Showing posts with label 2012 chiefs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2012 chiefs. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

a blast from a non posted blast ...

“She likes whiskey with her water.
She starts dancing when the stars come out.
She ain’t your typical preacher’s daughter –
She’ll leave you dreaming, yeah there ain’t no doubt.

There’s a little bit of devil in her angel eyes!
She’s a little bit of heaven with a wild side!
She’s got a rebel heart a country mile wide!
There’s a little bit of devil in her angel eyes!
There’s a little bit of devil in her angel eyes! …”

-- “Angel Eyes” by Love and Theft.  This song is effing amazing folks.  Effing amazing.  (vice president biden voice) Folks!  He is praising this song!  A three letter word – song!**

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So, I was cleaning out my email inbox today, and saw I had a couple draft emails that I never finished, or sent.  Curious (because that’s not like me), I figured I’d take a look and see what they were.

When I saw the first one, I nearly spit out my fourth Gold Peak iced tea of the day (hey, it’s 94 degrees in KC today.  Since they won’t let me have a vodka tonic at my desk, I settle for the next best thing). 

Just to prove this was a draft, and more specifically, the date I composed it, I grabbed a Snag-It of the opening of the email.  (I blacked out any identifiers to persons or companies, in full compliance with “company Stevo works for”’s social media posting policy.  You’re welcome guys; glad to help.)

Here is the shot – notice the date that I can’t make up.



(photo credit: me, via the Snag-It utility.)

Now read the opening.

(peter griffin seeing ernie the giant fighting chicken voice) Holy Crap!

We certainly saw something REALLY special that weekend, and not in a good way, and not from Cam Newton and the Panthers.

I figured I’d post the entire draft of the post, because the stats below?  Are just mind-bogglingly epically awful.  The 2012 Chiefs might have been the worst team in NFL history.  I’m not joking.  I know the 2008 Lions went 0-16, but my God, read the stats.

Enjoy?

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Sorry for the lack of predictions lately, but this season is so awful, I have no desire to do them.

We all know there's lies, damned lies, and statistics.  So your motivational speech for this week's impending debacle: nothing but unreal statistics, courtesy nfl.com, the good folks at Arrowhead Pride, the "crack research staff" at that reputable website Wikipedia, and the brave souls at Save Our Chiefs.  I'd suggest sitting down and/or having a very, very, VERY stiff cocktail on hand when reading the facts. 

Hope to see y'all on Sunday.  If anyone needs a ticket, let me know, I have a freebie you can have.  Not sure what the tailgating menu is going to consist of, but anyone is welcome to join us.  For gambling purposes, I am setting the "How Many Drinks In Will Stevo Be When Gregg Arrives" at ... let's see here, carry the one, factor in the ten minute walk ... I'll set it at 8.5.  That sounds about right. 

As for the game itself, I have a feeling that in a season of unprecedented failure, that in the words of arguably the most influential man of the 20th century, the greatness that is Mr. Hugh M. Hefner, "we're going to see something REALLY special!!!" Sunday from Cam Newton and his fired up Carolina Panthers.  Panthers (-3) 55, at Chiefs 2. 

And the over/under on me "resting my eyes from the sunlight" again is 10:32 remaining in pregame warmups ...

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* the Chiefs, as of this moment, are the only team in the NFL officially eliminated from postseason consideration.  Yes folks, the team Sports Illustrated and ESPN picked to win the AFC West, is officially out of playoffs faster than any other team in the sport. 

* the Chiefs are the only team in the NFL to fail so far to win a game at home.  Only one other team (Jacksonville) has failed to win two home games. 

* if the Chiefs lose on Sunday to the 3-8 Carolina Panthers (and they will), then for the second time in four years, they will be swept at home on a three game homestand late in the season.  But wait -- it gets worse:

* if the Chiefs lose on Sunday to the 3-8 Carolina Panthers, at a bare minimum, 370 calendar days will pass between Chiefs home victories, as their next home game is December 23rd.  Let that sink in, Chiefs fans -- we may literally go an ENTIRE FREAKING YEAR between seeing our team win at home, at what used to be the most feared stadium to play in, in the league.  The previous longest stretch between home wins, incidentally, is 352 days, from the Bengals game in 2007, to the broncos game in 2008.

* if the Chiefs lose on Sunday to the Panthers, they will fall to 3-15 in their last 18 home games that count.  3.  and.  15.  To put this into perspective, the 2007-2008 Chiefs that went 6-26?  Went 4-12 at home in games that count.

* the Chiefs were swept at home by their divisional rivals.  To the best of my crack research, this has never happened before in franchise history.  In franchise history!

* the Chiefs are an ungodly -21 in turnover ratio, the worst in the league.  The only other two teams in negative double digits are your team, your town, YOUR Tony Bruno's Philadelphia Eagles (-17) ... and amazingly enough, the Indianapolis Colts, who somehow are 7-4 despite a -14 ratio.  For the record, the, uuh, record for worst turnover ratio is -30, held by the 1948 Chicago Rockets (who?).

* the Chiefs are the worst scoring offense in the league, posting only 161 points to date.  We have scored 13 TDs to date ... in 11 games.  And that's being kind -- the defense has contributed one of those touchdowns to the scoring total.

* the Chiefs have not scored a touchdown, at home, when the game was within 17 points in either direction, since week 4 against the Chargers.  And that touchdown occurred when the Chargers led by 17.

* the Chiefs have not scored a touchdown, at home, of any kind, since 2:26 remained in the game on October 28th.  Today is November 27th.

* the Chiefs have scored one touchdown, at home, of any kind, in its last four home games -- the garbage time touchdown by McCluster against oakland, when the Chiefs trailed by 18.

* the Chiefs have failed to score a touchdown in two straight home games, and three of their last four. 

* if you remove the Atlanta game (season opener), the Chiefs have managed to score exactly four touchdowns at home this season, none since the re-election of President Obama. 

* half of the Chiefs touchdowns, occurred in weeks 1-3.  Week 13 is currently underway.

* as Gregg noted -- Ryan Succup 81 points, the entire rest of the roster, 80.  And yet, Succup is the one who has "competition" being signed to, uuh, compete with him for his job, while the Brady Quinn / Matt Cassel craptacular tour continues unchallenged.  "Right 53", my hairless never seen the light of day ass.

* as of the time I snagged this screenshot yesterday, tickets for the Panthers game can be had for as low as $4.  No other team listed, has a ticket available for less than $10:



(photo credit: me, via the Snag-It utility, from espn.com.)

* and yes, that means that scintillating Jaguars at Bills rematch of the 1996 wildcard game, as well as the "no, really, friends and family -- stay home!  We love you too much to put you through the pain of watching!!!" bowl being staged in oakland this weekend, are all deemed "more valuable" to the ticket buying public, than the Chiefs / Panthers game is.

* at -140 for scoring margin, this is not only the worst team in the league ... it's the worst in franchise history.  Last year's -138 scoring differential was the prior worst margin.  And we still have five games to go to "improve" on that statistic.  For the record, the NFL record for worst point differential in a full season is by our former AFC West Divisional rival Tampa Bay Buccaneers, at -287 the year they played in the AFC West.

* to be fair, the offense is balanced -- 6 rushing TDs, 6 passing TDs.  No other team has failed to throw for fewer than 8 TDs (Miami).  Amazingly enough, we rank 25th in rushing touchdowns.  Yes, there are actually 7 teams that have scored less by pounding it in, than the Chiefs have. 

