IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Friday, November 15

Starting Five

 

For nearly a quarter-century, Tendulkar has been the second-largest nation’s largest sports figure in its most popular sport.

1. Mumbai and Good Luck

A popular T-shirt in India reads, “Cricket is my religion, and Sachin is my God.”

Sachin Tendulkar retires this weekend from the sport of cricket after his record 200th test match (test matches last five days). The ascent of Tendulkar, 40, who has been a professional since the age of 16, coincides with the ascent of India (I didn’t say that; NPR did, but I wanted to sound intelligent, so… NPR also said that if you were to assess Tendulkar’s cricket records, it would be like “taking the records of Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron and Pete Rose” and wrapping them all together.

You can check out all the records yourself. I’ve long wanted to write a book titled “The Michael Jordan of Jordan”, a tome in which I’d profile every nation’s most iconic athlete. Sachin would be India’s (I’m still working on locating Jordan’s).

2. Oliver Moves to Premium Cable

The Daily Show’s “Senior British Correspondent”, John Oliver, is taking his talents to HBO. After having an even hotter summer than Yasiel Puig, it was obvious that Oliver needed to take the first exit onto the Stephen Colbert Expressway. At HBO, where he will host a weekly satirical news show on Sunday nights, the playful but acerbic Brit will be able to say naughty words without them being bleeped. Here’s hoping his first guest is Carlos Danger.

3. Cris, Charles and the N-Word

Matt Barnes is complaining about WHAT?!?

 

Why do I get the feeling that white folks are going to agree with what the ubiquitous NFL broadcaster and former Cincinnati Bengal wideout, Cris Collinsworth, said on “Inside the NFL” about the N-word more than African-American folks will?

For example, here’s Sir Charles Barkley’s thoughts on TNT last night.

The official Medium Happy statement on this issue.

4. The Other Side of Big-Wave Surfing

Part of the allure of big-wave surfing, at least in terms of our rubber-necking of it, is the danger. And, in related fashion, the courage of the people, mostly males, who ride the most powerful force on earth. The toll? Death, which exacts its tax every once in awhile.

Earlier this week Kirk Passmore, a 32 year-old experienced big-waver surfer, went missing after wiping out on a 20-foot wave at Oahu’s North Shore. Locals estimate that Passmore may have ruptured his eardrum when he fell, which causes one to lose all sense of balance and have no idea which way is up. He may also have broken his neck.

This epic photo gallery from Surfer Magazine captures Passmore’s final moments.

5. “In the Long Run…”

Cain may look like the treasurer for the Physics Club, but she’s a demon on the track.

Love that middle-distance running prodigy Mary Cain, 17, used this turn of phrase in her statement to announce that she is turning pro. Did you hear that, David Stern and Roger Goodell? A 17 year-old high school senior from Bronxville, N.Y., is bypassing intercollegiate athletics and proceeding directly to the professional ranks. Cain, a straight-A student, still plans to matriculate at a college. She is coached by Alberto Salazar, so it sounds as if she is headed to Eugene.

Reserves

Flori-Duh

A passenger falls from a private plane while soaring 1,800 feet above Biscayne Bay. Didn’t I see this on “Burn Notice?” Yes, yes I did!

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Thursday, November 14

Starting Five

 

That’s Paul Robeson, who besides nailing this tune was a football All-American at Rutgers and class valedictorian. Paul Robeson: NOT a showboat.

 

1. “But Don’t Say Nuthin’/They Just Keep Rollin’/They Keep on Rollin’ Along…”

Ol’ Man Riverwalk/Dat Ol’ Man Riverwalk….

Best record in the NBA (breaking: apparently I meant the NBA’s Western Conferece… Gol, Susie B.!) ? San Antonio Spurs, 8-1.

In their last three games, the Spurs have held leads of at least 17 points…in the first half.

Nobody on San Antonio is averaging better than 18.1 points per game, which is to say that all but five NBA teams (four of whom stink; the other is Chicago) have a leading scorer averaging better than the Spurs’ leading scorer, Tony Parker.

This, KevinGar Nets, is how you age gracefully in the NBA.

2. “You Know What’s Better than $3 Billion….?”

This selfie will vanish in 15 seconds. Wait, it won’t? It won’t? Oh well, you’ll just have to live with it.

