Sometimes, Coming Up With A Title For These Things Is Hard

(This is a non-sports post. But this is also the 10-year anniversary of the worst day in my and my family’s life. If you come here for sports, I completely forgive you for waiting until the next post.)


Ten years ago today, my father suffered a stroke. I was a junior in high school. I left home that morning never thinking that it was the last time I would hear my dad speak, or see him walk correctly. At no point during the day did I think, my father is close to death right now.

After school, I dropped my friend Dave off at his house, as I did every day. I walked into his house to the sound of my grandmother on his answering machine. That was the first sign on January 31, 2002 that something wasn’t right.
The next message was my mother. She repeated the same thing my grandmother said, “Jason, there’s an emergency. You need to get to (the hospital) as soon as you hear this. I remember tossing the CD that was in my hand and, with no indication that I was right, saying to Dave, “It’s my dad.”
I raced to the hospital from Dave’s house. The song on the radio was Rancid’s “Time Bomb.” That song is forever synonymous with that moment. I yelled at every car in my way and drove much too quickly to the hospital.
Standing at the door to the Emergency Room was my grandfather (mother’s). That cinched it that it was my father. I drove my car into a snow bank at the far end of the hospital and ran quickly. My hunch was true.
My mother’s friend Linda Thomas, a nurse, sat me on a vacant stretcher and told me, through tears, about my father’s stroke. I had no idea, then, what a stroke really was. I knew it made people talk and walk funny. I didn’t know why it happened or what it looked like when it did.
My grandfather drove me to Boston, where my father was transported to receive emergency surgery to try to keep him alive. My grandfather, Dean Hess (this being the only time his name will ever appear on the internet in a blog), was and remains either a really great person to be with in times of crisis or the worst. When his close friend and the husband of my grandmother’s best friend died, my grandfather stood in his backyard for a while, marveling at how impressive Bobcats were. Not the animal. The bulldozer vehicle. My grandparents apparently picked an ideal day to have a new septic system installed at their house because it gave my grandfather a distraction.
The drive didn’t involve much talk about my father. We talked about sports and that was it. It prepared me in no way for what awaited me in the ER waiting room at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
I’ve never really understood why people cry. For one, why did God decide to have water come out of our eyes when bad things happen? And why does seeing other people cry cause one to cry? Because as soon as I saw my mother: tears. And lots of them. And for a very long time.
After hours of waiting, my mother was told that doctors could not remove part of my father’s skull to allow his brain to swell. I don’t remember why. The details are in no way important. She was told that his prognosis was not very good and that if his brain swelled very much at all, he would die.
And so, before we left the hospital that night, we said goodbye.
I walked into his room and lost all control. There were tubes feeding tubes feeding tubes. He was not responsive. He was not conscious. And so thus, you talk to, essentially, your dead father. That is something we do as human beings. We encourage our children to talk to people who can’t hear them, see them, talk to them, or touch them. This is supposed to be cathartic.
It’s not.
I don’t remember anything that I said. Not a thing. I don’t remember how long I was in that room for. I don’t remember anything except how my father looked. Dead.
The last time I had seen him he was sitting next to me on the couch at 6:50 am, watching MTV with me. No headache. No dizziness. Not even a sneeze. The next time I saw him, 16 hours later, and everything had changed.
Ten years later, and my dad is definitely alive. If I were to see him tonight, which I wish I could, he would look very different then he did ten years ago. No tubes. More gray hair. His face looks noticeably different, naturally.
The ten years since that stroke have been incredibly difficult for him. Six months after that stroke he suffered a massive seizure that nearly killed him. What followed was a series of smaller seizures. Therapy became more difficult for him because he didn’t see progress and he eventually gave up hope that he’d speak well ever again. His physical therapy afforded him the ability to walk, albeit with a slow hitch. Then, in 2008, my mother, for reasons I’ll never understand or accept, told my father that she wanted a divorce.
The last ten years of my dad’s life have been more difficult than any decade should be. My mother and sisters have chided me for “making excuses” for him. In my mind, the guy doesn’t need any excuses. Everything we take for granted was taken, inexplicably and without warning, from him.
I haven’t really talked to my dad in the last 10 years. We talk, but because of the limitations he faces, there’s no real substantive feelings expressed from him. Everything he wants to say is there. But it often can’t come out. And when it does, it’s just a word or two. In a decade, my dad hasn’t been able to adequately express how he feels. It confounds me, especially as someone who loves to hear himself speak, how one can live through that.
My intention here is to not bog down your day with my problems. That is not the point. We, as people, often need reminders to not take things for granted. Every January 31st, simply by looking at a calendar, I’m reminded of that. And it bothers me when this is regarded as cliche. A word like “cliche” should never be used to describe awareness and appreciation. The manner in which you wake up one day can be very different from the manner in which you go to sleep that same night, if you even get the opportunity to lay your head down at the end of the day. Your ability to express how you feel, to tell someone that you love them, can disappear in an instant. Just because you got to see someone before they left for work, does not mean you’ll get to see them when they’ve clocked out.
After I post this, I’m going to call my dad, and tell him I love him. It’ll be a vastly different conversation from the one I had ten years ago with him.

