Monday, December 31, 2012

Wilson Legend Grows With Game Winning Drive vs. Rams... by Mark Arnold



   T
he game was tied at 13 with 5 minutes to go in regulation. The Seahawks had just forced the St. Louis Rams to punt and had the ball on their own 10 yard line, 90 yards from the go ahead score. Enter Russell Wilson.  To this point in the game the Rams had been very tough, sacking Wilson 6 times and harassing him constantly. Going into this last drive Wilson was special on this day more for what he hadn’t done than what he had done.  Despite the constant pressure and the hits he took he did not make the big mistake; the costly fumble or interception, and in a defensive struggle like this one that is often all that it takes to keep your team in the game. Russell Wilson had done that.

            But now, with 5 minutes to go, it was game time…the time that the great ones step up and take over; the time that legends are made. Russell Wilson did not disappoint.

            The drive started with a Marshawn Lynch 8 yard run followed by a near disastrous play in which Lynch fumbled the ball forward. A scrum ensued as players from both teams dove after and fought for the ball. Tense seconds passed while the refs unstacked the bodies but when they were done it was Seahawk wide receiver Golden Tate at the bottom of the pile and the Hawks had the ball and a first and ten on their own 22. Not one to look a gift horse in the mouth, it was time for Russell Wilson to go to work.

            On the next play, once again under heavy pressure, Wilson threw the ball away. Following a Wilson 5 yard read option gain to the right side the Seahawks had the ball with a third and five on their own 27. It is plays like the next play that are coming to define Russell Wilson. He took the snap from the shotgun and retreated a few steps to pass. A Ram defensive lineman somehow got around his blocker and spread his arms to engulf Wilson for another sack…only to come up with an armful of air. Wilson had somehow evaded the lineman, broke out of the pocket to his right and while on the run delivered a perfect pass to Golden Tate for a 44 yard gain. The Hawks had the ball, first and ten on the Ram 29 yard line.

            The rest of the drive had the air of the inevitable to it. A short Wilson pass to fullback Michael Robinson was followed by another Lynch run. The two plays gained ten yards and as the teams went into the two minute warning the Hawks had the ball with a first and ten on the Ram 20 yard line. Whatever spirit the Ram defense had left was broken on the next play when Wilson faked a handoff to Lynch and then sprinted around the left end for 15 yards to the Ram 4. Two plays later the Hawks scored the go ahead TD on a short Wilson run when he once again broke from the pocket and running to his left scampered across the goal line. With the game on the line at the end of the 4th quarter Wilson had driven the Seahawks 90 yards to a TD in 4 minutes.

            Game over!

            But the legend of Russell Wilson is just beginning…

By
Mark Arnold
30 December, 2012

Copyright © 2012
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Why Bringing In The Fences and a New Score Board Won’t Fix The Mariner Offense…One Fan’s Protest! ... by Mark Arnold



  I
f you haven’t been paying attention I am reluctant to be the harbinger of bad news, but the winter meetings are over, we are 6 weeks from pitchers and catchers and so far the biggest moves the Mariners have made are a new $10,000,000 score board, raising the ticket prices and bringing in the fences at Safeco Field. After years of losing and last place seasons, raising the ticket prices while giving us a new score board kind of speaks volumes about where the guys running this team are at. Keep the $10,000,000 and the old score board guys… use the dough to cover whatever the reason is you are raising ticket prices and leave the prices where they are. The fans don’t give a hoot about a new score board…what we want is wins!

          What really galls me though, is bringing in the fences. On the face of it this is a gesture made with the hopes of improving the Mariner offense; an offense that has set new standards for futility over the last few seasons. Well…it won’t work and for a very simple reason; the location of the fences is NOT the reason for the Mariners offensive woes. I think the reason they are doing it is that someone observed that this batch of Mariners hit better on the road than they did at the Safe or listened to Justin Smoak bitch about how he had crushed that pitch that was just caught on the warning track, and so decided on bringing in the fences as the solution.

          It is no solution. If the Mariners hitters are “psyched-out” by Safeco Field’s dimensions the problem is their “psyche” not the dimensions of the field. As a fan I am REALLY tired of the kind of “logic” exhibited by actions like “bringing in the fences” because it gets us no closer to winning a World Series. To fix anything that is non optimum, like the Mariner’s offense, you must find and address the actual cause and not things that are mere explanations. To do this you must have data. So…since the Mariners seem unwilling to do it, let’s you and I examine some.

