Showing posts with label recap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recap. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

chiefs! jets! (tailgate!) curb stomp away! ...

“I’m gonna need you?
To raise your glass!
I don’t care what
You put in it.

Here’s to nights
That you can’t take back!
We live hard --
But we love to laugh!

We all thought that
We’d get rich fast;
Hop the plane out
For greener grass.

Found out the green?
Is cash –
And don’t compare?
To friends that last!

See, we won’t forget
Where we came from!
The city won’t change us!
We beat to the same drum!

No we won’t forget
Where we came from!
We beat to the same drum!
The same drum!

La da da da da da da!
La da da da da da doe!
It don’t matter where we from?
We always find our way back home!

La da da da da da da!
La da da da da da doe!
It don’t matter where we from?
We always find our way back home!

We always?
Find our way back home! …”


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Curb stomp.

According to that beacon of accuracy Wikipedia, a curb stomp is defined as “a form of assault in which a victim’s mouth is forcibly placed on a curb and then stomped from behind, cause severe injuries and sometimes death”.

Sadly, the sports world suffered two tragic deaths on Sunday.  Marlins ace Josh Fernandez died in a late night boating accident.  And The King, Arnold Palmer, passed away at the too young age of 87. 

But Sunday, at Terrorhead?

That was a curb stomping.  That was the most damned forceful performance I think I’ve ever seen a Chiefs defense put on, and folks, I’ve been going to games in that stadium since before I had a conscious memory.  Which come to think of it, might explain a few things about who and what I am.

The Jets had eleven possessions on Sunday.  They kicked three times to end them – one field goal, and two punts.

And normally, that’s a very good thing.  You want to kick as little as possible, if we’re being honest.  If you told me, for example, the Chiefs would have eleven possessions in a game, and only three would end with a kick, I’d think the Chiefs chances to win would be at least decent.  Because you’d expect at least a few of those other eight possessions to end with the Chiefs crossing the goalline, right?

Well, unfortunately for the Jets, those other eight possessions resulted in three fumbles (two recovered by the Chiefs), and six – SIX! – interceptions.  Also unfortunately for the Jets, two of those turnovers were taken to the house by the Chiefs.

The Chiefs accomplished this?  With their best defensive player out via injury, and with the front seven collecting exactly zero sacks.  No NFL game since 1986 had seen that many interceptions without a sack being recorded.  Sh*t folks, had the Chiefs forced one more turnover?  They would have tied the NFL record for most turnovers in a game.  (Anthony looked it up after turnover number seven.)

I noted in the predictions piece for this week that the Chiefs are going to get curb stomped in The Ketchup Bottle come Sunday night.  I might want to rethink that sentiment, given the outcomes of Sunday.

Because that, on Sunday, at Terrorhead?

The Chiefs delivered a curb stomping so violent and thorough, I honestly think the Jets will not recover from it.

That game Sunday, to quote one of my dad’s favorite, uuh, quotes?

“That was an ass kicking of Biblical proportions!”

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The Bus departed a little late, since we figured there was no way in hell there’d be enough people in line at 9am on a rainy, dreary, somewhat humid Sunday morning, to force the early-in gates to open even earlier than planned. 

And as usual, we were wr … wr … wr … possibly incorrect.

There were seven of us who rode out: myself, Russ and Mona, Anthony and Jaimmie, and Miranda, and Fran.  We got to Gate Seven a little before 9am … and the line was already backed up to Gate Six, to get in the early-in gate.  Donna, the nice lady who tries to keep everything organized in line (by confirming you do have an early-in parking pass) came by, knowing we do have said pass, exchanged pleasantries, and then said “there’s no way (the gate) won’t open by 9:30.  Line’s too long.”  This was at 9:08am.

So me, being the nice, decent dude I am approximately 2.46% of the time, did what any insane, irrational dude would do.  I grabbed my mimosa and began the walk to secure our spot … and to survey what the latest dumb f*ck parking setup the Chiefs have come up with looks like.

(Yo, Chiefs?  As I once again submitted in your STM Survey (maureen mcgovern voice) “the morning after”?  You want to seriously address and fix the parking issues you have?  Get a panel of 15-20 of us Season Ticket Members together in February – ideally one from each lot, with a few who park wherever – and let us fix it for you.  When in doubt?  Address the victim.  Because they’re f*cking tired of being victims.)

I headed down the hill through Gate Seven … and saw a parking attendant on a golf cart at the bottom of the hill, a couple law enforcement officials there as well, and as I approached our spot, I saw a new dude sitting on the rocks in the island, waiting to “help direct the flow of traffic”.

This, I thought?  Could not possibly be good. 

I, in hindsight?  Could not possibly have been more wrong.

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

When the early-in gate opened a little after 9:45am (earlier than the 10am early in posted time!), I approached the dude sitting on the rock in the island across from us.  The conversation as best I recall:

(me) hey.
(parking dude) hey.
(me) see that Bus coming down the hill? 
(me) (points at The Bus)
(parking dude) Yeah. 
(me) he’s hopefully going to be coming right here.  Then I’m going to pick up that cone, to let him pull into Lot G to turn around, so we’re headed out.  We’ll be on the grass over there (pointing to our spot).
(parking dude) Cool.
(me) Not going to be a problem?
(parking dude) Why would it be?
(me) because you see those (pointing to the port-a-potties)?
(parking dude) Yeah?
(me) because we’re about to move them.
(parking dude) OK.

And that is exactly what happened – The Bus went right past the golf cart parking folks, drove onto the grass, and I grabbed a cone to let Russ the Bus Man through into Lot G.  Anthony and I then moved the two port-a-potties down towards the dumpster (where they should be anyway), before moving a second cone to let The Bus pull into our usual spot.

And you know what happened after that?

Five f*cking hours of fun, that’s what.  Because nobody bothered us – or Roger’s crew next to us.  Nobody bothered the black bus to our left.  Nobody harassed the people entering.  Nobody stopped us from saving spots for Ron and Michelle, for some friends of Russ and Mona’s that came out, or for Brad – making his first appearance in nearly three years.

The parking attendants left us alone.

That, Kansas City Chiefs?  Is all we have EVER asked for!  Just leave us the f*ck aloneYou can steal our literal image and use it to sell your parking setup, without giving us a damned thing, and we’re cool with it.  Just leave us alone in return.

(Ours is the red bus on the right, with the green roof.)

If the parking setup Sunday is what we can expect going forward?

I’m perfectly fine with it.

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

We no sooner started unloading stuff, than … well …

(fran) what is that smell?
(me) (beyond excited)
(anthony) (beyond exited)
(me) I think we should go check it out, buddy!

Yup, the new neighbors in the black bus next door?  Like a medicially legal herbal product as much as I do.  And God bless, did it smell good.  And I mean good. 

If there’s one good thing about pushing 40, it’s that you just don’t give a sh*t about certain things now, one of those being propriety and decorum:

(me) can I hit it?
(dude next door named vince) depends. 
(me) on what?
(dude next door named vince) you got a Miller Lite?  My idiot brother forgot to buy some.
(me) I’ll be back momentarily.

And when I got back to The Bus:

(me) I need a couple Miller Lite’s please!
(jaimmie) already?
(me) yes, already!
(jaimmie) (realizes what I’m asking)
(jaimmie) but you don’t drink Miller Lite!
(me) just give me the damned bottles!

And with that, a truly “green” friendship was born, with the neighbors next door.  (sammy sosa voice) God bless America!  It’s a beautiful country!

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

We came so close.  So freaking close.

The Hy-Vee folks stopped by our tailgate a little before noon.  As I’ve mentioned before, our crew has won the Tailgaters of the Game twice before – Thanksgiving Night 2006 against satan’s squad, and a 2008 throwaway game against the Titans … when we probably won because we were like the only folks who showed up.  The group that tailgates next to us – Roger and his crew – won the honor in 2010 against (I think) the 49ers, and in 2014 against either the raiders or Chargers.  I just know it was f*cking cold when they won in 2014, so it had to be December.

Slacker (from 101 The Fox) recorded a commercial with us.  I know Ron got a video of it (I couldn’t; we use my iPhone for the music.)  According to Mr. Griffin, it aired on The Fox during the pregame.  (We’ve requested the .mp3 from them; it’s supposed to be emailed this week.  I’ll upload when / if it’s received.)  We also got a gift card from Hy-Vee that is either worth $10 … or $101 dollars.

We’ll find out Sunday what the value is, when buying the necessities for the Watch Party on The Deck, against my third most hated franchise in professional sports … and truth be told, I might hate the steelers, more than I hate the raiders.

(The winner on Sunday was a group farther down in Lot G … and we passed by them walking in.  They earned it.  No complaints; they had a rocking tailgate even I was jealous of.)

What I loved the most?  What made the Hy-Vee and 101 The Fox folks stop by and check us out?

Cinco Noose Donkey.

Or in the words of the Hy-Vee chick: “that … is awesome!”

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

My buddy Tim stopped by with his son, attending his first football game.  Jesus, it truly frightens me that someone my age has kids coherent and cognizant enough to understand football.  I’m only 39!  I’m too young for this!

For the record, his son and Anthony beat me and Miranda 21-16 at the bean bag game. 

And for the record, I scored 13 of our 16.

God bless, do I need Tyler to get healthy in a hurry.

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

Classic Speakers went over well … and man, did the new adapter work.  I guess going truly digital paid off, because we weren’t limited to the 88 and 107 channels.  Oh hell no!  We can now hijack any frequency not playing up and down the FM dial!

I admit, I had my doubts.  And one person (*cough Russ cough *) wasn’t exactly thrilled that bringing back Classic Speakers meaning bringing back the generator.  (In his defense, that is one heavy – and hot – bastardo.  My leg is still hurting from hitting it a few times.)

