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August 15, 2007

Fairness? Don’t Bet On It

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Sports — Mark Wentz @ 3:30 pm

In the news today is a story telling how Tim Donaghy pleads guilty to betting on games and taking cash payoffs.

This is, of course, not good.

What I don’t get is the hand-wringing and “how could this happen?” Some say its the worst thing to happen to sports because now the fans don’t know that the games are on the level.
The fans NEVER knew the games were on the level. Just ask anyone in Raider Nation.

Seriously, did no one notice that NBA superstars like Michael Jordan had their own set of rules? Did anyone notice that, when the 49ers were Super-Bowl good, their cornerbacks could mug the opposing receivers while if the opponents breathed wrong on Jerry Rice they’d be called for pass interference? Do you really think Roger Clemens pitches to the same strike zone as does Boof Bonser?

As a fan, the surest way to know my team has become an elite team is when the officials start making bogus calls in my team’s favor.

The difference between the tradition playing field tilt and Donaghy’s tilt is that Donaghy bypassed Madison Avenue. The league and its marketers didn’t get to decide which teams got it a little easier and which ones got the long touchdown pass called back on a holding penalty.

July 28, 2007

I’ve Got to Get Some Sleep Some Time This Week Man

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 9:26 am

Last week, George W. Bush had surgery so Dick Cheney was put officially in charge of the country for a few hours. This week, Cheney is having surgery. Does that mean, for a few hours, Bush will get to run the country.

I know. I know. Too easy.

How about this?

Dick Cheney is having surgery to replace the battery in his ticker. Say all the bad things you want about Cheney (I’ll wait … still waiting … waiting some more … okay, that’s enough), but he, in his personal life, seems very green. The reason I say this is because he’s balding. Why not install a solar panel on top and run his ticker on solar power?

July 8, 2007

July 14: A Heavens-ly Holiday

Filed under: For the life of me — Mark Wentz @ 1:43 pm

Since I started gainful employment, I’ve always considered my birthday to be a holiday. It’s a day to–if nothing else–take time off from work. I’ve often thought about promoting it to a national holiday. There’s one negative to that, though. What do all national holidays based on birthdates have in common? The person born on that day is dead (although, one guy was resurrected) and, quite often, died early at the hands of someone else. I have no desire to go that route. I’m not sure how many global holidays there are. The closest would probably be New Year’s, Christmas, and Easter. There’s still that death cloud dimming my view on those. What about galactic holidays? I don’t even know that there are any. Maybe I’ll nominate myself for one of those.
Of course, we run into the problem that I haven’t done anything to deserve such an honor. I could try the route of suggesting it’s the holiday to celebrate the “common person.” However, that would make me the typical common person and I’m not sure persons commonly suggest having a galactic holiday in their honor. So we’ll work on the holiday part now. The rest of it will take care of itself with the mythology which usually accompanies major holidays. (I’m hoping I had single-handedly defeated the Green Bay Packers in the Super Bowl, but I’m not going to suggest that as I don’t want to influence history.) But it’s not really about my greatness. It’s more about celebrating that I have a birthday and don’t want to work on said day. And, be honest, wouldn’t you all really rather not work on July 14?

Let’s start off by declaring which day on which the holiday falls. We could go with the first Friday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox after the new year after the old year. Or we could go with July 14. That’d work great, too, because I was born on July 14. July 14th, it is!

Hear ye! Hear ye! On this day, by the authority of some guy who has an infrequently-visited web site, let it be known that from hence forth July 14 shall be recognized as the galactic holiday know as Mark Wentz’s Birthday. Hear ye! Hear ye!
There are three parts to holidays: food, decorations, and traditions. Family, also, but I can’t really help you there.

Food
An important part of any holiday is food. Pretty important in non-holidays, too. Breakfast on this holiday consists of doughnuts. The midday meal doesn’t really exist for this holiday. It’s more like grazing. Get some good finger foods (chips, nuts, chocolates, etc.) and nibble away while doing other activities. Supper is easy: pizza. Some holidays have their wassail, some have their beer, and others have a wine. This one has generic (store brand) soda. Strawberry and grape work best. Orange and root beer in a pinch. Cans and 20-ounce (or less) bottles. You do not–I repeat, DO NOT–put generic or store brand soda in a glass. First, it’ll eat through the container, the table, the floor, etc. Second, it’s horribly couth to use a glass.

Decorations
Blank walls are fine. Pictures and portraits of me would be pretentious. No, there is only one decoration that will do for this holiday: bumper stickers (read: bumper snickers) about me. That should be about it. However, if you really need a centerpiece for the dining room table during the Mark Wentz’s Birthday feast . . . er . . . graze and a bag of Doritos doesn’t float your boat, you may use a football. (The classier lot of you will probably use a tee, but it is okay to set the football directly on the table–held in place by a wad of gum, if necessary.)

