Tag Archives: tampa

If Moss is Really a Viking Again, Ol’ Brett Might Smile Again

TAMPA, Fla. — It appears Randy Moss is back in Minnesota.

Just talked to a couple of NFL buddies here in Tampa and the deal is apparently done: Moss from the New England Patriots to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for a third-round draft pick.

Doesn’t sound like New England got much in return, but ever since Moss went off, in a Week 1 rant, that was designed either to get him a huge contract extension or a one-way ticket out of Belichickland, it was painfully apparent that the talented but emotional receiver was no longer welcome in Foxboro. He saw the football occasionally, especially in the end zone, but he was no longer a favorite of anybody in Patriot Blue. In 2010, he’s had nine receptions in four weeks, for 139 yards and three touchdowns. Monday night, in New England’s 41-14 shellacking of the Miami Dolphins, Moss had his first game without a reception as a member of the Patriots.

As a result, the Patriots have run him out of Dodge and he’s now somebody else’s problem.

However, you have to know that Vikings quarterback Brett Favre loves him. Remember, back in 2006, when Oakland wanted to move Moss and Favre wanted him in Green Bay. Favre sulked almost every day after Moss went from Oakland to New England and not to Green Bay.

Now, without Sidney Rice, plus a bead-achy Percy Harvin and a guy named Berrian that can’t be found on the field with bloodhounds and searchlights, Favre finally has a legitimate downfield threat and a guy with actual speed and skill. And it will be fun to watch Moss jump into the arms of Winnipeg’s Syd Davy at the Metrodome again.

I can’t wait for Monday night when the Vikings take on the New York Jets in the Big Apple and I really can’t wait until Oct. 17 when the Vikings play at home against the Dallas Cowboys.

Not that Moss is going to turn around the Vikings season, but he’ll suddenly add some intrigue to an otherwise mediocre and only marginally interesting Vikings team.

After a Week on the Road, Some Thoughts and Observations

TAMPA, Fla. — We’ve been out watching hockey, baseball and golf for a week.

Here are some things we’ve heard and a whole lot of things we’ve seen.

1) Sure, just about everyone you talk to in the NHL these days believes Phoenix Coyotes head coach Dave Tippett will easily win the Jack Adams Coach of the Year Award. But could it be that Tippett is merely the illustration we’ve been given to show that Wayne Gretzky was a horrible coach? Could it be that Tippett is a good coach (there are plenty of good coaches) who just happened to inherit a very good hockey team that got plenty of help at the trade deadline?

This past Saturday night, the Nashville Predators locked up a playoff berth with a brilliant 4-3 win over the Red Wings in Detroit. Tippet is worthy, but Barry Trotz is the best coach in hockey. Nashville — with a lineup of no-names, has-beens, never-weres and Shea Weber — is now 46-29-6 and will play either Vancouver or San Jose in the opening round of the playoffs.

For a guy who has never won a major coaching award and only coached our national team on one occasion, he’s the most outstanding coach that nobody really knows. And this year, frankly, he’s the Coach of the Year.

2) Watched Tiger in the opening round of the Masters on Thursday. What an incredible performance. Say what you will, Tiger Woods is the greatest golfer in history.

Considering that after all the crap he went through — some of it of his own making, most of it the media’s making (he didn’t do anything that hundreds who have gone before him didn’t do) — Woods went out and shot a first round 68 at the Masters. It was his finest opening ever at the Masters. The first time he ever had two eagles in the same round. It doesn’t matter what happens the rest of the way. Nobody plays the game better than Tiger Woods. Period.

And golf is better off now that it has him back.

3) See the Bombers lost $1.2 million in 2009. See the Winnipeg mainstream media wants to blame Mike Kelly for it.

Talk about a one trick pony. The Winnipeg mainstream media either hasn’t got the cojones or the intelligence to point the finger at the people responsible. Wonder how long this will last? In 2016, when the Bombers go 4-14, it won’t matter who’s coaching, it will be Mike Kelly’s fault. Nice deal for Paul LaPolice, though. If he goes 0-18 as head coach this season, the local media will blame Mike Kelly.

If  the coach is the guy who single-handedly lost $1.2 million, why wasn’t he fired a helluva lot sooner? In fact, why wasn’t the guy who hired him fired? And why weren’t the people who hired the guy who hired Mike Kelly all fired? When a football organization loses $1.2 million, the responsibility lands a lot higher up than the head coach. The local media in Winnipeg did a lot more to help the Bombers lose $1.2 million than Mike Kelly did. When you keep telling people to stop buying tickets, a lot of them will eventually stop buying tickets.