But sometimes?  You have to learn a valuable life lesson, one I wish a certain someone had realized four years ago – and honestly, this one should get Stevo Rule of Life designation status, it’s so obvious:

Don’t f*ck with what ain’t broken.

But if you are gonna f*ck with what ain’t broken?  Then make damn sure to at least Gorilla Glue the bastard back together, when you’re done f*cking with it!

I also gotta give a huge thumbs up to the new IOS 10.  Mixology now shows what is in the queue to play next!  There’s no more guessing, there’s no more “yeah, I swear, it’s like three songs away” lies that have to be told, to tailgaters wanting certain songs.  It shows what’s in the queue!  I think that’s cool.

The one funny moment from Mixology was when Jaimmie or Miranda (I forget which one) b*tched me out for not having “All I Do Is Win” in the rotation.  Which led to Anthony correctly reminding them that “he sent us the f*cking text asking what we wanted to hear on Tuesday!  You said nothing!  You can’t blame him for (your song not being there)!”

I hope the couch was comfortable dude.  I’m guessing you slept on it, after that response.

Now if we could just find a charcoal grill whose lid actually locks closed …

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

The menu adapted a bit because of some unforeseen stuff from Saturday.  I made the jalapeno poppers (and go figure – maybe two of those 150 plus survived the carnage), and there were brats, burgers and dogs.  But we also went with deli sandwiches you made yourself.  I went with my favorite, and I call it “The Stevo”.

“The Stevo” consists of the following (and I should note, I call it “The Stevo” not out of pure arrogance and a self-inflated sense of worth (although both apply to me) … but because the sandwich lady in the cafeteria at work (an awesome chick named Vickie, who doubles as the best damned barista I’ve had since college – seriously, I’m drinking caffeine again every Friday solely and only due to her coffee making skills), named it “The Stevo”, since I order it at least once a week … and damned if at least one other person in line behind me, doesn’t request the same thing, every single time.

Sh*t folks, even “Chairman Dao” gave it a try … and liked it!  And that man despises me like … well, like I despise him.  Anyways, here you go.

“The Stevo”:

* generous helping of roast beef.
* generous helping of turkey.
* generous helping of sharp cheddar cheese.
* NOT toasted.  (That’s the key, I think.)
* banana peppers – I prefer just a few, but you can never have too many, I think.
* tomato slices.  Total depends on how big a bun / hoagie you’re working with.
* spinach.  Because lettuce sucks.
* chipotle ranch dressing.  Although as I discovered Sunday, dijon mustard does the trick as well … just not as well, as chipotle ranch dressing.
* ideally fresh cracked pepper … but pepper in a shaker works too.
* and some green onions splashed on there to boot.

Piled on white bread.  Although I’ve settled for having one on a tomato, as well as a spinach, tortilla wrap … and I had no complaints on either one.  If anything, the wraps made “The Stevo” slightly better.  But I still prefer two gigantic Texas toast sized white bread slices.

Oh – and two pickle spears on the side, with those sea salt and vinegar chips that are so damned addicting, I think they’re a bigger health crisis than crack, meth, and heroin combined.

Tell me that isn’t one amazing sandwich.

Because I had to make it, for four – four! – different people on Sunday, they were so impressed, watching me make mine.

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

We broke down late from tailgating, because honestly, nobody wanted to leave, and people kept showing up.

I mentioned earlier that our buddy Brad (from Roger’s tailgate next door) made his first appearance in almost three years.  He looked … different.  Not in a bad way.  Just … settled.  I guess that’s a good word, settled.  And good for him. 

His dad Bruce, on the other hand, was far from settled.  He was embarrassed.  So embarrassed, he sent Roger over a little after 11am, to have this conversation:

(roger) So I need to ask a small favor.
(me) ok.
(roger) Did you bring any vodka?
(me) (literally crying from laughing so hard)
(me) yeah, we have some.
(roger) Bruce left his in the fridge in the garage.
(me) you need one bottle, or two?
(roger) You people bring that much?!?!?!

For the record, Bruce makes THE best Bloody Mary’s you will ever have.  It’s tradition – we head over with the stiffest mimosa’s you’ll ever have, and they offer us Bruce’s Bloody Mary’s in return, usually about 8:30 for a noon kickoff (in this case, 11am for a 3:30 kickoff). 

For some reason, I’m glad the Tito’s Vodka, finally made it into one of his Bloody Mary’s.

(Tito’s Vodka: the official vodka of Stevo’s Site Numero Dos!  (Pause).  What?  You’d expect ANYTHING else?!?!?! #teamtito)

Amongst the others to flow in on Sunday were Phil and the Bulance crew, our friends from St. Louis we met last week, and of course, “New Jersey Bob”, who literally flew in from, uuh, New Jersey, for this game, with his brother and his son, who I literally … I just have to admit it, I guess.

(me) holy f*cking sh*t!
(chase) what?
(me) Jesus f*cking Christ!
(chase) what?  What did I do?  I just f*cking got here!  I just wanted to have a fun da --
(me) no!  It’s nothing you did dude!  It’s just … are you Chadwick Pennington?
(chase) (laughing)
(chase) I get that a lot, actually.
(me) I so should have worn your jersey today.
(chase) Chase.  (extends hand for handshake).
(me) Stevo.  And hey – you aren’t fooling me, Chadwick!  (extends hand for handshake).

Folks, the kid looks EXACTLY like Stevo’s Site Numero Dos’ Official Favorite Quarterback of All Time, Sir Chadwick Pennington, who piloted the Jets from 2002-2007.  I asked Mona to send me the picture(s) she took of me and “Sir Chadwick”, as I took to calling Chase, so that I could post a picture.  The kid looks EXACTLY like my irrational man crush (NFL Edition) from the early 2000s. 

And yes – I do have a Chadwick Pennington jersey.  It is amongst my most priziest of prizy possessions, in my life.

If “priziest” and “prizy” are words. 

Which I guess they now are.

Also, we’re now “officially” on the hook, to go to the Chiefs / Jets game at the Fake Meadowlands next fall, to “return the honor of tailgating with you”. 

Jesus – next year the Chiefs have roadies at the Cowboys, Jets, “satan’s squad”, potentially Houston (we visit the AFC South team that lands in the same slot in the standings as the Chiefs), and possibly Las Vegas, when / if the “evil empire” moves.  (As well as the Giants, the Patriots, and wherever the hell the Chargers wind up calling home.)

And I’m still staring the trip to Sioux Falls for oakland in three weeks, the trip to Indy for the Colts in five, the trip to the eighth layer of hell itself in nine weeks for satan’s squad, and my cousin wants me to head south to Atlanta for that one in ten weeks, and I want to spend my 40th birthday on a beach in the southern-most part of California, for the Chargers to open 2017!

(Pause).

I’ll be living under a bridge in a worn out cardboard box, in barely twelve months, to make all that work financially …

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Since I prefer to let the professionals recap the game, while I give you the highlights you otherwise wouldn’t witness, I’m only going to mention two specific moments from the game itself.

1. My favorite, bar none moment, was Marcus Peters “pulling” DJ across the goalline on DJ’s pick six.  DJ has just outrun the entire Jets offense to rumble and stumble nearly sixty yards to the east end zone.  And as he gets to the 2, 1 ½ yard line, Marcus Peters grabs his jersey to help pull him in.  (jim mora jr voice) It was really neat!

2. About halfway through the first quarter, security makes their way to where I was sitting.  And once they reached where they were going, it made total sense.  The dude sitting across the aisle from me was passed out drunk, and I mean passed out.  As in “his neighbors were fearing he was dead” drunk.

The security dude shook him.  Tried tapping him.  Even semi-slapped him.  He wasn’t waking up … in any part of his body, except one.

Because no sooner did the attempt to wake him begin?  Then oh yeah, the steady stream of urination began.  Dude pissed himself wetter than a river.  There was a gigantic puddle underneath him, and his tan shorts were a lovely shade of watery.  (For those of you who wonder why I never wear anything but dark and/or heavily colored pants and shorts?  As always, I plan drunk!)

Needless to say, he didn’t witness any of the six interceptions the Chiefs participated in creating on Sunday.

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Not much to report from after the game.  We waited out the traffic, had another mini-tailgate, made it back to the Bus Barn about 7:30, just in time for kickoff in Dallas.  I was asleep by 9:30; I just don’t have the stamina I did ten, twelve years ago, to stay up for the prime time game after a day of tailgating and football viewing.  Does this mean I’m old?  I guess it does.

But hey.  At least no matter where I go?

I always find, my way back home.

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

And so, begins what might be one of – if not the – most pivotal weeks of the season.

Two credible Super Bowl contenders, duking it out on Sunday Night Football, in the most underrated rivalry that exists in the National … Football League.

If the Chiefs and Steelers both play like they did on Sunday?  The Chiefs will win this game, and it won’t be even remotely competitive.  Because the Chiefs curb stomped the Jets … and the Steelers got curb stomped by the Eagles.

And that’s why my belief entering last weekend, that Pittsburgh was going to once again, in the words of Clark Judge ten years ago, “use the Chiefs as their own personal urinal”, is being re-thought.  Who tore the Steelers a new one on Sunday?  Former Chiefs offensive coordinator / play caller Doug Pederson.  Who basically stole “Fat” Andy’s playbook and took it to Philly with him.

I’m really intrigued by this matchup on Sunday night.  Really intrigued.

Next post will probably be the picks.  There probably won’t be much to it; I have month and quarter end duties beginning Thursday, and my co-worker is spending month and quarter end on a cruise in the Caribbean.  (Which is great; she’s earned it.  God knows she covered my ass two of the last three years, as I ditched year-end duties to travel to Chiefs playoff games.)