* and no, one of those seven teams is not named Stevo (rimshot!).

* speaking of the offense, did you realize that the Chiefs haven't scored a touchdown on the opening possession of the game since 2010?  The last time the offense marched down the field and put seven quick ones on the board was against the Titans, in the game that clinched the AFC West for the Chiefs.  That is a stretch of 29 games (28 regular season, 1 postseason) and counting, for those scoring along at home.

* only two teams have faced more third downs while on offense, than the Chiefs have -- the Pittsburgh Steelers, and the Arizona "Super" Cardinals.  The Steelers are converting 49% of their third downs, the Arizona "Super" Cardinals 28%.  The Chiefs split the uprights -- we're converting at an appalling 36% clip, good for 4th worst in the sport, ahead of Arizona, St. Louis, and the offensive juggernaut that is the Jacksonville Jaguars.

* simply taking scoring into account, the New England Patriots would beat us by 21.4 points on a neutral field in Wichita.  They average 37.0 a game.  We average 14.6.

* Our defense is yielding an ungodly 27.4 points / game.  To put this into perspective, the "32 Defense" of 2002, which to this day remains, statistically speaking, the worst defense over a full season in the history of the league?  Those guys?

Only yielded 24.5 points / game.  I know, I know -- "our offense is so terrible, the defense is always on the field!", right?  Well, you'd be wrong:

* the Chiefs rank 7th in time of possession.  How?  How in the bloodiest of bloody hells are we 7th in ToP?  Our offense actually spends nearly 4 minutes more per game on the field, than our defense does!  Are you kidding me? 

* only five teams have gone for it on 4th down less than the Chiefs: the Patriots, broncos, Texans, Packers, and 49ers, all of whom are highly likely to reach the postseason, all of which are still alive for a division championship in their respective divisions.

* the only team to rush for more yards than the Chiefs, is the Minnesota Vikings, by 17 measly yards.  No other NFL team other than KC or Minnesota, has topped 1,600 yards in rushing this year.  Wait, this is a good stat.  I think.

* unfortunately, only three teams have thrown for fewer yards than the Chiefs -- the aforementioned Vikings (who are 6-5), the Seattle Seahawks (ditto), and the Chicago Bears (who lead football's toughest division).  Fewer than 150 yards separate the 29th ranked Chiefs from the dead last ranked Bears.

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That is where the picks post ended in the draft form.  After reading those stats?

I totally understand why ...

Thursday, March 14, 2013

professor stevo's grades for the 2012 chiefs


"You.  I hear you're doing fine.
Seems like you're doing well,
As far as I can tell.

Time.  Is leaving us behind.
Another week has passed,
And still I haven't laughed yet.

So tell me what your secret is,
To letting go, letting go like you did,

Like you did ...

How can you just walk on by?
Without one tear in your eye?
Don't you have the slightest feelings left for me?

Maybe that's just your way,
Of dealing with the pain --
Forgetting everything between our rise and fall.

Like we never loved at all.

Like we never loved at all ..."

-- "Like We Never Loved At All" by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill.  Needless to say, there was NOTHING I loved, at all, about the season that just occurred ...

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Well, I guess I've held off on this for as long as I could.

Here you go, Chiefs fans.  Your Stevo's Chiefs Season in Review: the good (not much), the bad (a lot), and the ugly (December 1).

* Best Game: none.  The Chiefs only won two -- one in which they never led (winning in overtime), the other the result of the team coming together in the wake of the worst moment in franchise history.  If I had to pick one, I'd probably pick the overtime loss at Pittsburgh in week ten on Monday Night Football -- the one major TV appearance this year, where the Chiefs didn't disgrace themselves (the others: a whipping in the home opener against Atlanta, a horrendous showing against oakland, a blowout at San Diego).

* Worst Game: at broncos, week seventeen.  (Dis)honorable mention to the game at Arrowhead against the raiders (week eight) ... but that season ending "effort" at denver, was one of the most disgraceful, disgusting, pathetic displays of football the Red and Gold has ever put on the field.  I know this goes against my personal beliefs, but if it was possible to abort a football game?  I'd pay for the trip to Planned Parenthood myself, to suck the life out of this "effort".

* Best Play: Jamaal Charles' 91 yard touchdown run, at Saints, week three.  Is there actually any other play worth considering?  I ask that in all seriousness -- is this the only highlight of the season?  Sadly, I'd argue "yes".

* Worst Play: Ryan Succup shanks a 41 yard field goal, vs Falcons, week one.  This was the opening drive of the second half, with the Chiefs trailing 20-17, and this would have tied it, to keep up with the Falcons (who were scoring at will).  Instead, he shanked this one, the Falcons scored 24 unanswered, and the worst season in franchise history was very much underway.

* Team MVP: Jamaal Charles.  Honestly, there ain't any competition for this honor, although the linebacking trio of Houston / Hali / Johnson was solid, and Ryan Lilja was the most underrated player this year, shifting positions when Rodney Hudson was lost for the season, and performing admirably.  (Note: I am aware Dusty Colquitt had a great season too, but I am not giving a MVP award, to a freaking punter.)

* Team LVP: Quarterback.  You pick between god awful (Matt Cassel) and beyond sh*tty (Brady Quinn), and so brutally God awful, he can't get on the field (Ricky Stanzi), because I can't.

* Coaching MVP: Gary Gibbs.  Started the season as the linebackers coach; took over as defensive coordinator after the bye.  To Mr. Gibbs' credit, the linebacking corps was the only unit on this team that performed well, and the defense was noticeably better after Mr. Gibbs took over the playcalling.

* Coaching LVP: Brian Daboll.  My God.  I never -- and I'm not joking -- I never in a thousand years, thought getting rid of Bill Muir as offensive coordinator, would be a mistake.

* Best Rookie: Dontari Poe.  Poe actually had a fairly decent rookie season, and brings a highly underrated quality to the defensive line -- he can drop into coverage, and do a decent job. 

* Worst Rookie: Cyrus Gray.  This really isn't fair -- Gray didn't get a good enough look due to position "depth" and injury issues, but someone has to earn this "honor", and you're it champ.

* Best Free Agent: Brady Quinn.  Don't laugh.  You look at the transaction log from last offseason, and you find a better signing, because I can't.

* Worst Free Agent: Eric Winston.  Rot in hell, you f*cking asshole.  Rot.  In.  Hell!  (Or oakland; they're one and the same (rimshot!).)

* Actual Worst Free Agent (Separated From Emotion): Stanford Routt.  Nothing like whizzing away $14 million on a corner that played in six games before he was cut.  Good God.  Even Carlton Gray stuck around for a couple seasons.

* Best In-Season Development (Storyline): the rise of Save Our Chiefs.  Watching a simple protest against losing spread into a 70,000 plus fan movement that forced complete and total change to, uuh, save our Chiefs, was awe-inspiring.

* Worst In-Season Development (Storyline): the murder of Kasandra Perkins, and the suicide of LB Jovan Belcher.  Every other negative from this season combined, doesn't come within 2/1000ths of 1/100th of 1 percent, of this development for worst storyline of the season.

