The Game? You Mean They Had a Game Too?
12:02 p.m.:
5 1/2 Hours to Kickoff
Frank: Hey, how'd you like that other huge game
that just finished?
Artie: Huh? The Badgers and Michigan State
haven't tipped off yet.
Frank: I meant the Chelsea-Liverpool soccer
showdown.
Artie: Another nil-nil earth-shaker?
Frank: Heck no! Liverpool scored a goal.
Artie: I'm thrilled. But I'm more thrilled that
UW basketball will keep me from joining the Super Bowl pregame death march.
Frank: You've already missed most of ESPN's
four-hour bloc of blather. You still have to avoid Channel 6 for another five
hours or so.
Artie: Eight-plus hours; that's cuttin' it close.
How can they be sure they'll spew out every possible word from every possible
gasbag?
Frank: Maybe they're saying everything twice,
just to see if anybody notices.
Artie: Of course I'd watch the Badgers anyway,
but I've been desperate for something I can focus on. Last night I was in bed
at 9 o'clock! I couldn't pay attention to anything in print or on TV. Cripes,
if I'd started getting the Spice Channel for free, it wouldn't have mattered.
Frank: Feeling that much Super Bowl tension?
Artie: It's not that; I've been buried in hype
for so long that everything's just gone blank. Maybe I got a concussion when I
banged my head on the fridge door grabbing a cold one.
Frank: There'll still be three hours to go after
UW finishes. Some networks have "marathons" competing with the Super
Bowl lead-up. There's "Law & Order" in various forms on TNT and
USA.
Artie: If I ever watch any of those, the hospice
is the next stop.
Frank: MTV is giving Jets fans an afternoon of
"comfort" programming—"Jersey Shore." On the ever-classy
Spike channel, there's a marathon of something called "1000 Ways to
Die."
Artie: For me, one way would be watching
Chelsea-Liverpool.
Frank: I won't have trouble concentrating on some
good reading before the kickoff, but what'll you do?
Artie: I reckon I'll give in and go to FOX, but
not until about 4:45.
Frank: Let me know which studio Einstein says the
game "will be won in the trenches."
Artie: That's too old school. Nowadays they say
it'll be won by whoever achieves "A-gap maintenance." But after the
Badgers finish I'll also have time for my usual Sunday activity.
Frank: Light housekeeping?
Artie: You betcha. Coach McCarthy wanted to make
this just another game, not do anything different, so I'm keepin' it real!
4:51 p.m.:
Almost There
Frank: Wow, 82-56 for the Badgers! An omen,
perhaps?
Artie: Too risky. If I start invoking omens
there's a good chance that tomorrow I'll be saying, "Well, at least the
Badgers won." I'll just stick to laying out the Cheetos...
Frank: Oh yeah, I was going to ask about the
menu.
Artie: Cheetos and Pabst Blue Ribbon, plus a tube
of summer sausage.
Frank: With my PBR I'm going with Krunchers
chips, original style, and a Miles Standish from my favorite sandwich place for
40 years, Suburpia. I'm going to FOX precisely at 5:29, the alleged kickoff
time, and I'll bet they won't be playing yet.
Artie: Christina Aguilera is singing the national
anthem and I'm predicting she'll torture it for about 2 minutes. A nice anthem
should come in at about 1:25, but she'll flog that thing to the point where
I'll want to go out and buy a Koran.
7:07 p.m.:
Halfway Home
Frank: Since the kickoff was five minutes late, I
assume Christina came through.
Artie: I clocked her at 1:55. It was beyond
everything, so over the top and overwrought. And it could’ve helped to know all
the words. Just excruciating.
Frank: What about that self-important recitation
by Michael Douglas, all that malarkey about how "this is so much bigger
than a football game" and these teams "give us a chance, for one
night, not only to dream but to believe." Huh? "Their journey is our
journey." What, the Founding Fathers were thinking of this when they wrote
the Constitution?
Artie: Take that, Al Qaeda, we've got the Super
Bowl!
Frank: Anyway, in between all the commercials
featuring young men being idiots, they played some football. And with a 21-10
halftime lead your confidence level is…?
Artie: Not as high as it'll be if they're ahead
at the end of the game. It'll be interesting to see what defensive scheme Dom
Capers has in the second half. So far he's not bringing a lot of extra
pressure, just making Ben Roethlisberger prove his arm against the basic stuff.
Frank: And they got a big interception for a
touchdown when the basic pass rush messed up Ben's throw. Also, something
happened in the first half that didn't against Philadelphia and Chicago: The
Packers got a third score to go up by more than two TDs.
Artie: But the Steelers came back to make a game
of it. That's the way these things go. The Pack hasn't had any turnovers and I
think no penalties either, but seeing Charles Woodson leave the field, and Sam
Shields, and with Donald Driver already getting hurt, I'm real worried about
who can go in the second half.
Frank: The decision to defer on the opening
kickoff means they get the ball to start things.
Artie: It sure would be nice to use some clock
and score, too. But I heard something interesting from Mark Chmura on the
radio. He said it's really tough for players to get "up" for a Super
Bowl second half because the stinkin' halftime is so long. He says you lose
your sweat, your edge, and you expend a lot of energy just trying to keep your energy.
Frank: At $100,000 per second for TV ads, the
league and FOX ain't shortening the show. Speaking of which, go delight in the
Black Eyed Peas.
Artie: I liked the way the halftime shows had
been trending, with geezers like the Stones and The Who. This time I was hoping
for the Glenn Miller Orchestra, or at least the Everly Brothers, ain’a?
9:32 p.m.:
Mission Accomplished
Frank: I hope the thrill of victory doesn't have
you speaking in tongues.
Artie: Only three words ever matter—Go, Pack, Go!
Frank: Congratulations. This team played six
straight "elimination" games, the last four away from home, and won
them all.
Artie: And in the second half tonight they did it
with two of their big engines out of commission, Woodson and Driver.
Frank: When the Steelers made it 21-17, the
defense kept things together and eventually forced the fumble that led to Greg
Jennings' second TD. And when the Steelers cut it to 28-25 on that gorgeous
"touch" throw by Roethlisberger, Aaron Rodgers made the throw of his
life—touch and zip—to
Jennings on that huge third down. True, they only got a field goal and the lead
was just six...
Artie: My tongue was paralyzed with two minutes
left.
Frank: But they closed it out with defense, just
like in Philly and Chicago.
Artie: When I think about all the major injuries
this team had...
Frank: Maybe it was fortunate to have so many of
them so early in the season. It gave them time to find the right replacements.
Like that linebacker Frank Zombo, who had a sack and other big plays, and
Howard Green, who got in Roethlisberger's face on Nick Collins' interception
TD.
Artie: I've given Mike McCarthy grief for his
"We'll get that fixed" mantra, but hell, I guess he fixed everything.
You can't be more fixed than this!
Frank: Might as well do the media thing and
immediately ask about their chances to repeat.
Artie: Back off! I'm gonna relax and be glad I
can stop wearing nothing but green. It's time for Brewers blue; pitchers and
catchers report next week!



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