At Least I’m Not A Wizards Fan

Between January 7 and February 24, 2007, the Boston Celtics won one game. The team they beat was the Milwaukee Bucks. During that span, the Celtics went 1-22. It was, perhaps, the worst 23 game stretch in the history of the NBA’s most storied franchise. And it was brutal to watch. What is remarkable about that stretch is that the Celtics were not often blown out. They were relatively competitive in those games. They did get blown out by the Lakers by 28 and followed that up with an 18 point loss to the Jazz, but there were a lot of 7 and 8 point losses during that painful run.

What I recall from that period was just how much I enjoyed watching the Celtics. When I write that it was “painful” I mean that in the sense of losses. It’s never fun to watch your team lose 22 of 23 games. What I enjoyed in watching those games, though, was the effort. It was there. This was a team that was just undermanned.
On January 22, the Celtics lost to the eventual NBA champion Spurs. By 4 points. I remember watching this game in my dorm room in college, as I did the vast majority of those 23 games. Look at this starting lineup mismatch:
Spurs:
Fabricio Oberto
Tim Duncan
Bruce Bowen
Manu Ginobili
Tony Parker
Celtics:
Ryan Gomes
Delonte West
Al Jefferson
Kendrick Perkins
Gerald Green
The Celtics reserves that night included a young (and overmatched) Rajon Rondo, Sebastian Telfair, Leon Powe, and Allan Ray. No, not Ray Allen. Allan Ray.
There was no Big 3. Pierce was hurt. Garnett was a Timberwolf. Allen was a SuperSonic. Rondo’s line that night featured 30 minutes of 12% shooting and 3 turnovers. The Celtics leading scorer was Delonte West. The Celtics fell behind the Spurs in the 2nd quarter, but fought back in the fourth, coming within four points of knocking off the Spurs.
One of the silver linings of this 2006-07 season, one which the Celtics finished 24-58 was the upcoming NBA Draft and the promise of a lanky, sharpshooting Freshman from the University of Texas named Kevin Durant. And if not him, there was the big, athletic, Freshman-who-looks-like-a-Vietnam-Veteran from Ohio State named Greg Oden. I was a Durant supporter from the start and became enamored with the thought of the Celtics finishing with the second worst record and having the lottery balls fall their way so that someone else could take Oden first overall and the Celtics could have a future Hall of Famer fall into their laps.
I was sitting in a restaurant in Omaha, Nebraska on May 22, 2007. It was the night of the NBA Draft Lottery and the Celtics had the best chance at the best pick (the second). This was the era before smartphones. I was left to the text messages of a friend and fellow Celtics fan, Matt Minton. Before my meal was put in front of me, I got the message. It was a string of mashed key strokes. It looked like this: lkdajfiodjgiofdjfodjojo. It was and remains the Minton trademark, used to express anger, outrage, uncontrollable excitement, and general extreme emotion. The Celtics did not have luck on their side. They drew the fifth overall pick in the draft. My meal was ruined.
With that fifth pick, the Celtics drafted Jeff Green, an experienced but underwhelming forward from Georgetown. Green was not a Celtic for long, however. Realizing that they were staring down another season like the 2006-07 season, the Celtics decided to give up on their youth by acquiring veteran players hungry for a championship. Gone were Al Jefferson, Gerald Green, Sebastian Telfair, Jeff Green, Ryan Gomes, Delonte West, 2 first round draft picks, and a second round draft pick. Incoming were Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, and a rookie named Glen Davis.
The 2007-08 Boston Celtics were anything but the 2006-07 Celtics. The two teams looked and played nothing alike. The new Celtics were a defensive powerhouse. They were mean. They were physical. And they were winning.
On June 17, 2008, a year after one of the worst seasons in franchise history left the team with no direction and no hope, the Celtics lifted their first Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy since 1986. It was the first title I got to experience. There was jumping, chest pounding, smiling, and tears. And that was just me. There was the epic Kevin Garnett post-game interview. And KG was right. In that moment, anything was possible.
3 1/2 years later, on January 11, 2012, I asked myself if it was worth it. I thought that 2007-08 title would be the first of at least a few. I was wrong. The Celtics would get back to the finals once, but lose in Game 7 to the Lakers. 2010-11 ended with a very quick and quiet second round defeat at the hands of the Miami Heat. The young, dynamic Heat and the aging, banged-up Celtics looked like teams from different eras. Something had to be done, right?
