Friday, February 5, 2010

College? What For?

College? What For?
M.D. Wright
2.5.10

***EDITOR'S NOTE: Continuation of the Recession (Depression) Series. I will keep writing and exposing some of the hiring practices of certain companies and the virtues (or apparent lack thereof) of going to college/returning to college in this day in time.

My man Cameron Giles (aka Cam'ron) said it best years ago, "What I'mma do? Go to college, what the f--- for? So I can get a job, get paid $30,000 a year, be paying student loans for 30 years? How I'mma be able to go to Miami 10 times a year off that?"

You  may not agree with his grammar, or the content of his lyrics, but he makes a point. Is this where we are right now? There was a time, from about 1981-2000 -- that if you were ANY American, White, Black, Asian, Latino, Arab, what have you, and you went to college, got a degree or 3, you were GUARANTEED to find a job. And the more degrees you had by your name, the more of a sliding scale your pay and job prestige would be. Ever since Bush, Cheney & Co. had the planes flown into WTC, the Pentagon, etc., the job market has become progressively worse for college graduates. And it's been even more pronounced since 2007.

Think about some of the sacrifices people make to even go to college. Think about the sacrifices some people would make if they were even ALLOWED to go to college, if not for the prohibitive nature of the cost to do so? There are millions of people who would like to go to college, if for no other reason than to broaden their personal perspective and become enlightened in a concentration -- much less to be better suited to receive a promotion at a job or move to a new field altogether. I am cognizant of these people, and can relate to them. No one wants to be staring $125,000 (I have a few friends who have gotten 4 or 5 degrees and are into Uncle Sam $400K) in loans directly in the face for 10-30 years; particularly when they can't even get a job on par with the one they had before going to school in the first place.

SEGUE.

I just wonder how this system we have in place was set up to begin with. What does it say about this nation and its consideration of Black men (Black women don't have it so hard, as almost every Black woman I know is employed and almost every job I've applied for has featured one interviewing me for the job), that you spent the better part of the last 30 years extolling the virtues of going to college, getting educated, then you have a subgroup of females who do nothing but berate even the best of those men who seek to enlighten themselves, not even to better their job prospects, but better THEMSELVES and expand their horizons, especially should they choose to become entrepreneurs? So many Black guys I know have a Bachelors degree, maybe a Masters, a few of them have Juris Doctorates and I even knew a Ph.D. who couldn't even get a job flipping burgers because of his educational background (yet couldn't get a job in his field either). This is ridiculous. A man's desire is to be able to sustain himself first, then potentially a family and above all else, HE WANTS TO WORK. When he cannot work, cannot sustain himself, cannot provide for a wife and children, what does that lead to (a whole 'nother column, whole 'nother day on that)?

Personally, my situation is rather unique. I began college in 1997 with my high school graduating class at Long Island University in Brooklyn. I was where I was supposed to be, on track to graduate with my class in 2001, had made inroads at Madison Square Garden (for an internship with the Knicks) and had a very nice 5 year plan laid out. Circumstances that I will not speak about publicly necessitated that I withdrew from the school and leave New York (and anyone who knows me knows I would not have willfully done that, since I had no desire, no reason, no purpose for being down south). That set me back, but being resilient, I made the most of it and tried to see the other side of things: WORKING.

It was tough to find a job at that time. I had no refined skills, just a high school diploma and no substantial college education, didn't belong to any organization that could have vouched for me to get a decent job, so I had to go through a temporary staffing agency to find employment. That is how I ended up with Aetna. I know a lot of people ask me how I got that job without a Bachelors degree and no insurance background at the time, but there was no magic wand -- simply got placed there through the staffing agency.

Moving on, I, being a man of structure and order, built a reputation with Aetna and carved out a nice niche there. I maxed out by 2003 (actually fought every year to move back to New York and spent every summer here re-establishing my contacts so that I would hit the ground running when I was able to move back) and became disenchanted. While I was making very good money, plus bi-monthly stock options that I could cash in on (and they were lucrative at the time, given that Aetna was prospering in a major way after about 2002), along with quarterly bonuses, my job was mind-numbing. I could do it in my sleep. Being a natural entrepreneur and a leader by birth, I find it hard to sit and do the same thing every day, 40-50 hours a week with no ability to grow or be promoted within.

By 2004, I was sitting pretty. I wanted to break into real estate investing in 2000 and spent five years trying to put myself in position to acquire property that could be rented, while I was able to buy my own house and build equity rather easily. I had started a non-profit organization with my cousin in 2004, had continued to offer services through my  own personal business since 1997 (one that had been conceived one night back when I was living in Brooklyn as I pondered methods by which I could apply my innate abilities business-wise). In short, I was good bread at that point.

BUT I WAS DEPRESSED.

That job was dead-end, unless you had someone willing to put selfishness aside and put in a word for you to be promoted beyond our level. I had maxed out salary-wise, and with no promotion involved, my business acumen and other dreams (which were inadvertently placed on the back burner when I left New York as I had to go from "Goal-Achievement Mode" to "SURVIVAL OR DIE MODE") were lying dormant. I could barely force myself to get up and go to that job the entire year in 2004 and the part of 2005 that I was there before I left it for good. I had decided to go back to school in 2004, and I worked full-time, went to school full-time, served over a ministry and started a non-profit ALL within that two year period, and doing each simultaneously the entire time.


That's dedication and focus.


I had bought a $40,000 sports car (Nissan 350Z) and I had several lines of credit, as my credit score was 815 (due to my meticulous nature of immediately paying all debts and having paid off two cars before I was 25 -- I also had multiple accounts with several banks and credit unions, which also builds your credit score, provided that they remain in the positive). I WAS GOOD MONEY. I figured going back to school was a natural progression. It was time. I was 25 years old. I didn't have time to waste.

LITTLE DID I KNOW.


