WARNING: Reading the Chode Picks may result in increased intelligence, superhuman strength and agility, tiger blood, fire-breathing fists, severe intoxication, gratuitous violence, female sexual arousal, and winning. Read at your own risk.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Chode Picks – Season Finale



Friends and family, boys and girls, good citizens of Madison, Menomonie, Oshkosh and beyond, welcome to the final edition of Chode Picks for the 2012-2013 NFL season.  I come to you from my humble abode on 1206 Bowen Ct, in a weakened, sorry state as we kick off the Conference Championship weekend.  A combination of a devastating Packer loss, a loaded week of classes and nearly six full days of sobriety have sapped me of my usual vigor on this particular Friday night, but I feel more than obligated to all of you to put together one last viciously wonderful edition of the Chode Picks before I sign off for the season.  As of right now, my brain is clogged with a slew of memorized arteries, veins, muscles, disease pathologies, physiological equations and other useless minutiae that I hope to erase from my mind over the course of the weekend in order to best serve the interests of this blog.  So bear with me if I seem a little sluggish as we get started this weekend.  I promise to write until my brain is as empty as Manti Teo’s girlfriend, my mind is as broken as Lance Armstrong’s credibility, and my hands are as useless as the Packers’ run defense.  Let’s get to it.

First off, an apology.  Last week I said a lot of mean, hurtful things about the San Francisco 49ers, and it’s pretty obvious that afterwards they made it their mission to ruin my Saturday night in response.  Touche.  Even after starting the game with a defensive touchdown, my beloved Packers simply had no answer for the 49ers’ tough, physical style of play.  It reminded me a lot of the Rose Bowl in that my team looked outmatched from the start across the line of scrimmage.  Now against Stanford, this could be attributed to a disparity of talent between the two teams, but in the NFL, especially in the playoffs, that excuse doesn’t fly.  The Packers are loaded with young talent, and there’s no team in the league that should be able to manhandle us like that.  So I think most of the blame for the loss needs to be put on the coaching staff.  Whatever the dumbass defensive scheme was that Dom Capers decided to run against Colin Kaepernick, tear it out of the playbook, light it on fire and piss on the ashes.  Offensively, we’re doing just fine, and if all of our linemen can stay healthy next season we should continue to have one of the best passing attacks in the league.  But I think that this offseason Capers and McCarthy need to sit down and evaluate what needs to change in practice in order to get our defense to play as fast and as physical as San Francisco’s.  That’s the only barrier standing between us and another Super Bowl.  And no, I’m not going to go along with the knee-jerk “fire Dom Capers” sentiment that so many Packer fans seem to have adopted.  Remember, it was just two years ago that the best scoring defense in the league led us to a championship.  The pieces are all there, and it’s only a matter of time before they all come together again. 
Despite last weekend’s devastating loss however, I have to consider the 2012 season a success on the whole.  A 12-6 record, an NFC North division title and a playoff victory would be considered a fantastic season for most fan bases.  However, I can’t help but feel like every season we have with Aaron Rodgers in his prime is an opportunity for a Super Bowl, and it would be a shame if we only got one title out of him (am I right, Viking fans?).  Whatever.  We’ll be back.

On a lighter note, at least I’m not a Broncos fan.  In case you missed it, the #1 seed in the AFC somehow managed to blow a home road game in altitude after Peyton Manning threw away the season (and probably an MVP award) with an overtime interception, depriving us of the much-anticipated Brady-Manning AFC Championship game.  Apparently the only way you can get Peyton to deliver in the playoffs is to call Papa John’s.  By the way, do you know who’s won more playoff games for Denver than Manning?  That’s right…

TEEEEEEEEEEEEBOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sorry, I’ve been waiting all season for that.  Damn you, Rex Ryan. 

Anyways, there’s one other group of people that I owe an apology: the UW Men’s Basketball team.  You may recall that earlier this season I wrote the team off as too slow, too unathletic and just not good enough to win consistently in the Big Ten.  After a 4-0 start in the conference season, punctuated with a win over #2 Indiana at Assembly Hall (ranked by ESPN as the second-toughest place to play in America), I stand corrected.  My bad.  As has been the case for his entire career, Bo Ryan continues to prove his critics wrong by getting the most out of the limited talent on his roster.  It’ll be interesting to see how this team does in the NCAA tournament.  On Wisconsin.

Ah, shit.  Literally three hours after I wrote the above paragraph, the basketball team went into Iowa City and played their worst game of the season, giving up 70 points to the Iowa Fucking Hawkeyes after holding Indiana to 59 four nights earlier.  Are you kidding me?  We just lost to the ONLY team in the Big Ten that’s slower and less athletic than us by scoring a whopping 18 points in the first half.  Eighteen damn points.  Now, I’m terrible at basketball, but I’m pretty sure I could launch half-court shots for 20 minutes and score more than that.  I retract my earlier apology. 

I’ll write some more about basketball later, but I should probably get to today’s NFL games before they’re over.  First up…

NFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME:
SAINT FRANCISCO’S GOLD PROSPECTORS OF 1848 (12-4-1) at ATLANTA BIRDS OF WAR (14-3)

The 4th quarter of this game just started off with Atlanta clinging to a 3-point lead over the Niners in a shootout between Matt Ryan and Colin Kaepernick, who recently became my least favorite person on Earth, narrowly edging out Skip Bayless and Joe Buck.  Did I mention that Kapernick is originally from Milwaukee?  I hate Milwaukee.  Except for the Brewers.  And Summerfest.  Other than that, it’s just a less disgusting version of Chicago, which I suppose is like being a less stupid version of Ke$ha.  Not a compliment.  Anyways, I’m picking San Fran to win this one because Matt Ryan can’t seem to hang on to the damn ball.  HEY MATTY, ARE YOUR HANDS SLIPPERY BECAUSE OF ALL THAT ICE!?!?!?! Bahahaha.  Bad joke.