Well, yes. But instead nothing was done. The Celtics tried to acquire Chris Paul, a player who would help them in a marginal way, for a short period of team, and add to the team’s youth in no way, but he made it clear that he didn’t want to come to Boston. And who could blame him?
Coming into the 2011-12 season, it was clear that there was not the personnel to make this team work, given such a grueling schedule. Add to that a foot injury to 34 year-old Paul Pierce (the youngest of the Big 3) and one could expect the Celtics to get off to a slow start. But, my God, is this slow or what?
On Wednesday, the equally old and slow Dallas Mavericks rolled into Boston for the Milk of Magnesia Bowl. The Readers Digest Festival. The Lawrence Welk Cup. The Celtics of 2006-07 would have beaten the 2011-12 Dallas Mavericks on pure youth. These were two old, tired teams, dragging through sludge. This was ugly. This was the 2011-12 NBA season for old teams.
I expect more of the same for the Celtics. Looking ahead at their schedule, I see some periods that will be an utter struggle. And for a team who finds itself 4-5 (with wins over 4 of the NBA’s worst teams) that’s not going to be good. From March 11-23, the Celtics will play 0 home games. They will play 8 road games. That’s 8 road games in 12 days. From LA (Lakers and Clippers) to Oakland to Sacramento to Denver to Atlanta to Milwaukee to Philadelphia. In late April, they’ll play 5 games in 6 days, including a back-to-back that will take them from Miami to a home game against Atlanta, back on the road to Toronto.
The road is an unforgiving place when you’re at the end of your career, when your knees are weak, when your feet are ailing, and especially when you don’t have a lot of help around you. This season is going to be an unforgiving one for the Boston Celtics. But this season isn’t the biggest concern. Next season is.
Where do you go from here if you’re the Celtics? Is Rajon Rondo the Point Guard of the future? You don’t bring back Ray Allen, do you? And you certainly don’t bring back KG, right? And with two first round picks (both of which will likely be mid-round picks), what direction do you go in? Last year the Celtics drafted E’Twaun Moore and JaJuan Johnson from Purdue, both veteran college players. Yet, even with a wealth of college experience, the two former Boilermakers are averaging a robust 1.8 ppg. Combined. They can’t find the court on a 4-5 team. The year before last, they drafted Avery Bradley. If you were to call Avery Bradley an “abject disappointment,” Kwame Brown would get jealous. Bradley has been, in a word, “useless.” There is no young foundation in Boston, save for Rondo.
And so that brings us to Rajon Rondo. Rondo has gone from an abysmal shooter to a reluctant one. Next year’s starting lineup is going to look a lot different and may even involve two rookies for all we know. What do you do, if you’re Boston, about your reluctant-to-shoot Point Guard, with a very friendly contract? Rondo has had plenty of time to become a more willing and better shooter. Neither has happened. Someone will need to score points along with Paul Pierce.
The last area where a team can build for the future is of course through free agency. It’s harder in the NBA because, generally, you’re not going to find a lot of in-their-prime free agent talents. You’ll either get undrafted rookies or veterans playing out their career. The Celtics have made a habit out of signing those guys in recent years. And there will be plenty of them in 2012. But that won’t get the Celtics back onto the Boulevard of the Elites. In fact, it’ll take them further off course onto Middling, Directionless Drive.
I keep going back to 2007. I keep asking if it was worth it to win that one title. Couldn’t the Celtics have built a team around Jeff Green, Rajon Rondo, Al Jefferson, Kendrick Perkins, Ryan Gomes, and Paul Pierce. Maybe had one more down year, ended up in the lottery, and drafted Eric Gordon, Brandon Rush, or Roy Hibbert? Rondo, Pierce, Green, Jefferson, and Hibbert with Perkins off the bench? It wouldn’t have won a title, but it would have been something right?
Or was 2008 the point? Does it seem like it was a mistake because the only championship came so soon? Would it have been better for the Celtics to have lost the 2008 final, and come back in 2008-09 to win the championship? Or is this all just fantasy? I know that answer.
Still, above all else, I go back to May 22, 2007. All that floundering in 2006-07 was for not. All that losing. Playing all of that youth. What did it get? Jeff Green, who now finds himself back with the Celtics, but unable to play because of a heart condition. When I watch the 2011-12 Boston Celtics, it’s just not fun. And it’s only going to get less fun from here.

