Boston Globe: It’s hard to get pumped up about a Super Bowl against . . Atlanta

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
http://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/p...nst-atlanta/0t7MbsUBBpbzJpVvTZlzxM/story.html

We do not hate Atlanta nor its sports fans. We can’t even summon the old “Casablanca” line when Rick Blaine tells a petty thief, “If I gave you any thought I probably would [despise you].”

No. It’s not that. When it comes to Atlanta and its sports fans, we feel nothing. Maybe a little pity.

The Patriots are going to the Super Bowl in Houston Feb. 5, and they are going to play the Atlanta Falcons, and that takes a little fun out of the experience. It’s thrilling to see the Patriots get a chance to carry out their frontier justice on Roger Goodell. It will be sweet if Bill Belichick becomes the first coach to win five Super Bowls and Tom Brady ends the debate once and for all by surpassing Terry Bradshaw and Joe Montana with five Super Bowl rings.


But Atlanta? Seriously? This will be like the Larry Bird Celtics winning two of their championships by beating the Houston Rockets instead of the Lakers. It’ll be like the Bruins beating the expansion St. Louis Blues to win the Stanley Cup. It’ll be like the Red Sox beating the Colorado Rockies to win the World Series.

I know this makes us greedy, but it’s real. A Super Bowl vs. the Dallas Cowboys or New York Football Giants or Green Bay Packers would have had so many more layers of story lines and history. Even a rematch with Pete the Poodle Carroll and the Seahawks would have drummed up some extra interest.

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The Atlanta Falcons?

Meh.

This is nobody’s fault. There is no need to insult the nice folks of Atlanta, where you can drive on Peachtree Street, go to Peachtree Plaza, and order yourself a Peachtree Margarita. Atlanta is a diverse and hospitable city with friendly folks and warm temperatures. You can always get a Coke and a smile.

But it is also a town with absolutely zero enthusiasm for professional sports. And the non-fans know it. They’ve been hearing it for a long time. The Falcons, Braves, and Hawks don’t win championships so they don’t get much love. Atlanta is a place where people play sports rather than watch them. Atlanta grows professional athletes. We produce Ordways and Massarottis.

The only two spectator sports that matter in Atlanta are college football . . . and spring college football.

I was in Atlanta to watch the Celtics play the Hawks in the first round of the NBA playoffs last April. There was zero local buzz about the Hawks or the playoffs. While the Celtics and Hawks warmed up for their postseason clash, all the televisions at Philips Arena were tuned into Georgia’s intramural spring football game, for which 93,000 fans were gathered in Athens. In the next day’s local paper, coverage of Georgia’s spring practice dwarfed that of the NBA playoff game.

Given the dearth of professional sports championships the city has produced, it’s hard to blame Atlanta fans for their abject apathy.

Atlanta has the Braves, the Hawks, and the Falcons. The Braves (born in Boston) came from Milwaukee, while the Hawks migrated from St. Louis. The Falcons were an NFL expansion team, born in 1966. Atlanta has had two NHL teams (Flames and Thrashers) and lost them both to cities in Canada — because of lack of support.

Meanwhile, two perfectly suitable “new” stadiums (Turner Field and the Georgia Dome, both built in the 1990s) have already come and gone as Atlanta teams search for support that never arrives.

Atlanta’s five professional sports teams have combined to win ONE championship in 168 seasons of competition. One. The Braves, winners of 14 consecutive division titles from 1991-2005, managed to win only one World Series, and that came at the expense of the Cleveland Indians (of course) in 1995.

Here in Boston, we’ve had an embarrassment of riches, witnessing nine championships since the turn of the century. Between February of 2005 (Patriots in Jacksonville vs. Eagles) and June of 2011 (Bruins in Vancouver), we watched a local team from each of the four major sports win a championship. That’s a span of just six years and four months. No city will ever do that again. Certainly not poor Atlanta.