* Coolest In-Season Development (Storyline): the national media's reaction to us booing Matt Cassel as he left the field, vs Ravens (week five).  Some ripped us ... but most not only understood what was happening in Kansas City, they supported it, they exposed it, they held it out as an example of what every fanbase should be at its' passionate core.

* Best Tailgate: Tie -- Falcons (week one) and raiders (week eight).  The Falcons was a perfect weather day -- sunny, warm, great day.  The raiders game gave us eight hours to tailgate, plus our good friends from South Dakota came in for it.  That was cool.

* Worst Tailgate: Colts (week sixteen).  It had the coolest outcome (more on the next bullet point item), but there were only four of us there, since everyone was gone for Christmas or other assorted holiday activities ... and this was the only game I did not attend in shorts, because it was the only game where the temps at kickoff were below 45 degrees.

* Coolest Tailgating Development (Storyline): being filmed for an episode of "Tailgate Takeover" on the Travel Channel.  (Our episode has yet to air).  I'm really curious to see how it turns out.  No matter what, the nation now knows where the best tailgate is located: on the grassy lot across from the G30 sign.

* The Grades: Offense.

For those of you who have never read Professor Stevo's Year End Review before, a few notes up front:

1. I do not grade on a curve.  If every member of the Wrong 53 flunks?  They all flunk.  You have to earn your grade with Professor Stevo.  And Dear God above, have these guys in the Wrong 53 "earned" their grades.

2. Personal feelings about the player, coach, or executive, do factor into my overall evaluation of said player, coach, or executive.

* QB Matt Cassel: D-.  He only avoids flunking because of the classy way he handled both the fan revolt, and his demotion to backup.  His on-field play was atrocious.  He damned near single handedly cost the Chiefs the week four game against the Chargers via three INTs and a fumble, and he did single handedly cost the Chiefs the Ravens game, with his fumble at the goalline.  Thank God this four year nightmare is over.

* QB Brady Quinn: D.  Do you realize that, despite starting nearly half the season, Mr. Quinn managed to toss exactly two -- two! -- touchdown passes all year?  And that both were in the same game (vs Panthers)?  It is that game, that gets Mr. Quinn a passing grade, if only for his presence of mind to execute clock management perfectly down the stretch of that contest.

* QB Ricky Stanzi: F.  If you can't get playing time on this team, given what we trotted out there at the position?  You must suck so well, that Ashlynn Brooke is calling you for tips and pointers on how to suck so well (rimshot!)  (Pause.)  What?  (Pause.)  Oh come on -- (dana wright voice) For.  The.  Love!  I made it to page four before dropping a cheap, gratuitous, absolutely unnecessary sex and/or porn star joke!  That's restraint, dammit!

* RB Jamaal Charles: A-.  The sole bright spot on offense.  Led the AFC in rushing, proved beyond the shadow of all doubt that he has not only recovered from his knee issues of a year ago, he's still capable of producing at a top-flight level.  Again, Chiefs fans -- I know we all loved Jared Allen.  But would you rather have Branden Albert and Jamaal Charles, or Allen?  Carl made one helluva trade, to get that, for a defensive end who is (still) one beer away from a year long suspension.

* RB Shaun Draughn: F.  If he's on the roster come September 8th, the Chiefs will have epically failed at cleaning house.  I'm sure he's a nice dude.  He's just not the answer, to back up Jamaal Charles.

* RB Cyrus Gray: Inc.  Battled serious injury issues this year.  I like this kid.  I think he can absolutely turn into an effective third down back / change of pace option. 

* RB Peyton Hillis: F.  Is there a grade worse than a F?  There's not?  (florida evans voice) Damn, damn, damn!  This might go down as the second worst free agent signing in franchise history, behind only Carlton Gray.  What a waste of money, a waste of space in the locker room and the team charter, and a waste of time, he was last season.

* RB Nate Eachus: B+.  He got the job done at fullback.  He's the one who sprung wide open the gaping hole Jamaal Charles sprinted through to spark the comeback at New Orleans.  Did a good job of protecting the quarterback as well.  Could be a keeper in the Tony Richardson type role.

* WR Dwayne Bowe: B-.  Not even God could have put up decent numbers with our crappy quarterbacks throwing to him.  Now that he's got a credible NFL starter throwing him the pigskin, let's see what happens.

* WR Jon Baldwin: F.  Of all of Mr. Pioli's moves in his four year reign of (t)error, this one might go down as the worst.  And that's saying something.

* WR Steve Breaston: F.  Not quite sure what he did to p*ss off Romeo and the coaching staff, but I wish him the best of luck going forward.

* WR Dexter McCluster: F.  This just isn't working.

* WR Devon Wylie: C.  I like this kid.  I'm very, very excited to see what he's capable of in "Fat" Andy Reid's scheme.  (Think DeSean Jackson).

* TE Kevin Boss: F.  He's probably spent every moment of this season thanking God above for his concussion that ended his season before it really began, because he might have died going over the middle, trying to catch the crap being thrown in his general vicinity by our quarterbacks.

* TE Tony Moeaki: D.  Can you recall a single catch, block, or big play he made this year?  Me neither.

* TE Steve Maneri: F.  Was it really just five short years ago we had the best tight end combo in the game in Tony Gonzalez and Jason Dunn?  

* LT Branden Albert: B+.  Did a decent job this year.  I am glad we franchised him, and if the Chiefs hold onto him, he should stay at left tackle.  He's good at what he does.  (That, and if we use the first overall pick on an offensive lineman, my television screen is going to have a gaping hole in it, from where my bottle of Coors Light hits it, after I chuck it in anger.  You don't waste top five picks on linemen, on either side of the ball.  You take the best skill position player available drafting that high, not the fattest dude on the board.)

* LT Donald Stephenson: F.  I will remind you, Chiefs fans -- Russell Wilson went one pick after Mr. Stephenson, who played the role of a matador at a bull fight to perfection last year.  We haven't seen a wide open road to the quarterback like what Mr. Stephenson laid last year, since "Route 65" Jordan Black was getting Trent Green and Damon Huard killed back there.

* LG Jeff Allen: B+.  I don't recall any major penalty gaffes, or serious blown assignments.  Decent player who'll have to step up more next year, and did effectively step up this year, when Mr. Hudson's injury forced serious shifts along the line.

* C Rodney Hudson: Inc.  Was doing fine until he was lost with a season ending injury.  I think the Chiefs have a decent, upper 25% center on their hands here.  That's a good thing.

* C / G Ryan Lilja: A.  Did fine work at guard the last few years, and performed capably when forced to shift to center after Mr. Hudson went down.  I wish Mr. Lilja all the best in retirement, and look forward to applauding him at future Alumni Weekend introductions.

* RG Jon Asomoah: B+.  The interior of the Chiefs line -- Allen / Hudson / Asomoah -- looks set for the next five years, barring catastrophic injury.  I'm good with that.

* RT Eric Winston: F.  Lost in the heat of the debate over us Chiefs fans booing Matt Cassel as he lay unconscious during the Ravens game?  Guess who badly whiffed on the block, that led to the hit on Cassel that knocked him out cold?  (sarah palin voice) You betcha!  Eric Winston.

On behalf of Chiefs fans everywhere who love this franchise, sir?  Goodbye, good riddance, and please, let the door not only hit your ass on your way out the door, have it do things to said ass that would make Candy Strong blush from embarrassment.

* The Grades: Defense.

