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Posts Tagged ‘Personal Thoughts’

Opening Night: Music, Fireworks, Loud Noises … and a Game

September 6th, 2007 - 4:39pm by AndrewOther posts by

Ah opening night.

A nationally-televised concert, fireworks … and, oh, yeah, there’s some football too. Pretty fair matchup.

I guess we’ve come a long way from when halftime shows meant calling up the university band whose team had a road game within two hours’ drive and asking whether they wanted to come down and perform a halftime tune or two.

Let’s see … they’ve got John Mellencamp, Faith Hill, Kelly Clarkson and Hinder. I know the first two; rather like Mellancamp, actually. Plenty of his stuff in the Morsels’ iPod. Clarkson? Can’t recall a song she’s sung; just know that she’s got a good voice, she’s cute and she probably wants to slap you if you remind her of her performance in From Justin to Kelly, which I think was seen by fewer people than your average rec-league slow-pitch softball game.

Then there’s Hinder. What in God’s name is Hinder?

It’s a band, moron. Here’s the Wikipedia link.

Wrong, it’s a verb. (And as Robert Goulet once said of Tim Duncan’s surname, it’s a “baaaaad verb.”) It can also be an adjective.

Click to continue reading “Opening Night: Music, Fireworks, Loud Noises … and a Game”

The Worst Day on Football’s Calendar

September 1st, 2007 - 8:50pm by AndrewOther posts by

It was the first morning of September, but midsummer heat still seared the asphalt parking lot outside the players’ and coaches’ gated entrance to Broncos headquarters.

Being out as temperatures began to soar wasn’t the uncomfortable part of the morning. Waiting for players to pass by as they went inside to hear the news of their unemployment, on the other hand … that was torturous.

Watching to see which players are to be left on the curb as the NFL bandwagon rolls away for another year is a painful annual exercise. It pales, of course, with what the players themselves endure, as well as the coaches who have to bring the devastating news of dreams at least temporarily destroyed.

Few players stop to talk with those of us in the laptop-and-notepad set. Who can blame them? If I’d just lost my job, the last thing I would do is want to answer a question or two. Some had the right idea; they came and went before any of us arrived with our tape recorders in tow.

Yet as one vehicle after another passes into the team’s sanctuary, there we are … waiting for the rare soundbite or insight into a player’s heart on this cruelest of summer days.

As the minutes pass, many of the players to be released scoot by behind tinted windows. A few politely wave, and I offer a wave or a tip of my Braves hat back. It’s the least I can do; they want to go, and I can’t blame them. I’d at least like the chance to thank them for their time, for granting an interview or two, for answering one of my verbosely-worded queries or being patient while I pursued a line of questioning they might not have wanted me to follow.

So this will have to do — to those of you who gave a few minutes for an interview, who shared your thoughts with me while you donned the orange and blue — thank you for letting us pass your thoughts and your stories on to Broncos fans.

But back to the moment at hand, and back to the asphalt.

“Why?” jokingly asks Nick Ferguson as he disembarks from his vehicle and wanders inside. Of course, Ferguson is familiar enough with a camera and a lav mic to know the answer to this. There’s nary a question he won’t answer, scarcely an issue he won’t ponder. He works in interviews and in front of a camera the way Van Gogh used oils and watercolors. One would even argue that a television studio is even more a home for the veteran safety than the football field; so strong is his camera presence and so compelling is his conversation.

As the morning progresses, another player stops to offer a comment.

“Scavengers!” bellowed the voice of Sam Adams from behind the wheel of a smoothly-purring SUV. He bore a sly smile, seeming to indicate that he understood our presence by the gate, even if the havoc-wreaking defensive tackle didn’t necessarily approve of it.

By the way, Sam, I prefer “buzzard” to “scavenger.” But you are right. I’ll be the first to admit it.

Finally, it was time to go. Media-relations director Paul Kirk informed us that the players who’d been let go had likely come and go. It was time to head back in the car and get back to work, to wait the official word that came down early Saturday evening.

And, fortunately, time for this most lamentable of days on the NFL calendar to wind to a merciful end.

Preseason and Panic

August 22nd, 2007 - 12:13pm by AndrewOther posts by

Mike Rice’s blog: No reason to panic

Jim Saccomano’s blog: Preseason time, not panic time

My Spidey Sense hath detecteth a theme here.

