IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Monday, September 16

Starting Five

1. Money Can’t Buy Me Love

Walt’s “I just lost my brother-in-law AND $69 million” face.

“You’re the smartest guy I ever met, and you’re too stupid to see: he made up his mind 10 minutes ago.”

An unforgettable closing line by Hank Schrader, to his nefarious brother-in-law, Walter White, as Hank stares down the barrel of a gun and at his own mortality in last night’s episode of “Breaking Bald.”

The first 15 minutes of last night’s installment was as good as television gets.

Hank’s courage. Uncle Jack’s sneering heartlessness and his Machiavellian brilliance (“So that’s what got this party started”). Walt’s light-switch transition from anguish to mendacity with Jesse. Todd’s sociopathic quick-thinking, in which only moments after stating “Sorry for your loss” (I laughed), he realizes that Pinkman has far more value to him alive (Jesse Pinkman is the new Gimp; even the cord is similar).

Fan boys extolled the entire episode, and I understand why, but for me it peaked out there in the high desert. The final turn of the screw was the DEA agents being buried in the very same grave that had been the resting place for Walt’s $80 million, which was the material prize for all the evil Walter had committed in the name of providing for his family.

“Roll out the barrel/We’ll have a barrel of fun/Roll out the barr-elll…”

And the fallout is that Walter loses his brother-in-law, loses in fact his entire family (when Skyler asks, “Did you kill Hank?”, notice how Walter replies, “I tried to save him” instead of saying, “No.” Because deep down he knows that, though he did not pull the trigger, he did kill Hank). Loses his identity. At least Tony Soprano likely took one in the back of the head while surrounded by the family he loves and a classic Journey tune playing in the background.

One minor quibble from a former Land of Enchantment resident: That final day is one long day. It begins with Walter White at the A-1 Car Wash (“Have an A-1 day!”). I thought it might have begun earlier, at Andrea’s home, but our anti-hero is wearing a different shirt there than the one he wears at the car wash.

So, let’s assume it begins at the car wash.

Then Walter drives out to the high desert, most likely north of Albuquerque and toward the location of the hidden cash at the site of the GPS coordinates, which in real-life is the location of Albuquerque Studios, where much of the series was shot.

Then there’s the showdown with Hank and Gomez.

Then Hank phones Marie.

Then Uncle Jack and his posse arrive.

Then the shootout, Hank’s murder, and the aftermath.

Then they must excavate the $80 million using nothing but hand shovels. That’s a Snickers “Not Going Anywhere for Awhile?” moment.

Then Walter runs out of gas and rolls $11 million in a barrel across a desert.

Then Walter finds a pickup truck to purchase.

Then Walter drives back to Albuquerque.

Then Skyler, Walt, Jr., and Holly arrive home.

Then the White family has its own meltdown.

Then Walter kidnaps Holly and drives away, and as Skyler chases after him on their street, we still have daylight.

That’s one heck of a long day, is all I’m saying.

2. Johnny B. Great

6-4, 290-pound Jeoffrey Pagan was not only unable to sack Manziel on this play, but Johnny tossed up a prayer that an Aggie teammate caught for a first down.

After No. 1 Alabama outscored Texas A&M 49-42 to win the most highly anticipated matchup of the 2013 CFB season — a classic that lived up to all the hype — our friend Chris Huston, alias “The Heisman Pundit”, tweeted, “We go through this exercise every year. Folks, there will never be another two-time Heisman winner.”

Not so fast, my friend. What did Manziel do, other than fail to lead his team to victory (important to note here that he does not play defense), to eliminate himself from the Heisman race? Against arguably the most dominant defense in the land, Johnny Cash threw for a career-high 464 yards and five touchdown passes (and, yes, 2 INTs, neither of which were his fault) while rushing for 98 yards.

That’s 562 yards of total offense. Or, the most yards in total offense in SEC history when playing against a fellow SEC school. Only once has any one SEC player accounted for more yards in a game against anyone, and that player was named Johnny Manziel, and the opponent was Louisiana Tech, which is not exactly the Crimson Tide.

Toss in Manziel’s miraculous plays –his 95-yard TD pass to Mike Evans, who himself was Heismanesque, or the sack he avoided in the second quarter that led to a ridiculous jump-ball completion –shades of Eli Manning-to-David-Tyree — and I’m only more impressed with what a TOTAL GAMER Manziel is.

As SI.com’s Stewart Mandel wrote this morning, “Saturday’s classic served to remind me why Manziel is the best player in college football…Roll (Tide? my add) your eyes if you wish. Choose to fixate on his two interceptions (one in the end zone, one on a deflected pass turned pick-six) if you must. But the player who racked up 562 yards of total offense against the nation’s most renowned defense on Saturday certainly didn’t fall off this Heisman voter’s ballot. If anything, he moved back up to No. 1.”

Amen, Stew. Amen.

3. We’re Even Outsourcing Our Miss America Now?*

Immediately after winning, Nina  asked Neal to change her Wikipedia page.

On the same night that I finally finished reading a 932-page epic novel that is set in Mumbai (“Shantaram”, one of the most unforgettable books I’ve ever come across), a young lady of Indian descent wins the Miss America pageant. Congratulations to Nina Davuluri, who is 24 and actually from Syracuse, N.Y.

I’ll remind you that Miss America, once THE brand name in beauty pageants, is now Barbie to Miss USA’s American Girl.

It’s only too bad that 1) the pageant did not conclude with an over-the-top Bollywood-style production number and 2) ABC’s Lara Spencer was involved with it in any way.

*I’m sure someone is offended.

4. SI Versus Stillwater: So Much Wrong. Where to Begin?

Back in black: Okie State took out its frustrations on SI and Thayer Evans with a 59-3 win against Lamar.

I vented a lot of my thoughts on Twitter in the wee hours of Monday a.m. Kyle Porter of PistolsFiringblog.com did the yeoman’s work of compiling that rant into one blog entry. Still, I’ll enumerate my gripes here:

A) You roll out a five-part series on corruption in college football, specifically at Oklahoma State, in the week before the most hotly anticipated college football contest of the season (see No. 2) between two other schools? Who’s the genius behind that timing?

B) Your stated premise, in your “Overview”, was this: “How does a Division I program make such a large leap in such a short time? SI dispatched senior writers George Dohrmann and Thayer Evans to begin searching for the answer.”

