Certainly none of the endless procession of college bowl games before and I suppose after the two bowl games that serve as semi-final tilts on New Year’s Eve interest me.
Thus my Mildred Dunnock (attention must be paid as she uttered that line/sentiment in both stage and film productions of “Salesman” (i.e. “Death of a Salesman”) admonishment will be via pro football.
The ‘big time” league will play twice on screens and devices on Christmas Day, a far cry from its vow not to do so, after two slots/division games were held on Jesus’ 1971st birthday, a Saturday.
I do not know if the cake for Jesus was inundated with candles but many lights, eyes and rear ends watched and sat for NFL Christmas day tilts then and will do so now.

In a Christmas Day divisional playoff game in 1971, though his team lost, Ed Podolak, played brilliantly.
Likely one can make a good case that I go go a bit far in my criticism, usually directed against most modern announcers, “non return” broadcasting great, Bob Costas, a notable exception.
However, there are few if any who will impart some of the information that will follow, all in and around the 1960 World Series, matching the Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Yankees.
In the historic seventh game, a key play in that, one of baseball’s greatest games, I say the greatest, when one considers the importance, was a ball hit by Bill Virdon, taking a bad hop (by definition going up in the air) and hitting Yankees shortstop, Tony Kubek in the throat.
The first batting result of the classic series, won by the underdog Pirates, obviously a play infinitely less important, was however, an almost eery coincidental opposite.
Kubek was the batter and hit a ball that also went up in the air, hitting the third base bag for a single. Virdon’s ball in #7 was also a single, eventually a huge play, in denying pitcher Bob Schantz and the Yankees.
The great Roger Maris, a year before hitting 61 home runs to not only beat out his even greater teammate Mickey Mantle for the home run crown, but setting a record with 61 home runs, had much the opposite happen in 1960.
Mantle’s home runs in the Yankees final series vs the Washington Senators gave him 40 on the year, one more than Roger, giving “#7” the 1960 American League home run crown.
One more note (maybe during this holiday season this “critic,” sort of generous “Scrooge,” I believe with good reason, but alas what is the point, will provide more, follows.
Yankees pitcher Art Ditmar actually filed suit for the use of “Ditmar throws” on the series ending home run by Bill Mazeroski on a commercial some 25 or so years later. (It was Ralph Terry who surrendered Maz’ historic clout.)
The first pitch by a New York Yankee in the series was called “Ditmar throws” by the same great announcer, Chuck Thompson who worked with another great, Jack Quinlan, on radio in that classic World Series.

In getting ready for (10-4) “Hack” (boy are they dangerous, already copping 2 Supe titles, with the highly criticized, but so good, not great, Eli Manning, as their quarterback) at (5-9) Philly Thursday night, consider the Giants almost certainly will be a wild card team, nothing more, but nothing less.
The Giants need 4 of 4 decisions in their games and those of Dallas to go “their way” to win the “div” title and garner the “one seed” for just the third time in the 42 (that number worked for Well Mara as at the time of Supe 42, he had that many grandchildren or was it grandchildren and great grandchildren? “Rhythm method” and “Saturday night” indeed. Also and I am in a foul mood, but is not the late Mara, one who did much good and bad in his life, perhaps hovering in Ohio?) seasons it has afforded all home advantage games possible.
However, it would take say 7 maybe 8 decisions to go against them to keep first year coach Ben McAdoo (how could Bob McAdoo not have been one of the 50 greatest NBA players?!!) and his Giants out of the playoffs.
That would require Hack losses at Philly and last night’s “lay an egg team” Wash, under Jay Grudin with Jon Grudin doing color.
Additionally Tampa Bay would have to win both its games and the Lions would have to win at Dallas and lose vs Green Bay, after the Pack beat Minne this week. Even then Atlanta would have had to win at least one game.
NFL.com is stating the Giants “hack” their way into the ‘offs with an Atlanta loss this week and they are probably right as some of the tiebreakers get beyond my calculation. (Unlike the inordinately well paid Francesa, at least I try).
However, say all the above happens with one Atlanta loss coming this week, the Pack at (10-6) would win the NFC North. TB at (10-6) would win the NFC South. Det, Atlanta and the Giants all would be (10-6) and the Giants with the worst conference record AMONG the three (another “bargain” Brad Nessler said “BETWEEN” the four teams in shamefully promoting a meaningless college basketball doubleheader last week) would be out???
Bottom line–almost certainly the Giants will be in the ‘offs, very likely as a wild card team.

