OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE: New York Yankees Gone But Not Forgotten In 2008 Playoffs

The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball announced today that the New York Yankees are on the verge of not participating in the 2008 Major League Baseball posteason.  After thirteen consecutive playoff appearances — a run which included ten division titles, seven World Series appearances, and four World Series championships — the Yankees are currently in fourth place in the AL East, nine games behind the divison leading Tampa Bay Rays and nine games behind the Boston Red Sox for the AL Wildcard with only 12 games remaining in their season.  Though they have yet to be officially eliminated from the playoff hunt, most projection systems give the Yankees less than a one percent chance of playing into October.

Despite this unfortunate  turn of events, MLB and their broadcast partners are pouring their efforts into making sure that this year’s "There’s Only One October" features the timeless and treasured presence of the 26-time World Series champion Yankees.  This initiative includes the following:

  • Negotiations are nearly complete with various Yankee players, not including Philip Hughes, to employ blogging (a popular digital trend, as noted in a previous press release) to express their thoughts and analysis regarding postseasons past and present. 
  • Various Yankee players (to be determined) will be attending both AL and NL playoff games in very visible seating locations, and will be available for "in the crowd" celebrity montages, pre-game sketches, and mid-game interviews. 
  • All TBS, ESPN, and Fox Sports playoff-game broadcasters will be wearing commemorative lapel pins honoring the end of the old Yankee Stadium and the construction of the new Yankee Stadium.
  • An hour-long special on the history of Yankee Stadium, produced in conjunction with the YES Network’s Emmy-award winning Yankeeography producers and narrated by Sopranos star / Denny’s spokesperson Tony "Paulie Walnuts" Sirico, will be broadcast before and after every playoff game. 
  • MLB Productions will be producing a series of 30-second promos titled, "What Would Derek Jeter Do?"   These promos, similar to the NFL’s "You Make The Call" campaign, will feature pivotal plays from past playoff games — ranging from the ball through Bill Buckner’s legs in 1986 to Aaron Boone’s ALCS-ending home run in 2003 — and commentary from Yankee great Derek Jeter on what he would do in these situations. 
  • All Tampa Bay Rays home playoff games will be played in the new, unfinished Yankee Stadium; official ground rules will be released prior to Game 1 of the ALDS.
  • Yankee radio broadcaster John Sterling ("The Voice of the New York Yankees") will throw out the ceremonial first pitch before the 1st and 4th games of the NLCS.  His broadcaster partner, Suzyn Waldman, will throw out the first pich for Games 2 and 3, as well as sing "The Star-Spangled Banner," "God Bless America," and "Cotton-Eyed Joe."
  • Yankee outfielder Bobby Abreu will be a guest contestant on Fox’s newest gameshow smash hit, Hole In The Wall, paired up with former major leaguers Jose Canseco and Rodney McCray.
  • A new pinstripe-intensive "hip-hop" clothing line from Robinson Cano, simply called ROBBD-U, will be premiered during Game 1 of the ALDS.
  • Fox Sports baseball analyst Eric Karros will officially change his name to Tino Martinez.
  • All umpires will be wearing Yankee caps and undergarments during all playoff contests.
  • Yankee manager Joe Girardi will guest star in an upcoming episode of TBS’ award-winning Tyler Perry’s House of Payne as a racist policeman who learns the error of his bigoted ways thanks to the Payne family and a package of uncooked Ballpark Franks.
  • An upcoming episode of the critically-acclaimed FX Network sitcom It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia features a character defecating into an old Yankee hat.

New promotional spots for this campaign will be distributed to all of Major League Baseball’s international broadcast partners in English speaking countries as well as locally within broadcasts of the 30 MLB Clubs.  In conjunction with this initiative, all MLB broadcast partners are strongly encouraged to continue running old postseason promos that prominently feature footage of Yankee players up to and beyond the conclusion of the regular season.

The Jockish.com Mailbag: Aaron Rodgers

Dear Aaron Rogers:

I am ten years old and I live in Arena Wisconson. I didnt like you at first becouse I really really liked Brett Favre. But he is gone and you are here so I guess I like you now. Plus you have done a good job sofar. Do you think a lot of peopl feel like I do or what.

Trevor G.

Trevor:

Thanks for your letter, little guy. I sure am glad I’m winning over young fans like you. At least I hope I am!

Even though your spelling needs a little help, you ask a good question. Yes, I think there are a lot of Packers fans out there like you — even though I’ve been on the team for two years before now, no one really knows much about me except that I can carry a mean clipboard LOL. I don’t blame you one bit, either. Brett Favre was — is — a great American hero, a true warrior, and a great guy to get to know. But let’s be honest here: I’m a pretty good guy myself, and I think I’m starting to prove that I’m a pretty good quarterback. After all, the Packers jettisoned the most beloved player in the history of the franchise…for me! Continue reading →

Doctor Doctor!