They must still be searching. Yes, they have anecdotal evidence of players being given grades they didn’t deserve (funny, though, how no one can remember the name of a professor), of $500 handshakes, of hostesses perhaps having sex with recruits, etc. But they have no evidence that any of this translated to more success on the gridiron. Moreover, they provide no proof that there was an institutional decision to make any of these transgressions part of a concerted effort.

Oklahoma State alumnus and billionaire T. Boone Pickens has given the athletic department hundreds of millions of dollars in the past dozen years, and those donations have directly led to OSU upgrading its facilities so that they are on par with any school’s in the nation. Pickens and his boosterism were mentioned, I believe, once during the five-part series plus the overview (I’m not sure Eskimo Joe’s was noted even once, which is a crime). That’s like the old Jack Haley line of how Michael Jordan and he combined to score 57 points against the Knicks (Update: My buddy Mike an NBA g1uru, notes that it was Hot Rod Hundley, the Bob Uecker of basketball,  who originated this line, noting that he and Elgin Baylor once combined to score 71 points in a game –Baylor scored  69, you see).

C) You could just as easily have gone after Oregon, SI, which has made a more rapid ascent and which, like OSU, has been the beneficiary of a billionaire alum. But, then you might offend Phil Knight and hence be risking Nike ad dollars.

D) So can I assume that this is also how Stanford, which went 1-11 in 2006 and had seven consecutive losing seasons between 2002-2008, improved so quickly?

Evans: Definitely not hung over here. Definitely not.

E) Thayer Evans might want to learn another adjective besides “laughable.” His appearance with Maggie Gray, complete with Heat Miser coif, was embarrassing both for him and for SI. A major journalistic enterprise is now promoting realpolitik interviews between staffers? If this were an actual interview, and if Gray were actually pursuing journalism, she might have asked Evans follow-up questions to his self-serving responses. She never did. She might have asked him if subjects knew they were being recorded, or what he told them he was speaking to them about, or if they even realized they were participating in on-the-record interviews. An interview need not be a sterile environment, but Evans certainly appears to have deferred to the lowest common denominator in terms of his standards and practices.

Holder: A former OSU golf coach who took a nothing program and turned it into a national golf power. Must’ve been the sex and the money.

F) Finally, I met Oklahoma State athletic director Mike Holder once, in the summer of 2011, when I wrote for The Daily. We had a planned meeting in his office, and this was at the height of the Texas A&M wants to bolt drama. As our interview began, a highly prominent man phoned Holder about the situation. Holder had never met me before, but he spoke freely and candidly to the man on the other line. He did not shoo me out of the office. I heard things I should not have heard and when he was done, he simply said something to the effect of, “I could’ve kicked you out of the office but didn’t. I hope you’ll pay me the same respect.”

Maybe if I were a more ambitious reporter, a more zealous reporter, I would’ve burned Holder. Instead, I respected the respect that he paid me. We had a terrific interview and I found him highly intelligent, likeable and even self-effacing. He seemed like a very decent man.

Is he naïve? Hardly. Have I spent enough time around him to know what he does and does not know about what SI alleged? No. But he seemed like a stand-up guy. I can’t say the same for some of the people whom I know very well who make the big decisions at SI these days.

There are two problems, IMO, with how editorial decisions were made in vetting this story from within the Time-Life Building. First of all, a veil of secrecy cloaks the most important stories that SI attempts to break, such as the Jason Collins piece, so that even editors whose names appear very high on the masthead have no more knowledge of them before the magazine closes than you or I do.

The old SI editors’ meetings –which took place on Thursday mornings (the SI work week is Thursday, Friday, Sunday and Monday; I know! Sweet, eh?) and Sunday afternoons — were forums for discussion and dissent. Yes, personalities emerged (Michael Bevans was going to shoot off a few F-bombs and sardonic comments under his breath, while  Jack McCallum was going to ease the tension with a well-timed quip) but so did intelligent debate. Perhaps if more of SI’s editors knew what the magazine was planning to do regarding Oklahoma State, a voice of reason might have emerged from the pack.

Which leads to the second flaw in the system: A very few people are privy to playing a role in IMPORTANT stories, and you know what? The best way to no longer be part of that exclusive club is to be a voice of dissent. Do I know this first-hand from the Collins story and/or the OSU story? No, but I have known the current managing editor for two-plus decades and, trust me, I know him well. This fiasco was inevitable.

High-level editors at SI have mortgages to pay and kids to send off to college. They must, as Hank Schrader failed to do, tread lightly. I have neither –nor do I work at SI, a magazine I care greatly about and always have– so I can afford to be candid. Even if it makes me a pariah.

5. The Annotated Newsroom

In which we decipher and un-encrypt –is that even a term?– the latest episode’s pop culture references and/or best lines.

Fun with Sam and Jane. Waterston and Fonda in one of last night’s best scenes.

1. “Schadenfreude is easily found.”

Taylor sums up the pay-back Will and ACN are feeling from the right wing in the wake of the Genoa debacle. As you know “schadenfreude” is a German word that translates to “pleasure derived from the misfortune of others.” As a character from the brilliant Broadway musical “Avenue Q” once said after having the term defined for her, “MY, that is German.”

2. “I want to get the Allman Brothers back together.”

One of a few marijuana references Leona Lansing makes in a scene with Charlie Skinner. Yes, they’re a notorious weed-friendly band, but I would have gone with The Grateful Dead or, better yet since they’re frontman is still alive, Phish. But if Leona had said, “I want to get Phish back together” it might have confused some viewers phonetically.

3. “It’s like I led them to Cape Fear.”

Charlie laments his poor stewardship of the Genoa fiasco. Cape Fear was a 1962 film starring Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum (which was remade in 1991 with Nick Nolte in Peck’s attorney role and Robert DeNiro as Mitchum’s vengeful, sinister ex-con) in which Peck shepherds his family to the titular spot, a real spit of land in North Carolina, hoping to keep them from danger only to lead them directly into that danger.

4. “I’m not really sure Elizabeth Windsor is the world’s greatest mom.”

Numbers 2-5 here are all from the same chat between Charlie and Leona, and why don’t these two crazy kids hook up, too? I mean, if Will and Mac can and Don and Sloan can, why not this duo? Anyway,  it’s a reference to the queen of England, who even at age 87 refuses to abdicate the throne in order that her 64 year-old son, Prince Charles, may have her job.

