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A Guide to the NFL For Women (Part 2)
Part 1 Here
Since revealing the details of my formerly torturous football deprived ex-relationship in an emotional piece a few months ago, some readers are calling the article's content into disrepute. Who dare challenge the word of this unemployed, hack, anonymous blogger? Erm, his ex-girlfriend. This just in... she claims to still hate football (I never knew, she claims to have told  me many times.). Yes, she says that, "MAYBE IF MY HACK, ANONYMOUS BLOGGER EX-BOYFRIEND LISTENED TO ME MORE, I COULD'VE LEARNED TO LIKE IT THIS FALL!" Alas, let's not get into what-ifs, he-says-she-says, and listening to the opinion of women. Let's just transition into Billynho's Guide to the NFL For Women (Part 2). (Iuns will deliver her side later; but she's more eager than any woman for the rest of this series.) "Damnet B! You said the DEFENSE was supposed to tackle the offense!? Hmpf! Looks to me like Ohio State's running back keeps knocking down Purdue's defenders." -Billynho's ex-girlfriend, 10/6/07, expressing her frustration at watching Ohio State's running back Beanie Wells go BEAST MODE on Purdue. Defensive Tackle: Marked "DL" in the picture above (but more commonly referred to as DT's), defensive tackles primarily serve to eat up space at the line of scrimmage. In most instances, the biggest and strongest are the best; speed is of little value, except at the dinner table. The top defensive tackles in the NFL command the attention of two offensive linemen (and even more servings of food), which theoretically frees up their defensive linemates to wreak havoc on the offense. The majority of NFL teams play two defensive tackles at a time, but a handful use just one. Good Examples: Ted Washington, Vin "Second Helping Taker" Baker (if he played football instead of basketball), Warren Sapp, Refrigerator Perry, Sally Struthers Bad Examples: Steve Emtman, Nicole Richie, The People of Kenya Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "Honey, if Tony Siragusa was an incontinent, I bet he'd still weigh three times more than me! I'm pretty sure I'd be incontinent I had the ball and was playing against Bob Sanders."Defensive End: The main duty of defensive ends is to contain the run on the outside and rush the quarterback (DE). They'll spin around, club, or bull their way through the offensive tackle to get there every play. Explosiveness, size, and strength are required. If you can't apply pressure on the quarterback, it allows receivers lots of time to get open and makes it hard on your secondary. The elite defensive ends make over 10 sacks a year. The New Orleans Saints have about half that many as a team this season I think. Good Examples: Jared Allen, Reggie White, Bruce Smith, Julius Peppers, Jevon Kearse as a rookie Bad Examples: Andre Wadsworth, Jevon Kearse when he wasn't a rookie Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "I'd rather have Dwight Freeney spin into me ten times than run into a motionless Bob Sanders once."
Linebacker: Linebackers are pegged as either inside, strongside, or weakside, but none of the three is really demonstrably better than the others. The inside (middle) linebacker calls the defense's plays and is usually a tough guy. The outside backers guard tight ends and rush the quarterback on blitzes. They usually make the most tackles and are utter badasses (like Bob Sanders). Good Examples: Brian Urlacher, Bobby Bouche, Ray Lewis, Former Purdue Defensive Ends, Barrett Ruud (or so I'm told during every Bucs game), old white guys on the Patriots Bad Examples: The Boz, Willie Williams, Napoleon Harris Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "OMG! I just had the greatest idea! How sick would Bob Sanders be if he played linebacker for the Colts!?!?! Wouldn't it be so beautiful? (tear at the thought)"
Cornerback: Cornerbacks cover wide receivers and try to prevent them from catching the ball. Most can't do it. The best-of-the-best make it virtually impossible for receivers to catch a pass thrown their way and essentially seal off their side of the field. The worst can undermine a team of Pro Bowlers by themselves. None of them have a prayer against Randy Moss. Good Examples: Neon Deion Sanders, Champ Bailey, Ronde Barber, Cortland Finnegan, Rod Woodson Bad Examples: Quentin Jammer, Tracy Porter Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "Shit. When Pacman gets locked up again, who am I supposed to go to Vegas with?"
