Mother Nature Insurrectionist

A snowstorm has hit Washington, D.C., on January 6 no less, and rumors are flying that Jamie Raskin is about to allege insurrection – by Mother Nature.

Jack Frost, Suzy Snowflake, Elsa and Anna of Frozen fame, are among the countless expected to be charged, too. They are just so much right-wing filth to be locked away in prison and forgotten even as illegal immigrants run rampant, at least for a few more weeks.

Prominent Democrats will rush to microphones to proclaim that democracy will not die, despite their efforts to stab it in the back with election rigging, running a coup on a sitting president on their ticket for re-election, and ginning up (pun intended) a replacement for that would-be candidate largely by finding someone who checked several DEI boxes.

AOC will claim to have trauma from yet another incident she witnessed from afar.

The FBI and Department of Justice will move prosecution of the insurrection case to Manhattan, because that’s a jurisdiction that has a proven way to twist and distort. It is in Manhattan that Jesus would have been convicted for paying hush money to Mary Magdalene and/or committing fraud by claiming to have fed 5,000 with just five loaves of bread and two fish.

I mean, the guy was a carpenter, which is almost a builder, which is a quick hop, skip and a jump from being a real estate developer. Guilt by association.

Of course federal offices were closed Jan. 6 due to the snow. That’s largely inexplicable since almost all federal employees now work from home and need not travel. Presumably their phones and computer connections still are up and they might do the nation’s business from the comfort of their homes.

As I write this, we are little more than an hour away from Trump being certified in Congress as our next president.

Unless some clueless Democrat pulls a fire alarm “trying to open a door,” or a member of the Capitol police shoots an unarmed protester, just because, by late this afternoon Trump will be certified and Democrats can move to impeach Trump and prosecute Mother Nature.

Think of it as a left-wing daily double.

Move On From Extremism

Make it your New Year’s resolution to avoid extremism, in any area.

Think for yourself. Question blanket statements. Don’t allow your emotions to ratchet up to a point where you take your rational brain out of the equation.

It’s a natural tendency for people and events to be skewed in one direction or another. Think of the pendulum that spends precious little time at the point of equilibrium.

But, unlike a pendulum which is hostage to physics, you have the opportunity to correct for distortions.

Events of recent days have brought this subject into focus.

We’ve had at least two terrorist incidents, both of which are reported to have been fomented by veterans of the U.S. Army.

We owe a great debt to our servicemen. There have been many in my family, including my late father. The vast majority of veterans were or are good people. But we also owe it to society to admit that not all veterans are beyond reproach simply because they once wore the uniform.

Oklahoma City bombers Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols both had military backgrounds. I was recently reminded of a tragic story, reported by many outlets including The Guardian in a Sept. 8, 2010 post, about 12 U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan killing civilians at random and cutting off their fingers to keep as souvenirs.

Extreme actions in general are relayed to us almost daily.

An assassin executes an executive of a health care provider on a Manhattan street and people take to social media to praise him as some sort of hero, even raising money for his legal defense.

We just had a presidential election in which Democrats labeled the opposing voters as garbage, deplorables, racists, idiots and various other uncomplimentary terms.

There are extremists on the right, too, but the political left seems more eager to attract and endorse such lunacy.

Few are nuttier than climate change crusaders who are long on predictions and short on accountability when those predictions are 100 percent wrong. Al Gore has made a fortune off the “cause” and, along with fellow climate extremists, has proclaimed, among other things, extreme rises in ocean levels due to melting and snow and ice.

The Arctic, in particular, was predicted to be ice-free by 2013. Instead, the most recent survey finds there is 26 percent more Arctic ice than there was in 2012.

Climate alarmists are willing to starve people by banning carbon fuels used to run farming machinery, or banning cows due to them farting.

The most extreme views have taken over the movement, sort of like the Democratic Party. If the climate activists did have a point to make, it’s lost in their hyperbole.

Ironically, terrorists in the New Orleans and Las Vegas examples would be celebrated as being environmetally friendly due to them using electric vehicles for their mayhem.

One of the basic tenets decades back, when I was being taught traditional journalism, was to avoid the use of absolute statements such as no one does this, or everyone does that.

To refute such exaggeration, all someone would need to do is find just one person who didn’t follow the rule. It was an important point.

Such lessons in moderation would be particularly timely now. Unfortunately, they would be largely ignored.