Leona’s right, you know.

5. Sidney Falco…Joe Gillis…Walter Knapp…Archibald McRaven

All aliases used by Don, we soon learn, to bid against himself in order to purchase Sloane’s book during a Hurricane Sandy auction. All I gotta say is, “Wow!” cuz Sandy happened on a Monday — eight days before the election –and already ACN had held an auction. Who do they think they are? Brian Williams?

Sidney Falco was the character portrayed by Tony Curtis in “The Sweet Smell of Success”, while Joe Gillis was William Holden’s character in “Sunset Bouelvard.” Both movies are film noir classics and neither character meets a happy end. Hmm.

6. “Do we really have to slow down for these people?”

Don asks the question every one of us who is in favor of tort reform asks: Why do we need a label attached to a box containing an iron warning us not to iron our clothes while wearing them? Hooray, Darwinism.

7. “Chris Christie, the media…”

A reference to the New Jersey governor welcoming President Obama when he visited the Jersey shore in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, just days before the presidential elections. Cynics saw it as grandstanding while POTUS was in a no-win situation. If he doesn’t visit, he doesn’t care. If he does, then he’s shamelessly courting votes. Christie, a Republican, chose not to be cynical and was excoriated by some on the right for praising Obama just days, hours, before the votes were cast.

8. “ACN is able to project that Barack Obama will be living in government housing for the next four years…”

A hilarious line from Will McAvoy, and one I doubt any actual news anchor would have used. You see, because the president is African-American, so of course he’d expect the government to take care of him. Except that, as president, his housing is paid for by the government. Yes, I know that you got that. You don’t iron your clothes while wearing them.

9. Jedediah Purdy, “For Common Things”

From what I can gather, it’s a book about decency over greatness. Purdy, you should know, is a summa cum laude graduate of Harvard who later earned a law degree from Yale and currently teaches at Duke Law School. You can pick up the phone and call him or even email him today if you like. He must have loved the plug that Aaron Sorkin gave him last night, mentioning him and his book twice.

10. “Let My Love Open the Door”

Sorkin, for the second time this season, chooses to close the show with a song penned by Pete Townshend of The Who. Earlier he went with “You Better You Bet” by The Who. Now it’s a Pete Townshend solo love song, which is a classic, although he uses a cover by the Texas-based Christian rock band Luminate. And Sorkin is not the first to use it for dramatic effect. Here’s Steve Carrell and Dane Cook (I know) performing a heartbreaking acoustic version (you have to watch to the end…the very end), surprisingly moving, in the film “Dan In Real Life.”

 

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Friday, September 13

Starting Five

1. Steve Hymon, who was part of a team of reporters from the Los Angeles Times that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2005, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Tim Crothers, who teaches journalism at the University of North Carolina and who last year was nominated for a National Magazine Award for Profile Writing, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Josh Elliott, who now brightens your weekday mornings on ABC, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Jeff Bradley, for years a senior writer at ESPN the Magazine (and the brother of soccer coach Bob Bradley), was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Current editor of the Time Inc. Sports Group Paul Fichtenbaum, SI managing editor Christian Stone, executive editor L. Jon Wertheim, assistant managing editors Stephen Cannella  and Hank Hersch, senior editors Richard Demak, Mark Bechtel, Trisha Lucey Blackmar, Stefanie Kaufman, Kostya Kennedy and Richard O’Brien were SI fact-checkers…

(Deep breath)

…senior writers Kelli Anderson, Lars Anderson, Seth Davis, Austin Murphy (although his combination of apathetic fact-checking and formidable writing talent made this a brief tour of duty), Alan Shipnuck and Grant Wahl were fact-checkers. As were associate editors Mark Beech and Elizabeth Newman.

Staff writer Brian Cazeneuve, who is a walking Wallechinsky (the heretofore last word in Olympic facts and history), was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

USA Today’s Kelly Whiteside was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Cameron Morfit, a wonderfully gifted golf writer, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Teddy Greenstein, who is even more affable than I am (correction: than I used to be) and who is now a big-shot college football writer for  the Chicago Tribune, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Jeff Pearlman, who writes best-selling sports books and the F-word a lot on his blog, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Pearlman

Dave Gabel, the coordinating producer for NBCOlympics.com (basically, he runs the show) and a man who once hit a ball over the Green Monster at Fenway Park, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Mark McClusky, who now runs Wired.com, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Ashley Fox, who now covers the NFL for ESPN, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Julian Rubinstein, who has since written “The Ballad of the Whiskey Robber”, a highly acclaimed international best-seller that Borders named its “Original Voices” Non-Fiction Book of the Year in 2004, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

 

Loren Mooney, who went on to become the editor in chief of Bicycling magazine, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Paul Gutierrez, who now covers the Oakland Raiders for ESPN.com and is NOT president of the Jeff Pearlman Fan Club, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Amy Nutt, who won a Pulitzer Prize last year for the Newark Star-Ledger and whose business card at SI had a typo so that it read “Any Nutt” (I still have one of those cards), was a Sports Illustrated reporter.

As was Shelley Smith, who now reports on-air for ESPN and has done so for nearly two decades.

Candace Murphy, who is awesome, who grew up in Alaska and attended Yale and who appeared in Faces in the Crowd and is now married to KNBR morning show host Brian Murphy, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Candy Sue: Murphy

Michael Jaffe, who would go on to pen “Dance Real Slow”, a poignant novel with an unforgettable first line — “Calvin eats dirt” — that was later turned into a Vince Vaughn-Joey Lauren Adams film titled “A Cool, Dry Place”, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Chad Millman, who is the editor-in-chief of ESPN the Magazine, was a Sports Illustrated fact checker. As were ESPN the mag college football editor J.B. Morris and tremendously talented ESPN senior writer David Fleming.

Lisa Twyman Bessone, who went on to work at Outside magazine and now lives in Santa Fe, was a Sports illustrated fact-checker.

Armen Keteyian, whose new book “The System” is the latest to expose college football’s rancid underbelly, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Ivan Maisel, who covers college football in that inimitable Alabama drawl, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Steve Rushin, who is easily the most talented writer I’ve yet bold-faced here, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

Alexander Wolff, who was sharp enough to recognize Rushin’s talent when the latter was a senior at Marquette, and who went on to become the mag’s poet laureate of college hoops and is now the president of the Vermont Frost Heaves, a semi-pro hoops team, was a Sports Illustrated fact-checker.