There is sparse history of professional sports moments involving teams from Boston and Atlanta. Bird scored a Celtic-record 60 points against the Hawks in 1985, but the game was played in New Orleans because the Hawks couldn’t draw enough fans to see the Celtics in Atlanta.

The Patriots have played the Falcons 13 times since 1972. I challenge you to remember a single play from any of those games. Belichick and Brady are a perfect 4-0 lifetime against Atlanta.

The Red Sox have been playing the Braves on and off since the advent of interleague play, but nothing momentous has happened in the “natural rivalry” of Sox and Tomahawks. The Braves certainly didn’t get caught up in last summer’s David Ortiz Farewell Tour. Atlanta was the only franchise the 2016 Sox visited that did not present Big Papi with a token gift.

By my math, the most memorable Boston-Atlanta sports moment came when Hawks center Tree Rollins bit Danny Ainge’s finger while the two were rolling around the old Garden’s parquet floor in the 1983 NBA playoffs. That’s it. Tree Bites Man.



Now we’re going to get some real history. The final chapter of the most passionate and hate-fueled mission in the history of Boston sports will conclude in Houston Feb. 5, and the team standing in the path of the perfect ending is a team from Atlanta.
 
Dan Shaughnessy is a troll. He does this shit all the time. Don't fall for it Atlanta fans.

Local sports media been warring wit dem uppity smug cacs for days...it will spill over to the former falcons players soon. Then people will run with those soundbites until a real player speaks (if at all).

Julio almost got baited into saying something which could have been used as borderline bulliten board material last week.
 
I hope ya'll know he just trolling...

that is his new shtick.

these newspapers aint selling no more.


92.9 got into dat azz last week....and but-ston cacs got their feelings hurt....."don't call us racist / leave race out of it."

Atlanta Radio Hosts Call Pats Fans 'Drunks' and 'Racists'
Chowder and Champions · 2 days ago


Rich Kamla and John Michaels host a midday show in Atlanta (92.9 The Game) and were so mad about a piece by Dan Shaughnessy, that they started hurling insults at the city of Boston, calling Patriots fans “drunks” and “racists.”

Earlier in the week, local Boston troll Dan Shaughnessy called out Atlanta Falcons fans as fair weather. He said that they truly only care about their college team, the Georgia Bulldogs. Shaughnessy correctly pointed out that the city of Atlanta has suffered years of mediocrity in professional sports.

Of course, Atlanta, it’s media, and it’s fans played right into Shaugnessy’s hand. He writes articles for a reaction, and he certainly got one. On Wednesday, Rich Kamla and John Michaels began hurling insults at the city of Boston. They labeled New England Patriots fans as “drunks” and “racists” So lets take them on a little cultural and historical tour of Boston.

“Drunk” Patriots Fans

New Englanders do like to drunk. But they’re far from the crazy inebriated lunatics that the hosts equate them with. The worst a drunk fan of our patriots has done, is pull the fire alarm at the Steelers team hotel last weekend. T

The occasional fight breaks out in the upper deck, but that happens in every NFL and professional sports stadium. Meanwhile, Falcons fans have not been the highlight of morality.

During last weeks NFC Championship Game, Atlanta fans were falling in the crowd and knocking cheese heads off of Packers fans. So Atlanta, let us drink our Sam Adams, Harpoon and Narragansett in peace as we destroy your team in the Super Bowl

“Racist” Patriots Fans
According to Bart Hubbuch, a longtime New York Post NFL reporter, the Patriots are racist. His argument? A black quarterback had never started for the Patriots until Jacoby Brissett in week 3. His argument was ridiculous given the fact that the New England Patriots have drafted African-American quarterbacks and the fact that, between Tom Brady and Drew Bledsoe, the quarterback position has been locked up for the last 22 seasons.

