Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Turkey Bowl 38:COVID Edition

 Turkey Bowl 38 is officially cancelled.

This really bums me out.

One of the many things I enjoy about the Turkey Bowl is that it’s a moment when the troubles of the world seem so far away. Orchard Park has always been an oasis, a bucolic piece of land in the middle of a busy town in the busiest state in the country where the problems of the world fall away and we can focus on the three C’s: CAMARADERIE, Taylor Ham egg and CHEESE, and CONSTANT prayer that no one gets hurt.

Wait, that’s not right. But I think you get the gist.

Here’s how I closed last year’s newsletter:

"I can’t think of anywhere else I’d rather be on Thanksgiving morning at 10:30 a.m., than at Orchard Park, sharing a cold beer and a warm Taylor Ham sandwich with people I love."

Oasis though it may be, Orchard Park can’t protect us from the virus, so we won’t be able to get together and laugh and catch up and share some Jersey delicacies, a beer or two, and maybe a wee dram. Over the years we’ve played in rain, snow, and extreme cold. I never imagined that we’d have to call off a game because of outside forces. During some of the dark years, when we scrambled to find enough people to play, I did imagine that the game might fade away from a lack of interest, but I never pictured THIS. We can’t share hugs and handshakes and disputed two-hand touches. We can’t share laughter and good-natured mockery. But we can—many of us—believe that the “adults” would have definitely won this year.

 Just another turd on the shit sundae that is 2020. Kate and I had to postpone our wedding, and now this. 

A few years ago, as some of you might remember, we had a distinguished visitor to the Turkey Bowl: Mr. Hogenauer, former Columbia High School teacher and resident of Maplewood for over 50 years. He died earlier this year from COVID. A former colleague of mine died from the same thing. This shit is real, people.  Wash your hands. Wear a mask. Stay safe.

It blows my mind that there are people out there who’ve let their worship of the Orange Mad Man and his crew of racist, plundering, lying opportunists suck out what little reason they may have had in their pea brains and now believe that it’s all a hoax. It depresses me even more that some of them grew up very close to Orchard Park and went to Columbia.

No, they didn’t play in the Turkey Bowl. Thank God.

No, Orchard Park isn’t the refuge that I thought it was.

This year we’ll have to take comfort in the memories we all carry of past glory. Tell these stories at your probably-smaller-than-usual Thanksgiving Dinners. Smile broadly. Embellish sparingly. Disparage lovingly. Laugh loudly. Be thankful.

Before that dinner, I invite everyone to a Zoom (shudder) kickoff at 10:30 a.m. (the traditional start time) on Thanksgiving morning. We can still lovingly insult each other and talk about how well we all would have played. It will be weird to see everyone and not walk away with some physical soreness. I guess the emotional soreness will have to do.

 Email me at ashelffo@gmail.com for the Zoom info.

 Gobble gobble and all that stuff.

 (Beware: I’ve already started training for next year.)

 

 

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Turkey Bowl 37

Editor's note: Lars did, indeed, return the MDF Bowl. Just not to me. 

Let’s begin with the elephant in the room: Lars will not be playing in the Turkey Bowl this year. While not having Lars to lock down that all-important 3-yard circle five yards or so past the line of scrimmage, on the downhill side of the field, will be a difficult-enough challenge to overcome, the real problem is that he won’t be bringing with him the passel of nephews who’ve been the lifeblood of the Turkey Bowl for the past few years.

More egregious is that, as of this writing, he has not arranged to return to the Most Dominant Force Bowl, so that it can be awarded to this year’s outstanding player. That’s just poor form. However, without Lars’ kith and kin, the MDF race is wide open. Can Michael Nulty step up to the challenge with his Trubisky-esque ‘stache? Can Owen bounce back in his return from injury? Can Kesin just show a little athleticism for once?

The BIG NEWS is that the Commissioner got engaged in the off season!  Kate Myers’ spirited-and-successful debut at last year’s Turkey Bowl (who can forget this wily rugby vet’s willingness last year to lay her body out on the cold, hard Orchard Park turf!) sealed the deal. The nuptials will take place over the summer in the Finger Lakes. Stop by if you’re around. Dodger will be in the wedding party. If you haven’t met Dodger yet, you’re missing out on one of the cutest dogs around. Just ask Kate to see a picture. She might have one or two on her phone.

Speaking of cute dogs, the Nulty family just adopted Bea, a deaf, 12-year-old shih-tzu.