By the way, I see that the CFL sent $150,000 less than it did a year earlier to each of its eight teams. That means the CFL raised $1.2 million less in corporate sponsorships in 2009 than it did in 2010. How did that happen? How did the CFL lose $150,000 per team in revenue when the league’s popularity has never, ever been greater.

Wonder where Tom Wright went?

4) The Stanley Cup playoffs start next week. After this past week in Tampa, I can’t wait. Too bad Steven Stamkos doesn’t play in a city where people actually care about hockey.

Speaking of which, my people in Phoenix tell me that the chances of the league still owning the Phoenix Coyotes on Tuesday night after Glendale city council votes on that sweetheart rental deal for Jerry Reinsdorf at jobing.com Arena, is better than 50-50.

Winnipeg might not be dead yet.

Nobody in Tampa, Nobody in Jacksonville and Jason Whitlock Gets it Right Again

TAMPA, Fla. — Sitting in the press box at the St. Pete Times Forum wondering where the hockey fans went…

I remember coming to Lightning games and seeing at least 15,000 people inside this beautiful building in downtown Tampa, cheering and screaming and urging on their hockey heroes.

But not anymore.

Tonight, the Lightning will probably announce a crowd of 13,000 or 14,000, but the reality is, this building is not half full. And the truly sad part is that Alexander Ovechkin and a very good Washington Capitals team is playing a Lightning club that struggles on defence but has every weapon on offence — Marty St. Louis, Vinny Lecavalier, Steven Stamkos and Ryan Malone. If you live in Tampa and you don’t like this Lightning team, you just don’t like hockey.

Of course, it could all just be part of a recession that few people want to admit is seriously affecting professional sports. I was in Jacksonville yesterday as the Jaguars took another step toward an AFC wild card berth with a 23-18 win over Houston, but fewer than 43,000 people were in the  stands. It was the smallest crowd in Jaguars history.

Fact is, if you want to buy tickets to any sporting event in America these days, there are “plenty of good seats available.” My wife just bought a $50 ticket to the Pro Bowl from Ticketmaster. Nobody thought there would be Pro Bowl tickets available if the NFL moved the game from Honolulu to South Florida, but nobody thought the recession would kick the crap out of ticket sales the way it has.

Tonight, here in Tampa, Ovechkin is wheeling all over the rink while Lecavalier had had three great scoring chances in the first period. It’s a good hockey game. But if there are 6,000 people in this building, I’ll eat the seats.

(NOTE: Just watched Ovechkin score his 19th goal of the season on a one-timer after taking a great pass from Alexander Semin. Ovie is worth the price of admission and I can assure you that here in Tampa, the price of admission ain’t much.)

NOTE: There is only one mainstream media reporter who truly understands the Tiger Woods scandal. Read Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star at: http://www.kansascity.com/182/story/1613268.html?storylink=omni_popular.

After reading his column, the rest of the issue is moot.

Bettman Uses Winnipeg as a Pawn in His Nasty Fight With Balsillie.

You knew the word “Winnipeg” had to turn up at some point.

National Hockey League commissioner Gary Bettman, in his ugly court battle with RIM CEO Jim Balsillie, a wealthy entrepreneur who wants to move the Phoenix Coyotes to Hamilton, filed an affidavit with the court in Phoenix suggesting the NHL would rather have a American-based team move to Winnipeg than Southern Ontario.

The news arrived in Canada on TSN yesterday and not long after I received a telephone call from Winnipeg mayor, Sam Katz.

“What do you think of Mr. Bettman’s proclamation?” the Mayor asked.

“I think it’s disingenuous,” I replied. “I think Bettman will use anything he can to win the war with Balsillie and make himself look good. I think he’s said something to make it seem like he cares about the NHL in Canada, but he doesn’t, and he’s just being the same guy who lied about ‘not being in control of the Coyotes’ for six months when he actually was in control.” 

Mayor Sam didn’t seem happy.

“All this is going to do is cause more grief and unnecessary heartache,” Katz said. “I think it would be great to have a team back, but we don’t have anyone with deep enough pockets to buy the team and then operate it in Winnipeg. And until we find an owner, there is no sense talking about it.”

The mayor, as usual, is absolutely right. We did have someone who was rich enough and smart enough to own a team, but Izzy Asper has passed on and that leaves no one.