As was I. “John Walters, a Sports Emmy-award winning waiter…”

(I survey all those names, realize I’m the one waiting tables and writing a free blog, and know that God has a sense of humor.)

All of us inhabited The Bullpen, as we referred to the reporters group. All of us, or most of us, aspired to become writers and/or editors at SI. It was the ESPN of that era. Most of the aforementioned names were my friends (I’ve attended the weddings of at least five of these people and took trips to Europe with three others) and many remain so.

But here’s the thing. I arrived at SI at a time when, with only a weekly magazine to concern itself with, the publication employed anywhere from 12 to 15 fact checkers, or “reporters”, as we were known, in order to be sure that every line in that rag was accurate. I fact-checked (and wrote) Faces In The Crowd. I mean, we even fact-checked THAT.

We even fact-checked the cover. The reporter who checked this was canned (notice Boog’s shoe).

Today, with its multiple platforms of the magazine, the website, the MMQB website, and various commemorative publications, Sports Illustrated employs TWO fact checkers. Two. Kelvin Bias, whom I  have known forever and is a likeable figure –although a person who admittedly would tell you that he is far more interested in being a filmmaker than he is in fact-checking sports stories– and Rebecca Shore, whom I do not know.

I have not asked anyone at SI how they vetted the five-part, Oklahoma State series co-authored by George Dohrmann and Thayer Evans. A story that has been shredded, at least to a degree, by both ESPN’s Brett McMurphy –a friend and former AOL colleague of mine whom, it should be noted, is a proud Oklahoma State alumnus — and Deadspin.com.

It would not surprise me one bit to learn that former chief of reporters Stefanie Kaufman, who is the most meticulous, anal (in a good way) person I have ever met, had been assigned to this detail, a task that is far below her pay-grade, but she’s the best they have. That’s just a guess on my part.

Let me tell you, briefly (or not so briefly), how we would fact-check stories at SI in the pre-internet age. The fresh-baked copy would arrive on your desk and then you would use every possible means –phone calls, books and previous magazine stories that our SI librarians had clipped and put into clip files categorized by name or team, or newspaper articles, etc. — to corroborate the facts.

Google had not yet happened.

The extended feature that would appear at the back of the magazine, which might run as long as 12 pages, was known as “The Bonus.” If you, or you and one other reporter, were assigned The Bonus to check, you might have as much as two weeks to fact-check it.

(An aside: the most dangerous writer to fact-check, in terms of his being loose with the facts? And all of the bold-faced names above know this: Rick Reilly. We all loved him. We all loathed fact-checking him.)

I once had two weeks to check a 1990 bonus entitled “Smart Guy Football”, about the game being played at Swarthmore and similar schools. I got every fact correct, but at the last moment one of our copy readers added a note about former University of Chicago president Robert Maynard Hutchins, who had abolished football at the prestigious institution, writing, “Hutchins was fat.”

This was pre-internet, kids. I had about 15 minutes to find a photo of a man who had died 13 years earlier. I couldn’t, but the editor loved the note, so it stayed in the story.

Guess what? Robert Maynard Hutchins was NOT fat.

Hutchins, left. Not obese. Not obese at all.

I almost got fired over that. And that was just one error in a story that was a surfeit of arcane facts and anecdotes –again, all pre-Google. I was nearly tripped up at the end by a copy reader who was trying to be facetious. But hadn’t bothered to tell me.

So fact-checking is not easy, even when a magazine devotes as many resources as possible to doing so. Which is not what magazines such as SI can afford to do today.

There were two levels of fact-checks: black checks, which were sort of a “We think it’s true, now we just need more corroboration” (e.g. a newspaper article) and red checks. When you struck your red pencil through a sentence –and you literally did this, and I mean the pre-2013 version of “literally”, by the way — you were verifying its authenticity. Yes, “Steve Garvey” is spelled S-T-E-V-E G-A-R-V-E-Y. I have it here on his baseball card; oh, and his mom verified it.

(Quick anecdote: former SI fact checker Roger Rubin, now with the New York Daily News, once phoned Joe Paterno after midnight on a Sunday night/Monday a.m. to red-check what type of car he drove. Paterno verified it. Or at least Sue did).

Get to the point, John.

First, SI used to employ far more people to fact-check stories than it currently does, which leads me to believe that said stories were much more finely combed through than they are today. The stories were read by lawyers, no matter how fluffy or controversial (the stories; not the lawyers), and if a lawyer had a question, he or she would phone. I imagine the lawyers nit-picked this Oklahoma State piece like vultures on a zebra carcass.

Second, the job was formerly a gateway to greatness, relatively speaking (after all, when all is said and done, we remain nothing more than sports writers; it’s not as if we can fix a sink). As the roster above suggests, highly talented and ambitious twenty-somethings landed those jobs.

I have no idea how carefully SI fact-checked the Oklahoma State piece, nor how many people or how much time was devoted to fact-checking it. I do know that the culture of fact-checking at SI has become much more of a “Smoke ’em if you got ’em” approach. Writers are expected to fact-check much more of their material before submitting it. But… the last person who should fact-check a story written by John Walters is….John Walters.

The problem with a piece such as the Oklahoma State series is that all it takes is a few errors, even if they are meaningless ones about a wrong year, to erode that story’s credibility. And that has two negative effects: 1) the public chooses to dismiss the story out of hand and 2) if SI is taken to court for libel, every factual error is one more nail in the coffin.

Another anecdote. In the spring of 1994, SI sent me to Jacksonville to write a piece on Charlie Ward, who was then trying to make it in the NBA by playing on a summer league team. After I arrived, senior editor Steve Robinson phoned and said, “We got a tip that there’s a veterinarian in Jacksonville who gave FSU players no-show summer jobs.”

That was it. No name, no further leads. Just a Jacksonville-based vet.

Well, I found him. And I interviewed people who worked for him. At one point during the week –this is all true — a man identifying himself on the phone as former FSU star Leroy Butler called and warned me that people there knew how to find me, knew where I was staying.

