game I’ve been playing since I was seven years old at Martin Luther King Park in Minneapolis. Sure it’s the Super Bowl, sure it’s the biggest stage on earth. But it’s the same game I’ve always played. I just need to run my routes, catch the ball and run with it. That’s all it is. It’s just football.”

 

3) Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt, was asked how he turned around a team that played mediocre football down the stretch and finished the regular season at 9-7.

 

Let’s be honest here: The Cards were dreadful in December, but have been unbeatable in January.

 

In fact, as the question was being asked, former Detroit Lions head coach Steve Mariucci — a guy who had a lot of trouble winning football games — wondered aloud whether Whisenhunt had changed the system or delivered a different message.

 

“None of the above,” Whisenhunt said with a smile. “There was nothing tangible that happened. We just got hot at the right time. Nobody gave us a chance in the playoffs so it’s been the us-against-the-world mentality and the guys have bought into it. We’ve done nothing more than get hot at the right time.”

 

Funny, it’s actually starting to feel a little cooler here in Tampa. 

 

Oh, by the way, last night before the Montreal-Tampa NHL game, the duo of Les Sabler (on guitar) and Marshall Gillon (vocals) provided both the Canadian and U.S. national anthems.

 

I have never heard O Canada or the Star Spangled Banner performed better. Outstanding doesn’t even begin to describe how spectacular it was. 

 

Another by the way, no matter what the P.A. announcer told the crowd, the attendance at last night’s game in Tampa, was a lie.

 

The St. Pete Times Forum was not half full for the Habs and Bolts.

Oh, so sad, Lingerie Bowl VI has been cancelled. “We’ll play in our undies, but OMG, not nekkid!!!”

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 3, Monday, Jan. 26, 2009

 

TAMPA — I’d like to talk about football, but there is too much craziness going on…

 

1) Lingerie Bowl VI — The Really Big Game during the festivities of the past five Super Bowls — was supposed to be played at a vacant lot in Tampa this week, but after the neighbors complained, it appeared as if Lingerie Bowl VI was dead.

 

Then, in a magnanimous gesture, the folks at the Caliente Resort, a highly-regarded Tampa-area nudist colony, extended a hand to the Lingerie League, and told the organizers they could play the big game at the main field of the resort.

 

Eureka! The Lingerie Bowl had survived. Or so we thought.

 

On Sunday, the folks over at Caliente, which is actually a “clothing-optional” resort, told the Lingerie League that lingerie wasn’t acceptable. It was nude or no Bowl game. At a nudist colony, you are expected to be nude.

 

With that, a number of players quit. “We’ll play in our panties, but not in our girl-suits,” they said.

 

Organizers announced on Monday that the game was officially cancelled and that there was a good chance the league would fold, as well. 

 

Couldn’t the NFL help these girls out? I mean, come on, football in lingerie is just about perfect, isn’t it?

 

2) It has become pretty obvious over the last few weeks. If the Arizona Cardinals intend to upset the Pittsburgh Steelers, it will have to be done by Kurt Warner and Larry Fitzgerald. 

 

After all, in last week’s NFC championship game Fitzgerald caught nine passes for 152 yards and three touchdowns, giving him an NFL postseason record 419 yards in his first three playoff games. Warner was equally as impressive in that game, completing 21-of-28 passes for 279 yards, four TDs and a QB rating of 145.7. 

 

If those two pull it off again, the Cards might indeed be the team of destiny. Trouble is, pulling it off against the No. 1-ranked defence in the NFL is a lot different than pulling it off against Atlanta, Carolina or Philly.

 

3) The Winnipeg Blue Bombers will make it official on Tuesday. Calgary Stampeders’ assistant director of scouting, John Murphy, will be the team’s new general manager and director of player personnel.

 

Down here in Tampa, the news arrived with a bit of a thud, but in fairness, it did not go unnoticed. NFL people know Murphy and the ones we talked to on Monday night thought very highly of him.

 

After all, he did play a major role in building the Grey Cup champion Stampeders. That looks pretty good on any football resume.

 

 

 

Can ex-Steeler Whisenhunt Coax the Mediocre Cardinals to a Title?