That is not a photo of Evan Spiegel (“Spiegel, 60609!”….”Thanks, Johnny”), the 23 year-old founder of SnapChat, who yesterday said, “Thanks, but no thanks” to an offer of $3 BILLION from Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook to purchase his company, an enterprise that is actually not a manufacturer, but rather a service, and whose principle function, as far as anyone can quite fathom, is to let users snap selfies or sext before Deadspin can post such self-incriminating items.

Not to mention that thus far SnapChat earns no revenue. To be clear, it’s not that it’s losing more money than it’s earning. It’s earning NOTHING. It’s MediumHappy.com with chicks in bikinis (okay, it’s MediumHappy.com with chicks in bikinis who disappear in seconds).

Granted, The Zuck didn’t just make that offer cuz he’s an idiot. He understands that teens, tweens and Brett Favre prefer anonymity. That’s why SnapChat is growing at a much faster rate than Facebook. It may just be the new, new thing. If it can only find a way to make money? Slate magazine wisely suggests saving all the photos and using them to blackmail clients as a way to earn revenue. Here, here!

So last week I gushed about a 23 year-old who’d earned $8 million by winning a poker game. This week I discuss a 23 year-old who just turned down nearly FOUR HUNDRED TIMES that amount.

Well done, Evan Spiegel, well done (Spiegel, by the way, dropped out of Stanford three classes shy of graduating and lives at home with his dad).  Two thoughts, perhaps both true even though they appear to contradict: If you’re a company and you don’t have a precocious (and, yes, probably terribly annoying) 20 year-old in your top-tier meetings, you’re idiots, and second, Can you say, “Bubble?”

3. “Separate But Not Equal…Taxis?”

Even the color is different! Taxi segregation in our time.

You ever heard the Chris Rock riff about how every town has two malls, the one white people go to and the one white people used to go to? Well, New York City is like that. Cabbies will often simply not pick up minority fares because they don’t see the upside in driving to a part of town where they are unlikely to find a return fare…among other issues.

Enter Boro Taxis, which specifically do NOT pick up fares in the more demographically favorable (read: white) parts of the city. You literally cannot hail them below East 96th St. or West 110th St.

Get ready for “Borough Taxi Driver”, starring Tracy Morgan.

4. Rinny

 

Record-setter

 

That’s Mirinda “Rinny” Carfrae, 31, an Aussie who not only won the Hawaii Ironman last month (for breaking news, keep it here at MediumHappy.com!), but set a new course record for females at 8:52:14. Carfrae, who grew up on a lettuce farm, accidentally fell into the sport while training for hoops season in college.

And just so we present fair and balanced coverage, here’s an essay by a dude who can’t stand endurance athletes.

5. Ball Hawk

 

Korver has the three-point shooting prowess of two-and-a-half men

Today’s Creighton White Dude Hoopster Item belongs to former Bluejay Kyle Korver, who last night buried a three in the fourth quarter of his Atlanta Hawks’ loss to the Knicks. Korver has now made at least one three-pointer in 81 consecutive games. The NBA record belongs to Dana Barros, who did so in 89 straight games. It’s not exactly a DiMaggio-an feat, particularly in terms of hype, but we’ll keep an eye on it.

Reserves

NIU and Fresno State Are STILL Undefeated (Nooo!) What Does It All Mean?

NFL scouts would like to see Fresno State’s Derek Carr pitted against BCS-quality defensive talent.

The Huskies ‘sploded for 21 fourth-quarter points last night against The Fighting Whitlocks of Ball State, who were America’s last best hope to defeat them (although Toledo, where NIU travels next, looked strong in Tuesday night MACtion).

What does it all mean? It means that either Clemson or Auburn or Michigan State or Oregon is gonna get screwed.

If Fresno State (9-0 and currently No. 14 in the BCS rankings) and/or NIU (10-0, No. 15) remain undefeated, at least one of them is headed to a BCS bowl. If either team finishes in the top 12 (unlikely) or in the top 16 but AHEAD of a champion from an AQ conference, then that team receives an automatic BCS bid. UCF, currently leading the American Athletic Conference, is below both schools at No. 17.

If BOTH Fresno State and NIU satisfy either of those conditions, then the higher rated school between the two receives an automatic bid. Right now they’re neck and neck.