I can tell you the Watch Party Plans are to be on the deck at Russ and Mona’s.  We’ll have plenty of food and booze; we’re gonna put the fire pit to use as well.  Should be fun.  Or at least mildly entertaining.

Plus, this is the only game this year we’re guaranteed to use The Deck for – we’re headed to Sioux Falls for the raiders game, to watch it with our raider friends on their turf (as we always do, and they always come here for the game as well), and I’m going to the game in Indy with (at least) Anthony.  The next roadie after that is Carolina in mid-November; it might be too cold to set things up outside by then.  And I’m planning to go to denver with the Springfield wing of our tailgating crew. 

So until next time – hey?


(sgt. esterhaus voice) Let’s be careful out there

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

chiefs! chargers! where the significance of my old buddy 13, finally hits home ...

“All my days are spent;
All my cards are dealt.
Oh, the desolation grows!

Every entry filled
As my heart is pierced.
Oh, my soul is now exposed!

In the oceans deep?
In the canyons steep?
Walls of granite?  Here I stand.

All my desperate calls?
Echo off the walls.
Back and forth, then back again.

To believe I walk alone?
Is a lie that
I’ve been told.

So let your heart hold fast –
For this soon shall pass!
Like the high tide?  Takes the sand! …”


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

“F*ck yeah!  F*ck yeah!  (Massive fist pumps!)”

OK, pop quiz time, readers and readettes.  Who reacted like that at 3:48pm CT on Sunday, September 11, 2016?  Was it:

a: Me, in stunned disbelief at the Chiefs 33-27 overtime victory over the San Diego “Super” Chargers
b: “House of Wings”, in stunned disbelief at Secretary Clinton collapsing during the 9/11 memorial in New York, turning an already bat sh*t crazy election even more bat sh*t crazy, a mere eight weeks out from Election Day?
c: Joel Goldberg enduring yet another Salvy Splash after a Royals victory
d: Alex Smith’s reaction to his game-winning touchdown being upheld by the booth?

The answer is d … although to be fair, b might be true as well.

But the one I can confirm is d, and I gotta admit, as that moment unfolded, as Alex Smith capped the greatest comeback in Chiefs history by punching it in the corner of the end zone I sit in, as he fist pumped his way around the lower bowl shouting “f*ck yeah!”?

I’ve rarely if ever been prouder of the leader, of the Right Fifty Three.

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

The Bus departed for the game at 6:10am exactly.  I know this, because I was there, along with Russ the Bus Man, Mona, Anthony, Jaimmie, Miranda, and “Tony and Lisa”, who came in from Omaha for the opener.

We got in the early in line at a little after 6:20am.  The line was already backed up out of Gate Seven, back onto Stadium Drive in both directions – back past Gate Six to the west, almost back to the new bridge over The Dred (aka I-70) to the east.  I headed down, unsure of what to expect.  My “highly placed confidential source”, the artist known as “Rufus”, had promised their edict for Sunday was to enforce the new tailgating regulations within the lots – namely, keep the aisles clear.  He assured me we would be left alone. 

I am happy to report that as usual, he was 100% right.

Here’s how improved the new setup is – we not only didn’t have to move one of the barriers out of the way to get The Bus onto Chiefs Way?

The side entrance to Lot G was unlocked!  We didn’t even have to move a cone and turn around!

We were set up and going by 6:45 yesterday morning.  And for the record, Lot G was filled in, front to where we tailgate at the back, by 8:50am.  Arrowhead Nation showed up en masse and in force for yesterday’s opener, and why wouldn’t we?  A perfect 80ish sunny day, not a cloud in the sky.

Exactly like Tuesday, September 11, 2001 was.

So, if I’m going to rip the Chiefs a new one for everything they do wrong (and don’t worry, we’ll get to a gigantic gaffe so impressive and indefensible, even Joe Biden * would be embarrassed), allow me to sing their praises when they nail it.

Job well done Chiefs.  You have fixed the parking disaster Steve Schneider unleashed on us fifteen years ago, and that you and the fine folks at the Jackson County Sports Authority have made worse every year since.  You have finally come up with a sane, competent layout that works well.  At least as far as my tailgating group is concerned.

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(*: I have been saying since last summer that Joseph Robinette Biden will be the forty fifth President of the United States.  Sunday, if anything, has definitely put that prediction well in play yet again.  Also, Stevo’s Site Numero Dos (and it’s writer) sends well wishes for a quick and speedy recovery to Secretary Clinton.  In the interest of full disclosure, Stevo’s Site Numero Dos – and Stevo – have strongly endorsed Secretary Clinton to be the next President of the United States.  But in the interest of fairness, even if “House of Wings” was ill, I’d at least send well wishes and positive thoughts.  Seems the morally right thing to do, irregardless of which side you support.)

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The first Brian Griffin Memorial “What the Hell?!?!?!” moment of the season: about 7am, we get the beer pong table out.

Me and Anthony versus Jaimmie and Miranda.

We put the Bud Light in our cups.  (And no, just because it’s in a Chiefs can, does not mean Bud Light is drinkable, likable, refreshing, and / or anything other than the worst beer ever made that doesn’t rhyme with “Mamm’s”.)

The girls put … water.  (brian griffin voice) What the hell?!?!?!  Their rationale: “we don’t really drink beer”.

Well fine then – give me what I’ve asked for, for (hang on, carry the nine) ten years now.  Let’s do vodka tonic pong!  Sh*t, let’s do mimosa pong!  I was slamming those bad boys yesterday ** for God’s sake!

Nope.  We had to slam the Bud Lights – win or lose; they got water.

Anthony and I won all three games against them.

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(**: should have opened with this: Russ and I made a liquor run to the HyVee on 350 on Saturday night.  I was told to “buy OJ and cheap champagne!”  (Hey, it is my one duty for tailgating, save for the music.  And yeah, we’ll get to that next.)

But anyway, after grabbing what counts (the whiskey), I head for the champagne section, and find something I have never seen before: 1.75ml bottles of champagne!

The cost?  $8.99 / apiece.

Given that OJ was on sale for $.88 / small bottle (is it a half gallon?  I never check.  I just know it wasn’t the gallon size), I made it out with essentially five bottles of cheap champagne, four thingies of OJ, and I barely pulled out two twenty's, to pay with.

That’s so indefensibly awesome, I honestly said “that’s shawsome!”, walking out the door, to describe that liquor purchasing experience.)

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So let’s address the Captain Oats in the room: the new speaker setup.

Because frankly, I owe each and every person there on Sunday, not just a personal, face-to-face, “dude I f*cked up, and I’m sorry” apology, but a public one as well.

Readers?  I f*cked up.  Royally.  And I cannot possibly apologize enough.

Because the one thing I didn’t test?

Was how loud the new speaker setup would be … with about twenty other speakers in range, of said speaker setup.

This change, quite frankly, was a screw up the likes of which the United States – if not the entire world – has not seen, since New Coke thirty years ago.

So just like Coke executives choked down the debacle and brought back the Classic formula?

I’m choking down the sound debacle, and bringing back the Classic (speakers).

Major thanks to my buddy “derek carr’s doppleganger”, for saving my ass with his portable Bose speaker.  It made the music almost listenable.

I truly, humbly, and profoundly apologize, for thinking I could improve, on what wasn’t broken.

And you have my promise: I will spend whatever it costs, to find a f*cking FM adaptor, and bring Classic (speakers) back, for the Jets game, and every game thereafter.

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Third funniest moment of the day – and remember folks: if you cannot laugh at yourself?  You have to brace for everyone else, laughing at you … because they’re going to anyway.

(And I should note up front: that this is only the third funniest moment of the GameDay experience?  Especially when you read numero dos below?  Is truly frightening.)

Recall the home opener against “those people” last year, there was a blonde chick who approached me, saw me opening a bottle of champagne, asked if she could have a glass, and given how freaking hot she was, I immediately ran onto The Bus, grabbed a cup, and poured her one?  And recall how she promised to return later in the season?  And recall how she noted “you’re so cute”?

Well, she returned on Sunday.  It turns out, her name is Lacey.  (Because of course smoking hot blonde girls are named Lacey.  (phil voice) Damned right they are Stevo!) 

She once again approached as I was cracking open one of those ridiculous sized bottles of champagne I purchased Saturday evening.  And the following ensued:

(lacey) Hi!  You’re Steve, right?
(stevo) Yeah.  (A rare moment of sanity – I know my name!)  Hey, I remember you!
(lacey) Yeah!  Funny we meet again in the exact same situation!
(stevo) Yeah, it is!  Coincidence, huh!
(stevo) (thinking privately “f*ck no it’s not”)
(lacey) Will you pour me a glass?
(stevo) Sure!
(stevo) (pours glass)
(lacey) Thanks!  (Obvious flirting move)  You’re still cute!  And you’re still nice! 
(stevo) (awkward) Thanks, but … I’m … kind of taken by a great girl I met this summer?
(lacey) (actually sounding legitimately … something) Really?  You’re taken by a girl? 
(stevo) Yeah, a really cool chick.  I even call her The Chica!  (Pause.)  Why?
(lacey) (yelling to her friend about ten feet away) You were right!
(stevo) (confused) Right about what?
(lacey) Oh, I thought you were gay.  (Her friend) thought you were straight.
(stevo) (speechless)
(stevo) (recovers) Well, did you at least wager on (my being gay or straight)?

There’s funny.  There’s damned funny.  And then there’s the “Stevo having the Seinfeld Memorial “not that there’s anything wrong with that” Misunderstanding Moment hysterical.

(She’ll be back for the raiders and “those people” games, at least.  This ought to be entertaining, at least, if not awesome.  Or shawsome.  (Pause).  Sh*t, five pages in Word in, and I’ve dropped shawsome twice!)