Ironically, Hubbuch covers the Giants, now the only team to never start a black QB. Like many cities, Boston and New England have faced issues regarding race. Of course there are racist Patriots fans, but no more than of any other team. When you have a population of millions, it is made up of all different types of people. It would be less than honest not to admit that Boston has some terrible marks against it. Not the least of which is the Yawkeys.

We all know the Red Sox were the last team to integrate
, and there’s hardly any doubt it’s the fault of the race-baiting. Boston’s contemporary imaging can be acquainted to many star athletes of color in the 21st century who have made Boston home.

So, yes, Boston is also Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Isaiah Thomas, Randy Moss and Willie McGinest, Pedro Martinez and David Ortiz. But the Patriots have been labelled they’ve been seen as “White America’s Team.” They’re faces of the franchise are Rob Gronkowski, Tom Brady, Danny Amendola, and Julian Edelman.

But around New England, you could not be more wrong. The Patriots are a team, and the fans do not care what race you are, just that you play well. Julian Edelman and Malcolm Mitchell are held to the same fan standards. Devin McCourty, Dont’a Hightower and Malcolm Butler are beloved by fans. Labeling Patriots fans as racist is stereotypical, as the actions and beliefs of just a few fans are blown up by the media.

Boston and New England embrace diversity, while remembering the mistakes that were made in regards to race in the past. Rich Kamla and John Michaels, we know your job is to stir up a story, but leave race out of it.
 
92.9 got into dat azz last week....and but-ston cacs got their feelings hurt....."don't call us racist / leave race out of it."

Atlanta Radio Hosts Call Pats Fans 'Drunks' and 'Racists'
Chowder and Champions · 2 days ago


Rich Kamla and John Michaels host a midday show in Atlanta (92.9 The Game) and were so mad about a piece by Dan Shaughnessy, that they started hurling insults at the city of Boston, calling Patriots fans “drunks” and “racists.”

Earlier in the week, local Boston troll Dan Shaughnessy called out Atlanta Falcons fans as fair weather. He said that they truly only care about their college team, the Georgia Bulldogs. Shaughnessy correctly pointed out that the city of Atlanta has suffered years of mediocrity in professional sports.

Of course, Atlanta, it’s media, and it’s fans played right into Shaugnessy’s hand. He writes articles for a reaction, and he certainly got one. On Wednesday, Rich Kamla and John Michaels began hurling insults at the city of Boston. They labeled New England Patriots fans as “drunks” and “racists” So lets take them on a little cultural and historical tour of Boston.

“Drunk” Patriots Fans

New Englanders do like to drunk. But they’re far from the crazy inebriated lunatics that the hosts equate them with. The worst a drunk fan of our patriots has done, is pull the fire alarm at the Steelers team hotel last weekend. T

The occasional fight breaks out in the upper deck, but that happens in every NFL and professional sports stadium. Meanwhile, Falcons fans have not been the highlight of morality.

During last weeks NFC Championship Game, Atlanta fans were falling in the crowd and knocking cheese heads off of Packers fans. So Atlanta, let us drink our Sam Adams, Harpoon and Narragansett in peace as we destroy your team in the Super Bowl

“Racist” Patriots Fans
According to Bart Hubbuch, a longtime New York Post NFL reporter, the Patriots are racist. His argument? A black quarterback had never started for the Patriots until Jacoby Brissett in week 3. His argument was ridiculous given the fact that the New England Patriots have drafted African-American quarterbacks and the fact that, between Tom Brady and Drew Bledsoe, the quarterback position has been locked up for the last 22 seasons.

Ironically, Hubbuch covers the Giants, now the only team to never start a black QB. Like many cities, Boston and New England have faced issues regarding race. Of course there are racist Patriots fans, but no more than of any other team. When you have a population of millions, it is made up of all different types of people. It would be less than honest not to admit that Boston has some terrible marks against it. Not the least of which is the Yawkeys.

We all know the Red Sox were the last team to integrate
, and there’s hardly any doubt it’s the fault of the race-baiting. Boston’s contemporary imaging can be acquainted to many star athletes of color in the 21st century who have made Boston home.