Look at this picture. If you can identify everyone in the picture, I’ll buy you a beer at Nulty’s Thanksgiving Party. I was able to identify everyone except for one person. I also have no idea who the photographer was. Kesin, perhaps, since he’s not in the picture? I would also love an explanation for why I’m wearing that hat. Best guess is this picture is from circa 1994, back in the tackle days. Everything in this picture reeks of optimism. Why else would Nulty be wearing that outfit?



Most of the people in this picture haven’t played in the Turkey Bowl in years, some more than twenty years. I used to get irritated when I’d run into past players, like at a high school reunion, and the subject of the Turkey Bowl would come up and they’d say, “Oh, are you still doing that thing?” As if the Turkey Bowl can be reduced to a thing. But now I look at pictures like this and I think about how great it is that we’ve had so many people experience this great tradition over the years. I imagine that at least one of these people, one of the ones whose names have been lost to history, will be sitting at Thanksgiving this year and feel a twinge of nostalgia, or a transitory pang of middle-aged pain, and remember fondly for a moment or two their experience in the Turkey Bowl.

This year I’m not sure how the parents v children breakdown will manifest itself. I’m pretty sure that the adults have gotten slower over the last twelve months. I’m also pretty sure the children haven’t. The kids are on a two-year winning streak, and while two is clearly in the fluke range, if they win this year and make it three, I’m going to have to seriously consider some rule changes to curtail their rampant cheating and loophole exploitation to restore a competitive balance.

I got a panicked DM from Grampa Doug MacDonald this morning explaining that Brian’s nephew is now 6-feet tall, wearing a size-13 shoe, and is this the year we’re going to abandon the kids v parents model. Good question. However, because I don’t know who’s going to be playing this year, I can’t answer it right now. Like most good TB-related things, it will have to be a game-time decision. However, I’m leaning towards keeping the rivalry going for at least one more year, then we can call it “adults” vs kids and draw the line appropriately.

While we’re looking at pictures, here’s one of the extremely photogenic 2018 Crew:




This year will be the 37th edition of the Turkey Bowl. There have been some lean years, where only six or eight people would show up to play a half-hearted game mostly just so that we could say the tradition continued for another year. There are 22 people in this picture, more than that picture from 25-or-so years ago. That feels good.

I’m thankful for the place this game has in my life and for everyone who plays, has played, has thought about playing, might one day play, watches, or just worries about those playing or watching. I can’t think of anywhere else I’d rather be on Thanksgiving morning at 10:30 a.m., than at Orchard Park, sharing a cold beer and a warm Taylor Ham sandwich with people I love.

See you on Thursday!



Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Turkey Bowl 36


Men do not quit playing because they grow old; they grow old because they quit playing.”
-Some Dead Guy

Owen had knee surgery on Friday, so the past MVP will be unavailable for the Big Game.
Seeing Owen go in for knee surgery, I couldn’t help but think about my own knee surgeries almost 40 years ago. Thankfully, surgical techniques have improved, so his prognosis is much better than mine is. But we all knew that.
While Owen was in “Pod B”, which is where the day surgery patients go, post-surgery, he was tended to by a nurse who explained to us that pain is more difficult for younger people because as we get older, we realize that pain is just a part of life, and therefore we’re better able to deal with it.
He also told us about how his father when he was a kid had seen Babe Ruth play at Fenway, and that after the Babe was traded to New York, he’d still visit Southie to see his “girlfriends.”
But back to the nurse’s explanation of pain. What a depressing thought that is!
It totally reminded me of the Turkey Bowl, however.
Perhaps I should talk to a therapist about this, but I associate the Turkey Bowl with pain. If you’ve read any of these newsletters over the years, you know this to be true. Two years ago, I believe, I began with a musing on cane shopping.
And that makes me worry that I’ve turned these missives into the complaints of a middle-aged white man. And I worry that when the disgustingly athletic youth who’ve malevolently infested our game read this they will have every preconceived notion about old people confirmed. But then I remember that I am posting this on a blog and linking to it through Facebook, so they’re probably not seeing it at all. And I also remember this: This is your future. This is my present. I have the power of the pen, so suck it.
“Cause myself just told myself, ‘You the motherf*****’ man, you don’t need no help.’”
          -Some Rapper

Bravado aside, this could be a year of total humiliation for the grown-ups. Let’s face it: we’re older and slower. Last year the game was relatively close, and it came down to the final play. However, unless we play a 20-minute game with no forward passes allowed, our days are numbered. I’m amazed every year when Kesin yells at me for how poorly I’ve laid out the field at how small it seems when the game starts and how big it feels when I blow a coverage in the second half. And that’s what adulthood is like when it comes to athletics: we’re all just finding ways to cope with our limitations. Just a few years ago, the notion of losing to the children was laughable. Then it became a possibility, but really just a 16-seed-beating-a-1-seed possibility. Then it happened. Now it’ll be hard to derail that freight train.

