Sunday, December 31, 2023

The Windmills of My Mind

On November 28, 1977, when I was approaching my 8th birthday, The Muppet Show aired a sketch in which a character began by saying that on the outside, he was very calm, but on the inside...

An edit suggests we're entering his mind, and he starts singing "The Windmills of Your Mind." In its original form, it is a slow tune by French composer Michel Legrand, with French lyrics by Eddy Marnay. It was given English lyrics by the husband & wife team of Alan & Marilyn Bergman. It was sung by Noel Harrison over the opening credits of the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair. It won the Academy Award for Best Original Song. Dusty Springfield had a hit single with it.

But on The Muppet Show, this character appears to be running from left to right across the screen, with three feet forming a pinwheel off one leg, and as he runs faster, he sings the song faster, until he crashes into a windmill. This dovetails with the idea of the "the windmills of your mind" being a metaphor for Miguel de Cervantes' character Don Quixote charging at windmills, thinking they're giants.

And we jump back to him sitting in his chair in his living room, where he's shaking with fear, and saying, "But on the outside, I'm very calm." And then he screams, jumps out of his chair, and runs.

That made a big impression on me as a kid. It was about 40 years before I learned that the character had a name: "Screaming Thing." And it was about 20 years before I heard the song in its proper context, and could take it seriously -- not just as an expression of sadness and loss, but, perhaps, as a form of... not necessarily mental illness, but of not being able to concentrate on things that really matter.

Because that's the way my mind works. This is what it's like. I'm on a bus to New York. We go into the Lincoln Tunnel. That makes me think of Abe Lincoln. That makes me think of his Gettysburg Address. Which begins with the words, "Four score and seven years ago." Which makes me ask myself, "Why couldn't he just say 87 years?"

Which reminds me that I graduated from East Brunswick High School in '87. Which reminds me that, in many ways, 1987 was a good year. Which makes me think, "You know, I haven't seen a Goodyear Blimp in a long time." Which makes me think, "I haven't seen a Blimpie store in a long time."

Which makes me ask myself, "Are Blimpie still in business?" So I think, "Subway may have driven them out of business. Subway is lousy. I'd rather be stuck on the subway. Hey, we just came out of the Tunnel. Which means I'll be on the subway in ten minutes." And so on, and so on, and so on.

(Yes, Blimpie is still in business. But only one is in New York City, and only 18 are in New Jersey, where it debuted, in Hoboken in 1964. And that original Hoboken location is now closed.)

When I was boy, we didn't have terms like "attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder," or "neurodivergent." Football star-turned-broadcaster Terry Bradshaw said in his memoir that, when he was a boy, the name for it was, "Aw, that's just Terry." In my case, they called it, "What is wrong with you?"

And because they treated it as something wrong, not merely something different, it wasn't just that they didn't know how to handle it, they chose to not handle it. They kept telling me I was smart, but because I couldn't think like they could, like "a normal person," they treated me like garbage.

The shock isn't that someone as smart as I was, but as affected as I was, turned out the way I did; it's that I turned out even that well. Had I been born 20 or so years earlier, as Bradshaw was, but, as I was, without his massive athletic talent allowing me (pardon the choice of words) a pass in society, I'd probably have ended up in Bellevue, or someplace like it. As was said by the member of the Jets gang pretending to be the psychiatrist in West Side Story, "Society's played him a terrible trick," and "This child does not need to have his head shrunken at all."

(It also took many years to find out that "social disease" meant "venereal disease.")

But it explains everything. It explains why I became a sports fan: I didn't fit in with people on a regular basis, so I found something in common, where being a little off-kilter was, if not "normal," then, at least, "the usual." It explains why I got into science fiction: The search for a better world, a better life, which brought me into contact with many other people who were similar. (Although I've never really gotten into the fantasy genre, though I understand the appeal.)

So, here I am, 54 years old, a mostly-functioning person in modern society, with more control over thoughts than ever before, and with enough perspective to know that a minor slight is no big deal, and even one bad day is not the end of the world.

On the other hand, I live in the New York Tri-State Area. And I'm on high blood pressure medication. And we're entering a Presidential election year. And, regardless of the result, it will be the most stressful Presidential election of all time.

I don't know if I could have handled this situation when I was younger. I can probably handle it now. Probably...

What I'm saying is... On the outside, I'm very calm.

At any rate, Happy New Year.

*

Days until the next Arsenal match: 7, a week from today, at 11:30 AM New York Eastern Time, home to Liverpool F.C., in the 3rd Round of the FA Cup. Given the history of the games between the teams, including 3 FA Cup Finals (Arsenal winning in 1950 and 1971, Liverpool in 2001), it should not be this early in the tournament. On the other hand, they played each other in the 4th Round in 2014, and Arsenal went on to win the Cup. So, who knows.

Days until the Iowa Caucuses: 15, on Monday, January 15, 2024. That's right: Just a little over 2 weeks until the Republican Party officially starts to fall all over itself for Donald Trump for the 3rd time.

Days until the next game of the U.S. National Soccer Team: 20, on January 20, 2024, at 3:00 PM, an international friendly, home to Slovenia, at Toyota Field in San Antonio, home of 2nd-tier team San Antonio F.C.

Days until the New Hampshire Primary: 23, on Tuesday, February 23, 2024.

Days until the New Jersey Devils again play a local rival: 48, on Saturday, February 17, 2024, at 8:00 PM, away to the Philadelphia Flyers.

Days until the next New York Red Bulls game: 56, on Sunday, February 25, 2024, at 5:00 PM Eastern Time, away to Nashville SC. This is the season opener. Exactly 8 weeks.

Days until Donald Trump's federal election trial begins: 64, on Monday, March 4, 2024. If we're lucky, he'll be convicted before the Republican Convention, and the Republican Party will do the right thing, and drop his fat fascist ass.

Days until the Yankees' season opener: 88, on Thursday, March 28, 2024, time TBA, away to the Houston Astros. Under 3 months.

Days until the Yankees' home opener: 96, on Friday, April 5, 2024, 1:05 PM, vs. those pesky Toronto Blue Jays. Unusually, the Yankees do not have the day after the home opener off, in case of rainout.

Days until the next North London Derby: 118, on Saturday, April 27, 2024, at 10:00 AM New York time, at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The game will almost certainly be rescheduled, to a different time, maybe to a different day, for the purpose of TV ratings. But it will still be that weekend. Under 4 months.

Days until the Red Bulls again play a nearby rival: 132, on Saturday, May 11, 2024, at 7:30 PM, home to the New England Revolution.

Days until the Yankees' next series against the Boston Red Sox begins: 166, on Friday night, June 14, 2024, at Fenway Park. Under 6 months.

Days until the next Summer Olympic Games: 208, on Friday, July 26, 2024, in Paris, France. Under 7 months.

Days until the next Rutgers University football game: 244, on Saturday, August 31, 2024, at 12:00 Noon, home to Howard University. Just 8 months.

Days until the next East Brunswick High School football game: Unknown, as the schedule hasn't been released yet. If it goes as usual, starting on the 1st Friday in September at 7:00 PM, that will be on September 6, 2024. That's 250 days, or a little over 8 months.

Days until the next East Brunswick-Old Bridge game: Unknown. If the 2024 game is played in the same week of the year as was the 2023 game, a close 30-28 loss, it will be on Friday, September 20, at 7:00 PM, away, at Vince Lombardi Field. That would be 264 days. A little under 9 months.

Days until the next Presidential election: 310, on Tuesday, November 5, 2024. A little under a year, or a little over 10 months.

Days until the next elections for Governor of New Jersey and Mayor of New York City: 674, on Tuesday, November 4, 2025. A little under 2 years, or a little over 22 months.

Days until the next Rutgers-Penn State football game: Unknown. With the expansion of the Big Ten Conference for the 2024 season, these 2 schools will not play each other in 2024. They are set to play each other in 2025, but a date has not been set. Since Rutgers entered the Big 10 in 2014, the Penn State game has usually been on the 3rd or 4th Saturday in November. If that holds true, then it will be on November 22, 2025, at 12:00 Noon, in Piscataway, at what's currently named SHI Stadium. (The naming rights could well be sold to someone else by then.) If that turns out to be when it's played, that's 692 days.

Days until the next Winter Olympics open in Milan, Italy: 768, on Friday, February 6, 2026. A little over 2 years, or a little over 25 months.

Days until the next World Cup opens: 890, on Monday, June 8, 2026. Under 2 1/2 years, or a little over 29 months.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

MLS Teams Ranked by Facebook Likes -- 2023 Edition

Number 1 is obvious, because of Lionel Messi. Never mind that they haven't won anything yet, with him or without him. Okay, they won the 2023 Leagues Cup, but that's like an English team winning the Football League Cup. Big fat hairy deal.