Although some people would love to call the MTS Centre, “NHL-suitable,” it’s too small, the seats are too uncomfortable for the prices that would have to be charged, the press box is too small, there aren’t enough suites, parking revenues are a problem and no one is sure about the value (if any) of television revenue or corporate support. The fans are there, nobody doubts that, but what price will they pay to sit in an undersized arena is anyone’s guess.

An NHL team in Winnipeg would lose money, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. That’s because it’s very unlikely a team in Winnipeg would lose as much money as the teams are already losing in Florida, Atlanta, Tampa, Nashville, Long Island and Phoenix.

The return of the NHL to Winnipeg would be the right move by the NHL, but we all know the NHL isn’t full of “right moves” (What the hell IS Versus and why is there a team in Fort Lauderdale?). 

In the meantime, it’s pretty unfair to use this community as a pawn in an ongoing battle with an honest, well-meaning billionaire who wants to put a team in Hamilton.

Why does Gary Bettman love non-traditional hockey markets and crooks and hate Canada, Winnipeg and Jim Balsillie?

ST. PAUL, MINN. – For years, we’ve been suggesting, quite loudly at times, that the National Hockey League’s decision to turn the southern United States into a hockey Mecca has failed miserably.

Sports fans in Tampa, South Florida, Atlanta, Nashville and Phoenix have all but rejected the game. Crowds are small (on most nights the rinks are barely half full), there are few actual local hockey players in the communities and television ratings for the sport are miniscule.

Despite the NHL’s best efforts to force-feed the game to these folks, the people of the south really don’t like it that much. As a result, owners are losing bags full of money while beautiful state-of-the-art buildings sit empty — and very few people care. 

So why wouldn’t a league commissioner facing ownership woes, markets that are lukewarm to the game — at best — and an economy still on the slide, not look to greener pastures for some relief?

I guess, because NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is so full of his own pride that he has no desire to give up on a plan that is now, without fear of argument, a monumental failure.

These past few weeks, we have watched as the NHL started out looking foolish and then got caught in a lie. All because (a) the hockey team in Phoenix, Ariz., is and always has been a disaster and (b) Bettman must make the southern U.S. experiment a success.

In early May, Phoenix Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It was a sad day for the NHL, a league that had argued for years that there were no problems in Phoenix.

However, by our calculations –and with the help of reports from the Arizona Republic — we believe the Coyotes have lost more than $400 million since being yanked out of Winnipeg and shipped to the desert in 1996.

What we expected to happen four or five years ago, ultimately took 13 seasons and three different ownership groups to come to pass. 

Moyes, financially crippled by a slow down in the trucking industry, his core business, filed for bankruptcy protection and then cut a deal with Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie to buy the team for an amount that will be well north of the reported $212.5 million 

Meanwhile, Balsillie has been asked to provide “debtor-in-possession” financing, meaning Balsillie provides the necessary funds to allow the team to keep operating while the bankruptcy process continues. According to our insiders in Phoenix, Balsillie’s offer is for $216.5 million and will pay off all the current creditors.

But there is a catch. If Balsillie’s offer is accepted, he intends to move the team to Southern Ontario and Bettman wants no part of that.

“The current team ownership asked that I table an offer to purchase the Coyotes and significant discussions resulted in an offer that is in the best interests of the franchise, the NHL, and the great hockey fans of Canada and Southern Ontario,” Balsillie said in a written statement.

“I am excited to move closer to bringing an NHL franchise to what I believe is one of the best un-served hockey markets in the world, Southern Ontario. A market with devoted hockey fans, a rich hockey history, a growing and diversified economy and a population of more than 7 million people.”

Not surprisingly, Bettman and his NHL mob have no desire to allow another team in Canada. In fact, after telling the international press for more than six months that the league was NOT operating the Coyotes, Bettman and his No. 2, Bill Daly, showed up in Phoenix with a lawsuit that, in part, read: “The NHL has been operating the Phoenix Coyotes hockey club since November 2008.”

In other words, “We’ve been lying like dogs for six months, but now that we don’t want this dog of a franchise moved out of that hockey hot-bed in the Arizona desert, we’ve decided to tell the truth.” Or something like that.

It has truly been a sad month for the NHL. The league is dying in the southern U.S., and it’s unlikely the Coyotes are the only team suffering financial stress, but when a guy who has lost about $200 million (plus his purchase price) on a franchise that will never, ever be profitable, the only thing the NHL will do, is strip him of his ownership tag and let him wallow in his losses, alone.