* LDE Tyson Jackson: B-.  I might be in the minority, but Mr. Jackson made progress this year.  He's developed into a solid run blocker, who effectively engages the tackle, to free up the edge for Justin Houston.  I'm glad he'll be back.  I'm really glad he'll be back at a far more reasonable salary and cap figure.

* LDE Shawn Smith: Inc.  The former Chief was signed late in the season.  Did not make much of an impact.

* NT Dontari Poe: B+.  Again, I might be in the minority, but Mr. Poe showed some good signs of things to come last year.  A nose tackle that can cover the safety valve.  Seriously, who was the last one that could do that effectively, Keith Millard?  Could be a sneaky good pick when it's all said and done.

* NT Jerrell Powe: C.  Didn't distinguish himself, didn't embarrass himself.  Sadly, too many Chiefs couldn't say either statement about their play last year.

* NT Anthony Toribio: Inc.  Didn't play enough to warrant a grade, either pass, average, or fail.

* RDE Glenn Dorsey: B-.  He'll never justify being a top five pick, but he's still better than average.  Like Mr. Jackson, he did a very effective job of occupying the tackle, freeing up Tamba Hali to rush the quarterback.  That's every bit as important, as posting solid tackle numbers.

* RDE Allen Bailey: Inc.  Missed a lot of the second half of the season with injury.  What little playing time he saw, I was slightly impressed with.  A solid backup end, and every team needs at least one of those.

* OLB Justin Houston: A-.  Mr. Houston was about one of five Chiefs to not defecate on themselves this year.  He provided a solid pass rush, was at least average at covering the tight end / swing back, and avoided a second positive test for weed.  All good things in my book.  Especially that last one.  Gotta know how to beat the system*.

(*: that is still my favorite story about The Champ.  It's laugh out loud hysterical ... and one hundred percent true.  To protect the guilty, I'll avoid posting it.  But trust me -- you would laugh your ass off.  God knows I did.  And man, did I have to eat that laugh.)

* OLB Andy Studebaker: B+.  Rock solid special teams player.  (Pause.)  Other than Dusty C, he's just about the only one of those we have.

* ILB Brandon Siler: B-.  Showed flashes of what I've always believed he had to offer.  (In the interest of full disclosure, I irrationally like Brandon Siler.  I think he can be a damned good linebacker.  From what my friends and trusted fellow Chiefs fans have said, I am bat sh*t crazy, and seeing things that don't exist.  In my defense ... that wouldn't be the first time that's happened.  (Pause.)  Or the five hundredth.)

* ILB Derrick Johnson: A.  Did everything asked of him, and then some.  With Houston / Johnson / Hali, the Chiefs have a rock solid linebacking core for the rest of this decade, barring catastrophic injury or incompetent salary cap management.

* ILB Cory Greenwood: B.  Did a decent job stepping into an impossible situation.

* ILB Jovan Belcher: F.  Failed on the field, failed his fiance, failed his daughter, failed his mother, failed Coach Gibbs, failed Coach Crennel, failed Mr. Pioli, failed every fan of the Red and Gold, failed every human being to ever draw breath -- past, present, or future.  I could continue, but why honor this absolute failure of a man by saying anything further about him.

* OLB Tamba Hali: B+.  Effectively battered the passer this year, and has developed a knack for being around the ball.  I can think of at least five passes he batted down, when after realizing he couldn't reach the quarterback, he instead fell back and waited for the throw.  A smart, effective presence at the position.  Docked half a letter grade for his drug related suspension in week one.

* CB Brandon Flowers: F.  Yes, F.  If it was possible to grade lower, I would.  He missed large periods of time with injury, and despite getting his payday as a top tier corner, refused to play like one.  You know who else was like that?  Who else the Chiefs threw an elite level corner contract at, and his game promptly went down the sh*tter?  Eric Warfield.  I do not like the trajectory of Brandon Flowers right now.

* CB Stanford Routt: F.  This was (allard baird voice) no question, THE worst free agent signing from last year -- possibly in the entire league -- and save for possibly Tyler Palko, the worst transaction period of the Pioli era.  He didn't even make it to midseason before being cut.

* CB Jalil Brown: F-.  Quite simply, the worst player on the Wrong 53, in terms of talent and contribution.  And with nothing else to add, may I ask a question that has always fascinated me, but noone seems to have an answer for?

Why does an F grade, not carry a plus or minus designation?  Every other possible grade has a plus, an average, and a minus.  But not F.  I mean, if you've got red ink all over your paper, and a gigantic F circled in red at the top of the page, what further harm could you do to a kid by adding a plus or a minus?  Really, like little Johnny isn't going to be upset at getting a F already?  Inflict some more trauma on the kid!  Or, give him a reason to hope by tossing a plus sign on there.  Give him a reason to aim for that D!  Am I the only one who thinks this way?  I am?  Figures.

* CB Javier Arenas: D.  Is in over his head as a starter, and provided virtually nothing in the return game.  Remember folks -- this is what we got for Tony Gonzalez.  Anyone happy about that deal still?

* CB Neiko Thorpe: B-.  Showed potential at times.  Saved the only game the Chiefs won in regulation with a late interception.  Should be a solid third down nickel / dime corner next year, as he was this year.

* S Eric Berry: B.  Was a bit timid early on, but can you blame him?  I don't.  By the end of the season, he was again showing his Pro Bowl form from his rookie season, and had put the effects of the knee injury behind him.  I am looking forward to seeing a healthy Eric Berry on the field come September.

* S Tysyn Hartman: A-.  I like this kid.  Showed some good flashes this year.  Plus, if that isn't the most f*cked up spelling of Tysyn any of us have ever seen, I can only cringe in horror, at what a worse spelling of Tysyn, would look like.

* S Travis Daniels: C.  A perfectly league average safety.  He's not gonna win a game for you, but he's not gonna lose one for you either.  Every team needs at least two of these guys in their secondary.

* S Abram Elam: C.  Another perfectly league average safety.  And since I have nothing else to say here, let me say that I had to look up whether he was black or white.  There aren't a whole lot of players, you have to do that for, anymore.  (Pause.)  Wait, what?  (Pause.)  Oh come on!  That was not racist! 

* The Grades: Special Teams.

* LS Thomas Gafford: A+.  I don't recall a single botched snap on a field goal or a punt this year.  And God knows Mr. Gafford had plenty of chances in the punting game, to screw the proverbial pooch.

* PK Ryan Succup: F.  Had the worst season of his career, missing nearly 30% of his kicks, becoming wildly inconsistent inside of 40 yards out, and had a couple costly misses (vs Falcons, at Steelers) that swung those games against the Chiefs.  Let's do better next year, ok, Mr. Irrelevant?

* P Dusty Colquitt: A+.  The cynic in me would note "well he should -- he had a boatload of practice!" to the suggestion that this was Dusty C's best season to date.  And with nothing else to add, seriously guys -- how ridiculously loaded is the AFC West at the punting position?  You can make the legitimate argument that the four best punters in the league, all reside inside our division (Dusty C with the Chiefs, britton colquitt with the broncos, shane leckler with the raiders, Mike Scifres with the Chargers).

* The Grades: Coaches.

(Not for the faint of heart).