The New Hampshire Primary OR Me Talking About College Basketball

I’ve been wracking my brain trying to think of blog ideas. My head is filled with frameworks. There’s a non-sports idea in there trying to examine why we, as people, live where we live. There’s a baseball hot stove post up there. There’s a Greg Stiemsma post. There was a BCS National Championship preview (though I was less excited about that because I had already written at length about those teams).

Today, though, because we’re at about the halfway mark in the season, you get some college basketball. A little more analysis on the front-end as I try to highlight a few teams who aren’t getting the pub I think they deserve.
What follows is how I rank college basketball’s best 10, so far in 2011-12. This has less to do with where I think they’ll end up than where I think they are today.
10. UNLV (14-2, Strength of Schedule (SOS): 60, 2-2 vs. Top 25)
Losses to Wisconsin and Wichita State. Wins over Illinois and North Carolina. The Wisconsin loss makes sense because they’re a matchup problem for most teams if they can dictate the tempo. If you can play slow against Wisconsin, you’re probably going to win. If you only know one speed (fast), you’re going to have to make the Badgers run. If you don’t, they’ll lull you to death. Or, if I’m being less dramatic, defeat.
UNLV’s win over North Carolina was not some sort of aberration. The analysts said, “Well, UNLV was playing in their backyard (the game was on a neutral court in Las Vegas. The “LV” in “UNLV” stands for “Las Vegas.”).” My response? So what! So the Tar Heels played on the road against the Rebels. They lost. Convincingly. Even more convincingly than the 10 point difference.
To the average college fan, the loss to Wichita State might seem like a red flag. That’s because the average fan doesn’t know how good the Wichita State Shockers are. 12-3 overall. Losses to Temple, Alabama, and the 11th best team in the country, the Creighton Blue Jays. Currently ranked 24th in Jeff Sagarin’s computer rankings. Only two teams in the top 10 have a better strength of schedule than the Shockers.
UNLV is here because they do everything, offensively, well. They’re in the top 31 in the nation in field goal shooting, points per game, rebounds, and assists per game. They’re efficient and effective, led by Chase Stanbeck (shooting 46% from 3) and Mike Moser, each averaging over 14 points per game.
Biggest remaining game of the season: This Saturday at San Diego State. A win in front of “The Show” at Viejas Arena should very well catapult the Rebels into the real-life Top 10. San Diego State is just as for real as the Rebels. I expect the Aztecs to win the home tilt. Still, I think UNLV has a chance to be an Elite 8 team this year. With the talent they have, anything short of the Sweet 16 will be a disappointment.
9. Kansas (12-3, SOS: 10, 3-2 vs. Top 25)
The losses came to Davidson, Kentucky, and Duke. Which one is not like the others? The Davidson loss is an outlier. Each team is going to have one of those nights in the course of a season. The Kentucky and Duke losses, well, those make sense.
What puts Kansas in this list is a victory against Ohio State. Second tier wins against Long Beach State, Kansas State, and Georgetown are nice too. Kansas does nothing particularly well. Their offense is perfectly middle-of-the-pack. So is their defense. This is a team that will get by on talent. As long as Tyshawn Taylor, their often troubled, sharp-shooting guard (44% from 3) stays out of trouble, Kansas can find itself in the Final Four.
Biggest remaining game of the season: Monday January 16, at home, against Baylor. This will be the game of January, on paper. Kansas needs to win at home. They’ll play again in February in Waco. Until then, a win against an undefeated Baylor team will give the Jayhawks a lot of momentum and vocal support.
8. Michigan State (14-2, SOS: 40, 3-2 vs. Top 25)
Michigan State lost their first two games of the season, to North Carolina (on a boat) and on a neutral court against Duke. Since then, they’ve lost to no one.
The Spartans were (and in a lot of ways, remain) an unproven commodity. The players are fairly nameless, outside of Draymond Green. The coach though, is not. Tom Izzo was able to keep a young team on track after their season began with two consecutive losses. Since the Duke game, the Spartans have beaten Gonzaga in Spokane, Indiana in East Lansing, and Wisconsin in Madison. They’ve also gotten strong off of the likes of Central Connecticut State, Missouri-Kansas City, and Bowling Green. But sometimes the most dangerous thing for a young team (or at least for their opponents) is to taste victory. Once you get the flavor of victory on your tongue, it’s hard to get it off. Right now, the Spartans have that taste. And no one has taken it off since November 15.
Biggest remaining game of the season: February 11, at Ohio State. We’ll find out if they’re for real then. Columbus isn’t an easy place to win. But if the Spartans still haven’t tasted defeat, well, that could be a big game for both teams.
7. Indiana (15-1, SOS: 125, 2-1 vs. Top 25)
I’ve watched no team this season more than the Hoosiers. And I’ve loved what I’ve seen.
If not for the loss at Michigan State, the Hoosiers would be the number 1 team in the country. A buzzer beater win over Kentucky put IU back in the national spotlight. A New Years Eve win over Ohio State helped some people forget about that loss to the Spartans.
Part of the issue for Indiana is that no one knows any of their players. The program has been so far off the radar for the last few seasons. But it appears that while no one was paying attention, Tom Crean was building a powerhouse out of 4 and 5 star recruits.