The trail was hot. The veterinarian was named Richard Blankenship, and at last he agreed to sit down for a face-to-face interview. But I was only a writer-reporter (one step up from fact-checker), so SI sent down a senior writer (I’ll spare him here by not identifying him) to accompany me. It was Colonel Jessup, Joanne Galloway and Daniel Kaffee having breakfast outdoors in Cuba.

We sit down, turn on our tape recorders. The room is filled with tension. And the first thing the senior writer says is, “Your name is Lance Blankenship?”

Lance Blankenship had just retired from the Oakland A’s.

Dr. Blankenship laughed out loud (I laughed inside). In five words the senior writer had eroded our credibility. That’s all it takes.

Time (as opposed to Time, Inc.) will tell how seriously the sports cognoscenti and college football fans in general treat this Oklahoma State piece. But already there are too many holes in the bow of this ship. Moreover, one wonders just what Dohrmann and Evans told the former players they interviewed as to what their story’s angle was going to be. Did they mislead these players? If not, how did this piece remain such a secret for so long?

It’s a fascinating topic.

One day after SI’s expose on Oklahoma State was released, Yahoo! Sports released its own thorough investigation on SEC athletes, most notably former Alabama offensive tackle D.J. Fluker, being funneled payments as players (belated congratulations on your 2012 national championship, Notre Dame!). What stands out about the piece is how meticulously it was reported: emails, text messages, bank statements. No one is going on The Sports Animal or any other radio show and ripping Yahoo! a new one. Why? Because it appears that Yahoo! conclusively made its case.

I don’t know that the same can be said for SI. And at the SI where I worked, in the 1990s and early 2000s, there was tremendous pressure to fact-check a story in time for its scheduled release date (thanks, Peter Carry). BUT, if as a reporter you had legitimate concerns about being able to verify that story, there were editors and others who had your back. Facts were paramount. People lost their jobs over such errors. And there was no sexy sexagenarian Jane Fonda publisher/owner who’d rescue you from unemployment when you told her that you’d lost the public’s trust by barking, “Get it back!”

Leona Lansing. If only media magnates like this existed in real life.

Rather, it was, “There’s the door.”

Magazines in 2013 simply cannot afford to devote the resources to fact-checking that they used to. On the other hand, they cannot afford to have their credibility undermined so swiftly when they endeavor to pursue transcendent investigative pieces. And it doesn’t help when a competing website releases a more highly praised investigative piece related to the same sport in the same week.

I’m sure everyone at SI will tell you that they fact-checked this story as thoroughly as any story we fact-checked in the 1990s. Perhaps that is true. What is also true is that the commitment to fact-checking, that culture, no longer permeates the halls of SI. They spend a lot less money on red pencils than they used to in the Time-Life Building. That’s just reality.

(2-5 to appear later)

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Thursday, 9/12

Starting Five

Cookoutateria double today, so this will be concise (“THANK GOD, Dubs!”)

1. O Captain, My Captain

Yankee trainers check on Jeter before shipping him off to Dr. James Andrews.

Derek Jeter, “The Captain”, is given the coup de grace to a forgettable and disjointed 2013 season. Officially, the Yankee shortstop made his first appearance on July 11, 2013 after battling back from last October’s broken ankle. Fittingly, No. 2 batted second and even more fittingly hit a dribbler down the 3rd-base line that went for a hit. I believe it was Stephen Douglas over at The Big Lead who sarcastically tweeted, “Clutch-esque.”

Of course, DJ soon went back on the DL. Let’s look at the timeline, shall we?

July 12: Yankees announce they’re shutting DJ down ’til after All-Star break. Later, retroactively put on DL.

July 28: DJ returns FROM the DL. (Swings at the first pitch, hits an opposite field run, cuz he’s THE CAPTAIN, damnit!)

August 5: DJ returns TO the DL.

August 26: DJ returns FROM the DL.

September 7: DJ plays his final game of the season, a loss –the Yanks’ third straight– to the Sawx.

DJ’s 2013 season: 17 games, 12 hits, a .190 batting average, and one home run. Although he did pass Eddie Collins to move into 10th place on the all-time hits list (3,316). You’re next, Paul Molitor (3,319).

May I remind you that it was only a year ago that Jeter, 39, led the American League in hits with 216. Does anyone really believe that Jeter will NOT return next season with a renewed desire to show the world that he’s not finished? And does anyone really believe that Jeter’s and Rivera’s last moment together on a baseball diamond –absent Old-Timer’s Day — was last Thursday, when Mo blew a two-outs, nobody on in the 9th save chance against the loathed Red Sox? Do you?

2. Doug and Carl

Doug Lesmerises

I’d like to point out two iconoclasts (one, you might say, is an Icahn-oclast) in this spot. The first is AP poll voter Doug Lesmerises, a writer for the Cleveland Plain Dealer whose AP ballot looks like this. If you didn’t hit the link, here are Doug’s top eight schools, in order:

1. Clemson 2. LSU 3. Alabama 4. Louisville 5. Oregon 6. Florida State 7. South Carolina 8. Washington

Doug’s ballot is definitely contrarian –three of those eight teams received their highest votes from him, while one of them, Bama, received its lowest vote. I applaud the original thinking, for the most part. Doug appears to be rewarding Clemson, LSU and Washington for having the highest quality wins (over preseason No. 5 Georgia,  No. 20 TCU, and No. 19 Boise State, espectively).

He appears to be rewarding Louisville and Oregon for having a pair of the most emphatic wins (so why is Wisconsin at No. 23?) and Florida State for looking so dominant at Pitt. And he is rewarding Alabama because, let’s face it, most of us believe that the Tide are the team to beat.

The vote I don’t understand? South Carolina at No. 7. Didn’t the Gamecocks just lost at Georgia last Saturday? And so why would Lesmerises put the Dawgs at No. 14, since they beat his No. 7 and only lost by three on the road to his No. 1 team? That one is indefensible.

Then again, our old friend Scott Wolf doesn’t even rank Wisconsin which, while patting around a pair of FCS bunnies in Madison for two weeks, has won by a combined score of 93-0.

You could argue that, if preseason polls are meaningless (as I do), then why reward teams for beating highly ranked preseason squads? Okay, good point. But that’s a bit of a Catch-22 (in related news, I’ve just dropped that book in the rankings down to Catch-24).

Per Medium Happy editorial policy, all photos of Carl Icahn are replaced by a pic of a Baywatch babe (here, Gena Lee Nolin). You’re welcome.