          First, let me point out the obvious fact that that in bringing in the fences for the Mariners at Safeco you are also bringing in the fences for the other team as well. Whatever help this will be to the Mariner offense will benefit the opposing team’s offense equally. How this is helping the Mariners win games is lost on me. But that is a minor point. The major point is that just 11 years ago in 2001, hitting in the same Safeco Field with the same dimensions, the Mariners had the number one offense in the American League! They led the league in runs scored (927), hits, batting average (.288) and on base percentage (.360). They were number two in walks with 614. In addition, in the 14 team American League they were 6th in doubles, 2nd in triples and 8th in home runs. That team won more games (116) than any team in the Major Leagues since the 1906 Cubs, and all in the same ball park with the same dimensions that the current team finds to be such a burden. How could they do this? Well…the purpose of the human mind is to solve problems relating to survival…so let’s use it! (something the Mariners management would be well advised to do)

          The 2012 edition of the Seattle Mariners, though actually improved on offense from the year before, pale in comparison to the 2001 team in nearly every offensive statistical category. They scored 619 runs (300 fewer), had a Major League worst team batting average of .234, walked 466 times and had a team on base percentage of .296 (the worst in Major League baseball). When you realize that the purpose of offense in baseball is to score runs and that to score runs you must get on base then you can start to see why “on base percentage” is such a key statistic and much more important at measuring offensive effectiveness than “batting average”. (“On base percentage” is calculated by taking the number of times a player reaches base—excluding reaching by fielder error, fielder’s choice, dropped third strike or catcher obstruction—whether by hit, hit by pitch, by walk or whatever, and divides by the player’s total at bats. An OBP of .300 simply means the player reached base 3 times for every ten at bats). 

        The top teams in scoring runs last year in the Major Leagues were Texas (808), Yankees (804), Milwaukee (776), Angels (767), and St. Louis (765). These teams were also among the leaders in team OBP, and all had winning records with St. Louis and the Yankees making the playoffs and the Angels and Texas in the race until the season’s last day. The two teams making it to the World Series, Detroit and San Francisco, also had team OBPs in the upper third of Major League teams. (Incidentally, to illustrate how great that 2001 Mariner team was in the same Safeco Field that the current Mariners find to be such a problem, that Mariner team scored 100 runs more than the BEST team in the Majors in 2012 (Texas) and had an OBP of .360, more than 20 points higher than the best Major League OBP team in 2012, the St. Louis Cardinals at .338. It was no accident that 2001 team won 116 games…they made a point of getting on base.)

          It is also apparent from a study of the data, that there is a distinct correlation between OBP and batting average. In general this could be summed up as “the higher the OBP, the higher the batting average” with the reverse also holding true. The 2012 Mariners had the worst team OBP (.296) AND the worst team batting average (.234) in the Majors. The top teams in OBP also tended to be the top teams in average AND the top teams in scoring runs, as can be seen in this chart (below) of 2012 team statistics from MLB. Look it over and draw your own conclusions. 



         And while you might think that this is all “sabermetrics, Bill James and Baseball Abstract” stuff, in truth it really isn’t. Ted Williams, by the reckoning of some the greatest hitter ever, had it all figured out decades ago and summed it up in his book “The Science of Hitting” as “get a good pitch to hit”. A look at Williams’ career stats shows that he practiced what he preached; they are nothing short of eye popping! Despite missing nearly all of 5 peak potential seasons due to service in World War II and Korea, Williams’ production speaks for itself; a career .344 batting average; .488 OBP (highest in ML history!) and 521 career home runs. “The Splendid Splinter”, as Williams was called, across his career averaged 143 walks per 162 game season!! The guy simply did not swing at bad pitches… and because of this, to get him out, the pitcher had to throw him strikes; and when the pitcher threw him strikes Ted simply squared them up and hit them…that’s it and that’s all.

          By comparison the top Mariner in walks last year was Dustin Ackley with 59 in 600 plus at bats. Ackley’s OBP was a meager .294. Want to know who number two for the Mariners in walks was? The answer is very enlightening…John Jaso with 56! Jaso walked nearly as many times as Ackley in half the at bats Ackley had! As a result Jaso led the team in OBP (.394) AND batting average (.276). Clearly Jaso was not “psyched out” by Safeco Field dimensions like the rest of the Mariners apparently are. (My question is why didn’t Jaso get more at bats?)

          What is the key, then, to getting a high OBP and resultant batting average, runs scored, and wins? They key is plate discipline by the hitter; don’t swing at bad pitches, square up the good ones and if the pitcher won’t throw you good ones take your base via the walk. When you have a team of players that concentrate on this you win. Simple right?

          Of course there are many other factors to baseball; some players have more talent and some less and pitching and defense have their parts in things. Hitting Major League pitching is not easy; if it was, as the saying goes, everyone would do it. But the Mariners make it way tougher on themselves than it needs to be in my opinion. The answer to improving our team is not contained in moving in the fences, new score boards and such illogical actions. The answer is contained in the lessons to be learned by a study of the data above.