* Offensive Coordinator Brian Daboll: F.  From baffling play calls, to an outright refusal to coach to his team's strengths, Mr. Daboll's year with the Chiefs will go down as one of the worst coaching efforts in franchise history.  I honestly -- (joe biden voice) Folks?  I honestly cannot recall a single game plan this year that I didn't have an issue with, save for the first preseason game.  And in the words of "The Voice of Reason": it's preseason!  (My God, remember how optimistic everyone was after that preseason opener?  Talk about a cocktease.)  This is normally where I would note that "his replacement cannot possibly be worse ...", but that's what I said about Bill Muir in 2011, and Holy Mary mother of God, his replacement was worse.

* Offensive Line Coach Jack Bicknell, Jr.: B.  The Chiefs line had serious injury issues, but for the most part, they kept the quarterback upright (which may or may not have been a good thing), and there's no question -- (allard baird voice) no question! -- that the run blocking was amongst the league's best.  Bumped up a full letter grade for having to deal with and coach the biggest asshole this franchise has ever allowed to wear the Red and Gold (I'm looking at you, Mr. Winston.) 

* Quarterbacks Coach Jim Zorn: C-.  For on-field production, he deserves a F minus ... but for God's sake, look at what he had to work with!  To plagarize a line from Rick Pitino back in the day: "Trent Green or Len Dawson ain't coming through that door".  Not even the best offensive coordinator in the league (and for my money, that's Jay Gruden of the Bengals) could have won more than 5 games with this steaming pile of doggie doo doo.  He'll land on his feet, and probably succeed; Zorn's a good coach caught in an impossible situation last season.

* Wide Receivers Coach Nick Sirianni: F-.  Should have been purged at the bye week.  Granted, some of it is on the quarterback play, but every single receiver regressed this year.  Even last year, with Tyler Palko and Kyle Orton (who had no time to learn the playbook) under center, Jon Baldwin had made some improvement by the end of the year, and Steve Breaston was making a significant contribution to boot.  This year?  Breaston went "Where's Waldo" on us, Baldwin was about as effective as a condom Antonio Cromartie would use, and Dwayne Bowe had all but disappeared from relevance. 

* Offensive Quality Control Coach Jim Bob Cooter: A+.  Come on, there is no way I'm giving anything but an A to a dude named "Jim Bob Cooter".  And yes -- he really was our Offensive Quality Control Coach last year, he does exist.  Just like Rusty Kuntz actually exists.

* Tight Ends Coach Bernie Parmelee: F.  Bernie Parmelee is to quality coaching, what I am to sobriety.  He should have stuck with his UPS delivery day job*.

(*: in case you've forgotten -- the Dolphins signed him to be their running back in 1993, when he was working as a UPS delivery guy.  That might be the best move their franchise has made in twenty years; Parmelee was a decent back for a solid four or five seasons.)

* Assistant Head Coach / Running Backs Maurice Carthon: B+.  You can question damned near every position's result you want ... but the running game is one of two areas on this team, that performed at or above any reasonable expectations.  He'll be the one departing member of this coaching staff, that I am sorry to see go, and that will be difficult to replace with an upgrade.

* Defensive Coordinator / Linebackers Coach Gary Gibbs: A.  Linebacker was the other position on this team that met or exceeded expectations.  I thought Mr. Gibbs did an outstanding job as well when he took over as defensive coordinator at the bye week.  This was a vastly improved defense the last two months of the season, save the season finale, when everyone had already mailed it in -- they nearly won in Pittsburgh, gave denver all it could handle, shut down Cam Newton, and nearly sprung the upset of the Colts.  I am extremely pleased that "Fat" Andy Reid has retained Gary Gibbs as linebackers coach.

* Defensive Line Coach Anthony Pleasant: C.  The line was at least average, which by 2012 Chiefs standards, is Canton-esque.  Still, with not one, not two, but three top 11 picks from the last four years starting or seeing significant playing time, average is an unacceptable outcome.

* Defensive Backs Coach Emmitt Thomas: B+.  Given the alarming number of first and second year players he was forced to employ due to injury, release, and lack of depth, Mr. Thomas worked a minor miracle this year.  Like with Gary Gibbs, I am very happy that "Fat" Andy Reid retained Mr. Thomas in this position.  (That, and because I also hate to see former Chiefs players who return to coach with the team, essentially get fired a second time from the organization.)

* Defensive Quality Control Coach Otis Smith: A.  I didn't notice any equipment malfunctions, any missing helmets or pads, a lack of towels or Gatorade, so he did his job.  Plus, I love the name Otis.  We need more people named Otis in this world.  And Ralph.  I love the name Ralph too.

* Defensive Assistant / Assistant Linebackers Coach Anthony Zimmer: A.  The position didn't suffer one bit after Gary Gibbs assumed the coordinator's role, and that's a tribute to Mr. Zimmer.  Hopefully he lands on his feet with a quality organization; he's got a future in this league, based on the last two months of this season.

* Special Teams Coach Tom McMahon: C.  Half of the unit's responsibility (punting and coverage of said punt), he earns an A+ for.  Dusty Colquitt and crew turned in a season for the ages.  But half of the unit's responsibility (returning kicks and punts; field goal attempts), he earns a F for.  So I split the difference and gave him a C.  Mr. McMahon will not be returning in 2013; it's probably for the best.

* Strength and Conditioning Coach Mike Clark: F.  Every position, save for running back, had someone suffer a disasterous injury this year.  While some of them were unavoidable despite the best training regimen, this part of the team simply did not deliver the goods this year.

* The Grades: Head Coach.

* Head Coach Romeo Crennel:

This is going to be the toughest grade to decide, and the hardest review to write.  Seriously.

Mr. Crennel is arguably the worst head coach in franchise history.  (It's him or Frank Gansz Sr.)  Most everyone -- myself included -- thought this was a bad hire from the beginning, and ripped it early and often.  And as the incompetence shone through each week, and each defeat got worse, and the anger grew, and Mr. Crennel stood at the podium claiming that he "didn't understand" why things were collapsing around him, I turned on him in a way that I've never turned on a Chiefs coach before.  I resorted to calling him Coach Baffoon -- and purposely misspelling buffoon, because I didn't want to insult legitimate buffoons.

I openly questioned, both on this site and in casual conversation, how in the hell this owner, this general manager, this team -- how any of them could not fire Mr. Crennel at the bye week.  Six weeks into the season, and the Chiefs had yet to hold a lead for even a second, had lost four games by double digits (Falcons, Bills, Chargers, Falcons Bucs), and if something drastic didn't happen pretty f*cking fast, it wouldn't be just Romeo who paid the price with his job.

I even contemplated resurrecting something for the Bengals game that I hadn't done since the dark days of 2007 -- buy a pinata, print off a large Romeo Crennel head, slap it on said pinata, and hang it up on the tree at our tailgating spot, to let the masses know what you thought of Romeo.  (Hey, I lynch a donkeys doll for every home game.  I have serious anger management control issues when it comes to the Chiefs.)

But still, no matter how ugly it got, Mr. Crennel had one last chance to redeem himself -- November 25th.  Circle the wagons and beat the broncos at Arrowhead.  I am the person who has noted on more than a hundred occasions that "I can live with 1 and 15 every year, so long as the 1 is denver at Arrowhead" ... and I actually do mean that.  Obviously, it's not what I would want, but if the Chiefs are destined to suck, then for God's sake, at least beat the My Little Ponies at Arrowhead.

It didn't happen. 

