Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Random thoughts on Captain Sully Sullenberger, Boise St-TCU & the BCS, and the former GB QB

As usual, I have a lot of sports-related things on my mind, but I’ll start with a hero; a real hero, not the kind of hero who hits a game-winning shot in the playoffs.

 

Sully

Captain “Sully” Sullenberger was the big hero last year, and has been able to start 2010 in the news, without any miraculous landings needed. As I watched a few of the 2009 retrospective type shows (yes, I’m a sucker for anything like that; could be why I was a History major), I continue to be amazed each time the story is told about him piloting U.S. Airways 1549 to safety in the river. I got to hear the discussion with the tower for the first time, I believe during the VH1 look at 2009. The tower tells everyone else that takeoffs & landings need to be stopped, since a plane has an emergency and needs to return. Sully comes on & says that he needs to land in the Hudson. Verbatim response from the tower “I’m sorry, say again?” I can only imagine what they must’ve been thinking when they heard that.

 

The camera phone type videos that have been shown of the landing (which I somehow hadn’t seen before) just solidify how amazing it was that everyone survived. That plane was still going fast! The line “brace for impact” isn’t usually followed by such a successful finish. As my mom & I were discussing this, she said looking at the video again in the last week, of the people standing on the wing of the plane in the water, she was suddenly more amazed. As a flight attendant, she had to do safety training that included going out on the wing, and the wing is slippery. It’s not exactly a stable place to stand. Yet in the water (which I’ve heard can make things more slippery), everybody was able to stay in place until the rafts & boats rescued them. I cannot even fathom that no one was lost, and to continue to have the presence of mind, and selflessness, of waiting until everyone else was off, and then going back to check the whole plane again, even as the back end inside the plane was dangerously full of water, just adds to the heroism of Sully Sullenberger.

 

The man has shown in the nearly 12 months since this happened, that he’s not big on getting a lot of attention, or taking a lot of credit; he was just doing his job, is what he keeps repeating. Yet, he also was wise enough to realize that if he didn’t acknowledge the praise people from the flight were giving him, that he was minimizing the fact that their lives were saved. I’m guessing he would like to have just started flying again quietly and continued his life, but of course news cameras & media followed his first day back on the job, so he is learning to somewhat embrace the position he’s including writing the book “Highest Duty” which I have on audio book, so I can hear him tell his story.

 

On January 1 of this new decade, Sully was the Grand Marshal of the Tournament of Roses parade, along with his wife Lorrie, and had the honor of doing the coin toss for the Rose Bowl game between Ohio State & Oregon. On Monday (Jan. 4) he spoke to employees at NASA’s Johnson Space Center, and was even able to speak to Astronauts (& Cosmonauts) on the International Space Station from mission control (video can be found here on NASA’s Featured Videos page: http://bit.ly/6nChxi ).  I’m a little jealous that NASA employees in Houston get to see Astronaut Mike Massimino and now Sully Sullenberger, but I’ll make a New Year’s resolution to get over my envy! 

 

Of course, you know you’ve made it when Harrison Ford is going to narrate your documentary, which will be shown on TLC (January 10, 9 EST/8CST) called, appropriately, “Brace for Impact.” My Tivo is already set!

 

I’m just pleased, that with all the end of year talk about Jon & Kate, Britney, K-Fed, Kanye, Rihanna’s horrifying abuse from Chris Brown (& his return to the music charts in less than a year), Spencer & Heidi, and White House party crashers, that discussion of a true inspirational hero could stand out as one of the great stories of the year. Thank you Captain Sullenberger!

 

 

BCS: Boise St. & TCU

Since I already expounded on this subject with both Facebook & Twitter, I’ll keep it brief here: I am about as irritated as I can get about something in sports (I can get more irritated about real life, but we’re just talking sports now) at the fact that the BCS matched up Boise St. & TCU in the Fiesta Bowl Game, played last night, 01/04/10. I’m glad they “admitted” two very worthy schools from non-BCS conferences, but they are robbing all of us the opportunity to see how they matched up against schools from the big, bad, “powerful” BCS conferences. All this does is guarantee that the little conference schools will be .500 in BCS bowls this year, and since there are no playoff games, so there is no advancing to the next round, we can’t see if they are Cinderella teams whose clock strikes midnight or if they are worthy applicants for the National Championship game. Let’s face it; they couldn’t look any worse than Cincinnati did in the first half vs. the Florida Gators in the Sugar Bowl, and if Nebraska had held on to beat Texas a month ago, Cincinnati would have been the #2 team in the BCS and would’ve been in that Championship game vs. Alabama. Computers should not be deciding championships.