          Hint to Mariners: you want to really improve the team’s offense in 2013? Have all the players study John Jaso’s 2012 at bats and read Ted Williams’ “Science of Hitting”. Preach “get a good pitch to hit” and use batting practice to drill, drill, drill it until the players all grasp it conceptually and are practicing it at the plate. Do this and the Mariners will get better and be a more exciting and fun team to watch and…who knows…we might even make the playoffs and get that World Series at long last.

by
Mark Arnold
Dec 29th, 2012

Copyright © 2012
All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, December 25, 2012



The Christmas Tree



A Short Christmas Story of  Hope and Belief in
One’s Dreams

By
Mark Arnold

Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved



I


  I
t was Christmas Eve. The boy stood alone on the city sidewalk, an icy wind cutting through his jacket like a knife. The stores were all closing and the last few straggling shoppers, loaded with packages, were making their way home to their families. Watching them as they left, the boy shivered. He was not one to feel sorry for himself, but just now he couldn’t help it. This would be his 9th Christmas and he had yet to experience in his life the excitement and anticipation of waking up on Christmas morning and seeing a Christmas tree, brightly lit with piles of presents beneath it, knowing some of them were for him. He had yet to have a Christmas wish come true.

He didn’t blame anyone. His mother worked hard but what she made was barely enough to pay the rent and put food on the table. His father was long since gone to who knows where. The boy barely remembered him and for the most part had stopped thinking of him. He had an older brother who had left home when the boy was 6. At first the brother would come to see him but as time went buy he came less and less. And then this last year they had gotten word that his brother was dead. The police had said something about a drug overdose. The boy’s mother was not the same after that. She spent a lot of time just sitting and staring. The boy sometimes wondered if she would ever smile again.

Now, watching the last of the shoppers, the boy felt trapped by his poverty, and he wished that things could be different. A tear rolled down his cheek. Wiping it away with the frayed cuff of his jacket, he stood staring through the display window of the store in front of him, not knowing what to do.

          “What’s wrong?” a voice inquired behind him.

Startled, the boy wheeled around to face a pleasant looking, older man with a concerned look on his face. The man was well dressed in a warm looking overcoat; collar up to shield his neck from the icy wind. The hat on his head was tilted forward, partly obscuring the man’s forehead, but the boy could still see a face wrinkled about the eyes and mouth indicating the man’s age.

  Instantly afraid and on the defensive, the boy stammered, “I wasn’t doing anything. I was just looking through the window.”

The man smiled. “I can see that,” he said. “But it looks like you have been crying. What’s the problem?”

The boy did not want to answer. Why should he trust this man? In his short life the boy had learned it was better to not show his feelings. He wanted to run away, but there was something disarming about this man. He didn’t seem threatening at all and as the boy stared back at the man the urge to run gradually dissipated.

The man smiled and put his arm on the boy’s shoulder. More tears rolled down the boys face. “Come…” the man said. “Tell me what’s wrong.” He steered the boy to a nearby bench and they sat down. The man was silent, waiting for the boy to speak. Minutes went by.

The boy wiped more tears from his face, but his fear was gone and he found himself wanting to talk to this man. He didn’t know why, but he wanted to trust him. The boy opened his mouth to speak; “I…Its Christmas time.” he said.

The man just listened.

The boy went on, “I have never had a Christmas present ever. I have never had a Christmas tree. My mom has no money. I don’t want much… but just once I would like a Christmas tree, with lights and tinsel and a present underneath for me. I would like that.” The boy was crying again.

The man took a handkerchief from his pocket and dried the boy’s tears. “I understand son,” the man said, sympathizing with the boy’s situation. He waited a few moments to be sure the boy was done speaking, and then continued…“But don’t you know that you can have a Christmas tree anytime you want?”

The boy looked up, puzzled. He was starting to doubt the wisdom of talking to this man. After a few moments, however, curiosity got the better, “What do you mean?” the boy asked.

 “Well,” the man said, “close your eyes and I will show you.” 

The boy closed his eyes.

 “Alright…” the man said. “I want you to create a picture of the Christmas tree of your dreams. OK? Let’s get a picture of a tree.”

The boy seemed puzzled. “You mean in my mind?” he asked.

 “Yes!” the man said. “In your mind. Now get that picture. Have you done it?”

The boy paused a minute, then he said “Yes…Yes I have got it.”

“Great!” the man said. “Describe it for me.”

“Well,” the boy said, “it’s an evergreen tree with a lot of branches and long needles. It looks nice.”

“That’s fine.” the man said. “What’s it smell like?”

“Oh…” the boy said, smiling now, “it smells fresh, like pine. It smells really good.”

“Fantastic!” the man said. “But I thought this was a Christmas tree. Where are the ornaments? Put some ornaments on the tree.”

The boy was quiet a few moments and then said, “OK…the tree has ornaments.”

“All Right!” said the man. “Tell me about the ornaments”.

The boy proceeded to describe ornaments of all kinds that he had put on his tree. Red bulb ornaments. Blue bulb ornaments. Snowflake ornaments. Icicle ornaments. The boy was actually laughing as he described them.

“Wow!” the man said. “Sounds like you have ornaments! But didn’t you say you wanted lights on your tree?”