I know people mean well, but I am really sick of all the church clichés and other bunk that people spew about my situation since September 2005 (which has rapidly deteriorated ever since), but I really do not want to hear it. I don't want to hear about earthquake, tsunami victims and the homeless. There is a time and place for that, and while in a position to help those people, I have done so, but you are talking about someone who had everything working for them and finds nothing but bad breaks, poor fortune and complete rejection at every turn ALL OF A SUDDEN. Earthquakes happen, tsunamis happen as a result of those, the homeless face bad breaks, too -- but usually have no contingency plan in place when things fail and they go under. I am no quitter. The hustler in me won't allow me to. People ask how I was able to support myself on nothing but those paltry student refund checks, a few gifts from family (and this was not substantial by any means) and NO INCOME since August 2005 -- but anyone who is from, ever lived in or spent any significant time hanging out in Harlem knows that hustling is THE WAY OF LIFE, and you pick it up honest.

Think about it. I had a near-perfect credit score. A year's wages saved up for when I went back to school (half of which was depleted upon arrival at UNC Greensboro as a transfer from Long Island University), a $40,000 car which was 3/4 paid for, two businesses and real estate options at hand.

Fast forward 4 years.

I HAVE NONE OF THAT. No job. No income. No serious job prospects, and without which, there is no "CREATING YOUR OWN OPPORTUNITIES" -- I get so sick and tired of people saying this to me. The next person who does it may get smacked with a Johnston & Murphy. I'm dead ass. You don't have capital, nor the means to generate it, THERE IS NO CREATING OF ONE'S OWN OPPORTUNITIES. Much less when you're drowning in credit card, student loan and hospital debts with no ability to repay them (itself  being a likely culprit explaining the inability to secure employment).

Then I catch nothing but bad breaks ever since? I had to haggle with UNC Greensboro for a YEAR in 2007 for money that belonged to ME. And even after they finally relented and paid up, I only got HALF of what was due to me.

I broke my back later that year, was completely inactive in 2008, other than walking like Phil Jackson to get to class. Anyone who has had back woes/ruptured disk knows not to make this seem trivial. I had people trying to minimalize the significance of my injury -- clearly people who have never injured their backs. I am one of the toughest guys I know. I have a high threshold of pain. When you play sports year-round for 15 years and never sit out, despite obviously getting nicked up and injured at times within that period, you're not a softie. When I was unable to walk for more than 20 feet at a time without collapsing in pain regularly, people thought I was punking out.

WHEN I FINALLY HAD SURGERY IN 2008, MY DOCTOR THOUGHT IT WAS A MIRACLE I COULD EVEN SIT UP AND GET OUT OF BED. Meanwhile, I was going to class every day and even tried to work out, run and play basketball through it. My roommate and his now-wife can attest to it. Michael Wright is no quitter. When I've caught bad breaks, I've fought through them. But this has been going on for FIVE FULL YEARS NOW. Enough is enough. From breaking my back, to breaking my BANK, from having my non-profit fail, to losing my good name/credit score, to having to sell my 350Z, to depleting my savings, rack up tens of thousands in debt in my path, from not being able to get a job -- despite applying like a madman ever since October 2005 and still have not had a full-time job in that time (only three two-month stints at temporary or seasonal jobs). I'm sick of it.

As depressed as I was at that job, I DID have a solid income and had options to do things as an entrepreneur and invest. I am at the end of my rope and all I'm going to say now is this -- I have always respected dudes in the streets. I have always been a legit dude and cats in Harlem, Brooklyn and out on Staten Island know my hustle and respect it. For that, I get a street pass. No snitch here. But at the end of the day, I know why most of the REAL hustlers resort to doing what they do. If they see a cat like me, with everything I had going for me, education, business acumen, etc. and can't cut it -- they figure "why go to college, when I can flip this White and move to Alpine?"

And I can't say that I blame them. With every passing day, I almost regret going back to college. Why does a Black man need college nowadays? The better jobs seem to go to those Black men who barely graduated high school, while those of us who sacrificed our whole lives just to be able to go to school can't even wash cars. Again, I sacrificed my entire life, can I at least get laid paid? For those who like to toss out empty rhetoric, church speak and can't help with the job prospects, if you have kids, I wish I could just kick them in the fucking head and stomp on their testicles, so you could feel the pain I feel.

And no, I'm not laughing. I can wholeheartedly understand why Tyson said that, and I feel the same way right now.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

NFL History: Unbeatable Teams Since 1980

NFL History: Unbeatable Teams Since 1980
M.D. Wright
2.4.10

***EDITOR'S NOTE: Super Bowl Media Week Blitz; random stories, Super Bowl annals and historical teams for the ages.

This just a little blurb about some of the teams that I can recall in my lifetime that won Super Bowls and were not going to be deterred no matter what.

Remember, this is 1980-present. Please don't write me about 70s Steelers teams, or the Lombardi Packers, or even the '72 Dolphins. Read the title first.

1984 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS.



















In 1984, these guys were scary good. It had all come together for them. They had QB Joe Montana (aka Joe Cool), WR Jerry Rice, RB Roger Craig, WR John Taylor CB/FS Ronnie Lott, amongst others (including their offensive line, which, while good, was one of the dirtiest ever) that enabled them to go 15-1 that season and trounce the Dan Marino-led Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl XIX. Marino was coming off his record-setting 5,084 passing yard season (a record that still stands). The 49ers were having no parts of it.

1985 CHICAGO BEARS.

















Those '85 Bears, man... they were scary on defense. They already had steady QB Jim McMahon (steady, referring to his play, rather than his mental state ha), All-Pro, Hall-of-Famer, best RB ever Walter Payton, Willie Gault, Richard Dent, Mike Singletary, and a host of other great players. The Dolphins only beat them because of murky conditions during a late-season Monday Night Football game. The Bears demolished everyone in their path in the playoffs and completely manhandled the New England Patriots on their way to their win in Super Bowl XX.

1986 NEW YORK FOOTBALL GIANTS





















The Giants were a complete football team in 1986. I loved watching them play and the playoff wins were as epic, bone-chilling, spine-tingling and goosebump-inspiring as the Super Bowl XXI win itself; particularly the win over the Redskins, a team that many thought was the only true rival to the Giants that year.