Not Bowled Over By Bowl Games

Don’t ask me why I’ve been continuing to watch college bowl games this month. My only defense is some sort of social inertia — I do it because I’ve been doing it most of my life.

It can’t be the games. They are just so many jokes. Rosters of backups – underclassmen or seniors without prospects – battle before mostly empty seats for garish trophies that might look good in the trophy case, but really mean next to nothing.

Talented players opt out of playing lest they be injured and harm their pro prospects. Oh, many of them show up on the sidelines, even wearing their jerseys, in some sort of ridiculous show of support for the teammates they have forsaken.

But they don’t play.

Others, like Miami quarterback Cam Ward, take a hybrid approach. They play in the first half, to pad their career TD pass numbers and break the record, only to retreat to the sidelines for the second half and watch their team to go down to defeat due to offensive ineptitude.

And then there are those not here for bowls due to being in the “transfer portal” which sounds like something we might have explained to us on the latest episode of ‘Ancient Aliens.” But there is nothing otherworldly about this. Instead, it allows some college programs to use lesser programs as their feeder system.

Go to Inferior U and do well and we will reach out to you to join our big-time program, where Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) revenue falls like rain from the skies, we’re always on national TV, and you have a real strong chance of playing for a national championship.

Former Steelers coach Chuck Noll used to have a saying about envying the opposition talent. He advised, “though shalt not covet your neighbor’s goods.”

These days, it’s encouraged.

It’s gotten so bad at UConn, which just completed a surprising 9-4 season, that coach Jim Mora was moved to take to social media to warn coaches about trying to poach his talent. Mora promised legal redress for any such violations.

Good luck, Jim. This is the state of college football as 2024 rolls to a close.

The national championship playoff, now expanded to a 12-team field to start, has rendered most bowls as beyond irrelevant.

Last year Alabama and eventual national champion Michigan met in a much ballyhooed semifinal game.

Fast-forward a year and the two are matched up again on New Year’s Eve in Tampa’s Reliaquest Bowl. Both teams have copious amounts of players either opting out to avoid injury ahead of their pro careers, or not playing due to wishing to leave via the transfer portal.

Alabama had three turnovers in its first 10 offensive plays, and lost the ball once on downs during that stretch. Meanwhile, Michigan struggled to cash those breaks in for points and led just 19-10 midway through the fourth quarter, according to ESPN.com. Michigan eventually won. Yippee.

I quit watching at halftime because, well, it’s a bit of a joke.

Later tonight the meaningful championship bowls resume play, with Penn State meeting Boise State in the Fiesta Bowl.

Many people think Ohio State, with its reported roster “payroll” of $20 million in NIL money will win it all in the long run.

As reported here previously, Texas has a backup quarterback making $3.1 million dollars in NIL, more than the $1.4 million the starter is reported to receive.

Meanwhile, a CBS Sports story ranked Penn State 6th in NIL income among the remaining playoff teams. Opponent Boise State is eighth, dead last.

Apologists for Penn State coach James Franklin maintain his first-round playoff win over SMU, an eight-point underdog in a game played at Penn State, rendered null and void his reputation for losing big games.

Wrong. And beating 11-point underdog Boise State wouldn’t really change that reputation, either. For reasons of talent and NIL payments, Penn State should win this game. If Franklin finds a way to lose it, that’s the real story.

Until Franklin actually beats a team with similar talent and payroll, in a meaningful game, his reputation of a big-game loser remains.

Meanwhile, the whole college sports scene is taking on the stench of losers.

Republicans Yet Again Willing To Fail

God Bless the Republicans, always eager to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

Led by Donald Trump and his unwavering strength in the face of lawfare, assassination attempts and even disloyal RINO Republicans, we stand in a position to right many wrongs. Trump won the presidency, helped give Republicans control of the Senate, and aided in the maintaining of an admittedly slim Republican edge in the House of Representatives.

How do ungrateful Republicans reward this strength? They do so by being petty morons, looking to make names for themselves at the expense of the big picture.

Just a reminder, that big picture is saving the nation. Period. Democrats have put us on the precipice of losing all that is near and dear to us. Trump stands in the breach. But he needs help.

He needs to have a Speaker of the House and he has endorsed Mike Johnson. Is Johnson perfect? No. Is he the only viable choice at this time? Yes.