Hello my friends! I am Dr. Ricardo Salvay, an accredited medical professional of sports medicine and owner of multiple correspondence school degrees from various Internet institutions with a reputation. And like you I am a fan of sports! So welcome to my sports injury column! As a young Sicilian child growing up in the inner city just outside of my family’s palatial estate, I achieved great pleasure through the playing of American sports like Monkey In The Middle and 52 Pick-Up with the servants’ many larger children. This is why I became an accredited medical professional of sports after I tried to become a handsome movie actor in Hollywood and New York, and this is why I have created this sports column to talk to you about injuries in sports. So let’s start the talk!

Right now, superstar baseball slugger Albert Pujols is thinking about surgery to fix his elbow. What he has is called “Tommy John,” named after the guy that did the surgery first! Now, I don’t know about you, but I would be worried! Right now, Albert Pujols is kicking the snot out of the roundball, having another great St. Louis season. So why would he want to do screw up all that for a surgery? Obviously he is better than fine right now, and there is always a risk of dying when you go under the gas. You open yourself up for infection, more disease, and even another surgery. I knew a friend of a friend who went in for a simple colonoscopy, and ended up losing his left leg! Surgery, like most things, is a crapshoot, so watch out Albert!

I am afraid that I am thinking that he is thinking that his “Tommy John” injury is helping him hit the way that “Tommy John” is helping out all sorts of pitchers. In case you are not aware of this true fact, pitchers with “Tommy John” add an average of 3-5 MPH to their fastball than when they didn’t have “Tommy John.” However, the key here is that as a HITTER, Albert Pujols does not have a fastball. He swings the bat, and the motions for throwing and swinging are completely different — they use different motions, for one. Also, the bat for the hitter does what the arm does for the pitcher. Meaning it does all the work for them. So when you have a bat, why worry about your elbow, which doesn’t have to move much when hitting?

A plus for Albert is that he is also only a first base, so he has to maybe make one or two throws a month, and that’s during a busy month! If he were actually making lots of throws, then it would be an issue. But the elbow ligament is very tenacious and tough. It has the consistency of a tight and cold rubber band, meaning that it can bounce back easily after warm stretching. If he wants to be extra careful, he should keep his elbow at a 50-degree angle after throwing for no longer than 20 seconds — that will give the ligament time to get back into shape!

Speaking of “in shape,” Pujols is also in trouble with something called plantar fasciitis, which is Latin for “foot problem.” Put in simple terms, he has troubles with standing on his feet for a long time. Now the traditional approach taken by a lot of doctors would have him massage the area of effect, and staying off his feet as much as he can. But I am no traditionalist! I am a believer of tough love. When my parents took away my weekend car after a bad report card, and forced me to go to the club parties in my weekday car, it taught me a valuable lesson about who you get the test answers from. And this is the lesson that Albert must teach his feet.

Foremost, he should do everything standing up — walking, talking, sleeping, eating, even sitting! And he should do it with extra weight on his back. If amateur joggers can put cinder blocks in their backpacks and run for 3 hours straight, why can’t a professional do the same good while not moving? After standing long enough, he will pass what is called the “pain threshold,” and after passing this enough times the problem will soon be back in the past.

I believe people need to stop babying their bodies and instead put them through the motions! If we weren’t tough, then the dinosaurs would have eaten us, and there would be many more cases of alien anal probing. But we humans are tough people, and we should act like it and stop being injury babies. Like they said, you attract more injuries and disease with honey than with vinegar. So the next time you have a pain in your wrist or your back, or you throw up repeatedly and have multi-colored expectorate and your urine is the color of a bag of Skittles candy, don’t just pick up the phone and bug your doctor again. Just take a deep breath and “ride out the wave,” for better or worse. And it will be for the better. You will thank me for that when you can, I non-legally-binding guarantee!

And that is it for today’s first column! I hope you had fun enjoying it. Until next time, it is Dr. Ricardo Salvay that says, “Get the ball!”

Dr. Ricardo Salvay received his Health Records Management certificate from Ashworth University Online.

An Open Letter From Billy Wagner

Seeing as how Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady just posted his thoughts about his season-ending injury, I thought it’d only be fair to let folks know how I’m coping with my own season-ending injury. But before I do, let me just say that I agree 1000% with what my boy Randy Moss said about that hit. If that’s not some sort of lowdown cheap shot that’s supposed to be some sort of payback for all those touchdowns Brady threw last year while “running up the score,” then maybe the refs should just forget about ever calling late or illegal hits on QBs from now on. Why have the rule in place if you’re not gonna enforce it?

As a longtime and diehard Pats fan, I’m redder than an Irish sunburn that the NFL let the Chiefs get away with that sort of garbage, and all those refs out there should be happy they’re not coming up to bat against yours truly any time soon. Mr. Fastball’s got a few things to say about this travishamockery, you can bet your ass on that. Even that super-tough macho man Ed Hochuli — I’ve thrown chin music at all sorts of roid cases, Mr. Ed, so come on down and get some.