Lawrence Taylor was the NFL's MVP, with 20.5 sacks. You did not stop LT (the ONLY "LT", by the way, can we knock it off calling LaDainian Tomlinson "LT", ONCE AND FOR ALL???) I loved watching LT play. It seemed like he was going to get a sack or cause great harm to a RB on every play. He was great on Tecmo Bowl and racked up honors left and right. The thing is, he wasn't alone on that squad for the ages. Harry Carson, Carl Banks, Gary Reasons, Pepper Johnson, Leonard Marshall, Jim Burt, Joe Morris and last but not least, PHIL SIMMS -- these guys were destined to win it all that year. Two minor blips on the radar led to a 14-2 regular season record, but no one posed even a half-hearted threat to the Giants in the playoffs, including the complete annihilation of the John Elway (then-starcrossed) Denver Broncos 39-20 in Super Bowl XXI.

1989 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS.

















As good as the 1984 team was, THIS ONE WAS EVEN BETTER. Probably the most dominant team all-around that I have ever seen. The 49ers were known for their vaunted "West Coast" style of offense. Something that was pretty much indefensible at the time. No one knew who to cover. Montana had Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman, Brent Jones -- ALL IN THEIR RESPECTIVE PRIMES -- making plays all over the field. They dominated everyone they faced in the playoffs following the 1989 season (it should be noted that the same Los Angeles Rams that lucked out and defeated the Giants the previous week were included in this -- as the Giants were the only team that had a realistic shot at beating San Francisco that year; given that the two teams had a rivalry that was pretty evenly-matched in the 80s).

This team was like playing Madden '10 with the Bolts or Madden '09 with the Patriots. Offense for the AGES. They defeated the same Elway-led star-crossed Broncos in Super Bowl XXIV, 55-10. The game was over before the 2nd quarter got going good. That's how great these guys were. Their defense was amongst one of the best ever also, which is unfair. This is why they are probably the most dominant team all-around ever.

1990 NEW YORK FOOTBALL GIANTS.





















The 1990 incarnation of the Giants wasn't quite like the 1986 team, but they were unbeatable in a different way. They had moxie, most of the same players from the '86 team (most notable absence was Harry Carson, who had retired in '88 -- and Phil Simms was lost earlier in the season due to injury versus the same Buffalo Bills team that they faced in Super Bowl XXV). These guys had been there before, were unphased by the playoff stakes and relied less upon their offense, but rather a stellar defense. LT still led the troops, which featured '86 holdovers Carl Banks, Pepper Johnson and Gary Reasons. Jim Burt had jumped sides to the 49ers, who the Giants faced in the 1990 NFC Championship Game.

QB Jeff Hostetler stepped in for Simms, and even HE was injured in the NFC title game, before coming back in and gritting out a last second drive -- setting up the game-winning field goal by Matt Bahr, which sent the Giants to the Super Bowl in Tampa. This was the year of the Persian Gulf War. We watched all the proceedings in 6th grade on TV. This Super Bowl was poignant as a Giants fan. The Giants finished 13-3 that season, grinded out wins in the playoffs and won Super Bowl XXV by virtue of a missed field goal by Buffalo Bills' kicker Scott Norwood. While the game finished 20-19 Giants, they were unbeatable nonetheless. This team never hiccupped all season, nor did they flinch when injuries threatened to derail their season.

1991 WASHINGTON REDSKINS.





















YIKES. The Skins had previously followed a Giants Super Bowl win in 1987, and they did it again in 1991. This team was a whirling dervish. I remember it well. QB Mark Rypien, WRs Art Monk, Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders, along with '87 Browns goat, Earnest Byner. Ricky Ervins was huge for the Skins as the season wore on. The Skins finished 1st in total offense in 1991, scoring 485 points. Their defense was also very good, led by Darrell Green, Charles Mann, Wilber Marshall and Andre Collins -- yielding only 14 points per game, 2nd in the NFL. Hard to beat a team that good. Super Bowl XXVI was trivial, at best, as the Skins mauled the Buffalo Bills (sorry, Bills fans) 37-24.

1993 DALLAS COWBOYS.

















The three guys pictured above pretty much say it all. They were The Triplets (I hate these silly nicknames, BTW, but that's what they were called) and made tons of plays all season. The thing is, no one really had eye-popping numbers. RB Emmitt Smith sat out the first two games of the season due to a holdout, and rushed for nearly 1,500 yards, which is remarkable. WR Michael Irvin had nearly 1,400 yards receiving on 88 catches and 7 touchdowns and QB Troy Aikman had 3,100 passing yards and 15 TDs. Nothing out of this world. No one on their defense had great numbers either. Somehow they finished 2nd in both total offense and defense. There was not much doubt about them repeating as Super Bowl XXVIII Champions after winning Super Bowl XXVII.

1994 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS.















I still hated SF in 1994. Particularly as a side-Chargers fan. The 49ers destroyed the Bolts twice that year. The first game featured Deion Sanders getting an INT on Chargers' QB Stan Humphries and streaking up the sidelines, high-stepping for 50 yards (unreal) and doing jig that he patented (and one that all of us growing up back then and played CB emulated, myself included). That was the theme of the 49ers' season. They just RAN AWAY FROM EVERYONE. Deion Sanders led the defense, having his best season ever -- which is saying something, given his history in Atlanta and a few great seasons in Dallas after 1994. It was as if the 49ers caught lightning in a bottle that year. They had everything to come together, great talent, Hall of Fame players, some at the ends of their career, and got it done. It should be noted they haven't sniffed a Super Bowl since this season in 1994, but they were not to be beaten that year. Start to finish, Steve Young, Jerry Rice, Ricky Watters, Deion Sanders, William "Bar None" Floyd, Bryant Young, Dana Stubblefield (or as John Madden called him repeatedly -- "Dana Stubbafield"), Ken Norton (previously on Dallas), Richard Dent (previously of the Super Bowl XX Bears' squad), Merton Hanks, Tim McDonald, etc. all steamrolled their opponents.