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

The menu was red-wine soaked Charger chicken, burnt ends from Gates, stuffed mushrooms left over from the pre-party the night before, a boatload of beer, a crapload of champagne, a healthy helping of vodka, and a lil’ thing I like to call the piece de resistance: jalapeno poppers.

I hope you enjoyed them.  I not only picked each and every one of those bastardos, and I not only sliced, diced, and cleaned each and every one of those bastardos (and there were over 150 of them), but I stuffed each and every one of those bastardos.  (Except for the 12-15 that were made OT Style; I had nothing to do with the creation of those.  That was all Nicole’s handiwork from two weeks ago.)

And it was in making those that the funniest moment of the weekend occurred, because like a blithering idiot, once I was done slicing, dicing, stuffing and mounting all those jalapenos, the frosty cold Coors Lights I was consuming during the process caught up to me.  So I went to use the facilities.

Before washing my hands.

Sweet merciful Lord Jesus.  So for all you kids out there, let Uncle Stevo teach you a valuable lesson.  Do not – I repeat, do NOT – hold anything in your crotchal region if you’ve just sliced up a ton of jalapenos.  Because your crotchal region will burn like a mo’ fo’ for at least the next six hours.

Needless to say, a lot of laughs were had at my expense.  And the best part?  My “secret ingredient” in the filling I make?

Crab meat.

(Cue the STD jokes in four, three …)

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

I really liked the folks from St. Louis who parked and tailgated next to us.  Nice people.  A dad, an uncle, and two what I thought were college aged kids.  Wound up throwing a few games of cornhole with them, before the two younger ones challenged us to beer pong.  Never one to back down from a challenge, I headed over to the table, started filling the cups, and the dad comes over and, well, this occurred:

(the dad) You do realize (my kid) is 16, right?
(stevo) (in genuine stunned disbelief) Really?  He looks like he’s 20!
(the dad) Nope, 16.
(stevo) (pauses) It’s still OK if he plays, right?
(the dad) Sure, why not.  Just be careful with him.  He’s new at (drinking).

I’ll let you people judge, who was the worser influence.

Oh, and don’t worry – The Kid isn’t finished appearing in this recap yet.

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

And after reading the post in its finalized version, I realized the funniest moment of the weekend, which involved The Kid, wasn't included ... because the ending of this post was too f*cking personal.

I emerged from "The Ending", goofy grinned faced, smiling like a kid who just got laid for the first time, and headed to The Bus.  I proudly shouted "I only want two things right now", which has always meant (a) "Dancing on the Ceiling" to be played, and (b) a cold beer in my hand.

The Kid?

Handed me a beer, then asked "hey, you smoke?", as he showed me a dugout.

Folks?  I'm done.

How the hell do we draft a sixteen year old to tailgate with us all year?  Because I want this kid back, stat!

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

The rest of the tailgate was pretty laid back.  Food was consumed.  Adult beverages were ponged, chugged, and yes, Drinko made its 2016 debut.  I dropped into Bud Light.  I think I now have yet another, in this year of never’s:

#nevertrump
#neverdenver
#NEVERbudlight

God that crap is, uuh, God awful.

All told, we had about 25 people flow through at one point or another, including the McFadden’s folks, who once again gave us a $200 gift card to use for a road game at their fine establishment.  I’m voting Steelers … but I’m betting Panthers.  As always, stay tuned.

We broke down a little bit after 11, after having the celebratory toast to the season to come.  Had a fun conversation with the ‘Bulance folks (Phil and his crew) headed in, and another celebratory toast to the season to come.  The lines to enter the HyVee Gate were, if anything, less slow than I expected.  The lines to purchase a beer once you got inside were, if anything, indefensible.

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

I did not notice the block letter “c” “h” “i” “e” “f” “s” in the east end zone for the pregame.  If they were there, then I totally either missed them, or arrived too late to see them.  I know for sure there were no balloons launched, and that infuriates me.  I can live with tradition being defecated on.  I mean, I look at seats where the legendary Tony DiPardo and the TD Pack Band played for decades, and write it off to “progress”.  I have to listen to whatever the hell The Rumble is disrupt tailgate after tailgate with their pointless and dumb ass drumming, and I write it off to (joe pesci voice) courting the utes amongst us.  I even accept that a Season Ticket Member sticker is not available this year because “the demand wasn’t there”, per my STM representative.  (The hell it wasn’t, Zach.  The hell it wasn’t.)

But once you screw with the balloon launch out of the little kid alphabet blocks, you cross a line, Chiefs.  I mean, Indy may not be able to offer “our good friend, Mr. Jim Nabors!” anymore, but not even Tony George is stupid enough to f*ck with launching more balloons than the Confederates launched cannons at Fort Sumter, when “I dream about the moonlight on the Wabash” hits the PA at about 10:52am on RaceDay morning.  That’d be as stupid as speaking through “Taps”.  Not even Colin Kaepernick would be that stupid.  (I think.)

I hated not seeing the balloon launch … and there’s no way it happened.  There was no wind whatsoever out there on Sunday; they would have hovered over the stadium, like the fireworks and smoke from the smoke thingies at the players entrance did.  Plus I was in my seat at 11:45ish.  The balloons would have launched about 11:50, 11:51, to keep the traditional schedule intact. 

Let’s hope the Chiefs are saving the balloon launch for the Jets game.  Or the raiders “Color Rush” game.  Or the game against “those people” on Christmas Night.  But please, Chiefs – give us a balloon launch.

Even the Royals stole how epic that thing is, to open their season, five months ago.

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

“This is the worst first quarter I’ve ever seen” – Anthony, in a text to me and Jaimmie, 12:42pm.
“Shittacular” – me, to Anthony and Jaimmie, in response to that text.
“I love that word!” – Jaimmie, in response to my response.
“I hate that word perfectly sums the last hour up” – Anthony, in response to that response.

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

So apparently, the computer system inside Arrowhead died at some point in the first quarter on Sunday.

I know, because after the Chargers punched their second score in to go up 14-3, I headed to my Chiefs Bar, to get a Coors Light.  Five possible checkout lines.  Only two were open.  And the guy in my line, kept heading over to the other register, to pay the tabs run up in his.

If you wanted to pay by anything but cash and/or sexual favors, you were screwed.  (And if you wanted to pay by sexual favors, you were screwed too (rimshot!))

I opened the game sitting in the seat I pay for, 339 / 11 / 1.  I actually don’t mind it; it’s pretty much right as you emerge from the tunnel, right above where I used to sit (and still do for most of the game, most of the games, 132 / 26 / 14.  This will factor into the finale, I swear.)  There’s a bathroom next to the tunnel, and a Chiefs Bar between the tunnels leading to 339 and 340.  It’s a perfect spot, right as you exit the spiral ramp up.

The Chiefs Bar didn’t have a working computer.  And neither did either food stand on the opposite side of the concourse.

I mean, are you kidding me? 

Or as Phil (the ‘Bulance guy, who sits two rows in front of my actual seat, and was in line with me) noted: “Hey!  How about you quit p*ssing away your money on parking sh*t, and fix your godd*mned computers!  How’s that for an idea, huh?”

I’d have worked a f-bomb in there … but that about summed up my thoughts.

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

“Please fix the score of your game!!  WTF is going on down there!??  I got $$$ on you guys!!  Still early I know!!” – Rudy, 1:14pm, to me via text message.

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

During the twenty five minutes I was in line to pay $9.25 for a beer that was barely cold? the Chargers scored again, to make it 21-3.

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

“Person in your seat just left, said “f*ck this sh*t”!  Come down and be miserable with us!” – Mona, 1:26pm, to me via text message.

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

So, I did what any good son would do – I headed down.  Go figure – the computer glitches in the upper deck?  Didn’t exist in the lower.  I purchased the second frosty cold Coors Light of the game and … you know what, God bless.  If I praise parking, then I gotta praise this too.

Thank you Chiefs, for offering something OTHER than Bud Light, or Stella Artois, or Miller Lite, or Heineken, in your Chiefs Bar’s this year.  THANK YOU!  Bud Light gives me the worst heartburn imaginable.  Stella Artois is the sh*ttiest beer this side of Hamm’s.  Miller Lite is worse than Keystone, and I wouldn’t pay $12.50 for a Heineken if it was the last beer on earth.  (OK, fine, that’s a lie – I would pay that price … if it was the last beer on earth.)  If you aren’t gonna offer the only beer in this life I truly love (Shiner Bock), then I can settle for the one beer in this life, that is a mass-produced domestic that doesn’t make me want to jump off a cliff: Coors Light.  Thank you, for adding those 16oz slop water cans of craptacular occasional enjoyment.

I got to my old seat exactly after Jeremy Maclin was stripped by a Chargers defensive back.  1:47pm CT, Sunday, September 11, 2016.

It led to a Chargers field goal, to extend the margin to 24-3, Chargers.  The Kansas City Chiefs, in over 900 games staged in franchise history, had never – not even once – in a game that counts (meaning non-preseason), had NEVER rallied from a three touchdown deficit. 

The only way the Chiefs were going to win that game, is to do something no Chiefs team, on any given Sunday, Monday, Saturday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, or Wednesday, had ever done before.

Cue “The Text That Set Off The Comeback”.

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

I wish I was smart enough to know how to capture a screen shot of a text message.  Then again, I also wish I was wealthy enough to do whatever I want to do without working for it, so I guess I can wish in one hand and sh*t in the other, and you all can wager on which hand fills up first.

There was a suggestion made, after the Chargers field goal to extend the lead to 21, that it was time to leave, as at least 1/3 of the fans there on Sunday had already done.

Me?

I’ve been there, done that, watching an insurmountable lead in person.