But this isn’t about how the NFL is rigged to keep great teams like the Pats down and out. This is about me, Billy Wagner, closer for the NL East division-leading New York Mets. Let me tell you, I’d do everything in my power to go out there and help the team out if I could. Ever since I came to New York, I’ve done everything I can to put the team first. Whether that means I go out there on the mound with my elbow flapping and moaning like that Keith Olbermann guy, or getting all aboard the Straight Talk Express when I’m talking with the media, it’s all for the good of the team. Now some Mets “fans” don’t like that I speak my mind and call it like I see it. Some “fans” think I ran Lastings Milledge out of town. Some “fans” think I got something against the Hispanic players on the team. Some “fans” think I’m just a me-first sort of guy that likes to hear himself talk and couldn’t care about what happens otherwise.

To all these Mets “fans” that think they know one damn thing about Billy Wagner, all I have to say is this: until you spent a day walking around in my jock, you can just sit there in your ivory tower talking your know-nothing talk like you’re something special, or you can do the smart thing and pop open a can of STFU Juice. You think I like going out there with my arm barking? You think I like going out there blowing two or three leads in a row? You think I like having some 98-pound slap-hitter take me over the right field wall?

There’s a reason closers are called “firemen” — it’s as close as a ballplayer can get to feeling the rush and danger that those American heroes face on a daily basis. And it’s just as tough to go out there with a three-run lead and 2 outs as it is to face the other team’s cleanup hitter with ducks on the pond. It’s a tough job. And I ain’t complaining about it. I’m paid a nice chunk of change to do this, and I knew the risks going in. But you’ll have to pardon my French if, when I see something that’s not right, I actually do what you’re supposed to do and say something about it.

If that uppity Lastings Milledge talks out of turn and throws his bling in my face, damn straight I’m going to say something about it. If that anthem-hating Carlos Delgado decides to skip out of the post-game interviews, damn straight I’m going to point it out. If that Jose Reyes or that Jose Castillo boot a room-service grounder to allow the tying run to score, or that Carlos Beltran loafs after another flyball over his head, you can be damn sure I’m going to light a fire under their tacos and make their nacho cheese extra spicy. And if these so-called fans don’t like what I have to say, then that’s just tough titty, because Billy Wagner weren’t raised no other way. I am what I am, and that’s all she wrote.

Anyway, Mets “fans” won’t have old Wags to kick around much anymore. You see, I’m supposed to miss all of next year because of this elbow thing, and I don’t want to come back too soon from surgery and risk getting it busted up all over again. After all, everyone knows that Billy Wagner only cares about himself, right? He wouldn’t step up and say what everyone’s thinking, and go out and pitch hurt, if he wasn’t totally selfish, right? So after next year, I’m gone baby gone from The City That Never Sleeps. Personally, I think it could use a nap, but what does a chaw-spittin’ NASCAR-lovin’ country bumpkin like me know about life in the big city? Well, golly gee, Mr. Educated New York City Man, I don’t know!

So anyway, while the Phillies storm back and take the division title away from your big city baseball team for the second straight year, and your 2009 season goes up in smoke like a pile of dead leaves next to a leaky moonshine still after fancy-pants free agent K-Rod stinks up the joint, and y’all are crying your eyes out over this sad turn of events, I’ll be rehabbing my bum joint and cashing my major league paycheck all the same. Yeah, Billy Wagner’s gonna come out of this just fine, don’t you worry about that.

New York Mets closer Billy Wagner puts as many as five pieces of sugarless Bazooka bubble gum in his mouth before going out to pitch.  And that’s a fact, jack.

FireJoeMaddon.com Is BACK, Baby!

Okay, we’ll admit it — things have not been easy around here at FJM. I mean, we were cruising along just fine for years, goofing on the Tampa DEVIL Rays and their idiot manager, Joe Maddon. We had links galore, we had a regular group of hilarious commenters, we even did up some sweet t-shirts and mugs on Cafe Press. Looked like easy street for us…2.0 style.

I mean, the sky is the limit for you when your satirical baseball website blows up. You get mad amounts of hits on your webvertising, providing enough for one or two crazy Quizno’s runs a month; you get cease-and-desist emails from the schmucks you’re making fun of; you might even break the bank by getting picked up by a sports powerhouse like AOL or Yahoo. Every once in a million years, you’re the new TrueHoop. Heady stuff indeed.

Well, we haven’t exactly gotten there yet, but we saw the path ahead of us this year. It was looking good for us, too — no one, not even us, thought we would escape the cellar this year. That would have been sweet for us, as we could have complained about how the Rays had to Fire Joe Maddon all year!