The 1994 NFC Championship game, which from 1992-1994 featured the Dallas Cowboys playing the 49ers, had gone the Cowboys' way in 1992 and 1993 on the way to their back-to-back Super Bowl wins. However in 1994, the 49ers, featuring Deion Sanders shutting down Michael Irvin and Troy Aikman throwing INTs (yes, I remember this game like it was yesterday, and it was 15 years ago) were not to be deterred. They beat Dallas 38-28 and it wasn't that close. Every playoff win was a blowout for SF, as they beat the Bears (who were not to be heard from the rest of the decade following this loss) 44-15, Dallas 38-28 and utterly embarrassed the San Diego Chargers in Super Bowl XXIX, 49-26.

The 49ers scored 505 points that season (easily leading the NFL), even though they had a game where they only scored 8 pts, and another with only 14. MERCY.

2000 BALTIMORE RAVENS.





















GOOD HEAVENS WHAT A SCARY DEFENSE. We never stood a chance after the refs called DT Keith Hamilton for a holding call that gets called once every 17 years in the NFL. One of my favorite players ever, Jessie Armstead, had picked off QB Trent Dilfer and returned it for a touchdown on the play. After that, the Ravens thoroughly demolished the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV. Such was the case with anyone else who dared to step on the field with the Ravens that year. They featured an all-time great defense, led by Ray Lewis and rolling out such studs as Sam Adams, Rod Woodson, Jamie Sharper, Rob Burnett, Chris McAlister, Peter Boulware and Michael McCrary. They only yielded 10 points per game all season. That is UNHEARD OF.

2002 TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS.





















Swarming defense for the ages. They didn't utterly shut teams down like the Ravens of 2000 -- although they did only yield 12 PPG, but consider this: The Ravens played an attacking defense, predicated upon getting pressure with their front seven and allowing their secondary to be aggressive and jump routes, make plays near the line of scrimmage and gamble a bit. The Cover 2 requires discipline, staying within your gaps on the defensive line, manning your lanes and having extensive coverage range as a linebacker and the safeties are not to allow anything to get behind them, as cornerbacks are responsible for the area NOT covered by linebackers. The Bucs played the defense better than anyone ever had before and since.

The Bucs played various packages of a base Cover-2 defense (later simply called the "Tampa 2"). Head Coach Tungy Dungy instituted the scheme in 1995 and the Bucs perfected it. Jon Gruden gets credit for winning the Super Bowl with Dungy's players and scheme, but everyone knows that Gruden was given the same instructions that Dennis Erickson was given when he became head coach at "The U." (The University of Miami) in 1989, following Jimmy Johnson -- DON'T WRECK THE PORSCHE. These were Dungy's players and Dungy's philosophy at work. Ironically, Dungy left the Indianapolis Colts in 2008 and the 2009 Colts are on the verge of winning without him. Reverse Ewing Theory much ha?

The Tampa 2 played to the strengths of OLB Derrick Brooks and cover corners such as Donnie Abraham and Ronde Barber. FS Dexter Jackson had a field day all season, particularly in the Super Bowl XXXVII embarrassment of the Oakland Raiders (Gruden's former team, ironically). The Bucs sonned the Raiders 48-21 in Super Bowl XXXVII.
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2009 INDIANAPOLIS COLTS?  We will find out Sunday!

DISCUSS>>>

Black History Month: Person Of The Day - February 4, 2010

Black History Month: Person Of The Day - February 4, 2010
M.D. Wright
2.4.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: Black History Month Series (Continued)


Today's Person of the Day:
WARRICK DUNN.


I can write a Warrick Dunn biography myself, given that I have followed his life since he joined the Florida State Seminoles football team in 1993. He is one of my favorite players ever, both at FSU and in the NFL and the reason he is being listed today as our person of the day is the fact that he is a humanitarian and a person who used his platform as an NFL star for unselfish reasons and many people have benefitted from his good works.


Warrick Dunn was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in 1975. Most FSU fans and ardent college football followers know his story. As he was growing up, his mother Betty Smothers had been a police officer while raising her children as a single parent. While Dunn was an accomplished football star at Catholic High in Baton Rouge (played quarterback, cornerback and runningback -- leading the school to a state title 1991), he was unprepared for what lied in store just as he was set to graduate high school and attend Florida State.


Just after New Year's in 1993, Dunn's mother was murdered as she escorted a businesswoman to a bank in order to make a night deposit. That left Dunn to care for his siblings on his own and as an incoming freshman at Florida State -- where he immediately began playing upon arrival later that year. 


As a personal side note, I was overwhelmed to hear Dunn's story when he first saw the playing field at Florida State. At that time, I read everything about the team, recruiting information and gathered information for my Sports Digest that I was known for writing back then (pre-internet). It was remarkable to me to hear about an 18-year old lose his mother, raise his siblings, start as a freshman on a powerhouse football team, helping them win a National Championship as a freshman, focus on his studies and still come out on the other  end as a better man.


Dunn left Florida State with many of the rushing records, most of which still stand today (3,959 rushing yards for his career, 1,418 yards in 1995 -- which was a season filled with irony, as Dunn's fumble vs. Virginia led to FSU's first ACC loss and knocked them from contention for the 1995 National Championship) and embarked upon a stellar NFL playing career, finishing with nearly 11,000 rushing yards. Not bad for someone who was considered too smallish and not built to withstand the rigors of NFL rushing. He played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneeers from 1997-2001, 2008 and the Atlanta Falcons from 2002-2007, narrowly missing a Super Bowl win, as the Bucs won in 2002 -- the year after Dunn left for Atlanta.


During his initial stint with the Buccaneers, however, Dunn began the program for which he is noted as a humanitarian. The Warrick Dunn Foundation, and by-proxy, the Homes For The Holidays Program. The latter assists struggling single parents purchase homes. The program buys homes through a down payment provided by Dunn, who also worked with area sponsors to furnish and outfit the homes. The program, as of 2009, has assisted 86 single parents and 233 dependants in AtlantaBaton RougeTampa, and Tallahassee. Dunn's goal is help these parents realize the dream that his mother was not able to give to him and his siblings, to own their own home. Dunn's achievements have been recognized over the years. He received a Giant Steps Award in civic leadership from former President Bill Clinton for his program. In 2005, Dunn was presented with the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award; named after theChicago Bears running back who died in 1999, the award is the only NFL award that recognizes a player for his community service as well as for his excellence on the field. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Dunn challenged all NFL players, except for those who play for the New Orleans Saints, to donate at least $5,000 to the effort. The effort received over $5 million in contributions.