And then there’s billionaire investor Carl Icahn, whose cheerleading for Apple makes you wonder if his surname should be spelled i-C-a-h-n? Last month Icahn tweeted that he had a huge position in Apple stock after conversing with CEO Tim Cook, and the price fireworked up from $465 to $500 in about two days. After Apple’s disappointing unveiling of its new Bling-Bling Colors iPhone on Tuesday, the price plummeted back to about $465. So what does Carl do? He tells everyone tha he cannot wait to buy more.

Apple, by the way, has become the Nicholas Cage of stocks. Where once it could do no wrong (“Raising Arizona”, “Moonstruck”, “Leaving Las Vegas”), now it has become a caricature of itself.

Of course, the question you should be asking yourself is: Who does Carl Icahn have in his top five? Icahn, by the way, attended Princeton and then dropped out of NYU medical school after two years (“There’s hope for you yet, Russell”)

3. A’s(s) Kicking

Bill Miller’s call was…incendiary.

The Oakland A’s posted a “0” in the top of the fourth inning last night in Minnesota. The only problem for the Twins is that the A’s posted a “1” in front of that “0”. Oakland scored 10 runs in the fourth as they walloped the Twins at Target Field, 18-3. Every A’s starter had at least one hit, one run and one RBI.

The funny part is that a line drive off the bat of Jed Lowrie during the fourth inning was initially ruled foul as umpire Bill Miller (who’s come a long way of his profile of Stillwater in Rolling Stone [“It’s a think piece”]…although Stillwater is a lovely riverside town not too far from the Twin Cities… but I digress) danced out of the way of it. That call was overturned, Lowrie was awarded a two-run double, and the monster frame was extended.

The following A’s batter, Brandon Moss, hit a foul ball also in Miller’s direction. When Miller signaled foul, the Twin fans gave a sarcastic cheer. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again here: Minnesotans are the best (“The BEST, Jerry!”)

4. Fast For His, Or Anyone’s, Age

Rees’ed Lightning….anyone? No? Okay.

This past weekend Martin Rees, 60, a retired steelworker from Port Talbot, Wales, completed the Cardiff 10K in 32:48. That’s a world record for the 60-plu crowd. When you consider that Rees ran 5:16 miles to achieve the feat, he’s that rare harrier who can run his age (only a handful of 40 year-olds, for example, have ever run a four-minute mile).

Rees now holds 37 world records in age-group categories ranging from the age of 45 and up at various distances. That number suits him, since Rees only began running at the age of 37.

I’d always thought that Gareth Bale or Reg Mellor was the most impressive Welsh athlete of all time. Rees gives both a run for their money. And you don’t want to run against Rees, now do you?

(The Mellor link is WELL worth it; if I ever teach a journalism class, that’s the first story we read).

5. “Faces”

Foxygen. If they played at Bonnaroo, would you see them under the Foxygen tent? (I got nothing this a.m.).

My quasi-adopted son, A.J. (I showed you a painting of his a week or two ago) also dabbles in film production. Boiling Point Films, check it out. Anyway, he and a couple of friends recently decided to spend a day in a basement with a super expensive camera and a talented young director, Austin Kearns, who wrote and directed what you are about to see.(Great tune. Very Liverpool-ish, reminiscent of The La’s ).

No one contracted them to do this, no one paid them.

The video is for the song “Faces” by Foxygen, and they did the entire thing at their own expense. There’s a lot of talent –and ambition –going on here. And even the folks at Pitchfork.com noticed. (p.s. the referee is a former cookoutateria employee while the Asian man is a current one).

Reserves

Stevie Nicks: Bella Donna. Chicago Sky: Delle Donne (Reeeeeeeeeaccccch)

Back in the WNBA, Elena Delle Donne takes her defender off the dribble in the final seconds to crush the game-winner. When has Chicago ever had a basketball player who could do that? It’s official: Delle Donne, who is 3rd in the WNBA in scoring, was the smart choice to be the top overall pick in last spring’s WNBA draft.

****

Remote Patrol

New York Jets at New England Patriots

NFL Network 8 p.m.

Geno: the arrow, for now, is pointing up.

It’s like this: If rookie quarterback Geno Smith leads the Jest to a win in his first visit to Foxboro, Adam Schefter’s head will explode, leaving filaments of thick black hair strewn across Interstate 84 and pieces of brain matter will be found as far away as Stars Hollow. He won’t –will he –but this is how legends are born. So tune in.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Wednesday, September 11

Starting Five

1. Ola, Brazil!

Donovan’s insurance goal in the 78th minute was not sponsored by GEICO, Progressive or All-State.

The United States officially qualifies for the 2014 World Cup with a Dos a cero” (2-0) defeat of Mexico in Columbus (and a subsequent 2-2 draw between Honduras and Panama). The Yanks have now defeated Tricolores by that identical score in this identical city in 2001, 2005, 2009 and 2013. All World Cup qualifiers.

Mexico, for its part, blamed its masseur for being unable to stop a header by Eddie Johnson in the 48th minute and another goal by Landon Donovan in the 78th minute. Mexico’s keeper’s name, by the way, is Jesus Corona, which was actually Anthony Wiener’s back-up choice for his sexting alias.

If you want to win friends and garner newfound approbation amongst your “football” friends, here are the nicknames for national teams globally.

Fans in Columbus remained long after the match’s end to help the U.S. celebrate its berth in World Cup 2014.

2. “C-A-…Gimme a Minute…May I Phone Terry Bradshaw?” * 

Evans

In the wake of Sports Illustrated’s first installment of its five-part series, “The Dirty Game”, co-authored by Thayer Evans and George Dohrmann, Evans’ former FoxSports.com colleague Jason Whitlock appears as a guest on a radio show and launches an ad hominem attack on him. No, better, Whitlock launches a Will Leitch-on-Darren Rovell-style “This guy, and I don’t mean this personally, is the worst human who ever lived” attack on Evans, noting that “…He’s simpleminded. He’s a hack that can’t write. This isn’t personal, I promise. I have no reason to dislike Thayer Evans personally, and I don’t. But I’ve read enough of his work this guy isn’t qualified for this job…”

The former-and-now-once-again ESPN columnist also alleged that Evans is unable to spell “fat”, um, I mean “cat.” (See, that was a cheap shot).