Either way, if you think about it, let’s ASSUME your BCS Championship is Alabama-Florida State.

That leaves four remaining BCS bowls, or eight schools (again, we’re assuming a lot here):

Baylor, Ohio State, Stanford, UCF and Fresno State: automatic bids.

That leaves three spots available. Clemson? Probably. A second SEC team? Sure. Auburn or Mizzou. Then who? Do you take an undeafeated NIU? Noooooooo. You might take a two-loss Wisconsin or a one-loss Baylor if Texas or Oklahoma State wrests the Big 12 title away from Art Briles.

We’ll see. Anyway, the point is that either Fresno State or NIU is almost certainly headed to a BCS bowl.

********

Great interview of a great interviewer, as SI’s Richard “e before I” Deitsch tackles Jay Glazer concerning his get with Richie Incognito. The interview appears on MMQB.com, or as I call it “TailWaggingTheDogThenEatingSaidDog.com”.

*****

Two days after Veterans Day, four U.S. Marines are killed in an accident at Camp Pendleton, just north of San Diego.

*****

So, JP Morgan (the bank, not the former “Gong Show” regular) decides to host a Q&A on Twitter, forgetting that most people who are on Twitter hate big banking with a white-hot loathing that borders somewhere around the way Jesse felt about Walter in the final three episodes. Pretty good questions, for example: “If it came out Jamie Dimon had a propensity for eating Irish children, would you fire him? What if he’s still “a good earner”?

Remote Patrol

Thunder at Warriors

TNT 10:30 p.m.

Two of the three most entertaining young squads in the West (we see you, T-Wolves) meet up tonight at the Oracle in Oracland. Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, Russell Westbrook, Klay Thompson. Afterward Kenny and Sir Charles will stay up until four a.m. discussing how these teams would have to merge in order to dethrone the Spurs.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Wednesday, November 13

Starting Five

Now, THIS is a solid starting five.

1. “Love, Exciting and New…”

It hit me last night as I was observing the precocious talent on display in the United Center, an arena that by the way is home to professional sports franchises: college basketball, at its upper-most echelon, is ‘The Love Boat’. Its cast is bolstered by a one-and-done set of stars who make the same journey as previous casts, with a spinal column of supporting cast members who are there to shepherd them on each pilgrimage.

Either Jay Bilas or Dick Vitale, but I believe the former, is your captain, Meryl Stubing.

Digger Phelps is Doc. Without a doubt.

Isaac is that hip funk-soul brother who can flash a smile but can probably score you something on the side if you really need it. Hello, Jalen Rose.

I’m going with Seth Davis as Gopher.

Julie, your Cruise Director? Samantha Steele Ponder (although I’m up for suggestions on this one).

“The Love Boat” was a wonderful addition to Americana. It taught an entire generation of Americans how to pronounce “Puerto Vallarta” and it kept the sparkly dress industry (there’s a sparkly dress industry?) solvent for at least half a decade. Besides, what else were the Landers Sisters supposed to do?

This is not an outtake still from “Boogie Nights.” I promise.

 

So, yes, Jabari Parker, Julius Randle and Andrew Wiggins (I’d draft them in inverse order of that, by the way) are spectacular talents. But they’ve set a course for adventure, a five-month cruise through Division I hoops. Which is fine. It’s just that they really don’t represent the schools whose names are on their jerseys as much as they represent the marriage of convenience between the NBA and the NCAA. Everyone is compromised by the charade, including the SportsCenter anchors who implore us to “enjoy them while we have them” as if these Pamper Princes are some doomed character in a Nicholas Sparks novel.

Ranking the ’70s Carols: O’Connor and Burnett finish in a dead heat.

College basketball is “The Love Boat.” But maybe another ’70s TV show theme’s lyrics are more apt:, “I’m so glad we had this time together/Just to have a laugh or sing a song/Seems we just get started and before you know it/Comes the time we have to say so long….”

2. Hurd Mentality

How many pairs of cowboy boots did McKnight wear out reporting this story?

An extensive, in-depth report by Michael McKnight for MMQB.com on the drug-related downfall of former Dallas Cowboy and Chicago Bear Sam Hurd. The tear quote is that Hurd smoked high-grade California marijuana “all day, every day” of his NFL career, and how nice of Dwayne Bowe to reinforce that stereotype on the same day that this piece was released.

