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Why the Elections Matter, A Football Translation
OK, all you undecideds, listen up.
The World Series is over, and maybe you can pay a little attention to 
another national pastime, the upcoming midterm national elections.
What? Oh. The NBA is in preseason, hockey is back, and of course, it's 
football season.
Right.
So let me put this in terms you can understand.
America's team is in real trouble, and you can help them out.
Are you ready for some (political) football?
With LOTS of yummy links?

Like I said, all is not well with America's team. After the hotly 
contested and still mystifying 2000 draft, the whole league was 
predicting great success, but things began to go awry almost 
immediately. For starters, though there were no other teams with 
anything like the home team's sheer power, several, notably the 
Jihadis, were working on crafty plays to take advantage of our 
overconfidence. While the early games of the season were focused on 
drastically lowering the price of skyboxes and adding chemicals to the 
snacks, our opponents were probing weaknesses in our vaunted defensive 
line.
In retrospect, several other early season changes have proven costly 
as well. Making the second stringers practice out in the parking lot 
sure felt good, but the resulting injuries have hurt us in the long 
run. Renaming the team from the Raiders to the Patriots was confusing 
enough, but then changing it again to the Angels really alienated many 
of our fans. Perhaps the Separation of Sports principle is a sound 
one, after all. Replacing the marching band with a choir wasn't as 
inspirational to the fans as we originally thought, either. Making the 
cheerleaders wear business suits and blanketing the TV with them was 
supposed to add respectability to a playing style that has, in the 
past, been a bit too physical for general audiences.  As it turns out, 
the fans want what they've always wanted from the cheerleaders - meat.
Coach Rove's play calling, so effective in past seasons, seems to be 
stuck in a serious rut. First there was that disastrous 8-6-01 PDB 
play that led to a very costly fumble, and before you know it, 
America's team had suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of a 
pathetic, rag-tag Pop Warner team that didn't even have uniforms. 
Instead of rethinking strategies, Coach Rove kept up his same 
aggressive style: run right on first, second, and third downs, then 
throw a Hail Mary pass on fourth down. Aside from being utterly 
predictable, this one-dimensional game plan resulted in an astonishing 
lack of yardage.  The almost universal lack of experience in the first 
string, notably the offensive line, has proven to be another 
liability. Throughout the 2000 draft, and the even brighter 2002 
draft, all of our acquisitions talked forcefully about knocking the 
other teams off the ball, off the field, and into early retirement. 
But as it turns out, it's helpful to have actually played before. It 
gives players a better sense of the discipline and training required 
to win games in this league. Our fortunes seemed to be looking up 
earlier in the season, when the league looked the other way regarding 
some significant changes in the rules that were designed to help the 
team win the games it always felt it should win. Widening the right 
side of the field by another 100 yards certainly aided the 
play-calling style of Coach Rove, and the new rule about stopping play 
every time quarterback Bush fumbled the snap was a big help, indeed. 
Because Bush's experience on the field was limited to being a 
cheerleader, allowing him to pick his own referees, always play 
offense, and spot the ball anywhere on the field were also beneficial 
changes.
But lady luck just doesn't seem to be on our side. There was that play 
where Bill Frist, a highly-touted receiver, ran out of bounds and 
collided with that hapless family in the Florida emergency game. Nose 
tackle Dick Cheney took aggression to a whole new level when he played 
the Texas game with a gun, (and used it on a teammate), guard Tom 
DeLay, safety Duke Cunningham, cornerback Bob Ney, and publicist Jack 
Abramoff have all been caught up in a betting scandal, to say nothing 
of the recent wide receiver problems, or that disastrous game at the 
Superdome. Now it turns out those prayer circles on the fifty yard 
line, such a fan favorite after games, are actually circle jerks. At 
this point, even the water boy is in trouble!
These events, and so many others, have finally led to a change among 
the fans. Where they used to come in droves and cheer wildly, even 
before the game, now there is a sense they come to see a ghastly 
spectacle, like staring at a train wreck.So what is America's team to 
do? Well, remember those second stringers? The ones practicing without 
pads out on the asphalt? They're ready to play. They're tough, they're 
battle hardened, and they have a game plan that is realistic and plays 
by the old rules, which always made for a better game.
Let's put them in!


xponent
Hoping This Translates To The List Well, Otherwise Go To The Site Maru
rob 


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