OK, things aren’t quite thawed out yet, but when I got out of work yesterday, it was sunny and 27°. That may not sound like much, but you’d be amazed at how warm that felt. Not exactly summer-like, but certainly don’t bother to zip up your jacket, no need for the hat and gloves springlike weather for sure. And as I write this at 5:30 AM or so, it’s already 29°, on its way to 33 – and tomorrow they’re projecting a high of 39 (by golly, that ought to get the sump pumps humming again)!
This warm weather comes at quite a timely moment, because – as you may have heard but probably not – this is a big sports-type weekend around here. I mean, yeah, Sunday’s the Super Bowl and even if you care nothing at all about that, you’d have to be living under a rock (or be my wife) to not know that. I have no “dog” in that fight, personally. I don’t really follow either team, and I don’t hate either one of them, either (not like it’s Dallas vs. Anybody, where it’s a no-brainer to root for Anybody). And no matter who wins, I hope to see a shot of their fans celebrating by firing up a nice big fatty on national teevee – and then instead of flipping over cars and starting them on fire, devastating a few bags of Doritos (warning: you will have severe internal cheek lacerations the next morning – take it from one who knows. Those things have very pointy corners and shatter into shards with every chew) and taking a nap.
But when it comes down to it, I’m sure I’ll be pulling for the Denver Broncos. First, their color is orange, so, like, “duh.” Also, I’m sure Floyd Little is rooting for them, and what’s good enough for Floyd is good enough for me. And then there’s Peyton Manning.
I’ve never been a huge fan, but not a hater, either – I enjoyed seeing him throw to Marvin Harrison (who we kinda don’t talk about much here these days what with him having maybe kinda murdered somebody or having somebody murdered, but there’s no conviction, so, hey, whattya gonna do?) and back then the Colts also had Dwight Freeney (who was an undergrad when I was in my 26th or so year of college).
But, anyway, as an old man, I can’t help but pull for another old man (I never really liked John Elway until he got “old” – born the same year as me, by the way – and ended his career with a couple of Super Bowl wins), and Manning is not only old (at least in NFL years – what I wouldn’t give to be 37 again!) but had a freakin’ “anterior cervical discectomy and fusion.”
Now, from what I’ve read, surgeons consider this ACDF to be no big deal, same day surgery, but the description of his procedure includes:
…a 1- to 2-inch horizontal incision in the front of his neck, carefully moving away muscle, retracting the esophagus, the trachea and the carotid artery, cutting through a membranous sheath that covers the cervical spine and finally exposing the crushed disc.
There are seven cervical vertebrae extending from the base of the skull to the top of the chest. The damaged disc in Manning’s neck was located between the C6 and C7 vertebrae, at the bottom of the neck. Using scissor-like instruments and high speed drills, surgeons removed the disc fragments between the two vertebrae and grafted a piece of Manning’s hip bone into the empty space between the vertebrae. A titanium “bridge†spanning the disc stabilized the spine.
Sorry, but once you do that to me (assuming I let you, which is pretty fucking doubtful since I won’t even go to a foot doctor), aint no way I’m playing football again. Not that I play it now that my XBox died, but you know what I mean.
So, anyway, it’s not like I’ll cry if the Seahawks win, and hopefully it’ll be a good game and all that. And the NFL dodged a bullet, ‘cuz after some really shitty weather, the forecast for East Rutherford NJ for Sunday is probably dry and relatively warm – high in the 40s maybe even 50.
But – at least in these here parts – Sunday is the #2 event of the weekend. The real news is that the Duke Blue Devils are coming to town tomorrow evening. The two winningest coaches in NCAA Division I basketball – with 1,877 wins between them – not to mention the coaching duo that has gone 62-1 with Team USA and won the past two Olympic basketball gold medals (USA! USA!) will face each other in front of a record on-campus crowd of 35,446 people to see if Syracuse can set a record for best season start (which would be 21-0).
I bring this up now so that I can kind of enjoy it, because last time we set an attendance record (about a year ago), the dreaded Georgetown Hoyas stomped us (though I feel compelled to say that we went on to return the favor by later beating them in our final Big East meeting in the BE Tournament at Madison Square Garden and then advancing to the Final Four with a win on their home court while they choked and went home early as they have typically done for many years now – “Hoya Saxa” apparently being latin for “One and Done”).
