Sports: Denver Plays Trick, no Treat; Tigers Under the Dog; Final 4 in NASCAR

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

This one is probably going to be pretty short.

(CHIEFS)—It seemed to be inevitable.  The malaise that has infected major league sports in Missouri this year finally caught up with the Kansas City Chiefs, a team that has not lived up to the expectations of their fans or themselves this year.

The Denver Broncos, who never let the Chiefs get away from them in their first game together this year, never let the Chiefs get off the mat in Mile High Stadium Sunday.  Five (count ‘em, FIVE) turnovers, failures on fourth down, and the inability to make their usual big plays doomed Kansas City, which didn’t even get a touchdown during the game, something that last happened almost two years to the day.

“I saw things that I haven’t seen before,” said Coach Andy Reid in his news conference yesterday. “They did a better job than we did.”

It was a team loss.  The next game is in Germany against the Miami Dolphins and their fleet of fleet=footed receivers led by Chiefs expatriate Tyreek Hill who already has more than 1,000 yards receiving and is averaging almost 17 yards per catch.

The Dolphins’ field goal kicker, Jason Sanders, has only had to kick nine times, hitting seven  of them.  The Chiefs have 18 field goals and only 19 touchdowns. The Dolphins have 36 touchdowns.

(MIZ)—The Missouri Tigers will have had two weeks to heal and work up some new plays and get some ideas how to stop the nation’s number one team by the time they play Georgia next weekend.  Oddsmakers have installed Georgia as almost-three touchdown favorites.

Last year, Georgia had to score two touchdowns in the last quarter to squeeze out a 26-22 win in Columbia as Missouri held George to its second-lowest total of the year.  This is the first time since the 1960 Orange Bowl that Missouri and Georgia have met with both teams inside the top 20.  Missouri will go  into the game ranked 14th in both major polls.

For what it’s worth, Georgia was a FOUR touchdown favorite last year. (ZOU)

A baseball note:

(XCARD)—Former Cardinals second baseman Tommy Pham didn’t know what he was doing Saturday night when he told teammate Jace Peterson to bat for him in Arizona’s 9-1 blowout of the Texas Rangers.  Pham was 4 for 4 on the night and had a chance to be the third player to get five hits in a World Series game and the first to do it in five at-bats.  Peterson ran the count to 3-2 before grounding out.

The only players in World Series history with five hits in one game are Albert Pujols in 2011 and Paul Molitor of the Twins in 1982.  But they batted six times.

Now for the zoom stuff:

(NASCAR)—Ryan Blaney raced his way into the NASCAR final four who will run for the 2023 championship next weekend in Phoenix.  He’ll be joined by 2021 champion Kyle Larson and Christopher Bell (who won races previously in the cut-down round) and William Byron, who struggled to a 13th place finish Sunday at Martinsville and squeezed in on points.

(L-R:  Byron, Bell, Larson, Blaney)

These four are the top young guns of the sport, at least for this year.  Their average age is 28 (Larson is 31, the oldest, and Byron is 25, the youngest. Larson has been in the Cup series for a decade, Blaney for eight years, Byron for six, and Bell for only four.

Denny Hamlin is still without a NASCAR championship in his 18-year career that has seen him record 51 victories, finishing in the top ten in the standings 15 times, and in the top five nine times. Hamlin appeared on the way to the top four until the final pit stops that dropped him and Blaney behind several cars that didn’t stop.  Hamlin got back to third, behind Byron, but came up four points short of the final four.

Martin Truex Jr., was one of the top three finishers in the first stage but later was caught speeding when he left pit road and had to start at the end of the line of cars on the leader’s lap.  He got as high as 12th at the finish, but the speeding penalty torpedoed his chance for the final four.

Next weekend’s race will be the final Cup appearances for Kevin Harvick and Aric Almirola. Harvick will be stepping away after 23 years in NASCAR’s top series, with 60 wins (so far), a championship in 2014 and 17 years finishing in the top 10 in the standings.

Almirola has been in the Cup series for 16 years. His best finish in the standings was fifth in 2016.

(Formula 1)—Max Verstappen broke his own record by winning his 16th race of the year during the weekend. It’s his 51st career win, tied for fourth on the all-time list. Lewis Hamilton, who finished second in the Mexico Grand Prix, is the all-time leader with 103 victories. Hamilton finished second in the race, 14 seconds back.

(Photo credits: Kansas City Chiefs, NASCAR)

 

 

OMG!!!

While our Congress has been acting like children who should be spanked and sent to bed without dinner—

While the Israel and Hamas are blowing each other up===

While Ukraine is hoping to hold on somehow to its own survival—

While hurricanes are growing more severe, water shortages are getting more serious, millions of people are still starving in Africa, China is building islands in the South Pacific to extend its reach, gas prices are as difficult to understand as airline fares, and Covid is on the rise again—

It is news that baseball great Alex Rodriguez has

Ta-dah!!!!

Gum disease!

Oh, the horror.

“I just recently went to see my dentist and not thinking anything about any gum disease and the dentist tells me the news, and then I come to find out over 65 million Americans have this gum disease.”

He made the heart-stopping announcement on the “CBS Mornings show a few days ago.

But it’s only early-stage gum disease.

Whew…..we were really concerned until we learned it’s been caught early and is treatable.