Traditions
Read and sing the Mark Wentz’s Birthday carols. Especially those with the patron saint, St. Luxbell, whose job it is to, at 0430 hours, supply all the grocery stores throughout the world with doughnuts made by stoners in a little bakery in what they believe is Shangri La–although it’s actually just outside Hunfratoon, Pennsylvania. And don’t forget the carol about Henry Streator, the stoner who was a misunderstood outcast until he saved the 14th of July holiday one year when he defeated the terrorists by bowling a 900 series during an unusually heavy cloudburst. Because of this, a traditional activity for the holiday is bowling.

We have happy holidays: Happy Halloween, Happy New Year, etc. We have merry holidays…well, one merry holiday: Christmas. Given the activities and foods of our new holiday, there is only one appropriate salutation for this holiday: deathfree. “If I don’t see you, have a Deathfree Mark Wentz’s Birthday.” “Yes, and to you and yours, as well.” Avoiding cardiac infarction on Mark Wentz’s Birthday ranks right up there in difficulty with avoiding a stroke on the 14th of July.

I nearly forgot about the gift exchange. Feel free to exchange gifts. However, none of this picking a Friday after a major holiday and trying to pack everyone possible into all of the stores (I’m looking at you, day after Thanksgiving). There’s no official start to the gift purchasing part of the holiday. Only an end date: June 23. If you don’t have your gifts purchased by June 23, just send a note to your friends and family telling them you no longer love them. Those of you partaking in the Secret Luxbell gift exchange, get your names in now before it is too late.

For those of you whose refuse, because of dignity and good taste, to embrace a self-appointed galactic holiday, I have a solution. Celebrate my sister Pat’s birthday. It’s on . . . well, what do you know? It’s on July 14th, too. What a coincidence! Remember, the important part is that I don’t want to work on my birthday.

So enjoy the festival that is the Mark Wentz’s Birthday galactic holiday. Get your You’ll Log and take inventory of all the fun you’re having . . . celebrating me and my birthday. Stay home and eat. Nobody wants a skinny bowler.

To you and yours: have a Deathfree July 14th!

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The opinions expressed here are solely those of the writer and do not neccessarily reflect those of the rest of the family.

© 2007, Mark Wentz

June 20, 2007

I Woke Up to a Ray of Sun Coming In

Filed under: For the life of me,PPN EXCLUSIVE — Mark Wentz @ 10:57 am

Yesterday, the Toddler of Action and I had our first telephone conversation. Steph had called to inform me that the TOA didn’t want to go to his water tots class.

Steph: You talk to him
TOA: I don’t want to go to water tots.
Me: Why not?
TOA: I don’t want my head to go under water.
Me: What if Mommy holds your head above the water so you don’t get wet?
TOA: My head will go under the water and I will cry.
Me [chuckling]: Let me talk to mommy, please.

Not only could my son hold his own on the phone, but, for those of you who know me, that was a pretty extensive conversation.

I just wanted to share the joy.

June 12, 2007

It’s Partly Cloudy and So Am I

Filed under: For the life of me,PPN EXCLUSIVE — Mark Wentz @ 9:49 pm

I’ve never seen The Sopranos. The people I work with never bring it up at the proverbial water cooler. My family, if they see it, never mention it. My school chums never mention it, either. I also don’t watch or read news stories about the show. I’m just not interested.

But I know a lot about it’s ending–which I thought stunk, but now I think may be pretty cool.

If I don’t talk to anyone who talks about the show, I don’t watch the show, and I don’t follow stories about the show, how do I know about it? Sports. I follow sports. And, unbeknownst to me until yesterday, the show seems pretty popular amongst sports commentators. I happened to see a bit of Mike and Mike, the sports-talk radio program they show on TV. (Yes, they put radio shows on TV.) And they disagreed on the quality of the ending. Then I read the paper, and a columnist mentioned the show. Then I read Peter King’s column and he discusses the ending. There’s even a link on the Sports Illustrated web site talking about the connection between sports and The Sopranos. (I don’t know what it says because, like I say, I don’t follow the show.) By the way, the Tuesday Edition of King’s Monday Morning Quarterback (yes, they have Tuesday editions of Monday columns, which you can read while watching radio on TV) gives a great explanation of why the ending of The Sopranos is good: Peter King column. I won’t talk about it here because the writer explains it well enough.

I just find this all interesting. First off, no one really mentions the show until it’s over. (Okay, King talked about it a lot. I think. I don’t know.) Then it’s all they can talk about for a day or two. Third, everything I need to know about The Sopranos I learned from sports talk. It’s all surreal.

Anyway, I’m off to watch the weather channel to find out how the Detroit Lions will do this year.

May 31, 2007

Outran a thunderstorm two days ago, I did not expect this

Filed under: For the life of me,PPN EXCLUSIVE — Mark Wentz @ 9:50 pm

For your consideration:

Izzy Stradlin’s new album, MIAMI, has been released and can be found on Itunes. Now, I’m not one to celebrate Itunes, but Izzy is one musician who’s worth losing your soul. Plus, it was pretty much necessary to release the album this way. When you don’t promote yourself so much, you need to be a be more flexible in your album releases. I’d much rather see Izzy’s albums on Itunes than see Izzy on a morning news show.

