Here are Tony and my picks for the NFC and AFC Championships Games. Please share your predictions at the bottom of the page.
Tony and I both pick the GiAnts upsetting the 49ers and New England (it was a Fumble!-10 years ago) over Baltimore.
George Allen for United States Senate
Here are Tony and my picks for the NFC and AFC Championships Games. Please share your predictions at the bottom of the page.
Tony and I both pick the GiAnts upsetting the 49ers and New England (it was a Fumble!-10 years ago) over Baltimore.
Here are Tony and my picks for this weekend’s NFL Divisional Round Playoffs. Please share your predictions at the bottom of the page.
Amazingly, our only difference was I wishfully picked Denver to beat New England. Tony picked New England.
Both Tony and I picked:
New Orleans over San Francisco
Baltimore over Houston
And a GiAnts upset of Green Bay
Here are this week’s picks for the NFL Wildcard Playoff Games, as well as the college National Championship game. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
For the National Championship game (there should be a playoff) , I picked LSU and Tony picked Alabama.
In NFL Wildcard playoff games:
I picked Houston, Tony picked Cincinnati.
And both of us picked New Orleans over Detroit, GiAnts over Atlanta and Pittsburgh over Denver.
Here are this week’s picks for Week 17 of the NFL Season, as well as the college Sugar Bowl and Chick-Fil-A Bowl. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
In our college bowl game picks, both Tony and I picked the UVa Wahoos over Auburn.
In the Sugar Bowl: I picked the Virginia Tech Hokies, while Tony thinks Michigan will win big.
In NFL games for Week 17, we agreed on Tennessee over Houston,
the Raiders over San Diego and the Jets over Miami.
I picked the Redskins over Philadelphia in a miracle, but Tony said Vick would romp for Philadelphia.
I picked Cincinnati over Baltimore. Tony predicts Baltimore
I picked Detroit and Tony took Green Bay.
And finally, I chose the Dallas Cowboys to win the NFC East. Tony went with the G-men/GiAnts.
Tonight, Tony and I are both rooting for Florida State over Notre Dame.
Here are this week’s picks for Week 16 of the NFL Season. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page. Unfortunately, Tony and I agreed on 5 of the 6 games.
Our only difference was that I picked the JETS and Tony picked the GiAnts.
Both of us picked:
Redskins over MinnesOta,
Raiders over Kansas City
Philadelphia over Dallas (I hope we are wrong on this one)
San Diego over Detroit
And New Orleans over Atlanta
Merry Christmas to all.
Here are this week’s picks for Week 15 of the NFL Season. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
To catch up to Tony, I had to make some unusual picks against teams I like.
I picked Baltimore over San Diego. Tony picked San Diego
I picked Detroit over Oakland, and Tony picked Oakland.
We both picked Philadelphia over the Jets, New England over Denver and Pittsburgh over the 49ers – the first 2 of which I hope we are both wrong.
When Army and Navy renew their annual rivalry at the end of every football season we are reminded that even though the service academies very much want to beat each other on the football field, their fierce rivalry is characterized by a profound sense of mutual respect and national solidarity. Thank you to all of the men and women in our armed services and their families for their service to our country and protecting our freedoms.
Here is an excerpt from my book, What Washington Can Learn from the World of Sports, about the storied rivalry between the Army and Navy football teams.
When Army and Navy renew their annual rivalry at the end of every football season, no one is ever quite sure whether the game itself will be the main attraction—or whether the pageantry and pranks surrounding the game will take center stage. Certainly, the Cadets and Midshipmen have played their share of classic gridiron battles.
In 1926, more than 110,000 fans watched an undefeated Navy team led by All-American Frank Wickhorst tie Army 21–21 in the first-ever game played at Soldier Field in Chicago. Among the fans in attendance that day was Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne, who was so interested in seeing this classic rivalry that he actually skipped his own team’s game against Pittsburgh. (In Rockne’s absence, Pitt upset the Irish, 19–0.)
In 1944, an undefeated Army team led by “Mr. Inside” Doc Blanchard and “Mr. Outside” Glenn Davis beat Navy 23–7 to complete the Black Knights’ perfect season and win Army its first of two consecutive national championships. Blanchard and Davis would each go on to win a Heisman Trophy, and the pair would finish their careers at Army as the only backfield tandem to ever be named All-American three straight years.
