

Had another nice weekend here in the 216, other than the fact that it doesn't stop raining. I got to watch a lot of college hoops and football, as well as spend time with the Jace man himself, who who in town with MD for the weekend. MD had the Detroit/Cleveland State game on Saturday. Reese was unable to come. She had sterp throat which developed into some sort of infection in her knee that caused it to swell. She was hospitalized, but released the next day. She is fine now, but the doctors told her mother that she shouldn't travel and should take it easy for a few days. We had dinner Saturday night after the game (PF Changs picked up) and hung out at my mom's house. Jace loved the Hanukkah gift we got him so much, he brought it with him from Indy and was playing with it most of the night. It is a race track and cars that you charge up, put on the track and they race around until they run out of gas. MD also brought this crane toy and we put it together. What is funny is that its a toy for 5 year-olds and up and it is borderline impossible to put together. The instructions couldn't have been worse. All pictures, no text. Again, more practice for my soon to be life experiences. They came over yesterday afternoon as well - I had Jace in the basement playing Pole Position and Miss Pac Man on the big screen and he just ate it up. He was pretty good too. He didn't want to leave C-Town this morning; he loves it here. They stopped back over this morning on their way out. Jace is such a sweet boy. When Leah and I were talking to him about the baby he said "we are going to be best friends forever." It was so cute. The next time I see Jace and MD, I'll be a dad. How scary is that?
Poor Marty Schottenheimer. The guy just flat out catch a break. The Chargers Head Coach watched his team self destruct and hand the game to the Patriots yesterday in their 24-21 loss. This loss is another in a string of bad playoff losses for Marty, who is now 5-13 in his career. What did Marty do to deserve this fate? He was the Browns Head Coach for "The Drive" and "The Fumble." He moved on to Kansas City for a successful tenure of regular season W's and more playoffs L's. Everytime Marty's teams have been the favorite to get to the Super Bowl, they have wet themselves. His 2006 Chargers ran through the AFC at a 14-2 clip and had home field advantage throughout the playoffs. They have the NFL MVP in Ladanian Tomlinson. They have maybe the best defensive player in the league in Shawne Merriman, yet it must be something in the water Marty gives to his players - they get to the playoffs and stupid mistakes come out of nowhere. Take yesterday for example, in the second half after stopping the Patriots on a key third down where they would have been forced to punt, Chargers Safety Drayton Florence inexplicably head-butts a Patriot right in front of the ref and gets a 15 yard personal foul. The Pats get a Field Goal out of it to cut the Charger lead to 14-13. Earlier in the game, Punt Returner Eric Parker dropped a punt and instead of falling on it, tried to pick it up and fumbled it again, The Pats recovered. The worst of all was that with six minutes left, 21-13 Chargers, 4th down, Chargers Safety Marlin McCree intercepts a Tom Brady pass and instead of falling down, gets stripped of the ball and the Patriots recovered. In typical Marty-luck fashion, the Patriots scored a TD and 2 point conversion to tie the game and eventually got the ball back again and won 24-21. Marty isn't blameless - he cost his team a key time out after challenging McCree's fumble which a blame man could see wouldn't be overturned. This cost the Chargers their last timeout that they could have used on the final drive, which ended with a missed 54 yard field goal. Also, the conservative Marty has been trying so hard to shed his image, that he strangely went for a 4th and 11 in the first quarter instead of kicking a very make able 49 yard Field Goal from his all-pro kicker. I've watched Marty's career since it started here in Cleveland in 1984. He is as nice of a man as their is in coaching. Mr "do it our way, one play at a time" may be the most snake-bitten coach in all of pro sports. I feel very sorry for him today. He must be thinking that he will never get his chance to win the big one.
Speaking of "The Drive, " last week was the 20 year anniversary of a day that will live in Cleveland Sports infamy; John Elway's 98 yard drive to tie the AFC Championship game and force overtime in Cleveland. I'd like to go back to that day. A week earlier, the Browns had beaten the Jets in a double OT thriller 23-20. The Browns were down 20-10 with about 3 minutes left and my father led the troops out of the stadium. Some of our family stayed, but most of us left. As we arrived at the AFC title game, the entire section was giving my father shit for leaving early. He never was able to live that down. I remember it in bits and pieces, but some of it is so vivid. In the 4th quarter Brian Brennan caught a long TD pass from Bernie Kosar to give the Browns a 20-13 lead. I don't ever remember being in a louder football stadium. I totally remember MD and I jumping up and down yelling "we're going to the Super Bowl! We're going to the Super Bowl!" We were so excited. Then we kicked the ball off, the Broncos muffed it and ended up on their own 2 yard line, needing to go 98 yards into the Dawg Pound to tie the game." Under normal circumstances, Dad would have gone down to get the car, bring it up to the top of the hill, and ran back into the stadium to see the finish. But after the debacle of the week before, he wouldn't do it. You know the rest. John Elway picked us apart, The Broncos tied the game on "The Drive" and won it in overtime on a Rich Karlis field goal that I still think was no good. My next memory was all of us sitting in dead silence stuck not moving in the parking lot. Dad was so bitter.