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 1, Saturday, Jan. 24, 2009

TAMPA — Some thoughts from Day 1 on Florida’s remarkable West Coast:

 

1) So what’s the real reason for the incredible improvement of the Arizona Cardinals? Was it the re-invigorated play of the young-again Kurt Warner? Was it the brilliance of Larry Fitzgerald (who might be the best all-around athlete in the NFL)? Was it a defence that has come around during the past five weeks?

 

Yes and no. While all of those things had a lot to do with it, it is, ultimately, the coaching of Ken Whisenhunt. A former Steelers assistant who took the job in Arizona just as Pittsburgh was hiring Mike Tomlin, Whisenhunt brought along Pittsburgh assistant Russ Grimm to be his assistant head coach and another Steelers assistant, Kevin Spencer to run his special teams.

 

The Cards are now headed to their first Super Bowl. The Steelers are going for the seventh time in 43 years. Although he denies it, Whisenhunt has brought a little Steeler tradition to the desert.

 

2) Depending on where you go in Las Vegas, the Pittsburgh Steelers are either 6 ½ or seven-point favourites in next Sunday’s Super Bowl XLIII. Ask the Arizona Cardinals and that’s exactly what they want to hear. Let’s not pull any punches. This year the 9-7 Cardinals, a team that lost 35-14 at home a month ago to the less-than-brilliant Minnesota Vikings, were a mediocre football team that caught fire at exactly the right moment. 

 

According to Cards head coach Ken Whisenhunt, “I think that it’s not a surprise that we would be an underdog. This is a very good football team that we are going against; one that a number of the members of this organization are familiar with. Obviously, there will not be a lot of people singing our praises. Hopefully, that will keep us focused.”

 

The Cards might get as much energy from the oddsmakers as they get from Tampa’s abundance of strip clubs over the next week. 

 

3) Do uniform colours matter? Guess we’ll find out in Super Bowl XLIII. On Thursday, the Arizona Cardinals, the official home team in Tampa, chose to wear their home red uniforms in the big game. 

 

That means the Steelers will wear their white road uniforms, just as they did when they defeated Seattle for the NFL title three years ago in Detroit. In the 2006 Super Bowl, Pittsburgh had the option of wearing their black home jerseys, but decided to wear white after playing and winning three road playoff games in as many weeks.

 

This will be only the third time in their seven Super Bowls the Steelers have worn white. They’ve never lost in their white jerseys. 

 

The NFL Championship Games: A Post-Mortem

It will be the upstart Arizona Cardinals and the heavily-favoured Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLIII and don’t forget, the 92-CITI Sports Machine will be live at the big game all next week.

In the meantime, it was quite a Championship Sunday for a team headed to the big game for the first time in franchise history and a team going off to try to win its record sixth Super Bowl crown.

 

In Glendale, Ariz., on Sunday, the Arizona Cardinals took a big halftime  lead (24-6), blew that lead (25-24) and yet came back to beat the Philadelphia Eagles with a tremendous drive late in the fourth quarter, 32-25. The Cards Kurt Warner was 21-for-28 for 279 yards and four touchdowns while wideout Larry Fitzgerald caught nine passes for 152 yards and three touchdowns as the 9-7 Western Division champs won the NFC title. Some were calling that final drive, “Warner’s Hall of Fame drive.” They might be right.

 

Talk about red-hot (no colour-coded pun intended). It was only a month ago that the Cardinals were demolished 35-14 in their own building by the Minnesota Vikings and now, this team full of surprises is off to the Super Bowl.

 

However, as great a game as Kurt Warner had at the helm of the Cardinals yesterday – and yes, Warner becomes the first quarterback ever to return to the Super Bowl after an eight-year absence – it could be that his favourite target, Larry Fitzgerald, is the best football player in the game.

 

Fitzgerald, who grew up in Minneapolis and went to Pitt, was absolutely spectacular and during the Cards game-winning fourth-quarter drive, the Pro Bowl-bound Fitzgerald caught three important passes for 39 yards. 

 

Fitzgerald has caught 100 yards worth of passes in each of his team’s last five games. If he does it again on Feb. 1, the Cardinals could be Super Bowl champs.

 

Although, they do have to face a Steelers team that appears to have way too much on defence.