“Yes!” the boy said.

“Well,” the man said, “go ahead and put the lights on your tree.”

And so the boy did; white lights, blinking lights, colored lights, blinking colored lights…he put them all on his tree, telling the man about them as he did so and smiling and laughing the while.

“Incredible!” the man said. “You have the most lit up tree in the country; but what about tinsel? Didn’t you want tinsel on your tree?”

“Yes…I forgot about the tinsel,” the boy said, and he proceeded to put tinsel all over his tree from top to bottom. Soon he was done and he told the man so.

“Good Job!” the man said. “You’ve got your tree, lighted, ornamented and tinseled, just like you wanted, but aren’t you forgetting something?”

 “Yes!” the boy exclaimed. He had been so enthralled with his tree he had forgotten about the present.

“So…what do you want for a present?” the man asked.

There was no doubt in the boy’s mind. He wanted a football.

“Great!” the man said. “Put a football under your tree as a present for yourself.”

The boy did, and then he sat there on the bench in the cold December twilight, his eyes closed, looking at his tree with the football beneath. For the first time in a while the boy felt happy.

He sat there for a few more minutes and only opened his eyes when he realized that he no longer felt the man’s hand on his shoulder. The boy looked about. The man was gone, but there on the bench next to him, still in its box, was a brand new football. The boy stared at it, not quite believing his eyes. Excitedly, he touched it. It was real! He tore the football from its box and tossed it into the air, caught it, and then tossed it again. He rubbed his hand over the ball’s pebbled surface. Real leather! Just like the pros! But where had the ball come from? And where was the man?

 The boy wondered fleetingly, but then lost himself in the excitement of the gift. For the next few minutes he was an All Pro Quarterback leading his team to a game-winning touchdown in the Super Bowl. He was having a great time.

Soon, though, it was dark. The boy decided to head for home, his new football cradled in his arm. He took one last look at the bench where he had sat with the man and it was only then that he spied the note. In all the excitement he had missed it. He picked it up and looked at it. In a simple, clear hand, the note said:

“It was great meeting you son. Have fun with your new football. And remember, the future is free ground. No one owns it. You can do anything you want with it. So you use it well. Merry Christmas”

The boy finished reading, put the note in his pocket, and ran off for home.


II

(Twenty Years have passed)



T
he roar from the Super Bowl crowd was deafening. The quarterback had been having trouble with it the whole game and was hoarse from having to yell the signals loud enough for the ends and backs to hear. To make things worse, that last sack had rung his bell. The right tackle had missed his assignment and a linebacker had broken through clean and had a free shot. The quarterback was glad for the time out. It would give him time to clear his head and figure out what to do.

Trailing 24 to 21 with a 3rd and thirteen on their own 35 and 21 seconds left in the game, the quarterback’s team was in a tough spot. The quarterback had already met with the coach on the sideline and had gotten the play; a deep out route to the split end who would then step out of bounds and give the team a shot at a field goal to tie. The quarterback did not like the call but he did not tell the coach. Number 43, the corner back on the opposing team, had been blanketing the split end all day and had already intercepted him once. And, if the end was covered, the second and third options likely would not get the yardage needed. Yes, it was a tough spot to be in, but the quarterback had seen plenty of those.

He returned to the field, the team milling around him waiting for the TV time out to end. The crowd was roaring in anticipation of the coming play. The quarterback turned away from the team, looked up at the now darkening sky and closed his eyes. Shutting out the crowd noise, the situation, the other players…everything… he returned to that cold Christmas Eve so long ago, when as a boy he had met the kind man and gotten his first football. He thought of the Christmas tree he had created in his mind and the lesson he had learned about the future. He still had that note. It was his most treasured possession.

Twenty years had passed since that Christmas Eve and the boy from that time was a boy no more. At 6 feet 4 inches tall, 225 pounds and with a cannon for a right arm, he was cat quick and on the verge of being one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL. He had been drafted in the first round out of the University of Washington 7 years earlier and had become the starting quarterback by his second year in the pros. Now he had his team in the Super Bowl with 21 seconds to go and 65 yards from a win. The quarterback had overcome so much in his life; the team had come so far to get here; and he knew in his soul this was no time to be cautious…deep out route be damned!

 Opening his eyes and back in present time, the quarterback turned toward the team. All ten of them were all looking at him. The split end gave voice to the concern the whole team felt when he said to the quarterback, “Are you OK? You look a little lost.”

The quarterback looked back at him, “Oh yea…” he said. “I’m fine. I was just doing a little thinking.”

“What about?” the split end asked.

“Oh…I was just thinking about an old Christmas Tree I had once...that and a few other things.” The quarterback said.

The split end rolled his eyes, his worst fear realized. That last sack had done some damage; maybe a concussion. He was about to motion to the bench for the trainer when he heard the quarterback tell everyone to huddle up with an intention that demanded instant compliance. The split end forgot about the trainer.

