by Ice Cream Jonsey » Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:25 pm
I was the biggest football fan. 5 years ago, I mean. My team, the Saints, picked when I was too young to know anything, was playing in the NFC Championship game against the LA Rams. Game was tied, time was running out. We had one of the five best players in NFL history as our quarterback and this would end up being his last truly dominant season - he was the best player in the NFC that year (second in MVP voting overall).
This happened.
In football, you can't - as a defender - blow up the receiver when the ball is on the way like it is in that play. Well, traditionally. Very clearly we have video evidence in the tweet above that you can! What was
supposed to have happened right there is that the defensive pass interference would have been called on the Rams defender. The Saints would have gotten a fresh set of downs, and with the Rams just having a timeout, the Saints could have run the clock down to a few seconds before zero, kicked a field goal and gone to the Super Bowl.
That didn't happen and the Rams ended up winning the game. And since then it's been different, me and football. Look, my favorite football team won a Super Bowl earlier in my lifetime. It was great. It is still, to me, the most unbelievable thing that ever happened in sports. Not everyone gets that! But we had SO MANY subsequent playoff games end up as poster material for other teams. I was watching for all of them. I cannot adequately describe how quickly it went from, "I can't believe this happened, this is amazing, we won a SB" to "here's another humiliating playoff loss and I guess I DO care, argh."
So something changed after that non-call five years ago. I think I've watched one non-Saints game since then, the Chiefs - Bills playoff game from a couple of years ago. Drew Brees retired a couple years after the non-call. Then, the year after that our coach left. I checked into the games in 2022 a little... this year, well, I watch my nephew on Sundays. He's more important to me than ... than whatever the the NFL is now.
As a kid I used to wonder why my dad went from someone who obviously cared about baseball and knew everything about it to someone who just didn't care. Well, at some point I realized, they moved his team. He followed the New York Giants. They moved to San Francisco. His favorite player was Willie Mays and they moved the team and they moved him. Some people say that Willie Mays was the greatest baseball player to ever exist and they moved the team he was on! To someone where my father was in life, moving a baseball team to San Francisco might as well have been moving the team to Mars. He was never going to go out there and see them. The newspaper wouldn't have had information on the Giants' night games until two days later in the 60s, 70s and 80s.
Of course he cared less and then not at all.
(So by the time his kids were born, my father was more into hockey and boxing. He cared about the NFL, still, especially when the Bills went to 4 Super Bowls in the 1990s, but no, baseball lost him even though he took his sons to little league and taught us the rules. I still like baseball, a lot. I don't have kids; I have a nephew I hang around and he is into learning about basketball, soccer, hockey and baseball. I've never mentioned football to him. )
Anyway, I don't think the game in question against the Rams was fixed for the Rams to win it. I do think that the refs were obviously told to do whatever they could to extend the drama of the game. They were told this before that game, they've been told this after and you see it every week. At one point the official NFL Twitter account tweeted some self-aggrandizing bullshit about how OMG!! Look at all these games that ended just a touchdown apart!! Amazing, how exciting!! And, no, motherfuckers, it's you guys intentionally arranging this shit. So I do think that part was fixed, because otherwise the game was over. Apropos of nothing, I was really into wrestling as a kid and then one day I accepted the evidence that the outcomes were scripted.
(One part of this that gets lost is that the NFL made pass interference calls reviewable the next season. If you thought your dude got interfered with, well, throw a flag and they'll take a look. The refs
refused to overturn their original calls. Almost ENTIRELY. I don't have the stats. I only saw one overturned the entire year.
And it went against the Saints. What a giant "fuck you" from a group that is, collectively, incompetent subhuman garbage.)
I didn't watch the Super Bowl that year. I've never seen an entertainment product work so hard to turn fanatics off to itself. We went to a cat rescue the evening of that Super Bowl instead and adopted Clyde, who is a pretty damn good cat. I've gotten into the NHL again, deciding to really follow the local team my father followed. It's funny how quick your knowledge of players evaporates with football: the average career is 4 years. I simply do not know the great majority of the dudes running around any more. Maybe I'll get nostalgia for it someday, I get nostalgia for everything. When life isn't fair it's important to rage and fight and make it fair. But I guess what I am seeing is that when sports aren't fair, god, it's impossible to give a crap.
...
Hmm. I'm .... I'm seeing the Texans didn't manage to keep their game close against the Ravens tonight? OOPSIES /q /quit
/quit
:q!
