The Canucks make me do bad things

October 22nd, 2009

My eldest daughter, born in Vancouver but raised (so far) in Calgary, is a Flames fan. This revelation came a couple of years ago and caused quite a family rift. I almost turned the little urchin out into the street. Cooler heads prevailed, however, and I realized that it was partially my fault. I had sent her to school that day in a Canucks jersey. There, the poor kid was taunted mercilessly by her classmates – slack-jawed, snot-nosed offspring of Flames fans. At home later, she declared she would never again wear Canucks colours. Eventually, she took to standing in front of the TV and booing whenever I would watch a Canucks game.

At least she cares about hockey, I tell myself whenever she breaks into another “Go Flames Go!” chant. (Unlike my girlfriend, who, during the Canucks-Blackhawks tilt last night, asked “what does ‘CHI’ stand for?” She pronounced this “chee”. Sigh.)

As a result of her unfortunate allegiance, my daughter and I have developed a pretty intense rivalry. Flames-Canucks games are eagerly anticipated, especially since these are the only times she gets to watch her team. I’m a tyrant, and I rule the TV remote with an iron fist. Canucks games only. It’s the privilege of a parent.

Last night, as the Vancouver-Chicago game began, she went into her usual spiel: “I’m rooting for the Blackhawks.”

“You’re going to cheer for the team that knocked the Flames out of the playoffs?”

“They knocked the Canucks out, too.”

This is the dark, twisted logic that is at the root of the Flames fan’s psyche: cheering for the team that ended your playoff hopes, simply because they’re playing the Canucks. I guess it’s understandable. Calgary had to watch in envious shame as the hated Edmonton Oilers won one Stanley Cup after another in the 80s. This now manifests itself in the schadenfreude that is, aside from bandwagoneering, the major driving force of Flames fans. They take more pleasure in the failure of other teams than they do in the success of their own.

So, channeling Royal Tenenbaum, I decided it was time for a life lesson. “How about we make it interesting? Let’s bet on the game.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means that if the Canucks win, you have to wash my car. If the Blackhawks win, I’ll wash it.” She had written in the dirt on the side of my car. “I love my Dad.” Yeah. That’s really cute, sweetie, but the paint . . .

“No. If the Blackhawks win, you have to buy me five chocolate bars.”

“That’s too many. I’ll buy you one.”

“Deal.”

She spit in her hand, Al Swearengen-style, and we shook on it.

And that’s how I introduced my eight-year-old to sports betting, thanks to the Canucks. But all is not lost. I’m also introducing her to child labour this afternoon, again courtesy the Canucks.

- The Sieve

Toews dummied by the “REAL” Canucks captain

October 22nd, 2009

In case you missed the Canucks vs. Hawks game yesterday, here’s Willie Mitchell’s hit on Jonathan Toews.

Yeah, he knocked him into “queer street” AND the Canucks won their first road game of the season. The only complaints I have about the hit are:

1. It wasn’t Patrick Kane

2. I have Toews in my fantasy league

Coach Mitch Mitchel

The gloves are off (but the foamies are on)

October 9th, 2009

Some rough stuff to get you in the mood for MLB playoffs.

Dammit! I bet this one would be stopped because of a cut in the first round. Can someone lend me another $100? It’s recess at the school across the street and I want in on a tether ball/hop scotch parlay.

- Coach Mitch Mitchel

Big 40 for $30

October 7th, 2009

Cameron Wake tied an NFL record for first year players on Sunday when he managed 3 sacks against the Buffalo Bills. Until Sunday’s game, Wake hadn’t seen much action, but CFL fans will remember him as the BC Lions defensive end. This guy has all the tools to succeed in the NFL. Non-belivers and/or haters should check out this video – a good indication of the man’s athleticism.

- Coach Mitch Mitchel

Guest editorial: Time for Don Cherry to go

May 11th, 2009

In the interest of being inclusive (and because we don’t seem to be able to come up with new material regularly ourselves), we’ve decided to occasionally turn over the floor to one of our esteemed readers. All six of them. Anyway, here’s Jacuzzi, opining that the CBC’s Grapes has soured.

I’ve pretty much had it with Don Cherry.

Over the years I’ve patiently indulged his xenophobic rants (come to think of it, you can take pretty much any word and put “phobic” on the end of it), his murky belligerence, not to mention a disdain for Vancouver so deep he has to remind Canadians he isn’t rooting for Chicago. I’ve put up with his increasingly clownlike outfits, his frequent memory lapses, his inability to pronounce any name but “Smith,” his random hero worship, his tendency to always take the bully’s side of the debate, etc., etc., etc.

But I’ve had it. Two nights ago he didn’t finish a single sentence. He couldn’t remember a single name. “Whatchamacallit show that clip of that there glurble again, now this is what I….What? Now hold on! Just watsh. That’s not the clip. Staal! Code of honour…boards. Kid coaches and kids watch this. What?”

Meanwhile, Ron MacLean quietly feeds him names and sets up clips. Finally, this is even too much for the longest-suffering referee and fall guy in the history of sports commentary. The camera cuts to two announcers quickly putting down their coffee, then off to Marc Crawford, who’s obviously unprepared to offer any sort of analysis at all and is trying desperately not to laugh.