1. Inter Miami, 5.2 million
2. Los Angeles Galaxy, 2.6M
3. New York City FC, 2.2M
4. New York Red Bulls, 966 thousand
5. Los Angeles FC, 798K
6. Seattle Sounders, 784K
7. Orlando City, 597K
8. Atlanta United, 456K
9. FC Dallas, 407K
10. CF Montreal (formerly the Montreal Impact), 392K
11. Toronto FC, 383K
12. Chicago Fire, 370K
13. Sporting Kansas City, 345K
14. D.C. United, 340K
15. Houston Dynamo, 337K
16. Portland Timbers, 308K
17. Vancouver Whitecaps, 278K
18. Minnesota United, 268K
19. Columbus Crew, 261K
20. Real Salt Lake, 247K
21. Philadelphia Union, 236K
22. San Jose Earthquakes, 235K
23. Colorado Rapids, 227K
24. St. Louis City, 217K
25. New England Revolution, 211K
26. FC Cincinnati, 147K
27. Nashville SC, 109K
28. Austin FC, 93K
29. Charlotte FC, 75K

NHL Teams Ranked by Facebook Likes -- 2023 Edition

I'm only slightly surprised by the top 10: I figured both the ancients of Canada, the Habs and the Leafs, would have a lot more than that. Still, it's no surprise that the top 7 are Sidney Crosby's team and the entire "Original Six."

1. Chicago Blackhawks, 2.5 million (Overall, Western Conference & Central Division Leader)
2. Boston Bruins, 2M (Eastern Conference & Atlantic Division Leader)
3. Detroit Red Wings, 1.8M
4. Pittsburgh Penguins, 1.8M (Metropolitan Division Leader)
5. Montreal Canadiens, 1.5M
6. New York Rangers, 1.4M
7. Toronto Maple Leafs, 1.3M
8. Philadelphia Flyers, 1M
9. Vancouver Canucks, 942 thousand (Pacific Division Leader)
10. Los Angeles Kings, 884K
11. San Jose Sharks, 855K
12. Washington Capitals, 787K
13. St. Louis Blues, 756K
14. Colorado Avalanche, 752K
15. Minnesota Wild, 638K
16. Edmonton Oilers, 623K
17. Tampa Bay Lightning, 606K
18. Buffalo Sabres, 489K
19. New Jersey Devils, 462K
20. Dallas Stars, 484K
21. Nashville Predators, 413K
22. Vegas Golden Knights, 412K
23. Anaheim Ducks, 399K
24. Winnipeg Jets, 397K
25. Calgary Flames, 384K
26. Columbus Blue Jackets, 325K
27. Ottawa Senators, 320K
28. Carolina Hurricanes, 316K
29. New York Islanders, 312K
30. Arizona Coyotes, 298K
31. Florida Panthers, 224K
32. Seattle Kraken, 206K

For shame, Islander fans!

NFL Teams Ranked By Facebook Likes -- 2023 Edition

Not a lot of surprise here, including the fact that the NFL's teams generally -- the Lakers being an exception -- have a lot more fans on the average than the NBA's and the NHL's. Although I thought both "New York City teams," the one remaining New York State team (the Bills), the Commanders and the 49ers would be higher. And it does bother me that the top team in each Conference is its most disgusting.

1. Dallas Cowboys, 8 million (Overall, NFC & NFC East Leader)
2. New England Patriots, 6.3M (AFC & AFC East Leader)
3. Pittsburgh Steelers, 5.9M (AFC North Leader)
4. Green Bay Packers, 4.8M (NFC North Leader)
5. San Francisco 49ers, 3.9M (NFC West Leader)
6. Philadelphia Eagles, 3.7M
7. New Orleans Saints, 3.7M (NFC South Leader)
8. Denver Broncos, 3.7M (AFC West Leader)
9. Chicago Bears, 3.6M
10. New York Giants, 3.5M
11. Seattle Seahawks, 3.5M
12. Las Vegas Raiders, 3.2M
13. Baltimore Ravens, 2.2M
14. Kansas City Chiefs, 2.2M
15. Carolina Panthers, 2.1M
16. Miami Dolphins, 2.1M
17. Minnesota Vikings, 2M
18. Houston Texans, 2M
19. Atlanta Falcons, 1.9M
20. Indianapolis Colts, 1.9M (AFC South Leader)
21. Washington Commanders, 1.7M
22. Detroit Lions, 1.8M
23. New York Jets, 1.7M
24. Los Angeles Chargers, 1.4M
25. Arizona Cardinals, 1.3M
26. Cincinnati Bengals, 1.3M
27. Cleveland Browns, 1.3M
28. Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 1.2M
29. Buffalo Bills, 1.1M
30. Tennessee Titans, 1M
31. Los Angeles Rams, 983 thousand
32. Jacksonville Jaguars, 674K

For comparison's sake, here's the Canadian Football League:

1. Edmonton Elks (formerly Eskimos), 330K
2. Saskatchewan Roughriders (Regina), 262K
3. Montreal Alouettes, 210K
4. Winnipeg Blue Bombers, 164K
5. BC Lions (Vancouver), 149K
6. Calgary Stampeders, 109K
7. Hamilton Tiger-Cats, 106K
8. Toronto Argonauts, 66K
9. Ottawa Redblacks, 55K

For the CFL's all-time winningest franchise, in Canada's biggest city, that is a disgrace.

NBA Teams Ranked by Facebook Likes -- 2023 Edition

Not at all surprised by the top 6. Slightly surprised by the one at 30. I really thought the Knicks, 76ers and (despite their current record losing streak) the Pistons would be higher.

1. Los Angeles Lakers, 22 million (Overall, Western Conference & Pacific Division Leader)
2. Chicago Bulls, 16M (Eastern Conference & Central Division Leader)
3. Houston Rockets, 15M (Southwest Division Leader)
4. Miami Heat, 14M (Southeast Division Leader)
5. Golden State Warriors, 15M
6. Boston Celtics, 8.6M (Atlantic Division Leader)
7. Cleveland Cavaliers, 7.7M
8. Sacramento Kings, 7.3M
9. San Antonio Spurs, 6.6M
10. Oklahoma City Thunder, 6.1M (Northwest Division Leader)
11. New York Knicks, 5.4M
12. Washington Wizards, 4.9M
13. Dallas Mavericks, 4.4M
14. Los Angeles Clippers, 3.9M
15. Utah Jazz, 3.1M
16. Brooklyn Nets, 3.1M
17. Indiana Pacers, 3.1M
18. Orlando Magic, 2.6M
19. Milwaukee Bucks, 2.6M
20. Toronto Raptors, 2.5M
21. Portland Trail Blazers, 2.4M
22. Denver Nuggets, 2.2M
23. Phoenix Suns, 2.1M
24. Memphis Grizzlies, 2M
25. Detroit Pistons, 1.9M
26. New Orleans Pelicans, 1.8M
27. Philadelphia 76ers, 1.8M
28. Minnesota Timberwolves, 1.8M
29. Charlotte Hornets, 1.7M
30. Atlanta Hawks, 1.6M

MLB Teams Ranked by Facebook Likes -- 2023 Edition

No surprise about Number 1. Or Number 2. Or Numbers 3 through 7. Number 10 wouldn't be that high if they hadn't cheated their way to recent success.

I'm a little surprised at how high the Tigers are, and how low the Mets are. But the weaker teams? I thought the Orioles and (due to being the only team left in Canada) the Jays would be higher. And the Nationals won the World Series only 4 years ago. Surely, they should be higher.

This means the only teams with more than the Yankees are the Dallas Cowboys; and 6 NBA teams: The Lakers, the Bulls, the Rockets, the Heat, the Warriors and the Celtics.

