Posts Tagged ‘Stephanie C. Curry’

Philadelphia Eagles: The Bottom of the Barrel

Wednesday, November 21st, 2012

by Stephanie Curry

 

 

 

Foles taking a beating just like Vick did.
(Photo via Nick Wass of the Associated Press)

There is only one question that people in this city will be asking themselves all week; how did we get to 3-7?  Where was the wrong turn that took us from the top of the pile to the bottom of the barrel?  There is not one person at fault here but everyone’s fault in this organization starting at the top.

Right now Jeffery Laurie and his cronies aren’t fit to tie my shoe, let alone run a billion dollar franchise like the Philadelphia Eagles.  This town is at its breaking point because there is nothing but excuses and no answers for the garbage that this team has trotted on the field for the last six games. 

I keep thinking about what Andy Reid said in his press conference on Monday; “This one’s on me.  We gotta do a better job.”  What?  That line has been on repeat for the last 13 years and it doesn’t hold weight any longer with me!  When you keep saying sorry and make the same mistake over and over, that apology becomes null and void. 

I don’t know about you but I’m tired of the excuses and the whining from men who are over the pubescent stage in their lives.  You were all smiles and giggles when you signed your name on the dotted line, but now it’s a problem when the person that buys your jersey and watches these sad excuses for games calls you out!  Get over yourself.

I only have one thing to say to my team and its head coach.  You are soft and you are weak, and I am not the only person that thinks so.  There are very few people who think you will win another game this season.  You gave up and the teams that you will face in the weeks to come will use this to expose you for the fraudulent football players that you are!

Improvement will be needed rather quickly because people are changing the channel and finding other ways to fill up their time on a Sunday afternoon.  You are unfulfilling and the sight of your resigned attitude is too much!  As we are getting used to saying in the fine city of Philadelphia, “There is always next year.”  Or maybe the year after that or the year after that!

 

Stephanie C. Curry, for War Room Sports

Innocence and Guilt: The Penn State Scandal

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

By Stephanie C. Curry

On Tuesday, I woke up and was disgusted at the way the Philadelphia Eagles had played the previous night, but that quickly took a back seat to what I heard on the radio and on the news.   I sat there flabbergasted at what I was hearing and seeing over the airwaves. 

I have not been able to think of anything else but this story, simply because I am a mother of a young boy and I am a friend to mothers with young boys.  I am also human.  It makes me wonder about the person sitting next to me.  When did we make it okay for adults to take advantage of vulnerable children who are raw and clean of the taint of this world?  How did we as a society let this happen?

These are the questions that I ask when I read and hear that former Penn State University defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky is being accused of sexually assaulting young children, on Penn State’s campus no less.  These are men of authority, men that sometimes are the only father-figure that a young athlete or young male who may have lost his way knows.  Then the father-figure, the role model, abuses that authority and trust that was given to them.

There are so many ways I could go with this unfathomable incident.  You have a 60 year old man preying on young boys.  You have the cover up.  You have the destruction of young lives before they begin.  Where would you like me to start?

Here is where I am going to start.  This makes me not want to sign my son up for little league.  This makes me want to keep my child indoors and bottle him up, but I cannot do that because he will never grow.  Instead, I am going to have to trust a coach when he tells me that my son is in good hands.  It makes me look at every person who comes in contact with my son suspiciously.  This is just me personally, but I am quite sure that I am not the only mother or father who has thought just that.  My heart goes out to the children who were abused by this man.  My heart also goes out to the parents of these children who have to pick up the pieces and try to give their child a sense of normalcy.

I read some parts of the grand jury report and I had to stop because it bought me to tears, then to anger.  I mean, the things that were described in this report could drive people to do things that would most certainly break the law.  With that being said, how can a man walk in on this act and not do anything but walk back out the door?  How can not one person think, “I need to take this to the police?” There are a lot of questions but no answers. 

Here is my opinion; if your hand touched this in any way and your first thought wasn’t to go to the police or at least follow up, then you are just as guilty.  This is a child…an innocent child.  You don’t want to blame Joe Paterno, why?  Why I ask you?  In the volatile state this country is in, we are quick to attach blame to anyone who would take it, but yet people are sitting here protecting someone who knew details about child abuse.  Even if it is a minute amount of information, it should have been discussed with someone other than people on the inside of the University.