Safety: Safeties are hard-hitting, intense dudes with SMS who wish they were big. They're fast, pretty good in coverage, and love to lead with their helmet when wide receivers are in the air. They stand the farthest from the line of scrimmage before the play. If the offense makes a big play, they're probably to blame. But they'll still act like hard asses when they come off the field. Good Examples: Bob Sanders, Rod Woodson, Bob Sanders, Ed Reed, Bob Sanders Bad Examples: Roy Williams, Adam Archuleta Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "No EFFING way! No. That was impossible. I don't believe it happened. How the EFF did Bob Sanders fight off six blockers to single-handedly solo tackle Jerome Bettis six yards deep in the backfield on fourth-and-one to win the game. I love him. I love Bob Sanders. It's over between me and you, whatever your name was, because I'm leaving you... for Bob Sanders."
Labels: A Guide to the NFL for Women, Billynho, chicks, NFL
A Guide to the NFL For Women (Part 1)
Part 2 Here I know when it happened to me for the first time, I could barely handle it. I'll never forget the moment. Stared in horror. Couldn't bear to imagine the future. Contemplated ending it all right there. It was all so... meaningless. The relationship... I mean. Yes, I'm of course talking about dating a woman who knew nothing about football. She didn't know jack about Jack (del Rio). "Joe Namath?... John Madden?... Joe Theismann's right leg?... Barry Sanders?... Brett Favre?... Tom Brady?... He Hate Me?" I'd offer hopefully to blank stares.  "Who?" she'd reply time-after-time uninterested (muffled by my shrieking sounds of disbelief), as if she was Fresh Off the Boat from some scarcely populated, archaic island in the Pacific (which wouldn't explain anything, I later realized, what with all the Samoans in the NFL). At first I shuddered, cringed, and whinged. But she was a sweetheart ( and had a tight booty). So I gave up hope of understanding how she lived 22 years on this planet yet managed to avoid ALL knowledge of its greatest sport, and I formulated a plan. I gave her a crash course on the ins and outs of football, dropped athletes names as verbs in everyday conversation ("You really Ted Washingtoned my ice cream!"), quizzed her on each team's nickname (they learn these fast guys), and smiled as the results shined through. Soon my girl was talkin' bout jukin' like Reggie Bush, devouring YouTube clips of Noel Devine and AJ Green and asking for thirds, threatening to crush me a la Bob Sanders, and, best of all, willing to watch NFL on Sundays with me (we tried college football, but she didn't appreciate the brutality when we went and saw No. 1 Ohio State obliterate Purdue)! "Monday Night Football?" you ask/beg. Well if she'd be as nice as she was enthusiastic about football, we  'd have watched Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints Monday at her behest. The point is you don't have to give up hope. Guys, your girlfriend/wife can learn to appreciate football, and quickly, even if she'd rather open-mouth kiss a homeless man than sit through a game today. Make your starflower utopia lovechild read this piece! Women, football is fun. And I'm here to explain why. Read on as I dish the essentials to help you not only tolerate football, but enjoy it!: "Quarter...back... please. When did you give me a quarter?" -Billynho's ex-girlfriend, 10/6/07, responding tersely after being asked to point out the quarterback. Understand the Positions: I don't watch cricket or polo because I'm not gay, nouveau-riche, or an Indian in Britain. But even if I tried, I'm sure I'd hate both because I wouldn't have a damn (raging) clue about was going on. I can understand why females with little knowledge of football don't like it. The best way to hasten the learning curve is to learn the roles of each position.