Sure I gushed and am touched by Cindy Stowell and in essence her fame is being on the show “Jeopardy.”
Conversely, Craig Sager, who also recently passed away, never meant much to me. In my not so humble opinion, he was in an innocuous, yet often annoying position of interviewing coaches, asking inane, meaningless questions, no different than any sideline reporter, including the suddenly renowned Doris Burke.
Far from like him politically, I wholeheartedly agree with the late Andy Rooney, that there is no need for “sideline reporters.”
So whether partly due to my general dislike and face it, envy of broadcasters or maybe the fact I honestly do not recall his doing anything of substance in broadcasting, the load of publicity given Mr. Sager’s life and death is truly disproportionate, in my opinion, to what he achieved.
I bet he would agree. If you the public or Mr. Sager are offended, know I fervently wish Mr. Sager had lived longer and was here to tell me so.
Would not that be nice?!! However, life with its impending death and largely who, not what you know reality, is a” bi–h,” not a “Beach Boys” song.

Dr. Jonas Salk fought polio.
When vastly over rated, college football coach, Bo Schembechler died, Beano Cook told me first of all, he was not a great coach as he lost too many big games.
Next Beano “pulled no punches” in saying, “the only person who dies and gets negative publicity is Hitler.”
In my opinion, that is pretty close to true, especially in the sports world.
I always thought of and still think of sportscaster, Len Berman as a “no talent.”
However, I credit him for criticizing Schembechler’s rival but also mentor, Woody Hayes, as bad, at the time of his death.
For the record, all of the above accomplished something, I sit here and criticize. There has to be a better way to express/live.
While as cited in the previous post, the two teams currently leading and very likely to be their conference’s top seeds won yesterday in contrast to losses on the exact date (Dallas, the almost certain NFC top seed) or in the case of very likely AFC top seed New England, one day from it, those teams lost games 28 years earlier that had no playoff implications.
Yesterday the Oakland Raiders, whose (10-3) record is pro football’s third best and the New York Giants tied with K.C., which incidentally suffered a seemingly big loss as 5 point favorites vs Tennessee (Ryan Succop’s 51 yard, last play field goal won it for the (8-6) Titans), for the fourth best mark (the Pie “took it down on Giants’ titles in ’07 and ’11) each had big wins yesterday reversing the results of games in which losses (in the Giants case, the loss and one by SF vs the L.A. Rams) ended their seasons, sans a playoffs appearance exactly 28 years earlier.
In 1988, I got one more chance, winning big, figuring the last day puzzle. soon I would “tailspin” not as one who owed but one who bet too much and all the negative energy and results inherent in such behavior.
That day, with long time New York Giants broadcaster Marty Glickman, then a Jets’ broadcaster getting a little too excited, as the Jets were spoilers and out of the ‘offs hunt, the Jets with Al Toon’s touchdown catch the key play, defeated the Giants. An upset win by the Rams at S.F. got the Rams in and put the Giants out of the ‘offs. I believe SF was playing for the one seed but fell. However they were the “2” and won it all, eventually defeating the Bengals in the Supe.
Cincy QB, Norman “Boomer” Esiason, a good one, was not, in his biggest game, failing to direct even one touchdown drive, in a (20-16) loss.
It was winner take all in the AFC West when Seattle, then in the AFC not NFC West, which they won again 3 days less than exactly 28 years later beating the L.A.Rams last Thursday, visited the Oakland Raiders in a game pumped into this/N.Y. market.
I “loved” Sea in that tilt and said so amidst my depression on the previous night cable show.
Sea won then, Oak took S.D. yesterday and clinched its first ‘offs spot since 2002, ending the second longest making the NFL ‘offs drought behind Buffalo.
This, to me is amazing at least interesting juxtaposition. I try to keep involved but it passed me, a train I never got on.