Let’s not pull any punches, here, it has become increasingly apparent that the Winnipeg Jets should NEVER have been moved to the Arizona desert in the first place. That’s not to say that, at the time, the Jets shouldn’t have been moved. With no NHL arena and no political will to build one (thanks to Gary Filmon and Susan Thompson), the Jets had to move elsewhere. There was no future in Winnipeg. It’s just that the future was not in Phoenix.

Sadly, Bettman has decided that he and only he will find the next Coyotes owner and that could, be another embarrassment for a league that, off the ice, at least, is an embarrassment almost every day.

Just to illustrate, let’s look at the history of some of Bettman’s most infamous owners.

When he took over as commissioner, one of his closest friends and supporters inside the league was Los Angeles Kings owner Bruce McNall. McNall went to jail for fraud.

After Steven Gluckstern nearly went broke owning the New York Islanders, Bettman brought in Charles Wang and Sanjay Kumar. Kumar is now serving a 12-year sentence for fraud.

Bettman also needed help after Buffalo Sabres owner Seymour Knox died in 1996, so he found cable TV magnate John Rigas. In 2002, while he was the Sabres owner, Rigas was convicted of, you guessed it, fraud. He’s still in prison.

Then there was “Bootsie.” With the Nashville Predators in bankruptcy protection, Bettman refused to sell the team to Balsillie because Balsillie wanted to move it to Canada. So Bettman went out and found a wealthy venture capitalist named William (Bootsie) Del Biaggio III. It seemed like a good idea at the time, I guess, but it wasn’t long before Bootsie was facing fraud charges brought on by everybody from the SEC to Luc Robitaille to Joe Montana. Bootsie hasn’t gone to jail yet, but thyere are a lot of people who would like to see him in the crow bar hotel.

Funny, isn’t it? Gary Bettman does not want Jim Balsillie to own a team, but he’s happy having felons own teams.

After 12 seasons in the desert, the Phoenix Coyotes have now lost more than $350 million and this past week, even Forbes Magazine reiterated that hockey had no future in Arizona. And while it might have no future in Winnipeg, it should be moved to a hockey market.

Look, I’ll admit that all of those people who believe Winnipeg still does not have a suitable NHL arena, does not have enough corporate backing and does not have a large enough fan base are probably right. But I will also say that because the best gate the Coyotes have all year is the exhibition game they play at the MTS Centre in September, it’s probably time the Phoenix Coyotes returned to their roots and became the Winnipeg Jets again.

Unless, of course, Gary Bettman finally comes to his senses and allows Jim Balsillie to buy a team and move it to Ontario. That wouldn’t be a bad thing either.

The Super Bowl: Post-Game.

The big game in the cold light of dawn…

ORLANDO — Live from the Ben Roethlisberger/Santonio Holmes Parade at the Magic Kingdom on Monday afternoon…

 

1) No doubt the Pittsburgh Steelers should be proud of their 27-23 victory in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLIII and while the game was certainly exciting and we’re told the TV coverage was wonderful, it was a game tainted with horrible plays, bad decisions and down right rotten officiating.

 

Terry McAulay’s officiating crew called 18 penalties, 11 against Arizona for 106 yards. There were holding calls missed (or ignored), but there were many called — right in the midst of big plays. There were some calls made and many more good calls missed.

 

It was THE big game and, yet, the officials weren’t ready for it. And as bad as Kurt Warner and Ken Whisenhunt called the offence in the third quarter, the officials were the true goats in this one.

 

And by the way, I still haven;’t seen a replay that clearly shows Santonio Holmes had both feet down in the end zone when he caught the game-winning pass. Just sayin’.

 

2) This year’s Super Bowl MVP was Pittsburgh Steelers’ wideout Santonio Holmes and quite frankly, it was an inspired selection by a group of people that more often than not picks the winning quarterback just because it’s the easy way out.

 

But Sunday night’s Super Bowl XLIII was Holmes’ game. He had nine catches for 131 yards and the game-winning touchdown and he even set up the game-winning score on a terrific pass-and-run play. The kid from Ohio State was the best player on the winning team and that indeed makes him the MVP.

 

That’s why it’s amazing to me that people are still questioning the Holmes selection today.

 

3) It’s Pro Bowl Week in Honolulu and it just might be the last. That’s not to say it’s the last for the Pro Bowl, but the last for Honolulu.

 

It’s very likely that next year’s Pro Bowl will be held the week before the Super Bowl in South Florida as part of the Super Bowl festivities and if it’s successful, which it will likely be, the Pro Bowl will never return to Hawaii.

 

The move makes sense. Now, perhaps it’s time to think about dumping the all-star game for good. 

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.”