1. New York Yankees, 7.9 million (Overall, AL & AL East Leader)
2. Boston Red Sox, 4.8M (AL Wild Card)
3. Los Angeles Dodgers, 3.4M (NL & NL West Leader)
4. Chicago Cubs, 3.2M (NL Central Leader)
5. San Francisco Giants, 2.7M (NL West Leader)
6. Atlanta Braves, 2.4M (NL Wild Card)
7. St. Louis Cardinals, 2.2M (NL Wild Card)
8. Texas Rangers, 2.2M (AL West Leader)
9. Detroit Tigers, 2.2M (AL Central Leader)
10. Houston Astros, 1.7M (AL Wild Card)
11. Toronto Blue Jays, 1.7M (AL Wild Card)
12. Philadelphia Phillies, 1.6M (NL East Leader)
13. Chicago White Sox, 1.5M (AL Wild Card)
14. New York Mets, 1.5M (NL Wild Card)
15. Los Angeles Angels, 1.3M
16. Cincinnati Reds, 1.2M
17. Cleveland Guardians, 1.2M
18. Kansas City Royals, 1.2M
19. Minnesota Twins, 1.1M
20. Seattle Mariners, 1.1M
21. Baltimore Orioles, 1.1M
22. Pittsburgh Pirates, 1.1M
23. Milwaukee Brewers, 1M
24. Colorado Rockies, 871 thousand
25. San Diego Padres, 868K
26. Arizona Diamondbacks, 794K
27. Tampa Bay Rays, 772K
28. Oakland Athletics, 759K
29. Miami Marlins, 714K
30. Washington Nationals, 711K 

Sunday, December 24, 2023

Problematic Christmas Songs -- 2023 Edition

'Twas the night before Christmas, and all through The Bronx
not a creature was stirring where usually sit throngs.
The Pennants, they fly from the flagpoles with care
in the hope, in the New Year, a new one will be there.
The Yankees are nestled all snug in their beds
while visions of ticker-tape run through their heads.
And I at computer, wearing my Yankee cap
will now make you aware of a worrisome trap.

Problematic Christmas Songs.

Let's start with the biggest Christmas song of all: "Jingle Bells." Guess what: This song has nothing to do with Christmas!

The lyrics make no mention of Christmas. Or Jesus, by any name: Christ, Lord, King, King of Kings, King of Israel, King of the Jews, King of the World, King of Heaven, Prince of Peace, Emmanuel, Holy Child, Teacher, Rabbi, Wonderful Counselor... none of them.

Nor do the lyrics make any mention of presents, or a gathering family, or even Santa Claus and his entourage (Mrs. Claus, reindeer, elves, whoever else he's got up at the North Pole). "Jingle Bells" is about Winter. It has nothing whatsoever to do with Christmas. It could be sung at any time from December 1 through March 31 -- or, if you prefer, from Thanksgiving through Easter. (Or, in Minnesota, even longer than that.)

Then there are the songs that someone (I forget who) once described as "songs Dean Martin liked to sing to get a woman to snuggle up with him by the fireplace." "Winter Wonderland," "Let It Snow," "I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm" and "Marshmallow World."

Now, I'm not gonna rip Dino, or say that these aren't nice songs. But they don't have anything to do with Christmas, either. They're about Winter, not about Christmas. And since we associate Christmas with Winter, regardless of Scripture suggesting that it didn't happen during Winter (not to mention that there's no snow mentioned in any of the Gospels), we associate these songs with Christmas, however erroneously.

One of the Dean Martin fireplace songs (which also doesn't have anything to do with Christmas) that most certainly is not nice, and goes far beyond even naughty, is "Baby, It's Cold Outside." In recent years, due to the #MeToo movement, this one has come under intense scrutiny.

The woman in the song says she has to go, that her mother will worry, that she's got a reputation to protect. And the man she's with keeps telling her that it's cold outside, that there's no cabs to be had, that she should stay. "Well, maybe just half a drink more," she finally relents. (Dean Martin with booze on hand? How out of character... ) And then, just 2 lines later, she asks, "Say, what's in this drink?"

So on the 12th day of Christmas, your true love gave to you... 12 roofies roofing? That's why this is known as "The Date Rape Christmas Song," and it is inappropriate on so many levels. At the very least, it's about a guy working way too hard to seduce a girl, and using Old Man Winter (if not the Christmas season itself) as an excuse.

"Sleigh Ride" is another song like that, although considerably more innocent. The most familiar version is by Johnny Mathis. Johnny is openly gay, and this had been rumored for some time before he came out, but I never believed it until a few too many listens to him sing, "Just hear those sleigh bells jingling, ring-ting-tingling, too... "

Come to think of it, the song also mentions "a Winter fairyland." Johnny's a great singer, even at age 87, making him perhaps the last survivor of the canon of "Classic Christmas Songs." But this song does him no favors.

"Frosty the Snowman" also has nothing to do with Christmas. It was written in 1950, and the lyrics make no mention of the holiday. It wasn't until the 1969 CBS TV special, narrated by an animated Jimmy Durante (as if the great comedian wasn't already quite animated, ah-cha-cha-cha!), that Frosty (voiced by another great comedian, Jackie Vernon) got an official link with Christmas.

And, as a fellow Yankee-themed blogger pointed out, the song begins, "Frosty the Snowman was a happy jolly soul." "Was"? Not "is"? What happened? Is he dead now? As in melted? Or is he just unhappy? Maybe he's only mad that he didn't get any royalties from the song.

Also weird about Frosty: If he's so afraid of heat, why does he have a pipe? And "two eyes made out of coal"? And, as was once pointed out to me, no matter how fat a snowman (and he did kind of resemble the portly Vernon), his walking wouldn't sound like "Thump-ety-thump-thump." He's made of snow, walking on snow. It would sound more like "Swish, swish, swish."

"Winter Wonderland," "Marshmallow World," "Sleigh Ride" and "Frosty the Snowman" appear on the 1963 classic A Christmas Gift for You from Philles Records – better known as The Phil Spector Christmas Album. Talk about problematic: Like many people who achieved greatly, Spector also did some awful things -- in his case, horrific things, and his great art (he called it "The Wall of Sound") cannot overcome that.

Another song on that album is "The Bells of St. Mary's," which is also not about Christmas (the lyrics mention "red leaves," suggesting that it takes place in Autumn). But it was the title song from a 1945 Christmas-themed movie starring Bing Crosby as Father Chuck O’Malley (he'd won an Oscar in the role in the previous year's Going My Way), and Ingrid Bergman as Sister Mary Benedict, the most beautiful nun you'll ever see. (Eat your heart out, Julie Andrews. And the real Maria von Trapp was no looker.)

The album had 13 songs, 5 of which are not Christmas-related. The highlights, in my opinion, are Veronica Bennett (Phil's girlfriend and eventual ex-wife, now usually known as Ronnie Spector) singing "Frawsty the Snowman" in her N'Yawk accent; and Darlene Love belting out the album's one original song, "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)."

Phil demanded an original song for the album, and Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich wrote it, as they wrote (and would continue to write) so many songs he produced. Sonny Bono played percussion on the album, and if you listen closely, you can hear his eventual wife (and eventual ex-wife), Cher, singing backup on "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)."

The rest of these, I’ll do in alphabetical order:

All I Want for Christmas Is You. The newest Christmas classic -- and even this one is now more than a quarter of a century old (1994) -- it seems harmless enough. Indeed, it even seems to have the girl telling her guy to fight the commercialism of Christmas, that she doesn't need the kind of things that Eartha Kitt (and later Madonna) demanded in "Santa Baby."

But it also suggests that what she really needs is a man. So feminists tend to not like this one. To be fair, though, she doesn't say she needs him, only that she wants him -- which opens an entirely different can of worms. The song is rarely sung by a man to a woman, but when it is, it sounds a little stalkerish.

Mariah has had more Number 1 singles on Billboard magazine's Hot 100 chart than any solo performer, 19. (That's 1 more than Elvis Presley. Only The Beatles, with 21, have had more.) "All I Want for Christmas Is You" was not one of them on its original release. It was ineligible for inclusion, because it was not released commercially as a single in any physical format.

A new joke surrounding the song is that one sign of the Christmas season coming earlier and earlier every year is that "Mariah Carey gets thawed out sooner." The idea being that, now past her hitmaking days, she only appears at Christmas to sing this song.

But that's because streaming services have led to the song being "bought" more as Christmas approaches. In its December 21, 2019 issue, Billboard listed "All I Want for Christmas Is You" as Number 1 on its Hot 100, setting a new record for longest time from original release to chart-top: 25 years. It got there again in 2020, 2021, and, now, again in 2022.

Auld Lang Syne. Robert Burns, Scotland's unofficial poet laureate, wrote this song in Scots Gaelic in 1788. Somehow, it got associated with Hogmanay, the Scottish version of New Year's Eve celebrations.

Starting in 1929, Guy Lombardo and his big band, the Royal Canadians, played it just after midnight, first over radio and then on television, on CBS from a major hotel in Midtown Manhattan: The Roosevelt Hotel until 1958, and then from 1959 until 1976 at the Waldorf Astoria. Lombardo died in 1977, but network broadcasts kept doing it, including The Tonight Show on NBC and Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve on ABC (even now, after Clark's own death).

