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Most Americans are Stupid - a proposal for an experiment (Politics Talk Post)

blankfist says...

I think this is a *quality idea, ponce. I've always said partisan politics is nothing more than pageantry at the Superbowl. Instead of O.J. Simpson vs. Refrigerator Perry (yeah, that's right, I don't watch football too often so my knowledge of the roster is limited to 1980s Pepsi commercials. So what?), we have Miss Arizona vs. Miss Illinois.

What your team is doing wrong or the other team is doing right is incidental; all that matters is the trophy and, of course, how your pageant contestant carries herself as a respectful lady.

Only the two teams with the most money will win, because only they can afford the best team roster for the payoffs... er, I meant playoffs! Playoffs!

Also, wouldn't it be an outrage to have a commoner compete in this pageant? Only the best, most beautiful, most groomed contestants should compete to sling pigskin for the two party system. Leave the spectating to the little people.

Carolina Hurricanes win playoff game with 0.2 seconds left

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'hockey, carolina, hurricanes, playoffs, goal' to 'hockey, carolina, hurricanes, playoffs, goal, jussi jokinen, martin brodeur' - edited by SlipperyPete

Evgeni Nabokov with the Save of the Year

kagenin says...

That's Nabby, alright. There's a good reason why the Sharks currently have the best record in the league, the best home record in the league (most home wins, fewest losses in regulation, an astounding 31-3-4), are currently 2rd in Goals Allowed all season(188, Boston leads that stat with 180), and were the first team to clinch their division this season. They've set a team record for playoff points accumulated(111), and there's still 6 more games left to play. No other team has 50 wins, and only 4 other teams are capable of hitting that this late in the season. And on special teams, they've been juggernauts - ranked third in both Power Play goals, and Penalty Killing. They're also ranked 6th when it comes to Even Strength goals.

With arguably the most dominant line in Hockey today (Joe Thornton, Devon Setoguchi, and Captain Patty Marleau, 91 goals among them), the Sharks are going to be the team to beat come post-season. Nabby has 39 wins under his belt, and his backup, Brian Boucher, has put up some pretty great numbers in his 11 wins. Sharks have been making great moves all season - acquiring Rob Blake and Dan Boyle added Stanley Cup-experienced veterans on the Blue Line, and they've been solid.

This has been a storybook season for the Sharks. I'm hoping the story doesn't end before the Stanley Cup makes its way to San Jose for the very first time.

Rookie Reggie Bush gets Leveled

jonny says...

That was actually Brees' fault for lofting the ball like that to him. This was the second play from scrimmage. I remember thinking "Oh shit - Reggie just got taken out of the game." Instead, he got up after this and racked up about 100 all purpose yards and scored a touchdown in the Saints first ever divisional round playoff win.

Atara of the Great White North gets her Gold star! (Scifi Talk Post)

atara says...

Whee, thanks!

And for the record:
1) I am into Star Wars... Saw Empire Strikes Back in the theatre, actually.
2) I am Canadian AND American - I got my Canadian citizenship last year after living here for six years.
3) Election seasons are like sports playoffs to me.
4) And way back when, about 15 years ago... Back when I was looking for an online handle, I did partially munge Atari with something else to come up with Atara.

Well done.

George Brett - Pine Tar Incident

nibiyabi says...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_tar_incident

From Wikipedia:

"In Major League Baseball lore, the Pine Tar Incident (also known as the Pine Tar Game) refers to a controversial incident that took place in an American League game played between the Kansas City Royals and New York Yankees on July 24, 1983.

Playing at New York's Yankee Stadium, the Royals were trailing 4-3 with two outs in the top of the ninth and U. L. Washington on first base. In the on deck circle, George Brett was heard remarking to a teammate, "Watch this baby fly" as he shook his bat. He then came to the plate and connected off Yankee reliever Rich "Goose" Gossage for a two-run home run and a 5-4 lead.

As Brett crossed the plate, New York manager Billy Martin approached home plate umpire Tim McClelland and requested that Brett's bat be examined. Earlier in the season, Martin and other members of the Yankees (most notably, third baseman Graig Nettles who, as a member of the Minnesota Twins, recalled a similar incident involving Thurman Munson) had noticed the amount of pine tar used by Brett, but Martin had chosen not to say anything until the home run. According to Nettles' autobiography, "Balls," Nettles claims that he actually informed Martin of the pine tar rule, as Nettles had previously undergone the same scrutiny with his own bat while with the Minnesota Twins.

With Brett watching from the dugout, McClelland and the rest of the umpiring crew inspected the bat. Measuring the bat against the width of home plate (which is 17 inches), they determined that the amount of pine tar on the bat's handle exceeded that allowed by Rule 1.10(b) of the Major League Baseball rule book, which read that 'a bat may not be covered by such a substance more than 18 inches from the tip of the handle.'

