Subscribe RSS

Posts Tagged ‘Soul Crushing Season enders’

Fire Jeff Fisher? That’s absurd

October 7th, 2009 by Rogersworthe | 35 Comments | Filed in Tennessee Titans

So with this 0-4 start the grumblings have begun: it is time to fire Jeff Fisher. This is not the cry of the majority of the fanbase, but a significant enough portion to where the conversation is being had. However, I am telling you now, firing Jeff Fisher is a VERY BAD IDEA.

Jeff is still a top 10 coach in this league

Jeff is still a top 10 coach in this league

We all know about how this season has taken the expectations of Titans fans and the team and crapped all over them. 4 weeks in and the Titans have already lost more games than last year. It is almost excepted wisdom that it is time to bring back Vince Young. Most fans have given up on making the playoffs, they just want to see the Titans avoid total embarrassment at 3-13 (some people even have 0-16 in the back of their heads).

So, who does the fanbase blame when these expectations aren’t met? The coaches. And this year, I believe it is deservedly so. However, that does not mean it is time to end the Jeff Fisher era. You don’t just fire a top 10 coach for one season of unmatched expectations. (more…)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Time of Death: 3:07 PM

September 27th, 2009 by Rogersworthe | 4 Comments | Filed in Tennessee Titans

The death of the 2009 Tennessee Titans season has been confirmed. On 9/27/2009 at 3:07 PM the season died. Week 3. Killed by Dirty Sanchez, Fat Ryan, and the NEW YORK FUCKING JETS. Oh, and Kerry Collins. 13 straight incompletions to end the game. Thanks asshole.

I feel like I have been punched in the gut. Again. For the 3rd straight week.

Tags: , , ,

Air McNair, my last hero

July 5th, 2009 by Rogersworthe | 7 Comments | Filed in Tragic

Almost everyone who gets into sports as a young child idolizes certain players. For me it was Ken Griffey, Jr. and Barry Bonds for baseball, Latrell Sprewell for Basketball, and Steve Young and Jerry Rice for football. As you can tell for all except Ken Griffey, I was a Bay Area fan as a kid. As you get older though, you begin to lose interest in your initial heroes and find new ones for different reasons. My reasons involved a combination of injuries, retirement, women beating, and just being an overall asshole. Steve Young stayed with me the longest of all these players. When Steve Young finally hung it up though, something that literally changed my life happened. The Houston Oilers would be coming to Nashville. I was 11 or so. I remember thinking “I don’t care, I’m a 49ers fan.”

But then the Oilers finally made their way to Tennessee and the 49ers weren’t very good. My favorite college team was (and will always be) the Ohio State Buckeyes, and one of my new heroes, Eddie George, was on the team. I got an Eddie George jersey and became a fan. I watched several of the games in that 1999 season. Like only a 13 year old can, I fell in love with the Titans. I lived and died on every play. I had no idea what the heck was really going on, would scream and rant like hell when on 3rd and 12 we’d throw a 5 yard pass. Never understood why on 4th and 3 we would punt it. I thought it was stupid (little did I know I was ahead of my time, as Football Outsiders has taken the mantle of going for it more on 4th down). It worked in Madden, why not in real life? Yet somehow, we found ways to pull out games. I learned to despise the Jacksonville Jaguars, the over-confident pricks who could beat everybody but us. My younger brother became a die hard Jevon Kearse fan.

I remember watching the Music City Miracle game and the Bills taking the lead and my mother saying “Well, this game is over.” With all the optimism of a kid who hadn’t watched hundreds of football games and understanding probabilities I retorted “They COULD return the kickoff back for a Touchdown!” And then they did. And I lost my mind. I screamed and screamed and screamed. From there we went to the Superbowl. Up to this point I was not so much a fan of Air McNair. Not that I wasn’t, I was just ambivalent. I liked Eddie George. That was my guy. Then in that Superbowl against the Rams, when he lost the players and threw it down the field to Dyson, something changed in me. As I cheered I thought “That was incredible! That was our Quarterback! OUR Quarterback did that!” Then as we came up a yard short of tying it, I sat in silence, and I actually felt bad for McNair most of all. To display such incredible toughness and grit and clutch to come up a yard shy, it made me sad. In an unusual way, it made McNair especially my teams Quarterback. MY team. Why? Because he had come up a yard short. Had Dyson shaken off the tackle enough to reach the end zone, the Titans had won the coin toss, and then won the Superbowl on an overtime field goal, while he still would have been our Quarterback, EVERYBODY ELSE would want a piece too. ESPN and bandwagon fans and people who couldn’t find Nashville on a map would’ve sung the praises of McNair. But when Dyson was tackled a yard short, McNair’s heroics were doomed to be forgotten in time. Except for us. The real Titans fans. Every Titans fan is ready at the drop of a hat to recollect that drive to every detail. Trust me. Just ask.