But the song has nothing to do with Christmas. So why do we associate it with December 25 along with December 31/January 1? My guess is because it was used at the end of the 1946 film It's a Wonderful Life. So, blame Frank Capra.

The Christmas Shoes. The idea of this comparatively recent song, recorded in 2000 by Christian group NewSong, is, on the surface heartwarming: One of those, "And that's what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown" moments:

A guy on line at the cash register, having driven himself nuts shopping for Christmas presents, hears a kid tell the cashier he has to get these shoes for his dying mother, so that she can be presentable when she appears before Jesus, and he doesn't have the money for them, so the guy pays for the shoes for the kid. Certainly, a beautiful gesture.

On the other hand, it might be the biggest downer in the history of Christmas songs. This song isn't about life, it's about death. If it was "a real Christmas song," the mom should be so thrilled by such a beautiful gesture, from both son and stranger, that she gets better, and enjoys many more Christmases to come.

And, if it was a Hallmark Christmas movie, the guy wouldn't have shaved for four days, and he'd meet the mom, whose husband, the kid's father, ran off long ago; and, once the mom recovered, they'd get married.

Real life tends to not work that way, but "Christmas miracles" do. Why not sing about that? After all, NewSong, are you Christian in just name, or in deed?

The Christmas Song – better known by its opening line: "Chestnuts Roasting On an Open Fire." Mel Tormé wrote it, and Nat King Cole is its best-known performer. "And so, I'm offering this simple phrase, to kids from 1 to 92... " So, for everyone age 93 and up, you're out of luck? Sorry, Dick Van Dyke. Tough cookies, Old Man Periwinkle.

Deck the Halls. "Don we now our gay apparel." Once, this meant, "Let's all put on some bright clothing to commemorate this festive season." Now, it means, "Sweetheart, even Nicki Minaj wouldn't be caught dead wearing that!"

I've gone on social media and asked a few people with rainbow flag icons in their bio if it's okay to still use the line. So far, all have said it is.

And I'm guessing "Troll the ancient Yuletide carol" means "Please sing an old Christmas song." It could be worse, I suppose: You could be calling a woman "Carol the ancient Yuletide troll!"

Fairytale of New York. Shane MacGowan of The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl sang this duet in 1987, and it is not a song whose lyrics are fit for this post. The short, clean version is that, for the couple in the song, the fairy tale did not come true. Kirsty was killed in a maritime accident in 2000; while Shane, born on Christmas Day 1957, finally had his excesses catch up with him last month.

Feliz Navidad. The only problem I have with this one is that it's incredibly repetitive. It was good of José Feliciano to write a Christmas song that kids whose first language was Spanish can sing, but couldn't he have written a second verse?

He could have made it "Joyeux Noël," for French-speakers, including people in Quebec. He could have dovetailed the Spanish "Prospero año y felicidad" (A prosperous year and felicity/happiness) with the French, "Prosperité en l'an nouvelle" (Prosperity in the new year), which would have rhymed with "Joyeux Noël."

Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer. What a terrible thing to have to think about at Christmastime! As B.J. Hunnicutt taught us on M*A*S*H, "A family's Christmas wreaths ought to be green, not black." On top of that, lemme tell ya somethin': If any reindeer had ever tried to run over my Grandma, she'd have popped him one, and then you'd know how he got the red nose!

The original performers from 1979, Elmo and Patsy Shropshire (then married to each other) dropped a seemingly innocent couplet: "We're so very proud of Grandpa. He's been taking it so well. See him in there, watching football, drinking beer and playing cards with Cousin Mel." Then, in 1985, came the video, and "Cousin Mel" is revealed to be a considerably younger woman, probably named Melissa, Melanie, or Melody. And she might not be a real cousin. Could they have conspired to bump Grandma off for the chance to be together -- and for the insurance money?

Then, in 2000, came an animated TV special based on it. As it turned out, while the evidence suggested that something awful happened to Grandma, she recovered from her incident, but with amnesia, and wandered off. To his credit, Santa finds her, takes her to the North Pole, and takes care of her until her memory comes back. And, yes, Cousin Mel is the villain of this version of the story.

Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas. "Make the Yuletide gay." Yeah, another one of those. Made even more problematic by the fact that the song was introduced by Judy Garland. (In the 1944 film Meet Me In St. Louis.)

Holly Jolly Christmas. The song was written by Johnny Marks, and introduced by Burl Ives in the 1964 TV special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (which was based on another song that Marks wrote). It certainly seems jolly and innocuous enough -- until you get to the line, "Somebody waits for you. Kiss her once for me."

Bump that! If she's waiting for me, I'm kissing her for nobody but myself! It reminds me of George Carlin's rant about the line, "Give her my best." (Said rant is too risqué to discuss in a Christmas-themed post.)

I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus. Dumb Dora is so dumb! (How dumb is she?) She's so dumb, she appears to be unaware that the guy she sees in the Santa suit is actually her father! Or, worse, she appears to be not particularly troubled by the fact that her mother is kissing a man who (she thinks) is not her father. Either way, this is not a very bright kid.

Please, save the "Santa only comes once a year" joke. That, too, is too risqué.

To make matters worse, there's a version of this song sung by... the Jackson 5, back when they were first big. So, that explains Michael Jackson... I wonder if he ever asked a child to sit on his lap.

I'll Be Home For Christmas. "You can count on me," the singer says. But he closes by saying, "I'll be home for Christmas, if only in my dreams." So, can she count on you, or not?

It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas. "Take a look in the five-and-ten." Sadly, there are now very few five-and-ten-cent (or "five-and-dime") stores -- many of which were in chains. Woolworth's, J.J. Newberry's and McCrory's all closed in 2001. Now we have "dollar stores" -- or, as they're known in Britain, "poundshops."

Another line: "There's a tree in the grand hotel, one in the park as well." Well, I should hope there's a lot more than one tree in the park! I know, I know, Perry Como meant that one of the trees in the park was a Christmas tree.

It gets worse: "A pair of hopalong boots and a pistol that shoots is the wish of Barney and Ben. Dolls that will talk and will go for a walk is the hope of Janice and Jen." The gender stereotypes are troubling enough. But putting a gun in a kid's hand is completely irresponsible, especially now, with the Newtown Massacre happening so close to Christmas a few of years ago.

Before Peter Billingsley starred in the 2022 sequel A Christmas Story Christmas, I wondered if I would one day see a version of A Christmas Carol where the Ghost of Christmas Past is a grown-up Ralphie Parker with an eye patch, saying, "See? I actually did shoot my eye out!" 

I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day. Oh, no you don't. Look at all the places that are closed on Christmas. If you need to buy something, you'll have to get it at 7-Eleven or Wawa or someplace like that. And you will have to get things. You think it's easy to shop for everyone you love for one day a year? Multiply that by 365!

It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year. "There'll be scary ghost stories... " Uh, excuse me, Andy Williams, but I think you're getting your holidays mixed up!

True, Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol has ghosts in it, but how old were you when you stopped being scared of those ghosts? Even when I saw my 1st version of it -- the 1962 Mr. Magoo version, when I was about 6 or so, in the 1970s -- I wasn't scared of them.

Last Christmas. First of all, it's by Wham! Second of all... Do I even need a "second of all"? The lyrics certainly suggest that it's the first gay Christmas song: "A face on a lover with a fire in his heart, a man under cover but you tore me apart."

There are "blue Christmas" songs -- "blue" as in sad, not "blue" as in "blue language" -- but this one, even if the "man under cover" is the narrator, not his target, is lame as heck.  And did I mention it's by Wham?

I'm definitely not the only ones who don't like it: Tomas and Hannah Mazzetti, a couple who, in spite of the surname, live in Sweden, hate the song so much, they're raising money to buy the rights to it, so they can prevent it from being played on the radio. According to George Michael's estate, the price is at least $15 million. Sounds like we're stuck with it.

Little Saint Nick. The Beach Boys' contribution to Christmas songs is a guilty pleasure of mine: I'm not a "car guy," but I love how they make Santa's sleigh sound like a hot rod. But they have a little problem with counting: "Haulin' through the snow at a frightenin' speed, with a half a dozen deer, with Rudy to lead." Half a dozen is 6. There's supposed to be 8 -- 9, counting Rudolph. In this song, Big Red is 2 reindeer short.

My Favorite Things. Written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II for the 1959 Broadway musical The Sound of Music, this song wouldn't appear to have anything to do with Christmas. But it's been included on Christmas albums since Jack Jones did it in 1964, a year before the film version starring Julie Andrews as Maria von Trapp. Mary Martin was the first to play the role and sing the song onstage.

