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  1. #1
    estrepe1's Avatar
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    Default There's No Place Like Detroit




    By Jason Whitlock
    Special to Page 2


    Beginning this week during the Major League Baseball All-Star festivities, the city of Detroit will be brutalized by sportswriters from across the country. The maiming and name-calling and dissing won't stop until the completion of Super Bowl XL.

    By the time it's over, the victims will include Kid Rock, Eminem, Madonna, Coleman Young's unborn great-grandchildren and Flint's Michael Moore.

    Beating up on Detroit is easy. As the center of the free-falling automotive industry, known chiefly for crime, high unemployment and urban blight, Detroit is an easy target. Motown's 30-something mayor wears an earring, zoot suits and, if you believe the whispers, throws a house party that would make Snoop blush.

    Yeah, making fun of Detroit is about as trouble-free as cracking a fat joke on Kirstie Alley. I've done both. It's really nothing to brag about.

    But the truth is, especially when it comes to sports, Detroit is as good as it gets.

    Yes, if we're buried under 10 inches of snow during Super Bowl XL, Paul Tagliabue should be forced to stand outside Ford Field butt naked apologizing to every fan as he/she enters the stadium. In fact, instead of looking to pass steroid legislation, Congress should pass a law tying the Super Bowl to three cities.

    One: San Diego: Best weather in the world.

    Two: New Orleans: Best food in the world.

    Three: Tampa Bay: Only Mons Venus in the world.

    But I digress. The fact that Detroit has lured sports' biggest showcase twice, while New York and Chicago have yet to host a Super Bowl, says all you need to know about Motown as a sports town.

    Laugh all you want, but the Motor City gets the job done. Detroit is the old high school sweetheart who landed the boy who went on to win the Heisman Trophy and put together a Hall of Fame career. Yes, she lost her hourglass figure three kids ago, and suffered through some painful public infidelity. But now, in her 40s, she's still on the arm of the man of most women's dreams, controls most of his money, and has the freedom, emotional leverage and confidence to come and go as she pleases.

    It's a good life. A very, very good life.

    Let's see … in June, Detroit hosted three games of the NBA Finals. This week it will host baseball's All-Star game. And in February, the world will descend on Detroit for the Super Bowl.

    Want to make fun of Detroit? Go right ahead. But what's so funny?


    The Pistons won a championship last year, and should've repeated this year. The Red Wings have won three Stanley Cups since 1998. Yes, the Lions and the Tigers stink. But the Lions and the Tigers play downtown in brand-new, state-of-the-art stadiums that sit within blocks of each other. The Pistons play in a 17-year-old Palace that still looks and feels new. And Joe Louis Arena, home of the Red Wings, is part of the reason Detroit is called "Hockey Town."

    Detroit is the best sports town in America. It blows away New York, Chicago, Boston and Philadelphia. With the car industry dying and Motown dead, sports is all Detroit's got.

    And it's got sports stories in abundance, so much so that Detroit scribe Mitch Albom carved out a reputation as the nation's best sports columnist long before he earned worldwide fame with "Tuesdays with Morrie" and "The Five People You Meet In Heaven." Heck, Mitch's sportswriting peers/rivals, Bob Wojnowski and Drew Sharp, have become Detroit celebrities. Wojnowski, a columnist for the Detroit News, has a wildly popular radio talk show. And Sharp, Mitch's colleague at the Free Press, has developed a rep as the city's tough-talking contrarian.

    When sportswriters start dissing Detroit, keep that in mind. They're jealous. We all wish we had the Pistons, Red Wings, Tigers, Lions, Wolverines and Spartans to cover. In the last decade, Michigan football has won a national championship, and Michigan State basketball has won a national title as well.

    In the 20 years Albom has owned Detroit, he's had Barry Sanders, Isiah Thomas, Thomas Hearns, the Fab Five, The Flint Stones, Steve Yzerman, Dennis Rodman, Desmond Howard, Charles Woodson, Jud Heathcote, Cecil Fielder, Scotty Bowman and Sparky Anderson to write about.

