Colonel_Reb
Hall of Famer
I was a little surpised when it was announced that it was the second most watched SB. I figured it would be a little lower than that.
They could also mention he has fetish for underwhelming wide receivers......jaxvid said:Unbelievable! I didn't happen to see it but apparently Ch. 4 in Detroit ran the following scroll everytime Matt Millen was on camera during the Super Bowl.
"Matt Millen was president of the Lions for the worst eight-year run in the history of the NFL. Knowing his history with the team, is there a credibility issue as he now serves as an analyst for NBC Sports?"
Yahoo story:
Matt Millen's NBC commentary comes with a warning label
NBC might want to trot Matt Millen out in front of the cameras like nothing ever happened, but WDIV, NBC's affiliate in Detroit, isn't about to forgive or forget what he did to the Lions. From the Detroit Free Press:
Every time a certain familiar face showed up on camera Sunday during NBC's Super Bowl pregame show, Channel 4 ran a scroll at the bottom of the screen:
"Matt Millen was president of the Lions for the worst eight-year run in the history of the NFL. Knowing his history with the team, is there a credibility issue as he now serves as an analyst for NBC Sports?"
Ah, if only the NFL was like professional wrestling. Matt Millen could put on a mask, get a new set of tights, and just like that, have a whole new identity. "Hi, I'm Bob Costas, alongside Jerome Bettis and The Masked Franchise Destroyer ... "
He will forever be Matt Millen, though, and the name Matt Millen will forever be synonymous with losing. I've written about this before, and I don't think that being an absolute train wreck of a general manager means that Matt Millen couldn't also be a good analyst.
At the same time, of course, I also couldn't blame anyone in Detroit if they held a grudge against Millen for the next, oh, 1,000 years or so. I'll readily admit that if he did that kind of a hatchet job on my favorite team, I'd have no interest in ever hearing any ignorant word that ever came out of his mouth.
Outstanding work, Channel 4. I think this is something we can expand and use in all sports, on all networks. When Tony Kornheiser starts talking on Monday nights, we can have a scrolling warning that reads, "CAUTION: In two years of work here, this man has never said anything that has added any value whatsoever to a broadcast, and we seriously doubt that he's going to start now."
Matt Millen is the epitome of a DWF. The three receivers he got so excited about (Rogers, Williams and Wiliams) were all known for being LAZY. And M. Williams was slower than most linebackers.jaxvid said:Unbelievable! I didn't happen to see it but apparently Ch. 4 in Detroit ran the following scroll everytime Matt Millen was on camera during the Super Bowl.
"Matt Millen was president of the Lions for the worst eight-year run in the history of the NFL. Knowing his history with the team, is there a credibility issue as he now serves as an analyst for NBC Sports?"
Yahoo story:
Matt Millen's NBC commentary comes with a warning label
NBC might want to trot Matt Millen out in front of the cameras like nothing ever happened, but WDIV, NBC's affiliate in Detroit, isn't about to forgive or forget what he did to the Lions. From the Detroit Free Press:
Every time a certain familiar face showed up on camera Sunday during NBC's Super Bowl pregame show, Channel 4 ran a scroll at the bottom of the screen:
"Matt Millen was president of the Lions for the worst eight-year run in the history of the NFL. Knowing his history with the team, is there a credibility issue as he now serves as an analyst for NBC Sports?"
Ah, if only the NFL was like professional wrestling. Matt Millen could put on a mask, get a new set of tights, and just like that, have a whole new identity. "Hi, I'm Bob Costas, alongside Jerome Bettis and The Masked Franchise Destroyer ... "
He will forever be Matt Millen, though, and the name Matt Millen will forever be synonymous with losing. I've written about this before, and I don't think that being an absolute train wreck of a general manager means that Matt Millen couldn't also be a good analyst.
At the same time, of course, I also couldn't blame anyone in Detroit if they held a grudge against Millen for the next, oh, 1,000 years or so. I'll readily admit that if he did that kind of a hatchet job on my favorite team, I'd have no interest in ever hearing any ignorant word that ever came out of his mouth.
Outstanding work, Channel 4. I think this is something we can expand and use in all sports, on all networks. When Tony Kornheiser starts talking on Monday nights, we can have a scrolling warning that reads, "CAUTION: In two years of work here, this man has never said anything that has added any value whatsoever to a broadcast, and we seriously doubt that he's going to start now."
If you want to fix games, corrupt the underpaid zebras. SB XL had pass interference calls that directly affected the games. This game had holding calls. Why do the refs ignore many holding calls, yet called the hold late against Pittsburgh to give the Cardinals the safety. Also Gandy might have committed a hold on every pass play and he was only called about 3 times in the game.bigunreal said:If I knew exactly how the fix worked, I'd be able to profit financially from it. I've been watching these games for decades, and became firmly convinced they were fixed by the mid-'70s. It used to be a lot easier to predict these games- there were only a handful of "chosen" teams (Cowboys, Steelers, Raiders, Dolphins), so you pretty much knew one of them was going to win the Super Bowl in any given year.
I don't think any player or coach would protest the "fix" for a few very good reasons. First, since the media is obviously in on the whole charade, who would they protest to? Second, they all are paid very well to do something they love. It's not exactly hard work, and the fringe benefits are awesome. You might as well wait for one of the WWE wrestlers to protest their scripted matches publicly.
Regardless of which team is scripted to win, as long as holding, pass interference and illegal blocks in the back are only called selectively, when they happen all the time, I will not believe the games are legitimate. As long as the jock-sniffing announcers ignore this issue, even when it's right before their eyes, I will not believe the games are legitimate.
As I've said before, how can anyone here find it far fetched that the corrupt overlords of the Caste system would fix the outcomes of the games? The NFL is clearly and obviously "fixed" against white players. That's the main topic of discussion on this forum. Why would you suppose these same odious forces would have a scintilla of morality or decency, and not permit the games to be less than legitimate?
I don't understand why it hasn't been fixed for more black QBs to win it all, but that doesn't change the shady nature of what goes on in virtually every NFL game. The Steelers were clearly the "chosen" team here, for the Tomlin factor alone. Not every game has to have a racial element involved; the primary "fix" against white players, and in favor of less qualified black players, takes place year round. Combines, the draft, playing time in preseason games, cuts, etc., constitute a huge "fix" in favor of blacks and against whites.
I'm glad to see some of you are willing to consider my wild and crazy theory. I trust very little of what goes on today in professional (or big time college) sports.
White Shogun said:Every player in the game doesn't have to be paid in order to fix a game or push the outcome one way or the other. A key player, a coach who calls the wrong play or someone slipping the other team the play on a crucial down, or just a ref or two could be enough to push the game to a certain conclusion.
Don Wassall said:- The Kurt Warner fumble with five seconds to go actually was reviewed -- and upheld. There is no question that, cosmetically, replay assistant Bob McGrath, sitting upstairs, should have called for a booth review and let Terry McAulay see the play down on the field. But understand the mechanics of the way this process works -- and understand the process was aided by a penalty call on the field.
Thrashen said:I dont think race has much to do with the fixing of games, because that issue is more than "taken care of" during the offseason (combine, draft, training camp, cuts).
Simply suggesting things like "McNabb and other black QB's should have won multiple superbowls" doesnt really make sense in this case. Race has nothing do to with gambling, and money is the be-all and end-all in the NFL.
That being said, none of us really know if games are fixed or not, but there certainly goodarguments to support both sides. There's no need to get pissed at one another.