The Hoosiers’ calling card is their offense. 8th in the country in scoring per game. No team shoots it better from 3. And the Hoosiers have one of the best on-ball defenders in college basketball in Victor Oladipo.
The downfall of IU will come off the glass. If they have an off shooting night, they will lose. Plain and simple. The Hoosiers are a subpar rebounding team with a fair amount of size, but not a ton of physicality down low. Indiana played near perfect games against Ohio State and Kentucky. Anything less than perfect and the Buckeyes or Wildcats would have won.
If IU can play perfect basketball for two weeks (past the Round of 32) I think they can win the National Championship. They’re really good. I look forward to seeing them hit the road in the Big 10. That’s when we’ll see if this team really can get to NOLA.
Biggest remaining game of the season: January 15, at Ohio State. The Buckeyes will get redemption. What’s going to matter after that game is how the Hoosiers bounce back.
6. Duke (13-2, SOS: 6, 2-1 vs. Top 25)
The losses were to Ohio State in Columbus (in blowout fashion) and at Temple last week.
There’s really no need to talk about Duke at length. They’ll go as far as they can without being able to rebound. The moment they run into a physical, rebounding team (North Carolina, Kentucky, Michigan State, Kansas State), they’ll go down. For Duke, their success in March will be about their draw. If they have a Sweet 16 matchup against Kansas State, look out.
Biggest remaining game of the season: March 3 vs. North Carolina. I fully expect the Devils to lose in Chapel Hill. That’s expected. A loss at home though will prove the hypothesis, that this team isn’t tough enough, true.
5. Baylor (14-0, SOS: 172, 1-0 vs. Top 25)
That one victory was against Saint Mary’s. They’ve also beaten West Virginia and San Diego State. These are all good teams, but these aren’t wins like UNLV’s against North Carolina or Indiana’s against Ohio State and Kentucky.
Baylor is only here because they’re undefeated. They haven’t had to play any tough road games, save for a trip to Provo (and they needed a buzzer beater to knock off the Cougars). Baylor has played like the richer man’s Kansas. They’re a team with a ton of talent, but they’re not great at anything. They’re long and athletic. But they’re not big and physical. They’re not necessarily quick. There aren’t a lot of great ball handlers. They’re slashers. They’re the sort of team that has to constantly dictate tempo to get where they want to go. And I don’t see that lasting for a while. But it’s hard to argue with undefeated.
(As a sidebar, Murray State is also undefeated. They have played a weaker schedule than Baylor’s 172nd. The Racers have a legitimate shot at an undefeated regular season, but I don’t think they’re anything more than a possible Sweet 16 team. And even that might be a stretch.)
Biggest remaining game of the season: The next one. Which happens to be tonight at Kansas State. The same Wildcats team who just knocked off the undefeated Missouri Tigers. If Baylor wins that game, the next one will remain the biggest. Can Baylor get to the Final Four? Yes. But anyone can do that. VCU did it last year. Do I think Baylor will get to the Final Four? No. I think they slip up in the second round of the tournament. Their a team that can be beaten who just hasn’t been yet. That will come.
4. Syracuse (17-0, SOS: 92, 2-0 vs. Top 25)
Much like with Baylor, I don’t buy the undefeated start. The Orange beat Florida (at home) by 4 and Marquette (at home) by 7. Those are by far their best victories. They’ve played 3 games on the road all season. This is a team that will likely finish the year with only 2 or 3 losses and will receive a number 1 seed. But you’re kidding yourself if you think they have the talent to get to New Orleans. They don’t. I’m not buying a team from the Big East who can’t rebound.
Biggest remaining game of the season: Much like Baylor, it’s always going to be the next one. Syracuse’s next one is Wednesday at Villanova.
3. North Carolina (14-2, SOS: 196, 2-2 vs. Top 25)
2. Ohio State (15-2, SOS: 156, 1-2 vs. Top 25)
1. Kentucky (15-1, SOS: 224, 3-1 vs. Top 25)
I’m grouping these three together because their numbers for the season are so similar. They’re all playing week schedules. They’ve all lost at least 1 game. The Wildcats are my number one team for a few reasons. Their only loss was on the road, to a top 10 team, at the buzzer. And they beat Carolina. And they have the best interior defense in the country. And the best freshman in Michael Kidd-Gilchrist.
The Buckeyes find themselves ahead of the Tar Heels because of the dreaded eye test. I’ve liked watching Ohio State more than Carolina. They look like the better team when they’re at their best. The numbers don’t back that up at all. North Carolina has the number one offense in the country. They’re coached by Roy Williams. They’re littered with stars. Ohio State plays good defense, shoots well, and passes well, but that’s it really. They’re Jared Sullinger (who has found himself injured twice this season) and some really good players, but no real stars outside of him. They’re coached by Thad Matta, a marvelous recruiter, but a guy who’s never won a title. And Ohio State has the tougher schedule of the two. So call it a limb, but it’s one that I’m willing to go out on. And I’m willing to shift my preseason pick. For now, I’ll take Kentucky over Ohio State in the title game. But I’m allowed to change that at the 3/4 mark of the season.

