
Elliot
Vancouver
Posts : 7
Pair
GALLERY
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Amidst all the money that was won & lost this past Sunday; the biggest news seems to be all about the blown calls by the striped shirts. Bad enough to have just about the entire country against the Seahawk but the refs too?!? I wonder what their cut in the NFL lines were.
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Posted: 2/8/2006 4:04:06 AM
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tiddlow
Vancouver
Posts : 1
Pair
ONLINE
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On 2/8/2006 4:04:06 AM, Elliot wrote: Amidst all the money that was won & lost this past Sunday; the biggest news seems to be all about the blown calls by the striped shirts. Bad enough to have just about the entire country against the Seahawk but the refs too?!? I wonder what their cut in the NFL lines were.
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Game Non The Super Bowl wasn’t close to super on Sunday. Billed as the greatest show in sports, it was anything but – on the field, off the field and after the game. When great expectations die, it means it’s time for a post mortem: First off, why Detroit? Picking one of the only American cities whose population is in free-fall was a weird choice. Ten-thousand people a year leak out of Motor City – and they are doing so for a reason. Just off the spit and polished streets done up for the media were the rows upon rows of abandoned houses and blight. Instead of talking about how great the venue was, it left reporters looking for excuses for their hosts. They wrote how things “weren’t all that bad” in the city. Or how it was “surprisingly clean.” Not everyone was playing along however. One San Diego wag wrote, “What? Baghdad was booked?” Then there was the pre-game. The only thing they didn’t show about Jerome Bettis was his DNA pattern. Joe Montana was conspicuously absent. He always was better at seeing things others couldn’t. He must have had an inkling about how things would turn out because he skipped his Super Bowl MVP intro for his kid’s game back home. I suspect he saw the better event. Even the dynamic duo of Al Michaels and John madden couldn’t liven up the game – although they did do a bang-up job of reinforcing the ref’s incompetence. The offensive interference call on Darrell Jackson was bogus. His arms made did make contact with Pittsburgh's Chris Hope – but there was no harm no foul. The zebra saw it otherwise and there was no touchdown. If the great shirts called the 1998 NBA finals like the 2005 Super Bowl, Michael Jordan would have been called for an offensive foul on his then final shot, and we fans would have been deprived of a classic finish. There was no classic finish Sunday ‘cause there was never a classic start. There were others that were as equally odd. Like Roethlisberger on his rollout appeared to come down short of the goal line. Sean Locklear's momentum killing holding penalty that erased that 18-yard pass to the Pittsburgh 1 that could have put the Seahawks in the lead in the 4th quarter. But it was the non-TD call that looked like it messed up the Seahawks collective skull. They played like birdbrains from then on out – especially at the crunch times at the end of the half and the game. The stuff around the game was also off. The Rolling Stones looked lost in that mighty mouth for a stage, and were even censored by the league. The NFL cut Jagger's microphone during ‘Start Me Up' for the line "you'd make a dead man come" and ‘Rough Justice’ had the sound level lowered just as Jagger was singing the words cocks in the line "once upon a time I was your little red rooster/now I'm just one of your cocks." That’s too rough for the NFL, so we can assume next year’s half time should be a riveting rendition of “It’s a small world after all.” Or maybe they should just run an endless loop of mostly lame commercials that most of the viewers tune in for anyway. They could if they wanted to. In the words of Max Bialystock, “If ya got it, flaunt it!” Sure - it was great to see the Steelers and the classy Bill Cower win, and Jerome’s parting shot was a classic, but it would have been even better if we could have clearly heard it. The biggest game in the world, and they’re using a 2-cent mic? All in all – it ranks in the pantheon of events failing to live up to the hype – close to or near the top. Hopefully for we poor beleaguered sports fans, it won’t be knocked from its lofty perch for a long, long time. The bottom line: The biggest shocker about the game was, it demonstrated that right now, things ain’t all that great with the greatest sports league in the world. That – or I’m still pissed off about losing my bet. Cheers – Gavin McDougald – AKA Couch
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Posted: 2/8/2006 12:29:04 PM
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rollan
Vancouver
Posts : 54
Administrator
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as much as i tried, i couldnt enjoy watching the game. i watched the stones perform and it didnt seem hype to me at all. dunno...the whole thing seemed a bit tired and boring. most people i talked to only watched bits and pieces as well
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Posted: 2/13/2006 11:12:53 AM
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mike
Vancouver
Posts : 85
Administrator
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I think the Gray Cup up in Canada was a heck of a lot better to watch than the super-bowl this year... how ironic is that. I guess you can't make everything great just by throwing money at it.
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Posted: 2/15/2006 12:14:06 PM
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Martin
Vancouver
i like cards Posts : 31
Administrator
ONLINE
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i pretty much stopped watching the game and stuck to the commercials after seattle was goofing around at the end of the first half.... what the hell were they thinking.
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Posted: 2/15/2006 5:08:03 PM
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allen
Vancouver
Posts : 87
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I was at Mahoney's and it was a lot of fun! Everyone was really loud and drunk...thats the only way to watch the Superbowl. Sitting at home and watching football is about as fun as mowing the lawn!!! The Stones were pretty gay...not hype, ****ty sound, all around a pretty bad performance. So we turned down the sound on the TV and got a couple of sexy twins up on the bar to dance... HELL YEAH Here is thier pic:
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Posted: 2/17/2006 3:26:56 PM
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