April 7, 2012
Another NFL Wide Receiver In Legal Trouble
Why does it seem that NFL wide receivers are always getting into trouble? The latest example can be highlighted by the actions of former Detroit Lions wide receiver Charles Rogers.
The 30 year old Rogers has been arraigned in Michigan on five misdemeanors from 2 unrelated incidents. He appeared Thursday before Saginaw County District Judge A.T. Frank and pleaded not guilty to the charges. Frank released Rogers on a $7,500 personal recognizance bond.
Charles Rogers was charged with making a malicious phone call and conspiring to commit that crime March 5 and March 6 in Saginaw County’s Bridgeport Township. In the second unrelated incident, he was also charged with marijuana possession, possessing an open container of alcohol in a motor vehicle and operating a motor vehicle on a suspended or revoked license Dec. 2 in Saginaw.
Rogers told The Saginaw News he had no comment on the charges.
Rogers was the No. 2 overall pick in the 2003 NFL draft out of Michigan State.
He played in the NFL for 2 years, both with the Detroit Lions. In his brief NFL career, Rogers caught 36 passes for 400 yards and scored four touchdowns. His longest reception was for 35 yards. He played a total of 14 NFL games, 5 in 2003 (3 TDs) and 9 in 2005 (1 TD).
Filed under Blog by
November 4, 2008
Redskin Rule Gives Obama The Presidency
It looks like Barack Obama can rest assured, he will win the election. WHAT!
That’s righ!, based on the RedSkin Rule, he will be the next president of the United States.
What is the “Redskin Rule” you might ask?
The “Redskin Rule” is using the Washington Redskins football team to predict a new president. And it’s accuracy is between 94% and 100% – depending how you apply it.
Every time the Redskins WIN their final HOME game before a presidential election, the incumbent party’s presidential candidate loses. So, the incumbent party is the Republican party and John McCain is their candidate. It has worked 16 out of the last 17 elections.
The Redskins lost their last home game before the election, last night against the Pittsburgh Steelers 23-6.
This fun statistic first came up in 2000, when Steve Hirdt, executive vice president of the Elias Sports Bureau, was looking for some unique conversation for a game between the Washington Redskins and the Tennessee Titans, right before the 2000 election.
Steve went back over the NFL statistics, all the way back to 1940. However the rule backfired in the 1948 election, when the now famous Newpaper headline, when Harry Truman (Republican) defeated Thomas Dewey (Democrat). That game was played between the Redskins and the Boston Yanks (wow! there’s two words I never thought I would see together).
According to an article written by Tim Lemke of the Washington Post, the “Redskin Rule”, it is worth pointing out, was tweaked after the controversial election of 2000, when George W. Bush topped Al Gore despite losing the popular vote.
References to other dimensions aside, Hirdt said he enjoys touting the Redskins Rule because the team is not required to support the same political party each election. It is a politically unbiased phenomenon that has stood the test of time, though it is worth pointing out the rule was tweaked after the controversial election of 2000, when George W. Bush topped Al Gore despite losing the popular vote.
In 2004, the Redskins lost to the Packers 28-14, suggesting Bush should have lost to John Kerry. Hirdt changed the way the rule is applied to have it refer to the previous winner of the popular vote, not the electoral vote.
“Scientists are always studying data and coming up with different conclusions,” Hirdt rationalized. “After 2004, because Al Gore won the popular vote in 2000, we tweaked the precision of how the Redskins Rule is applied.”
Is that cheating? Perhaps, but keep in mind that this is a rule that was discovered only during efforts to help fill the airwaves during a football game.
Who would have thunk it!
Filed under Blog by