As sometimes happens when big star people contract some dreaded disease, A-Rod, as he’s called, is becoming a mouthpiece for a cause.  He has “partnered” with OraPharma, a  health products company to increase public knowledge about this ailment.

(We wonder if he knew he had gum disease before OraPharma contacted his agent.)

His advice:

See your dentist for regular checks.  And take care of your teeth.

You bet, A-Rod.  I’ve already made my next dental appointment. It will be in December.

But there are other major ailments that require celebrity spokespeople with courage enough to go public with their problem so the public will be more aware and seek proper medical attention.

Hangnails.

Ingrown toenails

Dandruff

Think of the possibilities for TV commercials with your favorite sports stars or has-been sports stars elbowing their way between insurance, patent medicine, and medicare commercials.  We need the variety.  Flo and Doug and their associates are getting so monotonous.

In A-Rod’s case, be watching for him telling you that Arestin and Ossix are essential fighters for good oral health.

But until that happens, we hope you’ll send your thoughts and prayers to A-Rod as he enters a long fight against his early stage gum disease.

 

The Team Player

Being a team player means placing greater value on a team’s success than on individual achievement.

In sports it might mean passing up a chance to hit a home run when a sacrifice bunt is necessary.  In business it might mean supporting the competitor who got the job you wanted because the company is more important than one job, more important than one individual.

Sometimes being a team player means figure out what your team is.

The issue came up recently when Congresswoman Ann Wagner, who represents a district in eastern Missouri, announced she would support Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan, who had the backing of former President Trump, for Speaker of the House just days after she said she would “absolutely not” support him.  She complained that when Jordan lost the original caucus vote to Congressman Steve Scalise, “He gave the most disgraceful, ungracious—I can’t call it a concession speech—of all time.”

Talk about a turnaround!

She justified her change by saying it is because she is a team player.

In baseball terms, she tore off her Cardinals uniform and put on one for the Cubs. Instantly.

More and more, though, it appears we don’t have teams in Washington.  We have tribes.  At least four of them: the extreme right tribe, the center right tribe, the center left tribe, and the extreme left tribe.

Jordan, whose record of getting bills passed is so thin it is, well, non-eixtent*, got the Republican conference’s majority vote as its candidate for Speaker—-but with substantial opposition, casting doubt on whether he could get the 217 Republican votes he needed to take the gavel. He came out of the conference caucus 65 votes short of what he needed in a floor vote. He and his supporters spent the days getting people like Wagner to turn around. But 65 votes was a whole lot of turning. And Jordan couldn’t do it.

Some of his opponents had the temerity to suggest that the Republican minority within the Republican majority might align with Democrats to pick a Speaker, an impracticality at the time because a Democrat in charge of a chaotic Republican House would be unable to bring sanity to the large room that seemingly needs to add padding to its walls and to rewrite its recently-rewritten dress code to include canvas blazers with long sleeves that tie in the back.

But give credit to those who have had the courage to suggest that the other side is not the enemy; they’re just friends who have different ideas.  And if they can find areas of agreement and move forward, it sure beats focusing on differences that stand in the way of service.

We do not mean to target Wagner in this entry because there are others who have misunderstood the concept of team when they proclaim in word and deed that they, too, are team players, an observation that applies to both of our political parties.  She just happened to use the phrase.

Minority Democrats, who have seemingly been inessential to the slim-majority Republicans and therefore beneath respect by them, have had the luxury of sitting back and watching the GOP House fall into a state of extreme disarray without addressing the possibly troublesome fringe of their own party and the mischief it might cause if Democrats regain control of the House—which a lot of pundits think the Republicans are proving should be the case.

It appears the only teams that matter in that climate are Republican and Democrat.  Anyone who has spent a lot of time inside the political system at the national or state level can understand how consuming that world becomes, so consuming that the real team is forgotten.

As we said earlier, there are four tribes in the House, not two teams.

Who IS the team?

Look in your mirrors.

Somebody in Washington or Jefferson City wants to be a team player?  The first step is to get rid of tribes. The second step is remembering who the team really is.

WE are the team.

Reaching across the aisle in a way that benefits the team more than it benefits any one tribe isn’t a crucifiable offense.

Was Jim Jordan interested in taking one for the team?  No, he was in it for Jim Jordan (and his big booster at the time).  And he lost three times, each time with fewer members of his own party supporting him.

So what is the team’s responsibility for straightening out the whole mess? Simple. Pay attention to what our congressional delegation is saying and doing and make sure that whomever we send to Washington next November is more loyal to country than to tribe and certainly more loyal to country than to a disgraceful former leader.

*The New Republic, an unabashedly liberal publication, said in its October 17 webpage entry,  “Jordan stands out among his predecessors and colleagues because he is not a real lawmaker… The Center for Effective Lawmaking, a project by Vanderbilt University and the University of Virginia, rates House members based on their legislative performance. In the 117th Congress, Jordan was tied for fourth place among the least effective lawmakers.

Jordan sponsored only a single bill in the last Congress—on social media censorship, a perennial issue among some conservatives—and it did not advance out of committee. He has never successfully drafted a bill that became law…Meredith Lee Hill, who covers all agriculture-related goings-on on Capitol Hill for Politico, reported that Jordan’s supporters pitched his speakership to agriculture-minded Republicans as the “best way to get the huge [Farm] bill to the floor” in what remains of this Congress’s term. As Hill noted, Jordan has never himself voted for a farm bill at any time in his career.”