I used to be able to count on winning on Thanksgiving Day. Now it seems like the only thing I can count on is that whatever Mr. Gefken posts on Facebook is a total lie.

Monday I had the pleasure of going to the dentist to get two fillings. I was in the chair, in a prone position, on my back, looking up at the hygienist on the left and the dentist on the right. The hygienist, mid-procedure, says to the dentist, “So, my mother wanted me to ask…what kind of wine should she have for Thanksgiving?”
“Hmm,” the dentist said. “That’s a tough question. What type of wine does your mother like?”
“Oh, she’ll really just drink anything,” the hygienist replied. “I mean, anything. She doesn’t care.”
I’m all for workplace chatter, but this seemed a bit odd. I should mention that my dentist does own a local winery, so the question isn’t as out of left field as it might seem, but couldn’t the hygienist have waited to ask her question? Then again, I was interested in the answer, so I kind of appreciated it.
His answer: A light red, like a cab franc, or a dry or semi-dry Riesling. There you go: the first-ever Turkey Bowl newsletter wine tip.
Why mention all of this? Well, as he finished drilling and filling my teeth, he explained to me that one of my teeth was in bad shape. If it acts up again, he said, the best move would be to just extract it.
I’ve reached the age where I discuss getting teeth pulled with my dentist. And earlier this year I had my first colonoscopy. I had it in the morning, and I ran a 5k race in the afternoon. True story.
Speaking of Life Events, Ian MacDonald’s girlfriend had a baby a few weeks ago, Raelyn, so that means that this year we’ll have our first grandfather participating in Doug MacDonald. Finally, we can say that he plays like a grandfather because he is one. Ian’s living out in Pullman, WA, now, so it’s unknown if he’ll be in Jersey on Thursday. (Update: Ian will not be in attendance.)
I saw Ian and Doug out in Seattle in August after Pearl Jam played SafeCo field. We connected randomly—I only knew Doug was going because he posted it on Facebook. We met at a bar after the show. When I got there Doug was talking to a guy who’d grown up in Westfield. Small world.
I was at the Pearl Jam show with my girlfriend, Kate. Kate’s playing in the Turkey Bowl this year. She’s feisty. You have been warned.
Next up on the Life Events list: by kickoff, O’Reilly’s will have closed. John Nulty pointed out that this is the second iteration of O’Reilly’s that we’ve seen close. The Turkey Bowl has outlasted O’Reilly’s.
The big news in Massachusetts as I write this is that the first legal sales of recreational marijuana have started, with a store in Northampton. There was a line around the block to get in this morning, the first sales day. One of the biggest local proponents of recreational cannabis (apparently some people consider “marijuana” to be a racist term) taught Owen’s health class last year.
Thursday will be the 36th edition of the Turkey Bowl. The first one happened in Memorial Park in 1983. The next year we shifted over to Orchard Park. I love the Turkey Bowl. It is, without a doubt, one of the highlights of my year. And these newsletters, which I’m pretty sure I’ve written every year since 1985 or so, comprise my most consistent record of lifetime achievement.
Sam Shelffo is 19. Jasper Kesin is in his second year of college. Lulu Kesin is figuring out where she’s going to college next year. Jack Nulty just turned 22. Michael Nulty is growing a mustache for Movember. Kelly Nulty is a top high school swimmer. There will be a whole host of O’Neills at the field, and Lars will keep bringing in disgustingly athletic family members and hangers-on.
The more things change, the better the Turkey Bowl gets.
At the end of October, we all saw the horrific stories about yet another mass shooting, this time in Pittsburgh at a synagogue. Michael Nulty goes to the University of Pittsburgh, and coincidentally John and Kathleen were visiting Michael when the shooting happened. John was near the synagogue and saw the police cars rushing to the scene. When I learned that he was that close, I asked him if he was okay. He texted his reply, “Just another day in America.”
There’s a lot of truth in that, just as there’s truth in what the nurse said, that as we get older, we get used to pain. And that sucks.
But I’ve been thinking a lot recently about how the Turkey Bowl is another day in America, too. It’s a joyful celebration of friendship, friendly competition, family, and love. It’s been going on for 35 years, and if it has to go on for another 35 years to give us the hope we need to combat the horrors we’re seeing seemingly every day, then count me in for every one of them.
“If you think I’ma quit before I die, dream on.”
-Some Rapper

I look forward to seeing everyone at 10:30 on Thursday at Orchard Park. Dress warmly!
Peace.