For his exceptional involvement on and off the field, Dunn was awarded with the 2009 Bart Starr Award.


Warrick Dunn has always been an inspiration for me. From dealing with his loss, to watching his breathtaking play at FSU, to being a guy who stood 5'9" and 185 most of his career, which is just about my height and weight -- to developing programs to help the less fortunate (things that I am going to follow suit and do as well). He is a beacon of light in a league (NFL) and atmosphere (professional sports) that gets far too much publicity for the wrongs its players commits, rather than focusing on players like Warrick Dunn.


DISCUSS>>>

Black History Month: Person Of The Day - February 3, 2010

Black History Month: Person Of The Day - February 3, 2010
M.D. Wright
2.3.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: Continuing Black History Month Series


Today's Person of the Day:
SYLVIA WOODS -- Owner of Sylvia's Restaurant


Ms. Sylvia is a Harlem staple, and many people know about her restaurant, the food and maybe the newer location that opened in Atlanta in the late 1990s. 


Biography borrowed from Wikipedia:


Woods then bought her own restaurant in 1962; the restaurant could seat up to 35 people. During the early 1990’s the business expanded and now seats up to 450 people and also has a catering business. Organized and started by her son Van in 1992, Sylvia came out with her own line of soul food products that are sold nationally. Woods products include many of her special sauces, vegetables, spices, syrup, and cornbread and pancake mixes. Woods has 2 famous cook books one is called Sylvia’s Soul Food Cookbook which was published in 1992, and Sylvia’s Family Soul Food Cookbook which was published in 1999 both by William Morrow and Company. Woods opened her second restaurant on Central Ave in Atlanta, Georgia in 1997.
------------------


Personally, I grew up on soul food cooked by women Ms. Sylvia's age. And as I got older, I ate quite a bit of cocina criolla (native Puerto Rican cuisine -- the "soul food" of the Puerto Rican community if you will), so while I support any entrepreneur, especially one who can cut it in Harlem for almost 50 years, I don't go crazy for soul food anymore. But I will say this, the example she set as a Black woman, running her own restaurant HER OWN WAY and maintaining it for this many years is worthy of respect and adulation. Throughout the tumultuous 1960s and 1970s, Sylvia's prospered, and became a destination for both Harlemites and out of town visitors. 


While there are tons of other venues to eat such cuisine in Harlem nowadays (Amy Ruth's, Manna's, Spoonbread Too, Londel's Charles' Southern Style -- to  name a few), Sylvia's set the tone. And Ms. Sylvia is an excellent example for anyone to follow, whether it is a young Black woman who wants to own a restaurant, or anyone who could stand to learn a lesson in perseverance and sticktuitiveness. 


DISCUSS>>>

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Black History Month: Person Of The Day

Black History Month: Person Of The Day
M.D. Wright
2.2.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: Continuing Black History Month Series. At my discretion, there may be days where I write about several people in the same day. Obviously, there will be days when I cannot write at all, as priorities dictate. Enjoy!


Person Of The Day:
TOUSSAINT L'OVERTURE.


From a biography borrowed online: 


Francois-Dominique Toussaint L’Ouverture was likely born on November 1, 1743, though this date has been disputed. He was born into slavery on a plantation under the ownership of Count de Breda. Toussaint’s father, an African named Gaou-Guinou and probably a member of the Arrada tribe, had been deported from his native country and brought to the island of Haiti to labor as a slave on the lucrative sugar plantations of the white men. Toussaint was the oldest the eight children—five of which were boys and three of which were girls. However, in his formative years, Toussaint was allowed by the plantation overseer the rare privilege of learning to read and write. He soon began reading everything available to him. Authors of these books included Plutarch, Epictetus, Caesar, Saxe, and, especially influential in Toussaint’s life, Abbé Raynal. In addition, Toussaint was raised in the beliefs of Roman Catholicism, the official religion of the island. 


Throughout the rest of his life, his faith played an important roll in shaping both his actions and his personality. Toussaint possessed an innate skill for leadership, and this talent combined with his calm, but persistent, nature to create one of the greatest leaders of all time. Compared to most other slaves in the region, Toussaint was well off, serving as a coachman and house servant instead of toiling in the fields. Yet, good conditions or poor, he was still a slave, another man’s property.


These social upheavals were again followed by a short time of peace, in which Toussaint undertook the writing and establishment of the country’s constitution. This constitution ensured liberty and equality for all peoples regardless of race or color. It also named Toussaint as governor of the country for life and provided him the right to choose his successor. However, this did not settle well with the now jealous French commander Napoleon. Enraged, in January of 1802 Napoleon sent an army of approximately 20,000 men under the command of general Leclerc against Toussaint, but did so under a pretext of peace. Toussaint, however, saw through these deceptions and gathered an army from among the Haitians. War ensued, and the death toll climbed high. But in the French camp this was more often due to the deadly smallpox disease which many of the soldiers contracted. Yet, eventually, Toussaint’s forces were utterly exhausted and on May 5, 1802 he accepted a peace treaty with Leclerc which ensured Haiti’s independence and allowed Toussaint to retire to his estates in peace, provided that the fighting ceased. But treachery was afoot. Leclerc, under Napoleons orders, later invited Toussaint to a meeting where, despite Leclerc’s promise of safe conduct, the general had him captured, bound hand and foot, and put aboard a waiting ship. Toussaint was then transported to France and thrown into the dungeon of Fort de Joux in the Jura Mountains. And on April 7, 1803, Toussaint L’Ouverture died of apoplexy, pneumonia, and starvation.
-----------------------------


Well, well, well, what do we have here? Napoleon coming off like a typical imperialist from his era. A coward who lied, cheated and stole to get his way -- killing people in the process. Toussaint goes in good faith to resolve conflict once and for all and Bonaparte double-crosses him. Sounds like that was the European Way when they ventured into "The New World".


