Maybe so.
First, I no longer argue with the innocents that believe that the NFL never favored certain teams - via biased playcalling in important games - in order to promote a "storyline" to best advance the alleged drama of the NFL, making it bigger than a mere sport.
A now retired referee name Markbreit began it all, doubtless acting out Park Avenues "best case sceneraios." He did it on the field, and then from the replay booth.
His legacy lingered, including a few years ago in a playoff game where blatantly corrupt playcalling in a playoff game tried to give the win to Indy (Dungy's son tragedy, and first black winning SB coach storylines), and then in the SB to Pitt, (Jerome Bettis' last game storyline).
Last year's games seemed pretty much honestly called, including hte playoff games. New Orleans, a dream storyline team, did not benefit for the Markbreit legacy, as the script would have preferred it. I believe the NFL may have kept hands off, due to the many criticisms of the clearly biased officiating to enforce the corporate dream, even from their kept whores, the sportswriting press.
(Reporters covering political beats rightly view the politicians as their adversaries, trying to hide and spin fact. Sportswriters carry Vaseline in their laptop cases, to grease the way for the pro franchises from whom all blessings flow.)
But the Patriots are now Dreamtime for the NFL scriptwriters.
Wow, another Greatest Show on Turf, with the immaculately pure Tom Brady and a Redeemed Thru Grace wide receiver, making NFL history.
Not even in the far Dreamtime reaches of Hollywood could you write a script like this.
And then Madden and Al have the indecency to carp about the NE touchdown that wasn't. Never reviewed from the replay booth, even tho, as John said, that is "almost automatic" on all even slightly questionable plays in the two minute zone.
Also, the mysterious fourth down encroachment call against Philly, that gave NE another chance. Two officials apparently disagreed - the "decider," the ref, opted for Dreamtime.
I certainly smell the NFL Dream Machine, unlocked from the cellar where it was stored last season, in full play again.
And will venture the (safe) guess that the NFL wants an undefeated season for the Patriots, Dreamtime on steroids.
You can surely bet against the double digits in any game they play, but forget betting against them on a money line.
This, btw, is the same league that heatedly opposes betting on football, for fear it will corrupt their game. Well, knock me over with a feather, my sides are splitting with thunderous guffaws.
First, I no longer argue with the innocents that believe that the NFL never favored certain teams - via biased playcalling in important games - in order to promote a "storyline" to best advance the alleged drama of the NFL, making it bigger than a mere sport.
A now retired referee name Markbreit began it all, doubtless acting out Park Avenues "best case sceneraios." He did it on the field, and then from the replay booth.
His legacy lingered, including a few years ago in a playoff game where blatantly corrupt playcalling in a playoff game tried to give the win to Indy (Dungy's son tragedy, and first black winning SB coach storylines), and then in the SB to Pitt, (Jerome Bettis' last game storyline).
Last year's games seemed pretty much honestly called, including hte playoff games. New Orleans, a dream storyline team, did not benefit for the Markbreit legacy, as the script would have preferred it. I believe the NFL may have kept hands off, due to the many criticisms of the clearly biased officiating to enforce the corporate dream, even from their kept whores, the sportswriting press.
(Reporters covering political beats rightly view the politicians as their adversaries, trying to hide and spin fact. Sportswriters carry Vaseline in their laptop cases, to grease the way for the pro franchises from whom all blessings flow.)
But the Patriots are now Dreamtime for the NFL scriptwriters.
Wow, another Greatest Show on Turf, with the immaculately pure Tom Brady and a Redeemed Thru Grace wide receiver, making NFL history.
Not even in the far Dreamtime reaches of Hollywood could you write a script like this.
And then Madden and Al have the indecency to carp about the NE touchdown that wasn't. Never reviewed from the replay booth, even tho, as John said, that is "almost automatic" on all even slightly questionable plays in the two minute zone.
Also, the mysterious fourth down encroachment call against Philly, that gave NE another chance. Two officials apparently disagreed - the "decider," the ref, opted for Dreamtime.
I certainly smell the NFL Dream Machine, unlocked from the cellar where it was stored last season, in full play again.
And will venture the (safe) guess that the NFL wants an undefeated season for the Patriots, Dreamtime on steroids.
You can surely bet against the double digits in any game they play, but forget betting against them on a money line.
This, btw, is the same league that heatedly opposes betting on football, for fear it will corrupt their game. Well, knock me over with a feather, my sides are splitting with thunderous guffaws.