So, yes, Boston is also Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Isaiah Thomas, Randy Moss and Willie McGinest, Pedro Martinez and David Ortiz. But the Patriots have been labelled they’ve been seen as “White America’s Team.” They’re faces of the franchise are Rob Gronkowski, Tom Brady, Danny Amendola, and Julian Edelman.

But around New England, you could not be more wrong. The Patriots are a team, and the fans do not care what race you are, just that you play well. Julian Edelman and Malcolm Mitchell are held to the same fan standards. Devin McCourty, Dont’a Hightower and Malcolm Butler are beloved by fans. Labeling Patriots fans as racist is stereotypical, as the actions and beliefs of just a few fans are blown up by the media.

Boston and New England embrace diversity, while remembering the mistakes that were made in regards to race in the past. Rich Kamla and John Michaels, we know your job is to stir up a story, but leave race out of it.

http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...use-he-said-they-prefer-white-players.930143/
 
cac store owners building a beer wall....


Sorry, Boston ... No Sam Adams At This Falcons Fan's Store
The store owner says he got riled up for the Super Bowl after reading a Boston-based columnist insult the Falcons and their Atlanta fans.

falconssamadams-1485629705-155.jpg


By Doug Gross (Patch Staff) - January 28, 2017 2:46 pm
GAINESVILLE, GA — Sip on a Sweetwater. Tipple a Terrapin. Grab a 12-pack of Red Brick, or any other Georgia-brewed beer.

But don't expect to walk into at least one Georgia convenience store and walk out with any Samuel Adams between now and Super Bowl Sunday. The Boston-based brew is banned at the Browns Bridge Exxon until the Atlanta Falcons and New England Patriots have settled the score in Super Bowl LI.

"We will NOT be selling any Sam Adam's until after the Super Bowl. #RiseUp," reads a sign taped to the beer cooler at the store in Gainesville — about an hour north of Atlanta.

(We're willing to let the typo slide out of team spirit and because ... hey ... this is football, not the Scripps National Spelling Bee.)

The NFC Champion Atlanta Falcons and AFC leading New England Patriots will kick off Super Bowl LI at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, February 5.

On a Facebook post showing the beer-cooler sign (which has been liked nearly 900 times and shared more than 3,500 times since Tuesday) store owner Viral Chhadua wrote that his temporary Boston booze ban was inspired by what he saw as disrespect for the Falcons and their fan base.

"It's not hate," he wrote to a Patriots-loving Facebook user. "One of your writers for Boston Globe called out a match up against our Falcons to be 'meh' and took shots at our Fanbase so this isn't hate, it's just a response from us that we ARE a passionate fan base!!!"

Last week, Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy wrote a piece with the headline, 'It's Hard To Get Pumped Up About A Super Bowl Against ... Atlanta'."

"We do not hate Atlanta nor its sports fans ... No. It’s not that. When it comes to Atlanta and its sports fans, we feel nothing. Maybe a little pity," he wrote.

He goes on to call Atlanta "a town with absolutely zero enthusiasm for professional sports. And the non-fans know it. "

That rubbed Chhadua the wrong way.

"I was already pumped that we were in the Super Bowl and matched up against living legends in Bill (Belichick) and Tom (Brady)," Chhadua told ESPN. "Then this article pops up and belittles our sports teams and fan base. I was irritated at the shots this guy took at the fan base and Atlanta as a whole."

So away went the Sam Adams —a beer made by the Boston Brewing Company and, with its Revolutionary War trappings, associated closely with the Patriots and their home turf.

For their part, Samuel Adams was taking the news in stride, in the way that only fans of a squad that has already been to eight Super Bowls and won four of them can.

"Won't be their only loss," the company wrote on Twitter, in a post containing a link to a story about the Browns Bridge ban. They followed up with a shot at one of Atlanta's own, adding: "And don't worry, Atlanta. We're still drinking @CocaCola."