    And I haven't even mentioned Detroit's high school basketball scene.

    Now I grew up in Indiana. There's nothing better than Hoosier high school basketball. The teams and the coaches are incredible.

    But the individuals, the stars, and the unbelievable stories make Detroit prep basketball second to none. Detroit is the only city in the world that could produce Antoine "The Judge" Joubert, the greatest prep basketball player of all time. Detroit is the only city that would legalize for athletic competition the Jheri curl The Judge sported.

    Detroit has style, a swagger, a confidence that belies its condition. Detroit is the big, sweaty woman squeezed into a size-10 dress, daring anybody to suggest her body ain't booming.

    When I was playing college ball, you could always tell the difference between an athlete from Detroit and everybody else. Detroiters had an attitude. When I was at Ball State in the late 1980s and early 1990s, we had three basketball players from Detroit -- Paris McCurdy, Curtis Kidd and Scott Nichols -- and they damn near willed our team to a Sweet Sixteen victory over Larry Johnson and Greg Anthony's UNLV championship team. We were the only team to play the Rebels close that year. Our best football player was from Detroit, too, an undersized linebacker named Timmy "Shoe" Walton.

    Detroit has a spirit, an energy that's infectious. It's an awesome place to take in the sports world. You have the whole package -- great teams, bad teams, terrific talent, wonderful characters, championships, two newspapers, two all-sports radio stations, good facilities, passionate fans.

    There's nothing funny about Detroit when it comes to sports.

    Jason Whitlock is a regular columnist for The Kansas City Star. His newspaper is celebrating his 10 years as a columnist with the publishing of Jason's first book, "Love Him, Hate Him: 10 Years of Sports, Passion and Kansas City." It's a collection of Jason's most memorable, thought-provoking and funny columns over the past decade. You can purchase the book at TheKansasCityStore.com. Jason can be reached by e-mail at ballstate68@aol.com.



    This article is the leading article on espn.com

  2. #2
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    Default Re: There's No Place Like Detroit

    Originally posted by estrepe1
    Yeah, making fun of Detroit is about as trouble-free as cracking a fat joke on Kirstie Alley.
    That is classic! And I like how Tampa Bay is listed as one of his three "cities".
    Up above, aliens hover, making home movies for the folks back home.

  3. #3
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    Default

    But the Lions and the Tigers play downtown in brand-new, state-of-the-art stadiums that sit within blocks of each other. Detroit is called "Hockey Town."

    Blocks from each other? I don't think he's been here, has he?
    AAT: VICTOR MARTINEZ

    SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT A CLEAN BLOCK IS? BECAUSE THE NCAA SURE DOESN'T KNOW!

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    anyone else find it funny that a 10 year veteran of sportswriting has to use an aol account as his email address? You'd think someone would have invited him to open a gmail account by now....
    2010 Adopt-A-Tiger: Hua-Wei Lo

  5. #5
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    Default

    Originally posted by Motor City Sonics
    Blocks from each other? I don't think he's been here, has he?
    He's from A2.

  6. #6
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    Originally posted by Motor City Sonics
    Blocks from each other? I don't think he's been here, has he?
    I wondered about that as well, considering Whitlock knows his way around the area. He was a coulmnist for the Booth Newspapers Ann Arbor News before he got his Kansas City gig.

    I don't always agree with his Page 2 columns, but he nailed this one...

  7. #7
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    Default Re: There's No Place Like Detroit

    Originally posted by estrepe1
    By Jason Whitlock
    Special to Page 2


    Beginning this week during the Major League Baseball All-Star festivities, the city of Detroit will be brutalized by sportswriters from across the country. The maiming and name-calling and dissing won't stop until the completion of Super Bowl XL.

    By the time it's over, the victims will include Kid Rock, Eminem, Madonna, Coleman Young's unborn great-grandchildren and Flint's Michael Moore.

    Beating up on Detroit is easy. As the center of the free-falling automotive industry, known chiefly for crime, high unemployment and urban blight, Detroit is an easy target. Motown's 30-something mayor wears an earring, zoot suits and, if you believe the whispers, throws a house party that would make Snoop blush.

