Po
Boy Views
By
Phil
LaMancusa
Pigskin
Perplexity
Or
Who
Dat What Dat?
I was never an organized spectator sports enthusiast, nor
was I ever a team oriented, rock ‘em sock ‘em active player of competitive
sports; once when I was pressure/enlisted to join a team, I asked that my
position be named ‘left out’. The idea of swatting a vaguely spheroid inanimate
object with a bat, club, racquet or my tender hands, is as foreign to me as
getting into a roped enclosure with someone bigger (and tougher) than I whose
sole purpose in life is to beat me like a red headed stepchild and be rewarded
by having their hand raised in victory to the sound of cheers from a bloodthirsty
audience who’ve paid money to watch this occur. Ouch!
As a caveat: I’m aware that it takes great skill, talent
and training to run that ball against the likes of that herd of buffalo size
men on an open field, or hit a ball coming at you at a hundred miles an hour
and run in a circle hoping to eventually cross ‘home plate’. I know that I’d never be able to take a nine iron, or
whatever, and slice that egg size ball into a hole three hundred yards away or
face Serena across a net as she runs me like a bad comedian dodging tomatoes
from a hostile crowd. I can swim, run
and bike, but not in competition; for me the emphasis on sports is in the playing… play-ing… get it?
Also, I don’t have a head for statistics, historic
significances, odds in favor (or against), theories, rules of the games, point
spreads, names, dates or places. Who did what when how and against what
opponent does not adhere to any of my gray cells-- and while this is second
nature to some folks-- it seems that my brainpan has sports Teflon surfaces.
Even in the Olympics my attention is captured more by figure skating, gymnastics
and high diving competitions than on football, golf or hockey. I guess I should
turn in my ‘Man Card’.
That being said; I am a rabid Saints fan; they’re my team,
my boys, my dogs, my troops. Although, I’m not sure why they keep getting rid
of some of the most beloved players and hiring strangers for us to get to know
and love (or not), they’re still a team I’ll get up, dress up, show up and
never give up on. Black and Gold symbolize my city and her recovery and ongoing
challenges. I just hope that they don’t start drafting any hipsters with man
buns.
In the aftermath of Katrina, I was at a talk given by
Alec Baldwin; at the time, the city was a mess of trash, homelessness, chaos,
confusion and militant optimism about the balls that it was going to take to
get us off our backs and on our feet. The talk was given in one of the dining
rooms of Muriel’s Jackson Square and thus spoke Alec: “You know, New Orleans is like your home team; and just because your
home team gets their asses kicked, you don’t switch teams! It’s your team, you
belong to it and it belongs to you; and New Orleans is going to get through
this because her people will not, cannot give up on her.” He said a lot of
other things too, but those are the words that stuck with me. At one time, our
football team was being called “The Aints” and fans were wearing bags on their
heads because they were so terribly bad at the game and that’s when I fell in
love with them. I watch them play good and bad and cheer them on (loudly); I
learned what ‘fourth down and one hundred and ten to go’ means because that’s what
our city came back from; it has been a real ‘Hail Mary’ of a recovery, hasn’t it?
And we’re still in O.T.
Liuzza’s By The Track on N. Lopez is my home team when I
consider bacon, beer, barbecued shrimp poboys and game time banter. Liuzza’s
stays open for Saints games whenever and wherever they may be; if they’re on
Sunday (when the kitchen is closed), patrons bring pot luck and their staff
works their day off out of solidarity with the neighborhood and “Our Boys”.
That’s the New Orleans that I know.
As I said, for the upcoming competitive sports season, I
know doddley-squat about such things, and previous to my Saints fever and
fervor, I would have suggested that we give each team their own ball and have
them stop fighting over just the one, but times have changed. I still don’t
know the difference between a punt and a bunt, a tight end and a wide receiver
(sounds rather earthy to me) or why some grown people get paid gazillions of
dollars to run, jump, kick, punch, swat, slam and run in circles wearing
themselves out, getting hurt and trying to hurt opponents that are trying to
hurt them and others get hurt for little or no money at all; as they say “it’s
beyond my ken”. However, put me on a level playing field with you, me and a football pool and I’ll give you odds
that I have just as much chance of
winning as you do, with no previous experience necessary.
So, go on with your bad self and root, cheer, whistle,
yell, stomp your feet and yell your lungs sore. Of course the Referee is blind and probably biased against your
team (he’s probably being paid off). They (the other team) STOLE that victory! Gosh darn it! We still have a chance at the
playoffs, semi finals or wild card matches; our team rocks! We have a mascot, a
great coach, hot dogs, beer and a pretty lady in a yellow sundress screaming: “Stomp the bastard! Kill him!” I rest my
case.
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