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The Team Player 

Being a team player means placing greater value on a team’s success than on individual achievement.

In sports it might mean passing up a chance to hit a home run when a sacrifice bunt is necessary.  In business it might mean supporting the competitor who got the job you wanted because the company is more important than one job, more important than one individual.

Sometimes being a team player means figure out what your team is.

The issue came up recently when Congresswoman Ann Wagner, who represents a district in eastern Missouri, announced she would support Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan, who had the backing of former President Trump, for Speaker of the House just days after she said she would “absolutely not” support him.  She complained that when Jordan lost the original caucus vote to Congressman Steve Scalise, “He gave the most disgraceful, ungracious—I can’t call it a concession speech—of all time.”

Talk about a turnaround!

She justified her change by saying it is because she is a team player.

In baseball terms, she tore off her Cardinals uniform and put on one for the Cubs. Instantly.

More and more, though, it appears we don’t have teams in Washington.  We have tribes.  At least four of them: the extreme right tribe, the center right tribe, the center left tribe, and the extreme left tribe.

Jordan, whose record of getting bills passed is so thin it is, well, non-existent,* got the Republican conference’s majority vote as its candidate for Speaker—-but with substantial opposition, casting doubt on whether he could get the 217 Republican votes he needed to take the gavel. He came out of the conference caucus 65 votes short of what he needed in a floor vote. He and his supporters spent the days getting people like Wagner to turn around. But 65 votes was a whole lot of turning. And Jordan couldn’t do it.

Some of his opponents had the temerity to suggest that the Republican minority within the Republican majority might align with Democrats to pick a Speaker, an impracticality at the time because a Democrat in charge of a chaotic Republican House would be unable to bring sanity to the large room that seemingly needs to add padding to its walls and to rewrite its recently-rewritten dress code to include canvas blazers with long sleeves that tie in the back.

But give credit to those who have had the courage to suggest that the other side is not the enemy; they’re just friends who have different ideas.  And if they can find areas of agreement and move forward, it sure beats focusing on differences that stand in the way of service.

We do not mean to target Wagner in this entry because there are others who have misunderstood the concept of team when they proclaim in word and deed that they, too, are team players, an observation that applies to both of our political parties.  She just happened to use the phrase.

Minority Democrats, who have seemingly been inessential to the slim-majority Republicans and therefore beneath respect by them, have had the luxury of sitting back and watching the GOP House fall into a state of extreme disarray without addressing the possibly troublesome fringe of their own party and the mischief it might cause if Democrats regain control of the House—which a lot of pundits think the Republicans are proving should be the case.

It appears the only teams that matter in that climate are Republican and Democrat.  Anyone who has spent a lot of time inside the political system at the national or state level can understand how consuming that world becomes, so consuming that the real team is forgotten.

As we said earlier, there are four tribes in the House, not two teams.

Who IS the team?

Look in your mirrors.

Somebody in Washington or Jefferson City wants to be a team player?  The first step is to get rid of tribes. The second step is remembering who the team really is.

WE are the team.

Reaching across the aisle in a way that benefits the team more than it benefits any one tribe isn’t a crucifiable offense.

Was Jim Jordan interested in taking one for the team?  No, he was in it for Jim Jordan (and his big booster at the time).  And he lost three times, each time with fewer members of his own party supporting him.

So what is the team’s responsibility for straightening out the whole mess? Simple. Pay attention to what our congressional delegation is saying and doing and make sure that whomever we send to Washington next November is more loyal to country than to tribe and certainly more loyal to country than to a disgraceful former leader.

*The New Republic, an unabashedly liberal publication, said in its October 17 webpage entry,  “Jordan stands out among his predecessors and colleagues because he is not a real lawmaker… The Center for Effective Lawmaking, a project by Vanderbilt University and the University of Virginia, rates House members based on their legislative performance. In the 117th Congress, Jordan was tied for fourth place among the least effective lawmakers.

Jordan sponsored only a single bill in the last Congress—on social media censorship, a perennial issue among some conservatives—and it did not advance out of committee. He has never successfully drafted a bill that became law…Meredith Lee Hill, who covers all agriculture-related goings-on on Capitol Hill for Politico, reported that Jordan’s supporters pitched his speakership to agriculture-minded Republicans as the “best way to get the huge [Farm] bill to the floor” in what remains of this Congress’s term. As Hill noted, Jordan has never himself voted for a farm bill at any time in his career.”

Sports—Homecomings in Columbia and Kansas City; Cooperstown Finalists  

(MIZ)—The Missouri Tigers are having their best season in a decade and the crowds are responding .  Saturday’s Homecoming 34-12 win over South Carolina produced the third straight sellout, the first time Missouri has sold out three games in a row since 2008.  The Tigers are 7-1 for the first time since 2013.

The Tigers defense held South Carolina to four field goals, sacked the Gamecock’s quarterback Spencer Rattler six times, and stopped them ten of thirteen times on third down converstions.  The Tigers have allowed only one touchdown in the last seven quarters.

Brady Cook threw for “only” 198 yards. But Corey Schrader ran for 159 and Cook picked up 64 more.