Toussaint L'Overture seemed mythical to me when I read about him extensively in elementary and middle school. I did a report on him in high school and wrote another on Haiti as a freshman at Long Island University (many) years ago. When these guys felt strongly about the way they were being (mis)treated, they didn't sit around and whine and complain about it. They ACTED on it. This man fought for his people in Haiti, and being Black brothers and sisters, they're my people also -- as well as learning of his African roots and went back and forth to France in the name of freedom and independence for Haiti.


While Bonaparte and his people double-crossed Toussaint and had him imprisoned, where he died, Haiti did experience independence from France on January 1, 1804, just mere months after Toussaint died in the French prison of pneumonia. He would have been proud to see independence finally come to fruition in his country.


Side Note: I love how people try to make it seem as if Bonaparte just gave Haiti and Louisiana away because they weren't "worth fighting for" any longer. No. His boys were getting the rat piss beat out of them in Haiti and they got out of there while the getting was good. The only way they took Toussaint down was by deception. Who can respect that?


DISCUSS>>>

Monday, February 1, 2010

Black History Month: Person Of The Day

Black History Month: Person Of The Day
M.D. Wright
2.1.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: Every day this month, I will highlight a historical Black history figure of importance. They may or may not be famous or nationally known, but they are important to me. And although this month is appointed socially, I celebrate my blackness daily. But for the sake of semantics and conformity (ha) I will do this day. Enjoy!


Today's Figure:


Paul Robeson.


A biography borrowed from online:



Paul Leroy Robeson was born in Princeton, New Jersey, on April 9, 1898, the fifth and last child of Maria Louisa Bustill and William Drew Robeson. During these early years the Robeson's experienced both family and financial losses. At the age of six Paul and his siblings, William, Reeve, Ben and Marian suffered the death of their mother in a household fire. This was followed a few years later with their father's loss of his Princeton pastorate. After moving first to Westfield, the family finally settled in Somerville, New Jersey, in 1909, where William Robeson was appointed pastor of St. Thomas AME Zion Church.

Enrolling in Somerville High School, one of only two blacks, Paul Robeson excelled academically while successfully competing in debate, oratorical contests, and showing great promise as a football player. He also got his first taste of acting in the title role of Shakespeare's Othello. In his senior year he not only graduated with honors, but placed first in a competitive examination for scholarships to enter Rutgers University. Although his other male siblings chose all-black colleges, Robeson took the challenge of attending Rutgers, a majority white institution in 1915.

In college between 1915 to 1919, Robeson experienced both fame and racism. In trying out for the varsity football team, where blacks were not wanted, he encountered physical brutality. In spite of this resistance, Robeson not only earned a place on the team but was named first on the roster for the All-American college team. He graduated with 15 letters in sports. Academically he was equally successful, elected a member of the prestigious Phi Beta Kappa Society and the Cap and Skull Honor Society of Rutgers. Graduating in 1919 with the highest grade point average in his class, Robeson gave the class oration at the 153d Rutgers Commencement.

With college life behind him, Robeson moved to the Harlem section of New York City to attend law school, first at New York University, later transferring to Columbia University. He sang in the chorus of the musical Shuffle Along (1921) by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle, and made his acting debut in 1920 playing the lead role in Simon the Cyrenian by poet Ridgely Torrence. Robeson's performance was so well received that he was congratulated not only by the Harlem YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association) audience but also by members of the Provincetown Players who were in the audience. While working odd jobs and taking part in professional football to earn his college fees, Robeson met Eslanda "Essie" Cardozo Goode. The granddaughter of Francis L. Cardozo, the secretary of state of South Carolina during Reconstruction, she was a graduate of Columbia University and employed as a histological chemist. She was the first black staff person at Presbyterian Hospital in New York City. The couple married on August 17, 1921, and their son Paul Jr. was born on November 2, 1927.

To support his family while studying at Columbia Law School, Robeson played professional football for the Akron Pros (1920--1921) and the Milwaukee Badgers (1921--1922), and during the summer of 1922 he went to England to appear in a production ofTaboo, which was renamed Voodoo. Once graduating from Columbia in 1923, Robeson sought work in his new profession, all the while singing at the famed Cotton Club in Harlem. Offered an acting role in 1923 in Eugene O'Neill's All God's Chillun Got Wings, Robeson quickly took this opportunity; he had recently quit a law firm because the secretary refused to take dictation from a black person.

Although All God's Chillun brought threats by the Ku Klux Klan because of the play's interracial subject matter and the fact that a white woman was to kiss Robeson's hand, it was an immediate success. It was followed in 1924 by his performances in a revival of The Emperor Jones, the play Rosanne, and the silent movie Body and Soul for Oscar Micheaux, an independent black film maker. In 1925 Robeson debuted in a formal concert at the Provincetown Playhouse. His performance which consisted of Negro spirituals and folk songs was so brilliant that he and his accompanist, Lawrence Brown, were offered a contract with the Victor Talking Machine Company. Encouraged by this success, Robeson and Brown embarked on a tour of their own, but were sorely disappointed. Even though they received good reviews, the crowds were small and they made very little money. What Robeson came to know was that his talents in acting and singing would serve as the combined focus of his career.

--------------------------

Paul Robeson may very well be related to my family and I. We have not been able to confirm it for sure, but we have been able to trace back to the late 1800s on my father's side, and there has been talk for as long as I've been alive that he may be related to us (Robinson family). My parents bought us Black History books in a huge, brown volume that was released the year that I was born (1979). Being a nerdy bookworm growing up, I devoured those books in less than a year -- a 20 encyclopedia set. 

I learned quite a bit more about historical Black figures from reading those books than any class that I've taken in grammar school or at the university level. This is a shame. We call this Black History Month, but outside of the same half dozen or so people whose respective biographies were ingrained into our brains in robotic fashion throughout school years, we rarely hear about the countless others who have contributed to Black society and culture as a whole. 