Meanwhile, back in Gainesville, Chhadua was making it clear that the feud with Boston and its beer is only a temporary one, and that — win or lose — Samuel Adams will be back on his shelves after the big game.

"It'll be back on the shelf on Monday the 6th," he wrote on Facebook.
 
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and beantown don't want to get big homie started..... :lol:

Did you know Samuel L. Jackson once sold concessions at Falcons games?
Jennifer Brett
January 27, 2017 celebrities.


samuel-l-jackson-at-the-falcons-game.jpg

Samuel L. Jackson inspires both the team and its fans to "Rise Up."

Samuel L. Jackson isn’t just one of the most famous Atlanta Falcons fans. The actor known for his inspiring role in those “Rise Up” commercials once worked for the team.

“I went to college in Atlanta,” he said during a Thursday night appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” “When I was at Morehouse the Falcons came to town. I used to work at the stadium. I used to sell hot dogs, burgers, fries.”



He talked about spending time on the sidelines before games and displayed intricate knowledge of the Falcons’ key plays.

“Are you a hater of the Patriots?” Kimmel asked.

“Yep!” Jackson quickly responded. “I’m going to have to say yes.”
 
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Mayor Kasim Reed defends Atlanta sports fans' passion after Boston insults
Alec McQuade, WXIA 8:39 PM. EST January 24, 2017

Dan Shaughnessy wrote.

Many in Atlanta feel Shaughnessy is ignorant to what is really happening in Atlanta. The population is growing, stadiums are rising, new professional teams are being created, the teams are making runs in the postseason, and now the Falcons are in the Super Bowl for the first time in 18 years.

But for years, Atlanta fans have been labeled as either bandwagon or fair-weather fans. The city's mayor, Kasim Reed, said that description is wrong.

"I've never felt that way about our fans," Reed told 11Alive. "I think what you have to have are players that are committed. I talked to the Atlanta Falcons, many members of the team after the [NFC Championship]. They didn't feel that the fans were bad. They felt that are fans were as good as any fans in America. Obviously on Super Bowl night, there'll be a billion people here in the city of Atlanta over and over, and that can't be anything but good. It'll be a little better if we win though."

This notion that Atlanta is a weak sports town is also disputed by the Director of the Atlanta Sports Council, Dan Corso.

Corso described Atlanta fans as "passionate" and said that the recent success by the Falcons and Hawks, as well as new stadiums, has generated more excitement than ever. He believes the perception that Atlanta has a weak sports fan base is because of it being a "transient" city that many migrate to, including from cities like Boston.

"You're going to have folks moving down here and folks move down from the northeast with generations of allegiance to other teams," Corso said. "There's a reason people move to Atlanta. This is a great place to live, this is a great place to work, and when folks do move down here they have some historical allegiance to other teams, but we would certainly stand by the idea that if you live here, you cheer here. "

Corso has been at the forefront of bringing major sporting events to the city. He said the city's biggest sports highlight is obviously the 1996 Olympic Games (something Boston has yet been able to bring to its city). But Atlanta has also hosted multiple Super Bowls (with another coming in 2019), four Final Fours (and a fifth in 2020). Future plans include the 2018 College Football Playoff national championship game in the $1.6 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium (opening in just a couple months).

Atlanta isn't just a strong sports town with a strong fan base, it's an ultimate sports destination.

"This community has a long standing history of hosting big events," Corso said. "This community knows how to put on big events. It's built for big events. Quite frankly there's not a city out there, in my opinion, that can compare to the full experience we can provide to the fans, to the attending media and to the participating teams."

Speaking Tuesday during an event regarding the College Football Playoff national championship, the Executive Director of the College Football Playoff, Bill Hancock, said that Atlanta creates unique championship events, and that is one of the reasons that Atlanta has become, as he said, one of the best sports cities: "Atlanta, because of the infrastructure and the people that make it happen, has risen to the top tier of sports cities around the country."

