Tag-Archive for » Buffalo Bills «

The Pimple: More Familiar Faces

Thursday, August 20th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
Bills Killer!

Bills Killer!

As noted in yesterday’s post, it seems the stories we are witnessing from the NFL seem to involve many of the same characters:

Terrell Owens:

The “T.O. Show” is getting a lot of press in Canada because Buffalo is close to Toronto, and Toronto wishes it was Buffalo (ZING!). I can only shake my head at this. It seems that sports fans are incapable of reasoned thinking when it comes to their team. With T.O.’s every new destination, my friends who are fans of that team become devotees of the “Human H-Bomb”. They go from snickering in disbelief at how Owens wrecks every locker room he invades to uttering platitudes like “Well, he’s always well-behaved in the first year, and, well, the guy can play”.

Franchises that have suffered through T.O.’s scorched earth policies: Four (I include Baltimore).

Super Bowl wins: Zero.

Hey, I’m a Dolphins fan, so I welcome any factor that will keep the Bills in the gutter!

Plaxico Burress:

If ever they make a movie about Plaxico Burress’ life, it should be directed by Quentin Tarantino and he should borrow a line from his masterpiece “Pulp Fiction”. Only instead of John Travolta saying “Ah man, I shot Marvin in the face!!” it should be Plaxico, playing himself of course, exclaiming “Ah man, I shot myself in the leg!”. Then Plaxico should roll around on the ground clutching his leg yelling “Whyyyyy meeeeeee!?!?!” à-la Nancy Kerrigan. Yeah, someone needs to make this happen.

Dolphins Ownership:

Jimmy Buffet. Gloria Estefan. Marc Anthony (the singer, not the Roman Senator). Some dude called Steven Ross. And now, the Williams Sisters. Pardon me as I indulge in a little self-deprecation: “WHAT THE FUCK IS GOING ON WITH MY DOLPHINS!!!”. Thank you. Here’s hoping Dolphins ownership is never put in charge of the Super Bowl halftime show, because that would be worse than the year they had Diana Ross.

Raiders Shenanigans:

Tom Cable, Head Coach of the Oakland Raiders, punched one of his assistants in the face. I would like to thank the Raiders for once again providing comic relief to a league that often takes itself too seriously.

Did I miss anything? What storylines will you be following as the season unfolds?

The Pimple: If You Like To Laugh…

Friday, March 20th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy

…then make sure you watch this. I found it while reading the Sports and the City blog. This one’s for you, B-Mac and Matty.

The Pimple: Roadie Edition Part Two

Friday, November 24th, 2006 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy

Read Part One here…

Before I continue with the conclusion to my little road trip story I’d like to mention that the trip has, like all good road trips, cast its hue on the everyday lives of those who took part. Last week a good friend of mine, Serge the Psycho, got some unwelcome news: his in-laws were extending their stay by five days (they stay at Serge’s when they’re in town). For the record, Serge doesn’t dislike his in-laws, but they are in-laws. It also meant that he couldn’t play his Xbox 360 until they left. Yesterday when they finally left, Serge (who didn’t make the Buffalo trip) fired off an email to Bruce Mr. Turk and I exclaiming in Braveheart-like fashion: “FREEDOM!”

Now for those who haven’t been to the States in the past five years, or haven’t bothered watching the news during that time, you wouldn’t know that the word “freedom” has been hijacked by certain elements of the Establishment and used as a political tool and propaganda mechanism. As terrible as that is, this amused us to no end while we were there (in a Bill Maher kind of way). In fact, the whole drive back sounded like a right-wing radio broadcast, as if Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter were in the car. It was one of those “had to be there” moments – “Freedom” was mentioned once or twice.

Now, back to Serge the Psycho and Bruce Mr. Turk: Bruce’s response to Serge’s exultation had its roots firmly planted in that drive back from Buffalo: “Congrats on the Freedom Serge! Freedom rocks! You should even rename your 360 as the ‘Xbox 360 Freedom Edition’. I love Freedom!”

Ah yes, “Freedom” will live on for a long time in this incarnation.