This is how I opened the recap to the broncos game:




I was absolutely convinced -- beyond the shadow of all doubt -- that there was nothing, not one God damned thing, that Romeo Crennel could do, to salvage anything than the most scathing and insulting of grade and review, in this post after that defeat.  He was destined for the most hate-filled, angry diatribe I've ever posted on this site, and I remind you -- I have posted the recap of both the Ravens defeat in 2006*, and the victory over the Rams in that same year, on this site ... and neither is exactly a complimentary piece towards the intended targets that day (Herm Edwards in the Ravens piece; the CBS broadcasters in the Rams piece).

(*: I thought the Ravens recap was posted.  I'll have to search the archives for it, and if it didn't post, I'll find it in my old sent emails and post it.  Trust me -- it's a Stevo meltdown for the ages.) 

And then came the morning of December 1st.

9:32am.

I was sitting in bed, watching a "Law and Order" rerun, scrolling through my friends' Facebook statuses from the night before, when my phone started going berserk.  First, my brother: "Get on Twitter.  Now!"  Then friends various texts: "Hey, what's going on at Arrowhead?"  "Did you hear a player's dead?"  "What the hell do you know about this Chiefs player killing himself?"

And as the initial sorrow, turned into outrage, and then grief, suddenly football seemed as trivial as it actually is.  I'll be honest -- I was in the group of fans that did NOT want to play the next day.  Partly out of respect for what happened, but (and if I am one thing, it's always brutally honest about how I feel about something) because from a selfish standpoint, this was the one truly winnable home game on the schedule (the only other one left was the Colts), and I had no desire to go 0-8 at home.  I knew -- I just knew -- there was no way in hell the Chiefs would be ready to play that game, barely 24 hours after their teammate killed his fiance in front of their daughter and his mother, and then killed himself in front of his position coach, the GM, and Romeo himself.

Instead, what transpired is, simply put, the most amazing coaching performance I have ever had the pleasure and the privilege to witness live.  And the most meaningless, pointless, absolute "I don't give a sh*t about it" Chiefs game of my life.

On the basis of on-field performance, Romeo Crennel should be given an F, and he should be sued for every cent of compensation provided to him for his on-field "coaching" this season.

On this site?  I'm gonna do something I rarely do: I'm going to act like a typical Barack Obama supporter.  I'm going to grade Mr. Crennel based solely on emotion and feeling, rather than fact, logic, or reason.

Don't get used to it.

Grade: A+.

* The Grades: General Manager.

* General Manager Scott Pioli.

This one?  Much easier to write.  Mr. Pioli failed at nearly every aspect of his job.  Save for linebacker and place kicker, this franchise is infinitely worse at every single position upon his departure, than it was upon his arrival.  He turned off half the fanbase with his prick attitude, and he turned off the other half with his incompetence.

Rany Jazayerli put it best: fans will support a jerk who wins, or a lovable guy who loses.  They will never support a jerk who loses.

Bango.

Grade: F.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

chiefs! colts! where stevo on bended knee, ring in hand, happens ...


“I let ‘em in! I --
Oh man, I let ‘em win.
I’ve burned my house down,
Just to hear them scream my name.

I carried hopes,
And heavy daydreams,
She said, but
I’m done with sleeping.

Take the phone calls!
Take this circus!
Take the drama, ‘cause baby
It’s, it’s just – it’s worthless.

This modern love?  Is not enough!
She said, watch your back,
Cause I’m nobody’s girlfriend.
This modern love?  Is not enough!
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh!
They said one big exhale
Never did me no good …”


--------------------------------------

And that … for all intents and purposes, closes out the worst season in franchise history, an absolutely disgraceful 20-13 defeat to the Colts, as the Chiefs become the first team in NFL history to rush for 350 yards in a game, and lose.  And hell, they didn’t just lose – they never led.

Was this season worth it?  Of course not.  The Chiefs lost by 14 or more points in at least half their games, regardless what happens in denver next week.  (The roll call?  Falcons (16), Bills (18), Chargers (17), Bucs (28), Chargers (18), Bengals (22), Browns (23), raiders (15).  Oy.)  Our bitter rival is one very doable combination of games (Colts win at home, donkeys win at home) away from having home field advantage throughout the playoffs, from entering the postseason on an eleven game winning streak … and keep in mind, the Chiefs haven’t won 11 games in a season, period, in a freaking decade.  Hell, if you combine the last two Chiefs seasons?  The best we can do, is 10 wins.

We’ve endured a season where both quarterbacks have been benched for the other, and yet the third option, the only option this current regime drafted?  Can’t get on the field.  We’ve wasted one of the greatest seasons at the running back position ever submitted (by Jamaal Charles).  And sadly, we’ve seen human waste at it’s most ugly and brutal, via the murder / suicide by Chiefs LB Jovan Belcher.

The Chiefs have at least five games (out of fifteen so far) in which we’ve failed to score an offensive touchdown: Ravens (two field goals), Bucs (one defensive TD, one field goal), Bengals (two field goals), broncos (three field goals), and raiders (no points period).  Throw in two more games in which our only touchdown came in garbage time while trailing by at least 17 points (vs raiders, at Chargers), and literally, in half the games we played this season, we had no chance to win from the opening kickoff.

The Chiefs had the lead in exactly five games this season: at Steelers (for 21:21 of the first half), vs Bengals (for 5:40 in the first quarter), vs broncos (for 26:56 in the first three quarters), vs Panthers (for 7:56 of the first half, and incredibly, all 30:00 of the second half), and at Browns (for 15:08 of the first and second quarters).  That’s it.  Out of 908:33 of football the Chiefs have played in the 2012 season, they’ve led for … wait for it … 107:01.  Out of 908:33.  I think my four year old nephew’s pony league soccer team managed more lead time this fall, than the Chiefs did.

And yet, I know that when the season dawns anew come next August … I’ll still be there, still clinging to my blind, delusional faith that this is the year.

Because no matter what Clark Hunt and his clueless ownership gives us, there’s one thing they cannot take from us.  There’s one thing they cannot destroy, and that is the special, amazing relationships that being a paying customer of his broken franchise has given to myself, and so many of you who read this every week for my take on what happened.  There’s something to be said, for knowing that every week, the same people will be lined up at the gates at 7:30 right along with you, ready to head in and make a day of it.  There’s definitely something to be said for the people I’ve sat by for well over a decade now (even if I did have to sneak down this year from my relocated seats.) 

That’s what I will remember the 2012 Chiefs season for.  Much like how I will remember all of 2012.  In my personal life, this year revealed more than any other who my true friends are, and thank God I surrounded myself with so many amazing people.  I feel that way about my Chiefs family as well.  I love that Chris can yell out “(Insert QB Here)’s Pass”, knowing I’ll immediately scream “was IN!  COM!  PLETE!”, and Ray will drop the “waa waa waa waa!” line from the single most annoying, yet fun to do, chant in professional sports.  Only three of us rode out on the Bus today.  Yeah, the core group has somewhat fallen apart as this abortion of a season has unfolded.  

But by 10am?  There were almost 30 people there, marveling in amazement that our group, our tailgating spot, our Bus -- us! -- were going to be featured on an episode airing in mid-January of “Ultimate Tailgaters” on the Travel Channel.

Oh, and by 3pm, a mere five hours later? 

I was engaged.