There have been very few easy wins on the way to 20-0, so, yeah, we’re ripe for a loss, and on a national stage (ESPN College Game Day) on Super Bowl Eve with lots of people paying attention and everybody south of the Mason-Dixon line hating us even more than usual because our football coach made a teeny-weeny joke on Twitter of all things about a few snowflakes shutting down an entire major metropolitan area
“Oh, my god oh my god oh my god! People are dying, children are trapped on school buses, old people are stranded in their tarpaper shacks, the couch in my front yard is full of snow and you Yankees have the audacity to refer to us with a hashtag of ‘#softnosed’? How dare you, you insensitive lout, I do declay-uh you’ve given me the vapors!”
And Clemson… Most humorless fuckin’ fans in the NCAA. No wonder Lindsey Graham keeps getting elected.
I swear having Syracuse in the ACC is about to reignite the Civil War – and this time we won’t have Abe Lincoln Vampire Hunter to bail us out…!
Anyhow, let’s just say a loss tomorrow wouldn’t surprise me.
The SU women started things off well last night, though, by travelling to Chapel Hill and upsettting the #6 North Carolina Tar Heels (after being down by 18), so good for them.
And there’s no break in the action as hated Notre Dame (whose racist, stereotype perpetuating “mascot” I shall not mention) comes to town on Monday (big weekend for the bars and pizza joints on the SU hill – one of them decided they had to close on Sunday, ‘cuz they didn’t have room to store enough food for the crowds they expect on Saturday and Monday if they were open for the Super Bowl).
So hopefully it’ll be a fun weekend. Warm, only a little snow (no more than it would take to shut down Atlanta – we don’t even roll the plows out for that), and hopefully win #21.
If you don’t hear from me for a while, you’ll know I’m either off sulking somewhere or defending my home from Johnny Reb.
If there was any story that might get me to like a Manning, that would be it. Then again, I can only go so far. Eli Manning vows to fight fraud lawsuit against him, Giants
People seem to like to name their dogs after brother Cooper. Dawg-hunt-fight… I have been getting a little closer to the dreaded Seahawks. Nothing like a bunch of flaming racism and a Chris Hayes interview to make a Stanfoo grad a likeable figure to me, not to mention that their QB is a homeboy if I wanted to say RVa is ‘home’ and ignore the fact that the other famous alum at his prep school is named Cantor.
Since Pete Carroll led my Pop’s alma mater to probation and thereby gutted their program, I’m gonna root for the Broncos.
ACDF is far from “day surgery” (the hip, though, hurts worse than the neck, imho). The disks above and below the fusion have to do the work of the fused C6-7 and eventually they will most likely deteriorate. I think the man is nuts to continue playing.
Well, I always liked Archie. Not that I know him or anything about him. But I’ve always had a soft spot for good players on shitty teams (hello, Floyd).
Do you often get things stuck in your crack? Then these crack wedges are for you!
I think this qualifies as “rats leaving a sinking ship”:
Former mayor Rudy Giuliani said it’s an even bet that Chris Christie knew about the orders to snarl traffic on the George Washington Bridge.
“It’s fifty-fifty, it leaves you with no possible way of knowing did she discuss it with him or didn’t she discuss it with him,” said Giuliani, in an interview with Geraldo Rivera on 77 WABC.
“I like Chris very much and he’s being unfairly treated, and he’s a good friend,” added Giuliani, who has been one of Christie’s most visible defenders since the advent of “Bridgegate.”
http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/city-hall/2014/01/8539594/giuliani-fifty-fifty-whether-christie-knew-bridge-orders-updated
Guidi 2016!
Keep the dream alive.
Football!
Those guys did a month at Berkeley Rep last autumn across the street from Freight & Salvage where my friend works and I often attend shows. They could be seen hanging out around the neighborhood and shortly after their stand Stewart was married by Ian in Lake Tahoe.
You gotta love them both. Ian talks about how people always come up to him and say how much they loved him in Harry Potter. :rofl2:
Dear Atlanta: this is what snow looks like:
Over 15 feet of snow for our friends in the Tug Hill region. So far.
Wow! have they gotten out the door?
That looks even worse than the big Lake Tahoe snows of the late ’70’s. Holy Moly!
In a letter released by his lawyer, the official, David Wildstein, a high school friend of Mr. Christie’s who was appointed with the governor’s blessing at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which controls the bridge, described the order to close the lanes as “the Christie administration’s order†and said “evidence exists as well tying Mr. Christie to having knowledge of the lane closures, during the period when the lanes were closed, contrary to what the governor stated publicly in a two-hour press conference†three weeks ago.