And the Tigers showed some killer instinct.  When South Carolina closed to 24-12, Schrader led the Tigers on a drive that culminated in an 11-yard run to the end zone with 2:46 left.

Missouri scored led 24-3 at the half but only outscored the Gamecocks 10-9 the rest of the way with all of the scoring coming in the fourth quarter.  Afterwards, Coach Eli Drinkwitz said Missouri has yet to play a compete game.  “We’ve seen flashes of it. But we haven’t put it all together for four quarters. And I think that’s why this team is so hungry and coachable: because they’re wanting to prove it to each other. We can keep playing better,” he said.

Missouri hits its bye week at just the right time.   The next game is against the nation’s number one team, Georgia, on November 4.

The AP and the USA Today Coaches’  polls have Missouri at 16th this week, the highest the Tigers have been since reaching 14th in 2014.

—Harrison Mevis picked up four PATs and two field goals to move within 16 points of becoming the most prolific scorer in Missouri football history.  He has 73 field goals and 128 extra points for 347 points.  The record was set by Jeff Wolfert, 362 points on 59 field goals and 185 extra points from 2006-2008.

—The Associated Press mid-season All-American team was released this week.  Missouri’s Kris Abrams-Draine is one of four SEC cornerbacks on the list.

—The win was a landmark one for Missouri, which became the 31st Division 1 collegiate program to record 700 victories. Missouri is 700-586-53 for a .544 winning percentage. Eight D1 schools have more than 900 victories.  Michigan could win its 1,000th game this year. (ZOU)

(CHIEFS)—Sunday was National Tight Ends Day.  No, really.  It’s the fourth weekend of October every year.  And Travis Kelce celebrated it in style.

He was the star of a first half was a shootout between two old AFL rivals, a game that—among other things was a solid homecoming for a former team member coming home from a disappointing sojourn to New York. The second half was time for the Kansas City City Chiefs’ defense to shine as they beat The San Diego—oops, the LOS ANGELES Chargers 31-17 in a game closer than the score appears.

The Chiefs pulled ahead 24-17 with a touchdown with 2:36 to play in the first half but didn’t lock down the game until 2:36 was left on the clock with the only points either team scored in the second half.  The two teams combined for 841 yards, with Patrick Mahomes throwing for 424 of them, 321 in the first half, the fourth time in his career he’s had 300 or more yards in the first half of a game. Travis Kelce was unstoppable in the first half with 9 catches for 143 yards (he finished with 12/179 and is more than halfway to his eighth straight 1,000 yard receiving season (48/525) although he missed the first game.

The game was a homecoming for Mecole Hardman, who went to the New York Jets in a trade last year and came back last week after seeing little action.  He returned a late-game punt 50 yards, a play that Mahomes said “put the game away” and he kept the Chiefs’ final scoring drive alive with a key third-and-six catch that gave his team a first down.  The Chiefs scored the dagger touchdown on the next play.

The only casualty for the Chiefs was linebacker (and former Mizzou All-American) Nick Bolton.  His team-leading ninth tackle, of Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen, left him with a dislocated wrist. Last night, it was reported that Bolton will need surgery and will be out for about two months. It’s the second setback Bolton has had this year. Earlier, he missed three games with a high ankle sprain.  If he can’t go next week, Drue Tranquill is expected to fill in for him again. Tranquill had a key nine-yard sack of Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert in the fourth quarter. Tranquill signed with the Chiefs in March, after three seasons with the Chargers.

Now, to mix the sports:

We normally include Formula 1 automobile racing at the end of these Tuesday posts, but we are moving part of it closer to the top because, well—

(CHIEFS/FORMULA 1)—Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce have become part owners of a Formula 1 racing team.  They are among several sports stars who have joined Otro Capital investment group in buying 25% interest in the Alpine Formula 1 racing team.

The amount the two have invested has not been made public although Otro Capital has put 200-million euros ($211.7 million US) into the team. Several other sports stars including pro-golfer Rory McElroy, two-time heavyweight boxing champion Anthony Joshua, and others.

It’s not the first venture into sports team ownership Mahomes has made. He also has minority shares of the Kansas City Royals, the Sporting Kansas City major league soccer team, and the Kansas City Current of the national women’s soccer league.

Alpine used to be known as Renault F1 Team but changed its name to promote the Alpine, a Renault sports car. The team has been competing in F1 since 1981 under various names. Michael Schumacher won two of his record seven championships driving for the team and Fernando Alonso won both of his titles with the team.  But that was a long time ago.

Formula 1 has only 13 teams of two drivers each competing.  With five races left in the season, Alpine is sixth in the constructors points standings. In a combined 34 races, the team’s two drivers have only two top-five finishes and 18 top tens.

(BASEBALL)—-The official trading season won’t start until the end of the World Series sometime before Thanksgiving but the air is full of potential signings or trades involving the Cardinals. The Royals aren’t generating comparable headlines, perhaps because so little was expected of the them this year and because they haven’t had the traditional of excellence the Cardinals have had.