I am sickened, saddened, but most of all enraged.  I mean, this was supposedly going on for a long time and not one person thought to take a closer look at what was happening.  What in the name of heaven were these guys thinking about?  Protecting a legacy, protecting themselves?  Because now the legacy has been soiled, and protection of oneself is now null and void.

The only thing that will be remembered is that several children’s innocence was stolen by a greedy man with a diseased mind.  People like Mike McQueary who witnessed an act of child abuse and “Joe Pa” who heard of the incident, could have stopped this.  They could have kept another child out of harm’s way.  So for those of you that think that these men should not be to blame, shame on you. 

Here are my final thoughts:

If you saw a kid being thrown into a van kicking and screaming, would you stand there and watch it happen?  If you saw a child get hit by a car and the car drove off, would you write down the license plate?  If you saw anyone being physically assaulted in the street, would you just do nothing?  If you heard someone screaming for help, would you walk the other way?  What if that was your son, daughter, niece, nephew, granddaughter, or grandson?  Would you not want someone to help? 

I am only 5 feet and 2 inches tall, but I promise you nothing would have stopped me from getting to that man and protecting that child.  NOTHING.

Stephanie C. Curry, for War Room Sports

“The Worst Sports Fans in America”: Response to GQ Magazine

Monday, March 21st, 2011

When, in a sane world,  does meanness outweigh violence?  What would you choose; snowballs or arson?  Gentlemen’s Quarterly (more affectionately known as GQ) has once again placed an unflattering light on Philadelphia fans, naming them the worst in America.  I love the byline calling us “The Meanest Fans in America”.  Yet the third worst fans (West Virginia University) have a reputation for setting fires (1,120 blazes 1997-2003, as well as presently setting dumpster fires weekly) and the 13th worst fans (University of Wisconsin) throws bottles at little girls and sexually hazes their marching band.

What is so wrong with being mean?  When did sports become so fluffy?  Basically, you are telling me and my fellow Philadelphia fans that we should pay a small fortune to watch a game without expressing the slightest criticism.  We should just sit there and coddle the egos of millionaire athletes when you can blatantly see they are not doing what they’re getting paid to do?  Is this what you are telling us to do?

This is the rowdiest photo GQ could come up with for the so-called "Worst Sports Fans in America". What a joke!

The first thing that the national media brings up when talking about Philadelphia is that we booed Santa and threw snowballs at him.  Here are some facts that I think you should know before bringing that up yet again:  This incident was over 40 years ago and The Philadelphia Eagles royally stunk.  They were not booing Santa; they were booing the terrible performance by The Eagles.  I was nowhere near being born in 1968, but I’m pretty sure I would have booed Santa too.

Let me give you a little perspective of what goes on in the mind of Philadelphia fans.  We are losing badly, and you want to throw Santa Claus out there to do what?…make us feel better, forget that we are a horrible team?  Surely you jest.  My issue is that the organization at the time thought this would be a good idea.

As for Michael Irvin and his injury, I only have one thing to say.  We didn’t know it would end his career. If we did, we wouldn’t have booed.  We are not that heartless.

“Pukemon” (the vomiting incident) was the act of a young man who was being irresponsible with his alcohol content.  It was crude and disgusting, and I am pretty sure that little girl is scarred for life, but that kid does not represent the fans of Philadelphia.  The taser incident was some young kid trying to get his fifteen minutes of fame, so please don’t go overboard with this one.

I saw some of the other nominees for “worst fans” and I do not believe that we are the worst.  We don’t set fires and we don’t maim or kill.  What sports stadium doesn’t have an occasional fight or two?  The problem with everyone outside of Philadelphia is they don’t understand the intense relationship we have with our sports teams.  We live and die with them, so we expect nothing but the best from them.  Quite frankly, GQ is a white collar magazine and this is a blue collar city.  We don’t sit in a box seat sipping on scotch and smoking a cigar.  We are out in the blistering cold and sweltering heat supporting our teams , hoping they can get us the golden goose.

