Archive for 2009

12 Reasons You Were Never Meant to Dunk

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

1. You can dunk the ball . . . but you’re considered clinically obese:

2. You have absolutely ZERO depth perception:

3. You think the trampoline is a great place to dunk from:

4. You had to enlist in the military instead of the NBA . . . and still can’t dunk:

5. If you think Sir Isaac Newton’s laws do not apply to chairs and dunking off of them:

6. The high school asked you to be the mascot instead of the center:

7. They ask you to put on a Scream mask before attempting a dunk:

8. You’re fat, dunking depends on your life, and there’s only a bucket:

9. See (5) and apply to shopping carts:

10. You’re a nerd and you have a dunk called “the Spidey” involving wall climbing:

11. If your friends convince you to jump off their backs . . . from 10 ft out:

12. You don’t believe in the slippery powers of freaking ICE:

Fantasy Football is Glorified Dungeons and Dragons

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Dungeons & Dragons: For the majority of the American public this live action role playing game says everything about the people that partake in its magical adventures. Geeks, dweebs, nerds, virgins . . . the list of insults are seemingly endless. And prior to becoming a weekly D&D barbarian half-orc named Lord Thorg, I would have absolutely agreed with many of the insults. However, I soon found many of the elements of D&D overlapping into my other favorite fantasy obsession, which is football.

Fantasy football and Dungeons and Dragons are similar in too many ways for me to ignore. The first main similarity is determining the draft order. In fantasy football, being the first pick and the 9th pick can be the difference between Adrian Peterson and DeAngelo Williams . . . Drew Brees and *shivers* Kyle Orton. Getting that first or mid round pick is essential to being successful. Similar to the draft, D&D players roll a 20 sided die to determine who will fight first during a battle. “Rolling for initiative” is like rolling for life or death. Every position has its advantages and disadvantages. Both are games of extreme chance, luck and passion.

Take for instance this clip from FX’s “The League”. If you’re in a diehard fantasy league, there is absolutely no denying that they were on par with this commercial:

While thinking about your fantasy lineup during sex is way different than having sex (something foreign to the honest majority of the D&D realm), it is guaranteed that they will only think of pleasuring their princess while in the bed.

The Draft

The drafting of players is no different than busting out the old D&D character sheet. During the fantasy draft every player has their own strategy, targeted players, and a relative sense on how their distribution of points will work. Similarly, when rolling for your D&D character it is important to take into consideration their class, race, gender, religion, and overall skills. Giving monstrous barbarian half-orc extra points towards a sneak skill is like drafting from the New England clusterfuck of running backs. You know what you’re getting into, but it’s all essentially useless.

The Players

While talking shit to Team Ronnie Brown-noise and Steve McNair Speedholes has become quite a weekly occurrence in my fantasy league, I know there is absolutely nothing I can do to help the onslaught they will likely bring during the weekend. While Drew Brees might be capable of putting up 40 points, my running backs are hit-or-miss while they boast All Day and MJD. As most fantasy owners will tell you, we have absolutely no control over our players destinies in the realm of fantasy football. However, in D&D I can talk shit AND back it up. If Grizzly Nova, the blasphemous ninja monk with a badass fists of fury runs his mouth to me . . . it’s a simple barbarian rage and a gash in the chest with my +3 flaming sword of swiftness. That’ll shut him up while giving me instant pleasure out of the agonizing screams by his character. Of course, it’s all in my head . . . which is no different than fantasy. Yelling “I’m going to burn you with Drew Brees this week” or “I’m going to break Chris Cooley’s ankle” just doesn’t have the same feel. As fucking VIN DIESEL tells it, having full reign over your character is what makes D&D so badass.

The Dungeon Master

The Dungeon Master makes all the rules. He tells you what you can and can’t do, determines your fate, vetoes actions between players, penalizes characters, gives them rewards, etc. Sound familiar? While your commish might not look like the man to the right, it’s guaranteed he takes just as much pleasure out of putting hard work into the league. The DM has to determine story lines, maps, quests, treasures, monsters, friends, foes, layouts of towns, and the list goes on. Preparing for a weekly campaign requires hours of hard work from the DM alone to make it successful.