“Ok guys,” the quarterback said. “Pay attention! Coach wants to run a deep zig and out to the split end and go for the field goal to tie. He wants to try and win in overtime.”

The split end moaned, “I don’t think that play will work,” he said. “I’ve been wearing number 43 like a suit all day. That guy is an animal! He’s killing me!”

The quarterback looked at the split end. “Don’t worry,” he said. “We’re not going to run that play. We’re going for the win now! I’ve come up with a play…I call it ‘Christmas Tree’. I need everyone to hold their blocks for a seven-step drop. Everyone got that?! And someone pick up that linebacker! We can’t let that guy through again! Here’s the play…” and the quarterback called a “deep zig out and then go” to the split end. It would start as the same play the coach wanted except the quarterback would pump fake when the end broke to the sideline. Number 43 would bite on the fake and the end would break deep behind him for the TD. Because the route was deep, and required a “triple move” on the part of the split end, it was imperative the line, the backs and the other receivers all do their part. They all had to hold their blocks and run their routes. Any failure would destroy their chance.

The split end looked dubious, “What is all this Christmas Tree stuff?” he challenged. “And what if 43 doesn’t bite on the fake? He is faster than me and….”

“Quiet!” the quarterback said. He was looking at the split end with a steely resolve. Then he softened a bit. “Listen,” he said. “Listen all of you. If there is one thing I have learned in my life for sure it is that the future is free ground. No one owns it, least of all number 43. We can do anything we want with it. So everyone do your job and let’s win this thing!”

As the team broke huddle and went into formation they all, to a man, knew what to do. The crowd noise was at a fever pitch but they could all hear the quarterback call the signals, clear and strong. The center snapped the ball and the quarterback went to his 7-step drop. The linemen were all holding their blocks but that linebacker had stunted and here he was again, coming free up the middle. Suddenly the fullback stepped up and buried his helmet in the linebacker’s chest stopping him cold. 

Meanwhile the split end had been running his route to perfection. He had gotten off the snap in good shape and had fought through number 43's initial effort to knock him from his route. He had run about 30 yards down the right hash marks when he suddenly feinted toward the center of the field and then broke sharply to the right sideline while turning his head back toward the quarterback as if expecting the pass. Thirty yards up field the quarterback was standing strong in the pocket, the eye of the storm, defensive linemen and blitzing linebackers straining but failing to get around, through or over the wall of offensive linemen protecting him. The quarterback had been looking to his left, surveying that side of the field as the play started. Following the quarterback's eye's, the opposing team's safeties drifted to the left side of the field, denying number 43 the help he would need once the split end broke behind him.

Suddenly, at exactly the moment the split end made his break to the sideline, the quarterback turned back to the right and brought his arm sharply forward, giving the pump fake of his life. Certain he had the game winning interception coming his way, number 43 bit hard on the pump, just like the quarterback predicted he would. At that moment the split end planted his foot and cut sharply down field, streaking toward the end zone exactly as they had planned in the huddle.

Momentarily stunned by the sudden move, number 43 quickly grasped his situation..."Shit!" he yelled, as he saw the split end break behind him. Re-setting his feet and arm after the pump fake, the quarterback now reared back and bringing his arm forward let the ball go...a perfect spiral, carving a long arc against the sky toward the split end.

Though in reality the crowd was cheering wildly, to the split end the stadium was eerily quiet and time seemed to stand still, the ball taking forever to get to him. Diving at the last second and stretching as far as he could, it looked for a moment that number 43 would deflect the ball away...but then, in slow motion, there it was, just clearing 43's fingers. The split end reached toward the ball, allowing it to settle softly in his hands as he crossed the goal line...

Touchdown!

The quarterback and his team had won the Super Bowl!

The stadium went nuts, fans and media spilling onto the field and everyone wanting to interview and take pictures of the quarterback. It took a while for things to calm down. At last, though he was able to shower and get dressed.

Several hours later most of the press was gone and most of the players were on their way to the team’s post game party. Leaving the locker room, the quarterback was on his way to his car when he heard someone call him from behind. He turned and instantly recognized number 43 from the other team.

“You played a helluva game.” 43 said.

“Thanks!” said the quarterback. “So did you.”

43 was silent for a moment, then he smiled, “You know,” he said, “I had that split end in my pocket the whole day. Where in the hell did you come up with that last play? I know your coach and there is no way he called that.”

The quarterback laughed. “Oh, that play,” he said. “That’s just a little thing we call ‘Christmas Tree’. Glad you liked it.”

“Oh Yeah…” said 43 cynically. “Liked it a lot!”