Which is when I realized, I’d neglected the coozie, and the binoculars.

I did not stage this … and I defy you to believe in coincidence, after seeing this:


 (image credit: me via my iPhone 6.)

13 was disgusted, repulsed, absolutely offended at the notion of leaving this game early.  (Yeah, I know -- his arms are permanently extended, but work with it.  And if you doubt that's 13?  Look at his left sleeve.  That's dirt so bleeping earned, even Florida Georgia Line would have to respect it.)

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

"13 still has faith.  #rallytime". -- me, 1:48pm, across at least four different text messages, with the picture above attached.

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

Exactly two hours later, Alex Smith plunged into the end zone, in the corner I was sitting in, to deliver the greatest comeback in Chiefs franchise history to the record books.

Far better people than me have recapped the comeback.  I'll leave it to them to express their feelings over it, if only because I'm still trying to process mine.  The Chiefs took over possession of the ball with 11:08 to play trailing by seventeen points, 27-10.

They were tied barely ten minutes later, having never allowed a first down the rest of the way.

Every complaint about last year's playoff loss at New England?  Was answered with a "how you like them apples" response!  (Damned right that was chosen on purpose.)

The Chiefs take too long to score down multiple scores?  A barely two minute touchdown drive, to pull within ten.

The Chiefs don't understand game situation?  Settling for the field goal, to pull within seven.

The Chiefs cannot manage a two minute drill?  Not even ONE minute, possession of ball to end zone, to tie the game.

Andy Reid can't manage the clock?  A PERFECT handling of the clock entering the two minute warning (saving the last timeout, rather than burning it with 2:08 to play, to save eight seconds, because the timeout is more valuable than the eight seconds in that spot).

And the biggest complaint?

Was answered in overtime.

After this exchange occurred ...

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

“Oh Jesus!” – me, 3:10pm, via text message to The Chica.
“Sweet Jesus!!!!!!!” – me, 3:12pm, via text message to The Chica.
“What?” – The Chica, in response to me.
“Cheifs!” – me, 3:13pm, in response to The Chica. 
“That’s still on?  I turned that off at the half” – The Chica, in response.
“Turn it back on!  Now!” – me, channeling my inner late, great Randall Carlyle Wakefield, in response.

And after a minute or so’s pause …

“Holy sh*t!  How did this happen?” – The Chica, 3:16pm, via text message.

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


Alex Smith had never led a game winning touchdown drive as a Chiefs quarterback prior to Sunday.

He has now.

That entire fourth quarter rally, damned near most of the overtime, I kept pounding Seats 11, 12, and 13 in front of me.  

It's why I stuck around until nobody else who mattered to me or that I knew, was left standing in 132?  
To say what I said out loud, before I left the stadium.

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


"I've been pounding this bastardo today" -- me, 3:13pm, to Chris, via text message.
"Hey!  That's my seat!" -- Chris, in response.

(image credit: me, via my iPhone 6.)

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

I noted in the Texans playoff game recap, that 13 was an omen.

I first starting sitting in Section 132, when my seat number was 2.  The year was 2001.  I'd been moved back to Kansas City for pushing two years at that point, and up until that point, I'd been sitting with my buddy Jasson in 109 for the previous two years.  Then he met his significant other, who I got kicked to the curb for.  (Justifiably ... and dude, thanks for the advice and response, to the email I sent ya last week regarding The Chica.  I haven't replied yet ... but yours was the response, I most wanted to hear.)

I wound up in 132, next to Jasson's stepmom and dad, the late, great Randall Carlyle Wakefield, and the two folks who my parents would happily let adopt me if they simply asked, my Second Parents, Russ and Mona.  

I also wound up next to two other people who wound up adopting me in their own way (note: what is it about me that makes me so likable?  I haven't figured it out yet.  Please, feel free to express why I'm (barack obama to hillary voice) likable enough, in the comments, because I'll be damned if I get why I am.)

Those two people, are Chris and Greg.

(Note: if I can find the group picture from their wedding, Bye Week 2006, I'll post it here.  I have it on this laptop somewhere ...)

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


(OK, what stuns you more -- the binoculars are back on ... or the t-shirt never came off?  I lean t-shirt ... but I'm bribable.)

(image credit: me, via my iPhone 6.)

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

When I first starting sitting in 132, Greg and Chris were in 131.  The dividing line used to be between us.  Greg, Chris, Russ, and Mona were in 131; Randy, Nancy, and I were in 132.  Their seats used to be 25 and 26 in rows (again -- you believe in coincidence?  Because I don't) 25 and 26 ... and our were 1 (Randy) and 1 and 2 (Nancy and I).  I've detailed before the "last game of Chiefs games as they were"; I don't desire to turn this into a cry-cession that requires boxes of Kleenex.

Russ spent the fourth quarter and overtime pounding Seat 11, Section 132: Greg's former seat.  (Greg sadly passed away in October 2011, and God bless, do I miss him.)

Mona spent the fourth quarter and overtime pounding Seat 12, Section 132; Chris' former seat.  (And trust me girl -- you can sneak back in, when you return for the December games.)

I have to admit, I lied in my text to Chris -- yeah, I hit Seat 12 a bit ... but I was POUNDING Seat 13, Section 132.

Randy's old seat.

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

13 is an omen.

And I think it's a good one, Chiefs fans.

Because if you've ever seen "The West Wing" -- and if you haven't, you should -- one of my favorite episodes is from the last season, "Election Day".  You can pick which part you like better, uno or dos, but the end to Part Dos just does it for me:


(sk: I f*cked up the link.  Just hit the 36:00 mark, you'll get the point, when it pulls up.  God bless it, I can graduate from college in 3 1/2 years, and I cannot figure out a YouTube! embed link.)

Josh, overwhelmed by grief of what is gone, what is lost forever ... yet also overwhelmed by the possibilities to come, simply says the only two words that come to mind.

"Thanks, boss".

Which is why I said two words, leaving that stadium Sunday, I will never apologize for saying.

"Thanks, friends."

And then, I slapped Seat 11 (Formerly 25).  I really slapped Seat 12 (Formerly 26).

And I stopped ... 

... and cried, hugging Seat 13 (Former 26 1), for a solid minute.

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

Yeah, I cried on Sunday.  I know I got mocked for it on Facebook; I honestly don't care.

Because God help you, if you didn't cry, as a Chiefs fan, over what Sunday was.

The first step, in a long slow march, to something few if any people reading this, have ever witnessed before.

Greatness, out of the Red and Gold ...

Monday, October 27, 2014

chiefs! rams! where saint louis is put in its appropriate place ...

“I got my mail today; this economy sucks.
A bunch of bills I can’t pay; I guess they’re sh*t out of luck.
But there was one from an old friend; brought back memories.
A black and white from way back when; was hard to believe …

That was us riding dirt roads,
Shooting buckshot at signs.
Drinking beer we just stole;
Passing jugs full of shine.

And even them girls,
Was one of them boys.
Singing old country gold,
‘Til we all lost our voice.

That was us.

Every once in a while, we’ll catch a game or a race.
But catching up on old times?  Turns into hell that we raised.
We’ll start retelling stories, and lies we’ve rehearsed,
About the girls we made out with, and how badass we were …

That was us down in Panama,
Crusing the strip.
In the bed of my truck,
Tossing beads and talking sh*t.

Shotgunning beer,
Playing pong and flip cup.
We never lose senior year;
We tore them son b*tches up.

That was us.

That was us …

And we'll always remember, those of us that we miss.
We'll always be brothers, and we'll never forget ...

But that was us that we carried, with tears in our eyes.
When the rest of us are buried?  We're throwing down in the sky!
So raise a glass to the memories, that won't ever die!
Here's to friends!  Here's to family!  Here's to one helluva time!

Because that was us!

Here's to us! ...”


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

Well, that was lovely.

On a nearly ninety degree, bright sunny Sunday, the Chiefs looked like chumps at first, giving up a touchdown to the Rams not even three minutes and seven plays into the game.  The Rams then befuddled and stymied everything the Chiefs were doing, in an attempt to respond.  For the first twenty nine minutes and fifty some odd seconds on Sunday, this was an unquestioned, unmitigated debacle, and the Chiefs of Week One had shown up, not the Chiefs of Weeks Two through Seven.

And then, Cairo Santos nailed a fifty three yard field goal, with one second left on the clock.  Any kick from that distance is a crapshoot, and given the wind (which was swirling but generally was moving east to west), and given the fact that it’s Cairo Santos, I didn’t think there was a prayer of that thing being accurate. 

And then, Knile Davis takes the second half kickoff, and with some brilliant blocking, takes off down the Chiefs sideline, and nobody was catching him.

And then, Travis Kelce puts on a sick move*, to jumpstart another scoring drive, to push the margin to 20-7, and all but end the game.

And then, after trading a couple punts, Dwayne Bowe makes an incredible catch near midfield, and barely three minutes later, the Chiefs are in the end zone, the lead grows to 27-7, and the celebration began.

There were three moments yesterday that I absolutely loved, that if you weren’t there, or weren’t paying close attention to the broadcast, you probably missed.  All three were just random “sure, that happened” moments that you don’t see coming in advance, but simply enjoy the hell out of them, when they occur.

The first was after the Chiefs first touchdown.  Jeff Triplette, who in the interest of full disclosure is quite probably the second worse crew chief The League has ever employed (don’t worry Phil Luckett, your status is quite secure as the worst crew chief ever), has to stop the game before Cairo Santos’ extra point attempt.