Not much sense in repeating what’s being uttered elsewhere in Broncos blog-land. But unlike my esteemed blogging brethren I’m not going to counsel you not to panic. First, I’m not much of a counselor; just because I say “y’all” doesn’t make me Dr. Phil. Second, on a social-observation level, I enjoy observing the panic, because I don’t understand it, at least not when it comes to preseason football. After all, if a regular-season or playoff contest is “just a game,” then what is preseason, anyhow?

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Why I’m Not Posting As Much …

June 15th, 2007 - 8:39pm by AndrewOther posts by

It’s my vacation, so I’m admittedly more focused upon other things than football. Such as …

… Family. My brother, sister-in-law and two adorable nieces, checking in at 22 and four months. One of my first gifts to the older of my two nieces was a John Lynch Broncos jersey; I imagine it’s time for the younger of the twosome to start wearing it. The 22-month-old is my spitting image — headstrong, high-strung, and occasionally persnickety. She also adores anything that involves any kind of ball, and perhaps she can be the NFL’s first female general manager someday, although her first sporting love seems to be …

… Baseball. Braves are the lifelong team, Devil Rays the No. 2 side I feel obligated to support since they play within walking distance of my high school. I’ve got a ton of trinkets for both teams, which means I need to take …

… Inventory. Back at my parents’ place in Florida, they’ve held onto approximately three or four thousand dollars worth of sports memorabilia I collected in my youth, and I have to decide whether a) I want to use it for decor, b) put it in storage or c) sell it on eBay. I’m leaning towards a combination of options a) and b). And after I’m done writing this, I need to …

… Sleep. Drifting away into Nemo-land to the old Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever” and then remaining in slumber for nine hours this morning made me feel as giddy as a seven-year-old on a sugar high at Disney World.

So I’m not abandoning the blog or ignoring any posts … but it’ll be July 2 before my contributions are more than occasional.

Until the next time I venture back into the blog zone …

Vaya con Dios.

Memorial Day Musings

May 28th, 2007 - 11:45pm by AndrewOther posts by

I don’t quite know where I’m going with these late Memorial Day musings, so bear with me …

Of course, my prayers — and I’m sure, those of many others in the Broncos’ realm — are with the family, friends, teammates and all those who knew Marquise Hill and who grieve his death in Lake Pontchartrain.

Thinking about Hill, remembering the recent passings of Darrent Williams and Damien Nash, and, most of all, pausing for a Memorial Day reflection upon those who made this country’s way of life possible from Bunker Hill to Bataan and beyond, has a way of sending the mind careening down a highway of thought — a road to which there is no destination. One doesn’t know quite what the final conclusion of such mental meanderings will be — or, for that matter, if there will be any resolution at all.

Today, these ponderings had me glancing back to my Monday morning stroll around the Web, when I happened upon a wonderful story from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on one of the most relentlessly optimistic individuals ever to grace the American sports stage, former Atlanta Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates manager Chuck Tanner. As I read the piece, I recalled a quote that I remembered being attributed to him, the exact phrasing of which eluded my mind until I found it on baseball-almanac.com.

“The greatest feeling in the world is to win a major league game. The second greatest feeling is to lose a major league game.”

Tanner is right. You can substitute any sport in there — football, basketball, hockey, soccer, whatever you wish — but to invest oneself into a game, whether it’s through actual parrticipation or vicarious observance, is one of the blessings of life, and is worth treasuring all the same, whether the result is victory, defeat or draw.

Reading about Hill and pondering the sacrifices of those to whom Memorial Day is dedicated only heightens the accuracy of Tanner’s sentiments. Simply being a part of the game for that day in some fashion is a great feeling, indeed. There have been and remain many spots on this globe where it is impossible to retreat into the cocoon of sport, where, for that moment, a game can mean everything in that moment, even though in the larger picture, it means little.

We are blessed to be in a place where it is possible to lose oneself in the game, in the moment, where a win can be the greatest thing of all — but even a loss comes with the knowledge that you’d performed on the grandest of stages. The time of Hill, Williams and Nash on this earth was far too brief, but they nevertheless experienced a feeling of which multitudes dream but few reach — of being at the pinnacle of sport and human performance, and being in a place where, for those moments of competition, nothing matters but the game itself.

Someday, the Patriots will know that feeling again. The Broncos will, too. A young man’s spirit is a fairly resilient one; multiply that by 53 or 61 or however many players happen to be on a roster at any given point in the year.

For now, though, the day is about remembering and praying for the fallen — for those who made freedom possible, and, in the NFL’s realm, for another player seized from the world far too quickly.