 

On Sunday, the Steelers (and their No. 1 NFL defence) beat Baltimore (and their No. 2 NFL defence) 23-14 in a game that had   Troy Polamalu’s stamp all over it. The Steelers monster defensive back had four tackles and an interception return for the game’s final touchdown.

 

It’s a little tired perhaps, but if offence fills buildings and defence wins championships, then it’s clear the Pittsburgh Steelers should win Super Bowl XLIII. Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger did what he needed to do, but it was that sensational defence that won the Steelers another AFC title

 

While Warner, Fitzgerald and the rest of the Arizona offence put up 32 points to win the NFC championship, the Steelers got seven of their 23 points from the defence en route to Tampa.

 

The Steelers defence was outstanding as LaMarr Woodley had seven tackles and two sacks, Ryan Clark had eight tackles and, of course, Polamalu was out of this world. It was a defensive masterpiece and late Sunday night, the Steelers were rewarded in one small way: They were made 6 ½-point favourites in the big game.

 

Of course, that’s something the Cardinals will pin up in their lockers at Raymond James Stadium next week.

 

See you at Super Bowl XLIII and if you aren’t going, listen for me on 92-CITI-FM in Winnipeg, The TEAM 1260 in Edmonton and The FAN 960 in Calgary.   

 

Some Thoughts From a Crazy Weekend of NFL Playoff Football…

A few thoughts from a weekend in front of the big new Sony Bravia HD…

 

(1) OK, so I’d make a lousy NFL owner. No question about it. I know, because, on Saturday afternoon, if I owned the Carolina Panthers, I’d have fired head coach John Fox at halftime.

 

Let’s be honest, five interceptions will cost any team any football game and Carolina QB Jake Delhomme did himself no favours by coughing up the football five times. However, had Fox been marginally prepared for the Cardinals, Delhomme would not have found himself in a position where he had to force so many second-half passes.

 

Fact is, the Panthers could still have beaten the Arizona Cardinals on Saturday WITH five Delhomme interceptions, if Fox and his staff thought it might be somewhat important to actually try to cover Arizona wideout Larry Fitzgerald.

 

Fitzgerald came into Saturday’s game as the leading receiver in the NFC (1,431 yards). He might be the best receiver in football. He’s not a secret. 

 

Meanwhile, his receiving partner Anquan Boldin was injured and not in the lineup. So suddenly, with one of the Cards’ two most important weapons out of the equation, Carolina still forgot that Fitzgerald was playing. The Panthers allowed Fitzgerald to catch eight passes — six in the first half — for 161 yards and a second-quarter touchdown. Had Carolina shut down Fitzgerald before halftime, they’d have shut down the Cardinals. 

 

I hope this doesn’t sound presumptuous, but why didn’t Fox think of that?

 

(2) Evidently, in the National Football Conference, the 17-week regular season doesn’t mean very much. This coming Sunday a 9-6-1 team will journey to the home of a 9-7 team to play for the NFC title.

 

That’s right. It will be the 9-6-1 Philadelphia Eagles against the 9-7 Arizona Cardinals in the NFC championship game and the team hosting the game, the Cards, lost 35-14 at home to the Minnesota Vikings less than a month ago.

 

In a league where four injury reports are published every week just to keep the gamblers happy, it has now become painfully obvious the only reason the NFL’s regular season exists is for the benefit of the gamblers. 

 

After all, when an 11-5 team misses the playoffs and a 9-7 team could win the Super Bowl, the integrity of the schedule comes into question and right now, it would appear the only reason they bother to play a regular season is so you and I can bet on it.

 

(3) Why is it that people hate Minnesota Vikings QB Tarvaris Jackson so much? Seems everyone from Vikings head coach Brad Childress to the entire Minnesota media corps wants the Vikings to find a way to make it appear as if ol’ T-Jack never existed.

 

Which brings up the following question: “Because T-Jack had no support whatsoever from his offensive line in a 26-14 playoff loss to the Eagles two weeks ago, is he any worse at playing quarterback than Eli Manning — who had some support at home this past week and lost 23-11? With no help from his Hawgs, T-Jack DID put up more points against that Eagles defence than L’il Manning.

 

Just asking.