And the pre-season was just gold for us. Elliot Johnson, a little-regarded outfielder trying to make the Rays, brutally dispatched Yankees catching prospect Francisco Cervelli in a meaningless 9th-inning collision at home plate; a few days later, Shelley Duncan went in Ty Cobb-style on Akinori Iwamura, Jonny Gomes came flying in like Superman, and it was on. We wrote like 15 satirical posts in two days. It was gonna be the season of our dreams.

And Maddon was in fine form, too, belching out one of the finest quotes of all time (speaking about Joe Girardi):

“I’ve always liked Joe. If he would like to have a conversation, I’d like to talk about politics. I’m good with global warming. I’m good with a lot of different topics on a daily basis. I like iTunes; I download some stuff off iTunes, I like different restaurants. I like red wine. I have a lot of different areas I can go conversationally.”

Informally, we estimate that quote was responsible for about 10,000 hits. IN ONE DAY. We were stone cold pimpin’, y’all. It was beautiful.

But then things started going to hell. I mean, it’s been great for us as fans of the Rays to be in contention at all, much less the unthinkably long spell in first place ahead of the Yankees and the Boston Overrated Sox. Come on — our team’s never been more than four games over .500, like, ever — now suddenly we’re thrashing BOTH Evil Empires? It’s been Christmas, actually, and Hanukkah, and the Muslim one, and Buddha’s birthday, topped with a Very Merry Winter Solstice Festival. (We’ve been so happy we’re shouting out Wicca Nation!)

In fact, we have been so enthralled that we haven’t had the time to adequately smack down Joe Maddon himself. Sure, we kept up, making fun of him for talking smack to Coco Crisp and helping that June Red Sox brawl situation flare up like acne on prom night — but our hearts weren’t in it, not really. Deep down, we thought the first brawl actually must have worked, so why NOT stoke the flames of another one?

And we were gonna bust on Maddon for benching B.J. Upton for lackadaisical baserunning, figuring it was just one-time grandstanding…but then the son of a gun did it AGAIN just a couple of months later! We started thinking that maybe, just maybe, the idiot in emo glasses had some kind of integrity…and might be some kind of genius after all. What could we do, in the face of all this? When the Rays came out of the All-Star Break and went 22-9, even without the services of Carl Crawford, we hopped on the bandwagon — and shuttered our site. It hurt, but we felt it was necessary. Besides, traffic had dwindled to a trickle, and the AOL Sportsline guy stopped taking our emails.

But things have changed in the last few weeks. While we haven’t exactly been stinking up the joint, we’ve started to lose a few more games — which wouldn’t be a problem except that the Red Sux [sic] have been pulling a Steve Garvey and started banging everything out of the place. We’ve seen our lead flit out of sight, rise up again, then disappear once more. This would have been beautiful had the Rays had been a butterfly, but it’s not as great for fans down here in Tampa.

On the other hand, it’s the best possible news for two young bloggers trying to make a buck by insulting a major league baseball manager. Suddenly, the bloom is off the Joe Maddon rose. Moves that seemed wise earlier in the summer now seem unconscionable, idiotic, anti-managerial. We used to be furious about the rapid ascent of Evan Longoria — now we’re furious about the coaching staff coddling him through an injury at the most crucial point in franchise history. We loved Maddon’s faith in his ballplayers, but now we think he’s an idiot for sticking with Troy Percival as a closer. Has he alienated the free-spirited Upton with his rigid insistence on discipline and order?

And now, last night, we lose to the Red Sox, again. Joe Maddon’s glasses suck, his whole head sucks, he sucks, he should be FIRED IMMEDIATELY.

Aaah. That feels about right. Go, Sox, go!

An Open Letter From Tom Brady

I would just like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their thoughts and prayers as I start down the long road towards surgery and recovery.  The outpouring of support from Patriots fans in New England and all over the world has been tremendous, and has seriously touched my heart in a lot of ways.  I will forever be grateful for all your kind words.  And I’m sure that if I could get in touch with the mother of my child, actress Bridget Moynahan, and my son, or my girlfriend supermodel Gisele Bundchen, I’m sure they would appreciate your thoughts and prayers about me as well.  Even the hate mail I receive and all the criticism I get from the sports media experts is all welcome, because as it’s been said, people only hate you because they are jealous, especially when you’re a former 6th round pick with multiple championships, a whole lot of lucrative sponsorships, and attractive sex partners that have both been ranked on Maxim’s Hot 100.

Suffering an injury is one of the toughest things about being a professional athlete, tougher than even winning a championship.  As this is my first serious injury, I am not sure what to expect.  Before I go into surgery, I will talk with some of my teammates, like Tedy Bruschi (who suffered a stroke), as well as other NFL players who have suffered through serious injuries like mine, such as spinal injury victim Kevin Everett of the Buffalo Bills.  We are all warriors in our own way, and I am sure whatever they can tell me about their difficulties will help me deal with mine.