People are just learning about Atlanta as a sports city and its fans for the first time. What they don't know is that the fans have been there all along, quietly waiting for their teams to do something remarkable. Now that the Falcons have done that, the city isn't getting ignored anymore.

It's not that Atlanta hasn't ever had passionate fans. It's that they finally have something to cheer for.

http://www.11alive.com/sports/nfl/a...-fans-after-insults-fly-from-boston/392135201
 
A Rise-Up Response To Dan Shaughnessy & The Boston Globe
January 24, 2017 3:12 PM By John Fricke
Filed Under: Atlanta Falcons, john fricke
newsinconebyone.png

Falcons fans erupt in joy as team heads to Super Bowl
WGCL - Atlanta, GA

The Boston Globe sports columnist Dan Shaughnessy took aim at Atlanta, the Falcons and our fans.

This is our response:

We’d like to begin by paraphrasing your opening statement to this:

We do not hate Boston nor its sports fans. We can’t even summon the old “Gone With The Wind” line when Rhett Butler tells Scarlett that “Frankly, I don’t give a damn.”

But if we did we would be guilty of following you into the muck.

Instead our answer is this…

You are Boston. Your city’s storied history is one all Americans feel pride for. There is no doubt of your incredible contributions to this nation. We cherish and honor that with the additional knowledge that, largely, your history has already been written.

We are Atlanta. Our new history is just beginning to unfold from an old history that you might recall.

There was a time in our collective pasts when the Sons of Boston rose up in arms. They joined those to march on us; and when they got here, they burned our city – board and nail – to the ground.

Still we were not beaten. Those ashes became the fertile soil of a revival. Of a place that now strives to become the next great city of the world. From that smolder came a phoenix rising from ruin to soar across the South. We are Atlanta.

You are Boston. Not long ago, when your town was hurting, we mourned your losses at the Marathon. We all joined “Boston Strong” from the distance. We prayed you would find healing. And when Patriots Day came again, and your best crossed that finish line without fear while Fenway cheers echoed across the way, we too rejoiced.

Now one of your adopted sons, a gunslinger schooled out of Chestnut Hill, joins the sons of Georgia and Florida and Alabama and beyond to lead a new march south, rallying behind a new cause, to Houston and Super Bowl LI. Our best will cross a different finish line on a different mission. And we will then rejoice in a different way.

You are Boston. Your sports accomplishments are a source of tremendous civic pride. Your teams fought and earned all their titles and your fans cried with joy at all your parades. But instead of reveling in all that glory, you instead chose to sink into the mud of Rumney Marsh.

Instead of welcoming us to one of the parties you seem to host annually, you fired shots in a war that does not exist.

You pointed out we have but one major pro sports championship. Which we know and accept is true. Today.

But after that fact…

You dismissed our teams as irrelevant, slammed our fans as uncaring and failed miserably in an attempt to use the pride we here have in the greatness of collegiate football as a hammer to pound on a people you obviously don’t know or understand.

You even went so far as to say you pity us.

Yet we do not envy you.

Yes, you are Boston. You’ve been there, many times. Please, act like it.

We are Atlanta. We are going there. When we arrive we will hold ourselves high.

You are Boston. When Sunday a week comes Atlanta will wish you good luck! And you will find that you need it.

Because.

We are… Atlanta. We are… the new history.

Rise up!


John Fricke
 
Memo to Boston: I won’t apologize for Atlanta or the Falcons


Mark Bradley
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
1:40 p.m Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017 Sports


belichick_0124.jpg



Say what you will about Bill Belichick, but he does cut a dashing figure.


As insults go, Dan Shaughnessy’s Boston Globe missive regarding Atlanta and its sports is as mild as it gets. Indeed, I’m not sure it qualifies as insulting. His thesis: It’s hard for snooty New Englanders to get excited about a Super Bowl with the little lambsies from the A-T-L.