Hurd already pleaded guilty and will be sentenced today to what may be life imprisonment. It’s the legal system’s version of the targeting penalty.

3. Kevin-Up

Love, after his game-winner at LA last year. The other night his tip-in that would have tied the Clips at Staples fell short.

The NBA’s top player, non-LeBron division, is named Kevin. But is it Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder or Kevin Love of the Minnesota Timberwolves?

Durant: Leads the NBA in scoring (30.2 ppg) for a Thunder squad that is 5-1 and second in the Western Conference at this nascent stage of the season. Played one season at Texas.

Love: Second in the NBA in scoring (26.4 ppg) and first in rebounding (15.0) for a T-Wolves team that is 5-3. Played one season at UCLA. Also, don’t ask him a question unless it’s actually a question. You’ve been warned.

Durant: He looks fine to her.

Both are terrific ambassadors for the league. Both are 25; Love, born September 7, 1988, is 22 days older than Durant. Love plays in the nation’s 15th-largest television market, Durant in the 45th-largest.

Love used to play with Russell Westbrook with the Bruins; now Durant does.

The Thunder’s only defeat this season? At Minnesota, a 19-point loss. They next play on Sunday, December 1 in OKC.

4. “Ordinary” Circumstances

Charles Youvella, who stood 5-5, spent most of his final game covering a 6-6 wide receiver.

Charles Youvella, a five-foot-five, 115-pound football player at Hopi High School in Keams, Arizona, dies three days after collapsing following his team’s 60-6 first-round playoff loss. Youvella scored his school’s only touchdown during the game and there was no particular hit that appeared to trigger his collapse. Hopi High is located in Keams Canyon, Ariz., where 89% of the population is Native American.

Youvella, whom his coach described as “the toughest player I ever coached”, hit his head hard on the turf after being tackled following a reception. Two plays late he collapsed.

5. Faulty Towers…Measuring

1 World Trade vs. Willis. It’s really all about men and gym locker rooms.

 

I’m sorry. Not buying it.  Just because a cadre of architects declare New York City’s Freedom Tower the tallest building in the United States does not mean you have to accept it. Or I.

The Freedom Tower, a.k.a. 1 World Trade, officially measures 1,776 feet (“U-S-A! U-S-A!”) because it has a 408-foot needle planted atop it.

Chicago’s Willis Tower: 1,451 feet

1 World Trade, minus needle: 1,368 feet tall.

Did Julius Erving suddenly become shorter when he ditched his ABA-era rainbow ‘fro in favor of a more 9-to-5 NBA ‘fro? Nope.

“What’chu talking ’bout Willis” Tower, Chicago

I’m sticking with the Willis Tower. Earth to roof, babe, that’s the deal. Either that or we all pitch in and buy a 326-foot tall needle to plant atop the Willis.

Remote Patrol

Ball State at No. 15 Northern Illinois

ESPN2 8 p.m.

Jordan Lynch. Coming to a name trail atop this blog some time soon.

The Cardinals’ (9-1) sole blemish was a seven-point defeat at North Texas in September. The Huskies have won 24 in a row at home and are seeking a second consecutive BCS bowl berth. Remember, they lost to Florida State in the Orange Bowl last January? You didn’t watch? Me, neither.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Tuesday, November 12

Starting Five

Clooney threw two touchdown passes as Tampa Bay outlasted Miami–wait, what?

1. Monumental Man

In the December issue of Esquire, Mr. Movie Star George Clooney invites writer Tom Junod over to his house and reinforces every suspicion you may have had about how funny, charming and insightful the 52 year-old might be. I can imagine Junod departing from this interview all hurgly-gurgly with excitement about all the terrific anecdotes and commentary he plumbed.

My favorites (you’ll just have to read the piece to understand the references):

1. Brad Pitt’s gift to Meryl Streep.

2. Addressing the U.N.

3. The Russell Crowe feud.

4. The Leo DiCaprio basketball game.

5. The Bill Murray story.

6. The Don Cheadle story.

7. The turkey bacon story.

8. Clark Gable.

Damon and Clooney doing the Cliff Clavin and Norm bit.

Junod’s lede? “You must love him.”

Yes, it’s both a supposition and a mandate.

