Patrick Reusse

hedgehog

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Pat Reusse, the most famous sports writer in Minnesota, has been a sports writer for the Star and Tribune for over 20 years, and is regularly making caste football type comments. I plan on putting them on this thread everytime he opens his yap.His latest commentfrom his article on Oct 4th he says "The sheep from the suburbs again are ready to descend on Xcel Energy Center. The Wild's response will be to fleece them more blatantly than ever." For those of you who don't know the Xcel Energy Center is the Minnesota Wilds hockey arena. You see if you are from the suburbs (hint-hint) you are merely a sheep that doesnt know any better, and you are getting fleecedbecause you are supporting hockey-shame on you. I don't know how he gets away with this tripe, in a market that has sold out every single home hockey game, and a market where the local T.V ratings for the NHL playoffs outdrew the NBA when the Timberwolveswere playing the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals.
 
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Why do you say that you can't understand how he "gets away with this tripe"? He's a sportswriter; he can't get ahead in his profession without playing his part to advance the caste system. Do you honestly think he could have remained at his news-rag job for 20 years if he wasn't a shameless black-jock-sniffer?

Why do you think they call them Sports-CASTE-'rs? (Kidding.)
 

hedgehog

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<DIV id=precede>According to sports columnist Pat Reusse of the Star and tribune. -vikings fans are racist because they are not booing Brad Johnson like they did Daunte Culpepper. (by the way Culpepper would have won all these games anyway if he were not injured)

http://www.startribune.com/stories/508/5789824.html


Quarterbacking futility doesn't come with the same background noise in the Metrodome. The boos that echoed so rudely in Daunte Culpepper's ears have turned to stony silence for his replacement.
<DIV =byline>
<DIV =byline>Patrick Reusse,Star Tribune
<DIV =story>


The boos would have started early in the second period, when the Vikings' quarterback flipped a pass in the direction of receiver Koren Robinson and it ricocheted to Pittsburgh's Joey Porter.


The hoots would have filled the Metrodome on the home team's next possession, when the quarterback threw short to Jermaine Wiggins on third-and-6, leading to a punt from midfield.


The boos would have escorted the Vikings toward their locker room, after the quarterback was hit and threw a popup that was intercepted by Pittsburgh's Deshea Townsend in his end zone in the closing seconds of the first half.


And in the second half, when the quarterback went 2-for-9 for 9 yards and his team had one first down (by penalty) in the game's final 27 minutes, there might have been a need to use fire hoses to calm down the partisans as they screamed with bug-eyed venom at the leader of the offense.


The interceptions, the short toss and the putrid second half all occurred Sunday, but the Purple zealots chose to observe the haplessness of the quarterback and his offense mostly in silence.


They did this because Brad Johnson was the man on the job and not Daunte Culpepper. For several weeks, the locals had been assuring themselves that Johnson was the cure for all that ailed the Vikings, and it's never easy to admit:


"Guess I was wrong. There might have been some flaws beyond Daunte that made this a sickly offense."


Culpepper started seven games, and five were losses against playoff contenders: Tampa Bay, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Chicago and Carolina. He was 2-0 against the non-playoff teams from Green Bay and New Orleans.


This was Johnson's seventh start. He was 5-0 against the non-playoff teams from Detroit (twice), Green Bay, Cleveland and St. Louis, and also had a 24-21 victory over the New York Giants on Nov. 13. That was the Meadowlands miracle -- Vikings touchdowns on kickoff, punt and interception returns.


Johnson was 6-for-13 for 11 yards in the first half against the Giants. He finished 17-for-30 for 144 yards, with no touchdowns or interceptions. On Sunday, he faced a second playoff contender in Pittsburgh, and the 9-yard second half put his totals for the afternoon at 16-for-30 for 143 yards.


In these two games against serious NFL teams, Johnson is 33-for-60 for 287 yards, two interceptions and no touchdowns. His quarterback rating against the Giants was a modest 69.8, and Sunday it was 38.6.


Put Culpepper in charge of a 9-yard second half in the Metrodome and the anti-Daunte screeds would have blown out the phones on the postgame radio shows.


After the Big Neighbor's three-hour version of Vikings Whine Line, host Dark Star reported that Johnson remained blame-free among the callers.


That serves to reaffirm that many Vikings fans are phonies at best, and overly fond of the idea of having a white quarterback at worst.


Culpepper might have panicked amid the offensive futility against the Giants, thrown a couple of interceptions and lost the chance for the improbable victory.


Beyond that, there's not a game Johnson has won that Culpepper would have lost, and there's not a game Culpepper lost that Johnson would have won.


And Sunday, if the Vikings had a quarterback capable of making a play with his legs, all those chances in the red zone might not have gone pffft!, and Pittsburgh's 18-3 victory might not have been so sweat-free.