Paul Robeson was a master of his craft in the arts. An accomplished actor, singer and thespian, he could do it all. HE WAS ALSO A LAWYER. How about that? Someone who strikes a chord with me in each of those ways -- and as a future ESQUIRE, that was the thing that took the cake. These "actors" nowadays could do a lot better than to strive for the heights Robeson reached in his career. I couldn't fathom it, even though I am moderately talented in many of the arts. It was sad that he was blacklisted as a communist just as he was approaching superstardom and had an opportunity to  open doors for even more up-and-coming Black (and other) thespians and artists otherwise. He will always be remembered as a significant contributor to the arts and being a beacon of Black culture. 

An icon. PAUL ROBESON (1898-1965).

New York Giants All-Time Team

New York Football Giants All-Time Team
M.D. Wright
2.1.10

***EDITOR'S NOTE: As we wind down the 2009 NFL Season, I'm hanging on to any semblance of the season that I can by writing about as many topics as I can. This stretch between February and August is always tough (although NCAA hoops, NBA ball and -- by July -- MLB help assuage those NFL withdrawal pangs). I will ratchet up my writing about everything sports-related in general, but there will be tons of NFL columns coming in the next 2-3 weeks before I immerse fully into college hoops for a solid Six-Week stretch.

NEW YORK FOOTBALL GIANTS ALL-TIME TEAM
The oldest of all the NFL teams, and the only one of the original teams still operating under the same name and in the same region. Eighty five years of history. A tough call on some of these, and yes, the leaner years (1966-1984) will be reflected here. And yes, this list is heavy with players who have played in my lifetime (1979 - present) but I am very much well-versed in Giants' history. Sit back, relax and enjoy the read.

Head Coach: Bill Parcells
Quarterback: Phil Simms
Quarterback: Y.A. Tittle
Quarterback: Fran Tarkenton
Runningback: Tiki Barber
Runningback: Rodney Hampton
Runningback: Frank Gifford
Fullback: Charles Way
Fullback: Tuffy Leemans
Wide Receiver: Amani Toomer
Wide Receiver: Chris Calloway
Wide Receiver: Homer Jones
Wide Receiver: Ike Hilliard
Wide Receiver: Plaxico Burress
Tight End: Mark Bavaro
Tight End: Jeremy Shockey
Left Tackle: Jumbo Elliott
Left Guard: Jack Stroud
Center: Mel Hein
Right Guard: Chris Snee
Right Tackle: Rosie Brown
Defensive End: Michael Strahan
Defensive End: Leonard Marshall
Defensive End: Andy Robustelli
Defensive Tackle: Keith Hamilton
Defensive Tackle: Jim Burt
Defensive Tackle: Rosie Grier
Outside Linebacker: Lawrence Taylor
Outside Linebacker: Jessie Armstead
Outside Linebacker: Brad van Pelt
Outside Linebacker: Carl Banks
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Sam Huff
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Harry Carson
Cornerback: Phillippi Sparks
Cornerback: Emlen Tunnell
Cornerback: Dick Lynch
Free Safety: Spider Lockhart
Strong Safety: Terry Kinard
Punter: Sean Landeta
Place Kicker: Matt Bahr
Punt Returner: Dave Meggett
Kick Returner: Dave Meggett

DISCUSS>>>

2010 NFL All-Decade Team (2001-2009)

2010 NFL All-Decade Team (2001-2009)
M.D. Wright
2.1.10

***EDITOR'S NOTE: Wow, January flew by. We're already in February. Before we know it, we'll be celebrating New Year's again, God-willing. Yikes.

Since we are heading into a slow news week in Sports, especially with the media making up stories out of thin air leading up to Super Bowl XLIV coming up this Sunday, I thought it was a good time to look back at the previous decade and do an All-Decade Team.