The reason?  Streamers had floated onto the field, and had attached themselves exactly where Dusty C was expecting the snap.  I loved that.  This last month – really, last six weeks – has been one non-stop celebration of this city we love and call home, and the sports teams that unite all of us.  It’s been an incredible six weeks, if you aren’t from Kansas City.  Those streamers landing where they did, and somehow the wind being unable to lift them or move them or dislodge them from that exact spot, in that exact moment, in that exact situation?

Hey, I’m the one who believes there is no such thing as coincidence.

The other two moments, I’ll get into inside the recap.

Which, since given the recap of Chiefs 34, Rams 7 is why you came here in the first place, I guess should begin, right about now.

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

(*: I got the juke move out of sequence.  Sue me.)

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

* I got to the Second Parents house a little bit after five on Saturday.  The original plan for the pre-party had been to watch Game Four of the World Series, while enjoying some individually made fresh pizzas and some cold beer.  But go figure, that didn’t materialize as expected.  Instead, we headed down to everyone’s favorite Lounge, because we had three friends in from Omaha for this game (Jeff, Paula, and Paula’s sister Mickey) who wanted to see what the Daily Double was all about.

Three hours, plenty of pitchers, a few vodka tonics (gee, wonder who consumed those), and a couple rounds of shots, as the Royals imploded in the sixth inning to cough up a three-run lead (en route to an 11-4 defeat), that we finally got around to making those pizzas.

And let me tell you, this was a great idea.  Everyone had their own crust, and you could make whatever you wanted.  I went with Italian sausage, pepperoni, green pepper, red pepper, red onion, and decided to bake the oregano and pepper flakes and parmesan cheese right into the sucker, rather than adding them as a flavor enhancer after the pizza’s already made.  It was a great call.  That was one epically good pizza.

* After a Weller and Diet Coke nightcap or three, it was off to bed.  About five, everyone started getting up, and getting ready.  Normally we load up The Bus as much as possible the night before – get the generator and heavy coolers on, so that you don’t have to get up early and do it the morning of the game.  Yeah, this was not a typical tailgate.  So for the better part of an hour, Jeff and I were lugging coolers and the generator and trying to do this in the dark, while still pushing a .20 from the night before’s residual alcohol balance.  Somehow we pulled it off.

Nine people rode out yesterday – myself, Susan, Russ and Mona, Jaimmie and Anthony, and the three from Omaha.  We got to the early-in gate about 6:45, and began the descent down the hill to our spot.  Go figure – Roger and his folks were already there.  By 7:10ish, the Mixology List kicked off with the traditional opening number of “Penny Lover”.  My co-worker Deneece got there a little after 8am, and folks, here’s the good news, especially for those of you who desire to park by us to tailgate, but don’t have a Red Reserve pass.  You ready?

Your crazy drunk uncle Stevo has found the loophole, in the new ridiculous, insane parking set-up.  If the set-up stays as it is (and it’s been like this for all three regular season home games so far), getting you past the parking nazis and onto the grass north of G30, is once again doable exactly like how it used to be.  No need to meet you at the gate and hand you an invalid Red Reserve pass anymore!  I have to admit, I was pretty proud of myself.

Ron and Ryan and the Springfield folks arrived, just as James and Deneece were backing in.

* How you knew this day might be special?  Every freaking person was there with at least two hours to spare, before kickoff.  Usually somebody arrives at 10:40 and is p*ssed that we’ve run out of some food item, or somebody oversleeps, shows up as we’re breaking down, and has to spend ten minutes issuing embarrassing apologies for their unacceptable sleeping error.  Not yesterday.  Everyone there with two hours to spare.

* Another way you knew this day might be special?  “The Voice of Reason” and his dad usually arrive between 9 and 9:30.  Never before, in the (hang on, carry the six…) nearly ten years since we ceased being roommates and began arriving separately, Gregg has never parked behind us.  He’s always a solid ten, fifteen rows farther down, down by Boomer’s Aunt Jamie and their group.  Folks?  I had to do a double take about 9:45 on Sunday.  Gregg and Gordon were approaching our group … from behind.

Lot G was filled to the exits before 10am.

I’ve been going to games in that stadium for as long as I have conscious memory.  I ain’t NEVER seen that before.  Not even for arguably the best home game of the last fifteen years, the showdown between 4-0 denver and 4-0 KC back in 2003.  The game where there were no tickets to be had, because nobody was selling them, and not only was nobody selling them, every ticket got used, despise NASCAR dropping the checkered flag thirty miles away at the exact moment of kickoff.

My way of saying: not even that glorious October Sunday eleven years ago, saw Lot G completely full more than two hours before kickoff, for a noon game.

* As detailed in the picks commentary, I lost my wallet last weekend, and so I had to head down to the ticket office, to get a new Season Ticket card.  In case you need any further proof this day was going to be special, actual conversation with me and ticket agent dude:

(stevo) Hi.  Listen, I called the Chiefs on Tuesday and explained that I’d lost my Season Ticket card, and they told me it’d be available at the ticket office this morning.
(ticket agent dude) OK.  Can I see your valid state ID please?  Assuming you’ve gotten one?
(stevo) (does not immediately try to punch ticket agent dude in the nuts)
(stevo) Sure, here you go.  (Hands over temporary paper ID.)

I didn’t go postal hearing the words “valid state ID”!  Yay me!  Even better?  The ticket agent dude made a note on my account, to actually spell my last name correctly (which the Chiefs have never done)! 

So you’re damned right I decided to go look for my brick**.  I mean, if ever there was a day I was gonna find that bastard again, it had to be yesterday, right?

I got nothing.  I found The Voice of Reason’s, I found Russ and Mona’s, I found Monty’s, I found Susan’s, I even found the late Bill Williams’ brick.  (Rest in peace sir.  This Super Bowl is gonna suck without chatting with you at halftime.)  But I can’t locate mine to save my life.  Truly sad.

(*: in case anyone ever goes searching for it, mine has my name on line one, “RIP 37 58 RCW” on line two, and “Go Chiefs Go” on line three.)

* So, if the streamers refusing to leave the ground was the first awesome, memorable moment I recount, this next retell is awesome, memorable moment number two.

Gregg and Gordon and I are talking, it’s a little before ten.  I think we were discussing the Royals.  Anyway, Jasson and his daughter arrive.  (Sign I’m getting damned old: I didn’t recognize it was Ashton.  I just figured he was stepping out on the wife with some young attractive blonde.  The lesson?  As always, I’m the dumbest kid in the room, always.)

Somehow, we get off on the “48 Hours” episode that Jasson starred in a couple years ago, and he starts telling us the real story, of how they caught the dude who tried to murder Marti.  (Sorry, I forget her last name, but the episode is available in all its greatness by clicking on this link.  At least until CBS has it yanked.)  Let me simply say, Jasson’s version was so damned funny, we laughed for a solid fifteen straight minutes as the real story was revealed.  (Note: the CBS program on what happened, sadly cleans up the truth.  A lot.)

And that’s also why I chose the theme I did.  Because that?

Was us.

And that, yesterday, and every day for the rest of my and G's and Jasson's lives?

Is us.

* Worst moment of tailgating?  Without question.  I was over talking to Deneece and James and Jerry and the son of Deneece’s I hadn’t met until yesterday (I’d met Matt already, and let’s just say Brandon and I have enjoyed a medicinally legal product a time or three together.)  They notice that 13 is lacking a beer bottle or can.  As Jerry notes, “this beer doesn’t drink itself”.  I point out that I usually am a vodka tonic person; I just hadn’t had the time to make one yet.

So James goes “hey, we have some Smirnoff concoctions in this cooler”, and he hands me this gigantic 40 oz can.  So gigantic, 13 couldn’t even fit over it.  And trust me, I tried.

That?  Should have been the sign, the “listen, you clueless dolt, this sh*t is nasty!” sign.  I mean, when 13 is staging a Coozie Revolt over going onto a can, you have to listen to the Coozie.  He knows what’s good and what isn’t.

It was a Smirnoff something, in a black can, with a fruit punch flavor.

I took a drink of it.

I set it down on the table.

The reaction?

(deneece) How is it?
(stevo) (long pause).  I’ve had worse.  I’ve definitely had better.
(deneece) What does it taste like?
(stevo) It tastes like Robitussin mixed with Hawaiian Punch.
(deneece) (expletive!)  That is awful.
(james) You don’t have to finish it.
(stevo) No, no – you never leave a wounded soldier on the battlefield.  Once you start?  You finish.
(deneece) Well, Brandon likes these things.
(stevo) Your son needs to learn what quality alcohol tastes like.
(deneece) In his defense, he was probably stoned when he bought it.

Why, you ask, was this the worst moment?

Because I am embarrassed to admit … I left the wounded soldier on the battlefield to die.  I made it through about 2/3 of the can, and literally needed to vomit, it was so nasty.  So I went to the port-a-potty, did what needed to be done, and dumped the rest of the can down the urinal.

* I had my first cigar in forever yesterday.  A Cohiba, which is a stunning choice for me, but every cigar Jerry had was a lighter one.  (I prefer something more along the lines of Macanudo Maduro or the CAO Brazilia.)  It was good.  It was damned good. 

Nine, ten years ago, you were guaranteed on an evening like yesterday or Saturday was?  I’d be on the back deck, watching some television show, enjoying a Maduro or Brazilia.  It was nice to flash back to those days yesterday.

* Broke down the tailgate a little after 11am.  There was a group of Rams fans two spots down (or east of Roger’s bus, if you will), and as I was taking down the speakers, got to witness a wedding proposal between two of those Rams fans.  It’s a miracle I didn’t march over there and start a fight.  There’s only two proposals that have ever happened in our area there at Arrowhead, and it didn’t involve a Rams fan of any way, shape, form or kind.

But I was nice, and just kept my distance.  Twenty five year old me is p*ssed, at thirty seven year old me, over the maturity shown in that spot.