/dontpost
I was the biggest football fan. 5 years ago, I mean. My team, the Saints, picked when I was too young to know anything, was playing in the NFC Championship game against the LA Rams. Game was tied, time was running out. We had one of the five best players in NFL history as our quarterback and this would end up being his last truly dominant season - he was the best player in the NFC that year (second in MVP voting overall).
This happened.
https://twitter.com/ActionNetworkHQ/status/1748749416394035347
In football, you can't - as a defender - blow up the receiver when the ball is on the way like it is in that play. Well, traditionally. Very clearly we have video evidence in the tweet above that you can! What was [i]supposed[/i] to have happened right there is that the defensive pass interference would have been called on the Rams defender. The Saints would have gotten a fresh set of downs, and with the Rams just having a timeout, the Saints could have run the clock down to a few seconds before zero, kicked a field goal and gone to the Super Bowl.
That didn't happen and the Rams ended up winning the game. And since then it's been different, me and football. Look, my favorite football team won a Super Bowl earlier in my lifetime. It was great. It is still, to me, the most unbelievable thing that ever happened in sports. Not everyone gets that! But we had SO MANY subsequent playoff games end up as poster material for other teams. I was watching for all of them. I cannot adequately describe how quickly it went from, "I can't believe this happened, this is amazing, we won a SB" to "here's another humiliating playoff loss and I guess I DO care, argh."
So something changed after that non-call five years ago. I think I've watched one non-Saints game since then, the Chiefs - Bills playoff game from a couple of years ago. Drew Brees retired a couple years after the non-call. Then, the year after that our coach left. I checked into the games in 2022 a little... this year, well, I watch my nephew on Sundays. He's more important to me than ... than whatever the the NFL is now.
As a kid I used to wonder why my dad went from someone who obviously cared about baseball and knew everything about it to someone who just didn't care. Well, at some point I realized, they moved his team. He followed the New York Giants. They moved to San Francisco. His favorite player was Willie Mays and they moved the team and they moved him. Some people say that Willie Mays was the greatest baseball player to ever exist and they moved the team he was on! To someone where my father was in life, moving a baseball team to San Francisco might as well have been moving the team to Mars. He was never going to go out there and see them. The newspaper wouldn't have had information on the Giants' night games until two days later in the 60s, 70s and 80s. [i]Of course[/i] he cared less and then not at all.
(So by the time his kids were born, my father was more into hockey and boxing. He cared about the NFL, still, especially when the Bills went to 4 Super Bowls in the 1990s, but no, baseball lost him even though he took his sons to little league and taught us the rules. I still like baseball, a lot. I don't have kids; I have a nephew I hang around and he is into learning about basketball, soccer, hockey and baseball. I've never mentioned football to him. )
Anyway, I don't think the game in question against the Rams was fixed for the Rams to win it. I do think that the refs were obviously told to do whatever they could to extend the drama of the game. They were told this before that game, they've been told this after and you see it every week. At one point the official NFL Twitter account tweeted some self-aggrandizing bullshit about how OMG!! Look at all these games that ended just a touchdown apart!! Amazing, how exciting!! And, no, motherfuckers, it's you guys intentionally arranging this shit. So I do think that part was fixed, because otherwise the game was over. Apropos of nothing, I was really into wrestling as a kid and then one day I accepted the evidence that the outcomes were scripted.
(One part of this that gets lost is that the NFL made pass interference calls reviewable the next season. If you thought your dude got interfered with, well, throw a flag and they'll take a look. The refs [i]refused to overturn their original calls.[/i] Almost ENTIRELY. I don't have the stats. I only saw one overturned the entire year. [url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/saints/2019/11/25/sean-payton-nfl-pass-interference-replay-review-al-riveron/4300960002/]And it went against the Saints.[/url] What a giant "fuck you" from a group that is, collectively, incompetent subhuman garbage.)
I didn't watch the Super Bowl that year. I've never seen an entertainment product work so hard to turn fanatics off to itself. We went to a cat rescue the evening of that Super Bowl instead and adopted Clyde, who is a pretty damn good cat. I've gotten into the NHL again, deciding to really follow the local team my father followed. It's funny how quick your knowledge of players evaporates with football: the average career is 4 years. I simply do not know the great majority of the dudes running around any more. Maybe I'll get nostalgia for it someday, I get nostalgia for everything. When life isn't fair it's important to rage and fight and make it fair. But I guess what I am seeing is that when sports aren't fair, god, it's impossible to give a crap.
...
Hmm. I'm .... I'm seeing the Texans didn't manage to keep their game close against the Ravens tonight? OOPSIES /q /quit
/quit
:q!
/dontpost