Wednesday, April 28, 2004
Cheney Speech
Here's a transcript and commentary on VP Dick Cheney's speech out in Fulton recently. I like to read.
Friday, April 23, 2004
Sad, but inspiring news
I just heard that former Arizona Cardinals receiver Pat Tillman has been killed in action in Afghanistan.
This guy gave up millions of dollars to go serve as a Ranger defending
his country. It's one of those stories that you may have heard quite a
bit in WWII, but never these days. I'm sad for his wife and family.
Maybe they'll name the new stadium after him.
Sunday, April 4, 2004
How to ruin a great game
I'm upset. I feel cheated. And it's not because UConn rallied to beat Duke
last night in the Final Four. It's because the referees tried to ruin
the game by calling the most ridiculous fouls ever. They had UConn's
premier player (Okafor) benched after playing 3 minutes in the first
half by calling two ticky-tack invisible fouls. My Duke team, not to be
overlooked, get just about every starting player in foul trouble using
the same method. Randolph and Williams, our two big men (not counting
Horvath, who, while good, isn't either of them), fouled out with seven
minutes or so left in the second half, leaving Okafor completely
unchallenged to lead a comeback.
Incomprehensibly, the referees called only the fouls that weren't there, but ignored some amazing hacks. The one that comes to mind most clearly is the hard foul on Redick in Duke's last possesion. You don't see Krzyzewski, a class act of a coach, often on the sidelines screaming, "That's bullshit! That's bullshit!!" When he's lost his cool, you know there's something wrong. And what is wrong is this game could have been classic. It could have been magical. Instead, thanks to three stupid zebras, we got two championship-caliber teams fighting it out with one arm tied behind their backs.
Michael Wilbon of the Washington Post was there, and his column says it pretty good:
Incomprehensibly, the referees called only the fouls that weren't there, but ignored some amazing hacks. The one that comes to mind most clearly is the hard foul on Redick in Duke's last possesion. You don't see Krzyzewski, a class act of a coach, often on the sidelines screaming, "That's bullshit! That's bullshit!!" When he's lost his cool, you know there's something wrong. And what is wrong is this game could have been classic. It could have been magical. Instead, thanks to three stupid zebras, we got two championship-caliber teams fighting it out with one arm tied behind their backs.
Michael Wilbon of the Washington Post was there, and his column says it pretty good:
- They
came close to ruining the game. With eight minutes to go half the
people in the Alamodome, some with no rooting interests whatsoever,
began chanting, "Let them play! Let them play!" David Hall, Olandis
Poole and Ted Hillary apparently never heard the sentiment that zebras
should be seen but not heard.
There was never any kind of flow or back-and-forth rhythm to the game, even though Duke and Connecticut are polished teams offensively. And neither is particularly physical or foul-prone. UConn vs. Duke isn't Michigan State vs. Oklahoma. UConn and Duke rely on skill; they play beautiful basketball. They don't hack it up. Yet, the game was ugly, perhaps even unsatisfying, because the officiating was embarrassingly, even unforgettably awful and actually prevented the teams from playing to the level they'd shown through the first four games of the tournament. All three of them should have been taken from the court at the half and been replaced during intermission.
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