The quarterback shook 43’s hand and then stood alone watching as 43 turned to walk away. Closing his eyes, he thought again of the kind man and the Christmas Tree he had created in his mind all those years before. He had learned something that day…the power of his own dreams…and that regardless of the circumstances confronting him, no matter how bad, he could still create for himself a reality exactly as he wanted it to be. While he had never seen the kind man again, or heard from him, the quarterback was certain there had been times since that cold Christmas Eve that the man was somehow in communication with him, not in any physical sense, but in a way the quarterback did not entirely understand. It was something he just accepted as true because he felt it was. With his eyes still closed the quarterback tilted his head skyward…

“Thank you!” he whispered. “How can I ever repay you?”

Suddenly, deep within the quarterback’s mind, came a response. Distinct and clear, he heard the kind man’s voice speaking…

“You're welcome son!” said the voice. “Just help people, that’s all. Just help others. Do that and you will have more than repaid me for any help I provided you.”

A little surprised at first, the quarterback laughed to himself. He directed a thought to the kind man thanking him again and letting him know that he would do his best to help people when and wherever he could and that from that moment on helping others would be the overriding purpose of his life.

A few moments later, still smiling, the quarterback continued the walk to his car.


The End

Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Monday, December 24, 2012

Lookout NFL...Here Come Russell Wilson and the Hawks!!!

        Did you catch the Seahawks game tonight against the '49ers? Have you been paying attention to them the last few weeks? If you have you have seen the emergence of Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks as a top flight NFL team, capable of beating anyone and legitimately justifying any Super Bowl dreams Seahawk fans care to concoct. And to those of you who still harbor any doubts about Wilson being an NFL quarterback because of his relatively short stature (Wilson is just under 5'11'' when the prototypical NFL QB is 6'3" at least) , he is, I can assure you, the real deal! Before he is through with his career here in Seattle this kid will lead us to the Promised Land and possibly multiple times. He is that good.

        I am not given to raving about professional athletes. When it comes to football my quarterback standards were set by years of watching players like Johnny Unitas, Bart Starr, Sonny Jurgensen and Fran Tarkenton. Very few quarterbacks down through the years have measured up. Several, like Brett Favre, John Elway, Joe Montana,  Peyton Manning and Tom Brady come to mind over the last 30 years, which isn’t many. So, for a guy like me, what I see going on in the NFL right now is special. There are currently three rookie quarterbacks playing who are tearing up the league, something that has never occurred in a sport and a position with a heavy premium on experience. The 3 are Andrew Luck (Colts), Robert Griffin III (Redskins) and our own Wilson. With today's games Luck has just passed for more yards than any rookie quarterback in history and has the Colts in the playoffs and Griffin has resurrected the Redskins, has them playing for the NFC East title next week against Dallas, is completing passes at a 66% clip and has thrown a grand total of 4 interceptions thus far this season while leading the league in QB rating. He has also rushed for 750 yards.

        And then there is Russell Wilson. Over the last half of this season he leads the league in quarterback rating and has thrown 15 touchdowns against just 2 interceptions. He has 25 Touchdown passes this year and if he throws 2 more in next week's final game he will have surpassed Peyton Manning's rookie record for touchdowns in a season. With tonight's blowout 42-13 victory over the 49ers he has the Seahawks on a 4 game winning streak, the last 3 by a combined score of 150-30. You have to go back into the 1940s to find an equivalent domination by one team across a 3 game period. And while the first two of these blow outs came against teams going nowhere this season (Arizona and Buffalo) tonight's win at the "Clink"    (Century Link Stadium) was against the NFC West leading San Francisco 49ers, the team that just last week had  flown across country and beaten Tom Brady and the Patriots in their own house. In tonight's game in rainy Seattle Wilson had 15 completions out of 21 attempts for 170 yards and 4 touchdowns. He ran the 49er defensive linemen ragged when he had to leave the pocket. There was one play in the second half in which he eluded at least 4 defensive linemen trying to sack him while running about 50 yards to gain 4 yards in the end. It was the best imitation of Fran Tarkenton I have seen since...well...the “Frantic Man” himself was driving opposing defenses nuts for the Vikings in the mid '60s. He is also very accurate as a passer. He is completing nearly 2/3rds of his passes on the season and tonight made some passes into some very tight windows…Doug Baldwin’s 2 touchdowns come to mind. The second of these was a laser beam throw just beyond the defender’s reach into Baldwin’s hands; an amazing throw.

        But there is something else about Russell Wilson. It is what football people call "intangibles". The word "intangible" means “incapable of being perceived by the sense of touch…not having physical presence”. That definitely describes Wilson from what I have seen. He is buoyant, but not flamboyant. Things just have a tendency to go right around this kid. He lifts the people around him up. They become more confident and they play better around him. He is also unflappable under pressure and, according to his own description, makes a point of staying in the “now” and not worrying about what has just happened in the game, good or bad.  A few days ago on ESPN I caught an interview with NFL analyst Mark Schlereth as he was talking about Wilson. Noting Wilson’s remarkable poise under pressure for one so young in the NFL, Schlereth referred to Wilson as “an old soul” implying that he had NFL wisdom beyond his NFL years. It was an apt description. The “intangible’ qualities possessed by Russell Wilson are the same qualities possessed by all truly great players in team sports and we in Seattle are very fortunate to have such a player as our Seahawk quarterback. Trust me…they don’t show up very often.