As I’m sure Kevin or Tedy would say, recovering from a surgery requires a gameplan, just like an NFL game, and even when you have a gameplan in place, sometimes audibles are required, which is what all the preparation is for.  I want to make sure I’m ready for whatever might be headed my way.  So don’t worry, folks — this three-time Super Bowl winner isn’t going under the knife without being ready first!

As for everyone that thinks the Patriots are done for the season — watch out!  Bill Belichick is arguably the best coach I’ve ever played under, and he’s got an offensive and defensive system in place that is sure to win lots of games.  And as my backup Matt Cassel showed against a quality up-and-coming NFL secondary like the one they have in Kansas City under coach Herm Edwards, he’s more than ready to take over.  After all, I don’t want to toot my own horn, but he was my backup as I threw an NFL record 50 TD passes, so he was bound to learn a few things about football from someone like me!  And even if Coach Belichick decides to go to the free agent market for a new QB — even if it’s Phil Simms’ kid — I’m sure everything will be fine, and I will make myself available for whatever questions they have.  As long as they don’t ask me for Gisele’s cell number, that is — ha ha ha ha ha!

Of course, everyone on the team will have to step up to help, from your Pro Bowl defensive lineman to your practice squad place holders.  NFL football, more than any other sport, is all about teamwork.  And as we proved after the tragedy of 9-11, when we came onto the field all at the same time before the start of Super Bowl XXXVI), the New England Patriots are all about the team concept, which is what America is all about.  And as soon as I’m able, I’ll be there on the sidelines, doing whatever I can to help the Patriots do what they do best — win a championship the American way.

In conclusion, I would like to assure everyone out there in the sports world and beyond that I am doing OK, and that the Patriots are doing OK, and my supermodel girlfriend is doing OK, and my child’s mom is probably doing OK, and I’m sure my kid is OK, and together we will all be pretty OK overall.  So as Madonna once sang, don’t cry for me, New England football fans — the truth is I’ll never leave you like Brett Favre left Green Bay for a worse team like the Jets.  So let’s go Patriots!

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was picked in the 18th round of the 1995 MLB Draft by the Montreal Expos as a catcher.

Being Too Good is Never Good Enough

It should come as no surprised to those familiar with my public service record that I am in no way a fan of partisan politics.  I said as much during my speech at the 2008 Republican National Convention — it doesn’t matter that the letter “R” or the letter “D” follows your name.  What matters is that you are able to put prejudices aside, see both sides of an issue, and do what is necessary for the betterment of all involved.  This is why I have chosen to go against the mandate of my fellow Democrats and pledge my support to the man and woman who I feel will best lead this country for the next four years, Senator John McCain and Governor Sarah Palin.  And it is through this impartial non-partisan view of the world that I shall address a story from my home state of Connecticut that has captured the nation’s attention.

Late last month, nine-year-old Youth Baseball League pitcher Jericho Scott was told that he could no longer pitch for his league.   A lawyer representing the league claims that Scott — who can throw upwards of 40 miles per hour, what professionals would call “high heat” — is so far beyond the scope of talent within the league that to let him compete would be unfair to the other children.  Others, including Scott’s mother and coach, claim that the league has a vendetta against Scott because one of the league administrators is employed by a sponsor — coincidentally, the sponsor of the league’s reigning champion — that unsuccessfully courted the pitcher during the off-season.

Superficially, it seems that both the league and Scott’s supporters have legitimate complaints.  While it’s possibly unfair to ban Scott from pitching, how fair is it to force children that clearly aren’t skilled enough to hit Scott to have to face him during game situations?  As a great man, John Stuart Mill, once said (and as an even greater science fiction character, Mr. Spock, once reiterated), the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.  And when the many are so overmatched that they cannot hope to succeed, then the scales must be balanced in order to make things right.  And if this balance will not come naturally, then it must be forced, which is what the New Haven Youth Baseball League successfully did.

Critics of the league’s decisions should realize that the same reasoning behind the league’s ban is also behind the lowering of the Major League Baseball pitcher’s mound in the late 1960’s, and the banning of performance-enhancing drugs just last year, and the unspoken collusion behind the unemployment of Barry Bonds this season.  It is about maintaining a competitive balance.  If one team, or one person, is allowed to perform above and beyond what peers can accomplish, it can only disenfranchise those people or teams who cannot meet those lofty standards.  This is doubly true for children.

Just like our current administration’s well-intentioned (yet underfunded) educational policy, the New Haven Youth Baseball League is making sure that no child is left behind.  How disheartening it must have been for these children, to fail time and time again against this one individual.  What can they learn from this repeated failure?  That they will fail at everything they do?  That it doesn’t matter how good you are, because there’s always someone that can best you despite your efforts?  This sort of shallow elitism — showing preferential treatment to “celebrities” over the common man or child — is a rampant scourge that is slowly infecting our national fabric with moths.