Whitlock went so far as to say “there’s no way I’ll read this”, which is an intelligent thing for a journalist (who earns high six figures) to say when assessing the work of a fellow journalist. It seems that if you are going to attack Evans’ credibility in a public forum –and I stood next to Thayer at a pre-Fiesta Bowl press conference in 2011 when former Oklahoma State wide receiver  Justin Blackmon literally refused to shake his hand or acknowledge him — then you’d better be prepared to provide at least one or two examples of his unprofessional or unethical journalistic behavior. If you cannot, or are unwilling to, maybe you keep your thoughts to yourself. Otherwise, you may sound like a blowhard.

(Whitlock wisely chose not to attack Dohrmann. Dude’s won a Pulitzer Prize for investigative journalism, after all.)

If Whitlock has evidence that SI’s investigation is flawed, he should bring it. Until then, his lips are in proper position here.

Of course, maybe Whitlock showed his hand before he even got to discussing Thayer.

 “I’m tired of people pointing out how corrupt participants are in a system that has been proven to be corrupt,” Whitlock told “The Sports Animal”. “The NCAA amateur system is corrupt, so we should not be surprised that there is corruption among the participants. I would like to see more of the focus on the NCAA…”

Whether or not you agree with Whitlock, does that mean you simply place your head in the sand when a report such as this one surfaces?

Curiously enough, Doug Gottlieb penned an interesting and introspective contrarian piece yesterday that, coming from a former scholar-athlete, opened a few eyes yesterday. It was aimed at the Johnny Football Drama, but it may as well have landed in Stillwater, too.

* Bully for you if you caught the Thomas “Hollywood” Henderson reference in the hed.

3. Passing Questions From Saturday Night

Wentworth: Every dog does have his day…

First, I hate to be the guy to spoil a Fat Guy Touchdown, but why wasn’t Fresno State penalized for having an ineligible receiver downfield on Austin Wentworth’s hook-and-lateral TD versus Cal Poly (Oh, and why do you run this play versus Cal Poly?)? Wentworth lined up at offensive tackle and there was a split end on his side of the field –you line that guy up at flanker, one yard behind the line of scrimmage, and this is not an issue –rendering him ineligible. I guess you can make the argument that he ran parallel to the line of scrimmage before the ball was thrown, but if you look at the video, that’s highly disputable. I’d say he was downfield by more than one yard when the football was thrown. Your thoughts?

Tuitt makes the most acrobatic coach by an Irish gridder thus far in the 2013 season.

Second, my buddy Dean asked a valid question about Devin Gardner’s pick-six in the end zone by Notre Dame’s Stephon Tuitt. Did the referees ever toss a flag for intentional grounding? My reply was that there was no reason to do so, since someone (Tuitt) caught the football. Dean’s answer was, What if the replay booth had determined that the pass by Gardner, who was not outside the tackles and who clearly threw the ball to avoid a safety, had NOT been caught by Tuitt? Would it have been an incompletion? Or would it have been a safety? If the refs did not throw a flag –and the only ref seen in the video clearly does not — they cannot penalize Gardner post facto, can they? Again, your thoughts, please…

And, yes, future generations will read that No. 98 threw a pass that was intercepted by No. 7 and simply assume that it was a typo.

4. “Cheap Grace”

Give ’em hell, Colonel. Or at least wisdom.

Good morning. Yes, it is the 12th anniversary of 9/11. It is also the day after President Obama delivered a national address attempting to foster support in Congress for a strike against Syria (a punitive strike? a surgical strike? Oh, a targeted strike) in response to its chemical weapons attack on its own people.

Anyway, I thought I’d turn you on to this compelling conversation (brought to my attention by a Twitter follower) between Phil Donahue and retired U.S. colonel Andrew Bacevich. A graduate of West Point and a Vietnam veteran, Bacevich served in the U.S. Army for 23 years…and had a son die while serving in Iraq. If you bother to click the link, PLEASE either stay to the end or fast forward to the 29:00 mark, where Bacevich introduces the term “cheap grace.”

The idea is that sporting events –and other aspects of American life, but certainly sports more so– provide a venue for contrived means in which to say that we support our troops without us ever doing anything more than cheering on the idea. There’s no actual sacrifice involved, just a feel-good moment that happens to coincide with us spending money to attend a sporting event. Exploitation plus manipulation equals self-delusion.

The Tillman Tunnel.

It’s why a Pat Tillman Tunnel beneath the stands at Sun Devil Stadium makes me pause. Particularly when Arizona State coach Todd Graham — who never met, never knew Tillman — says that Pat Tillman did things “the Sun Devil way.” This is a football program that less than a decade ago had one former player murder another. Was that the Sun Devil way, too? Of course not.

There’s a fine line between paying tribute to someone and appropriating his ideals as your own, and using said appropriation to promote yourself. If Todd Graham has been profoundly moved by the life of Pat Tillman –he has reportedly immersed himself in Tillman biographies, etc. –that is fantastic. But wrapping yourself in Tillman’s glory is a little like wrapping yourself in the flag: you have to earn it before you do so, don’t you?

Again, your thoughts?

5. Clint Bowyer: From Spinout to Spin City

ESPIN

Last Saturday night in prime time you would find Notre Dame-Michigan on ESPN and a NASCAR race from Richmond on ABC. And so it’s even worse that auto racing embarrassed itself on such a national stage.

Late in the Federated Auto Parts 400, driver Clint Bowyer appeared to intentionally spin out. That’s what the ESPN analysts thought. That’s what the in-car video appears to show.

By spinning out and causing a caution flag to appear –here are the Chase Cup consequences and nitty gritty — Bowyer would be able to manipulate the outcome of the race and, because this was the final “regular season” race of the NASCAR season, eliminate Jeff Gordon from making the postseason (i.e., the Chase Cup).

Moments after the accident, two of ESPN’s top NASCAR analystsat the track came right out and said that in their opinions, Boywer intentionally spun out. And these weren’t two jokers. These were NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace and legendary crew chief Ray Evernham.

Yesterday Bowyer visited Bristol and was interviewed twice. This might have had a little to do with the fact that ESPN will televise the upcoming 10 races of the Chase Cup (sort of NASCAR’s playoffs) beginning this weekend and it wanted to address the issue of the sport’s integrity In Bowyer’s first interview, with former driver Ricky Craven, Bowyer was asked whether the fact that he phoned Ryan Newman –who was prevented from winning the race due to the spinout and hence did not qualify for the Chase Cup — to apologize was an admission of guilt.