McClelland signaled that Brett's home run was nullified and the game over. An enraged Brett stormed out of the dugout to confront McClelland, and had to be physically restrained by Kansas City manager Dick Howser and his teammates. (As one commentator stated, 'Brett has become the first player in history to hit a game-losing home run.') Despite the furious protests of Brett and Howser, McClelland's ruling stood. The Royals protested the game ('TAR WARS!' blared a New York Post headline), and their protest was upheld by American League president Lee MacPhail. MacPhail (who coincidentally had once been the Yankees' chief executive) ruled that while the bat was illegal, it didn't violate the 'spirit of the rules.' He added that the bat was not 'altered to improve the distance factor,' and that the rules only provided for removal of the bat from the game, not calling the batter out. Baseball writer Bill James concurred, saying that, unlike other sports, 'in baseball, when you hit a double, that's a double.'

MacPhail ordered the game resumed with two out in the top of the ninth inning with the Royals up 5-4. He also ruled that Brett was to be ejected for his outburst.

On August 18 (a scheduled off day for both teams), the game was resumed from the point of Brett's home run, with about 1,200 fans in attendance. Martin symbolically protested the continuation of the game by putting pitcher Ron Guidry in center field and first baseman Don Mattingly at second base. Mattingly, a lefty, became the majors' first southpaw second baseman since Oakland's Gonzalo Marques [1] a decade earlier; there has been one only lefty middle infielder in a big-league game since (Thad Bosley, in 1987).[2]

Before the first pitch to Hal McRae (who followed Brett in the lineup), Martin challenged Brett's home run on the grounds that Brett had not touched all the bases, and maintained that there was no way for the umpires (a different crew than the one who worked July 24) to dispute this. But umpire Davey Phillips was ready for Martin, producing an affidavit signed by the July 24 umpires stating that Brett had indeed touched all the bases. An irate Martin continued to argue with the umpires and was ejected from the game. Yankees reliever George Frazier struck McRae out to finally end the top of the ninth, twenty-five days after it had begun. Dan Quisenberry then got New York out 1-2-3 in the bottom of the ninth to preserve the Royals' 5-4 win.

The bat is currently on display in the Baseball Hall of Fame, where it has been since 1987. During a broadcast of Mike & Mike in the Morning, ESPN analyst Tim Kurkjian stated that Brett used the bat for a few games after the incident until being cautioned that the bat would be useless if broken. Brett sold the bat to a collector for $25,000, had second thoughts, repurchased the bat for the exact same amount from the collector and then donated the bat to the Hall of Fame.


The winning pitcher for the Royals was reliever Mike Armstrong, who went 10-7 that year in 58 appearances, notching career highs in wins and games. In a 2006 interview, Armstrong said a angry Yankees fan threw a brick from an overpass at Kansas City's bus cracking the windshield as the Royals were leaving for the airport after the make up game. 'It was wild to go back to New York and play these four outs in a totally empty stadium' Armstrong said. 'I'm dressed in the uniform, and nobody's there'. Mike was still pitching baseball as recently as 2006 at age 52 in the Athens Area Men's Baseball league in Athens Ga, where he still has a fastball in the mid 80's."

Basically, this was a totally unprecedented event, in that (a) a super-old, completely outdated rule was dug up by an opposing manager, (b) it was upheld by the umpire, (c) the ruling was overturned and the game was resumed later on in the year. This has become the most famous event in George Brett's career, something he doesn't mind at all, considering that before this, he was most famous for suffering with hemorrhoids during the playoffs.

Go Habs Go (Fans Riot)

What's Better Than a Fight? A Goalie Fight! Osgood vs. Roy

Hitler plans his trip to Burning Man

There Can Be Only One - Obama and Clinton Split SNL

Top Ten College Buzzer Beaters

Trancecoach says...

I remember that final Laetner basket -- My friend surprised me with floor seats to a Nets game and I was using my binoculars to watch the television in the luxury box of the NCAA playoffs. Oh the irony.

Richard Dawkins and PZ Myers discusses Expelled Expelling

Screw Blue! Michigan lost 34-32 to Appalachian State

Let's All Hate Toronto

bigbikeman says...

Bring the hate! As a lifetime Torontonian, the only argument that I can understand for hating Toronto is the Hockey Night in Toronto thing. When I went out west during the playoffs a few years ago, that was the biggest legitimate gripe and I totally agree.

That being said, being heckled through two hockey games by some loser in an Edmonton bar because of where I happened to pop out of a womb really didn't teach me much except that people who suck live everywhere, not just Toronto.

Sports Top 10 Down But Not Out Moments

MasterMonk says...

What about Isiah Thomas in Game 6 vs the Lakers in I believe '88. Badly sprained ankle and proceeded to score 25 points in the 4th quarter. (Most in playoff history)



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