I have long suspected that many pro sporting events are fixed. NFL
games are the most obviously fixed of all the sports, IMHO. As I have
pointed out for years, the officials can determine the outcome of most
games with key calls at crucial points. For instance, it has been said
by almost everyone involved in the sport that holding could be called
on every play. My response to this is: then why isn't it called every
play? How do the officials decide when to call it? The same thing can
be said of pass interference; that also can be called on almost every
play.
It hurt to watch the Colts-Patriots game yesterday. I wanted the Colts
to win so badly, and was especially rooting for Peyton Manning. After
it was over, there were only two explanations for what happened, in my
mind. Either Peyton Manning is a choke artist and simply cannot perform
up to his great abilities in big games, or the game was fixed. I refuse
to believe that a QB who shattered the season TD mark, and an offense
that was unstoppable almost all season, could fail to produce a single
TD against a defense that was missing its best defensive backs. WR Troy
Brown was given crucial coverage assignments all day, and there is no
way he should have been able to cover any of the Indy WRs. The Colts
offensive game plan was mindlessly conservative from the start, when
most fans would suspect they'd come out flinging against that decimated
pass defense. Tony Dungy, like Marty Schottenheimer, has a history of
changing his game plans to an ultra-conservative, play-not-to-lose mode
in the playoffs. One would think both of them would have realized by
now that this strategy doesn't work. Anyhow, the conventional wisdom is
that Bill Belichek has Manning's number and simply knows how to defend
him. Okay, maybe so. Also, maybe Manning simply can't do it in the
clutch. Is he the Greg Norman of football?
The alternative view, that the game was fixed, makes a lot of sense to
me. First of all, the Caste system doesn't want to have to "ooh and
aah" over any white star, and Manning is the biggest white star of them
all. With the Eagles or Falcons, you know the entire story will be
McNabb or Vick. All of the attention will be focused on them. With
either the Steelers or the Patriots, the story will be the "team," and
especially in the Patriots' case, the coach. Tom Brady, despite his
great accomplishments, never gets the credit the black stars in the NFL
get. With Manning, however, the focus is all on him (they simply can't
ignore those stats) and the NFL is apparently uncomfortable with that
now. Anyhow, it's just one of my many wild and crazy theories.
I'm depressed and demoralized now, because I don't think any of the
remaining teams are worth rooting for. The Patriots would be okay,
except for the presence now of Corey Dillon. No way can I ever root for
this stupid thug. The "Pros and Cons" book, which has been mentioned on
this site a few times, goes into great detail about Dillon's massive
juvenile crime record.
games are the most obviously fixed of all the sports, IMHO. As I have
pointed out for years, the officials can determine the outcome of most
games with key calls at crucial points. For instance, it has been said
by almost everyone involved in the sport that holding could be called
on every play. My response to this is: then why isn't it called every
play? How do the officials decide when to call it? The same thing can
be said of pass interference; that also can be called on almost every
play.
It hurt to watch the Colts-Patriots game yesterday. I wanted the Colts
to win so badly, and was especially rooting for Peyton Manning. After
it was over, there were only two explanations for what happened, in my
mind. Either Peyton Manning is a choke artist and simply cannot perform
up to his great abilities in big games, or the game was fixed. I refuse
to believe that a QB who shattered the season TD mark, and an offense
that was unstoppable almost all season, could fail to produce a single
TD against a defense that was missing its best defensive backs. WR Troy
Brown was given crucial coverage assignments all day, and there is no
way he should have been able to cover any of the Indy WRs. The Colts
offensive game plan was mindlessly conservative from the start, when
most fans would suspect they'd come out flinging against that decimated
pass defense. Tony Dungy, like Marty Schottenheimer, has a history of
changing his game plans to an ultra-conservative, play-not-to-lose mode
in the playoffs. One would think both of them would have realized by
now that this strategy doesn't work. Anyhow, the conventional wisdom is
that Bill Belichek has Manning's number and simply knows how to defend
him. Okay, maybe so. Also, maybe Manning simply can't do it in the
clutch. Is he the Greg Norman of football?
The alternative view, that the game was fixed, makes a lot of sense to
me. First of all, the Caste system doesn't want to have to "ooh and
aah" over any white star, and Manning is the biggest white star of them
all. With the Eagles or Falcons, you know the entire story will be
McNabb or Vick. All of the attention will be focused on them. With
either the Steelers or the Patriots, the story will be the "team," and
especially in the Patriots' case, the coach. Tom Brady, despite his
great accomplishments, never gets the credit the black stars in the NFL
get. With Manning, however, the focus is all on him (they simply can't
ignore those stats) and the NFL is apparently uncomfortable with that
now. Anyhow, it's just one of my many wild and crazy theories.
I'm depressed and demoralized now, because I don't think any of the
remaining teams are worth rooting for. The Patriots would be okay,
except for the presence now of Corey Dillon. No way can I ever root for
this stupid thug. The "Pros and Cons" book, which has been mentioned on
this site a few times, goes into great detail about Dillon's massive
juvenile crime record.