The Steelers, Like My Legs, Are Dead and Smelly

10.30.06 Written by Christmas Ape


One thing I think I should quickly clear up for people considering running a marathon is its origin. Sure, we all know it’s about some low-level Greek functionary who runs 20 some odd miles to tell some more important Greek that their army has defeated another army or some shit. But here’s what they don’t tell you:

The traditional story relates that Pheidippides, an Athenian herald, was sent to Sparta to request help when the Persians landed at Marathon. He ran the 34.5 km (21.4 miles) from the battlefield by the town of Marathon to Athens to announce the Greek victory over Persia and died on the spot.

That’s right, the motherfucker gets there and immediately drops dead. Didn’t see that in the race packet when I signed up. Didn’t see that anywhere in Runner’s World. Don’t see that in the myriad Nike or New Balance commercials.

So, as I mentioned last week, I ran in the Marine Corps Marathon yesterday, during which two people had a heart attack and one of them died, so maybe they should put that advisory in there after all.

And yeah, I boasted that I’d do in under three hours, but that plan was scrapped somewhere around mile 16 when my legs went and, well, died. So I finished with a solid 3:49:35. For a first marathon, not bad.

Let’s review my collapse:

Mile 5 – 33:26

Hey, look at Mr. Hot Shit with the 6:35 mile pace.

Mile 10 – 1:08:28

Okay, you’re still at a 6:50 mile. Hang in there.

Halfway mark – 1:31:32

Slipping a little. A little over a 7-minute mile. But if you duplicate this in the second half then you’re right at three hours. So far, so good.

Mile 15 – 1:47:16

Alright, I’m reading the tea leaves here and I’m not liking what I’m seeing. Creeping a little further over a 7-minute pace. You’re just a little tired. It’s still good, it’s still good.

Mile 20 – 2:38:04

Aaaaand, you’re Rumphed.

I have to say that I made a new enemy yesterday: runners who write their names on themselves before races. Fuck you and your energy gel utility belts, you attention whores. I suppose there’s nothing wrong with it on its face, it’s probably great motivation for the person (let’s call this person Jeff) to hear people chanting their name throughout the hours of running. But what if you’re the person running alongside Jeff for 8 miles? You hear nothing but encouraging words for Jeff and big fat squaddo for yourself, because I’m sure it’s easier for someone watching the race to cheer a name rather than to yell, “go number 1247!” or “go guy in the red shorts and grey top!” But it wears on you in that exhausted state, to the point that eventually you want to kick Jeff in the back of his knee or step on his heel and rip his ACL. Seriously, fuck Jeff.

Ah, but there’s more to this post than me gushing about my marathon performance. There’s Steelers sulking to be done and, luckily for our readers, this is most likely the last Christmas Ape Steelers homer post of the year, because Pittsburgh’s season is officially over.


After the race yesterday, my better judgment was telling me to fall into a sweaty heap in bed and wake up sometime Thursday, but my Steelers fandom demanded that I head to the bar, what with the game not being televised. And, as usual when the two square off, fandom wins hands down. Even though they were playing the Raiders and there was no urgency for me to watch the game.

I limped my way to my car and arrived at the bar just after kickoff. The regulars had a pretty uniform reaction. “Hey, that’s great. Congrats. And you’re still here? Wow. You’re a true fan…and a fucking idiot. Seriously, dude, go lay down. Jackass.”

Rather than further draw out an already long post with further description, allow me to summarize the few conclusions I can draw through the wall of rage: Ben won’t throw to a receiver unless there are at least three opposing players around his target. Ben will never throw the ball away. Before every sack, Ben will hold the ball for three Bledsoes (a Bledsoe being defined as a unit of time equal to five seconds in the pocket). A backup quarterback with a 136.8 QB rating under no circumstances should ever warm up when the starter, coming off a concussion, has thrown four picks, two of which having been returned for touchdowns. Charlie Batch has probably slept with Cowher’s wife and at least one of his daughters. Our defenders get flagged for coughing after the play. Russ Grimm, and hopefully not Ken Whisenhunt, will be coaching this team next year. (Living in D.C., it would be fun watching the ‘Skins fans get all in a lather about one of the Hogs coaching the Steelers.) And our special teams needs lots and lots of help. Lots.

