Friday, January 13, 2023

What Have You Done For Me Tomorrow

It was as predictable as it was discouraging. Celebratory cigar smoke hadn’t even cleared the Georgia locker room after the Bulldogs’ vivisection of TCU Monday night when the headlines and stories started dropping. “Historic three-peat now in sight for Georgia as returning stars focus on avoiding entitlement entering 2023” – CBSSports.com “Why You Shouldn’t Bet Against a Georgia Three-Peat Next Year” – Fox Sports “Can the Bulldogs Three-Peat as National Champions in 2023?” – Athlon Sports “Why the Bulldogs are primed to three-peat” – Los Angeles Times. 


Granted, the game deserved little journalism detail, since it was non-competitive after about an hour of real time. But Jesus H. on rollerblades, can we not permit the Bulldogs to enjoy themselves for even a day before kicking down the door of “what’s next?” and “can you do it again?” 

The answer, of course, is no. Must feed the beast, the beast in this case being journalism and its reflexive scramble to supposedly get out in front of a story. And since the story of the national championship game was toe-tagged at halftime, a legion of keyboards and microphones sprinted for the future. 

I was part of that ecosystem for roughly 35 years, so I get it. I was guilty of it at times, but overall did my best to steer clear of that kind of reporting, since it isn’t actual reporting. More like a magic 8-ball with depth charts. Reporters and editors defend predictive pieces and look-aheads as supplemental to the here-and-now, and what eyes and ears want. Unspoken is that they also don’t want to be the 18th outlet to mention it, because timeliness, or something like that. 

I’d argue that the Rush to the Unknown is unimaginative and, in cases of notable accomplishment, rather tone-deaf. It's human nature to ponder what’s next, and it’s likely accelerated by a microwave society that’s given us the attention span of German shepherds. Sports and sports fans, however, seem more susceptible to the dynamic. 

When folks are wrapping up a wedding reception, nobody says, ‘This was a great bash, but how are we going to top it for Thanksgiving?’ Immediately after it was unveiled, Chisel magazine didn’t say, ‘La Pieta is a dandy chunk of marble, Mickey, but what do you have for us next?’ Inventors Illustrated didn’t say, ‘Sure, Tommy Eds produced the telegraph, light bulb and phonograph, but if that’s all, did he underachieve?’ Does a supervisor say, ‘Bill, you set records in sales last year and were terrific with clients and customer engagement. Let’s ratchet that up by 15 percent this year.’ (Wait, scratch that. That’s precisely how American business works.) 

The inability to allow an accomplishment a decent shelf life is joined by its equally annoying cousin: ‘Yeah, but can he or she do it at the next level?’ The current chew toy in that exercise is Georgia QB Stetson Bennett. Sure, he made history by winning back-to-back Nattys, but what kind of NFL prospect is he? Can he throw the deep ‘out?’ Can he play in the League? 

The correct answer is: It doesn’t much matter right now, if ever. Pro scouts and biologists will start poking and prodding soon enough and determine his value, but if he never plays a meaningful snap for a paycheck (I’d wager that he will), it wouldn’t and shouldn’t diminish what he’s already done. Bennett and a slew of achievers barely have time for a good soak before somebody wants to drain the tub and say, ‘Towel off and juggle these hatchets.’ 

Several pieces already have Georgia as the betting favorite for the 2023 national title, owing to returning players and a favorable schedule. One piece postulated that the Dawgs would be 10-0 heading to Knoxville for a Nov. 18 date against Tennessee for the SEC East title, an interesting bit of cart and horse placement that begs the question: if they’re 9-1 or egads 8-2 heading into that game, will that be a disappointment? 

The answer, unfortunately for some, will be yes. 

That championship was sooooo 10 months ago. The one before that was almost two whole years ago. Who can remember back that far? Fans certainly can be unreasonable. Some media hate having their narratives upended, even if they know objectively that sports predictions, particularly for entire seasons, are a yard full of garden rakes at dusk. There’s no reason to expect change. Shots will fall and fail, passes caught and dropped, folks right and wrong about what happened and what’s gonna happen. 

Everyone back to their respective barstools and chatrooms. Those arguments won’t kindle themselves.

38 comments:

rob said...

you are looking live at the espn wide world of sports complex in lake buena vista, florida, home of the united cheer association college cheer nationals. it’s a sceeeene.

Whitney said...

OBXDave, thanks for reminding me that my subscription to Chisel mag needs renewing.

rootsminer said...

At least Tribe fans don't have to concern themselves with the discontent of high expectations.

Marls said...

Dave - great read as always.