Now where were we? Oh yeah, we had gone back to the hotel for a good night’s sleep (if we could get past the drunk and rowdy “Go Leafs Go” Nation). The next morning, after having settled our hotel tab, we set out for Ralph Wilson Stadium (when did it change from Rich Stadium!?!?). We had been tipped off by a colleague of Bruce’s that cheap parking was to be had just off the main drag, where we could avoid paying full price on Bills’ land. I don’t know how much parking at Rich, err Ralph Wilson, Stadium costs, but we paid $15 USD to park in a mud-bogged field where people were tearing down trees to feed their tailgating fires – nice (picture at right).

None of us had eaten breakfast yet, since we assumed there would be plenty of culinary opportunities in and around the stadium. Well, no so much. Everyone brings their own food to the stadium and cooks it on propane grills while drinking copious amounts of alcohol. Although we kind of knew this, we still thought there would be food merchants on the grounds. If there were, we didn’t find any (except for the Dad selling his kid’s school chocolates – brilliant idea!). We therefore poured into the stadium once the gates opened, famished and desperate for any kind of sustenance. That’s probably a good thing since I would have probably emptied a half-full stomach upon tasting these stadium offerings anyway. That’s an exaggeration, but let’s just say that Ambrosia this was not. One interesting menu item was a complete rip-off of Ottawa’s world-famous Beaver Tails. In Buffalo they are un-inspiringly named “Fried Dough”. Although you had the option of putting brown sugar on your fried dough, most people were putting icing sugar on it. One kid had so much icing sugar on his that I originally mistook it for a Studio 54 tabletop.

We arrived early enough to have the stadium pretty much to ourselves. As people slowly filed into the stadium, a buzz began to build. I recognized the buzz from the first time I saw Wayne Gretzky’s New York Rangers playing at the Corel Centre, or PhillipStadion in Amsterdam when David Beckham’s Manchester United were about to take the field. It’s the buzz you hear when you know a superstar is about to arrive, much like crickets cranking up their chirping when they anticipate rain. Everyone was keenly aware that this was to be Brett Favre’s last game in Buffalo, and the feeling was electric. We spent most of our time watching the players warm up, trying to count how many names we knew from the Bills “Ring of Honor” (O.J. Simpson!) and witnessing the rabble that was slowly surrounding us.

We seemed to be seated in a predominantly Packer-friendly part of the stadium. Nevertheless, many Bills fans were around us and tension was thick. I thought Sens fans were territorial – that’s nothing compared to working-class Buffalonians. When Peter King tells his readers that he wouldn’t bring young children to a football game, I can now see why. The things that were said to Green Bay fans were shocking. I don’t know if that’s a good or a bad thing.

Finally, the teams took to the field. The manner in which they do is quite humourous. A big inflatable Bills helmet is brought out to about the 10 yard line. The players are to make their grand entrance by running through an arch in the helmet. However, everyone can see the players gathered behind the helmet, being moved along by a team rep. It makes for a very anti-climactic entrance, the exact opposite of the intended effect. And then we have the cheerleaders. Should I go on my cheerleader rant in this column? Ok why not…

Put me down as a cheerleader-hater. Yes, I am a straight male with a healthy libido. However, I can’t stand cheerleaders (and no, I didn’t get my heart stomped on by a cheerleader). They’re very pretty, but that’s about it. They look so out of place on a football sideline, it’s ridiculous. For the Bills game there were 3 sets of about 10 cheerleaders. They stand with their backs to the stands until they decide it’s time for a choreographed dance. Yippee. So they shake their ass and wave their pompoms, then turn their backs on the crowd again in a “I know you want me but you can’t have me” manner. My goodness am I ever turned on. I think the worst part is that there’s no hint on the part of these cheerleaders that they’re in on the joke: they seem to take themselves so seriously. I am convinced that if you ask them, they’d tell you they contribute to the team’s on-field success with their cheers. I don’t doubt it for a second. They spend their entire week practicing their dance “moves”, as if that’s what we’re judging them on. Yesterday during the Cowboys game one of the “Cowgirls” got bowled over by a player running out of bounds. I laughed and cheered. I am a very sick boy. By the ways, the Bills cheerleaders are called the “Jills” (gag).

