Thursday, January 17, 2013

Falcons/49ers Rivalry

It's great that the Falcons and 49ers are playing for the NFC Championship. This rivalry brings back so many memories.

I guess most Falcons fans would say their biggest rival is the Saints. I get that, and I don't care for them either. But I really can't stand the 49ers. It's always been that way.

When I was growing up during the Joe Montana and Steve Young years, San Francisco had some really great teams, and won several Superbowls...and the Falcons hardly ever beat them.

To add to it, I was also a Cowboys fan in my early youth (because they won, and I used the excuse of being born in Dallas), and the 'Boy and 9ers held the 1st and 2nd seed in the NFL every year from 1992-1995 and met in the NFL Championship Game from 1992-94.

Atlanta is 30-44-1 (.400) against them all time. But in my lifetime (since 1984) they are 13-27-1 (.317) against the 49ers.

All those years in the NFC West - all those beatdowns.

From 1984-1990, the Falcons were 1-12-1 vs. the 49ers. The average margin of victory (or loss, in the Falcons case) was 17 points. They were hard to beat.

The first memory I have, when I realized how much it meant to beat them, was when the Falcons won on a Hail Mary throw on the last play of the game in 1991 (in old Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium) to win 17-14. I remember the next day on the school bus everyone was so pumped about winning that game. Of course, that was the second time Atlanta had beaten them that year, and that game gave the Falcons the tiebreaker (both teams were 10-6) and led to their big playoff victory in the Wild Card round vs. New Orleans in the Superdome.

The 49ers got payback in 1992 and won 56-17 and 41-3. If it wasn't enough that they beat us all the time, they had to steal away Deion Sanders after the 1993 season, and proceed to win the Superbowl with him in 1994.

Going into the 1995 season finale, San Fran had won 6 of the last 7, and they were poised for a 1st round bye in the playoffs. The Falcons needed to win to get in. I remember laying on my bed listening to the game on the radio (because practically all home games were blacked out back then). I don't recall exactly what happened, but it was an exciting finish I know. Atlanta won 28-27, my dad and I jumping up in down in my room as we listened to the call.

Back to getting taken behind the woodshed in 1996 and 97. And leave it to the 49ers to hand us one of our two losses in 1998, a 31-20 game in Week 3. But on their return visit to the Dome, I remember begging my dad to take me to the game because I just had to see it - both teams were 7-2 and I wasn't going to let the Georgia Dome not being sold out prevent me from putting my eyes on this game. (But, of course, I went and the game sold out for the first time in a billion years.) The Falcons won 31-19 and went on to an amazing season. And for once, when the 49ers came back to the Dome for the Divisional round of the playoffs that year, I finally felt confident we could beat them (maybe for the first time in my life). And we did, if only by a 20-18 score.

San Francisco wouldn't let us leave the NFC West without a bitter taste in our mouths. They won two overtime games in 2001. The Chris Chandler (but play Michael Vick, please) Falcons ended the year 7-9.

I was happy about the creation of the NFC South in 2002: no more San Francisco twice per season.

The 49ers have lost what they used to have. The 2000s weren't nearly as successful as the previous two decades, and the Falcons have won the last four meetings. But now that the Falcons are facing them in the NFC Championship Game, I'm reminded of the rivalry that once was. Just how thrilling it was to beat them back in the day, and how no one ever expected us to - as many are calling for this weekend. How awesome it would be to win one here, this week, to send Atlanta to the Superbowl.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Hasn't God Always Met Our Needs?

From Bryant Wright

"I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me." - Philippians 4:12-13 NAS

When you take the time to sort through your yearly expenses, it can be a sobering experience. Believe me, I know. First I paid the MasterCard bill and then my quarterly estimated state and federal taxes. This was followed by an exorbitant check for out-of-state college tuition, which had risen 17% that year. (At that point, I had that mental picture of a giant vacuum cleaner in the sky, sucking up all the money we had.) Then I checked on our retirement account, noting it had, for the third year in a row, dropped double digits. I began to have this very sinking feeling of despair coming over me. I must confess to you that I walked around really discouraged for a few days.

And then the Holy Spirit began to minister to me. It was like the Lord said, "Haven't you paid all your bills? Haven't I met all of your needs? Haven't I ALWAYS met all of your needs? What makes you think that after all these years of so-called spiritual maturity that I'm no longer going to meet your needs?"

Let me tell you something: that was very convicting. And then the Lord said to my heart, "Bryant, it never was yours in the first place. And whether you're riding high for one year and down in the dumps the next, that's My decision. It has always been My decision. It has never been yours. I'm just interested in you seeking to manage what I entrust to you, to the best of your ability, and trust Me with the rest."

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Blueberries

I'm into blueberries right now. Not necessarily eating blueberries themselves, but stuff with blueberries in them, nor flavoring.

Blueberry bagels, pop tarts, muffins. They are all good.

The other day I bought some blueberry cobbler coffee. Since I'm into blueberries and blueberry cobbler is good, I figured this would be too. And yes, it is delicious.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

The BCS Title Game Should be on a Saturday

The last few years the BCS Title Game has been on a Monday night. I don't really care for it.

All year long we watch Saturday football. It's one of the great things about college football - the games are on a day when most of us don't work, and you can stay up until after midnight watching games because you don't have to work the next day, Sunday.

But the BCS Title Game has gone the way of the MLB or NBA Playoffs and is played on a weeknight, and starting at 8:30 EST. So if you are someone who goes to sleep around 10 PM because you've got to get up early to work the next day, you can only make it to halftime. I could stay up of course, if I can keep my eyes open after waking up early that morning, and then run on a short night the next day. But wouldn't be easier to just have the game on a Saturday.

Probably the main reason it isn't played on the weekend is the NFL Wildcard Playoffs which are played on the entire weekend before the title game. But if college and pro would work together a little bit, it could be done.

How about 3 playoff games on Sunday: 1:00, 4:30, and 8:00 - just like any other Sunday during the year, and then the final game on Monday, just like any other week of football in the NFL.

If this was done, you'd have the entire Saturday before to devote to the BCS Title Game. And the 8:30 start on Saturday night would be fine as the entire country could easily, and happily stay up to watch it.

Of course, the BCS is going away pretty soon. And if the 4-game playoff semifinal is played on New Year's Day then the title game is unlikely to take place where it is now, just 6 or 7 days afterwards. Well, if that's the case, it would just be the Divisional round of the NFL Playoffs where it would fall. And for uniformity, the NFL could just make the Wildcard the same and let college play the final few bowls on the Saturday of that weekend.