Lem Blarney
Brian Hill
Artemis Seer
Calico Jack
D-Rock
Rain Ryder
Sam Clemens


 

 




 
 
   


 


Night Game Nightmares
(Packer Addict) - Wasn’t that Dallas game fun? The fun part being when it was over and you could forget it ever happened. Watching a T.O. touchdown celebration never gets old, does it? Just like you look forward to shoveling snow.

At my house, we don’t really enjoy watching night games in any case, particularly those played during the work week. We like to unwind in the evening, have a glass or two of wine and read a book or watch a movie. In most films, the conflict builds to a climactic good vs. evil battle between an evenly matched protagonist and antagonist. And the clever filmmakers generally make sure that “good” wins. After we see the good guys prevail, we get a satisfied feeling that all is well with the world and can sleep peacefully.

Football affords us no such peace. For one thing, good doesn’t always triumph over evil. In fact over the course of NFL history, it’s only triumphed about 56% of the time. The other problem is we, the fans, are not just observers of how fictional characters deal with conflict—we’re in the middle of the action. Fans can feel the changes of momentum, the ebb and flow, as though they were right there on the field. Otherwise we wouldn’t be compelled to yell obscenities at the refs’ bad calls, or lose our composure when we see the Packers’ secondary perform with all the focus and concentration of 2nd graders on the last school day before summer vacation.

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Brian Hill grew up in Wisconsin, now lives in Phoenix, Arizona, and is the author of four books, including the Packer-themed novel, Over Time. Read a press release on "Over Time: The Novel" here.

 
The Border Battle !
D-Rock (Packer Addict) - This week the three NFC North teams that were in action each put on a show of their own. Two of the teams proved themselves to be legitimate contenders in the playoff race by putting up solid scores against troublesome AFC teams. The other team showed that while most of their games aren’t pretty, there is still one amazing reason to watch. Who would have thought that going into this game, each representative from my favorite division would put up 33 plus points against solid AFC representation? Not I. >Full story >Forum

November Reign

Artemis Seer
(Packer Addict) -

Is week two of the NFL season too early to prognosticate about the Green Bay Packer season? Not for a seer, or for that matter, anyone who stares into a foggy mirror and spies a continuous repeat of Sunday afternoon highlights in the smoky glass. While all of the days between now and then exist in a thick “Others”-like fog, this much is clear: November will decide the fate of the 2007-2008 Packers. And Nicole Kidman won’t be around to fight against the reality of whether or not the Packer season is dead. It’ll be decided on the ruddy fields of autumn slaughter, where hopes are buried with the bones of bested opponents and separation is made between the teams that will and the teams that won’t.
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Packer Fans Don't Know Jack...

Sam Clemens
(Packer Addict)
- And that’s really a shame; Jack Vainisi was the man who supplied virtually all of the talent for Lombardi’s Packers of the 1960s. It could even be argued that he supplied Lombardi as well. Why isn’t he better known? Probably because he toiled for the Packers in the 1950s (known as the “Dark Ages” to Packer fans); that bleak time period between the Lambeau and Lombardi eras, when Green Bay was considered to be the “Siberia” of the league. Also, he died of massive heart trauma during the 1960 season, some time before the mythmakers began paying much attention to the Packers.
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