After watching the ESPN documentary "The Four Falls of Buffalo" a few weeks ago, a friend suggested to me that surely I would have found it better to not have had my team make it to four consecutive Superbowls than it was to have done this and then gone on to lose each and every one of them. He figured that the pain of the losses must have exceeded the joy of making it to those championship games in the first place. For me, it didn't. The way I look at it is that the ultimate achievement for an NFL team as each season begins is to win the Superbowl. It follows therefore that the second-best achievement must then be to lose the Superbowl. Believe me, the thrill of winning those conference championship games, each of which preceded two weeks of analysis, hype and anticipation, far outweighed the disappointment of losing the final games. Think about it: would you rather have your team lose a game to avoid the let-down of possibly losing the next game? Of course not.
Yesterday's game in Tampa reminded me of this and provided the same somewhat conflicted emotion. With the Bills trailing 24-3 at halftime and then 27-10 with just over 11 minutes remaining in the game, they looked to be dead in the warm salty waters of Tampa Bay. Would I have preferred that they simply went on to lose 34-10 rather than staging a thrilling comeback and forcing overtime before going on to lose on Tom Brady's 700th career touchdown pass? No. And for a couple of reasons: first, as a spectator, the game went from brutal to hopeful to fantastic and then finally ended on the wrong side of the ledger - all of which is better than it being brutal all the way through. Second, as difficult as it was to have lost the game after storming back to tie it, the team can take something positive from it as they prepare for the last four games of the regular season. If they had rolled over and lost 34-10, how would they be feeling this morning? I'm sure that local naysayer journalist Jerry Sullivan would be claiming that McDermott has "lost the room" and that his "process" has now been proven to be faulty. It may still be but the season isn't lost yet. Three of the last four games come against teams with losing records with the fourth being in New England on Boxing Day.
In three-down football, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers won their first Grey Cup in 30 years two years ago and have managed to remain at the top of the CFL throughout the missed COVID year and through to last night in the Hammer where they won in overtime. Good for them and good for Winnipeg. As we've been saying for about the last 40 years, the league really has to try to attract some younger fans. I have no idea how they might do this but if they don't, we'll be saying the same thing 40 years from now. I'll be 99. I wonder how many fans the Argos will be averaging in 2061.
In US College Football, as we await the two national semi-final games on New Year's Eve, the first of the litany of bowl games kicks off on Friday in Nassau. The University of Buffalo Bulls will unfortunately not have a chance to defend their Bahamas Bowl title. The winner will be either heavily favoured Toledo or Middle Tennessee. I wonder if fans of Middle Tennessee wish that their team hadn't made it to this bowl game. After all, they could easily lose. On Saturday, Navy beat Army in the 122nd meeting between the Black Knights and the Midshipmen.
Next up for the Bills is a home date with the 5-8 Carolina Panthers. I predict that they will blow them out and, in the process, regain their confidence and general mojo. They find themselves on the outside of the AFC playoff picture this morning at 7-6, a game behind the Los Angeles Chargers who occupy the 7th and final spot. With their relatively easy schedule (with the exception of the re-match with the Patriots) over the last four games, I still like their chances to make the playoffs. With the division title seemingly now out of reach, if they do make it, they will be playing on the road and could easily be one of those teams whose record looks worse than they actually are and who no one wants to play. After all, this team, which arguably has improved from last season (on defence anyway), went to the AFC Championship Game a year ago. And, yes, I wish that they had won it and gone on to lose the Superbowl to Tampa Bay.
No comments:
Post a Comment