Going into the game, I didn’t have high expectations. I absolutely adore American Football of the NFL variety, which is the only reason I subject myself to the advertising barrage that is NFL programming every Sunday. I’ve always wondered if I’d enjoy the stop and start nature of an NFL football game live, in the flesh. Turns out I don’t. Having commercials while watching it on TV allows you to either switch to another game or be otherwise entertained by another channel (Much Retro, for instance). In the stadium, you are a prisoner to your surroundings. What’s worse is that you can see how absolutely pointless, in terms of the actual game, TV timeouts are. When people at home are watching commercials, the players stand around waiting. The referee stands in the middle of the field checking his watch, and when enough Budweisers and Bold Ford Moves have been hawked, he blows his whistle and everything resumes. This happens every couple of minutes. What you’re left listening to is the collection of white trash and hooligans around you. On the upside, they fight a lot so there’s at least that to keep you occupied staff Seriously, watching the small army of yellow-jacketed Event Staff is high entertainment! However, on the scale of spectator sports I’ve attended, NFL football ranks very low:

1. Soccer (White Hart Lane, Philips Stadion, Gillette Stadium, Commonwealth Stadium, Frank Clair Stadium, Richardson Stadium, U of T Stadium, Skydome)
2. Baseball (Fenway Park, Olympic Stadium, Skydome, Lynx Stadium)
3. Hockey (Scotiabank Place, Montreal Forum, Aréna Robert Guertin, Centre Bell, Civic Centre)
4. Formula 1 (Circuit Gilles Villeneuve)
5. NFL Football (Ralph Wilson Stadium, Olympic Stadium)
6. ATP Tennis (Jarry Park)

The game itself was fairly entertaining. It was close ’til the end and watching Favre have one of his patented “Either I’ll win the game or lose the game by myself” displays was fantastic (this one was of the “lose” variety). The highlight came when the Packers were driving when the game was still close. The Packers were inside the 5-yard line, with Favre in the Shotgun. The snap came unexpectedly and boinked Brett in the helmet and the Bills recovered the fumble. It happened if front of the end zone where we were sitting, so it was pretty sweet (it’s in the official video). In any case, the final score was 24-10 to the Jills, err Bills. I wonder if the cheerleaders took any credit in the post-game press conference?

Our return home was to begin straight after the game, but first we had to get out of the parking lot/farmer’s field. It was quite funny to watch all the SUVs get stuck in the mud, while lighter cars easily pulled out (Too Smart To Be Categorized, and to negotiate tricky Buffalo mud). On the way to the car, Karl the Rabble-Rouser decided to make our Escape From Buffalo interesting, and so decided to speak French to strangers around us and scornfully pretended he didn’t speak English – I even activated the child-lock on the windows. Karl has a lot of pent up anger for a socialist. As all this was happening, I was keeping a close eye on the gas gauge on my car, which was getting dangerously close to the “E”. Since we weren’t moving, I decided to kill the ignition. Just as I did, an old woman in a 1991 Zubaz Bills jacket walks up to our car. She was selling wonderfully ugly Bills t-shirts. Scott the Wing Man yells out to her that he wants one. We all start giggling, but it turns out he was serious and couldn’t resist the unbelievable eyesore that was the tye-died Bills t-shirt (I wish we had taken a picture). Finally, and to my relief, we got out of there.

My relief was short-lived. The orange light on my gas gauge came on, and there didn’t seem to be a gas station anywhere in the vicinity. I have a terrible record when it comes to keeping the gas tank filled during road trips (remember the Toronto trip, Steph?), and flashbacks to flagging down cars at 4:30 am from the side of the 417 and the sound of duelling banjos haunted my thoughts. Finally, on a whim, I took an exit and thankfully there was a gas station right there.