Instead of sitting on your high horse casting your vote about something you have no idea about, you should get out there with us, sit amongst us and you might find that we aren’t such a bad city of fans after all.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

NBAbsence

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

"The Heatles"

People ask me why I hate the NBA and this is what I tell them… “Because the NBA is filled with a bunch of self-absorbed prima-donnas who should be on reality TV shows instead of a basketball court.”  I have become very intolerant of the NBA lately, since all I ever hear about now is what he said or what he said.  It’s funny that the NBA seems like nothing but little boys trying to play men.  All of this melodrama (no pun intended) takes away from the game itself.  Since basketball started this season, I haven’t heard anything related to actual basketball over the radio waves.

The NBA has been reduced to highlights and soap operas that play out every day on radio or TV.  We have “Crygate”, “The Heatles”, Carmelo and Amare, Phil Jackson and Stan Van Gundy’s mouths, etc.  I have basically tuned out of my radio stations and sports shows until baseball comes along.  I can’t deal with the dribble that is the NBA.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

Tiki Barber: He Should Stay Absent

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

I read somewhere that Tiki Barber was planning on returning to the NFL.  I mean that can’t be true, right?  I mean how old is he?  Correct me if I am wrong, but wasn’t he a running back?  He is about to be 36 years of age.  That is like 100 in running back years.  He has got to be kidding himself.  I guess that analyst gig didn’t work out too well for him.

Interviewing the "non-leader" Eli Manning

I don’t want to sound like I am putting him down, but I really can’t see what he could possibly offer any NFL team.  It seems that the sudden urge to return to his comfort zone was predicated by the fact that his twin brother Ronde Barber still plays.

Ronde & Tiki (The Barber Bros)

This is a really inspiring reason but hardly logical.  Here are the facts: Number one, Ronde Barber is a cornerback (which means they have a longer shelf-life).  Number two, Tiki has been out of the league for FOUR years.  Number three, he threw his former teammate and quarterback Eli Manning under the bus, inciting he was the reason for why the Giants weren’t going anywhere.  To his shock (I’m sure), the Giants went on the next year to beat the best team in the NFL (the then undefeated New England Patriots) to win Super Bowl XLII.  You all see where I am going with this, right?

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

Cam Newton: “Rules of Engagement”

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

Why is it that we now live in a society where we live to put you up only to knock you down?  When did we become social predators showing the fangs of jealously instead of patting your fellow man on the back?

When you put an inkling of doubt into someone’s head, you will never get it out.  There will always be whispers of “what if he did it, what if he didn’t”.  There are countless examples of what I mean, but for this instance I will choose just one.

Cam Newton is one of the best, if not the best athlete to have hit college turf.  He’s won The Heisman, he just won the BCS Championship along with his team, but yet he is being overshadowed by exploitation, greed, and the wrong doings of others, and you better believe that sooner or later it’s going to bite him right where it counts.  Instead of a “congratulations”, he is getting the “Scarlett Letter” of sports stamped right on his chest…the BIG “C” for cheater.

I’m not going to pretend that I know all the facts, because really nobody does.  This investigation has been so screwed up from the beginning that I’m not sure the real truth will ever come out.

Here is what I do know…                                                                      

First, the story is the Auburn quarterback and his father had put him on the auctioning table to be bought by the highest bidder.  Now we find out that he had no idea what was going on and that his father acted alone.

It didn’t matter that the NCAA had all the facts.  All they wanted to do was make this go away.  So what do they do decide to do?  Deem him ineligible following the NCAA amateurism rules, only to reinstate him the next day, finding they had no sufficient evidence to keep him from playing football and winning every trophy he was eligible to receive.

After all is said and done, this blemish on Cam Newton’s record is very present and does not seem to be going away anytime soon.

If the NCAA later finds Newton was involved along with his father and other unknowns in selling himself on the black market of football, then I will come to the conclusion that the NCAA has found no more use for Cam Newton and has thrown him to the wolves to satisfy the blood craving of those who need to see an artificial justice to make themselves feel relevant and important.