Instead of encouraging those that obviously don’t need encouragement, we must instead put these special cases through the trials and difficulties that they’ve never had to experience.  Right now, a young Jericho Scott is crying, thinking that the world is unfair for not letting him do what he enjoys.  But when he’s an older man, married with 2 or more children, with a car loan and a mortgage and credit card debt, a receeding hairline and a growing pot belly, making just enough money at his 9-to-5 job to get by, he will treasure the perspective that his Youth Baseball League experience has brought him.

And just to be clear — it’s not that the League is banning Scott.  They are only preventing him from pitching .  If Scott wanted to play second base (as he has) or in the outfield or anywhere besides pitcher, he is free to do so.  If I had followed Scott’s lead in the 2006 Senatorial election , I would have simply take my ball and gone home after losing the Democratic nomination to businessman Ned Lamont.  Instead, I ran for Senate as an independant candidate, and handily won the election.  There are many successful players in all professional levels, including superstars like Babe Ruth and Rick Ankiel, that have made the transition from pitcher to hitter.  It’s common at the high school and collegiate levels for players to both hit and pitch.  For Scott to not realize this and simply sulk his burgeoning career away shows a lack of initiative and character on his part.  If he’s going to act like a child about this, it’s probably for the best that he was banned.  After all, no one likes a sore loser.  Just ask Al Gore.

In 2004, Senator Joe Lieberman received the 7th most votes in his bid to become the Democratic nominee for President of the United States.

Fillin’ the Ol’ Onion Bag

Oi out there! It’s me, Olly Wollstonecraft, innit? But I’m better known on our side of the pond as The Sports Geezer.

You might have read my shite in the Runagate Rampant, or seen my beauty-filled visage on Sky TV 6’s “Best Fookin’ Sports Show of the Century.” Either way, doesn’t matter to me — I’m just happy to be bringing you my original common-man take on sport, all the way from old Blighty. I call this column “Fillin’ the Ol’ Onion Bag”…and welcome to it!

Better put away your assault rifles and shut those cheeseburgerholes, because here we go with some good old American bullet points:

  • The Barclays Premier League is a joke this year. Well, more like every year, innit? But this year has started out worse than ever. The same old sad overhyped zeppelins sit atop the table and do sweet Fanny Adams with it while the greatest and noblest clubs of all, like my beloved West Brom (Go the Baggies!), are dead last. Seems like if you make a mint in kit sales — or you’re propped up by the money of an exiled Thai ex-president — you can just waltz right in and buy your championship right there. There hasn’t been such injustice since Jade got singled out as the big racist one in the Big Brother house when Danielle and Jo and Jack were all giving an earful to Shilpa Shetty too.
  • Speaking of Manchester City, it looks like Thaksin Shinawatra’s money is out of the team’s picture. But now the new sponsors from Abu Dhabi are supposed to be all peaches and cream? As my mate Nick-o says, “Out of the saute pan, into the whatever they use to cook Abu Dhabi food, whatever that may be.” Couldn’t have said it better meself, Nick-o. But I like the idea of the Blues having the entire OPEC at hand to buy up every single good foreign player before Man U can get its fat little hands on ’em. Talk about cocking a snook at Sir Alex!
  • Oh and didn’t wee Shaun have himself a game last week against West Ham…and isn’t he of a domestic vintage? The wee leprechaun is mad for it!
  • I was in Belfast to witness Ronnie O’Sullivan and his utter demolition of Dave Harold in the Northern Ireland snooker finals. It was a great and glorious triumph indeed, “The Rocket” is unstoppable once he gets going on. But hello, what’s this I read in the Grauniad about the match: “…a delicate positional cannon was required to prise the brown away from the pink…” Me lad, I’ve made that shot dozens of times since I was 15! Rim-shot, cymbal crash. I’ll get me hat.
  • Notice how a lot of subcontinentals are getting their frilly undergarments in a Delhi twist over the plans to launch an English Twenty20 Cricket Premier League. What, they can launch an Indian league bolstered by Bollywood stars and nouveau riche telemarketing supervisors, and we cannot? That having been said, though, anyone else have the idea that this league will start out looking like Stacey out of “Gavin and Stacey,” but end up more like her slag of a friend? (Not that I wouldn’t still have a bit of the bigger one, of course. Just saying.)
  • You know who I miss? The Boo Radleys. What a great band, what a lovely bunch of guys. Spent a drunken pubcrawl with Martin Carr (great bloke, voice like a bag of spanners) in 1993 that ended with him smashing a Marks and Spencer display window and spraypainting “LIVERPOOL 4 EVAH” on the mannequins. To this day, I think C’mon Kids is brilliantine, a misunderstood work of deep feeling torpedoed by Martin’s angry contrary working-class soul, and a ferocious bitch-slap at the Gallagher Brothers and Damon Albarn…but then again I still own three different Roni Size albums, so what the bangers and mash do I know?
  • Guess what? I have decided to follow the American football NFL league this year. Why? you ask. Well, because I can, is all. Also, we’re inundated with the “other” footy news anyway, might as well have a stake in it. Here’s where you come in — suggest your pick for what my new favorite NFL team should be, and why, and I will go with the best answer. This will make history, and become the most important thing in the world. I have only a few warnings: No horrible teams that have no chance of winning, as I am a front-runner; no teams with embarrassing ethnically-based nicknames (I’m talking to you, Minnesota fans); no teams that are also owned by arseholes who are currently ruining Premiership squads. As my uncle Niall used to say, “Let it blast, make it last.”

