Bengals lost, 23-20, in Sunday’s Super Bowl. Did Akron native and
Pittsburgh Point Park University graduate (think Three Rivers) Michael Holley
jinx them? He seems to do that for people who take him on.
The 51-year-old former BJ reporter enraged Bengals fans by pooh-poohing
their record, even took at poke at the airport being across the Ohio River in
Kentucky.
It’s named Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport now but was Greater
Cincinnati Airport when the wooden terminal went up in 1946 after the federal
government handed out $2 million to Boone, Kenton and Campbell counties in
Kentucky to build four fields in 1944 as part of the World War II defense
effort.
Cincinnati Municipal Airport’s Lunken Field existed before 1944 IN
Cincinnati but it was too close to the Ohio River and potential flooding for
federal officials so Kentucky authorities intercepted the ball and got the $2
million to the airport 16 miles from Cincinnati but only 4 miles from the Ohio
River.
Did federal authorities think that river only flooded north and not south?
But maybe Michael did the math. The Bengals were 5-14 in playoffs and
NEVER won the NFL title, even with the legendary Paul Brown, who started up the
team after King Arthur (as BJ sports columnist called him) Modell canned one of
the greatest coaches in NFL history.
And 10-7 this season, which is barely keeping your head above .500 waters.
The lead on an article I read about the Holley dustup has this lede:
Holley’s co-host on
NBC TV’s “Brother From Another” sports talk show, Michael Smith, showed up with receipts (and a cigar) after
the Bengals pull off the upset to advance to the Super Bowl and all Michael
Holley can do is eat crow.
Michael Holley did
a pre-Super Bowl show for NBC.
Holley and
controversy are unstrange bedfellows.
Michael’s book, “War Room,” which he wrote after
shadowing New England
Patriots head coach Bill Belichick, Atlanta
Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff and Kansas City Chiefs GM
Scott Pioli for a year, for example.
Regarding the Chiefs playoff game against the Baltimore Ravens, some readers interpreted what Michael wrote as intimated that GM Scott
Pioli got involved in the playcalling decision or told head coach Todd Haley
that offensive coordinator Charley Weis, not Haley, has to call the
plays.
Michael went on the radio to be interviewed and said “it was flat-out
fabrication. I never said Pioli told Haley to make Weis call the plays.
Weis called the plays, Michael said, because while working under Belichick
he developed a great reputation as a playcaller that brought the Pats THREE
Super Bowl titles!
But in May 2011 Weis was booted by the Chiefs and became new University of
Florida head coach Will Muschamp’s playcaller.
Musschamp lasted four years with the Gators, going 7-6, 11-2, 4-8 and 6-5.
Weis got head coaching job at Kansas, bottom-feeder in the Big 12 forever
(Jayhawks are a power in basketball; football is a boring pastime for Kansas fans),
in 2012. After one year at Florida.
He went 1-11, 3-9, par for the course in Kansas football, and was fired 4
games into the 2014 season even though he ended Kansas’ Big 12 conference
losing streak at 27 games by beating my alma mater, West Virginia, in November
2013.
Michael-Michael (co-hosts Holley and Smith) rowed the controversy boat
ashore, maybe to the tune of the African-American slaves referring to Michael
the Archangel trying to escape Union Navy during the Civil War on St. Helena
Island in South Carolina after being abandoned by their plantation owners.
But the two Michaels didn’t create the controversy. They just interviewed
former Bengals QB Carson Palmer who took cheap whacks of his paddles at Bengals
QB Joe Burrows and his Bengals.
Palmer said Burrows would be waving goodbye to the Bengals soon because
Burrows doesn’t think the Bengals give him a long-term chance at a Super Bowl
ring.
Burrows would have had his Super Bowl ring Sunday but the game ran 85
seconds too long and Rams QB Matthew Stafford’s 1-yard TD pass to Cooper Kupp
turned a 20-16 Cincinnati lead into a heart-wrenching 23-20 loss.
Maybe Michael-Michael should get Burrows on their TV show and ask him
patient he’ll be with Bengals management. After all, Paul Brown is only a
legend up in the Heaven Hall of Fame.
And eight months ago sportswriter Grayson Freestone who covers the
Atlanta Falcons ripped into Michael Holley for saying Julio Jones is “terrible.”
And that there’s friction between Arthur Blank and Jones and that Julio thinks
Matt Ryan has lost a little “zing” on the ball.
Freestone called Holley’s comments
“awkward and laughable” and “it almost looks like he is making it up on the
spot.”
Last September Julio Jones was
traded to the Tennessee Titans after 10 years with the Falcons.
Michael is no one to mess with. He
was part of the crew that won the BJ another Pulitzer with his contributin to “A
Question of Color” in 1994.
His book, “Patriot
Reign: Bill Belichick, the Coaches, and the Players Who Built a Champion” made the
New York Times best-seller list.
And
his reported net worth of $4 million didn’t happen by accident.
Surely by now most intelligent
people in the NFL would know that it’s not wise to risk the Holley-gram Jinx by
taking on Michael.
Or he’ll row their boat offshore and
sink it!
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