(cue every reader spitting out his adult beverage at reading that).  Wait, what?!?!?!  Are you … WHAT?!?!?!

What can I say -- sometimes?  This “modern love” is enough.  

And one big exhale can do you some good!

(cue every reader slapping themselves stupid) WHAT?!?!?! 

As always, the answers lay inside the recap, about to unfold below …

* Only three of us rode out Sunday morning.  We left a little bit before 7am.  And for the first 40, 45 minutes in front of the gates, it was a perfectly normal morning – we got stuff ready for the tailgate, played some music, finished putting songs onto the iPod for the day, enjoyed a libation or three.  And then, right as I started to open the door to head down and secure our usual spot, a very nice lady named Cecilia asked if we would mind if she and her recording crew filmed us once we got set up.  We had no idea who it was for, but hell – we’re the folks that Justin Robinson targeted for the better part of a decade for his live reports on Channel 9 every gameday morning, because he knew he could mooch a couple donuts and some spiked hot chocolate from us.  What’s one more camera?  All I knew was, they kept referring to filming us for “the show”.  OK, whatever.

* So we get set up, and we made sure to get everything perfectly laid out (if you’ve ever tailgated with us, you know the table area is usually a complete f*cking catastrophe, stuff everywhere, no rhyme or reason to it whatsoever), and this Cecilia chick and her crew show up about 8:30am.  And for the next 90 minutes, myself, Russ, Mona, and (eventually) Ray, were filmed to be on the show “Ultimate Tailgaters”.  They were meticulous.  (Note to self: good job, Stevo, on not drinking screwdrivers early today!)  They asked a ton of pointed questions.  We even had to do a couple takes on our answers at times.

(cecilia and someone on her crew.  pic: me, via my snapp camera.)

They filmed everything, and I mean everything.  Russ gave them a full on tour of every aspect of the Bus.  They filmed every corner of our tailgate.  Those of you who know me best, know I am camera shy.  I hate being the center of attention.  But today?  I loved it.  I got to represent the team I love, and the thing I love (tailgating) more than anything that isn’t a human being, and I think I did a damned good job in doing both.

(the ultimate tailgaters camera guys.  pic: me via my snapp camera).

I just can’t wait to see how they botch the spelling of either (or both) my first and last names**.

The three highlights:

(1) Having to sign a release form.  I felt like I’d arrived.  It had to be the first time in my life I’ve signed a release form, that either wasn’t (a) to a bail bondsman, or (b) to release me from some penal system on my own recognizance.  Honestly, it was kind of surreal – the legalese on these things is ridiculous. 

(2) the mic / sound boom.  The way they set up the filming, you honestly felt like you were in a studio.  They had the boom mic, complete with shag carpeting cover.  Insane.  And

(3) I wore the mistletoe today (and it worked spectacularly well!  Visual evidence ahead!)  And then realizing about ten minutes after Cecilia and her crew left … that I’ll now be “that tool” who’ll be on national TV next month, wearing a damned clove of mistletoe on his head.  As Ray put it, “well, at least there’ll be no doubt which one is you!”  As I responded, “yeah – I’m the asshat wearing a f*cking flower on my head!”  (Laughs all around.) 

From what we were told, the episode will air Conference Championship weekend on the Travel Channel (which would be January 18-20, 2013), so check your local listings.  (Note to self: confirm I actually get the Travel Channel.)

(**: I had the same English teacher my sophomore and senior year in high school.  Hell, I was the damned editor of the yearbook under her watch my senior year, for crying out loud … and she misspelled BOTH my first AND last name EVERY.  FREAKING.  DAY.  (peter griffin voice) Cracked.)

* the only drawback to filming?  Of COURSE they arrived right in the middle of “One Toke Over the Line” by Brewer and Shipley.  For filming’s sake, they requested we pause the stereo until they were done.  So we got the first chorus and verse … and then had to wait 90 minutes for the finish.  (dusty voice) oh come on Stevo, you’ve never taken 90 minutes to finish anything (rimshot!) 

* The rest of tailgating started uneventfully … until “The Crush” and her crew showed up.  And Good Lord, did they show up.  I’m honestly not certain which “picture” her sister posed for was my favorite: either (a) humping the parking cone, or (b) drinking out of a strategically placed beer bottle on the dude with her.  I lean (a), it was laugh out loud funny.  But (b) brought the house down.  I love drunk people who have no inhibitions.  (dusty voice) Of course you do Stevo – it’s the only way you get any (rimshot!)  Oy.

* Shocking development – I actually got a $20 for my extra today!  Dr. Frank was going to use it, but had something come up last night and had to bail.  So this guy comes strolling through the tailgate while Cecilia and her crew are filming, asking for a ticket.  This was our conversation:

(random dude) any of you guys have an extra?
(stevo) (seeing an opportunity to get beer money) I do!
(random dude) how much?
(stevo) how much are you willing to pay?
(random dude) how much do you want?
(stevo) (knowing I’d accept $0.00) how much are you offering?
(random dude) I won’t go above $20.
(stevo) (a little too enthusiastically) SOLD!!!  (happily reaches in wallet and hands him STH card).
(random dude) (hands over $20)
(random dude) (light bulb comes on)
(random dude) you’d have just given this to me, wouldn’t you?
(stevo) nah.  I’d at least have asked you to say “thank you” for the privilege of watching the Chiefs play.
(random dude) (best one liner of the day) I’d rather give you the $20.

I love people that are total smart asses.

* Upset of the day?  No vodka.  Thankfully “The Crush” had a bottle.  Seriously, I had almost nothing to drink yesterday.  I had three spiked hot chocolates in the first three hours I was there, then two mimosas over the next 90 minutes, and I had two Pale Ales during the game.  That’s usually my 8-9am menu on most gamedays. 

* “The Voice of Reason” was there, and the highlight of his weekend, according to him?  Was finally getting a legitimate night’s sleep last night, probably for the first time since his daughter was born four months ago.  Reason Numero Uno why I’m never having children: I need to sleep in until at least 5:15 every morning.  This 3am feeding / diaper changing crap is NOT for me.

* Forgot to mention, the funniest thing from our fantasy football season, well other than my sad ass roster, is that when “The Voice of Reason” (who’s our league commissioner) sent out the “you still need to pay” email, for the first time in pushing a decade, I was amongst the “already paid” column … as was Jasson.  We’re usually the last two to pay, under the whole “well, if I win more than I owe, I never have to write the check” theory.  team tito version 1.0 went 3-11 this year.  I wasn’t winning anything, other than the toilet bowl trophy that I’ve argued for a decade should go to the last place team.

* The last song to play before we shut the tailgate down?  “Dancing on the Ceiling”.  I knew right then and there we weren’t winning today.

* Oh – proof the mistletoe worked:

(admit it, any ladies reading this: you are so effing jealous of "the crush" right now, I'm that damned sexy.  pic: megan's sister jenny, via my snapp camera.)

* Don’t have much to say about the game, honestly.  Quinn’s pick six was one of the five worst throws I’ve ever witnessed in person.  I have absolutely no idea who or what he saw when he threw that ball.  On the Chiefs next possession (or maybe it was their second possession after the pick six), Quinn missed a layup screen pass to Charles that would have been a touchdown.  There was noone in front of him.  Quinn overthrew him by six yards … ON A SCREEN PASS. 