Yes, Brad Johnson stepped in for the injured Culpepper and showed more competence than anyone watching him in the 2005 exhibitions could have anticipated.


He made a few clutch plays every week. Those were enough to ride to victory a defense that was forcing turnovers from bad teams.


On Sunday, the Steelers offered the Vikings some chances in the first 33 minutes. Now they needed a few clutch plays against a good team, and Johnson had none to offer.


The offensive line was worse than the quarterback against the Steelers, but that line also was worse than the quarterback when Culpepper was losing games, and there was no slack cut for him.


If you were among the thousands sitting there in silence as the offense stumbled through the second half Sunday, and want to claim you wouldn't have been screaming for Daunte's neck in the same circumstance, you are lying and you know it.



Patrick Reusse can be heard weekdays on AM-1500 KSTP at 6:45 and 7:45 a.m. and 5:40 p.m. -
 

Bart

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Of course the fans are going to cheer for Johnson. The team was was hopelessly lost before he took over. No, he didn't do it all by himself and he benefitted from the defense. Like this is not true of every other quarterback.Brad deserves tons of credit. Was he on the love boat by the way? Reusse is a typical -Caste- writer.
 

Kaptain

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Reusse as always been a caste system writer. The Viking fans have been more than patient with culpepper. In fact many are still hero-worshipping Duante. It's been common place to here Minnesota sports casters refer to him as "future hall of famer, Duante Culpepper". Any booing of Duante in the metrodome has been extremely mild considering his play. I remember the whole state turning on Rich Gannon after he had a couple of bad games in a row towards the end of a great season. He was quickly benched by Coach Green and the whole state cheered his dismissal the following year. It almost ended his career. Most Viking fans to this day swear that Gannon was a terrible quarterback. You can bet your life that Duante will be welcomed back by the team and the same fans that booed Gannon. It's pretty sad. To hear Reusse saying the exact opposite of the truth makes me wonder what kind of Bizzaro world were living in.
Today a Packer fan told me he was hoping the Vikings would trade Culpepper to Green Bay. I had to laugh in his face.
 

hedgehog

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caste football sports writer Patrick Reusse can't get over the fact Culpepper is on his way out of Minnesota. He manages to take another dig at the Vikings fans for prefering Brad Johnson to Culpepper. Here is a portion of his column today in the star and tribune.

"The Vikings' parting of the ways with Culpepper should prove to be the opposite: good for Culpepper, and good for the new Childress regime. Daunte will make more money and play in front of a fan base thrilled to have such an upgrade at quarterback. The Vikings will have $6 million more in cash to use on Drew Brees' signing bonus.

There has been no quarterback more consistently productive than Brees for the past two seasons in San Diego.

He's white, too, which certainly guarantees more tolerance among that segment of Vikings fans that wears Purple to cover red necks. This isn't a theory, but a fact demonstrated by the muted response to Brad Johnson's stink-a-thons against Pittsburgh and Baltimore at season's end."


Here is the link to the whole article

http://www.startribune.com/508/story/299892.html
 

Kaptain

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Wow, the home town sportwriter basically calls his readers racists rednecks. This is what happens when you hype a black afflete to death. When he has finally proven to suck, you won't be able to get rid of him without the cries of racism. What team wants to doom their francise with that mess? (a small handful apparently)
What did Brad Johnson do other than win every game but two? He's calling for the fans to boo Brad Johnson?!
smiley5.gif
BTW, Reusse looks like he's never played a sport in his life - except maybe leapfrog with Duante Culpepper.
 

joshinva

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Man that MC Hammer clip is the absolute funniest thing I ever saw! Look at it for 30 seconds and tell me it won't make you bust out crying in laughter!
 

White Shogun

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kaptain poop said:
What did Brad Johnson do other than win every game but two?

Funny how when the Falcons were on a winning streak early last season, all the criticism towards Mick Vick was met with the rejoinder - stats don't matter, all he does is win games.

But when all Brad Johnson does is win games, more than his Falcon's counterpart I might add, he stinks and should be thrown off team?
 

hedgehog

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Some "interesting" quotes from Patricks column today in the star tribune newspaper. This is what he had to say about Dustin Fox.




"Several players officially became Vikings busts with Saturday's moves:"

- Dustin Fox was drafted as a safety from Ohio State. He was on injured reserve as a rookie in 2005 because of a broken arm. The new Vikings regime tried him in this training camp as a cornerback and he failed to impress. That makes him a third-rounder who never made it to the field in the regular season.

The last third-rounder not to play at all for the Vikings was Gilbert Brown in 1993. He wound up as Green Bay's nose tackle on a pair of teams that went to the Super Bowl.
 
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joshinva said:
Man that MC Hammer clip is the absolute funniest thing I ever saw! Look at it for 30 seconds and tell me it won't make you bust out crying in laughter!