From that point McNair became my other favorite Titan. I read up on him, devoured every story I found. In Middle School he came to one of my football games because we were playing a team with Jeff Fisher’s son on the squad. Then, when I was 16 and entering a “too cool for school” phase, my stepfather worked at a Cat’s Music store over in the Fieldstone Farms area. One night my stepdad came home and handed me a little local free newspaper that one finds at a place like Cat’s Music. On the cover was Steve McNair, and across it was “To Sam – Steve McNair”. I looked up at my stepfather in surprise and asked “how did you get this?” He then informed me that McNair had just come in to buy some CDs, and it had taken him a bit to figure out who he was, but when he did, he had just asked him for the autograph and McNair had obliged. I treasured that autograph quite a lot.

We all know about the toughness of McNair, and how he played through any and everything. He also developed into an excellent passer. Sadly, he developed into an excellent passer as we slowly descended into Salary Cap Hell. We never were able to put together a top notch team at the height of his talent and abilities. Eddie George began to decline and eventually left for the Cowboys. McNair was the last “hero” I had. With the way it ended with McNair and the Titans, I was furious with my team. How could they treat McNair like this? Our Quarterback? Our guy? He then left for the hated Ravens and my “hero worship” of him was over, ending ingloriously in a way that left me very bitter towards my very own team for the next couple of years. (more…)

Tags: , , , , ,

Finding Post-Season Peace

January 19th, 2009 by Spizz | No Comments | Filed in T-Rac

I’m just going to skip the introductory paragraph in which I describe the ending of the Titans-Ravens game last Saturday. We all saw what happened. We all pulled a few hairs out, screamed a few profanities. We all accidentally took an entire bottle of calcium pills thinking they were Tylenol P.M.s, only to wake up in the hospital the following night passing gumball-sized kidney stones. Yep, being a true fan isn’t always easy.

But if you’re like me, you’re still struggling to find a source of closure other than the sweet, sweet solace of eternal slumber. Some sort of comforting punctuation to end of the sentence that reads “Wow, that game was horse shit”.

I come to you with a solution, brethren.

The Titans have dealt with trouble-makers like back judge Robert “No Call” Lawing before. Think back to Tennessee’s 2006 pre-season opener against the New Orleans Saints. A certain backup quarterback, Adrian McPhersen, got a little too mouthy for his own good during warm-ups, rattling off all kinds of racial slurs against a certain Tennessee state animal and making some wildly inappropriate mustache jokes well within Jeff Fisher’s hearing range.

And what happened?

He got his ass run over by a giant raccoon in a golf cart. Career over!

Then the dummy tried to sue for $20 million in damages. Apparently he forgot that A) that’s more money than he was ever going to make playing professional football and B) how are you going to sue a fucking raccoon?!?!?! (I believe they reached an out-of-court settlement of eight ripped-open sacks of garbage.)

Anyway, my point is that the Titans have one hell of an enforcer in my boy T-Rac, the Tennessee Raccoon. While he is usually kept pretty busy engaging in combat with the Titans opponents’ furry goons, he always has enough time to take care of certain “problems” that arise during the season.

Our menacingly huge rodent mascot is going to waste if nothing is done about this call. A hit needs to be made on those referees in exchange for their gunning down of our season while we were stopped at a toll booth. Now we insist that it be held in a public place, a bar or a restaurant. They’re going to search him when he first meets them, so he can’t have a weapon on him, but if we can have a turbo-charged, Titans-colored golf cart planted in the bathroom, he can excuse himself to take a piss, then bust out of the men’s room and take them all out.