We need a functioning Speaker of the House to help grease the procedural path to Trump actually assuming the office he won, despite efforts, both legal and illegal, of his opponents.

But some pompous types in the House, one whose last name appropriately rhymes with Assie, say no to Johnson.

The possibility of ridiculous political moves that could derail Trump taking over as president is why my Trump signs remain in my yard. Until he officially is in office, they stay up as a reminder that it’s not a done deal.

As if this is not enough, fool Republicans want to start a civil war over H1B, a visa program, not the latest virus to be used to create ridiculous panic and governmental overreach.

They are going to die on a hill of not wanting to allow PRODUCTIVE immigrants to come here to WORK! Better, of course, to have an open door policy for criminals and bums from other lands. The two extremes are readily apparent, yet Republicans want to quibble. Of course.

Trump wants to cut off the influx of illegal immigrant scum and Republicans want to fight about qualified professionals coming here.

Jesus, spare me.

Give the Democrats credit, they know how to cleave to the party line. If Hakeem and Chuck, Nancy and Barack tell them to back utter insanity, they do so with nary a complaint. Remember, Biden was sharp as a tack? Sure you do.

Meanwhile, Republicans are being asked merely to do something smart and totally sane, yet they want to be rebels and make the rounds of the Sunday news shows to boost their massive egos.

We are at a moment in time when we need all hands on board in the daunting attempt to preserve this nation as we have known it.

That these egomaniacal fools are willing to throw that chance away speaks to the presence of too many utter morons in the Republican Party.

Shaking The Digital Begging Bowl

GoFundMe has shut down repeated attempts to use its platform to finance the legal defense of alleged healthcare assassin Luigi Mangione.

Meanwhile, another such site reportedly remains open to it all, having seen the misguided contribute $132,000-plus to the cause in a continuing campaign.

And so it goes in the online begging community. It’s hard to find a definitive source on how often such efforts ever go toward funding miscreants less high-profile than Mangione, or if the funds raised in general actually are used for the advertised purpose instead of, say, someone asking for help with medical bills and instead spending the windfall on vacations or cars.

After having taken a brief holiday break, I’m back with a Christmas carol update on the matter. Sing it to the tune of Deck The Halls.

Shake the bowl just like GoFundMe

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Make the fat the more rotundly

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Send your cash to shaky causes

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Makes you feel like Santa Clauses.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Holidays they call for gifting

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Even if it’s more like grifting

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Seeing this it makes me sick

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

That you think you are St. Nick

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Begging bucks is now a pastime

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Without reason — even rhyme

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

All should hang their heads in shame

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Over this insane fund game

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Most Believe In Lottery Magic

Bless the lottery, not only for the fun it provides those who slavishly throw money at it, but also to us who mostly sit on the sidelines chuckling.

Case in point, the Mega Millions operation went without a big winner again Tuesday, meaning Friday’s drawing will be more than $1 billion. Now that would be a very merry Christmas.

There were four players, including one in Pennsylvania, who won $1 million each Tuesday by matching five white balls, but not the pivotal gold ball. Chump change, some lottery players would say.

Me? I pick up pennies on the sidewalk. And I laugh when people who have a net worth in the negative category find $1 million jackpots not worth their effort. This seemingly common sentiment is why, as years have passed and would-be ticket purchasers have become somewhat jaded, games have been re-jiggered to produce larger payouts.

But there is no free lunch in the lottery game, so the ticket prices have increased, and the odds against participants winning have been elevated greatly.

Back in the era of the Lotto game in Pennsylvania, in which players needed to pick six numbers out of 40 to win the big one, my wife made the mistake of creating a play list of of numbers based on family birthdays.

Those numbers were 5 8 9 15 25 28. I remember them well because, as I told my wife at the time, I was now bound to buy tickets for every drawing lest those numbers would be picked with me lacking an entry, me knowing I’d missed out on $1 million, and then me having to find a quiet place to off myself.

Fortunately, the game went to the lottery trash heap, to be replaced by an ever-increasing list of state number games, not to mention the scratch-off tickets.

My late mother somehow had a gift for buying scratch-offs and netting a modest profit. If she bought tickets for you, not so much.

But we did have a minor Christmas lottery miracle in the household this year.

My wife, easily the nicer person in this marriage, does things like save newspapers for someone from another part of town who noted online the need for same due to their dog using them for toilet matters.