But I mean, seriously.  If you need any further proof St. Louis fans are the world’s worst?  Who travels to a road game, to make a wedding proposal?  There was nothing magical about that spot (like with the two proposals in our tailgating group over the years).  Nothing special happened there for those people from St. Louis, to lead the dude to think “yeah, I gotta propose right there”.  If I ever meet the future Mrs. Stevo, you can be damned certain that unless I meet her in St. Louis, I’m not proposing in St. Louis.  And even then, I wouldn’t propose in St. Louis.  You know why?  Because that would mean having to go to St. Louis!  Who actually wants to do that!

* Best moment of tailgating … had to be Jasson’s story time.  But the coolest moment was when some random who came with Ryan approached me, asked if I was the dude who put together the Mixology list, and after confirming that yes, it’s my brainchild, he and his girlfriend said that it was the coolest mix they’d ever heard at a tailgate.  That’s why I do it folks, is for you.  (And because I’m a selfish narcissist at times who demands recognition for the greatness that is me.)

Seventy two songs played out of 226 that were loaded for the game.  That’s not too shabby.  And that’s also why every week, when I solicit input from those of you showing up, for what you want to hear, that why I also note “there’s no guarantee your choice(s) will play”.  You had a 1 in 3 chance on Sunday.  Unless it’s hellacious weather, denver might be closer to a 1 in 2 chance, the tailgate should be that epic.  And long.

* Relief moment of the week: I made a promise to a couple friends that, as my wedding gift to them, if there was ever a week they couldn’t afford a Chiefs game, and/or didn’t come by tickets, that I’d front the purchase price.  That’s what I do for a friend: guarantee he and she will see every game this season.  Anyone could give them a blender.  I give gifts that truly matter.

My plan for this week was to buy them at the ticket office, since I had to go down there anyways to get my new Season Ticket card.

The cheapest ticket available at the ticket office at 8:30am on Sunday morning?

$156.

Sweet.  Merciful.  Jesus.

I expected that the $30 tickets would be gone, and I figured the $49 and $54 were probably scarce.  I was prepared to pay $80 / ticket.  But $156?  Uuh, no.

So I headed back up to the tailgate, and figured one of two things would occur.  Either (a) I’d get lucky, and somebody would be selling off a pair with no clue that, you know, nothing was available, or (b) I’d hand $200 to The Voice of Reason and let him work his magic.

Your winner?  (A).  Some dude came walking by as I was talking with somebody, selling two in 320 row 11, at $35 / ticket.  Face value?  $54 / ticket.  Sold!

* Headed down around 11:15am.  So, in the interest of fairness, if I’m going to rip the Chiefs a new one over how asinine the parking setup now is, I have to credit them for how quick and professional the security screening is.  A few years ago, when the NFL mandated patdowns and wanding began, it would take 30-40 minutes to get through security.  It took less than five on Sunday, and the line at Gate H was back to the street when I got there.

* I sat in my old seat yesterday.  Sadly, Chris wasn’t there, but Shelby and Nancy were, and hallelujah, the dude a couple rows in front of me whose personalized jersey is number 69, was there too:



(There’s classy, and then there’s classy.  Image credit: me, via my iPhone 5c.)

* As always, for the game lookback and thoughts, I refer to nfl.com’s GameCenter dealie, to ensure accuracy of down, distance, and time, of the events of the game.

* Chiefs win the toss, choose to defer, and defend the East End Zone.  This is a decision that would be gigantic – in a positive way – about eighty minutes of real time later.

* And right off the bat, the Rams pick on the Chiefs leaky secondary.  On a 3rd and 1, Austin Davis airs it out for Kenny Britt, who was a solid three yards behind Ron Parker (who eventually made the tackle after a gain of nearly 45 yards).  Three plays later, Austin Davis hits a tight end wide, wide open in the front of the end zone on another third down play.  Rams 7, Chiefs 0, right off the bat.

* I’ll give the Rams fans this: they showed up in large numbers.  That’s all I’ll give them.  Of the approximately twenty of those assholes in my immediate viewing area, I saw the following jerseys:

* 80 bruce.
* 81 holt.
* 13 warner.
* 8 bulger.
* 1 stl rams.
* 29 dickerson***.
* 28 faulk.
* 36 bettis****.
* 76 pace.
* 11 everett.

Ten jerseys.  Nine players, one personalized / customized for the owner.  Care to guess how many of those nine players were dressed in uniform on the Rams sideline Sunday?

Zero.

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: I HATE st. louis.

(**: Eric Dickerson didn’t even play in St. Louis.  He was an ex-Rams in October 1987.  The Rams moved to the appropriately named the loo in 1995.  Having said that, I also saw a sweet-ass Dickerson throwback t-shirt that I actually have looked for online today.  If I find it and it’s under $30, I’ll probably buy it, I liked it that much.)

(***: Jerome Bettis hated the Rams so much he demanded a trade out (to the Steelers, after the 1995 season).  Your saint louis Rams everyone!!!!)

* the Chiefs take over, and on 3rd down, Alex Smith throws a quick hitter to DeAnthony Thomas, that he immediately turns upfield and turns into 17 yards and a first down.  I kind of smiled watching it; it reminded me of Al Saunders’ guaranteed quick hit play, Trent Green down the line of scrimmage to Dante Hall that was a guaranteed first down every time it was called.

Unfortunately, the Chiefs stall out on the next series of downs, and punt.  It would be a recurring theme in the first half yesterday: punt.

* the Rams take over at their own 17, and on second down from the 20, Austin Davis picks on Ron Parker yet again, airing it out with the target being Kenny Britt.  This time, Mr. Parker’s ready, and picks off Mr. Davis at the Chiefs 21.

Plays like this?  I wish the Chiefs would try more often.  Ron Parker got a ten yard return before being tackled.  The Chiefs started at their 31.  The play was run from the Rams 20.  In essence, on 2nd and long, the Rams “punted” sixty yards downfield, only instead of a punt, everything was in play – potential catch, potential pass interference, potential illegal contact or holding.  I have never understood why more teams don’t air it out, on 2nd and 3rd and long, because what’s the downside?  A sixty yard “punt” disguised as an interception?

Creative risk-taking.  The Rams did it yesterday.  Good for them.  I wish the Chiefs would do that more often than they rarely, rarely do.

* the Chiefs and Rams trade three-and-out punts, before a DAT return puts the Chiefs in business near midfield.  And on first down, the pocket breaks down, and Alex Smith scrambles right, only to be clobbered from behind and fumble the ball.  Thankfully, it bounces out of bounds before anyone can recover it.

On third down, the Chiefs throw short, and draw the flag against the Rams for illegal contact.

There are those who will b*tch about Alex Smith not being a “franchise quarterback”, but more of a “game manager”.  And if you’re one of those, then so be it.

But I know this: if “Fat” Andy Reid taps you to lead his squad?

You’re not a placeholder, or a manager.

And Alex Smith showed that yesterday.  24/28 for 226, granted with no touchdowns (but also no interceptions). 

What doesn’t show up in those stats, is the fact that once again, the Chiefs converted on at least 50% of their third downs (yesterday at exactly 50%, 6 of 12).  You can count on two fingers, the number of quarterbacks converting 3rd downs, at a higher percentage, than Alex Smith.

Those two fingers?

Belong to Tony Romo (57%) and Drew Brees (51%). 

You can count on a third finger (and I’d strongly suggest it should be the middle one) the only other starter to convert at least 50% of his third down attempts so far this season.  (That someone is Phyllis Rivers.)  And really, you tell me, who you’d rather have:

Romo: 54/94 (57%, through 7 games, entering tonight).
Brees: 43/84 (51% through 7 games; Saints have had their bye).
Smith: 47/93 (50% through 7 games; Chiefs have had their bye).
Rivers: 57/113 (50% through 8 games; Chargers have not had their bye).

Alleged all-time great peyton manning?  47% (43/92 through 7 games; donkeys have had their bye).  Andrew Luck?  45% (48/107 through 8 games; Colts have not had their bye).  I could keep going, but folks, the bottom line is that when you have to deliver?

Alex Smith delivers.

Just like on this drive yesterday, when he draws the illegal contact, then on the ensuing 3rd down, hits a perfect pass to Travis Kelce, who takes it to the half inch line (and I’d argue, he was in.  Or as I texted: “team tito prays this is reviewed”, since I started Kelce yesterday.)

And on 1st and goal at the half inch line, Jamaal Charles did what Jamaal Charles does, and crossed the white line, to tie the game at 7, early in the 2nd quarter.

This is the extra point attempt, where the streamers refused to move.

* Should probably note, the Chiefs calling timeout after Kelce’s catch, was indefensible.  Every potential scoring play, is reviewable by the booth.  If the booth didn’t see enough indisputable visual evidence after thirty seconds to buzz Jeff Triplette, then the call that Kelce was tackled at the one was probably right.

Then again, Jeff Triplette and buzzed go together, about as well as Stevo and buzzed.  It wouldn’t stun me in the least to learn the replay official did buzz Triplette, and he was too, uuh, buzzed, to realize it.

* After holding on 3rd and 1 near midfield, the Chiefs force a punt, and on the very next play, Alex Smith is sacked, stripped, and fumbles again … only this time, the Rams recover.  To say I was irate, is an understatement.

To say the Rams shanking – badly – a 37 yard field goal attempt convinced me the Chiefs were going to win this game?  Undersells things.

I mean, that field goal wasn’t within five yards of the goalpost.  I used to sit in 109 fifteen years ago (which is the section behind the goalpost, in the East End Zone; Jasson still sits there).  That wind is a b*tch to deal with.  The Rams kicker, couldn’t deal with it.