“Mr. Wildstein contests the accuracy of various statements that the governor made about him and he can prove the inaccuracy of some,†the letter added.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/01/31/1274045/-Christie-knew-about-lane-closings-former-Port-Authority-official-says?detail=hide
Being as I wisely predicted that Peyton would never make it to the end of the season without a major injury and I just kinda get tired of the stupid “Buick” sticker on his practice uniform plus whoring himself out to “Bud Lite” :barf: in the land of a thousand microbreweries……………….,
I’ll be cheering on the old geezer and possibly basking in the victorious orange glow of my first-ever legal :bong:
Christie Plays Defense
JAN. 31, 2014
Gail Collins
Do you think Chris Christie will be able to enjoy the Super Bowl?
Everything looked so promising. The whole sports-loving world’s fixated stare upon New Jersey. Plus, not insanely cold.
And then a lawyer for one of the key players in the great bridge-lane-closing scandal drops a letter suggesting there’s evidence the governor knew about what happened before he said he knew about what happened.
Back to Bridgegate! This comes on the heels of the saga about a New York City congressman threatening to throw a reporter over a balcony in our nation’s Capitol. In response to which, former Congressman Anthony Weiner resurfaced with an op-ed in The New York Daily News, offering useful advice from his personal experience. (“A congressman should not threaten to break, throw, ask to step aside or otherwise get physical with a reporter.â€)
I am getting a little worried about the metropolitan region.
Also, now that I think of it, this was the week in which Donald Trump announced that he would run for governor of New York on the Republican line, as long as they give him the nomination without making him run in a primary or go to the convention.
But the good news is that we’re ignoring Trump entirely. As well as non-New York reports on Toronto Mayor Rob Ford’s defense of Justin Bieber and Bristol Palin’s critique on the parenting skills of Texas gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis.
Christie, however, is national news. And the scandal we’re talking about involves two of the favorite topics of conversation in modern America, bullying and traffic.
David Wildstein, a former official at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, did his best to ruin Christie’s weekend in a letter from his lawyer, which claims that Wildstein “can prove the inaccuracy†of some of the statements Christie has made.
Wildstein is the one who closed down two of the three access lanes to the George Washington Bridge, creating epic traffic backups for several days before the election last fall. Inquiring minds want to know whether this was somebody’s idea of a good way to get even with political opponents. Wildstein, who pleaded the Fifth at a legislative hearing on the saga, also used to be described frequently as a high school buddy of the governor’s.
“We didn’t travel in the same circles in high school,†Christie said coolly, in a dramatic I-knew-nothing press conference after Wildstein had resigned. “You know, I was the class president and athlete. I don’t know what David was doing during that period of time.â€
Snap! There go the ties that bind. Or perhaps Wildstein’s breaking heart.
We don’t know exactly what inaccuracies Wildstein is talking about unveiling. Maybe it’s a senior class yearbook autographed “To David, my very best friend in the entire world, Chris.â€
One thing’s for sure — this comes at a really good time for those of us who know nothing about football. We’ve been at a terrible disadvantage over the past few weeks as the national conversation has been all about the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks. We do not care about the medical history of the wide receiver’s hip. We have never heard of Knowshon Moreno. We don’t even have an opinion about who wants it more.
However, some of us do have strong feelings about whether or not Chris Christie could have weathered several weeks of controversy over those backed-up bridges, then discovered the truth and fired a top aide without ever asking her what the hell had happened. We also know, thanks to a Times report by Kate Zernike and David Chen, that Christie’s staff kept color-coded dossiers on the mayors of 100 towns they wanted to win in the November election, and that Christie is a guy so detail-obsessed that he had personally overseen appointments to the State Board of Physical Therapy Examiners.
It is possible that he knew nothing, nothing, nothing. But it does seem a little bit like a coach claiming he never could keep all those players’ numbers straight.
And Christie’s political quarterback, who also was summarily canned, turns out to have formerly worked on Rudy Giuliani’s presidential campaign. What kind of résumé is that? And the lawyer Christie hired to represent him during the ongoing bridge investigation used to be Giuliani’s mayoral chief of staff. And now that we think of it, the congressman who threatened to throw the reporter over the balcony was a Giuliani favorite. Can we work out a conspiracy theory in which everything terrible that’s happened in New York or New Jersey politics is Rudy Giuliani’s fault?
Let the games begin.
Too write to drunk.
Duke was on my college short list. Ended up in NYC thankfully. There was that Nixon factor. :nixon:
It appears that the Orange prevailed. :kub:
:banana:
Speaking of orange, our team has new uni’s.
Glad to see that they aren’t the pullover version. Since the Super Bowl is dead to me, it’s less than 2 weeks until pitchers and catchers report. I’ll be on a road trip to Seattle with my friends who are moving up there. I will be doing a little location scouting myself although it is a bit far on my realms of possibility. I do have a lot of friends in the area though, maybe more so than anyplace else except for SF.