Junod, by the way, authored the best magazine profile I’ve ever come across, on none other than Fred Rogers (“Can You Say…Hero?”). I still possess it, as I keep all wonderfully written stories just in case anyone ever asks me to teach a college fifth-grade journalism course (“So when you get laid off, kids, remember not to turn in your lap top until they specifically demand it; and even then, tell them you lost it…”).

Finally, Esquire, why did you ever stop running the “Dubious Achievement Awards” in your December issue? I’ll come back and help you do it for free, which is pretty much the going price for freelancers, next year.

2. 60 Minutes: No Red Team Meeting?

Lara Logan: Not smiling now. (Kinda looks like “Sorority Girl’s” big sister, no?

Benghazi, meet Genoa.

Even the names possess  Sorkin-ian alliteration. Dylan Davies versus MacKenzie McHale. Lara Logan versus Leona Lansing.

So the most respected brand in television news, if not all of television, got Jerry Dantana’d by a mercenary/bounty hunter with an intriguing British/Kiwi accent. Why is this happening so often? Sports Illustrated and now “60 Minutes” are sorely in need of a Jim Harper, or at least a red team meeting (and you’re correct, Sloan, it’s nine reindeer). At least Lara Logan , whose experiences with the continent of Africa are far worse than Maggie’s, stood up and took the blame, even getting grilled by her own CBS colleagues. Norah O’Donnell, stand down, sister!

The good news? Reese Lansing has already said that nobody will be fired over this and that he’s now dating two Rockettes.

3. BMOC

Bhullar in last year’s NCAA tourney. As far as I know, no person of 100% Indian heritage has ever played in the NBA.

He may not be the tallest man in college basketball –more on that later this week –but New Mexico State sophomore Sim Bhullar is likely, at seven-foot-five and 360 pounds, the largest. Last night the Aggie sophomore, who is of Indian heritage but was born and raised in Toronto, scored 15 points and grabbed 10 boards as NMSU defeated Hawaii in Honolulu, 95-88. And here’s why Bhullar, who was actually the MVP of the WAC tournament last season, will garner more attention this season. His little brother Tanveer, who stands just seven-foot-three, is an Aggie freshman.

4. Sneak Preview: “Out of the Furnace”

Later in this film, Casey will be gone, baby, gone.

Christian Bale in a film about down-and-out brotherly love? And how’d that work out last time? Casey Affleck in anything? (Yes, please…I still contend he was just two scenes away from completely stealing “Good Will Hunting”). Woody Harrelson as a nefarious badass –he’s come so far from barback at Cheers. So, yes, I’m looking forward to “Out of the Furnace”, (opens Dec. 6)whose sole female is Zoe Saldana (FYI: Saldana is on Twitter but this is NOT her avatar…weird). It’s setting up as the autumnal complement to “The Place Beyond the Pines”, only a lot better.

Here’s an “exclusive” scene from the film…

The bad news? “Out of the Furnace” may not even be the best film Bale stars in next month, as “American Hustle”, which answers the question, “What if you put some of the stars from both ‘Silver Linings Playbook’ and ‘The Fighter’ in the same film?”, also opens. That’s not a coincidence, by the way. The director of all three is David O. Russell (the “O” stands for OSCAR!”)

5. Women’s Hoops? Yeah, Women’s Hoops (I’ll do anything to get a mention in “Media Circus”)

If the Huskies were to lose Hartley, they’d be short-handed…

Women’s basketball wastes no time –but maybe it should have — setting up a potential Final Four showdown, as No. 1 Connecticut tops No. 3 Stanford 76-57 in Storrs. The game’s high scorer was the Cardinal’s Amber Orrange (that’s three colors!), while Bria Hartley scored 20 for the Doggies. My favorite aspect of the game was when an old friend and inveterate Huskies observer who was at the game tweeted that he hoped “WNBA scouts notice Bria Hartley.” Because, you know, UConn women’s basketball always flies under the radar relative to women’s hoops.

By the way, as a call back to No. 1, there’s a lot of Clooney in Geno. He’s got that CH-arisma.

Reserves

McDermott has scored 57 points in 51 minutes of action thus far this season.