I think we need a G:TB college football preview that includes real predictions like mid season injuries and weather. If reporters really want to show that they know their stuff why not opine in August that Iowa is like to win the Big10 championship because Michigan’s QB suffered an ACL tear in the second quarter snow after the game was moved to Soldier Field due to Peyton Manning’s funeral being held at Lucas Oil Stadium.

That’s a fucking prediction.

Whitney said...

I got 10 bucks says Marls is wrong

zman said...

I think Samuel Morse invented the telegraph.

Whitney said...

“Report: Todd Boehly is expected to make a strong push to purchase the Washington Commanders from Dan Snyder”
-SBNation

Danimal said...

Yesterday, Lisa Marie. Robbie Knievel today. Head’s up Jamie Lee Curtis.

Whitney said...

En route to Chicago. Wwoman’s son is a Steph fan, so we’re catching Bulls/Warriors Sunday. Might have to pause Dry January whilst in Chi-town.

rob said...

buffs finished 12th of 19 power 5 conference schools in the prelims so they don’t advance. there are allegations of favoritism. we’ll be investigating.

OBX dave said...

Hey Z, Edison is credited with something called the quadruplex telegraph, but your point is duly noted.

As for elements of beauty contest and favoritism in cheer contest judging: say it ain't so.

Whitney said...

I thought the light bulb was invented by some airman named General Electric.

rob said...

rode the velocicoaster at universal today. that’s a fucking roller coaster.

rootsminer said...

Velocicoaster is awesome!

Re: Whit’s WFT report- upgrade?

Whitney said...

Debatable, if you’ve been following the Chelsea news

zman said...

zdaughter asked me "What's your least favorite song?" so I played "Blue Bayou" by Linda Ronstadt and as soon as Ronstadt started singing zdaughter said "This is awful!" I played a few more tracks from "Simple Dreams" that zmother tortured me with in the 1970s ("It's So Easy," "Poor Poor Pitiful Me") and she said "Ugh, it all sounds the same and it's all bad." That, coupled with her basketball performance today, have me feeling proud.

rootsminer said...

I never cared for Linda Rondstadt either, no matter how much my mom played it.

Mark said...

Zman and I traded a number of youth basketball related texts today. No mention of Linda Rondstadt. I’m thankful for that. Also thankful for this cool Florida weather this weekend.

OBX Dave- You seem like a great guy. And I’d love to talk sports with you over a few but…can we not post about Georgia turning into a CFB killing machine for a bit? I’m kind of dealing with some shit. Thanks.

Danimal said...

Dry January especially difficult on days like this, especially as the Jaguars approach their first playoff game in five years

mr kq said...

I pushed til Feb. Always works well for me.

Whitney said...

I’m taking a Dry Jan mulligan tonight. Chicago, steakhouse, whiskey.

Whitney said...

And I’m a Linda Ronstadt fan. I think she has a beautiful voice. I like all the songs mentioned plus especially You’re No Good and When Will I Be Loved.

But then, nobody ever overplayed it on me. I’d say anything force-fed becomes a natural hate.

rob said...

out of nowhere, your tribe goes on the road and beats a very good wilmington team. how bout that?

Mark said...

Wilmington should’ve hired Rob Burke.

Whitney said...

Well said, Mark

rob said...

chargers shoulda hired rob burke

Mark said...

Duuuuuvaaaaallll!!!

Mark said...

I don’t give a damn about the Jags but I like of people who do. Holy fucking wow.

Danimal said...

Still unbelievable

Whitney said...

Afternoon, everybody. Hope you’re faring well on MLK Day 2023.

rob said...

hoyas lose again. 28 on the bounce in conference. not great, bob.

Whitney said...

Tribe takes on a ranked opponent. Prediction? Pain.

OBX dave said...

Welcome to the day when a subset of the populace cherry-pick 35 words from MLK's "I have a dream" speech without context as a pretext to tell others to quit harping about race.

rob said...

pain it is!

Mark said...

The only thing about this football game that isn’t ruining my night is this Dallas kicker having an all time meltdown.

Whitney said...

Never seen shit like that, Mark. But yeah, the outcome sucked. For you Washington fans (I think I'm talking to myself here), here's the weekend recap.

- Both wild card teams from our division won, meaning 3 of the remaining 4 NFC teams are from the East and therefore teams we loathe.

- Washington was mediocre this season but somehow only has the 16 pick in the draft.

- Daniel Snyder is still the owner... and it's unclear if/when that's changing.

Good times... for a change...

rootsminer said...

I read that Boehly is out as a buyer, so you've got that going for you. It's kind of fun to listen to the UK media talk shit about him.

zman said...

I work with a British guy and he's a Chelsea fan. I told him I went to school with Boehly and he said something like "Look at that! Maybe if you hadn't missed that class or two you'd own a football club!"