 

Another thought stream that I put on Facebook the other day:

College football needs a playoff, because undefeated teams like Cincinnati, TCU & Boise St. deserve the chance to try to prove that they are the top team in the nation.

 

College football needs a playoff, because Cincinnati was only a few Nebraska plays away from competing for the National Championship, and clearly, they were not qualified.

 

 

Pro Bowl is not in Hawaii? And it’s before the Super Bowl?

Can someone please explain to me the logic behind putting the Pro Bowl the week before the Super Bowl? Aside from the fact that players don’t want to go to play; they want to go to Hawaii with their families, it makes no sense! Generally the two teams in the Super Bowl will have some talented players on their roster, and likely a number of them will have already been named to the Pro Bowl. But this guarantees that fans won’t get to see those players participate, as they obviously won’t be playing an exhibition the week before the big game.

 

 

The Legacy of Brett Favre

Speaking of Pro Bowlers…Brett Favre. I recall stories all summer on any network that carried sports, discussing that Brett Favre was likely ruining his legacy with his waffling about retirement, and would certainly ruin his legacy by trying to play this year, after ending last year on the down month (never mind that pesky injury he had). While the Vikings lost some games they should’ve won and we don’t yet know what will happen in the playoffs, it would be hard to argue that these numbers will bring him down: 12 wins, 33 touchdowns while the gunslinger only tossed 7 interceptions, 4200 yards (his 3rd highest total) and a career best 107.2 QB rating (which is not my favorite stat to compare quarterbacks, but can be valuable to compare seasons of any one quarterback). He completed 68.4% of his passes, which is his personal high. Only Drew Brees (70.6) & Peyton Manning (68.8) had better completion percentages, and they had better completion percentages to the opposing teams as well, throwing 11 & 16 interceptions, respectively.

 

Just to clarify about Brett Favre, I did not jump on this bandwagon, or do a 180 on cheering for a player I hated. I never hated Brett Favre. I have recently learned this was rare among Minnesota Vikings fans. Of course I hated the Packers, and wanted to see Favre throw to the team in purple, and wanted John Randle to slam him into the icy turf at Lambeau & concrete floor in the Dome, but I always enjoyed watching Favre play. While I never quite understood why his interceptions were because he was “just trying to make a play” while Dante Culpepper (back when he was actually good) would be making “a dumb decision,” I still thought he was fun to watch, and thought he showed how football showed be played. I just wanted him to lose every time he was on the field against the Vikings, or in any game that would affect the Vikings.

 

Once there was a shot at the Hall of Famer coming to Minnesota, I was on board for that, though I certainly could’ve done without nightly reports about him, when nothing new had happened; just tell me when there’s something I need to know! Now I can only hope that Favre can help lead the Vikings to somewhere they have never been: the winner’s circle of the Super Bowl! If that should happen, all those meaningless reports of him on high school football fields, or false sightings of his wife shopping in Minnesota, will be nothing but a distant memory!

Posted via web from trueliz's posterous

3 comments:

  1. Sully himself originally said that he wasn't a hero, and had only done what ANY well trained, professional pilot would do. He seems to have somewhat bought into the hype the media has created about him being some kind of hero. What a shame, and what an insult to the real heros in this country who put their lives on the line and in harm's way to save others. All Sully did was save himself, the passengers were just along for the ride. The proof in that is that you can be sure he would have done the EXACT same thing if the plane had 200 or ZERO passengers. He did the best landing he could to avoid killing himself...how is that heroic?

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  2. Definitions of "Hero" from Merriam-Webster dictionary after the one about a mythological figure: 1c-a man admired for his achievements and noble qualities; 1d- one that shows great courage; 4- an object of extreme admiration and devotion. It doesn't say anything about ruling out someone who is doing their job well, or someone who is also saving themselves. It may be what he was trained to do, and trained others to do, but it was an achievement (& it had not been done before), it would take courage, and many have admired him for it. All of this is part of the definition of the word hero. That is precisely why it is heroic.

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