Then and only then will me and my thirteen jagged calcium deposits be happy.


T-Rac cruising around (most likely ridin’ dirty) at a Titans game, about to rough someone up. Note the hat pulled down low over the face for the purpose of keeping a low profile.

Tags: , ,

NFL Offices or the United Nations?

January 18th, 2009 by Rogersworthe | 3 Comments | Filed in Tennessee Titans

Which is more useless?

Right now, I’m leaning NFL Offices.

So as all self respecting Titans fans remember, while in that horrendous loss to Baltimore in which we played our 3rd worst game of the year, towards the end of the game the officials missed an extremely important call. Sitting on 3rd down for Baltimore, the play clock clicked down to zero, which was then followed by Joe Flacco taking a step back, reading the defense again, asking for the play call again because he had forgotten it while reading the defense, then running under center where he then remembered it was a shotgun play and ran back, followed by him hiking the ball. Of course, Jeff Fisher went ballistic as he should, but guess what? Play isn’t reviewable. The spot of the ball, one of the most arbitrary calls in the game is reviewable, but to just take 3 seconds to check and see “Oh yeah, clock’s on ZERO, definite delay of game,” is not. WHAT?!?!

Well we all know what happened then. Flacco to Heap, 1st and 10 on the Titans 45, where they then drove down and kicked a field goal. We then followed that up with a possession that was the worst clock management drive we have had all season, which was just great to watch as a Titans fan. Especially if you enjoy throwing up all over yourself in disgust.

Naturally, after we lost, I was steamed about the non-call on the delay of game as it legitimately changes the game in our favor if they get that right, but nothing is guaranteed and we lost the game ourselves in so many other ways that I wasn’t going to dwell on that call for more than one bitter, drunken night of pain and emptiness. Whatever. Close the wound, bury the anger deep, and wait 25 years until a tumor manifests in my colon and get it removed.

Well the NFL Offices have just re-opened that wound. They, and specifically Mike Pereira, Head of Officiating, apparently AGREED that the call was blown. Thanks for the sympathy, NFL Offices! I feel so much better for our wasted season! So, can I ask a question? Can we restart the game from that moment, make it 3rd and 7 on their own 27 instead of 1st and 10 on our own 45? Because that seems fair to me!

But no, the NFL Offices once again, just like with the Ed Hochuli call, are content to say “Yep, that one’s on us. We missed it,” and move on.

Thanks NFL Offices. Maybe you can team up with the UN and fix that Darfur thing ON TOP of fixing incalculably horrendous officiating errors that cost a team a season. That’ll be great.

I wonder…

Maybe the Titans will throw out NFL officials and ignore NFL economic salary cap sanctions until Roger Goodell invades LP Field under pretenses of the Titans hiding illegal game tapes of other teams practices, which they’ll never find, yet still remain in LP Field for 5+ years. Then NFL Offices would REALLY get my vote.
Picture courtesy of photoshoplol.com

Tags: , , , ,

Requiem for a Team

January 18th, 2009 by The Raging Clam | No Comments | Filed in Tennessee Titans
The Titans are dead.


Just wrap your heads around the reality of this. Who were once the giants of the mythological universe of professional football, have been doomed the fate of their namesake…defeat.

You can call it what you want, you can sugarcoat it, (weren’t all those yards lost on penalties great? Or weren’t all those silly turnovers just hilarious? Wasn’t it great the job we did against the #1defense!?) Or you can say that God was on the side of the Ravens (kicker Matt Stover pointed to the sky after the winning field goal indicating God had a hand in the win of a team with an alleged murderer. This of course is not mentioning that God took time out of his busy millennium to get the Ravens a win while figuring out Dafur and Israel). But all that is left, God or no, is a team dead for another year.

“Why so down?” you may ask. Well, an obituary is supposed to list accomplishments, love of stamp collections, and the loving family you left behind. Although we’ll all love our Titans for years to come, none of these things mean anything in football unless you live to fight another day.

Tags: , ,

Follow Us