Gameplay

What’s the difference between sitting around a table all day watching football and playing in a RPG session? One action is simply observing while the other is controlling. While Team First & Visante Shiancoe may be sitting on the couch bragging about a touchdown, Prince Hammerclaw can likewise brag about leveling his character up or finding a magical item during a raid.

Despite the vast differences between the two games, they are utterly alike. I just wanted to point out to the millions of fellow jocks in America that live for the fantasy football weekend that we are no different than those who play RPGs. Even worse, they tend to get off their asses and actually play their game every once and a while.

A List of Thing Steve Phillips Messed Up

Monday, October 26th, 2009
  1. The Mets organization
  2. Mo Vaughn’s Career
  3. Most of New York City
  4. ESPN
  5. America
  6. His Marriage
  7. This Production Assistants life
  8. Josh Hamilton’s Comeback
  9. Attempted to trade Jose Reyes
  10. Wanted to trade Scott Kazmir
  11. His own football career

I do not need to tell you how much Steve Phillips sucks…

5 Sports Movie Characters Who Deserve The Nobel Peace Prize More Than Obama

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Obama, unifying figure…maybe, great for the world…maybe. But think about the sports movies that gave you hope and inspired you to do something better and change the way you go about life, which is very similar to why President Obama won the prize.

So here is the list:

5. Chet “The Rocket” Steadman

He inspired and change the culture that surrounded the down-in-the-dumps Chicago Cubs. He inspired a great young Henry Rowengartner and built this kid to a legend in Cub community. He was so devoted to Henry, and more so his MILF, that he went on to coach Little League. That is change i can believe in.

4.  Mr Miyagi

Mr. Miyagi inspired Ralph Macchio to become an teen karate champion.  Who would have thought that an old immigrant could change the way one kid thinks and acts? Inspiring words of hope for the future from Mr. Miyagi, “Wax On, Wax Off”

3. Gordon Bombay

Gordon Bombay was a hot shot lawyer who was forced to coach a joke of a kids hockey team by his boss. Reliving his childhood memories of hockey stardom, he grew depressed by the failure of his team and the intimidation of his former hockey coach. But as a unifying figure in the Minnesota youth hockey world, he is an idle and would surely caryr Minnesota if he challenge Obama in 2012.

2. Rudy

No explaination needed for why Rudy inspired millions of kids and adult alike to try that thing they never thought possible. Rudy was five foot nothing, 100 and nothing but he managed to get a sack in front of his skeptical father which changed the lives of thousands of people who thought they could never achieve something great.

1. Rocky Balboa

ROCKY, ROCKY, ROCKY. Rocky truly could have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize after his brilliant performance against Soviet Ivan Drago. Rocky won over the tough soviet crowd and start the debate on change that Obama used in his political campaigns. The most inspirational movie quote of all time, “During this fight, I’ve seen a lot of changing, in the way you feel about me, and in the way I feel about you. In here, there were two guys killing each other, but I guess that’s better than twenty million. I guess what I’m trying to say, is that if I can change, and you can change, everybody can change!”

Steve Phillips and Matt Millen: Why Do We Listen?

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I have always heard that the NFL and MLB jsut continually recycle coaches and general managers, so i kind of understood the system, but now ESPN has gone off the deep end.

They employ two, not one but two, of the worst general managers in the history of their respective sports. Steve Phillips did a brilliant job as the Mets GM, landing such top talent as Mo Vaughn and driving the team straight into the ground. ESPN was quick to hire Phillips as an MLB expert but why? His judgement has been proven worthless

Matt Millen on the other hand built a team so atrocious that they set the record for atrociousness. 0-16, never been done before. But do not worry guys, ESPN says he is an expert so we are all fine.