“Let’s not dig too much into this,” Bowyer replied.

Bowyer later sat with Sage Steele (one of three current or former female Steeles in the ESPN talent cadre) and was asked once more if he had intentionally spun out.

“No,” Bowyer said.

Nobody who knows racing believes Bowyer, though. And Bowyer would be just the foot soldier in this skulduggery if indeed that’s what happened. The real villain is Michael Waltrip, who heads up Waltrip Racing, for whom Bowyer drives. Talk about a dirty game.

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Tuesday, September 10

Starting Five

 

1. The Medium Happy Big Eight

A reminder: I go strictly off performance on the field. That’s why the Badgers are here…for now.

De’Anthony Thomas. If you can see the back of his jersey, it’s already too late.

 

1. Oregon (2-0) The Ducks invaded Virginia on Saturday while their former guru invaded Washington, D.C., last night. Both migrations were a success. Consider that Oregon is No. 2 nationally in rushing offense without Lache Seastrunk –now lighting it up for Baylor –and without anyone higher individually than 20th (De’Anthony Thomas). Next up: Tennessee

2. Clemson (2-0) Dabo and orange kitties still have the season’s highest quality dubya (W, over UGA) and held serve last week versus an FCS. Next up: Bye

3. Alabama (1-0) The Tide are an 8.5 favorite on the road versus Johnny F. Football. Somebody knows somefin’… Next up: If you have to ask.

4. Louisville (2-0) Teddy Bridgewater and the Cardinals have outscored opponents 79-7 through the first three quarters. Next up: at Kentucky

5. Stanford (1-0) When someone compared the Cardinal to an SEC squad and coach David Shaw replied, “That’s not necessarily… a compliment…” Awesome. Next up: at Army.

6. Texas A&M (2-0) JFF is actually averaging 70 fewer passing yards per game than Tommy Rees. Next up: Roll Tide.

7. Ohio State (2-0) Still have questions about the Buckeyes, but some should be answered when they trek to Cal to face the nation’s leading passer, freshman Jared Goff (465 ypg).

8. Wisconsin (2-0) Sure, Bucky has played no one, but at the moment (at the moment!) the Badgers are outscoring opponents 46.5 to 0. Next up: at Arizona State.

2. 54 Shots

“They call you…the Spaniard.”

I still can’t believe that Rafael Nadal, the speedy Spaniard, would ever be involved in a rally that lasted 54 shots. That’s like Oregon needing fourth down. It was the longest rally of this year’s U.S. Open. Kudos to the CBS shot-by-shot peeps for not interrupting it with verbiage.

Nadal won his 13th Grand Slam title last night with a four-set victory at the U.S. Open over Novak Djokovic….in a match that began on CBS at 5 p.m. local time. Maybe the U.S. Open needs to move the men’s championship to Tuesday night so as not to run up against the first Monday night of NFL season? Anyway, Rafa, just 27, is now just four behind Roger Federer for the most Grand Slam singles titles in men’s history (17) and only one behind Pete Sampras (14) for second place. He should catch both men at this pace. Only Djokovic can challenge him when Rafa is at his blazing best.

3. Pardon, Masseur!

Brazilian Masseur: Take that, Texas A&M and your 12th Man!

Shout-out, kudos, bravo, what have you to “Olbermann” for featuring the masseur from the Brazilian soccer squad Aparecidence as his “Worst Person” last night. In a Brazilian Serie D quarterfinal clash, the aforementioned squad was tied with home team Tupi, 2-2, late in the match. The hosts broke past the goalkeeper to take what should have been an uncontested shot on goal, but the masseur, who had snuck onto the pitch moments earlier, stepped in front of the goal and blocked not one but two shots.

(By the way, Tom Coughlin just offered the masseur a tryout at running back; way to avoid tackles)

Incredibly, the visitors were not penalized for this malfeasance. The score stood and, because Aparecidence were the visitors, they advanced to the quarterfinal (this is why they ABSOLUTELY need replay in Brazilian Serie D soccer!).

More incredibly, at least to me, is that the masseur blocked both shots without using his hands. It’s as if he thought, Well, sure, it’s fine if I just sneak onto the pitch and interfere with the outcome of a contest, but using my hands?!? No, only the keeper may do that.

NASCAR’s Clint Bowyer sees absolutely nothing wrong with what the masseur did.

4. Storm Chasers: Massive Sh$#storm Descends On Stillwater, Oklahoma

“And the horse they rode in on…” They’ll be circling the wagons at OSU after this SI report.

Part 1 of Sports Illustrated’s five-part series on skulduggery and corruption at Oklahoma State, “Inside the Dirty Game” commenced this a.m. Not that anyone is surprised, it’s just that SI actually brings details and dollar figures. The magazine focuses on the Cowboys because the program went from a have-not (in the years after Barry Sanders and Thurman Thomas, and maybe someone should inquire as to why they chose the former Oklahoma A&M) to a perennial power, and that just doesn’t happen in college football without a little…juicing.

Three questions:

–Will SI’s report lead to NCAA sanctions against the Cowboys or does all of this heat and chaos have no effect if the witnesses are unwilling to talk to the 2A?

–Will Mike Gundy challenge Thayer Evans and George Dohrmann to “Take on me, I’m a man, I’m 47!” or will he just ignore this one?
— Shouldn’t the next stop be Oxford, Miss., where Hugh Freeze assembled the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class for a program that has never even sniffed the SEC Championship Game?

Oddly enough, Oklahoma State will now likely take a page from rival Oklahoma’s playbook. It’s the Sooners (Boomer Schooner, to be precise) who are known for circling the wagons.

5. Bus Plunges 660 (!) Feet off Cliff in Guatemala

In which Rule No. 1 (“Gravity always wins”) is in full effect. At least 43 people died, though miraculously, many lived, after the bus plunged the equivalent of two football fields into a deep ravine. Reports say that the bus, designed to hold 54 passengers, may have been carrying as many as 90.

Remote Patrol

USA vs Mexico

ESPN 8 p.m.

World Cup qualifier from Columbus. Watch it, or the terrorists win.