Quinn had 3 INT’s, and a horrendous non-convert on 4th and 1.  Jamaal Charles had 210 plus yards, true … but one killer fumble lost, and a second that was clearly a fumble, yet Ron Winter’s crew stupidly ruled him down by contact.  Jon Baldwin had one good play, a 57 yard gain in which he was so wide open, I’d have had a 60/40 shot at making the catch, and there’s a reason why this site used to refer to Samie Parker as “Hands of Steve” – because I suck at catching the ball.  Ryan Succup missed yet another makeable field goal (although to be fair … well, hell, there was no wind in there today.  Missing from 43 is inexcusable in weather conditions like today.)  Even Dusty C had a couple brain fart punts.  Terrence Copper damned near got decapitated returning a kickoff.  Devon Wylie has no business returning punts. 

I counted at least four “Stanzi!” chants, and seriously, what possible reason is there to NOT play Stanzi?  Let’s say Stanzi is as sh*ttacular as he appears to be.  SO WHAT?  You need one more loss to clinch the first number one overall pick in franchise history!  If Stanzi is WORSE than Quinn and Cassel?  Then get his ass out there!  This is all about Tankapalooza 2012 now!

* My five favorite Tweets / texts during the Chiefs game:

5. Forget who tweeted this, but showed it to everyone in 132 to laughs all around.  “Today, we have replaced the Kansas City Chiefs with Folgers Crystal coffee.  Let’s see who can tell the difference …”

4. From @HisDirknesS, who’s a big Arrowhead Pride contributor: “Halftime bong hits!”, when asked how to cope with the first half.  Brought 132 down in laughter.  And made me wish said bong hits were readily available.

3. Me to Damien, when he noted that if we had anything under center, we’d be up 31-3 entering the fourth quarter: “You would be an upgrade right now, and I’m accounting for the 11 Coors Lights you’d have already had.”

2. From @SaveOurChiefs: “The Chiefs are now the first NFL team to ever lose after gaining more than 350 yards in rushing.”  Impressive!  But by far and away my favorite:

1. From Gary Lezak: “This is the best Chiefs game in over a year.  They are playing so hard.  This is fun to watch.”

Now, in fairness to Mr. Lezak, who is a long-time season ticket holder over in 130 … dear God Gary.  Have you lost your freaking mind?  What exactly was “fun” about watching the Chiefs thoroughly whip up on the Colts in every way, other than the one that matters (scoreboard)?

* But in a season this ridiculous, this outrageous, this over the top … of course, it couldn’t end there.

Because there were three more impressive things that happened in the fourth quarter today, all three of which I’d never witnessed, or been a participant to, before.

First, some dude four rows in front of us, was so drunk, that emergency assistance had to be called.  And he literally was carried up the aisle between 131 / 132 on a stretcher.  I mean, I recall a KU Football game a few years ago, when a sorority girl was so drunk, that emergency personnel each grabbed a limb and helped her out, but never a stretcher.

Second, KC Wolf helped some dude propose to his girlfriend in 131 at the end of the third quarter.  Yes, let that sink in – a freaking mascot helped a dude propose to his girlfriend, at a Chiefs game, at the end of the worst season in franchise history.  Now, considering that up to this moment in time, I have never been party to a marriage proposal?  I’m just guessing that having a NFL mascot that looks like a rat / mouse* hybrid posing as a wolf, would NOT be how I’d want said proposal to go down.

(*: the neat Colts fans who sat behind me, the guy’s girlfriend or wife, couldn’t figure out what the hell KC Wolf was supposed to be.  “Whatever that is, it ain’t a wolf!”  We finally settled on a rat / mouse hybrid.)

I wasn’t the only one who felt that way.  “The Crush”, who sat next to me all day, and the nice Colts fan behind us, get into a solid ten minute conversation over how NOT to propose.  Needless to say, neither one was a fan of what we witnessed.

Which set in motion, THE intentional comedy moment of a lifetime.  Namely, as Megan was going off about how crappy this proposal was, and how she’d never say yes to any proposal made in that manner …

(mona) you have to!
(stevo) (thinking the same thing) oh hell yes!
(stevo) (light bulb turns on) but I need a ring!
(chris) here!  (hands me the gorgeous gold band with diamond set ring on her finger)
(stevo) well, the worst she can do is say no!
(ray) (playing the dusty role) wouldn’t be the first time you’ve heard that word!
(entire section) (laughs all around)

So I wait for my moment, and after Megan ends her fifteen minute diatribe (and it was a SOLID fifteen minutes) … she finally pauses for a moment, and then grabs me by the shoulder and goes “you agree with me, right Steve?”

Which led to this:

(stevo) of course I do!
(stevo) (hits his knee)
(stevo) hey, honey?  I got something to ask you.
(megan) (in utter shock)
(stevo) (extends ring) uuh … chica?  Will you marry me?
(megan) yes!  yes! 
(megan) (literally knocks me three seats over with a massive hug)
(megan) (plants long kiss on me)

So let me put this in perspective.  The girl I’ve had a massive crush on since the first time I ever laid eyes on her, at a preseason game against the Dolphins in 2007 … has just said “yes!” to my offer to be Mrs. Stevo!!!  Now, granted, it wasn’t a serious proposition*, but still.  Which led to arguably the best one liner of my life:

(megan) but I haven’t even met your mom!
(stevo) oh, she’ll love you.  She’ll love you! 
(megan) really?
(stevo) sure!  She can have a true Christian wedding this way!  Because we haven’t even had sex yet!
(everyone) (laughing their asses off)
(stevo) uuh, that was a hint, chica.
(megan) it’s not happening, Ste --
(stevo) damn.
(megan) – vo!  Today anyways.

(*: yeah, right.)

And that, peoples and peepettes, is about as damned perfect of a finish to this disaster of a season, that can be dreamed up: “The Crush” says “yes!” to being Mrs. Stevo … but without the funnest part of a committed relationship ... or a random "why not" ending to a Friday night at the Eclipse.  Oy.   I swear.

* The rest of the game, as predictable as possible.  The Colts score with four minutes to play.  The Chiefs go three and out, then give up a 3rd and 12 to seal the defeat at the two minute warning.

* Postgame, not much to report.  We actually got out of the stadium within about two minutes of getting back to the Bus.  First game all season we haven’t had to take the back way home – 40 was wide, wide open all the way to Sterling.  And thus concluded yet another season of the home portion of Chiefs tailgating and football.  

One game to go, and just like last year's finale, we're reduced as Chiefs fans to rooting for a bad football team to roo-een denver's postseason plans.  I am going to try to have my Chiefs season ending grades, reflections, thoughts, and other assorted ramblings (as with past years) up by the end of next week.  I can’t promise much posting between now and then.  I am unfortunately dealing with some stuff at work (that’s noone’s fault) that has knocked my social life from “lame” to “non-existant” over the last month, and if anything, I envision things getting worse over the next four to six weeks.  And considering I worked for three hours on Christmas night, versus finishing this recap, that’s pathetic.

So until the next time we meet up, stay safe.  This season is all over, except for the consequences the architects of this abysmal failure have to face, hopefully starting Sunday night ...  

week twelve picks

The Statisticals. Last Week SU: 8-6-0. Season to Date SU: 98-62-1. Last Week ATS: 7-7-0. Season to Date ATS: 75-80-6. Last Week Upset / ...