One of yesterday’s posts pointed out the juxtaposition of the NFL having its last regular season Sunday games on December 18, 1988 while yesterday’s games ( Sunday December 18th, 28 years later) were played with two weeks remaining on the same numbered 16 game NFL schedule as 1988.
The teams with the top three records in the NFL and four of five (by the way, in trying to hear Bob Hope on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, while watching the plays in the Dallas/TB tilt, I had the sound on, forcing me to hear Cris Collinsworth’s error in saying TB was facing the team “with the BEST record in football.” At the time, that was (12-2) New England and not (11-2) Dallas. Even now after the win they are tied for that place, thus it would have been incorrect to state, what the non stop talking Collinsworth did) reversed their losses that day or weekend.
28 years and one day earlier, the same New England at Denver match up as yesterday, transpired with Denver winning a Saturday game, with no playoff implications.
Yesterday in a game chock full of such “implications,” New England won, covered and “Ko’d” Denver “teasers,” all vs me. While the result was the opposite for the two teams, it repeated a horrible loss for me that Saturday December 17th, leaving me “groggy and down,” while then “significant other” Angela’s friend, Pedro Tweed put on a great display, doing push ups on my live cable show.
On that last day of 1988, Dallas lost, ending a non playoffs season. Yesterday they won and as referenced above, are tied with New England for the best record in PRO football (Collinsworth said football, not pro or the NFL. Undefeated Alabama and some other college football teams have a better record!).
In my next post, I will cite the other teams with records in the top four or five, that reversed decisions exactly 28 years earlier, with key victories yesterday.

I am racing to just get out the four loser/loser/underdog system games for this week.
It is the same calendar as 1988, more on ’88 and the four guests cited in the last post, another time and in ’88 on this December 18th date, the regular season ended.
Now in 2016, 2 weeks remain after this.
Today, the Colts plus 5 plus at Minnesota.
The Jaguars plus 3 plus at Houston, which now after I rightfully mocked Boningo and Roberts assertion that a Houston AFC South win was certain, is a big “div” favorite, after all. Comments on this, no matter today’s results later this week.
“Another-rrr” is SF, a brutal (1-12) plus 14 plus vs Atlanta. A score there: Falcons no cover, winning (29-17).
A prediction is Denver plus three plus (it costs 7 to 5) but you will not have to pay it, N.E. 19 Denver 17.

Unlike regarding so much of what is on the air, I try to check my facts before putting them on these posts.
I know it was a Saturday night game and am ALMOST certain, it was the game between the Miami Dolphins and New York Jets, that I researched to have been on October 10, 1970, at which I remember the great and beautiful Ann Margaret, being interviewed or at least talking with Merle Harmon, about Joe Namath.
Margaret had co starred in the movie “C.C. and Company” with Joe Namath and told Harmon, a great broadcaster, she was nervous and worried, watching Joe on the football field.
Much had happened by that time and certainly afterward, indicating a drop in the play of the New York Jets and the often injured Namath, after the team and individual triumph, vs the heavily favored Baltimore Colts in the third Supe played in January, 1969.
That night in 1970, Miami, embarking on a period of greatness under Don Shula, then in his first year coaching the ‘Phins and the coach victimized by the Jets in the aforementioned Supe, won (20-6).
I am sure I have commented on the Jets, Namath, Shula, that and other Supes before and will do so again.
Today, I recall Anne concerned about Joe and my brief meetings with each, classy individual.
I simply said hello to Ms. Margaret once as she sat next to her husband Roger Smith. Ann worried about Joe that night in 1970, but it is her lifelong, ongoing devotion to Mr. Smith before and after his physical setbacks, that are a primer of what marriage can be.
I am not that naieve, and know, not quite from experience, but know it is not easy. They make it happen, and seeing them together, was a nice, moving experience.
Regarding Joe Namath the football player, I have complex feelings that can be cited another time.
When I talked briefly with him in 1988, I asked him not about that third Supe, the one I have “complex” feelings about, but his 4,000 yard passing season, the first one in pro football history back in 1967.
I also cited Namath and the Jets spoiling the then Boston Patriots’ season, exactly 50 years ago (Saturday December 17, 1966), winning (38-28) in the season finale, which was the help the Buffalo Bills needed, to gain a third straight AFL East title.
Joe Namath was impressed that I remembered. Of course I did, just as I remember he, Ms. Margaret and Mr. Smith being so gracious.

Only the great Jimmy Durante gets between Ann Margaret and Roger Smith. Alas who is Roger looking toward? I do not blame him.