 My ramblings are not about the boy and whether or not he made a poor choice, but a much bigger picture.  A picture of how the NCAA and the universities & colleges recruit these young men and women, only to have them “slum it” for four years eating Oodles of Noodles, secluding themselves and cutting off their social circles, because if you just so happen to buy them a drink, they may get kicked out of their selected program.  These kids have special talents, but they are much more than the talent they have.  They belong to a family that may depend on them.  They give up a lot to reach their potential, only to become sacrificial lambs.  They are human and they make mistakes and may want or need more than what these prospective organizations can offer.

I do not condone rule breaking but there is nothing to lose in changing the rules.  I am sure I will be perceived as giving these guys an excuse to take the gifts that are given to them, but this is my opinion and if you don’t like it then you should stop reading right now.  Like it or not this is a business, a profitable business that should be held accountable for their part in why this happens to what seems like all the time with young athletes.   I can’t tell you how it is to be a highly skilled athlete in college, but I can tell you what it is like to be me in college, and it wasn’t all gum drops and rainbows.  I had a full-time job plus a full course load, so I can imagine what these highly publicized athletes have to endure.

Maybe one day someone with authority in the NCAA will look at the rules and see that they are a little lopsided.  Maybe one day it will change, but for now I’ll look to papers to see which young athlete will be next to get the “Scarlett Letter” of “C” on their chest.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

Out From the Shadows

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

"The Phour Aces", "The Phour Kings", "The Phour (insert noun here)"

If you are a Philadelphia sports enthusiast like myself, then you are on a serious high right now.  First the uniting of the four kings, (Halladay, Lee, Oswalt, and Hamels), and now this?  The Miracle at the Meadowlands part II?  Only one word can describe it; unbelievable.

ANOTHER Miracle in the Meadowlands!

Can you feel it in the air or am I just riding the hallucination train thinking we might go-all-the-way?  First, a little arena football team called the Philadelphia Soul brought home a championship, much needed in the city of drought.  This little team won and challenged all the major league teams to do the same.  Then the boys in red pinstripes rolled through Milwaukee, LA, to Tampa to bring home a much-needed World Series that sent this City into a euphoric state.  The Flyers, the ultimate Cinderella story, made it to the Stanley Cup Finals last year when nobody thought they would even make it out of the first round.

Phillies Win the 2008 World Series!!!

I don’t know about you, but I can smell the polish they use to make that Lombardi trophy shine.  In my life, I have never seen anything like what I saw on Sunday and I have been watching football for a long time.  I could be naïve in thinking that we are going to the Superbowl, but what I saw Sunday gave me something that I haven’t had in a long time; hope.

2009-2010 Eastern Conference Champions!!!

There were so many blunders in Sunday’s game, a fumble here, an interception there.  It seemed like the Giants had Vick’s number and yet he still found a way to make it happen.  I love you Donovan, but you would have never been able to make this happen.

Mike Vick Never Says "Die"

We may finally be getting out from the under big brother’s shadow.  For now, we have the bragging rights over the Big Apple.  The only thing they can say is that the New York Knicks are slightly better than the 76ers and I’m okay with that.  All I know is that on a Sunday afternoon in December, I became glued to the television.  I watched history happen.  I watched Michael Vick turn an impossible to a possible.  I saw the speed of young man lift an entire city from its somber state.  I saw that same man celebrate in a way that I would usually frown upon, but this time he earned it.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

NFL Week 14 Open Letters

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Grow up DeSean

Dear DeSean Jackson:

Although I love that fact that you are probably the fastest thing on two legs and that you are an employee of my team, The Philadelphia Eagles, I would totally appreciate it if you grow up.  Don’t get me wrong, there is nothing bad about celebrating on the field when you’ve just ran, what 81, 91 yards for a touchdown, but seriously, the falling back in the end zone?  I mean seriously?  Just play the game.  Not too long ago you weren’t really doing anything on the field.  You dropped passes, missed routes, you even got called out by your coach.  Look, I love your explosiveness, I even love your attitude (even when it’s funky), but you need to calm down on the excessive celebration (which cost your team 15 yards) and get down to business.  It’s funny because I said to my boyfriend, “what happens if the defense goes out and gets an interception or a fumble and he’s over there on the sidelines needing oxygen, falling all over the ground?  What he is going to do then when he has to go back out there?”  Low and behold the defense does their job and gets a turnover.  Now you have to go out there gassed with rubber legs, all because you wanted to be a highlight on SportsCenter.  Well I’m here to tell you DeSean, you want to get big boy money then start acting like a big boy.