Josh, you took the words right out of my mouth. I was doing the same thing (staring and laughing hysterically) the last time he posted with the hammer-pants avatar. lol
 

hedgehog

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According to Pat, Vicks sentence is just another example of racism.

Even after a barbaric mistake, quarterback deserves second chance

Dogfighting is unquestionably brutal, but where was the outrage in earlier cases?

By Patrick Reusse, Star Tribune

Last update: August 21, 2007 - 12:38 AM

Robert Byrd, the 89-year-old Democrat from West Virginia, is the longest-serving member of the United States Senate in history. On July 19, he took to the floor of that distinguished body to comment on the dogfighting allegations against Michael Vick and his cronies.

"Barbaric!" Byrd shouted, while also pumping his first. "Let that word resound from hill to hill, and from mountain to mountain, and valley to valley across the broad land. Barbaric! May God help those poor souls who'd be so cruel. Barbaric!"

Byrd paused to say he wouldn't prejudge anyone's guilt, before concluding with more shouting:

"I am confident that the hottest places in Hell are reserved for the souls of sick and brutal people who hold God's creatures in such brutal and cruel contempt."

No rush to judgment there, Senator. And this probably was the same type of calm, objective look at the evidence Vick could have expected had he decided to go before a federal jury in Richmond, Va.

On Monday, the announcement came that Vick had capitulated and would accept a plea deal with the Feds.

The Associated Press reported that prosecutors will recommend Vick serve between 12 and 18 months. Apparently, federal prisoners can't expect more than a 10 percent break, so he'll do 10½ months, minimum.

And you can count on this: This is too grand an opportunity for NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to make himself a hero with the masses. He's going to add at least a one-year suspension after Vick is out of jail, making 2009 (and age 29) the earliest that he could be back in an NFL training camp.

Certainly, it's nauseating to read details of this dogfighting culture, but I think we're being as naive about this as we were about steroids in 1998 when Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa were staging the home run race.

Then, we wanted to believe the mammoth home runs we were seeing were the results of diligent offseason workouts, and now we want to believe Vick and his pals are more villainous than tens of thousands of other dogfighters in this country.

Remember the dogfighting episode we had in Chisago County four summers ago? Law enforcement officials walked in on the fights at a farm.

Tommie McClellan and Neal Burton both pled guilty to the felony of cruelty to animals involving fights. McClellan paid a fine of $750 and Burton of $500. Their sentences were suspended and they were placed on five years of probation.

Vick's operation was much bigger -- more dogs, higher stakes -- but it is puzzling how dogfighting has gone from a dirty little secret with modest punishment to the Crime of the New Millennium because of Vick's involvement.

Here's the deal: There has been a 90-pound yellow lab at our house for over a year and the big oaf is more fun than the State Fair. He's also a sissy. We keep running into a mother fox (25 pounds max, right?) on our favorite walking path. He sees the fox, turns around and looks at me, and gulps like Scooby Doo.

The idea that the Michael Vicks of the world would take another breed of dog and torture it into fighting for its life is barbaric, as the old senator from West Virginia bellowed last month.

But why is it that dogfighting has been taking place in urban alleys and in backwoods barns forever and nearly all of the culprits have been allowed to get off with a little more than a stern warning? And now it's Michael Vick, so he's headed to federal prison?

Everyone involved in dogfighting is a sick puppy -- not just Vick. He'll have a year in a cell to think about that. And then Goodell should forget the grandstanding and allow Vick to return to the NFL immediately.

Ron Wolf, the astute football man who built the championship Packers of the '90s, had it right Monday when he told Yahoo! Sports:

"If he pays his debt to society, why shouldn't he get another chance? Maybe I don't understand something in all of this, but you're supposed to get a second chance in this country."

Patrick Reusse can be heard weekdays on AM-1500 KSTP at 6:45 and 7:45 a.m. and 4:40 p.m. - preusse@startribune.com

http://www.startribune.com/508/story/1373731.htmlDogfighting is unquestionably brutal, but where was the outrage in earlier cases?</font>Edited by: KJV1
 

Don Wassall

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This caste-clown
smiley8.gif
poses a question near the end of his rantafter already stating the answerearlier:


Question: But why is it that dogfighting has been taking place in urban alleys and in backwoods barns forever and nearly all of the culprits have been allowed to get off with a little more than a stern warning? And now it's Michael Vick, so he's headed to federal prison?


Answer: Vick's operation was much bigger -- more dogs, higher stakes.


DoesReusse really believe that if it had been Peyton Manning accused instead of Vick, that Manning wouldn't have been suspended by the NFL and instead of going to prison would have gotten off "with little more than a stern warning"? I doubt it,but I pity the fools who can't see through this simplistic demagoguery. Mr. T, give this assclown and his readers a smackdown!
 
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