The lyrics do make mention of "brown paper packages tied up with strings." That suggests presents, but not necessarily Christmas presents. There's mentions of "sleigh bells" and "snowflakes," which suggests Winter, though not Christmas. And then there's "silver-white Winters that melt into Springs." Again, we're getting away from Christmas, in more ways than one.

Blame Andrews. No, not for the film. In 1961, she sang the song in a Christmas special for The Garry Moore Show on CBS. This was a few months after the avant-garde instrumental version by The John Coltrane Quartet debuted.

Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree. In 1958, Johnny Marks, author of the original "Rudolph" song, tried his hand at writing Christmas songs for the first generation of rock and roll fans. That year, he wrote this song, which became Brenda Lee's 1st hit, at age 13. She became a bigger star, having 2 Number 1 hits in 1960, leading to this song's re-release, and it hit Number 3.

In 2023, this song was brought back, and Billboard has it listed at Number 1 -- setting new records: 65 years from introduction to chart-top, breaking Mariah's record; 63 years between Number 1s for Lee, breaking Cher's record of 24; and, still alive and performing at age 78, she breaks the record for oldest performer with a Number 1 hit, set by Louis Armstrong in 1964, with "Hello, Dolly!" at 62. Musically speaking, this was a Christmas miracle.

But is the song "problematic"? Not really. Marks throws as many seasonal clichés as possible into the lyrics, and includes the first line of "Deck the Halls," which was, of course, already in the public domain in 1958.

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. First, "All of the other reindeer used to laugh and call him names." Reindeer bullies at the North Pole. "Then one foggy Christmas Eve," Rudolph's prominent proboscis saves Christmas. "Then how the reindeer loved him." What a lousy bunch of fur-covered front-runners. I wonder if any of them ever said, "I'm sorry."

Someone who was once a friend and a fellow Yankee-themed blogger (no longer either, both by their choice) liked to once point out that, in the 1964 TV special based on the song, the story gets worse before it gets better: Even Santa himself gets on Rudolph's case – and on that of Donner, who in the story is the lead reindeer on the sleigh and Rudolph's father, for essentially passing on a genetic mutation (of which Donner himself appears to be only a carrier).

This is not one of Santa's better pop-culture representations. But, remember, this story isn't about Santa, it's about Rudolph. And Sam the Snowman (voice of Burl Ives) is giving you his perception of what happened. Sam might be an unreliable narrator.

Also, if you ever hear Dean Martin's version, you might note that both the singer and the subject are known for having a red nose, albeit with very different causes.

Run, Rudolph, Run. (That's the title, while the lyrics say, "Run, run, Rudolph.") The same year that Marks wrote "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree," he cranked out "Run, Rudolph, Run," and gave it to Chuck Berry.

Elvis Presley may have been the 1st rocker to record a Christmas song, with "Blue Christmas" the year before; but it was written in 1948, and was first a hit the next year for country singer Ernest Tubb. Even Elvis' 1957 version hardly sounds like a rock and roll song. In contrast, the Chucker went out of his way to make "Run, Run, Rudolph" sound like a Chuck Berry song, and it works great. That's the (Johnny B.) good news.

The bad news is that the lyrics reinforce gender stereotypes. First, we have Santa asking a boy what he wants for Christmas, and he wants a guitar. No problem there. Then they have Santa asking a girl what she wants, and she wants a doll. In the Ike Age, this didn't raise too many hackles; now, it does.

In 2006, Whitney Wolanin, then just 16 years old, recorded a new version, with the genders reversed: The girl wants the guitar, and the boy wants the doll.

Santa Baby. Ah, the joy of Christmas, where everybody wants something. Usually several somethings. As Kanye West would have said, back when he said nothing more offensive than this, "Now, I ain't sayin' she's a gold digger... "

But this song is also problematic on a practical level. A '54 convertible? Cars were huge in the Fifties. A yacht? A duplex? The ring could fit, the deed to the platinum mine could be folded up, but how exactly is Santa gonna get all that expensive loot into her stocking? He’s magic, the stocking is not! Okay, she does ask Santa to "slip a sable under the tree for me." I just got carried away, thinking Santa is only responsible for the stuff in the stockings.

Then again, considering the 1953 original was by Eartha Kitt, maybe it's a long, slinky nylon stocking. As Bill Maher (on whose former show Politically Incorrect she guested a few times) would say, "Easy, Catwoman!"

To make matters worse, Eartha ended up dying on a Christmas Day, in 2008. James Brown, who recorded an album called Funky Christmas, also died on December 25, 2 years earlier. And the aforementioned Dean Martin died on December 25, 1994.

Santa Claus Is Coming to Town. This is probably the most oft-cited problematic Christmas song, because of the line, "He sees you when you’re sleeping. He knows when you're awake." Uh-oh, this makes Santa sound like something out of a George Orwell novel: "Big Brother is watching you."

Silver Bells. Nothing wrong with this one, as far as I can tell. In fact, it's my favorite secular Christmas song. But there's one version of it that's not... quite... right. I'm sorry, but Wilson Pickett? The Wicked Pickett should not have been recording Christmas songs! It would have been like asking Karen Carpenter to sing "In the Midnight Hour"! (Then again, she did cover "Please Mr. Postman.")

And how neat -- and weird -- was it in December 2010, on Saturday Night Live, to hear Jeff Bridges, not known as a singer (though he and brother Beau did play pianists in The Fabulous Baker Boys), duet on this song with Cookie Monster of Sesame Street?

Simply Having a Wonderful Christmastime. How is it that former Beatle John Lennon, who dared to "Imagine there's no heaven... and no religion, too" – not that he was saying there was no God or Heaven, just asking us to imagine a world where people had "nothing to kill or die for" – wrote such a fantastic Christmas song, "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)"? While his former musical partner, Paul McCartney, one of the world's greatest songwriters and one of its greatest sentimentalists, facing that most sentimental of holidays, wrote such a weak one?

(There's No Place Like) Home for the Holidays. Every place in this country has people trying to get back there for Christmas, because it's "home" to them. I have no issue with that. This song, first done in 1954 by Perry Como, first mentions that the man trying to get home to Pennsylvania (Como's home State), is starting out (or, perhaps, stopping along the way) in Tennessee. No problem there, either.

But then he mentions people going "to Dixie's sunny shore." Even if you're not bothered by this glorification of the South (and I am), it doesn't fit with the whole "Christmas as Winter Wonderland" idea.

Also, when he sings, "From Atlantic to Pacific, gee, the traffic is terrific," whether he realizes it or not, he's using "terrific" in the original sense: Inspiring terror. If you've ever done Christmas shopping in Bergen County, New Jersey, where stores aren't permitted to open on Sundays, on the last Saturday before Christmas, you will understand. Christmas-shopping traffic and Christmas-travel traffic are not "terrific" as in "wonderful" or "jolly."

The Twelve Days of Christmas. The earliest known version of this one was published in 1780. As someone pointed out to me, this is the "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall" of Christmas songs.

First of all, where did your true love get all that stuff? Second of all, where are you going to put it all? I mentioned George Carlin before, but I wonder if he ever incorporated this song into his bit "A Place For My Stuff."

A partridge, 2 doves, 3 hens, 4 calling birds, 6 geese, 7 swans? That's a lot of birds. Think of the mess! Five golden rings? I can see getting one, but 5? One for each finger on the hand? That doesn't make any sense, unless the singer is Elvis, Liberace, or Elton John. Or maybe Pink, or Pauley Perrette in character as Dr. Abby Sciuto of NCIS.

Six geese a-laying? Who uses goose eggs? Maybe one of the geese is "the goose that lays the golden egg." Eight maids a-milking? Maybe she already has 8 cows, but this is not specified in the song. Without cows, the milkmaids will have nothing to do.

Nine ladies dancing, ten lords a-leaping, eleven pipers piping, twelve drummers drumming? I hope they're all rented, because I can't imagine having them around every day, especially if none of them does anything else. Maybe one of the dancing ladies is also one of the milkmaids, and one of the leaping lords is also a piper or a drummer.

Also, what's so special about a partridge, in that it's the centerpiece of the song? I looked it up: In Greek mythology, in a fit of jealous rage, Daedalus threw his nephew Perdix off a hill, and the gods turned him into the bird in question. Hence, a partridge makes his nest in a tree that's not too high off the ground, like a pear tree. In French, the bird is a "perdrix," pronounced "pair-DREE," which may have confused an Englishman.

But that still doesn't explain what any of these varieties of bird has to do with Christmas. The only explanation I can think of for any of them is that a goose is the traditional bird to serve as Christmas dinner in England. After all, you don't need all 6 geese still alive to lay the eggs.