When my wife left the house last week to drop off papers at the meeting spot, she was on foot due to her car being worked upon at a nearby garage. As she left, I noticed she had a plate of Christmas cookies to be given to the paper person.

As an aside, my wife blankets the neighborhood with gift cookie trays and, until my former union brothers decided to cut off retirees at the annual Christmas party, her cookies were huge favorites in the ticket-bag raffle at those events.

I was astonished she was giving cookies to virtual strangers for whom she already was doing a good deed and told her this. That’s my role. Her role was to return and note they’d given her a scratch-off lottery ticket as thanks.

Said I: It would have been better if they’d just given you the $5 bucks. At least then you could have bought yourself some coffee.

Later that night I was informed that the ticket was a $100 winner. There was one symbol in the main area providing for a five-times payout of the number beneath, which was $5. Then, on the bonus portion of the card, there was not one, not two, but three winning symbols worth $25 each.

Now if only I can get them to buy her a Mega Millions ticket.

I will leave with a lottery story from decades back, when I still worked in sports at the local Woke Gazette. I was covering what I recall to be a night Steelers preseason game with Cleveland (the original Browns, not the current replacement team of that name).

Ohio had begun a Lotto game and after numerous drawings without a winner, the jackpot was big. I can’t recall the number, but I’m thinking something like $10 million might be right.

There were lines at all the ticket selling locations. Some Steelers assistant coaches, short on spare time, gave sportswriters money to buy tickets for them.

There was a huge crowd in ancient Municipal Stadium for the game. I still remember the scene, the dull roar of a crowed anticipating a football game and then the numbers were drawn and given out over the stadium PA system.

You could hear the collective groan, both from the crowd and the press box. The game had become an afterthought.

It turns out, inexplicably, each one of us ticketholders actually thought we’d had a good chance to win, and that is the magic of the lottery.

The Night Before Christmas Revisited

‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the nation,

The people were struggling with Biden’s inflation;

Prices were high and stockings weren’t filled,

But soon there’d be hope if the border got sealed;

Illegals would be grabbed from their snug little beds,

Sent packing by Homan and all his good Feds;

MAGA mamas and daddies had given their backing,

For Donald J. Trump to hand out this shellacking

Yet Kamala’s team was not taking this well.

Whining and griping and threatening as well;

Still Trump and his troop have a plan for this crew,

With turn after turn of a punishing screw;

Now Vivek and Elon, now Pete H. and Kash,

On RFK Jr. to deal with our rash;

The swamp will be drained by this undaunted crew,

And we might get a hand from some Democrats, too;

Leading the way will be all-conquering Trump,

Tossing the bureaucrats into the dump;

The man has four years to rescue this land,

Not a second to spare for he and his band;

But Trump he can do it, of that I am certain,

Keeping his promises ere down comes the curtain;

And we’ll hear him exclaim as he jets out of sight,

Fight. Fight. Fight, all you must, to preserve what is right.

NFL’s Netflix Grinch Move for Christmas

Among the many things for which I am grateful this Christmas season is that long ago I cured my NFL addiction.

Said addiction had dated to early childhood, when I watched the NFL, but favored the AFL, whose teams, players and coaches were more colorful.

As an AFL fan, I had to endure beatdowns of the Kansas City Chiefs and Oakland Raiders at the hands of NFL champion Green Bay in the first two Super Bowls, only to have Joe Namath and the New York Jets strike one for the AFL in Super Bowl III by beating the Baltimore Colts. By then, however, the leagues had agreed to merge, an act you history buffs might appreciate for having eventually sent the Steelers to the AFC.

The genius in the growth of the NFL post-merger was making the games readily available on traditional TV, and giving a tacit nod to the betting aspect of the sport. Even before betting was widely legal, CBS in particular made a great effort to address odds and picks in its pregame shows.

But, just as we’ve moved on from once upon a time when all major boxing matches were available free on traditional over-the-air TV outlets, these days slices of NFL football are being parceled out only to those willing to pay a little extra to see the games.

It began with games showing up on the NFL Network, which a lot of people don’t receive on their cable or satellite packages.

More recently, Thursday night games have been shifted to Amazon’s Prime. I happened to get a free month of Prime recently and watched a bit of two Thursday night games on my computer. It was not nearly enough to encourage me to re-up for Prime.