If you haven't had a chance, you must read the excerpts that were released from OJ Simpson's cancelled book, "If I did it." We all know that he did it. He knows he did it. The fact that he actually put this book together screams out that he wants to tell everyone he did it. The book is supposedly "ficticious" accounts of how he planned and carried out the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. The excerpts are so telling and make so much sense, that its almost as if he wants to confess because he is proud of his work. My favorite: He enters through a broken back gate—he's told her a "million times" to get the buzzer and latch fixed—and encounters Goldman, who is returning the glasses of Nicole's mother, Juditha. She had left them at Mezzaluna, where the Brown family dined after Sydney's recital and where Goldman is a waiter. Simpson accuses Goldman of planning a sexual encounter with Nicole, which Goldman denies. Nicole tells Simpson to leave him alone. Goldman's fate is sealed when Kato, Nicole's Akita, emerges and gives him a friendly tail wag. "You've been here before," Simpson screams at Goldman.... Simpson writes that his ex-wife came at him like a "banshee." She loses her balance and falls hard, her head cracking against the ground. Goldman assumes a karate stance, further angering Simpson. He dares the younger man to fight. Then, in the book, Simpson pulls back. He writes, "Then something went horribly wrong, and I know what happened, but I can't tell you exactly how." Everyone was obsessed with "The Trial of The Century." If you, like my mother in law Stacey who according to Max "majored in OJ" during that time period, you have to check out the line above and read this article. Is there a bigger piece of crap on earth than OJ? What's crazy is that there are women out there that actually date this guy!
I was watching 60 Minutes last night and saw a story and interview with the parents of the three Duke Lacrosse players accused of rape last year. Since I last discussed this, all of the rape charges had been dropped due to lack of evidence. Last week, the Durham district attorney Mike Nifong asked the court to remove him from the case, just a few weeks after the Rape charges were dropped. The charges of kidnapping and sexual assault are still in play. So in last night's interview, Lesley Stahl uncovered a bombshell and shows again why these three students have been completely railroaded and their lives ruined by Nifong who took the word of a stripper over 99.9% accurate DNA evidence. Check this from the transcript: Dr. Brian Meehan was hired by District Attorney Mike Nifong to conduct DNA testing on evidence collected hours after the alleged attack last March. What Meehan discovered in his lab has undermined the prosecution's case because he found DNA on the rape kit and the accuser's underwear that belonged to at least four unidentified men, none from any of the lacrosse players. But when Meehan issued a report of his findings, he left out that potentially exculpatory information about the other men. "I said it was an error," Meehan replies. "It was an error in judgment on my part."
The key here is that the D.A. was required by law to turn that information over to the defense in the first place. He didn’t do that until a judge ordered him to six months after he learned about the DNA belonging to other men. What's more, during that time, the D.A. told the court he was "not aware of any additional information" which may be exculpatory. Asked if Nifong was lying, Meehan says, "Well, I know that I told him. I sat down in our conference room and went over all of the information in this case with him." Four days after Stahl interviewed him, Meehan submitted an amended report with all his findings. There was probably nobody more shocked by Meehan’s testimony about the DNA than the parents of the three boys who have been indicted – Collin Finnerty's parents, Kevin and Mary Ellen, David Evans' parents, David Sr. and Rae and Reade Seligmann's folks, Kathy and Phil. They were all in the courtroom that day.
"Well, while we were sitting there, and the information came out, and someone then, behind us, passed the note and said on the note it said, 'Oh my God. He knew this on April 10th.' And we knew that our boys had been indicted on April 17th. And Mary Ellen turned to me and said, 'I'm shaking so hard, I think I'm going to pass out right now.' And we had to hold on to each other," remembers Kathy Seligmann. "But let me get—you’re saying that on April 10th, Mr. Nifong was told that your boys had left no—," Stahl asks. "No DNA, not a speck," Seligmann says. "But that there was evidence of other men. And days after he was told that, he indicted them for rape?" Stahl asks. "Right, yeah," she replies.
These three students will for sure be found innocent if this case ever gets to trial. What's sad about it is that even though they most likely didn't do this, the stigma will be with them forever and their lives pretty much have been ruined. Mike Nifong deserves to pay. He must now defend himself against ethics charges that could lead to his being stripped of his law license. One can hope he does and can no longer make a living.
I know tonight is the Golden Globe awards and under normal circumstances, I would watch. It is clearly the only award show worth watching. But I've got the big Missouri/Kansas border war game on ESPN at 9 PM. This is the 100th year of this great rivalry and the games never disappoint. No matter how bad Missouri is and how good Kansas may be, they always play us tough. Back to the Golden Globes, I am hoping that Borat wins for either best Comedy or that Sasha Baron Cohen wins best actor in a comedy movie. My guess is that he shows up as Borat and makes a mockery of the awards show. that would be pretty epic. The Departed better win something as well. That was the best drama I have seen in years.
Song of the Day: "Lil Ghetto Boy" by Dr. Dre