The trip home was a collection of “Freedom” jokes and “had to be there” moments while listening to the Pats-Colts game on the radio. Needless to say, the highlight of the trip for me was the voyage there and back again. At the Canada-U.S.A. border crossing, we had a scary moment. Bruce had packed some of his leftover rum, but the guys in the backseat didn’t know this so when the border agent asked us whether we were carrying alcohol, all he got from us was a garbled cacophony of “yes-no-yes we do-no we don’t”. He looked me up and down and asked: “Well? Is it yes or is it no?” I turned to him and said “Yes, we do. It’s in the trunk.” He then looked at our passports again and inquired: “You’re French? At least three of you?” to which I replied “Oui, 3 d’entre nous”. In my head I was thinking “Ah shit, we’ve got a bigoted border guard”. Quickly he says in perfect Québec slang: “Quossé vous faites avec l’angla?” (Lost in translation: Watcha doin’ with the Anglo?” ). We erupted in laughter and he waved us through.

When we got home, Karl tried to unlock his car with his keyless remote. Nothing. “Strange, the remote’s battery must be dead.” He unlocks his car using the key and turns the ignition and – nothing. The car’s battery was completely dead. A call to CAA and half an hour later, I was stepping into my apartment.

I don’t know that I’d make the Buffalo trip again. If I do make another football trip, I’ll get better seats in a better stadium in a better city. The camaraderie always makes or breaks these road trips, and in this case it saved it. Next road trip will most likely be a Blue Jays-Toronto FC double-bill in the spring, followed by (hopefully) Yankee Stadium in the summer. I bet you Yankees fans love freedom!

The Pimple vol. 2

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006 | Author: Mimglow


Ayoye (French for “Ouch that hurts like a bitch” – quite literally)! Two weeks does not a season make, but watching my Dolphins, and more specifically Daunte Culpepper, trot onto the field and get trounced by the hated Bills, at home, does not give me much hope for the season. Every time I catch Saints highlights and see Drew Brees light it up I think: “That’s the guy who was the perfect fit for Miami”.

At this point in the Dolphins progression, a game manager who can surprise you with the occasional deep ball is what’s needed. Daunte gives us what? Memories of Randy Moss? I hear Jay Fiedler is still a backup somewhere (pining for Jay Fiedler is not what I had in mind for this season). Dan Marino (may Buddha bless him) is still only 45. Wasn’t Steve DeBerg 68 when he played for the Chiefs?

Unfortunately, this is going to be another good Miami defence gone to waste. You know who I feel bad for? Zach Thomas. This guy has been the heart and soul of the Dolphins for 10 years, and will probably end his career without even one memorable playoff run. If ever you’re watching a Dolphins game, notice how he always seems to be in on the tackle, no matter where the play ended up. My buddy Jason and I were watching the season opener against Pittsburgh, and the Steelers had just scored on a passing touchdown. I pointed out to Jason: “Well, at least Zach was close to the guy who scored.” Jason replied “Yeah, but that’s the safety’s job!”. Exactly.

On the bright side, if the Dolphins go 0-16, they get Brady Quinn! Not that they would take him, since they’ve already broken the bank on Mr. Love Boat. And oh wait, the Raiders would actually have to win a game for that to happen. Never mind.

Speaking of the Raiders, anybody else pissed that Aaron Brooks is already on the bench? Art Shell is withholding some key unintentional comedy there. Andrew Walter? Nothing’s funny about him! I think I’ll start an Aaron Brooks petition. Who’s with me? However, as Bill Simmons pointed out in this hilarious column, Art Shell provides plenty of comedy on his own.

Anyone else watch the end of the Vikings v. Panthers game? Now there’s a game neither coach wanted to win. First John Fox gives the go-ahead for that dumb, dumb, dumb trick special teams play on a punt return – WHEN THEY WERE LEADING BY A TOUCHDOWN!!! So Chris Gamble promptly messes that one up nicely, and Minnesota recovers. Fine, then the Vikes do nothing with it and send out the FG unit. Hey Carolina, you think maybe this is going to be a fake, since the Vikings need 7 to tie the game with time almost running out? I guess not, because they got caught flat-footed as Ryan Longwell, the Vikings kicker, threw an easy TD into the endzone.

Off to overtime we go. A few things happened, but let’s fast-forward to the end. Vikings work the ball to inside the Panther 5 yard line for a first down. It’s overtime, remember. Kick a field goal and it’s over.

5 yard line.

Field goal.

Over.

Simple.