As a side note, if one is patient, those Thursday night games are replayed after the fact on the NFL Network.

Coming Christmas Day, we have a couple of NFL games, including the Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs, that are being offered on Netflix. My programming guide indicates they will be replayed later that night on NFL Network.

I don’t do no Netflix, even using the sort of underhanded password sharing many previously used to partake, so I’ll be passing on the live games and I can’t see myself watching replays.

Supposedly games being livestreamed on Prime or Netflix must be available on over-the-air outlets in the home markets of teams involved, in this case CBS affiliates in Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Baltimore and Houston. But we are not in the Pittsburgh home market, so no dice for Johnstown area fans watching the Steelers live on Christmas, other than on Netflix.

There was a time when such a thing, an attractive game not available without some sort of additional charge, would have offended me. Not anymore.

I see the NBA still is showing all five of its Christmas Day offerings on ABC or ESPN. Due to lack of interest, I won’t be watching them, either. But I’m glad to see they still are available on the customary outlets, for as long as that lasts.

I’m hoping Netflix does a better job with the NFL games than it did with the Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight broadcast, which I’ve read was replete with buffering and freezing issues.

But, even if there are technical problems, I’ll be spared any annoyance. Think of it as the tree falling in the woods when you aren’t present to hear it.

I’m not exactly sure how I’ll spend Christmas Day in view of the fact that a significant chunk of the family is out of town. Our official celebration will wait for January.

What I do know is I won’t be watching NFL games on Christmas Day and I’m fine with that.

Our Family’s Christmas Tree History

Having watched the National Lampoon Christmas Vacation movie for the umpteenth time, in particular the opening scenes about procuring the Griswold Family Christmas tree, I was inspired by how it rang true to my experiences.

In truth, the whole movie, with its dysfunctional family celebrations, resonates with the the majority of the populace, hence it’s enduring popularity. We all could tell tales. Here is my brief history of our Christmas trees.

My earliest recollections of my family’s Christmas tree experience was going to the lots that sprang up in December, buying a tree that looked a lot more full and straight on the lot, and then wrestling with the thing at home to get it to stand up in the holder.

Hatchets were wielded to trim the trunk to fit (and ostensibly to promote water flow to prolong needle life on the tree). Sometimes support strings were attached out of sight to aid in the fight to keep the tree erect despite gravity.

Eventually, our massive cardboard box of ornaments and lights were fetched from the attic and the tree was decorated. A week or two later, the whole process was repeated in reverse and the tree was sent to the curb.

Somewhere along the line, my dad, who was an idea man short on execution, decided buying cut trees was a waste of money. He had some property in Somerset County and his plan was to dig out our annual Christmas tree, keep it alive for the holiday season, then transplant said tree to that country plot of land. For what purpose, I’m still not sure.

What this meant for my brother and I was the act of procuring a Christmas tree became a whole lot more difficult.

My dad located a place that would allow us to dig up and purchase a tree. It was my brother and I who would accompany my dad, wield a pick, shovels and an ax to sever roots, load the whole thing into a large plastic tub and then into the bed of whatever pickup truck the old man was driving at the time.

Customarily we picked a rather smallish tree. Where our previous cut trees had tended to be in the six- or seven-foot range, these prospect transplant trees were more often four or five feet.

After the customary decoration and de-decoration in keeping with the season, the trees would be taken out to our land, where the brother and I again would be expected to dig into concrete-like frozen ground to make a suitable hole for the tree.

About four months later, we’d go out and check to find a dead, brown tree. And yet this act was repeated annually until we grew up and the old man gave up on it all. Call it the triumph of hope over experience.

There was a wide divide in how my grandparents addressed the whole Christmas tree matter.

My maternal grandmother lived in abject poverty, in a Walnut Grove hovel. My grandfather was dead from my very early years on, a victim of lung disease from his career as a coal miner. Yet my grandmother always seemed to have a magnificent live tree for Christmas. She also had those old bubble lights on her trees. I can’t believe this never led to the burning down of her house.

The exact opposite was my paternal grandparents, who lived in Dale Borough. They always were family first-movers of sorts, for example having been the first to acquire a cable television hookup.

It was during my early childhood that they made the move to an artificial tree. Those early trees didn’t even try to resemble live timber. My grandparents’ example had a silver wooden post into which branches were inserted. Those branches were thick metal wires with what looked like aluminum foil cut to resemble pine needles (if pine needles were silver, not green) attached.