49ers by 4

AFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME:
BALTIMORE’S EDGAR ALLEN POE (12-6) at BOSTON’S TEA PARTY (13-4)

Kind of a no-win situation for New England here.  On one hand, if they lose to Baltimore, they have to live with the fact that Joe Flacco knocked them out of the playoffs all offseason.  On the other hand, if they win everyone knows it’s because of the rampant cheating they’ve been up to for the past decade or so, and then they get to lose another Super Bowl to the 49ers (at which point Alex Smith will presumably jump off of the Golden Gate Bridge).  Hooray.  I guess I gotta pick the Patriots here though, since Emperor Belichick always seems to win these games, and despite losing Rob GRONKowski, New England’s playoff offense always seems to fit together seamlessly, unlike this transition.

Patriots by 7

Raise your hand if you’re surprised that Lance Armstrong is a cheater!!!  Nobody?  Yeah, me neither.  If anything, I’m surprised that he decided to come clean at all.  But props to him for being man enough to face the music after decades of deception.  I still think he’s an inspiration, mostly because he went up against a slew of other riders that were doped to the gills, and dominated their sorry European asses for seven years in a row.  And the whole cancer thing too.  But I will agree with what he told Oprah this week, “I am a deeply flawed person”.  Unfortunately, most world-class cyclists are.  For some perspective, I used to work in a lab where we gave the performance-enhancing drug EPO to rats to treat iron deficiency, and doing a little research about the drug gives you an idea of how hard it is to catch the cheaters.  In fact, just a few years ago the International Olympic committee designed a study where they took a group of endurance athletes, purposely gave half of them EPO, and randomly tested both groups for the banned substance.  The experiment failed miserably, with no significant difference found between the groups.  To put it simply, doping techniques are light-years ahead of testing techniques, and that’s probably not going to change anytime soon.  By the way, I’d just like to clarify that the timing of my two marathons correlating with the part of my life where I had access to EPO and an unlimited supply of needles is purely a coincidence.  Trust me.  Hey, speaking of liars…

Props to Ronaiah Tuiasosopo (also known as Lennay Kekua) for pulling a fast one on the entire country, creating and then killing off a fake girl that nearly won Manti Te’o the Hesiman trophy in December.  After reading most of the interview that Te’o gave yesterday, there are only three possibilities in my mind about how this happened. 
1)   Manti Te’o is the most naïve person in the world
2)   Manti Te’o is a sneaky, conniving bastard who nearly tricked us into giving him college football’s most prestigious award out of sympathy, or…
3)   Manti Te’o is a homosexual, and was pulling off the most ridiculously over-the-top cover up in modern history
So I’m not really sure where I stand on this one.  I either feel sorry for the guy (if he’s really that gullible), am kinda disgusted by him (if he’s a pathological liar), or don’t really give a damn (if he’s gay).  Either way, some team is going to waste a top-10 draft pick on him in April, and regret it almost immediately.  On that note, I hope I’m done writing about Notre Dame for the next lifetime or so. 

Well, now that I’ve covered the most recent wave of sports scandal, I’d like to direct you to something far more worthy of your attention.  You see, in this era of cheats and liars, there’s one athlete that’s been a model of honesty and consistency since day one.  Through the good times and the bad, his dependability has given us a shining example of everything good about sports.  He’s the greatest athlete on the planet, hardworking, humble (usually), and talented as hell, the Sportsman of the Year, LeBron Mothaf***ing James.  That’s right, we’re going there.  Since the only team worth watching in the NFL stopped playing last week and still nobody cares about hockey, I’ve switched to full-on NBA fan mode.  I’m gonna try to make one last pitch here for why you should watch the NBA this season, for the following reasons:
-       You live in America.  This is our sport.  We invented it, and we can’t afford to let the Europeans steal it, so pay attention, damn it
-       Offseason rule changes have dramatically decreased the amount of flopping this season
-       Free throws are also at their lowest in the past decade, meaning faster pace and less game stoppages
-       Love him or hate him, you get to watch the best player of all time IN HIS PRIME!!
-       Along with LeBron, Chris Paul and Kevin Durant are also both putting together MVP-worthy seasons
-       The Clippers (!!!) stealing Los Angeles from the Lakers
-       The Bucks actually aren’t that bad, and they should make the playoffs
-       If all else fails, you can root against Miami just to spite me
-       It’ll distract you from an offseason of being forced to watch the 49ers’ Super Bowl highlights (I guess instead of a Super Bowl victory, I’ll be forced to settle for an NBA title… again)

Shout out to my friend Biceli, who celebrated her 21st birthday on Friday night.  And by “celebrated”, I mean “drank way too much, threw up all over at 11:00PM and didn’t make it to the bars”.  Maybe next year.  Fortunately, the rest of us had fun without you.  And despite my best efforts to hide my computer from my drunken self, I managed to write a good portion of this edition that night.  Consider it my birthday present.

Well, I think that wraps it up for the season.  Time for me to start studying for exams again (Yeah that’s right.  All of you undergrad jerks haven’t even started classes yet, and our first round of exams starts in eight days.  Sorry, I’ll stop bitching now).  I want to thank you all for putting up with me for another season through the highs and lows, my immature jokes, narcissistic rants, horribly biased predictions and everything else that goes into the Chode Picks.  I’d also like to announce that I plan on returning to write again next season, despite all of the horror stories I’ve been told about the second year of medical school.  We’ll see how it goes.  And if I’m not too busy this summer, I might come back and write about the NBA Playoffs again like I did last year, provided you still want to read about them.  Let me know. 


- Chode Out.

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