Yesterday Cherry was a little better and today he almost made sense, but come on CBC, enough is enough. You didn’t renew the lease on your theme song, and that’s younger than Cherry. Perhaps you could just tape clips of him wandering through the mall with his pants falling down, or driving the wrong way down a freeway on his rotary cart fingering passers-by, and play those between periods.

Just spare me any more of his absurd drivel passing as commentary.

If you would like to have something posted and you think you can withstand the withering scrutiny of Coach Mitch Mitchel and The Sieve, e-mail us your drivel at falsegods.ca@gmail.com. We make no apologies for not posting your crap. In other words, if you don’t make the cut, suck it up, buttercup. There’s always next year.

COCKSUCKER!

April 18th, 2009

You got to feel for Roger Millions dropping the C.S. bomb on live T.V. but why Millions lets it persist in his vocabulary is dumbfounding. When things go wrong, is cocksucker really the first expletive to reach for, particularly when it’s already reached the level of high art?

Glove tap to the Sieve for bringing this one to my attention, who just celebrated his 3X birthday yesterday. Happy birthday, ya cocksucker. Give your balls a tug.

- Coach Mitch Mitchel

UPDATE

Hey Coach, Sieve here. Thanks for the b-day shouts. I feel I need to update this post and add the video below. No examination of the word “cocksucker” is complete without this exchange, possibly the greatest examples of the word ever committed to film.

- The Sieve

Playoff love

April 16th, 2009

The CBC mikes picked up this little tidbit and broadcast it during the Canucks’ 2-1 win over the Blues Wednesday night. The headline says “get your balls untied” but I heard “give your balls a tug.”

Glovetap to FG lab rat lazycomet for sending along the clip.

- The Sieve

What is it about Washington?

April 15th, 2009

Washington Redskins tight end Chris Cooley is starring in a Web-based reality show, The Cooley Zone. This episode/trailer/pilot opens with a boudoir shot of his super-hot wife (well, he’s in it too, but we’ll just pretend he’s not). So it’s already better than any other fucking reality show out there. (What? You don’t think so? Eh? Why don’t you go dance with some stars, Twinkletoes? Maybe catch the most explosive rose ceremony ever?)

I especially like the whiny, freeloading brother. “Chris’s house is, like 39,000 square feet, and he gives us 200 in the basement.” Awww. Poor you.

Cooley is already a favourite with us Internet types, mostly for his frank, outspoken blog. He comes across as a regular dude who knows how lucky he is and how good he has it, and really loves his life. Kind of like the NFL’s answer to official False Gods man-crush Alex Ovechkin.

- The Sieve

Toews and Kane left me some rookie tracks

April 1st, 2009

mantracker_quenneville

It’s like one of those rustic hole-in-the-wall bars that have been around FOREVER, but it wasn’t until a friend points it out that you notice it. You’ve passed it by a million times. Right under your nose like a pedo-cop moustache. That’s what this this stunt-double is like.

On the left we have Terry Grant, a.k.a. Mantracker. He’s the star of the T.V. series Mantracker. The premise is pretty straight forward. Terry, err Mantracker and a sidekick, while on horseback, hunt down two contestants that are creepily referred to as “the prey”. Not always men, the prey are at times women or couples – but Persontracker doesn’t have the cell block shower ring to it.

On the right is the Chicago Black Hawks coach, Joel Quenneville. Quenneville was drafted as a player by the Toronto Maple Leafs, and his professional career included stints with the Colorado Rockies, Hartford Whalers, Washington Capitals, and the Baltimore Skinflutes Skipjacks.

- Coach Mitch Mitchel

Ovechkin showboats, knocks hockey world off axis

March 20th, 2009

Hey, when did we turn into an Alex Ovechkin fanboy site? Good grief. Anyway, A.O. scored his 50th goal last night (for the third time), and celebrated by pretending to warm his hands over his burning stick. (It’s on fire! Get it?)

Apparently this didn’t sit well with a lot of people. Reactions among those opposed range from accusations of poor sportsmanship to lamenting a lack of violent retribution from Tampa players. Don Cherry is sure to foam at the mouth about it on Saturday. (Hey Grapes, ever wonder why no one talks about Sidney Crosby’s 50th goal celebrations? Because he’s never had one.)

My reaction is basically this: Who cares? The kid’s just having some fun. He just scored his 50th goal of the season. He’s in a class of his own. Yes, he’s prone to over-the-top goal celebrations. Even so, it isn’t like he does this kind of thing all the time. The NHL could use more characters like him. It would go a lot further toward promoting the game than shoving that wiener Crosby down our throats all the time.

Some people act as though Ovechkin’s antics are ruining the game. News flash: Gary Bettman is ruining the game. Stupid scheduling, ineffectual marketing, idiotic overtime rules – these things are all more important than how A.O. celebrates his goals. If you want to be outraged, do something useful and rail about one of those issues instead of getting your jockstrap in a knot over a goal celebration.

- The Sieve