However, both teams are part of the recommendations from the Hall of Fame Contemporary Baseball Era Committee for Managers/Executives/Umpires. Eight people have made the commtittee’s short list of possible enshrinement at Cooperstown and one each comes from the Cardinals and the Royals. The eight finalists this year are Bill White, Lou Pinella, Cito Gaston, Davey Johnson, Jim Leyland, Ed Montague, Hank Peters, and Joe West. All candidates except Peters are living. The committee will announce its winners December 3.

Lou Pinella had 1,835-1713 (.517 winning percentage) in his 23 years as a manager for the Yankees, Reds, Mariners, Rays, and Cubs.  The led the Cincinnati Reds to the 1990 World Series championship, and managed the 1001 Seattle Mariners to an American League record 116 wins. He was the Manager of the Year in his league three times. As a player, four games for Baltimore in 1964 and six games for the Cleveland Indians in 1968  before being traded to the Kansas City Royals in 1969.  He he hit .282 and was American League Rookie of the Year.  He moved to the Yankees in 1974, got World Series rings in 1977 and 1978, retiring after an 18-year playing  career. He hd been a candidate for enshrinement by the Veterans Committee twice, in 2016 and 2018.  He came closest to being elected in 2018 when he received 11 votes. Twelve were necessary to gain admittance.

Bill White played for 13 seasons, starting with the San Francisco  Giants before joining the Cardinals in 1959.  He won a World Series ring with the Cardinals in 1964. He was with the Phillies from 1966-68 before finishing his career back in St. Louis in 1969. He had a career batting average of .286. White was an eight-time all star and seven-time gold glove winner. .  He was the first African-American President of the National League 1989-1994, years in which the Marlins and the Rockies entered the league. He was a key player in getting both leagues to operate under the same umbrella of Major League Baseball.

Okay, time for racing:

(NASCAR)—Christopher Bell rallied from 22nd place to win at Homestead Sunday and guarantee he will be one of four drivers running for the NASCAR Cup next month.  Kyle Larson locked in his position last week, leaving only one race left to determine the other two finalists, with six drivers competing for those slots.

He ran down Ryan Blaney and beat him to the line by about 1.7 seconds. Bell described the race as a “whirlwind” that saw 25 lead changes before he pulled in front with 29 laps left. Denny Hamlin, who was in the top four in points going into the race, crashed with 31 laps to go while running for the lead, and is now seventh in the points, sixteen below the cut line.  Martin Truex, Jr., the regular season points champion, dropped out one lap later with a blown engine.

Larson and William Byron have the remaining two finals positions based on points.  Next week’s race on the half-mile at Martinsville will be the last chance for Hamlin, Truex, Tyler Reddick, and Chris Buescher to run for the 2023 title. Buescher is in a must-win situation although, technically, all of the six who haven’t won a race in this elimination round are, too.

(FORMULA 1)—Max Verstappen’s 50th grand prix win tied his record of 15 races won in a single season.  He had to work a little harder than usual to claim it, starting sixth instead of his standard P1. But it turned out his closest competitor wasn’t that close after all.

Second-place finisher Lewis Hamilton, along with sixth-place finisher Charles Leclerc were disqualified after post-race inspections found unapproved parts on the undersides of their cars.

(Photo Credits: Bell, Bob Priddy; Mevis, Missouri Athletics; Pinella, Baseball Hall of Fame; White, Baseball Almanac)

 

Nullifying a Nullification 

The Supreme Court has once again had to rule that Missouri is part of the United States.

A lower court had ruled as unconstitutional the legislature’s latest effort to say Missouri did not have to obey federal laws.  In this case it was a 2021 law that prohibited local and state police officers from enforcing certain federal firearms restrictions.

It was a slam dunk by the court. Only former Missouri assistant attorney general Clarence Thomas thought the state had a great idea.

That great idea, given the haughty name of the Second Amendment Preservation Act gave citizens the right to sue local and state governments, agencies and agents that enforce federal gun laws that impose registration requirements, fees, and taxes, for as much as $50,000 for allegedly infringing on Second Amendment rights.

The Washington Post reported Friday that the Biden administration took the state to court. Our Attorney General, Andrew Bailey, suggested the federal government had no business suing the state because lawsuits could only be filed against state and local agencies. And he maintained, as backers of the law proclaimed in 2021 that the state has no responsibility to enforce federal law. He called the federal government arguments “aggressive and novel,” and railed against federal second-guessing state policies.

United States Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar asserted that the law hampered enforcement of federal laws, “including its ability to apprehend dangerous criminals.”

She also argued—as opponents argued when the law was passed—that the U. S. Constitution prohibits states from invalidating federal laws.  Furthermore, she said, Missouri’s law says any federal employees who enforce the federal law in Missouri could never work for the state of Missouri after they leave federal employment.

Last March, a federal judge blocked enforcement of the law but damage already had been done.

The Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has had a task force made up of federal, state and local authorities. But several of those state and local agencies quit feeding date into a national program that helps link evidence of crimes in Missouri with crimes elsewhere in the country.

The U. S. Marshalls Service said a lot of state and local officers stopped helping catch fugitives.

States have been trying to nullify federal laws since 1832.  It hasn’t worked but the Missouri General Assembly is a low learner.

The issue originally arose with the passage of a strong tariff law in 1828. Southern states thought it put an unfair tax burden on their agricultural economy because the south lacked industry and had to import most of its manufactured goods. When the federal government under President Andrew Jackson did nothing to relieve that distress, radcals in the South Carolina argued that a state could declare any federal law it believed to be unconstitutional null and void and in 1832 adopted An Ordinance of Nullification that declared the 1828 tariff and a later one passed in 1832 were unenforceable in the state.