What do the Vikings do? Run up the gut on first down for no gain. Surely, someone upstairs is calling down to the sideline to make them realize they only need a field goal, and don’t need to risk a turnover? Nope. 2nd down, run up the gut, no gain. My buddy Bruce and I are freaking out on the couch, yelling at the TV. Ok, maybe only I was the only one yelling, but I’m more emotional than Bruce Mr. Turk. Now I’m hoping they run the ball again and fumble, it’s all they deserve, but common sense (FINALLY) prevails and they kick the field goal to win. Still can’t believe it.

Since we’re on the subject of the Vikes-Panthers game, I need to air something Bruce Mr. Turk pointed out during NBC’s Football Night in America. They have a feature where fans are asked to pick the biggest turning point of the day. There were 4 options, and one of them was the botched special teams trick play by the Panthers: definitely a turning point. However, the other 3 were not turning points but game-deciding plays. Example: Eli Manning’s game-winning TD pass to Plaxico Burress in overtime. That’s not a turning point, it’s game over, as Bruce Mr. Turk pointed out. A better example in that game would be the ill-advised kick to the groin that Trent Cole administered to a Giant defender, making the tying field goal a 35 yard instead of 50 yard attempt. That’s a turning point. Boo on you for that NBC!

While we’re on the subject of broadcasters, here are some quick hit observations:

  • Someone at ESPN needs to have a handkerchief ready for Chris Berman at all times. Having his sweaty face on my TV was scary, especially in HD. Can’t we get an intern to wipe him down when he’s not on camera?
  • Brad Nessler, Dick Vermeil and Ron Jaworski were superb in the second part of the Monday Night Football doubleheader. The shame is that they won’t be working another game until who knows when?
  • Costas’ chair was still too big. Bruce Mr. Turk couldn’t believe it when he saw it for the first time on Sunday. It’s New York, people, I’m sure they sell chairs for little people there! (see, I didn’t use the word midget).
  • Can we eliminate the part in every MNF game were they get a star to come to the booth? In week one, it was Jaime Foxx complaining about being in the third row of Daniel Snyder’s luxury box. This week, Wayde Dwyane (or whatever his name is) talking about how excited he is for the upcoming NBA season. Look, I realize one of ESPN’s major properties is the NBA – I GET IT. But I want football, at the very least. Warren Moon is in the house and wants to come to the booth? Fine. Lawrence Taylor? Sure. For everything else non-football related we have Tony Kornheiser. Stick to the program kids.
  • Another point from Bill Simmons with which I agree: Fox’s pregame show decided to dispose of James Brown in order to have Joe Buck lead the telecast. The only problem is, Joe Buck is their lead play-by-play guy for NFL and MLB. Therefore, the broadcast has to travel to whichever city Buck is announcing in for that weekend. Doesn’t that seem like an extreme and expensive solution to replace James Brown? Are you telling me there is such a black hole of talent in broadcasting that you had to turn to this costly solution in order to put a show on the air? Seriously, this is what the anchor does: “Hello everyone and welcome to Fox NFL Gameday. Lots of good matchups today…Howie?” There you go. Howie, Terry and Jimmy yell at each other for 15 minutes, you pretend they’re funny and fake-laugh through it all, then say “you guys are great – we’ll be back after these messages”. They couldn’t find anyone else for this? Was the monkey from Most Valuable Primate busy? What about the creepy golden shower monkey from the Telus commercials? Oh well, it’s not like anybody watches that show to begin with…

Looking good after week 2:

  • Jacksonville’s D
  • Rex Grossman
  • Alex Smith
  • Sean Taylor’s hit on T.O.
  • Joey Porter
  • LaDainian Tomlinson
  • Falcon’s run game

Looking horrible after week 2:

  • Culpepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (includes such hits as “Ripping the Soul From my Team’s Chest” and “Oops, My Team’s Not Dressed in Blue this Week”)
  • Chris “My Daddy won a Superbowl” Simms
  • Eagles character
  • 700 page offensive playbooks
  • T.O.’s finger (CRUNCH, BITCH!!)
  • Art Shell’s retirement fund

See you next week!

P.S. Did I miss any topics you wanted me to discuss? Send you suggestions mimglow@gmail.com and I’ll try and address them next time around).