Thursday, November 25, 2010

NFL Week 12

Last Week:3-5-1
Overall:40-40-6

New Orleans -4 (2X BET!!!!)
Minn -1.5
Browns/Panthers ovr 37.5
New York Giants -7
Green Bay +1.5
Packers/Falcons ovr 47.5
Oakland -2.5
St. Louis +3.5
Chiefs/Seahawks und 44.5
Indy -2.5


HAPPPY THANKSGIVING!

Friday, November 19, 2010

NFL Week 11

Last Week: 2-6
Overall: 37-35-5



Tenn -7
Dallas -6
Oakland +7
Cleveland +1.5
Atlanta -3
NYG +3
Denver +10
IND/NWE und 50.5
Ravens/panthers ovr 37.5
Cardinals/Cheifs ovr 44



Good Luck!

Friday, November 12, 2010

NFL Week 10

Last Week: 4-2-2
Overall: 35-29-5


Week 10


Jacksonville -1.5
Tennessee -1.5
Minnesota -1
Vikings/Bears ovr 40.5
Buffalo -2.5
KC -1
Colts/Bengals und 47
Pittsburgh -4.5


Good Luck All!

Asleep At the Wheel Again

Maybe it is true that ESPN has a bunch of monkeys actually doing the writing for their website!

I understand that people are going to make mistakes in writing articles that will not get caught before they are posted. I still do not understand who so MANY get through, but we are not really sure how many different eyes actually review a writer's work anymore. (Any?)

What I cannot understand is how you can fuck up a HEADLINE and nobody catch it before it is posted to your website! Yet ESPN has done it on many, many occasions. Obviously they are corrected in short order, but still, there is no excuse for a headline to be grossly incorrect.

Last night as I was heading to bed, I wanted to check the score of last nights Ravens-Falcons game, so I hit the ESPN Mobile sight on my phone and see this headline on the top of the page:

Matt Ryan Engineers 80-Yard Drive In Final Minute As Falcons Top Saints, 26-21

Nice headline right? Except the Falcons played the RAVENS you fucktards!!!!!!

How do you mess up that bad and nobody catch it? Are there no protocols at midnight before things are posted on your website?!? Maybe the Lom Henn crew need to quit our jobs and work for ESPN as editors. Lord knows we couldn't be any worse!

You may be the world leader in sports entertainment, ESPN, but you are also the leader in fucking stupid mistakes (as well as the leader in reporting breaking stories with unnamed sources, but that is another story, altogether.)

Let's get it together, people!

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Hooray!!!

It's really true!

Of course, the first time we were told that Joe Morgan would no longer be part of ESPN's Sunday Night Baseball, it was 2008 and it was reported by the New York Daily News--not exactly accuracy at it's finest. But now the Worldwide Leader has announced it, so it must be official: Joe Morgan and Jon Miller are out!

This makes me happy. It's well-documented on LomHenn and on a few other websites (like this one) that Joe Morgan is not a particularly good baseball analyst, so it's about time ESPN caught up to what a lot of hardcore baseball fans have thought for awhile now. And I'm not a big fan of Miller, either, though he hasn't been as annoying to me over the last couple of years.

There is a downside--no more Joechats on ESPN.com! As a result, everyone's baseball IQ has gone up 20 points...even those people who don't care about baseball.

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Friday, November 5, 2010

NFL Week 9

Last Week: 5-4
Overall: 31-27-3


Here you go:

Chicago -3
Bears/Bills und 41
Minnesota -8
Miami +5.5
Cleveland +4
Oakland PK
Indianapolis +3
Chargers/Texans ovr 50


Good Luck!

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Goodbye, Sparky

As a kid growing up in central Indiana in the 1970s, I was a Cincinnati Reds fan. It made sense: Cincinnati was (and still is) the closest city with a major league team, and the Indianapolis Indians were the Triple-A affiliate of the Reds into the 1980s. And it didn't hurt that when I started to get interested in baseball, the Big Red Machine was at its peak. With Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, Tony Perez, Dave Concepcion, et al, the Reds won back-to-back World Series titles in 1975-76, and were good throughout the decade.

As manager, Sparky Anderson knew the right buttons to push on the Big Red Machine. He was the first manager I knew by name, and I saw my first example of bad ownership moves when the Reds fired Sparky before the 1979 season. Of course, Sparky went on to manage the Detroit Tigers, leading them to another World Series title in 1987.

Sparky Anderson was a class act and a great baseball manager, though the following quotation from Sparky shows that he may have disagreed with the latter statement:

"Baseball is a simple game. If you have good players and if you keep them in the right frame of mind then the manager is a success."

As tribute, here are a few more quotations from Sparky (who was known for quite a few):

"I can't believe they pay us to play baseball - something we did for free as kids."

"I've changed my mind about it (the DH) - instead of being bad, it stinks."

"My idea of managing is giving the ball to Tom Seaver and sitting down and watching him work."

"Problem with (John) Wockenfuss getting on base is that it takes three doubles to score him."

"If I ever find a pitcher who has heat, a good curve, and a slider, I might seriously consider marrying him, or at least proposing."

"A baseball manager is a necessary evil."

"I only had a high school education and believe me, I had to cheat to get that."

Goodbye, Sparky--you were the best.

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