Gird yourself, America. There’s a white college basketball players who’s really, really good (and he does not play for Duke or Gonzaga; I know!). It’s not as if Creighton’s Doug McDermott was an unknown but in this, his senior year, the Bluejay forward is gonna ‘splode in the national media. The six-foot-seven McDermott, who plays for his dad (quick: last first-team All-American to play for his pops in college? Was it Pete Maravich?), scored 37 points in just 31 minutes of play last night in a win against UMKC. He is averaging 28.5 ppg after two games.

****

Evan Spencer of Ohio State goes all De’Anthony Thomas on Alabama and Florida State, declaring that the Buckeyes would “wipe the field” with them (yes, someone named Scooby Axson got the byline). Chances are we’ll never know –unless Auburn or Mizzou pulls off a major surprise. Meanwhile, Stewart Mandel (not Ivan Maisel, not Johnny Manziel) wonders aloud if the Seminoles are not the nation’s best team (I wondered this myself Saturday on ye olde Twitter). My one cent: Ohio State never recovered, in national perception, from not blowing out Buffalo on opening weekend, a team that time has demonstrated is actually very good…although it is curious that Baylor did “wipe the field” with Buffalo (70-13, I believe) and will have played more ranked opponents after this Saturday, but still is unlikely to jump the Fighting Urbans in the polls.

****

Shouldn’t you be driving a Howard?

Finally caught “Clear History” last night on HBO. Prit-tee, prit-tee good, Larry David. And, wow, Kate Hudson has never looked better. Smashing. Michael Keaton was fantastic, too. Favorite moment? The sight gag as the swing set collapses in the background.

Not just a Band Aid any longer.

 

*****

An underground Iranian rock band feud results in the deaths of four men in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Take that, gangsta rap.

 

Remote Patrol

College Hoops Doubleheader

No. 1 Kentucky vs. No. 2 Michigan State

No. 4 Duke vs. No. 5 Kansas

ESPN 7:30 p.m.

Randle, winning a dunk contest last summer.

It’s the Final Four, almost, five months early. Only reigning national champion Louisville (Chane Behanan reinstated, by the way…shocker!), ranked No. 3, was not invited. This event is the crossroads of the McDonald’s All-American Game and the 2014 NBA Draft, as Pamper Princes Julius Randle (Kentucky), Jabari Parker (Duke) and Andrew Wiggins (Kansas) take the floor at the United Center in Chicago. Someone monitor Dickie V’s blood pressure.

 

IT’S ALL HAPPENING! Monday, November 11

Starting Five

Miss Universe, Maria Gabriela Isler, should be starring in “Modern Family” this time next year.

1. Venezuela’s Greatest Natural Resource

Three titles, six years. That’s Crimson Tide territory. On Saturday night in Moscow (Russia, not Idaho), Maria Gabriela Isler became the third Venezuelan nymph to be crowned Miss Universe since 2008. (Note to self: Orbitz one-way flights to Caracas). “There’s no doubt we have the most beautiful women of the world,” Marco Sandoval, a 68-year-old retiree, told reporters. “We also have the most corrupt and shameless politicians in the world.” Priorities, Marco. Priorities. The 25 year-old brunette is an anchor for Venevision, which actually telecasts the Miss Venezuela pageant. And while Venezuela may have more oil reserves than any sovereignty in the world, even Saudi Arabia, can we not agree on what this South American country’s most valuable resource is?

2. “Too Many Dead”

That’s the headline over at CNN.com, as Typhoon Haiyan may have killed as many as 10,000 people as it ripped through the Philippines on Friday and Saturday. Haiyan may be the worst storm ever recorded, with winds regularly sustaining speeds of 190 m.p.h. (Sandy, by contrast, had winds of 90 m.p.h.).

One of the tragic ironies of Haiyan is that while it generates a wall of water that reportedly rose as high as 15 feet, it leaves survivors searching desperately for potable water.

3. Jack of All Trades

Jack’s 66-yard touchdown run is the longest rush from scrimmage this season for the Bruins. Of course it is. Of course.

The shake-your-head talent of true UCLA freshman Myles Jack can be seen in the numbers from Tucson on Saturday night: Eight tackles, all solo; one tackle for loss; one fumble recovery; and a game-high 120 yards rushing, more than half of that total amassed on one 66-yard run off right tackle in the fourth quarter.

As Chris Huston, alias The Heisman Pundit, tweeted, “He’s basically (former Stanford two-way player) Owen Marecic with talent.”