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

The 2017 Newsletter: It's a Long One


I’ve taken up yoga.

Sorry, I’ve learned that the correct phrasing is to say that I’ve begun practicing yoga. I started practicing because of a lengthy bout with hip/back/butt pain that basically had me limping for most of the spring. One of the great things about living in the Northampton area, aka “Happy Valley,” is that there are many options when it comes to advancing one’s personal health goals. No need to be a slave to Big Medicine! We’ve got acupuncture, acupressure, reiki, yoga, chiropractic, therapeutic massage…you get the picture. This great thing is also one of the worst things, because if you happen to mention to someone—anyone—that you’re experiencing an ache or pain, they’re going to tell you about their guy or woman who’s the “absolute best” at whatever voodoo they’re into. When you have too many choices, sometimes you have no choices.

Anyway, I ended up going with yoga and chiropractic, mainly because they were next to each other in one of the many cool old mill buildings we have around here and they were relatively inexpensive. The chiropractor, Roger, was nice enough, and he complimented me for having two legs that are the same length, but whenever I’d go in for an adjustment, he’d poke and prod and point out the areas where I was tight. Which was pretty much everywhere.

At yoga, Kellie, the instructor, doesn’t focus on my limitations. She flatly refuses to recognize them. She’ll tell me to move my legs here and my arms there and I’ll chuckle and say, “you’ve got to be kidding,” but she never is. And then she’ll walk over and twist me into the proper position if necessary.

Roger’s adjustments didn’t help my back. Kellie’s yoga did. So I’ve kept on going. However, it’s important to note that the pre-Thanksgiving yoga class was canceled, so I’m going into the game at a bit of a disadvantage.

If yoga stops working, I may have to turn to the TB12 Method. It’s probably a totally physiologically sound plan and besides, Tom could use the money.

But here’s a thing about yoga: you can’t win at yoga. Kellie chastised me for trying to be better than the other beginners in the Beginners Class I started with. (I’ve since graduated to a more advanced class, thank you very much.) This could be a mind trick, like the one hand clapping riddle, and the fact that she told me I can’t win yoga has me alternating between saying, “What’s the point, then,” and, “Oh, yeah? I’ll show you!” Or it could be true.

What does this have to do with the Turkey Bowl, you’ve probably asked more than once by now? Well, I’ve been thinking about this a lot, especially during Shavasana (look it up), and I think the same philosophy can be applied to the Turkey Bowl. You can’t win the Turkey Bowl. None of us can.

This part is directed specifically at the kids who pulled off the improbable last year and beat the adults: you shouldn’t put so much emphasis on winning. It’s not about winning. It’s about the camaraderie and being thankful. So it would be okay if you took it easy on us old folks on Thursday. You have to start looking at the bigger picture.

The bigger picture for me is that I ran into Bill Small at Dave Faherty’s lovely and amazing memorial service and he told me that he’s almost back to walking without a limp after the unfortunate Achilles incident last year. The bigger picture for me is that the thought of running around playing football for a couple of hours on Thanksgiving morning terrifies me. So I have an announcement to make:

I am retiring from the Turkey Bowl.

I’m 50 years old, and I’ve cheated Father Time long enough: November 25, 2032, will be my last game.

That means I’ve only got 15 Turkey Bowls left.

Oh, and this is the 35th Turkey Bowl. In honor of that, here are 35 (36, really) random ways the Turkey Bowl has made my life better (and they all go beyond this transitory notion of “winning”). The Turkey Bowl has:

1.       Given me another gluttonous meal on Thanksgiving

2.       Accelerated my curmudgeonly-ness by making me hate whippersnappers who can run and throw and catch all day

3.       Made me wonder, who takes the picture every year and is therefore not in it?

4.       Allowed me to teach my kids the South Mountain School song as we travel past my elementary school every Thanksgiving

5.       And embarrass them annually by singing it

6.       Allowed me to never host a Thanksgiving dinner, or cook a Thanksgiving meal

7.       Given me the pleasure of verifying once a year that I am, in fact, getting slower

8.       Convinced me that Doug MacDonald has the worst hands

9.       Made me appreciate the Orchard Park neighbors for tolerating our annual invasion

10.   Reminded me that, yes, the Wolf and Pig are still a good call

11.   Made me kick myself for listening to that crazy lady who demanded we stop trimming the trees. How many years ago was that?