Alright, that’s enough from me this evening. Cheers, ye bastards.

I Got You, Sideline Babes

My fellow Americans, when I was a young pageant hopeful in the Miss Alaska competition, I could never imagine the day when not one but TWO women would be running for the highest offices in the land during the same election cycle.  And that I would be one of them!  And to be the second-in-command behind an honorable old war veteran like John McCain during his final years!  Surprising though it may seem, the thought had never crossed my mind.  As a grateful daughter, a proud mother, and an even prouder grandmother-to-be (at the tender young age of 44 to boot!), you have no idea what this honor means to me, and womankind.  I shall do my best to uphold the values that make this country, and this political party, the greatest the world has ever seen.

Still, we women, as a gender, have a long way to go before we are to be truly taken seriously.  Women in all walks of life — not just in national politics — need to rise up and meet the lofty standards set by our honorable and righteous foremothers.  Leona Helmsley, Marge Schott, Phyllis Schafly — these are the trailblazers in whose ashes we follow, and it is their examples we must live up to.  Every move we make, every claim we stake, every breath we take happens beneath the tall shadows cast by such groundbreaking Amazons.  And it is the legacy of these brave pioneers (or, if you prefer, pioneeresses) that is being disgraced by today’s “modern woman,” especially in the public arena.  I’m speaking, of course, about a group of so-called sports reporters often referred to as “sideline hotties.”

As a former television journalist myself, it is appalling to see these so-called “women” win over audiences with their well-shaved legs and their gussied-up cleavage.  And did you know there are websites for people to just stare at pictures of these women, like they’re available for online chats?  After I found my son Track looking at one of these sites (for an essay he was researching), I could hardly believe my own eyes.  When are people going to realize that trading on your looks means that you get judged solely on your looks, and other valuable assets are left unappreciated?  Ladies, a word of advice — if you give the milk away for free, you’ll just become another cow.

I’ll admit, the fan mail I receive and the comments I see while my staff web-Googles for press clippings can be flattering, if perhaps a little too PG-13 for my particular tastes.  But I imagine that most men (and I fear some women as well) see me as just another “hot” librarian mother that they would like to get to know in a Biblical manner after a few shots of Jose Cuervo and some line dancing.  They don’t know that I minored in political science, or that I was known as “Sarah Barracuda” during my college basketball days, or that I enjoy a good moose burger now and then.  All men see is some woman in a power suit that looks like movie star Tina Fey or that woman that used to sell things for Overstock.com.  And maybe that’s good enough for some.  But not for any one that dares to consider themselves a “woman.”

And it’s bad enough that these trollops are staining our enjoyment of broadcast sports with their “human interest stories” and their “salon haircuts.”  Now I see that the queen of all these floozies — Ms. Erin Andrews (unmarried, of course) — isn’t satisfied with making important New York Yankees baseball games nearly unwatchable.  She is now using her anorexia-flavored good looks to sell shaving cream.  Soon, these talentless ignorant breast implants will be infiltrating all areas of our daily life.  When I learned that personable Good Morning America hostess Robin Roberts — a proud, civilized, and seemingly intelligent woman — used to flounce around like a drunk hooker for ESPN, I nearly choked on my post-pilates Museli!  Clearly, ESPN is just the tip of the iceberg.  If left unabated, they could become radio show hosts or newspaper columnists or movie stars.  Some of these people, heaven forbid, might even make it into public office!  We, as pure good-hearted American citizens, must do all we can to end this threat to our way of life.

Now, of course, it would be wrong of me to suggest that concerned citizens do anything rash or possibly illegal.  It would be beyond the pale to send these women death threat letters constructed from cut-out letters from various magazines.  I can’t in good conscience recommend that their Wikipedia pages are edited to include slanderous details about who or what they’ve done with various porn stars and farm animals.  To ask any hackers to perhaps reveal their Social Security numbers or steal their credit card information wouldn’t be becoming of a future Vice President.  And if anyone actually approaches one of these tarts during one of their “performances” and empties a vat of pickle juice over their pretty little airheads, it won’t be because I suggested such a course of action (and suggested you scream “sic semper tyrannis” after dumping the brine).