I first noticed the talented freshman out of Bellevue, Wash., during last month’s Bruin contest at Utah. What I noticed is that on a linebacking corps that contains Butkus Award candidate Anthony Barr, it was the six-foot-one, 225-pound Jacks’ name that was being mentioned most often.

Fun quandary for Bruin coach Jim Mora: Do you keep Jack at linebacker and continue giving him spot duty at a position that his body seems better suited for? Do you groom him as your starting running back? Or do you start him both ways?

Here’s my other question: If you start both ways or if, like Florida State’s Jameis Winston, you play two sports, aren’t you entitled to two scholarships? You should be given an extra one that you may give to a family member, no?

4. “Walking Dead” Recap: Hershel, Walkers

Just a flesh wound. But then again, when you’re fighting zombies, those are the worst kind.

 

Hershel, the most dedicated unorthodox medic with a bum right leg since Dr. Gregory House, was the hero of last night’s episode as he singlehandedly fought zombies, a virus epidemic that spawns zombies, and the hell that is medicine in a post-Obamacare world…Lizzy still does not realize that zombies are not part of a petting zoo…Rick and Carl share share the innocent joys of father-and-son mass murder, as long as you’re mowing down trespassing walkers (get off my lawn, indeed)…oh, and in the final frame of the final scene, we get a quick glimpse of…The Governor! Still, this was Hershel’s episode. He’s easily the most extraordinary Hershel to inhabit the rural forests of Georgia since No. 34 was making magic between the hedges. “You’re a tough sumbitch,” Darryl tells him near the end of last night’s episode. “Damn right I am.”

5. Charlie Richie Incognito

“MA! WHERE’S THE MEATLOAF!?!”

Miami’s Richie Incognito puts on a button-down, long-sleeve collared shirt, sits down with Fox’s Jay Glazer, and comes across as a well-spoken and reason, albeit mammoth, human being. A+ for his agent on that one. Incognito’s crime blotter speaks for itself, but by beating teammate Jonathan Martin to the Oprah-esque sit down, he’s actually ahead on points at the moment.

And yet, as CBS This Morning’s Norah O’Donnell asked James Brown (not the singer…not the greatest NFL running back ever…the other one), “Why should all the rest of us care? Why is this such a big story?”

Terrific question.

The answer was supplied long ago by that great NFL observer Charlie Rich:

“Oh, no one knows what goes on behind closed doors…”

This is the real NFL, people. I once hung out with an NFL player who within the span of two hours introduced me to both his wife and his girlfriend, unapologetically. So you can only imagine the stories that Michael Silver has. Adam Schefter is your buttoned-up and polished NFL reporter, providing you real news about transactions, salary cap realities and player performances. But Silver, and Jay Glazer, have infiltrated the REAL NFL. And this is, in part, it. They’re not all Peyton Manning.

And, by the way, the Incognito-Martin affair gives you a greater understanding of why Tim Tebow might be such a locker room pariah.

Finally, Incognito and Martin exchanged 1,100 texts in one year. And we’re all just assuming this is strictly a platonic relationship, right? Is it? Has anyone inquired?

Reserves

Vontaze. So physique-wise, he’s not exactly Thor.

We Were ALL Wrong About Vontaze

After a miserable junior season at Arizona State in which he did not even enter the Sun Devils’ bowl game until the second half, linebacker Vontaze Burfict went undrafted. A lot of people, myself and Mike Mayock included, wondered if he was a technically sound enough and emotionally mature enough player to survive in the NFL. Well,

By Michael DePaoli

If you were to click here you would find that Vontaze Burfict is the leading tackler in the NFL (the only player with 100-plus tackles).  Back in April 2012 just about everybody in the sporting world had given up on Burfict.  As a college linebacker at Arizona State University he was an All-American in 2010.  His 2011 season was not as productive.  Burfict blamed his coaches.  The NFL teams blamed Burfict, and he was not drafted in the 2012 draft.  Burfict did not give up.  He traveled to Cincinnati as an undrafted rookie free agent.  He worked hard.   He has now become a tackling machine.  The moral of this story:  Maybe Burfict was correct, maybe his college coaches did hold him back.