Brady's Mop

Dear Tom Brady:

Everybody else may be sniffing your jockstrap, but not me.  I don’t like you.  Sure you’re breaking records, yes you are probably going to win MVP, it’s most likely that you’ll even go to the Super bowl and win, because apparently the who’s who in the sports world think so.  Well I don’t care, I still don’t like you.  I don’t like your uniform, I don’t like your smile, and I don’t like your wife or even your silly haircut.  You have everybody else fooled, thinking you are the ultimate golden boy, but you can’t be this perfect, nobody is.  Yes I may just be angry because my team can’t have the amount of success that your team has, but I don’t care, I still don’t like you.  You may be the best there is, but I can’t jump on the wagon.  I won’t jump on the wagon.  Maybe it’s because you won’t cut that mop upon your head because your wife said so, but when you were thanking everyone under the sun after the Thanksgiving game against the Lions, you could barely remember you had one.  Or maybe it’s because you bitch and moan when a defender touches you with the tip of his finger.  I don’t know what it could be, but I just don’t like you.

There's no pouting in football Mark

Dear Mark Sanchez:

Pick yourself up off the floor, dust yourself off, look yourself in the mirror and say “I am a NFL Quarterback.”  You are on the verge of becoming a joke.  You know how many 23-year-olds would kill to be you?  Stop pouting and get your head in the game.  You have ups and you have downs, that’s how the game goes.  Sunday, versus the Dolphins, you looked so defeated and you did it to yourself.  Your teammates look to you to be a leader.  If you want to be considered an upper level QB, then you need to become the presence on the field that you’ve been conditioned to be.  No longer can you fall upon the sword of novice because you are now a veteran.  Look at your mistakes and learn from them or you will become just another overrated wanna be quarterback who never lived up to the hype.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports

Second Chances: Mike Vick Deserves One

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

When will we all stop being Mike Vick's judges and jury???

I have been sitting on this topic for quite a while hoping that it would just die down. Nevertheless, in the world of never ending media, some things never do. I’m starting to see a pattern where people tend to harp on the negative aspects of a person, place, or thing instead of trying to find something good out of it. I’m not one to tell you how to think, I merely like to make suggestions.

Let’s take the subject of Mike Vick and his ties to fighting and killing dogs. I personally know people who have served less time for more heinous crimes and then forgotten with the wind. I understand that he is a professional athlete who is in the public eye, but for him to be scrutinized at every turn is draining. I could stop reading or listening to all the opinions of how terrible it is that the man is given a second chance at becoming a better person, but instead I have chosen to write how I see this situation.

Michael Vick committed a crime; he was caught and became a national pariah. He served 19 months in jail and came home to a massive amount of debt and virtually nobody in his corner. Then the Philadelphia Eagles announce they are signing Michael Vick, which turned out to be a lucrative relationship for all involved.

Only people won’t let him ever forget what he did. I don’t blame them, but I’m starting to feel like this matter has become a witch-hunt for people who are angry and miserable about their own shortcomings and faults that did not allow them to have the opportunity to have a second chance and succeed the way that he is doing right now.

I read an article where someone called the media out because they praised Michael Vick for his performance on the field at the same time sweeping his unforgettable crimes under the rug. I find that I must disagree with this accusation, because for the first time the media has decided not to dwell on the negative role that Michael Vick used to play. Instead, they made a choice to show that a person can try to change their life around and find a way to live as a good person.

We focus too much on negativity instead finding a way to learn from the mistakes that other people make. Where is the spotlight when this man goes out and admits over and over his shortcomings and his downfall? Where is the media when he is trying to advocate against the violence of animals, when he is working with organizations like The Humane Society?

I’m not here to make excuses for Vick, but my point is he is no ordinary man, but maybe an ordinary man who decided to make the wrong choice can now get a second chance in life to make it right. However, this can only happen if we learn to forgive and trust that people can change.

Stephanie C. Curry, Guest Blogger for War Room Sports