12.   Made me appreciate the longest-running tradition in my life

13.   Let me go over the new Tappan Zee Bridge

14.   Made me ppreciate Texas Weiner Taylor Ham Egg and Cheese sandwiches.

15.   Made me appreciate the entire MacDonald clan.

16.   Taught me that anything can happen (Owen contributed this one)

17.   Taught me that Bill Small should never play in the Turkey Bowl

18.   Shown me that Michael Nulty talks a good game. Emphasis on the talk.

19.   Proven John Nulty has the softest hands.

20.   Proven that Turkey Bowl huddles are wildly inefficient

21.   Frustrated me because we should have filmed every one of these games

22.   Taught me to appreciate Lars’ understated steadiness

23.   Made me appreciate that Doug is a master motivator

24.   Who’s not afraid to do the dirty work on the line

25.   Proven that Thanksgiving is the best day of the year

26.   And that Maplewood and the surrounding area was a pretty great place to grow up

27.   Shown that Jameson’s pairs well with Taylor Ham

28.   Reminded me that Lulu Kesin might be the most underrated veteran player out there.

29.   That having Ian MacDonald on your team is the best.

30.   That Mississippis are better than alligators

31.   That the center should never be eligible.

32.   That Lars has a very athletic family. Something about skipping a generation, I guess.

33.   That playing against my children makes for great dinner conversation later.

34.   That a set of orange cones was probably the best investment I’ve ever made.

35.   That Sam Shelffo is a stealthy pass rusher.

36.   That YouTube is NOT a suitable substitute for a doctor when it comes to treating shoulder injuries.



Let me conclude with a brief story. Many people in my family love black olives, and they have long been a staple of the Shelffo Thanksgiving table; the table would not be fully set without a serving dish of black olives. One year, after a Thanksgiving Eve party at the Zoo Pub, I went home feeling a bit peckish. To satisfy my hunger, I ate two entire cans of black olives, which meant we had none for dinner. My mom was unhappy, to say the least. And I had to fight through the crowds at the A&P on Thanksgiving, post-Turkey Bowl, wicked sore and tired, to get replacement olives or be drummed out of the family.

My mom passed away in August. She’s been on my mind as I worked on this newsletter. She lived in Maplewood for 20 years, after living in South Orange for 20 years, and the fact that she still lived in Maplewood made me feel like less of an interloper during our annual invasion of Orchard Park. Every year when I’d see her after the Turkey Bowl, she’d say the same thing to me: “Well, I didn’t hear any sirens, so I guess the game must have gone okay.”

May the game go okay on Thursday.

10:30, Orchard Park. See ya there!


Monday, November 21, 2016

Newsletter 2016



A few years ago, when I was bitching to someone that Thanksgiving was quickly approaching and I hadn’t yet written the newsletter—sorry, that’s Newsletter, with a capital ‘N’—that someone said to me, “you know, you don’t have to write it if it’s causing you so much stress.” 

I know that person was just trying to be kind. But clearly, they didn’t get it. Which is part of the reason why I’m not friends with them anymore. For real. 

But I’m not going to lie, because the Turkey Bowl has always been about essential truths and Orchard Park is one of the few places left in the world where no one lies, or else the wolf and the pig will terrorize your dreams. I’m not going to lie about the fact that the Turkey Bowl does cause me stress, in a variety of ways. For instance, right now I’m stressing not just about the fact that this Newsletter is late or that the Jersey Turkey Bowl Blog has disappeared, but about the fact that I have no idea where the cones I use to mark the field are. I moved over the summer and I can distinctly remember where the cones USED to be, but I have no idea where they are now. And the clock is ticking. 

And I think this is the stress talking, too, because lately I find myself thinking a lot about Lou “The Toe” Groza, who either had one of the world’s greatest nicknames of one of the worst. I can’t decide. He was a kicker for the Browns in the 40s, 50s, and 60s who made everyone realize how important kicking field goals could be. In an era when teams hit fewer than 50% of their field goals, he made almost 70% of his, not infrequently from more than 50 yards away. Oh, and he also played offensive tackle. He retired when he was 44. 