By the numbers --
BOTH CONFERENCES COMBINED
1 Head Coach
1 Offensive Coordinator
1 Defensive Coordinator
3 Quarterbacks
4 Runningbacks
1 Fullback
6 Wide Receivers
3 Tight Ends
5 Offensive Linemen
10 Defensive Linemen
6 Outside Linebackers
4 Inside/Mike Linebackers
6 Cornerbacks
6 Safeties
1 Punter
1 Place Kicker
1 Special Teams Ace
1 Kick Returner
1 Punt Returner
--------------------------------------------------
* Must have played at least 5 years in NFL between 2000-2009.
** Patriots being caught for cheating in 2006 taken into account, but objectivity remains.
*** If Player/Coach has passed away, they will not get a spot over a living player or coach, but rather a memoriam, as they were also personal favorites
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Head Coach: Bill Belichick, New England Patriots
Offensive Coordinator: Tom Moore, Indianapolis Colts
Defensive Coordinator: Steve Spagnuolo, New York Giants
* IN MEMORIAM: Defensive Coordinator: Jim Johnson, Philadelphia Eagles
Quarterback: Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Colts
Quarterback: Tom Brady, New England Patriots
Quarterback: Kurt Warner, St. Louis Rams, New York Giants, Arizona Cardinals
* IN MEMORIAM: Quarterback: Steve McNair, Tennessee Titans, Baltimore Ravens
Runningback: LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego Chargers
Runningback: Edgerrin James, Indianapolis Colts, Arizona Cardinals, Seattle Seahawks
Runningback: Fred Taylor, Jacksonville Jaguars, New England Patriots
Runningback: Tiki Barber, New York Giants
Fullback: Lorenzo Neal, Cincinnati Bengals, San Diego Chargers
Wide Receiver: Randy Moss, Minnesota Vikings, Oakland Raiders, New England Patriots
Wide Receiver: Terrell Owens, San Francisco 49ers, Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills
Wide Receiver: Marvin Harrison, Indianapolis Colts
Wide Receiver: Hines Ward, Pittsburgh Steelers
Wide Receiver: Torry Holt, St. Louis Rams, Jacksonville Jaguars
Wide Receiver: Donald Driver, Green Bay Packers
Tight End: Tony Gonzalez, Kansas City Chiefs, Atlanta Falcons
Tight End: Dallas Clark, Indianapolis Colts
Tight End: Antonio Gates, San Diego Chargers
Left Tackle: Johnathan Ogden, Baltimore Ravens
Left Guard: Steve Hutchinson, Seattle Seahawks, Minnesota Vikings
Center: Kevin Mawae, Seattle Seahawks, New York Jets, Tennessee Titans
Right Guard: Will Shields, Kansas City Chiefs
Right Tackle: Damien Woody, New England Patriots, New York Jets
Defensive End: Michael Strahan, New York Giants
Defensive End: Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis Colts
Defensive End: Jason Taylor, Miami Dolphins (2), Washington Redskins
Defensive End: Julius Peppers, Carolina Panthers
Defensive End: Simeon Rice, Arizona Cardinals, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Defensive Tackle: Warren Sapp, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Oakland Raiders
Defensive Tackle: Casey Hampton, Pittsburgh Steelers
Defensive Tackle: Jamal Williams, San Diego Chargers
Defensive Tackle: Albert Haynesworth, Tennessee Titans, Washington Redskins
Defensive Tackle: Vince Wilfork, New England Patriots
Outside Linebacker: Derrick Brooks, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Outside Linebacker: DeMarcus Ware, Dallas Cowboys
Outside Linebacker: Lance Briggs, Chicago Bears
Outside Linebacker: Terrell Suggs, Baltimore Ravens
Outside Linebacker: Adalius Thomas, Baltimore Ravens, New England Patriots
Outside Linebacker: Joey Porter, Pittsburgh Steelers, Miami Dolphins
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Ray Lewis, Baltimore Ravens
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Brian Urlacher, Chicago Bears
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Zach Thomas, Miami Dolphins, Dallas Cowboys
Inside/Middle Linebacker: Al Wilson, Denver Broncos
Cornerback: Champ Bailey, Washington Redskins, Denver Broncos
Cornerback: Charles Woodson, Oakland Raiders, Green Bay Packers
Cornerback: Asante Samuel, New England Patriots, Philadelphia Eagles
Cornerback: Ty Law, New England Patriots, New York Jets (2), Kansas City Chiefs, Denver Broncos
Cornerback: Rashean Mathis, Jacksonville Jaguars
Cornerback: Antoine Winfield, Buffalo Bills, Minnesota Vikings
Strong Safety: Adrian Wilson, Arizona Cardinals
Strong Safety: John Lynch, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Denver Broncos
Strong Safety: Kerry Rhodes, New York Jets
Free Safety: Troy Polamalu, Pittsburgh Steelers
Free Safety: Ed Reed, Baltimore Ravens
Free Safety: Brian Dawkins, Philadelphia Eagles, Denver Broncos
*IN MEMORIAM: Sean "Meast" Taylor #21, Washington Redskins
Punter: Shane Lechler, Oakland Raiders
Place Kicker: Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland Raiders
Special Teams Ace: Larry Izzo, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots
Punt Returner: Devin Hester, Chicago Bears
Kick Returner: Dante Hall, Kansas City Chiefs, St. Louis Rams

DISCUSS>>>

Friday, January 29, 2010

Where Are They Now? January 2010 Edition

Where Are They Now? January 2010 Edition
M.D. Wright
1.29.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: A new feature (borrowed from a friend of mine) in my column will be random musings about celebrities and professional athletes who seemed to have faded into oblivion -- not to be heard from for years (and some, never again). Some days it may be a Top 5, some days there may be a Top 10. For the sake of starting out, today's will be a Top 5.


TOP 5: WHERE ARE THEY NOW?


1. WILLIE "FLIPPER" ANDERSON.
You have no idea how much I hated this guy for doing this:
http://www.inhistoric.com/2010/1/7/1238552/1-07-1990-flippers-td-kills-the




But that was 20 years ago. Other than a couple of decent seasons with the Rams before they moved to St. Louis, he faded into NFL oblivion and then completely fell off the face of the sports scene altogether. That game still makes me sick to think about it, because other than the eventual Super Bowl XXIII matchup for the San Francisco 49ers, the Cincinnati Bengals (WHO SHOULD'VE WON THAT GAME, BTW) the Giants were the only team that could have beaten SF that year. And we lost on a fluky play, set up by a bogus pass interference call.


Sounds like the 2010 NFC Championship game, doesn't it.


MOVING ON.


2. LISA BONET.
What on earth happened? After "A Different World" went off the air in 1993, I don't think I've seen her 5 times publicly since.


3. CHARLES D. SMITH
Yeah, THAT Charles Smith. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRFKhpMKX0E What a bum he turned out to be. When he was at Pitt, he was a bona fide stud. The Clippers sure thought they were getting THAT player when they drafted him -- and the Knicks certainly thought enough of him to give up young Mark Jackson to acquire Smith and aging Doc Rivers -- which undoubtedly cost us in the 1994 NBA Finals, as Mark had synergy with Pat and Oak. Doc ended up not making a difference and Derek Harper was our main point guard.


But I digress. From missing three "GIMME" layups literally underneath the basket (standing 6'10"), to basically out of the NBA and not a hide or hair of him since.

4. RICK BARRY.
Everyone says Barry is a douche, that he's self-indulgent and a narcissist. The rumors swirled for years as to why he was booted off CBS Sports' NBA playoffs broadcasts for seemingly no reason in the early 80s, when he was doing very well at it. He came back later to do games, but outside of San Francisco, who has seen or heard Rick Barry lately? He was a darn good player. One of my Top 5 Small Forwards EVER in the NBA. THAT GOOD.



5. MONA LISA (Singer)
Mona Lisa Centofanti, of "Can't Be Wasting My Time" fame -- I used to be crazy about her. She was my age and that jam was the joint back in 10th grade! Hell, I had to go play it on iTunes just now. But save for a cameo appearance on Cam'ron's "Purple Haze" album in 2004, where has she been for the greater part of the last 10 years?


LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU THINK! Add others, DISCUSS>>>






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MDW