South Carolina prepared a military force to oppose any federal soldiers  sent to enforce the tariffs. Congress passed the Force Bill in March of 1833 authorizing President Jackson to use military force against South Carolina. At the same time, Congress passed a new tariff that was a compromise South Carolina could accept.

A petulant South Carolina repealed its Nullification Ordinance.

Then it passed a measure nullifying the federal Force Bill, just to have the last word.

The issue of states’ rights, however, has never gone away.  And the 2021 Second Amendment Preservation Act was the latest flareup of the issue in Missouri—at least that got legislative approval.

But don’t be surprised if somebody proposes something for the 2024 General Assembly that asserts this state can live apart from the United States Constitution if it disagrees with something in it.

(You can check out the “Blood Right” entry we posted on May 10 this year for another example of the legislature to ignore the Constitution of the United States.  It was a gun issue, too.)

Crock

Republicans in the U. S. House of Representatives have had the night to twist arms, make promises or threats, or do other things to cajole their own caucus to vote for a Speaker who has been in the House since 2006, has introduced only thirty bills in all that time, and has gotten none of them passed.  They’ll try again today.

Jim Jordan not only didn’t get the votes to become Speaker of the House on the first ballot yesterday, he got outvoted by Democrats.  All 212 Democrats voted for their leader, Hakeem Jeffries. Jordan had only 200 votes after twenty of his fellow Republicans voted against him.

The Republicans, who can’t get their own ducks in a row, are blaming Democrats for their failure to use their majority to pick a new Republican  Speaker to replace the ousted Kevin McCarthy.

Whose fault is this historic and ugly deadlock?

McCarthy maintains the House would not be stalemated if “every single Democrat didn’t vote with eight Republicans to shut this place down.”

That, my friends, is a crock. And it’s full to the brim.

The Democrats have no obligation to Republicans who have let four percent of their caucus run their conference.  Democrats are not in charge of putting the Republican House in order.

Democrats have scored some points by saying they’ll work with moderate Republicans to end the chaos.  But McCarthy and Jim Jordan and their supporters who have shown no interest in bipartisanship otherwise think Democrats should ride to their rescue.

Hypocrisy flows in buckets with their whining.

Perhaps the Republicans, especially those who have aligned themselves with the political evangelicals should have a discussion group about the meaning of Luke 4:23—“Physician, heal thyself.”

And to remember another old adage:  If you point a finger at someone remember that there are three fingers pointing back at you.

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Sports: Defense Is The Word in Columbia, KC

by Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(MIZ)—Well, we know now that they can come back.  But maybe more important is that THEY now know it, too.

Missouri’s 38-21 win against Kentucky has vaulted the tigers into the top 20 on both major polls—although ESPN’s computer model doesn’t include them in the top 25.  The Tigers are 6-1, bowl-eligible in October for the first time in the Drinkwitz era and are headed for a game against South Carolina they should win (South Carolina is 2-4 and is giving up more than 435 yards per came).

Kentucky broke out to a 14-0 first-quarter lead but the Tiger defense stifled the Wildcats the rest of the way and Missouri owned the last three quarters, outscoring Kentucky 38-7.  And they did it without Brady Cook throwing for 400 yards or with Luther Burden catching 100 yards worth of those passes.

Missouri gets an off-week after the South Carolina game and then gets into the rugged part of the schedule with Geogia (7-0, so far), the nation’s top team, Tennessee (5-1 so far), Florida (5-2) and then Arkansas, which has come close to wins several times but is only 2-5. (ZOU)

(COACH DRINK)—Coach Eli Drinkwitz is a winning coach at Missouri.  The six wins of the Tigers this season boost his record to 23-20.

Some fans had thought he wasn’t cutting it in his first three years, all losing ones. But his record isn’t unusual in Tiger history.  The greatest early coach of the Tigers, Gwinn Henry, started out 2-3-3 but finished 40-28-9.  Don Faurot was 3-3-3 in his first year but hit a winning streak the next year.  Dan Devine was only 5-4-1 in his freshman coaching season, largely using players recruited by Frank Broyles and Don Faurot in Broyles only season in Columbia before he became an coaching institution at Arkansas.  Al Onofrio, who followed Devine’s only losing season with a 1-10 start went 37-31 the rest of the way with a string of notable upsets.  Warren Powers started hot at 8-4 but was only 38-29-1 the rest of the way.  Larry Smith, who is credited with returning Missouri football to national prominence was 11-22-1 in his first three years. He was 22-24-1 the rest of the way.  Gary Pinkel started 22-25 in his first four seasons but retired with the most wins in MU history.

(CHIEFS)—The Chiefs had a long week after dumping Denver 19-8 last Thursday night, their sixteenth straight win against the Denver Shetlands.  The Chiefs are not tied for the best record in the NFL at 5-1 with three of those wins coming on the road.

The defense bailed them out against Denver, now 1-5.  The Chiefs lack the offensive firepower they have show in past seasons but three of those wins have come on the road.

Patrick Mahomes made Chiefs history in that game by finishing with 2,138 career completions in the Denver game, topping Len Dawson’s record of 2,115.