All I am suggesting is that, somewhere in this great continent of America, there’s a young and beautiful college graduate whose life-long dream was to be the next Brent Musberger.  And this brilliant former beauty pageant contestant is sending her audition tape to an up-and-coming sports-centric cable network, knowing full well that she is overly qualified to be that network’s best announcer and reporter.  And this bright-eyed ingenue (who actually named her first daughter after the city that houses this supposed “world wide leader,” and made sure to mention this fact in her cover letter numerous times) will have her heart broken by a rejection notice that actually has the temerity to suggest that she “try again when you have more experience, Ms. Palin” which of course is code for “you didn’t get the job because you’re too strong-willed and self-sufficient for our particular needs, and besides married women don’t give us nice boners.”

And when this now-successful woman learns that one of these bow-legged blonde twigs — a talentless mannequin who actually got the sports job this woman has always dreamed of, who’s earning the prestige and fame this woman always craved, who gets to share airtime with this woman’s personal hero (and, truth be known, grade school crush) Brent Musberger — finally gets what’s coming to her, this proud and powerful Free World co-leader will sit back in her presidential-to-be Washington office and smile.  And she will be very, very grateful.  She can’t say how grateful she might be, but she might be grateful enough to send a few Alaskan king crabs their way, if you catch her drift and provide her assistant with a mailing address and, if possible, a phone number (preferably to a disposable cell phone).

Thank you, and may God bless you all.

Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin is governor of Alaska, which (as any good journalist knows) is very close to Russia, which is in Asia, which is next to Europe, which she once visited, which means that she has just as much foreign policy experience as anyone on the Democratic ticket, so there.

With Eckstein, It’s A Dunn Deal

While I’m proud to be a member of the Cincinnati Reds broadcast team, and even prouder to get the chance to broadcast games with my father, Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty Brennemann, I can’t help but think about the nine wonderful seasons I spent with my previous MLB employer.  I’m speaking, of course, about the 2001 World Champion Arizona Diamondbacks.  That year of 2001, when America faced its greatest tragedy, was also a magical year for Bob Brenley’s crew as they upset the Evil (Yet Beloved) Empire that is the New York Yankees.  I can only hope that the fans of these Reds experience the glory and excitement that the World Championship brought to that quaint little expansion team.

This year, they’re once again at the top of their division, engaged in a life-or-death struggle with those wily Los Angeles Dodgers, their storied skipper Joe Torre, and their newest acquisition, mercurial slugger Manny Ramirez.  Some people might claim that the Diamondbacks’ acquisition of Reds player Adam Dunn was a response to the Ramirez deal.  Those in the know, however, realize that it’s only with their savvy pick-up of two-time World Series winner David Eckstein from their northern neighbors in Toronto that Arizona has finally countered LA’s big-ticket move.

After watching Adam Dunn play baseball (if you can call what he did “playing”) for most of his career, I can safely say that he is not the missing piece of any championship team.  In fact, I’d suggest that any team that wants to win would be better off getting rid of a player like Adam Dunn.  With his me-first focus on selfish statistics like on-base percentage and slugging percentage, he’s certainly not made of the stuff that typifies a National League champion.  For over 100 years, the Senior Circuit has prided itself on being the league of strategy — of sacrifice bunts, of hit and run tactics, of double switches, of home steals.  A slow, heavy free-swinging slugger like Adam Dunn goes against everything the NL stands for.  His sub-.250 batting average is an insult to every hard-working fan paying to see their team win.  And when he strikes out with runners in scoring position with the team down 5 or more runs, you know he’s only thinking about cashing his next paycheck and laughing at the people dumb enough to think he cares about winning.

Sure enough, Dunn’s cancerous presence in the clubhouse has infected the Diamondbacks with a terminal slump — they’ve only gone 9-10 since his arrival, and have lost 7 of their last 9 contests.  (Meanwhile, the Reds have managed a respectable .500 record in Dunn’s absence.  Nuff said.  You are not missed amongst the fine folks here at the Great American Ballpark, my friend.  And you can sure believe that.)  Clearly, Arizona GM Josh Byrnes has come to his senses and now knows what his young team needs, especially in the absence of veteran All-Stars Orlando Hudson and Eric Byrnes.  They don’t need flashy offense and meaningless A-Rod-like homer barrages.  They need good solid fundamentals.  They need hustle and grit.  In a word, intangibles.  David Eckstein provides those in spades.

Every time he hustles down to first after a walk, he inspires his teammates to do the same.  Every time he dives in the dirt for a ground ball, he’ll make his teammates want to get dirty as well.  And every time Eckstein pokes a ball to the right side for a productive out, he’ll have folks on the bench asking their coaches to show them how to make that very same play.  Though Eckstein made his name with those great Mike Scoscia Angel teams, he’s always been a National League kind of player, and it’s great to have him back where he belongs.  I can’t speak for Reds GM Walt Jocketty (the architect of that Eckstein-lead Cardinal champion), but I know that signing Eckstein to a multi-year deal wouldn’t be the worst thing he could do for the 2009 season.  In fact, it might be the best thing he could do.

Thom Brennemann is a broadcaster for the Cincinnati Reds and Fox Sports.  His signature call is, “Can you believe it?”