There's also a theory that "five gold rings," which became "five golden rings" in America, was originally "five goldspinks," another name for a five-ringed pheasant. If true, it would explain why 6 of the 1st 7 were game birds common to England, but 1 wasn't: Actually, all 7 were game birds, usable as food; while the 8th gift was the maids a-milking, also providing food; and the last 4 were all entertainers. Also, the "calling birds" may originally have been "colly birds," meaning "coal black."

Up On the House Top. "First comes the stocking of little Will. Oh, just see, what a glorious fill. Give him a hammer and lots of tacks. Also a ball, and a whip that cracks."

Huh? Either the songwriter, Benjamin Hanby in 1864, just threw together a few words that rhyme, without thinking about how they would sound; or Santa has his priorities way out of whack; or little Will is into, uh, things that are too risqué to mention on Christmas. Maybe he's not so little.

We Wish You a Merry Christmas. The 2nd verse begins, "Now, bring us some figgy pudding." Have you ever eaten figgy pudding? Have you ever even seen figgy pudding? Until November 23, 2016, neither had I.

But, that day, on the way down to our Thanksgiving weekend getaway in Ocean City, Maryland, we stopped off in the Philadelphia suburb of Haddonfield, New Jersey. Across the street from the British Chip Shop, producer of fabulous pub food, there is a store owned by the same people, the English Gardener Gift Shop, which sells British- (English, Scottish and Welsh) and Irish-themed items, including products normally available only over there, like Walker's crisps (what we, not they, would call "chips"), Branston pickle (a chutney), and Irn Bru (a Scottish variation on orange soda).

Among the British delicacies they sell is, yes, figgy pudding -- which, like Yorkshire pudding, black pudding, white pudding, plum pudding and even blood pudding, is basically what the British call a fruitcake. None of them resemble what we might call chocolate, rice or tapioca pudding.

The 4th and final verse says, "We won't go until we get some." Where is a family that doesn't have any figgy pudding gonna go to get some on Christmas Eve (or Day)? If there's a Jewish deli open (which once saved my mother when she needed wild rice for Christmas dinner), something tells me they're not going to have figgy pudding, either. Is it even Kosher?

What's more, the person being sung to could easily say, "This is my house, and when I say you go, you go. Don't make me break out my Ralphie Red Ryder BB gun."

*

Even the songs that are about the original Christmas – the Christ Mass – don't always make sense. Again, I'll do these in alphabetical order.

Do You Hear What I Hear? Ignore for a moment that "Do you hear what I hear?" is from the 2nd verse, thus the title should be "Do You See What I See?" Ignore also, as previously stated, the likelihood (based on Scripture itself) that Jesus was not born in Winter, on December 25 or otherwise.

In the 3rd verse, the shepherd boy says, "In your palace warm, mighty king, do you know what I know? A child, a child shivers in the cold. Let us bring him silver and gold." This is the Christmas song that gets my mother upset: She points out that, if the child is shivering in the cold, forget the precious metals, bring him (and his parents) something more precious: Blankets. One would think that the shepherd boy, himself almost certainly poor, would figure that out.

And how did the boy get into the king's palace, anyway? Not that I want to take the king's side against a poor shepherd boy, but I would like to know. Maybe, like King David started out as, the boy was a crafty little shepherd who found a way around a seemingly impossible situation.

God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen and...

Good Christian Men, Rejoice. Should these songs be gender-neutral? It's hard to do it for the former, unless you (or, should I say, "ye") want to make it, in the song's rhythm, "God rest ye merry gentlefolk" or "God rest ye merry Chris-ti-ans."

As for the latter, some have tried to make it "Good Christian Friends, Rejoice." It's fairer, but it just... doesn't... sound right. A similar effort is occasionally made to change a lyric in the Canadian national anthem, "O Canada": "True patriot love in all thy sons command" becomes "...in all of us command."

Good King Wenceslas. This song, while certainly telling of genuine Christian behavior on the part of its subject, has nothing to do with Christmas. In fact, it takes place the next day: December 26, in addition to Boxing Day in the British Commonwealth, is St. Stephen's Day, the anniversary of the death of an early Christian martyr, and thus his "feast day" -- hence, "Good King Wenceslas looked out on the feast of Stephen."

There was a real Wenceslas, not quite a king, but Duke of Bohemia, born 907, died 935, assassinated by his brother (and, judging by his nickname, his total opposite), Boleslav the Cruel. And Wenceslas, too, has been declared a Saint, and is the patron saint of Bohemia, which is now in the Czech Republic.

Joy to the World. With a melody written by George Frideric Handel, there isn't much wrong with this one. But it shares a title with a song that country singer Hoyt Axton wrote, and which the band Three Dog Night took to Number 1 in 1971. Axton has died, but just about everybody from 3DN is still alive. I'd like to hear them sing the carol of the same title, just for the novelty.

The Little Drummer Boy. "The ox and ass kept time." Sometimes it's sung as, "The ox and lamb kept time," in case you don’t want to use the word "ass" around kids, even to mean "donkey."

You know, call me a relic, call me what you will, say I'm old-fashioned, say I’m over the hill... but the drummer is the one who's supposed to keep time! Why does the little drummer boy need the ox and ass (or lamb) to do it for him? I know, he's just a kid, and he's certainly not responsible for the lyric, he's just telling the story. But this is another dumb one.

O Little Town of Bethlehem. "The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight." Oh, really? Doesn't the Gospel have the angel saying to the shepherds, "Fear not"? Maybe the fears of all the years are dispelled in Bethlehem, but the point (or part of it) was that, with the birth of this child, there was less to fear.

Silent Night. The entire song suggests that it was quiet and peaceful. But the Gospels make no mention of whether Mary screamed over labor pains, or whether baby Jesus cried. The Rosary Prayer, the "Hail Mary," states, "Blessed art thou amongst women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb" -- suggesting that both "yon virgin mother and child" may have been granted holy exemptions to the usual pains each would suffer at birth.

We Three Kings. "Star of wonder, star of night." Great phrase, but there are no "stars of day." Yes, there is such a thing as "the morning star," but that's usually the planet Venus. There are people who believe that the Star of Bethlehem could only have been a "conjunction" of at least two planets (probably Venus and either Mars or Jupiter), looking like one big, very bright star. And, at the time of the birth of Christ, it might not have been known that these planets which looked like stars weren't actually stars. Even a king might not have known that. It's also been suggested that it was a particularly bright comet.

Ah, but the "three kings" were never actually called kings in the Gospels. They were, however, called "wise men" in The Gospel of Matthew, Chapter 2. But even their number isn't divulged: It's presumed that there were 3, since there were 3 gifts that they presented: Gold, frankincense and myrrh. One man, one gift? That seems reasonable, but neither the Gospel nor the song specifically says that.

They have often been called scientists, astronomers or astrologers. If they were any of those things, and the Star of Bethlehem was a planetary conjunction, or a comet, then they would have known that. But, as far as modern humanity knows, none of them wrote their observations down. We don't even know their names, although modern retellings of the First Christmas story have assigned them names, which may or may not be historically plausible.

One of those modern retellings is Amahl and the Night Visitors, the 1st ever composed specifically for television, by Gian Carlo Menotti, airing on NBC on December 24, 1951. It was the premiere of the series Hallmark Hall of Fame -- and, at just 45 minutes, was the first "Hallmark Christmas Movie."

*

Oh well. Regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, economic status, gender, your partner's gender, politics or even what teams you root for... for discrimination is the biggest humbug of them all...

May your days be merry and bright. Be good, for goodness' sake. God bless us, every one. Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night. Sleep in heavenly peace.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

December 19, 1948: The Snow Bowl in Philadelphia

15: Steve Van Buren of the Eagles. 67: Corwin Clatt of the Cardinals.
76: Bucko Kilroy of the Eagles. 24: Red Cochran of the Cardinals.

December 19, 1948, 75 years ago: The snowiest game in football history was played. The timing couldn't have been worse: It was the day of the NFL Championship Game.

It was a rematch of the previous season's title game: The Philadelphia Eagles won the NFL Eastern Division, while the Chicago Cardinals won the Western Division. The year before, since it was an odd-numbered year, the Western Champion hosted, and the Cardinals won, 28-21 at Comiskey Park in Chicago.

Both teams were arguably better than they were the season before. Coached by former pro quarterback Jimmy Conzelman, the Cardinals had improved from 9-3 to 11-1, their lone loss being in Week 2, 28-17 at home to the crosstown Bears.

They achieved this with their "Dream Backfield" of quarterback Paul Christman, halfbacks Charley Trippi and Elmer Angsman, and fullbacks Marshall Goldberg and Pat Harder. Christman was injured, and replaced at quarterback by Ray Mallouf. And Goldberg was limited to defensive duty. But each of the others had a better season, statistically speaking, in '48 than he did in '47.