* 2:36 left in the first half, Chiefs face 3rd and 6 at midfield.  Alex Smith drops, throws, and Dwayne Bowe makes an amazing catch, to gain the first down.  From my vantage point (which granted, was from Mr. Smith’s POV, albeit forty yards away), it looked like D Bowe simply reached around the corner, and stole the pass literally over the corner’s head, to gain the first and positive yardage.

According to the official box score, Dwayne Bowe was targeted six times yesterday.

He had six catches, for 64 yards.

Good enough.

* Cairo Santos nails a 53 yarder as time nearly expires in the first half, and the Chiefs lead 10-7.  This is why I mentioned, that the Chiefs choosing the East End Zone to defend, was so huge.  The Rams kicking into the East End Zone?  Five yards wide right from 37 yards out.  The Chiefs kicking into the West End Zone?  Perfectly drilled from 53 yards out.

Sometimes, the little things decide a game.

For a solid twenty minutes after Cairo Santos split the uprights, that’s what I thought.

* Halftime.  Good freaking God.  And I only use “freaking” instead of “f*cking”, because kids were involved.  That was an abortion of a performance.  (Pause).  Yeah, it probably would have been less offensive to use “f*cking”, as opposed to “abortion”, to describe something with kids involved.

But that was atrocious.  It was 200 breast cancer survivors, “cheering” with a bunch of kid cheerleaders, waving pink towels everywhere.  All that was missing was the late, great Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA … and you can decide if the D is for Democrat, or Drunk), to re-enact a typical Tuesday in the Kennedy Compound. 

That performance left a lot to be desired.  A lot.  I was so damned bored I borrowed the dude in front of me’s binoculars and started scouring the stadium, to see if I recognized anyone.

Here’s a free hint, Mr. Goodell and NFL officials.  Don’t tell us you care about women’s issues, when you actually don’t.  People will tolerate a lot in life, and most people will tolerate a liar.  (Of which Roger Goodell should be in the damned Encyclopedia Brittanica 2014 Edition, as the poster child for the word liar.)

But NOBODY tolerates a hypocrite.

Wearing pink socks and waving a pink towel, doesn’t cure the stink on your league, sir.

But clearing you out of Madison Avenue, if you fail to tell anything less than the full and complete truth regarding the Ray Rice debacle next Wednesday and Thursday?

I’m fully in favor of.

* Second half opening kickoff.  What a thing of beauty.  Knile Davis had great blocking, but man, what a great decision to just dart.  He didn’t hesitate, he just took off.

Which led to Russ leaning over at me, after the celebratory high fives and middle fingers pointed at the Rams bench as I informed them “we’re gonna beat the hell outta you!”, noting “you finally saw one!”

#2003.

Yes, I finally saw one.  (“clue” voice) In 132.  With my own eyes.  By Knile Davis.

* From that point on, there was little doubt about the outcome.  That return broke the Rams.  It just broke them, and thankfully it broke their fans as well.  The next ninety some odd minutes were just further celebration of the last six weeks.  A further validation of the greatness of Kansas City.

And then?

It happened.

A moment I’ll always remember, that at best, ranks fourth from yesterday.

A moment I’ll remember … at least until all the beer, vodka, wine, and weed I’ve enjoyed in my life, eventually clears my memory like a crashed hard drive.

* As I noted a few pages ago, I sat in my old seat yesterday.  (Which is Section 132, Row 26, Seat 15, for the newbies reading this.)

The first play of the fourth quarter, a Rams defender was hurt, after Jamaal Charles gained ten to set the Chiefs up to seal the game on the next play.  (Which was Charles virtually untouched for 36 yards and the six; seven with the extra point, which as I always note, is never a given, when your kicker is named Cairo Santos.)

The dude behind me – an affable, friendly guy who I never got the name of, simply said three words, and clapped  -- and it was more pounded, than clapped – his hands, in a nearly silent Arrowhead Stadium. 

“Let’s Go Royals!”

(Clap!  Clap!  Clap Clap Clap!)

Within fifteen seconds, the lower bowl was standing … and shouting.  Seats were being pounded.

“Let’s Go Royals!”

(Clap!  Clap!  Clap Clap Clap!)

I got a text from a buddy watching the game on TV.  “Damn that chant is loud!”  I got another text from a buddy inside Arrowhead.  “Never imagined this could happen!”  I got a third chant, from of all people, my mommy, who in the interest of full disclosure, tolerates football, but despises baseball.  (College hoops is her sports passion.) 

“I almost cried hearing (the chant).”

If anything?  I am my mother’s son.

Because it got damned, damned dusty, in Section 132, Row 26, Seat 15, a little after 2:15pm, yesterday.

It got damned, damned dusty.

And the dustiest, if that’s even a word, the dustiest?

Was yet to come.

* Nancy and Shelby checked out with about eight to play.  Mona headed out with about six to play.  Finally, with about four to play, Russ leans in to Susan and I, and says the magical words, that confirm this was a Chiefs ass-kicking worth celebrating.

“You know, the beer’s cheaper and colder on The Bus!”

Good enough.

* But I had to pee like a race horse from the beers I’d had during the game.  (All two of them.  Let’s just say, 13 was staring at me with disgust, at how little he got utilized yesterday.  #angrycoozie.)

So I stopped off at the collection of port-a-potties across the street from Gate H, did what beer makes me do, and began the walk back to The Bus.

There’s some regulars I always make a point to stop in and at least high five.  Did that for each of them.  There’s always cars reinventing the exits from Lot G to duck, dodge, and try to avoid.  There’s the moment I arrive back at The Bus, and “Dancing On The Ceiling” gets played, to celebrate the win.

All of those things happened, even if Mr. Richie’s classic was heard off my phone without the speakers involved.

But Moment Tres from yesterday I won’t ever forget, was worth waiting for.

Sometimes?

It pays to leave early.

* Because for the first time in years, I got to high five The Voice of Reason, as he passed by us on the way back to his car.

And for the first time in years, I beat Ryan back to The Bus.

My high five with Gregg was great.  Something about “one down, one to go today!”  Everyone was happy.

But damn.

Gregg’s always been there for me.  Ryan’s kind of new in that regard.  But trust me when I say, he’s one of those people in life, you never regret knowing.  (He also is like me in two other regards: he’ll try any drink once, and he has no desire to ever have a wife.  My kind of dude!)

I honestly didn’t see his car was still there.  I figured that, like most weeks when it’s a blowout either way, he and his dad Ron and the rest of their crew ducked out to begin the drive back to Springfield.

Oh no.  They stayed for every second.

Because when he saw me, and started sprinting towards me to high five and man-hug this win out, I was stunned.

(Pause).

And had a demand to play “Dancing on the Ceiling” placed on me.

Perfection.

* Well, not quite.  Some random black dude in a Charles jersey came up to where we were tailgating, and offered to share his joint, just because ... well, I'll be damned if I know why.  Nobody there knew him.

Still, I'm not one to pass on grass when appropriate, and beating the Rams by 27 made it appropriate.  (I'm also that guy, who (gulp) eight years ago, had random strangers offering me a joint, because I was so irate at a Chiefs loss, I kept kicking the light pole in frustration.  (Pause).  I should note, I thought I'd posted that classic recap.  Apparently not.  I'll search the email archives on Tuesday, to try to find it, and put it out there ... because it is a classic "yup, that's Stevo" moment.)

All I can say about the dude's joint -- other than the obvious -- is that the virtual ditch weed in my dugout right now?

Was 500% better, than his.

(But he rolled it in a grape flavored Swisher, right?)

Hell yes he did!

* Oh, and this selfie taken after the win?  Should express how great, yesterday was:



(I honestly don't know what awesome-er: how attractive I am, the fact that thirty minutes after the final play, Lot G is still jammed packed ... or that on a nearly 90 degree cloudless day?  My t-shirt stayed on.  (Pause).  You're welcome.  Image credit: Deneece, via whatever phone she uses.)

* I guess this is where I’ll choose to almost end the recap – getting to share an emotional experience with the best friend any person in life could ever have, and a dude whose personal family motto is “You Never Even Called Me By My Name” by David Allan Coe.  It doesn’t get much better than that.

Not a ton happened afterwards.  If you’re Facebook friends with me, there’s pics up under Deneece’s profile from yesterday, and I’m sure Mona will post hers at some point this week.

Postgame, we finished eating what we hadn’t already consumed, the Omaha folks headed home, and Gusser bribed me into watching Game Five at The Double.  I lost track after eight vodka tonics.  I woke up this morning in “my room” at The Second Parents, we enjoyed some breakfast, and then back to the real world.

* And I choose to close with this.

This was one horrific week for me personally.  Dad in the hospital.  I lost my wallet and had serious, serious financial struggles this week, as a result.  (It’s not cancelling and re-issuing every card that sucks.  It’s waiting a damned week to get one, that sucks.  You don’t realize how dependent you are on plastic, until you don’t have any on you.)  And I also have a … how to put this delicately … a “personal matter” I’m dealing with, I choose to keep mostly silent about, out of respect for the other person, but let me tell you, it’s both frustrating and yet necessary.

Yesterday was one bright, shiny ray of sunshine on this dog’s hairy white ass.

The Chiefs whipped the Rams’ ass yet again.  They are 0-6 against the Chiefs in games that count, since Georgia Frontiere whored herself out, to get the Dome Deal – to agree to play in a stadium, our KC tax dollars built.  (They lost at home in 1997 and 2010; they lost in KC in 2000, 2002, 2006, and yesterday.)

Which is probably why the “Let’s Go Royals!” chants throughout the day, made me feel as good as they did.

We OWN those bastards on the opposite side of the state.

We OWN them, Chiefs fans.

And Royals fans.


And there isn’t one godd*mned thing they can do or say, to dispute that, at this point ...

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 / ...