(Editor’s Note: The NFL’s leader in receptions, Antonio Brown, was a sixth-round pick; it’s leader in sacks, Antonio Brown, was a 5th-round pick. I got to get in on this NFL scout scam. Sounds easy.)

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Peyton Manning, discussing his displeasure with having to reveal injuries after yesterday’s Broncos’ win at San Diego: “I feel like the injury report is very revealing to the folks you’re playing as well as to the folks in Vegas.”

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Kliff Kingsbury at 7-0.

Texas Tech and Northwestern have both accepted bids to The Wheels Fell Off Bowl. When October began both the Red Raiders and Wildcats were 4-0 and ranked 20th and 16th, respectively. Since then they are a combined 3-8. Northwestern’s season –they’ve dropped five in a row– effectively ended on that missed 4th-and-1 conversion, while the Red Raiders, who’ve lost three straight, still are feeling that reversed/crossed field TD by Oklahoma. Kliff Kingsbury’s “Guns Up!” gang has lost its last two in Lubbock by a combined 41 points.

Kliff Kingsbury now…

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Outstanding advice here, not just for entrepeneurs but for anyone. Numbers 8, 13 and 14 are my favorites.

Robach’s Diagnosis

Last month, for Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Amy Robach of ABC’s “Good Morning, America” underwent a mammogram (kinda like Matt Lauer underwent a prostate exam last week). That’s a nice television idea –show the viewer that we ALL should undergo cancer testing –, but then Robach got hit with the news that she has breast cancer.

Robach, who’s married to Andrew Shue and is one of the most stunningly beautiful women you’ll ever see, revealed the news this morning on “Good Morning, America.” At this stage, she said, she does not know what stage the cancer has reached but has opted to undergo a double mastectomy. I suggest she, or anyone you know battling breast cancer, read Moosenoos.com, written by my extra-good friend Moose, who is currently undergoing chemotherapy in her second bout with breast cancer.

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Just a reminder that nobody actually died in the Notre Dame-Pittsburgh game, though you would not know that from Brian Kelly’s post-game demeanor.

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Yes, there is Green in the desert.

The Phoenix Tankers are 5-2 and Jeff Hornacek becomes the first Suns coach to begin his career 4-0 at home. Oh, and Gerald Green can sky (you won’t believe me, but he actually had a better dunk than this in the same game last night).

A Modest Proposal for Targeting

Targeting. In the SEC, they spell it “f-o-o-t-b-a-l-l.”

 

On Saturday night this hit took place in the Notre Dame-Pittsburgh game. Also on Saturday night, this hit took place in the LSU-Alabama contest. Which hit do you believe was delivered with more malicious intent? Which hit was less about a defender doing his job –tackling the man with the ball –and which was less about aiming at the head of a defenseless player?

It was the former play that resulted in a targeting flag against Notre Dame defensive end Stephon Tuitt and an automatic ejection. It was the latter, in which LSU’s Craig Loston went headhunting on Alabama’s Kevin Norwood, that resulted in a mere unnecessary roughness penalty.

So how about this? How about we never needed a targeting penalty in the first place, just like we don’t need to refer to a murder as a hate-crime (yes, I’m getting political)? Murder is murder. Assigning a motive does not make the crime any less heinous (to be clear, murder is not self-defense; murder and killing are different). Similarly, unnecessary roughness covers targeting. And if it’s done with what officials deem intent to cause bodily injury instead of making a fundamental football player, then toss the sucker out.

But, please, recognize what is happening here. This is about college football girding itself against a future class-action lawsuit such as the one the NFLPA brought about against the NFL, resulting in a (meager, used unironically) $765 million settlement. College football wants no part of that, so it is attempting to put on a show for us –and for all of you personal-injury claims litigators — to see that it is doing everything it can to prevent head trauma.

Short of, of course, outlawing the sport of football.

Remote Patrol

Miami Dolphins at Tampa Bay Bucs

ESPN 8:30 p.m.

Expect plenty of sideline shots from low angles tonight.

The Suck Bowl. Winless Tampa Bay, whose players are infected with flesh-eating bacteria, versus the Dolphins, whose locker room is infected with mutual distrust and hostility. At some point I expect the MNF producer to flash back to a Houston Oilers game circa late-1970s in which a disgusted fan gave the camera the finger (back when such a gesture was a really, REALLY big deal).