The cuts to the near catatonic looks on Al Davis’ ghoulish visage peering from the owner’s box as the Raiders neared victory were almost as unsettling as the outcome itself. He looks like my legs feel.

11 Comments TAGS: ,

Big Ben, Godsend Craptacular

10.11.06 Written by Christmas Ape
MMMMMM…Sacrilicious

I come to bury Ben Roethlisberger, not to Rumph him.

In the second snap of the Steelers’ Week 2 loss against Jacksonville, Ben Roethlisberger completed an 8-yard pass to Heath Miller, whereupon Joe Theeeeessssman declared the quarterback to be “back” much in the same way he would the following week about the city of New Orleans. That’s when Steeler Nation Country Anarcho-Syndicalist State Protectorate fans knew everything was fucked.

Everyone wants to blame the motorcycle crash, the appendectomy, or the maladies and organ failures we don’t even know about yet and I’m sure all that has playing a sizeable role in his struggles. Pinning it all on that, though, is either to be facile or an apologist. Another suggestion, usually made by the haters (Caveman) is that Ben is an effective game manager who has been exposed now that he’s being called on to do more for the team and his strong O-line and support system have let him down.

As for the “game manager” charge: no shit. He’s a quarterback for the Steelers. There’s no chicken-or-the-egg in Cowher’s system, the run sets up the pass. As a quarterback, you’re asked to get a lead and not make any costly mistakes that would make it harder for the defense to protect it. One could make the argument that because the age of the vertical passing game is behind us, every quarterback in the league, from Peyton to Vick, is a game manager to some extent. Not too many quarterbacks are able, much less allowed, to consistently drop back and try to win the game on their own.

The rest of the argument is flawed on two counts: first, it overstates the role of Bettis and Randle El in the offense. It suggest some change in the O-line that hasn’t happened. Pass blocking has never been their forte. Ben creates time by moving around the pocket, and he’s no less mobile this year than in the pass but seems hesitant to run downfield when coverage is tight and there’s an opening to take off. The special teams and goal line offense has suffered with these departures but the overall offensive gameplanning hasn’t changed. Willie Parker is having a fine year, so it’s not like this is 2003 with Amos Zereoue where they have to abandon the running game. And, secondly, it would be one thing if defenses were keying on routes or receivers that he frequently targets. Rather, Ben is making uncharacteristically bad reads, frequently under little pressure and looks afraid to take some hits (he isn’t running even when he has the chance – he looked downright terrified on the second pick Sunday, with a rusher coming at him he jumped backwards and basically chucked the ball straight up in the air to a defender with no one within 10 yards of him – this makes O’Donnell smile).

Granted, Ben has proven himself prone to the occasional devastating brain[cramp] over the years. Although still a rookie, he served up a nice fat one for Rodney Harrison to essentially lose the 2004 AFC Championship late in the first half when they still had a fighting chance. His running touchdown notwithstanding, he was the Seahawks conspiracy theorists best friend during the Super Bowl. Without his inexplicably terribly underthown pick in the endzone, the score is 21-3 midway through the third quarter, the game is pretty much over and the 12 Seahawks fans would be forced to shitcan their whine harvest for the year.

During the game Sunday against the Chargers, Al Michaels used the magic of cleverly manipulating statistics to suggest Ben’s struggles date back to last year. Loogit, he had a bad rating in the Super Bowl, just like his first few starts in 2006! Wait, his rating in the three AFC playoff games was over 120? Uhhhh, we can disregard that, right? Quick Madden, doodle some shit, post-haste! Talk about Turkduckken or how offensive linemen never get their due. Because, of course, one game seven months before a few more bad ones equals clear ominous trend. Cue the dog with the shifting eyes.

I know, let’s do another vacuous analyst exercise and project Ben’s final stats based on his first three starts:

510 Att 275 Com 2845 Yds 53.9% 0 TDs 35 INTs

Ooooooh…35 picks? Does that elevate him to gunslinger status? He does have as many rings as Favre. He’s way behind on the substance abuse but he shows remarkable potential on that front.