Get Lucky Tonight

Vacations, the Holidays, and generally having some semblance of a life has kept me from enjoying bowl season. That is not a complaint. In fact, it’s something I’m happy about. I don’t usually find myself watching a lot of bowl games because, well, they’re not all that relevant. Don’t take this as a complaint about too many bowls. I don’t think there are enough. I love that sponsors are so willing to provide colleges with money for playing in an exhibition game. I also love that the law of our nation does not require me, as a vocal fan of college football, to watch whatever the Belk Bowl is.


As I write this brief entry, I have the Rose Bowl Game on. On a 1-10 scale of excitement for this game, I’m about a 3.2. That is the highest my excitement rating has been this bowl season. And to be honest, I’m really only watching because I haven’t seen a Rose Bowl Game in at least five years and thought I was due.

Tonight though will be a little different. Tonight is the Fiesta Bowl. Oklahoma State and Stanford play each other. For Oklahoma State, this is an important game because they were kept out of the BCS National Championship Game. They have something to prove. But I’m a little less concerned with the Pokes. I think they’re going to get destroyed.

My excitement for the Fiesta Bowl (about a 7.1) has only to do with it being Andrew Luck’s last college game. I implore you, NFL fans, to watch tonight’s game if only to get a head start on falling in love with the perfect QB. Don’t wait until next year when he’s starting for the Colts on Day 1, as he should be. No QB as good as Luck should have to sit for “2-3 years” behind any other QB. The Packers wasted years with Aaron Rodgers playing behind Brett Favre. The Colts would be wise to trade Peyton Manning, and give Andrew Luck the car keys on Day 1.

Watch tonight as Andrew Luck carves up the Oklahoma State defense (one of the worst in the country) like a classically trained butcher. Don’t worry about the fact that he’s not facing a challenge. He’s faced plenty of challenges in his career and succeeded. Watch tonight to enjoy and appreciate.

And one more thing: I cannot listen to another person talk about Robert Griffin III in the same breaths as Andrew Luck. They talk about how Griffin III is a wonderful kid, very smart, and very accomplished on the football field as evidence of how he should be the top overall pick in the 2012 NFL Draft. Andrew Luck is all of those things as well. The biggest difference between the two though is that Luck has been running a pro style offense, with a massive playbook, and audible liberties, for years. Griffin III plays in a spread system, in a conference not exactly overflowing with quality pass defenses. Griffin III will be a serviceable enough NFL QB. His ceiling is Donovan McNabb. Andrew Luck is his own ceiling. The sky is truly the limit. Prognosticators tend to get bored with players who are always great in everything that they do, like Luck and become enamored with the new guy, in this case Griffin III. For the Colts sake, I hope that they don’t fall into that trap.