The Cardinals achieved this despite losing two-way tackle Stan Mauldin in their opening game, a 21-14 win over the Eagles at Comiskey. Mauldin, a 28-year-old Texan, was starting his 3rd season in the NFL, when he had a heart attack during the game, and died. The Cardinals retired his Number 77.

Coached by Earle "Greasy" Neale, who had played in both the NFL and what would later be called Major League Baseball, the Eagles went 8-4 in 1947, and improved to 9-2-1 in '48. They followed their opening loss to the Cardinals with a 28-28 tie away to the Los Angeles Rams, then won 8 straight before dropping a 37-14 decision to the Boston Yanks (yes, a team with that name actually existed) at Fenway Park -- just 3 weeks after beating them 45-0 at home at Shibe Park.

They were led by NFL rushing champion Steve Van Buren, end Pete Pihos, and quarterback Tommy Thompson. They also had two-way tackle Frank "Bucko" Kilroy, who may have been the dirtiest player ever. He even took cheap shots at his teammates in practice. Chuck Bednarik, the Hall of Fame center-linebacker who joined the Eagles the next season, was one of the toughest, hardest-hitting players in the game's history, but was so offended by Kilroy that he later said he wouldn't even speak to him off the field.

The Cardinals were listed as 3 1/2-point favorites for the Championship Game, until a weather forecast suggested rain or snow for game day, and bookmakers stopped taking bets. Conzelman said, "We are a tired club that has been going at top speed since July. The Eagles have been able to coast for the last couple of weeks, and they will have the advantage of playing on their home grounds, which should be worth one touchdown, at least. Statistics lean to them, too, and I just can't see how we have been installed as favorites."

Neale was not predicting victory, either: "I believe we are as strong as the Cardinals, along the ground and in the air. The weather might force the breaks."

ABC, which had just started in the television business that year, and had only been founded as a radio network in 1943, made this the 1st NFL Championship Game to be televised, but only their Northeastern affiliates would see it, including WJZ-Channel 7 in New York and WFIL-Channel 6 in Philadelphia. (WJZ would become WABC in 1953. The WJZ call letters would be given to Channel 13 in Baltimore. WFIL would become WPVI in 1971.) Harry Wismer was the play-by-play announcer, and would later be the disastrous 1st owner of the team that became the New York Jets. His color commentator was one of the greatest players of all time, Red Grange.

If home-field advantage made a difference, then the Eagles were glad that they would be hosting this time, at Shibe Park, which they shared with baseball's Athletics from 1944 to 1954, and with baseball's Phillies from 1944 to 1957. (The ballpark was renamed Connie Mack Stadium in 1953.) A total of 36,309 people paid for tickets.
$5.25 in 1948 = roughly $66.47 in 2023.
A very fair price, given regular-season ticket prices
in today's NFL.

But it started snowing at 7:00 AM, and by 12:00 Noon, there were 10 inches of snow on the field. The temperature was 27 degrees, not as cold as the year before, but the snow was going to be an issue. Neale remembered how the field at Comiskey was frozen the year before, and wanted to postpone the game.

Fortunately, the Commissioner of the NFL was Bert Bell, who had been the founding owner of the Eagles in 1933, and still kept the NFL's offices in Philadelphia. (His successor, Pete Rozelle, moved them to New York in 1960.) Fortunately, Bell was willing to listen to both Neale and Conzelman.

Neale said it was foolish to work for a championship all season long, only to have it decided partly by the weather. But he was sporting enough to say that, if the Cardinals insisted on playing, the Eagles would play.

Conzelman said his team was ready, and made the point that the conditions would be the same for both sides. After all, both teams were used to cold weather in their hometowns. But no NFL team had ever played in this much snow.

Bell was born and raised in Philadelphia. He had played quarterback in the city at the University of Pennsylvania. He had founded and coached the Eagles. But he had to be impartial. He thought of the people who had taken the trouble to get to the game: The fans, the stadium workers, and the broadcasters. He said the game would go on. Neale told his players, "Can you believe it? They want to play. Let's go beat the hell out of them."

Two concessions were made. The game was supposed to start at 1:30 PM, but kickoff was pushed back to 2:00, to give the maintenance crew time to clear the field and the seats of snow. And the lights were turned on.

(Shibe Park was the 1st ballpark in the American League with lights. Interestingly, the next time the Eagles hosted the Championship Game, it was at Penn's Franklin Field, which didn't have lights, and still doesn't, so, to account for overtime and to keep it out of darkness, the starting time was moved up, from 1:00 PM to 12:00 noon.)

When the grounds crew pulled the tarp off the field, they discovered that the chalk used to mark the yard lines had stuck to the tarp. In those days, every NFL game had 5 officials: A referee, an umpire, a head linesman, a back judge and a field judge, plus 3 alternates on hand in case of emergency. (The back judge had been added only in 1947. The line judge was instituted in 1965, and the side judge in 1978.) For the 1st time in NFL history, all 3 alternates were called into service. Bell talked Neale and Conzelman into not questioning referee Ron Gibbs on matters of down and distance.

As if all this wasn't enough, with an hour to go -- before the originally-scheduled 1:30 kickoff, that is -- Steve Van Buren still wasn't inside Shibe Park. He woke up that morning, saw the snow, guessed that the game would be postponed, and went back to sleep.

An hour later, he was awakened by a phone call. It was Neale, telling him the game was on. But he couldn't get his car out of his driveway. He took a bus, a trolley, and finally the Broad Street Line subway to Lehigh Avenue, and walked the last 7 blocks (through the snow, mind you) to 21st Street and the ballpark. He got there a little after 1:00.

There were 28,864 clicks of the turnstile, suggesting that 7,445 people had tickets but didn't go because of the weather.

Just after 2:00, the game began. In the 1st quarter, on the Eagles' 35-yard line, defying the still-falling snow, Thompson threw a bomb that Jack Ferrante caught at the Cardinal 20. He went down, but, since he hadn't been touched, he was allowed to get up again, and keep going, and he crossed the goal line. Touchdown.

No, not a touchdown. Ferrante recalled: "The play was called back because of an offside penalty. I was really steaming about that. I went up to the ref and said, 'Who the hell was offside?' You know, I was really going to line out the guy that cost us the six points. The ref said, 'You.' That shut me up!"

Later in the 1st quarter, the Eagles threatened again, but not much. Cliff Patton attempted a 44-yard field goal. On that playing surface, in that weather, from that distance, a field goal attempt was folly, and it was missed. The Cardinals got close enough for Harder to attempt a field goal from 37 yards. It had the distance, but it was wide left.

Early in the 2nd quarter, the Eagles got to the Cardinals' 5-yard line, but Chicago's defense held. Patton had a much closer field goal attempt, but he missed that one, too. The Cardinals drove to the Philadelphia 39 as the half wound down, but could get no closer. It was still 0-0.

With the choice for the 2nd half, the Cardinals chose to have the wind at their backs for the 4th quarter, in case the game came down to a field goal (or perhaps a mishandled long punt), and kicked off. The Eagles drove, but Van Buren fumbled and Goldberg recovered. The Cards drove to the Eagle 31, but on 4th and 2, their "Dream Backfield" failed to get the 1st down.

Near the end of the 3rd quarter, Mallouf fumbled a snap, and Kilroy recovered on the Cardinal 17. As the quarter ended, the Eagles had advanced the ball to the 11. Two plays into the 4th quarter, they got to the 5. The Eagle fans chanted, "Give it to Steve!" (In 2012, Philadelphia-based writer Will Bunch would publish a biography of Van Buren, with Give It to Steve! as the title.) Kilroy and Joe Muha opened a big hole in the Cardinal defensive line, and Van Buren got into the end zone untouched, nonetheless slipping on the snow. Patton kicked the extra point, and the Eagles led, 7-0 with 14:07 left to play.

The Cardinals could do little thereafter. Patton attempted another field goal, from 34 yards out, with 5 minutes to play, but missed. The last Cardinal drive ended in an interception, and the Eagles managed to reach the Cardinal 2 as time expired.

For the 1st time in their 15 seasons, the Philadelphia Eagles were World Champions. It was the 1st NFL Championship for Philadelphia since the 1926 Frankford Yellow Jackets, who folded due to the Great Depression in 1931, which, along with Pennsylvania eliminating the "blue law" that prevented professional sports on Sundays, made the Eagles' 1933 debut possible (and also did the same for the Pittsburgh Steelers).