Addendum: Sorry this is long and isn’t exactly bringing the funny. I’ve been exposed as lame contributor who eats Homoszechuan beef and reads Dykes To Watch Out For. I’m considering rehab.
18 Comments TAGS: ,

Two Players With No Surnames, One Burgery Rumph

09.28.06 Written by Christmas Ape

There were few bright spots for Pittsburgh fans Sunday during the comedy of errors that was the Steelers depantsing by the Bengals. One of the highlights, aside from that series where Carson Palmer fumbled twice and threw a pick on consecutive plays, was Ryan Clark, late of the Washington Indigenous Peoples, arresting the progress of the jailingest of the Jail Bengals, Chris Henry, with the force of three sobriety checkpoints. A shame he was knocked on his ass, because all the weed in his shoes would have cushioned the fall.

Henry was so shaken up, he was unable even to drunkenly drive himself home, relying instead on Brother Odell to be his shepherd through the valley of the sober. Once back in Cincinnati, he did sing praise (crossed himself and said HUGH!!) and spread the gospel of his liquid dinner all over the pavement when questioned by the cops.
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How wude

09.22.06 Written by Christmas Ape


The Bengals and Steelers this weekend renew the rivalry that wasn’t really a rivalry until about a year ago when the former team decided to be good again after 15 seasons of NFL laughingstockery.

Much of the attention lavished upon the resurgent Bengals has focused on the Chad Johnson New Millennium Minstrel Show and the loverly Cincinnati ghetto anthem “Who Dey?” Setting aside the obvious debt the chant owes to JT Money’s painful 1999 semi-hit “Who Dat,” it wasn’t immediately clear to what it was referring.

Was it a vaguely self-deprecating inquiry of just who these gang of upstarts are that are lifting playoffward a team with a dismal recent history? Was it an attempt to brush up on their knowledge of the history of the Ottoman Empire? Sadly, instead, the complete chant, “Who Dey, Who Dey, Who Dey, think they gonna beat them Bengals?” decodes as something to the effect of, “I say! Who are these ruffians, who, in their temerity, believe themselves capable of besting our squadron in a contest of American footballing?”

How these Bungalites took umbrage when their noble, solemn cry was co-opted by one of their arch-villains, Trap-Jaw. But, as these things go, the mocking of “Who Dey?” has turned into that most boomeranging (read: overblown) influences – bulletin board material – The Cincinnati Enquirer explains:

Cowher first borrowed the line in the postgame celebration after the
Steelers defeated the Bengals 31-17 in an AFC wild card playoff game Jan. 8 at
Paul Brown Stadium.

“Who dey?” he yelled to his players.

“We dey,” they screamed back in unison.

Bengals coach Marvin Lewis, a Cowher assistant coach for four seasons in Pittsburgh, showed film of Cowher’s cheer Wednesday morning to his players.

Bengals wide receiver Chad Johnson saw the video Wednesday for the first time. “I didn’t like it,” Johnson said. “It was very rude.”

Johnson later said the actions of the Pittsburgh fans were “not cricket and rather unsporting…HUGH!!!!”

He then wandered off aimlessly to, he said, prepare an endzone celebration involving a Terrible Towel, a Segway, some parkour kids and the corpse of recently deceased Pittsburgh Mayor Bob O’Connor.

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That "cool, refreshing" drink.

09.14.06 Written by Christmas Ape


The batshit craziness that affects the (5-time Super Bowl Champion) Pittsburgh Steelers’ fans in relation to the vicissitudes of Ben Roethlisberger’s health has extended to the team’s players as well. Roethlisberger, who practiced for the first time Wednesday since his appendix was removed like a champion on Sept. 3, should play this week against Dan Shanoff’s favorite team. Fortunately, for the more superstitious among us Stiller fans, the team’s replacement for the Destroyer of All Things Carson Palmer drew on the crazy voodoo Mormon powers he attained at Brigham Young University to ensure Ben’s future is full of furburgers – and not hospital furburgers.

From the Post-Gazette:

Defensive end Brett Keisel, who said last week that Roethlisberger is cursed, tried to remove that curse yesterday by giving Roethlisberger a bottle of “lucky” water. The quarterback called it half full, rather than half empty.

That’s some nice skepticism on the part of the reporter, there, with the dubious quotes surrounding the luck-enhancing properties of the half-consumed bottle of water. Care to ask why Keisel can’t give him, say, a full bottle of water? Can we expect a lot of half sacks out of him this year?

Also to be admired is the Pollyannaish sentiment of Ben. We’ll see if the optimism holds the next time he gets hurt and misses work and can be heard rebuffing Keisel’s black magic by saying, “Fuck you, Jobu, I do it myself.”

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