And you know what? For them, it probably is.

I can’t lie. Boston has a much richer history in sports — pro sports, anyway — than our city. Boston had Carl Yastrzemski and Bill Russell and Bobby Orr. If I had to name my 10 all-time favorite athletes, they’d make the list. I would, however, note that those luminaries began playing for their Beantown teams before we in Atlanta had a big-league club in those respective sports, which would make this a bit of an apples/oranges thing. But not entirely.

In the spring of 2008, this correspondent went to Boston for the sub-.500 Hawks’ playoff series — their first postseason voyage of this century; it wound up going seven games, improbably enough — and became immersed in Patriots Day and the morning Red Sox game against the Rangers at Fenway and a bit of the Boston Marathon and even the Bruins playing Game 7 of a Stanley Cup series that night in Montreal. It was, I must admit, pretty cool.

I talked to the Sox reliever Jonathan Papelbon about the championship vibe in his fair city. He used the phrase “kicking ass” to describe what Boston teams were doing. These genteel Southern ears had never heard such a thing.

As for Boston itself: Great place. Been there many times. Like it a lot. Like clam chowder. I wouldn’t want to live there, but that’s only because of the weather. Personal choice.

Mr. Shaughnessy makes a big deal out of our ardor for college football, noting that the TVs in Philips Arena as the Hawks were about to face the Celtics last April were tuned to G-Day. He mentions that the ol’ AJC made a splash of the scrimmage the next day. (He didn’t mention Ludacris and the condoms, so thanks for that.) What can I say? We do like college football. We like college football more than any major city in these United States. I don’t see that as a terrible thing. To quote the Patriots’ coach: It is what it is.

I did find this part semi-amusing: That beating the tradition-less Falcons in the Super Bowl wouldn’t be as satisfying as beating the Cowboys or the Packers or the Giants. Here’s the thing: The Patriots have never beaten any of those in a Super Bowl. (They’re 0-2 against Eli Manning.) Boston’s Super triumphs have come against the Rams, who have since moved to a different town; the Panthers, who came into being in 1995; the Eagles, who haven’t won a title since 1960; and the Seahawks, who began NFL play 10 years after the Falcons. Here’s the number of Super Bowl wins for those four franchises — two.

I could get all righteous about Spygate and Deflategate, but I’m kind of gated out. I admire Bill Belichick but consider him an ass. (Blame Papelbon. He taught me that word.) I admire Tom Brady but have never warmed to him. (In my book, he’s no Bobby Orr. I loved Bobby Orr. Growing up in the hockey hotbed of Maysville, Ky., I’d listen to Bruins games on WBZ.)

If anything, I’d think New Englanders would have a sense of kinship with us Atlantans. The Sox — the team that traded Babe Ruth for cash, mind you — went from 1919 until 2004 between World Series titles. (I was there the night they broke though in St. Louis. It was fun.) They had Bucky Frickin’ Dent. We had that rat Jim Leyritz. They had Buckner’s flub. We had Levingston’s running lefty hook. (Against the Celtics, if memory serves.) We both hate the Yankees. Isn’t the enemy of my enemy my friend?

Do I like the Patriots? Nope. Do I find them insufferable in their arrogance? Absolutely. Still, they’re a team trying to win, same as every other team in every other city. I understand folks up there mightn’t feel stoked about this game, but that’s OK. Imagine how it will feel when their proud team loses to a franchise that hasn’t much of a history. Imagine seeing the alum from the Jesuit school in Chestnut Hill lift the MVP trophy. Imagine that.

(Oh, and one thing more: That playoff series Mr. Shaughnessy covered here last spring? Could have sworn the Boston team didn’t win.)
 
^^^^^^^^^

The locals had at it all last week with the soft warm ups vs. the boston media.

Radio Row week in Houston begins tmw morning. Things should get all the way turnt up by Friday.
 
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