       Wilson is even weaving his spell on jaded old Hawk fans like me, who have seen it all and had our hearts broken again and again. He has made football fun again and for the first time in a long time I can say with confidence…  look out Promised Land (aka Super Bowl) …here come Russell Wilson and the Seahawks!

Mark Arnold
23 December, 2012

Copyright©2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Friday, December 21, 2012

The Christmas Tree: A Short Christmas Story of Hope and Belief in One's Dreams...by Mark Arnold


Part VIII
Conclusion


T
he stadium went nuts, fans and media spilling onto the field and everyone wanting to interview and take pictures of the quarterback. It took a while for things to calm down. At last, though he was able to shower and get dressed.
                                                 
Several hours later most of the press was gone and most of the players were on their way to the team’s post game party. Leaving the locker room, the quarterback was on his way to his car when he heard someone call him from behind. He turned and instantly recognized number 43 from the other team.

“You played a helluva game!” 43 said.

“Thanks!” said the quarterback. “So did you.”

43 was silent for a moment, then he smiled, “You know,” he said, “I had that split end in my pocket the whole day. Where in the hell did you come up with that last play? I know your coach and there is no way he called that.”

The quarterback laughed. “Oh, that play,” he said. “That’s just a little thing we call ‘Christmas Tree’. Glad you liked it.”

“Oh Yeah…” said 43 cynically, while chuckling and shaking his head. “Liked it a lot!”

The quarterback shook 43’s hand and then stood alone watching as 43 turned to walk away. Closing his eyes, he thought again of the kind man and the Christmas Tree he had created in his mind all those years before. He had learned something that day…the power of his own dreams…and that regardless of the circumstances confronting him, no matter how bad, he could still create for himself a reality exactly as he wanted it to be. While he had never seen the kind man again, or heard from him, the quarterback was certain there had been times since that cold Christmas Eve that the man was somehow in communication with him, not in any physical sense, but in a way the quarterback did not entirely understand. It was something he just accepted as true because he felt it was. With his eyes still closed the quarterback tilted his head skyward…

“Thank you!” he whispered. “How can I ever repay you?”

Suddenly, deep within the quarterback’s mind, came a response. Distinct and clear, he heard the kind man’s voice speaking…

“You're welcome son!” said the voice. “Just help people, that’s all. Just help others. Do that and you will have more than repaid me for any help I provided you.”

A little surprised at first, the quarterback laughed to himself. He directed a thought to the kind man thanking him again and letting him know that he would do his best to help people when and wherever he could and that from that moment on helping others would be the overriding purpose of his life.

A few moments later, still smiling, the quarterback continued the walk to his car.

The End

Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

The Christmas Tree: A Short Christmas Story of Hope and Belief in One's Dreams...by Mark Arnold


 Part VII

...Meanwhile the split end had been running his route to perfection. He had gotten off the snap in good shape and fought through number 43’s initial effort to knock him from his route. He had run about 30 yards down the right hash marks when he suddenly feinted toward the center of the field and then broke sharply to the right sideline while turning his head back toward the quarterback as if expecting the pass. Thirty yards up field the quarterback was standing strong in the pocket, the eye of the storm, defensive linemen and blitzing linebackers straining but failing to get around, through or over the wall of offensive linemen protecting him. The quarterback had been looking to his left surveying that side of the field as the play started, which resulted in the defensive safeties drifting to the left side of the field.

  

 Suddenly, at exactly the moment the split end made his break to the sideline, the quarterback turned back to the right and brought his right arm sharply forward, giving the pump fake of his life. Certain he had the game winning interception coming his way, number 43 bit hard on the pump, just like the quarterback predicted he would. Seeing this the split end planted his foot and cut sharply down the field, streaking toward the end zone exactly as they had planned in the huddle. Momentarily stunned by the sudden move, number 43 quickly grasped his situation…“Shit!!” he yelled, as he saw the split end break behind him. Re-setting his feet and arm after the pump fake, the quarterback now reared back and bringing his arm forward let the ball go…a perfect spiral, carving a long arc against the sky toward the split end. 

Though in reality the crowd was cheering wildly, to the split end the stadium was eerily quiet and time seemed to stand still...the ball taking forever to get to him. Diving at the last second and stretching as far as he could, it looked for a moment that number 43 would be able to deflect the ball away...but then, suddenly, there it was... just clearing 43’s fingers. The split end reached toward the ball, allowing it to settle into his hands as he crossed the goal line...Touchdown!!

The quarterback and his team had won the Super Bowl!

To be continued...

Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved







Tuesday, December 18, 2012

The Christmas Tree: A Short Christmas Story of Hope and Belief in One's Dreams... by Mark Arnold


Part VI


 O
pening his eyes and back in present time, the quarterback turned toward the team. All ten of them were looking at him. The split end gave voice to the concern the whole team felt when he said to the quarterback, “Are you OK? You look a little lost.”


The quarterback looked back at him, “Oh yea…” he said. “I’m fine. I was just doing a little thinking.”

“What about?” the split end asked.

“Oh…not much,” the quarterback answered. “Just thinking about an old Christmas Tree I had once…that and a few other things.”

The split end rolled his eyes, his worst fear realized. That last sack had done some damage; maybe a concussion. He was about to motion to the bench for the trainer when he heard the quarterback tell everyone to huddle up with an intention that demanded instant compliance. The split end forgot about the trainer.

“Ok guys,” the quarterback said. “Pay attention! Coach wants to run a deep zig and out to the split end and go for the field goal to tie. He wants to try and win in overtime.”

The split end moaned, “I don’t think that play will work,” he said. “I’ve been wearing number 43 like a suit all day. That guy is an animal! He’s killing me!”

The quarterback looked at the split end. “Don’t worry,” he said. “We’re not going to run that play. We’re going for the win now! I’ve come up with a play…I call it ‘Christmas Tree’. I need everyone to hold their blocks for a seven-step drop. Everyone got that?! And someone pick up that linebacker! We can’t let that guy through again! Here’s the play…” and the quarterback called a “deep zig and out and then go” to the split end. It would start as the same play the coach wanted except the quarterback would pump fake when the end broke to the sideline. Number 43 would bite on the fake and the end would break deep behind him for the TD. Because the route was deep, and required a “triple move” on the part of the split end, it was imperative the line, the backs and the other receivers all do their part. They all had to hold their blocks and run their routes perfectly. Any failure would destroy their chance.

The split end looked dubious, “What is all this Christmas Tree stuff?” he challenged. “And what if 43 doesn’t bite on the fake? He is faster than me and….”

“Quiet!” the quarterback said. He was looking at the split end with a steely resolve. Then he softened a bit. “Listen,” he said. “Listen all of you. If there is one thing I have learned in my life for sure it is that the future is free ground… no one owns it, least of all number 43. We can do anything we want with it. So everyone do your job and let’s win this thing!”

          As the team broke huddle and went into formation they all to a man knew what to do. The crowd noise was at a fever pitch but they could all hear the quarterback call the signals, clear and strong. The center snapped the ball and the quarterback went to his 7-step drop. The linemen were all holding their blocks but that linebacker had stunted and here he was again, coming free up the middle. Suddenly the fullback stepped up and buried his helmet in the linebacker’s chest, stopping him cold...


To be continued...

Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Friday, December 14, 2012

The Christmas Tree: A Short Christmas Story of Hope and Belief in One's Dreams...by Mark Arnold



Part V

(Twenty years have passed)



T
he roar from the Super Bowl crowd was deafening. The quarterback had been having trouble with it the whole game and was hoarse from having to yell the signals loud enough for the ends and backs to hear. To make things worse, that last sack had rung his bell. The right tackle had missed his assignment and a linebacker had broken through clean and had a free shot. The quarterback was glad for the time out. It would give him time to clear his head and figure out what to do.

Trailing 24 to 21 with a 3rd and thirteen on their own 35 and 21 seconds left in the game, the quarterback’s team was in a tough spot. The quarterback had already met with the coach on the sideline and had gotten the play; a deep out route to the split end who would then step out of bounds and give the team a shot at a field goal to tie. The quarterback did not like the call but he did not tell the coach. Number 43, the cornerback on the opposing team, had been blanketing the split end all day and had already intercepted him once. And, if the end was covered, the second and third options likely would not get the yardage needed. Yes, it was a tough spot to be in, but the quarterback had seen plenty of those.

He returned to the field, the team milling around him waiting for the TV time out to end. The crowd was roaring in anticipation of the coming play. The quarterback turned away from the team, looked up at the now darkening sky and closed his eyes. Shutting out the crowd noise, the situation, the other players…everything… he returned to that cold Christmas Eve so long ago, when as a boy he had met the kind man and gotten his first football. He thought of the Christmas tree he had created in his mind and the lesson he had learned about the future. He still had that note. It was his most treasured possession.

Twenty years had passed since that Christmas Eve and the boy from that time was a boy no more. At 6 feet 4 inches tall, 225 pounds and with a cannon for a right arm, he was cat quick and on the verge of being one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL. He had been drafted in the first round out of the University of Washington 7 years earlier and had become the starting quarterback by his second year in the pros. Now he had his team in the Super Bowl with 21 seconds to go and 65 yards from a win. The quarterback had overcome so much in his life; the team had come so far to get here… and he knew in his soul this was no time to be cautious…deep out route be damned!


To be continued...



Copyright © 2012 by Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved