Worst Super Bowl ever

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I found it odd & mean NO offense to the members here. It just seems weird to me. If one works hard in life and gets rewarded, I would hope to remember to honor the One who gave me the gift of my talents to be rewarded, not honor the reward itself.

Hats off to the players, they work harder than I ever will probably.
 
It reminded me of a catholic procession where usually everyone is trying to touch or kiss the priest’s vestments.

I might be weird and might be reading TOO much into it.
 
It NEVER is boring in Nawlins. Great food, fantastic music, good folks, and terrific adult beverages.
 
I found it odd & mean NO offense to the members here. It just seems weird to me. If one works hard in life and gets rewarded, I would hope to remember to honor the One who gave me the gift of my talents to be rewarded, not honor the reward itself.

Hats off to the players, they work harder than I ever will probably.
Sean Payton admitted in his book that he fell asleep with it in his arms and drooled on it, LOL.

It is symbolic of having won the single-most sought-after place in NFL history, a place that the players cannot lose and that connects them to each other for life. That’s the thing to remember–this is a group achievement and there is a lot of emotion attached to that, as well.

Imagine working for your PhD for year after year, never knowing if you’d ever actually get it, and knowing that success depending on your entire group achieving the goal! Considering that none of them know from one game to the next if their body will survive to play another game and all of them know that their team won’t exist in its present form next season, it is of course the single physical symbol of an extremely intense and emotional moment. That group of people means more to those fellows than any other group other than their families, only this is a group who won’t all be together in one place ever again, once the celebration ends. (Then add all the groups that they remember that did not get there…)
 
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It NEVER is boring in Nawlins. Great food, fantastic music, good folks, and terrific adult beverages.
And yet it could not be more different than Las Vegas, which a paramedic friend of mine who works there says has no soul (that the visitors can ever see) because the food and the entertainment and the beverages do not intersect at all with day-to-day normal family life. It is all from somewhere else and for someone else, just divorced from the locale. Las Vegas tries to be all feast and no fast, all glamour and no real skin-on life, all ease and no struggle. New Orleans is not like that.

I feel bad, by the way, that the Oakland fans are losing their team yet again. That is a loyal fan base and one that always gets treated as if they don’t use forks. (The jibes of course go back and forth between the Niner fans and the Raiders fans…)

Thank goodness that Mr. Benson put the Saints on a good footing before he passed away, God rest his soul. I hope they are in New Orleans for as long as there is an NFL. There is no place like New Orleans.
 
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I agree. Oakland is getting a raw deal.
Add them to a list that includes St. Louis and San Diego.
I ❤️ NOLA!
 
The Raiders being moved away from their true fans in favor of Las Vegas reminds me of this piece by Thomas Merton:

There is no greater disaster in the spiritual life than to be immersed in unreality, for life is maintained and nourished in us by our vital relation with realities outside and above us. When our life feeds on unreality, it must starve. It must therefore die…

The Desert Fathers believed that the wilderness had been created as supremely valuable in the eyes of God precisely because it had no value to men. The wasteland was the land that could never be wasted by men because it offered them nothing. There was nothing to attract them. There was nothing to exploit. The desert was the region in which the Chosen People had wandered for forty years, cared for by God alone. They could have reached the Promised Land in a few months if they had travelled directly to it. God’s plan was that they should learn to love Him in the widlerness and that they should always look back upon the time in the desert as the idyllic time of their life with Him alone.

The desert was created simply to be itself, not to be transformed by men into something else. So too the mountain and the sea. The desert is therefore the logical dwelling place for the man who seeks to be nothing but himself–that is to say, a creature solitary and poor and dependent upon no one but God, with no great project standing between himself and his Creator…

Yet look at the deserts today. What are they? The birthplace of a new and terrible creation, the testing ground of the power by which man seeks to un-create what God has blessed. Today, in the century of man’s greatest technological achievement, the wilderness at last comes into its own. Man no longer needs God, and he can live in the desert on his own resources. He can build there his fantastic, protected cities of withdrawal and expermination and vice. The glitterinig towns that spring up overnight in the desert are no longer images of the City of God, coming down from heaven to enlighten the world with the vision of peace. They are not even replicas of the great tower of Babel that once rose up in the desert of Senaar, that man “might make his name famous and reach even unto heaven” (Genesis 11:4). They are brilliant and sordid smiles of the devil upon the face of the wilderness, cities of secrecy where each man spies on his brother, cities through whose veins money runs like artificial blood, and from whose womb will come the last and greatest instrument of destruction.

Can we watch the growth of these cities and not do something to purify our own hearts? When man and his money and machines move out into the desert, and dwell there, not fighting the devil as Christ did, but believing in his promises of power and wealth, and adoring his angelic wisdom, then the desert itself moves everywhere. Everywhere is desert. Everywhere is solitude in which man must do penance and fight the adversary and purify his own heart in the grace of God…
 
I agree. Oakland is getting a raw deal.
Add them to a list that includes St. Louis and San Diego.
I ❤️ NOLA!
Move a team away from its fans, from families that hand down their connection to the game from generation to generation, from the people who stick together even when the team goes through bad phases, and what do you have? It is a soulless thing. I don’t want to make too much of it, but it is like when people want there to be all Mardi Gras and no Ash Wednesday or no Lent. It is just wrong.

As for New Orleans, though…where are there fans like that? Where is there a big crowd that meets the team when it loses with signs that read “Marcus Williams We Love You”–who don’t turn on a player who played with heart all season over one bad play at the worst time? How many cities greet an injustice with vandalism and rioting and how many meet it with solidarity and fund-raising to make the city better? It is a city that knows what to do with both success and set-back, with both feast and fast. You gotta love that.
 
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I’ve been a football fan all my life and never looked at it that way. It’s just a celebration of an accomplishment. That’s how I see it.
 
New Orleans has soul. Some communities across this land do not seem to have soul.
Oakland is amazing, because they moved the original AFL franchise to LA and then back again. The Oakland fans never wavered in their support. Perhaps one day, the team will be moved from Las Vegas back to Oakland.
 
New Orleans has soul. Some communities across this land do not seem to have soul.
Oakland is amazing, because they moved the original AFL franchise to LA and then back again. The Oakland fans never wavered in their support. Perhaps one day, the team will be moved from Las Vegas back to Oakland.
I’m still waiting for the Colts to return to Bawlimore.
 
I think one thing that the NFL should do it to allow the nickname for a team to remain, even if the franchise moves to another city.
Baltimore Colts makes more sense than Indianapolis Colts
Aare their Cardinals in Arizona? I know Cardinals exist in St. Louis.
Is Los Angeles or Minnesota known for all of is many Lakes?
And how much Jazz have you ever heard in Utah?
 
I think one thing that the NFL should do it to allow the nickname for a team to remain, even if the franchise moves to another city.
Baltimore Colts makes more sense than Indianapolis Colts
Aare their Cardinals in Arizona? I know Cardinals exist in St. Louis.
Is Los Angeles or Minnesota known for all of is many Lakes?
And how much Jazz have you ever heard in Utah?
The totemic aspect of the name demands it.
 
The name of a team belongs to the fans. Or at least it should.
If they want to remove the business let them, but leave the memories of games played in the past with the fans.
At least Cleveland fans were able to hold on to the Browns label when the team moved to become the Ravens.
When the Oilers when to Nashville, they became the Titans. Of course, there are not many oil derricks in Tennessee.
 
I think one thing that the NFL should do it to allow the nickname for a team to remain, even if the franchise moves to another city.
Baltimore Colts makes more sense than Indianapolis Colts
Aare their Cardinals in Arizona? I know Cardinals exist in St. Louis.
Is Los Angeles or Minnesota known for all of is many Lakes?
And how much Jazz have you ever heard in Utah?
Actually, believe it or not Salt Lake City actually has a jazz festival now.
But yeah, the Utah Jazz kills me… that’s just wrong. They have a soul there, I’m not getting down on the Mormons, but that ain’t it.

Las Vegas should not have been given the Raiders. They have less soul than LA!!!
That was cruel. Not that a trip from Oakland to Las Vegas is the worst thing it the world, but who can do that on a regular basis? Those fans deserve so much better than they’ve gotten from the Davis clan. Terrible.
 
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The name of a team belongs to the fans. Or at least it should.
If they want to remove the business let them, but leave the memories of games played in the past with the fans.
At least Cleveland fans were able to hold on to the Browns label when the team moved to become the Ravens.
When the Oilers when to Nashville, they became the Titans. Of course, there are not many oil derricks in Tennessee.
Too bad Baltimore wasn’t able to hold on to the name of the Colts. I’m old enough that I still think that Baltimore Colts has the natural ring to it.
 
I am a huge football fan, but I got so bent at the officiating that got the Rams in that I skipped this year. I know they wanted LA in the Super Bowl, but sheeesh!
 
The TV ratings were way down, so there were obviously a lot of other fans who did the same thing.
I think most sports fans have a profound thing about fairness. We are passionate about that.
 
Officiating throughout the entire season was bad and i agree that it was a huge turnoff for a lot of people. About the New Orleans things, I think definitely the NFL thought that having an LA team would pull in huge ratings. But I also think that the NFL didn’t want NO in because Drew Brees is clearly a more seasoned QB ,and no matter how well LA did during the regular season, playing in the SB is an entirely different thing. Yeah, I guess I’m saying the NFL wanted NE to win.
 
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Though I am not a conspiracy theorist, I agree with your assessment. It appeared that the NFL wanted New England to win.
Put as asterisk next to New England. (* The Patriots won because the New Orleans Saints did not get a chance to play.)

Super Bowl LIII champions – New England Patriots *
 
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