In 1963, future Hall of Fame quarterback Roger Staubach led Navy to a 21–15 win over Army in a nationally televised game that featured the first-ever use of instant replay. After Army’s first score, CBS commentator Lindsey Nelson had to explain to the viewing audience that they were not watching the Cadets score again. “Ladies and gentlemen, what you are seeing is a tape of Army’s touchdown,” Nelson said. “This is not live.”
In addition to football memories, the Army-Navy game has also had its share of rowdy, raucous, audacious, off-the-field shenanigans. In 1894, for example, President Grover Cleveland called a special meeting of his cabinet to discuss ways to preserve the reputation of the military academies after brawls in the stands and a near-duel between a retired general and a rear admiral marred the 1893 Army-Navy game. President Cleveland cancelled the game indefinitely. Several years later, President William McKinley revived the annual tradition.
In 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a West Point grad, ordered the Army cadets to return Navy’s billy goat mascot to Annapolis after a group of West Point cadets conducted the first of many successful kidnappings of the opposing school’s mascot during the week leading up to the big game.
In 1975, Navy alum H. Ross Perot got revenge for his graduating class (1953) when he snuck onto the West Point campus the night before the big game and serenaded the cadets from the chapel belfry with a medley of “Anchors Aweigh,” “The Marine Hymn,” and “Sailing, Sailing.” Perot was captured by some cadets and turned over to military police.
In 2007, an international peace conference being held in Annapolis the week of the big game caused Navy midshipmen to rein in their pranks, doing little beyond the customary effigy-burning of an Army mule at a mid-week pep rally. But the peace conference didn’t stop a group of West Point cadets from sneaking onto the Annapolis campus and burning a special message into the Naval Academy’s parade field grass. That message read: “Go Army.”
So, in addition to some smash-mouth football, the Army-Navy game has also been the impetus for all sorts of good-natured off-the-field fun. More than anything, though, the Army-Navy game has featured moments that remind everyone that even though the service academies very much want to beat each other on the football field, their fierce rivalry is characterized by a profound sense of mutual respect and national solidarity.
During World War II, for example, travel restrictions prevented students at the academies from going to away games. So in 1942, under orders from their superiors, some Navy midshipmen filled the visitors stands in Annapolis and cheered for the Army team. In 1943, some Army cadets returned the favor at West Point. When the travel restrictions were lifted prior to the 1944 game, a fleet of five Navy destroyers escorted a steamer full of Army cadets into Baltimore Harbor to attend the game.
Perhaps no moment, however, can top the scene at the end of every Army-Navy game when the players for both academies gather together to listen to the playing of each other’s school songs in a show of mutual appreciation and great sportsmanship.
“Army-Navy is like playing your brother,” Navy safety Gary Lane told a Smithsonian magazine reporter after the 1999 game. “You play harder, but you share something because you know what the other guy has been through.”
Here are this week’s picks for Week 14 of the NFL Season. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
This week’s picks:
Tony and I both picked Houston over Cincinnati and New Orleans over Tennessee.
We differed on the other three games:
I picked Dallas, Tony picked the GiAnts.
I picked Miami, Tony picked Philadelphia.
And I picked the 49ers, while Tony took Arizona.
After going 5-O Thanksgiving week in my picks, I hope to extend a lucky streak. Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
In this week’s games:
I picked the Redskins, Tony picked the Jets.
I picked Tennessee, Tony went with Buffalo.
And both Tony and I picked the Raiders over Miami, Dallas over Arizona and Pittsburgh over Cincinnati.
I’m also rooting for JMU and ODU in their playoffs and Virginia Tech in the ACC Championship game.
Here are this week’s picks for the Thanksgiving games and Week 12 of the NFL Season.
Share your predictions in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
Tony and I agreed on four of the five games we picked this week. We both picked:
Baltimore over San Francisco on Thanksgiving night
New Angleterre Pilgrims over Philadelphia (the first Thanksgiving was in Virginia)
The Raiders over Chicago
And New Orleans over the GiAnts
For the traditional Thanksgiving Day game:
I picked Green Bay and Tony is going with Detroit at home.
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