But they lost a player to injury—when wide receiver Justin Watson came up from a completion with a dislocated elbow.  The team says an MRI showed no damage so he’ll be back “sooner rather than later.” He leads Chiefs receivers with a 21.9 yard per catch average.

The defense held Denver quarterback Rusell Wilson to only 95 yards passing and intercepted two of his throws.

Mahomes says the key to this year’s success has been the stout defense. “Its depth. I mean, they’ve done a great job not only drafting but getting key free agents and developing guys,” said Mahomes. “I mean, we have guys that are starters on other teams that are trying to find a way to get on the football field. And when they get on the football field, they’re making plays,” he said after the game.

The Chiefs play the Chargers Sunday afternoon.  The Chargers are 2-2.

On the Track:

(INDYCAR/NASCAR)—Kyle Larson wrapped up a huge week for him with a win on the track at Las Vegas, guarangeeing he will be one of the four drivers to run for the championship in the last race of the season.

AND he put in his first laps in an open-wheel car at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  Larson plans to run the 500 in May and fly to Charlotte afterwards for the 600-mile stock car race that night, an event being billed as the Hendrick 1100 (for his NASCAR owner Rick Hendrick who has cleared him to run both races that day).

The Speedway requires rookie drivers to prove they can handle a car at the high speeds on the track with severallaps at increasing speeds before they’re allowed to try to qualify for the 500.  Larson drew praise for his runs with his fastest lap at 217 mph.  He’ll be back for more testing next April when he hopes to work his way up to competitive laps in the 230-plus mph bracket.

But looked good and felt good, as this report from Indianapolis station WRTV shows:

Video: (59) Larson turns laps under watchful eyes of veteran drivers – YouTube

The good times kept rolling for him Sunday when he became the first driver to lock up a position in the final four who will decide the championship in the last race of the year, November 4. Larson edged Christopher Bell by eight one-thousandth of a second at Las Vegas.  He led seven times for 133 laps including the last 45. He now has led 1,031 laps this year, the most of any driver.

Larson is bidding for his second NASCAR championship. He won the title in 2021.

Two races are left and seven drivers are competing for the remaining three spots in the final race.

Bell is one of the drivers hoping to make the final four.  Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, and Ross Chastain finished third through fifth but are no longer in playoff contention.

Sixth place went to Ryan Blaney at the checkered flag but a post-race inspection resulted in his disqualification and listing as being in last, a penalty that also dealt a death blow to his chances for the final four unless he wins one of the next two races.

However, NASCAR on Monday reviewed its inspection protocol and found a faulty instrument was used on Blaney’s car.  His sixth-place finish was restored.  Blaney is seventh among the eight contending drivers but is only 17 points out of fourth place, still a contending position.

(Formula 1)—Formula 1 returns to action next weekend with the United States Grand Prix on a new track that snakes its way around a 3.42 mile Circuit of the Americas near Austin, Texas.

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Has it Really Been 25 Years? 

For those who do not read our Tuesday entries on sports, please bear with us today because we’re going to talk about integrity today.  But we have to set up the discussion with some sports talk.

A few days ago I picked up a book by ESPN commentator Mike Greenberg and his associate Paul Hembekides, Got Your Number; the Greatest Sports Legends and the Numbers They Own.  It’s one of thoe “list” books—such as a thousand this or that’s to do before you die stuff.  This one lists 100 people and events in sports that are the greatest moments in the broad world of athletic competition.

Number 98 references the year 1998.  Those old enough need to think back 25 years to the dominating sports story of that year.  Let’s pause while you close your eyes and look for an answer, which I will give you after the (pause) but don’t peek.

(PAUSE)

The year 1998 was the year two men dominated baseball—Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa.  The fact that they played for the Cardinals and the Cubs—two long-time baseball antagoinists—made the competition even more significant.  Throughout that long season, these two men battled to see who would set a new major league home run record.

There was McGwire, who was under incredible pressure from the beginning. It was expected he would break Roger Maris’ record of 61 homers.  McGwire had come to the Cardinals year earlier after starting the season with the Oakland Athletics.  He hit 34 home runs for the A’s and 24 more when he reached St.Louis.  58, and from the first day of the 1998 season the  Post-Dispatch headlined each home run he hit.

In Chicago there was Sosa, a power-hitter for the Cubs who had hit 33-40 home runs a year since 1993. But there was no reason to exepect what would happen in 1998.  In fact, the biggest challenge to McGwire was expected to come from Ken Griffey Jr., who had 56 home runs in ’97.

Griffey had his second-straight 56-homer year.  Sosa briefly held the record at 66 before McGwire swept past him on the way to a 70-home run season.

Many say that those two years, particularly 1998, restored the faith of baseball fans who had been resentful of the 1994-95 player’s strike and owners’ lockout.  Greenburg isn’t buying any of that, writing, “That magical season turned out to be an illusion, unworthy of being celebrated though steadfastly impossible to forget. I have heard it said that the best way to gauge whether or not a player belongs in the Hall of Fame is by asking the question: Can you tell the story of the history of the sport without him?”