    Yeah, making fun of Detroit is about as trouble-free as cracking a fat joke on Kirstie Alley. I've done both. It's really nothing to brag about.

    But the truth is, especially when it comes to sports, Detroit is as good as it gets.

    Yes, if we're buried under 10 inches of snow during Super Bowl XL, Paul Tagliabue should be forced to stand outside Ford Field butt naked apologizing to every fan as he/she enters the stadium. In fact, instead of looking to pass steroid legislation, Congress should pass a law tying the Super Bowl to three cities.

    One: San Diego: Best weather in the world.

    Two: New Orleans: Best food in the world.

    Three: Tampa Bay: Only Mons Venus in the world.
    =============================================

    OK... I'm a little confused on #3. Never been to Tampa Bay either.

    Does this have something to do with Cubans or the nearby island inhabitants native tongue? Ya Know... "Mon" beiong interpreted as "man"???????
    Last edited by Triple Se7en; 07-11-2005 at 03:35 PM.

  8. #8
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    Ryder Cup
    Super Bowl
    MLB Allstar Game
    PGA Championship
    NCAA Regional
    NCAA Final Four
    NBA Finals
    NCAA Frozen Four
    Stanley Cup Finals

    Is there major sporting event that Detroit HASN'T had...or isn't GOING to get?

    Damn that's an impressive list!

  9. #9
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    Normally he's a race-card playing flame thrower, but here he's just a flame thrower.

    I like this column, thanks for sharing it.

  10. #10
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    Originally posted by Atom
    Ryder Cup
    Super Bowl
    MLB Allstar Game
    PGA Championship
    NCAA Regional
    NCAA Final Four
    NBA Finals
    NCAA Frozen Four
    Stanley Cup Finals

    Is there major sporting event that Detroit HASN'T had...or isn't GOING to get?

    Damn that's an impressive list!
    Insert joke about NFL playoff game and World Series game here.
    the above opinion is not respected by Deleterious

  11. #11
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    I'm thinking "mons venus" might be a strip club or something...
    VT

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    Originally posted by Motor City Sonics
    Blocks from each other? I don't think he's been here, has he?
    Yeah, I found that a touch humorous as well... I s'pose they might have really small block in Kansas City.

  13. #13
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    Originally posted by Buddha
    Insert joke about NFL playoff game and World Series game here.
    Well, both are somewhat removed, but we have had both in the not-too distant past. Plus the Lions brought home the NFL Championship a number of times in the distant past.

    And, Detroit is, as far as I can tell, the ONLY city to hold three of the four major sports championships in one 12 month period. And at the time, there wasn't an NBA, so it was all of 'em that could be had.

  14. #14
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    Originally posted by Buddha
    Insert joke about NFL playoff game and World Series game here.
    NFL playoff game and World Series?

    Help me out....what are those?

  15. #15
    Atom's Avatar
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    I heard on the radio today that over the last 25 years, metro Detroit averages one championship every 3 years.

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    Well, 25 years takes us to 1980.

    We had:
    1 x World Series
    3 x NBA Championship
    3 x Stanley Cup

    Total of 7 Championships. So, that's 25/7 = 3.57 years per Championship.

    If you throw in the WNBA Championship, then you get 25/8 = 3.13 years per.

    Am I missing anything? Did the Detroit Drive ever win an Arena Bowl game?

  17. #17
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    Originally posted by RedRamage
    Well, 25 years takes us to 1980.

    We had:
    1 x World Series
    3 x NBA Championship
    3 x Stanley Cup

    Total of 7 Championships. So, that's 25/7 = 3.57 years per Championship.

    If you throw in the WNBA Championship, then you get 25/8 = 3.13 years per.

    Am I missing anything? Did the Detroit Drive ever win an Arena Bowl game?
    I don't recall that it was only with regards to pro sports (it was just championships) so I'd imagine that UM, and maybe MSU, are part of that equation as well.
    Last edited by Atom; 07-11-2005 at 04:58 PM.

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