(When I was at Drew University, there was a guy working out there hoping to get a tryout as a kicker with an NFL team. He’d be in the fieldhouse and I’d be in the workout room and every time he kicked it, there would be an earth-shattering ka-boom. I think about that guy from time to time and how he never made it. How freaking loud would the kicks have been from someone who did make it?)

And I find myself thinking a lot lately about George Blanda, who I first learned about back in the days when I half-heartedly collected football cards. I committed to memory the facts from his card:  that he scored 2,002 points in the NFL and that he played in four decades, the 40s, 50s, 60s, and 70s. He retired when he was 48. 

Another George Blanda fun fact: he was the first-ever player taken in a fantasy football draft, way back in 1962. That I learned today, not back when I was collecting football cards.
And I find myself thinking lately about Gordie Howe, who played professional hockey into his fifties but then I remember that I really don’t like to spend a lot of time thinking about hockey.
So the subtext here, in case you haven’t figured it out, is that I’m turning 50 in a few weeks. John Nulty turned 50 last week. Doug turned 50 like 10 years ago. In other words, we’re all getting old. When we started this tradition, the Cold War was still raging, the Soviet Union was a thing, and Bunny’s had a payphone on the wall which in a few years a number of people would use to get ahold of me, since mobile phones back then really weren’t that mobile. Sonny’s bagels were less than a quarter back then! We could get two slices and a soda at Roman Gourmet for, like, two dollars!
Do you hear how old I’m sounding right now?

So I have to ask the kids: why haven’t you beaten us yet? I’ve heard some rumors that Mike Nulty is going to take a pass this year, because he says the game isn’t really that competitive. Honestly, I think if he didn’t play, it would probably be a case of addition by subtraction, but saying the game isn’t competitive when you’ve NEVER WON would be like the winless Cleveland Browns (a second Browns reference?) forfeiting the remainder of the season because they didn’t want to embarrass any of their opponents. 

Owen says that this is the youngsters’ year. He says they have the sweet combination of growth spurts and chemistry on their side. 

Rumor has it that Lulu Kesin is going to be watching from the sidelines this year. 

There may be other Turkey-Bowl-related rumors out there, but I cut myself off from Facebook and other social media a couple of weeks before the election because I couldn’t take it anymore, so I’m out of the loop. 

Meanwhile, I haven’t thrown a football since last year. And I’m cowering at the idea that soon I’m going to be entering my sixth decade on this earth. (I’ll wait while you youngsters use your fingers to figure that one out.)  I have this weird clicking in my knee that my doctors say they can’t do anything about. And I’ve been battling a bad back for months. And don’t even get me started on my prostate.
But the point is, long ago the Turkey Bowl became more than just a football game. Now it’s a ritual. I consider it to be a successful year when I can make it to the field on Thanksgiving morning and check in with my fellow truth seekers. I savor the annual pilgrimage we all make to Maplewood, where we have the traditional meal of Taylor Ham, egg, and cheese sanctified by beer and whiskey, and then engage in ceremonial combat. 

Last year I didn’t play in the Turkey Bowl. I showed up in street clothes to avoid even being tempted to play, because I was recovering from having run the Philadelphia Marathon and my right knee was the size of a cantaloupe. I’d forgotten that I didn’t play, but recently Sam reminded me. He called me out on it, too, in an inspired bit of shit-talking, along the lines of marathon, shmarathon: you wimped out, Dad.
 
George Blanda would have played. The Toe would have kicked my ass and then played. 

So I’m playing this year. 10:30 a.m., Orchard Park. I’ll be there, with cones. Come one, come all, old and young, winners and winners in waiting. 

They say exercise is a good way to combat stress. We’ll see.

Happy Thanksgiving.

Archives Return!

Look there! To the right! Archives!

A Blog Re-born!

A funny thing happened on the way to the 33rd instance of The Turkey Bowl: Our blog disappeared! Poof! The archives have gone missing, too. Thirty-three years of newsletters, down the Internet drain.

Who says that whatever you post on the web stays there forever?

We've reached out to the powers that be to see if they can help, but it's Thanksgiving Week and we can't just sit around waiting. So, here we are! Look for the 2016 Newsletter within a couple of hours.