Anyway, the album rocks. Jr’s Song is a bit light-hearted. And how many other albums do you know which have two final tracks? Everythings Alright and FSO Ragga could both be excellent closers to an album.

So, feel free to download the album. While you’re there, grab some tracks from his Ride On, Like A Dog, On Down the Road, and River albums. You won’t be disappointed … unless you don’t like the songs.

May 28, 2007

Debased Ball Records

Filed under: Sports — Mark Wentz @ 8:40 pm

As most folks know, Barry Bonds is very close to passing Hank Aaron’s record for career home runs. Bonds, I think it is safe to say, is widely believed to have used steroids. This has, of course, caused much debate among sports fans and sports media talking heads. Should Bonds be banned from baseball before the big event? Should the record count? Should the commissioner Bud Selig celebrate the accomplishment? Should Selig acknowledge the accomplishment? Should Selig even attend the game?

Let’s put this in perspective, though. Yes, this has caused much debate among sports fans and talking heads. But EVERYTHING has caused much debate among sports fans and talking heads. There have been some doosies since I’ve started following sports. There was the controversy over putting lights in Wrigley Field for, gasp, night games! Some people thought Cal Ripken, Jr. should have skipped a game rather than break the record for consecutive games played. Some grew indignant when a golfer was allowed to use a golf cart. In recent years, Brett Favre has been afforded the luxury of countless web sites and sports shows giving him the pros and cons of retirement to weigh. (Oddly, no one is debating whether he should change the spelling of his name to mach the pronunciation or change the pronunciation to match the spelling. That’s a debate I’d like to follow!)

First, I’d like to clarify something: INCREASED MUSCLE MASS HELPS YOU HIT HOME RUNS! I’m no doctor and I don’t follow sports talk closely enough to know how widely held a belief this is, but there are some people who don’t believe that increased muscle mass helps one hit home runs. Their reasoning for this? You still need to aim and make contact to hit a home run, and steroids don’t help with that. I’ll take their word for the aim and contact part. But that doesn’t mean that steroids don’t help. I figure there are three aspects to hitting a home run: aim, timing, and power. You need to be able to aim the bat so it hits the ball. You need to time your swing so the bat crosses the plate round about the same time the ball does. Finally, you need enough power in your swing to launch the ball out of the park. The more muscle mass you have, the less you need worry about the power of your swing. You can concentrate on the aim and timing. However, those without more muscle mass have to concentrate on all three aspects, making it much more difficult to hit home runs. So, you’d have to do a lot of fancy talking’ to get me to believe that steroids don’t help one hit home runs.

Second, should steroids be illegal in baseball? I would think so. (I know: I shouldn’t go so far out on a limb.) Steroids give you an advantage in baseball, but so do eating well, exercising in the off season, studying the game and the opponents, etc. Let’s not forget God-given talent. But where I think steroids are an unfair advantage is that the other things I’ve mentioned make you a healthier and better person whereas steroids make you stronger but, at least in the long term, less healthy. It seems silly to expect a baseball player to make himself less healthy to be able to compete in a game. Allowing steroids puts pressure on healthy players to use them to keep up with the players who already do use steroids. That’s where I draw the distinction and why I believe steroids should be banned.

Third, career records in general are pointless. To compare Bonds with Aaron and both of them with Babe Ruth doesn’t make sense. There are too many variables for it to be a realistic comparison:

Rule changes.
More games in the season
Advances in equipment.
Advances in physical fitness.
Advances in medicine (some career-ending injuries are no longer career ending)
Changes in the expectations of professional athletes (especially regarding off season conditioning).
Stadium changes (roofs and dimensions)

These are all environmental conditions which can play a role in the number of home runs one hits. I wouldn’t necessarily say comparing career home runs is like comparing apples to oranges. It’s more like comparing Clementine oranges to Mandarin oranges. But I know it’s tilting at windmills to suggest sports fan not rank everything possible. Have your fun.

And sports debates are fun. More for some folks than for me; as I don’t have the talent evaluation skills to participate. (Although, I’m not suggesting that that limitation has prevented others from participating.) I don’t know what is more American than expressing your opinion on subjects which don’t actually matter regardless of whether the folks to whom you are speaking actually care about the subject or what you think. It’s in the constitution!

So good luck, Barry Bonds. Good luck, Hank Aaron. Good luck, Bud Selig. And good luck to the pitchers who have to face Bonds in the next few weeks.

In closing, there’s a 500-pound gorilla in the room. People just may be waiting to find out what I think about it; since I’ve addressed almost every issue except it. Okay, I’ll give you my answer:

Favre should change the pronunciation of his name to match the spelling.

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The opinions expressed here are solely those of the writer and do not neccessarily reflect those of the rest of the family.

© 2007, Mark Wentz

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