Neither McGwire nor Sosa is in the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown. The reason the two are outside is because, as Greenburg puts it, “McGwire and Sosa dishonored the game.”  But, he says, what they did is unforgettable.  He finds it “a tad insulting” when people say these two “saved” baseball.  He argues that such statements preclude the idea that nobody else could have saved the game because baseball is so much part of the American spirit to have gone unrescued by somebody. These two men, he says, “were in the right place at the right time.”

McGwire and Sosa, and Roger Clemens—the most dominant pitcher of his time—and Barry Bonds, who holds the career and single-season home run records—have joined Shoeless Joe Jackson and Pete Rose in the mist of fame/infamy that keeps them from having plaques in Cooperstown because their greatness cannot overcome their violations of the integrity of the game, the first three because they are suspected of using, or have admitted using, performance-enhancing drugs, the fourth because of gambling on the sport.

The integrity of the game.

Whatever the game might be.

For many years I have been invited to speak to the incoming freshman class of the House of Representatives, who gather at the capitol a few days after their elections to begin learning how to be state representatives.  I usually tell them near the end of my remarks, “Never lie to a reporter because the first time to you lie to me is the last time I believe anything you say.  Never lie to your colleagues because your integrity is really the only thing you have going for you here.”

This is a time when we must measure those in the game of politics for their integrity for if we dismiss it as the primary qualification for public office we are dismissing it for ourselves. Our public integrity must not be sold to those who would mislead us in their search for power.

There are plenty of those who dishonor that great game of politics. Integrity to them is meaningless as they place power over us ahead of service to us.  It is up to us to exercise our integrity to save ourselves and our country from those who, as Greenburg would put it, “dishonor” the game.

We must never lie to ourselves.

Because our integrity is all that we have if we are to have, or save, our state and our nation.

(Photo credit: ESPN)

 

Notes from a Quiet Street (Cranky, colorful edition)

(Notes from a Quiet Street consists of observations that aren’t worth all the words for a full-fledged blog post.  On the other hand, some blog posts don’t merit all those words, either.)

In these chaotic times dominated by demagogues, I suggest all of us learn to play bridge, or learn to play it better.  For in playing bridge we may find relief from current controversies and fears because Bridge is a land of no-trump.

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Wife Nancy got a new car the other day.  If I drive it, it recognizes my face and moves the seat and mirrors where I like to have them.  And then it puts them back in her positions when she gets back in.

It’s white, the most visible color except in a blizzard, and it doesn’t show dirt as much as darker cars do.

The quick guide to it is 150 pages.  The full owner’s manual runs to 537 pages. We’ll probably finish reading about all the bells,whistles, and foghorns sometime in February. We might learn the rudiments of the touch screen by Thanksgiving.

How odd that in these days of concern about distracted driving, new cars have touch screens that the driver has to look at to do everything but serve hot coffee and so many buttons on the steering wheel that the driver has to look down to make sure their finger is touching the right one. No wonder the thing has systems to keep the car in the right lane and to keep it from shortening the car ahead.

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My first car had three on the tree, the headlight dimmer button on the floor for the left foot to work, an AM radio, and hand-wound windows.  I turned a key to start it, turned a key to lock and unlock it, had bumpers, a bumper jack in case of a flat tire (and tires that did go flat), and a full-sized spare that had to be checked for its air levels from time to time.  It alsos had a steel dashboard, real glass windows that were deadly to go through, no seat belts to keep you from hitting your head on the metal dashboard or going through the glass window in a crash, a rigid steering column that would be deadly, and an odometer that was all zeroes after 100,000 miles.

Air conditioning was the wind coming through the window that evaporated the sweat on hot days.

And the car didn’t recognize my face.

No, it did not have a crank to start it.

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The baseball playoffs are underway. I have no idea who is playing.  Sometimes I wish I cared.  Not often, though. I’m probably not alone.  It’s football season, after all.  I remember a lot of years when the World Series was over by now—back in the days when television didn’t run the sport.

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That first car was dark green on top and light green on the body.  Cars came in white, black, blue, green, or red.  Nowadays they’re pearlescent snow white, metallic Mediterranean blue, mocha, Sequoia Green, Arrow Gray, Purple Sector,  Thundernight Metallic—

How much do the geniuses get paid to come up with these names?

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Speaking of colors:

Did you know that Crayola makes an Ultimate Crayola Collection that includes 152 colors?  Among the more recent are crayellow, timber wolf, cool mint, oatmeal, jazzberry jam, purple mountains’ majesty, manatee, outer space, aspa

ragus, and Granny Smith Apple.

That would be a great question:  “Where will you find—?”  A Crayola box.

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And finally, a story that fell out of the blue—

We want to pay tribute to Dorothy Hoffner who died last Monday at the age of 104. Only a week earlier she had set a new record by being the oldest parachutist in the world. Guiness hasn’t certified the record yet, but she did it.

The Chicago newspapers reported she left her walker on the ground so she could walk away from her landing site.

It wasn’t her first time.  When she was only 100, she was strapped to the back of a professional jumper and had to be pushed out of the plane. This time she insisted on being the jump leader, strapped to the front of a certified parachute instructor. She jumped from 13,500 feet and floated to earth seven minutes later. “Delightful, wonderful, couldn’t have been better,” she said.

She died before her next great adventure could be accomplished.

She wanted to go up in a hot air balloon.

Some people live a life. Other people devour it.