Quarterback: Marked "QB" on the image above, quarterbacks have nothing to do with change. Quarterbacks command the huddle, call plays (most are told by their coach what plays to run, the best call their own), hand off to the running back, and pass to wide receivers, tight ends, and running backs... all while running for their lives from defensive ends. They're typically good looking (Peyton Manning is a notable exception), tall (around 6'5"), smart, and tough. A great quarterback makes his fans sound gay when talking about him. A terrible quarterback gets his head coach fired. Good Examples: Steve Young, Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Joe Montana, Drew Brees, Willie Beaman Bad Examples: Kordell Stewart, Kansas City's Thigpen, Ryan Leaf, Philip Rivers, Michael Vick Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "Part of me is glad Michael Vick is in prison, because as an Atlanta Falcons fan it's nice to have a real quarterback once again instead of a running back masquerading back there. The other part of me wonders how we're going to get weed with him locked up. You have JaMarcus Russell's cell phone number right?"
Running Back: Also known as "tailbacks" (TB above), running backs typically line up behind and take hand-offs from the quarterback before attempting to run around or through defenders. On pass plays, they either block for the quarterback or turn into receivers. Running back is said to be one of the most dangerous positions to play in any sport, a theory to which Willis McGahee surely attests (do not watch that video if squirmish... I have never re-watched it since seeing it live). Fast, strong, and skilled... running backs are the best athletes on the field. Good Examples: Barry Sanders, Marshall Faulk, Walter Payton, Reggie Bush, Adrian Peterson, Marshawn Lynch, Mike Alstott, Michael Vick Bad Examples: Anyone drafted in the first round by the Chicago Bears Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "Honey, have you ever realized that LaDainian Tomlinson's backups always average more yards per carry than him? Makes no sense that everyone thinks he's the best running back in the NFL."
Wide Receiver: Teams typically line up between two and four receivers (WR, logically) at a time, and it is their job to get open and catch passes from the quarterback. They must have great hands, run precise routes, and the best are fearless, able to hold onto a catch knowing a full-speed hit is coming from a defender. They also tend to have the best touchdown dances, generally believe they should have the ball thrown to them every down, and pout through the media when it isn't. Seriously, it's required of the great ones. Good Examples: 2002-2007 Chad Johnson, Marvin Harrison, Jerry Rice, Terrell Owens, Randy Moss, Rod Tidwell, Anyone guarded by Jacques Reeves, Florida State's Peter Warrick Bad Examples: 2008 Chad Johnson, Ashley Lelie, Troy Williamson, Cincinnati Bengals' Peter Warrick Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "If you made ME the Lions starting quarterback with Roy Williams and Calvin Johnson to throw to, we'd outscore the 1999 St. Louis Rams. I don't care if Charles Rogers and Mike Williams are my third and fourth options. We'll score 50 a game."
Tight End: Tight ends (TE) line up on either side of the offensive line and serve as extra blockers on running plays and targets on passing plays. They typically run 5-10 yard routes across the middle of the field, and average tight ends lack the speed to run much after the catch. The league's best tight ends are ultra-athletic speedsters who are too fast for linebackers and too strong for defensive backs (we'll cover those in part two). Because most tight ends are immobile louts, semi-competent ones with functioning legs are oft-vastly overrated (see: Jason Witten). Good Examples: Tony Gonzalez, Shannon Sharpe, Antonio Gates (while Drew Brees was his quarterback), Mike Vrabel Bad Examples: Vernon Davis Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "No one is better than Dallas Clark at finding the seam between the secondary and the linebackers. Unfortunately he fumbles more than Ahman Green."
Offensive Lineman: They're gross, so we'll hit them up all at once to get our minds off them fast. Every play, the offensive team lines up five lineman. The outside two are the left and right tackles (left and right in relation to the direction the quarterback is facing), inside of them are the left and right guards, and in the middle is the center. The center snaps the ball to the quarterback. To play on the offensive line are you must be a fatass, display a willingness to chop and cut (block), and smell bad. You HAVE to smell really bad! Good Examples: Billy Bob, Jonathan Ogden, Olin Kreutz, Steve Hutchinson Bad Examples: Tony Mandarich, Ray Budds Impress your husband/boyfriend by saying: "Does Leonard Davis lack a gastrointestinal tract? He is noticably more fat now than he was at the beginning of the game."
Check back for more in the series: A Guide to the NFL For Women
Part 2: Defense
Labels: A Guide to the NFL for Women, Billynho, chicks, Joe Theismann's right leg, NFL
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