One had to be careful with the lighting of these trees, lest a short circuit ruin your holiday. Often artificial tree people of the times had lights with a rotating color wheel beneath the trees to provide the illumination.

Our tree the past two years has been one of those pencil thin fakes, a consderable markdown from mammoth artificial trees we have displayed for many years.

But in the early years of my marriage, we went the live tree route, even anticipating that Christmas Vacation movie, which was released in 1989.

It was probably the early 1980s when the wife and I went out to a friend’s to hack down a tree he said was available for us, at a very small fee.

Like Clark Griswold from the movie, it turns out I had a problem judging size in an outdoor setting. I cut down the tree and struggled against gravity and friction from deep snow to drag this massive thing uphill to our waiting car.

At that point, I realized the tree was about as long, if not longer than my wife’s 1977 Plymouth Volare. I checked online and found that vehicle length to be a tad under 17 feet.

We lashed the thing to the roof, with plenty of tree hanging out the back and over the windshield. The fun was just beginning.

Once we got it home, I had to go to work pruning maybe seven feet off the bottom of the tree (our ceilings were just over nine feet) and trimming the massive branches to get the tree inside the house.

Eventually, we got it upright and decorated. The trophy was displaced in the corner of the dining room and protruded about halfway into the entrance to the living room. I just wish I’d taken pictures. But back then we didn’t all carry cameras/cell phones with us constantly.

That was my largest, most memorable live Christmas tree.

Looking back, at least I’d remembered the saw and hadn’t needed to dig it out.

Critics Abound As College Football Playoffs Open

Saturday’s football feast has been served and devoured, leaving us to deal with many cases of indigestion.

Begin with all the critics who used the blowout losses by Indiana Friday night and SMU Saturday to rail against those teams’ inclusion in the 12-team college playoff field.

Lane Kiffin’s sour grapes are predictable. His Ole Miss team is one of the units that didn’t make it despite going 9-3.

Lane, buddy, your stellar group lost to a 4-8 Kentucky team. Yet you had the hotty toddys to go on social media during Indiana’s 27-17 loss to Notre Dame, and SMU’s 38-10 defeat to Penn State to take jabs at the selection committee.

This just in, Lane, if only you had beaten mediocre Kentucky you probably are in the field. Any mirrors in your house? Try looking in one of them.

Others in the media and coaching fraternity were quick to rake the committee for including the teams from major conferences (Big Ten for Indiana and ACC for SMU) with the best records that didn’t win conference championships.

It seems ACC champion Clemson got a pass on its large first-round loss because, despite being dominated for a great part of a game at Texas Saturday, the Tigers rallied to lose by a relatively close 38-24 final. But, after jumping up 7-0, Clemson was outscored 31-3 over the next 30 minutes or so of playing time. This is less than stellar stuff.

The critics seemed to have lost their social media connections early in the nightcap, when Ohio State jumped out to a 21-0 lead vs. Tennessee. That would be Tennessee from the mighty SEC. But the Volunteers looked extremely overmatched.

By the fourth quarter, Ohio State was up 42-10 on the way to a 42-17 win. A “scarlet smackdown” announcer Chris Fowler branded it at game’s end.

If Tennessee had been wearing Indiana or SMU uniforms, critics would have rushed to judge. Get them out of the playoffs. They don’t belong. Look at them. Ridiculous. Overmatched.

But 10-2 Tennessee getting humbled invoked no such judgement. What, no rush to social media, Lane, to decry the weak SEC?

This Ohio State-Tennessee result was just another brick in the first-round wall, not a total indictment of the losers.

First, the opening round games are played in the home stadiums of the higher seed, an advantage most would agree. The home teams are thought to be better and are rewarded with a home game. That all four home teams would win, and mostly in impressive fashion, should have been expected to some degree.

Also, it’s winter in the north and teams from warmer climes, such as SMU or Tennessee, might be thought to be at something of a disadvantage due to the frigid temperatures.

Pregame coverage of the Tennessee-Ohio State game was long on detailing the great pains Tennessee had taken to try to keep its quarterback warm. It didn’t seem to help.

Videos of this Ohio State-Tennessee game should be provided to Kiffin and his ilk, to be viewed often ahead of next season in the pursuit of humility and perspective when it comes to the matter of playoff team selections.