The Championship Game of the All-America Football Conference was played the same day, in considerably better weather. The Cleveland Browns beat the Buffalo Bills, 49-7 at Cleveland Municipal Stadium. The Browns joined the NFL in 1950. The Bills didn't, and the name would be used on the American Football League team that began play in 1960. That team did join the NFL, in 1970.

The Eagles returned to the NFL Championship Game the next year, and, for the 3rd straight season, were hit by bad weather: First cold, then cold and snow, and now, in 1949, pouring rain. This was odd, because it was in Los Angeles. They beat the Rams for back-to-back titles.

In contrast, the Cardinals didn't reach the Playoffs again until 1974, by which point they were in St. Louis; and didn't reach another NFL Championship Game under any name until Super Bowl XLIII in 2008, by which point they were in Arizona.

From the Eagles: Steve Van Buren, Pete Pihos, Alex Wojciechowicz and coach Greasy Neale would be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. From the Cardinals, Charley Trippi was the only player who would be elected, although coach Jimmy Conzelman also was.

Trippi turned out to be the last living player from the 1947 and 1948 NFL Championship Games. Jack Myers was the last surviving Eagle, living until December 24, 2020. Van Buren lived until 2012, dying just after Bunch's book was published.

Although there have been many colder games in NFL history, the 10 inches of snow has been topped only once: On December 1, 1985, 15 inches fell on Lambeau Field. The Green Bay Packers were used to cold and snow, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were not. The Packers won, 21-0.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Make Umpires Accountable

Ángel Hernández

My grandmother was a fan of the Brooklyn Dodgers from the 1930s until they moved in 1957, and then of the Mets from 1962 until her death in 2006. There were things in baseball that ticked her off. One of these was the umpires "getting too big for their britches." She agreed with the idea that "Nobody ever bought a ticket to see an umpire."

Still, there have been umpires who continue to make bad calls, and not improve themselves, for the simple reason that no one holds them accountable. Bruce Froemming and Joe West may be retired, but Ángel Hernández, C.B. Bucknor and Laz Diaz are still out there. 

I propose new rules for umpires. Make it similar to card accumulation for soccer players:

1. Every 3 calls overturned by instant replay, 1 week's suspension.

2. If that happens twice in one season, the 1st week back, he's in Triple-A before returning to the majors. Call it a "rehab assignment."

3. If it happens 3 times in a year, 5 times in 3 years, or 7 times in 5 years, you're fired.

4. All ball & strike calls will be reviewed next day. If an umpire misses more than 10 percent of the calls in a game, Condition 1 is applied, and included with subsequent offenses.

Here's one that's very important to me:

5. No player may be fined for arguing with an umpire. That's a violation of a player's freedom of speech.

And finally...

6. If an umpire throws a player out of the game, and if it turns out that the player was right and the umpire was wrong, then, before the next game, umpire must apologize to the player over the public address system. After all, he deserves the humiliation.

December 17, 1933: The 1st NFL Championship Game

Hewitt's lateral to Karr

December 17, 1933, 90 years ago: The 1st official NFL Championship Game is played. Appropriately, it's between the League's founding team, the Chicago Bears; and its team in the biggest market, the New York Giants.

There had been controversies for the League title in 1921 and 1925, so having a definitive title game would have helped. In 1932, the Bears and the Portsmouth Spartans (who became the Detroit Lions in 1934) finished tied for first: The Bears were 6-1-6, the Spartans 6-1-4. (At the time, ties were not counted in winning percentage.) So a playoff game was set, and the Bears won it, 9-0.

So, for the 1933 season, the NFL was divided into Eastern and Western Divisions, and the winners were to meet in a Championship Game. The Giants won the East, going 11-3. The Bears won the West, 10-2-1. So the decider was set for Wrigley Field. (Until the Super Bowl began, regardless of which team had the better record, the West winners would host the game in odd-numbered years, and the East winners would do so in even-numbered years.

Coached by Steve Owen, the Giants had some fantastic players: Quarterback Harry Newman, running back Ken Strong, end Ray Flaherty, and the man regarded for decades to come as the best center in NFL history, Mel Hein.

George Halas, one of the co-founders of the NFL, coached the Bears. They had 2 of the defining players of NFL history, speedy halfback Harold "Red" Grange and bruising fullback Bronislau "Bronko" Nagurski. They also had center George Trafton, tackles Link Lyman and George Musso, and end Bill Hewitt, who famously played without a helmet, at a time when that was still allowed, even though everybody knew it was a bad idea. All of them are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Another difference in this new season was a liberalization of the passing rules. The Bears, the 1st NFL team to use the T formation, took advantage of this. The Giants had not done so as much. Nevertheless, when meeting with the officials before the game, Newman told them the Giants would be trying some trick plays, checking to ensure they would be legal.

The game kicked off at 1:45 PM Central Time (2:45 Eastern). It was broadcast on Chicago radio station WGN and a few other stations, but not on a national network. Nor was it broadcast on radio in New York.

Early in the game, the Giants' offensive line shifted, so that Hein was now on the end, and thus an eligible receiver. Hein snapped the ball to Newman, who handed it right back to him, then ran out to fake a run. While the Bears keyed on Newman, Hein took off. By the time the Bears caught on and caught up with him, he had gotten to the Bears' 15-yard line. But Chicago managed to, as their later fight song said "Bear Down," and hold the Giants to a field goal attempt, which the normally reliable Strong missed.

Jack Manders, so reliable he was known as "Automatic Jack," kicked field goals in each of the 1st 2 quarters, and the Bears led 6-0. But just before the half, Newman threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to Badgro, and the Giants went into the locker room up 7-6.

Manders kicked another field goal in the 3rd quarter, but a Giant drive resulted in Max Krause scoring from the 1-yard line, making it 14-9 New York. Finally, late in the quarter, Nagurski, not known as a passer, or as a jumper -- his style was to take the ball, crash into the line, and let the defenders fall where they may -- threw a jump pass to Bill Karr, who ran it in 8 yards for a touchdown, and the Bears led, 16-14.

The Giants had another trick play in them, early in the 4th quarter. Newman took off on a 30-yard run, then lateraled to Strong, who finished the touchdown, and then kicked the extra point. It was 21-16 Giants.

The minutes ticked away, and another Manders field goal would have done the Bears no good. Quarterback Carl Brumbaugh drove them to the Giants' 36 with less than 2 minutes left. He passed to Hewitt, and the Giant defense was ready to tackle him. But pulled the "hook and ladder play": He spun and lateraled to Karr, who took it in for a touchdown. The Bears led, 23-21.

The Giants got the ball back, and there was still time for them to get within Strong's field goal range. They got to their own 40, and again set Hein up as an eligible receiver. Running back Dale Burnett tried an option pass, and Hein was wide open on the Bear 30. But the pass was a bad one, and fell well short.

There was time for one more play. Newman passed to Badgro, who was ready to copy the earlier Hewitt-to-Karr hook and ladder. But this was the era of two-platoon football, where, no matter how big a star you were, you had to play both offense and defense. And there was no bigger star in football than Grange. He immediately figured out what was about to happen, and ran to Badgro, and wrapped his arms around Badgro's arms. Any lateral Badgro made wouldn't go very far. The clock ran out. Halas, eventually the grand old man of football, would later call it the greatest defensive play he ever saw.

The Bears were NFL Champions for the 3rd time, having won it in controversial fashion in 1921, and then definitively in 1932. The Giants had won in 1927, and would get revenge over the Bears in 1934, in the Polo Grounds, in a frigid contest known as The Sneaker Game.

These 2 teams would also meet in the NFL Championship Game in 1941, 1946, 1956 and 1963, with the Giants winning only in 1956. They've since met in the NFC Playoffs in the seasons of 1985, with the Bears winning; and 1990, with the Giants winning; and, each time, it was a good omen, as the winner went on to win the Super Bowl.

In 1981, John Thorn left his comfort zone, baseball, and published Pro Football's 10 Greatest Games. He included this game as the earliest of them.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

December 16, 1973: O.J. 2,000 & Weeb's Farewell

December 16, 1973, 50 years ago: O.J. Simpson sets the NFL's single-season rushing yards record, becoming the 1st player to rush for 2,000 yards in a season.

In 1934, Beattie Feathers of the Chicago Bears became the 1st NFL player to rush for 1,000 yards in a season. His 1,004 yards stood as the record until 1947, when Steve Van Buren of the Philadelphia Eagles raised it to 1,008. In 1949, Van Buren broke his own record, with 1,146.

Jim Brown played 9 seasons in the NFL, 1957 to 1965, all with the Cleveland Browns, and led the League in rushing yards in 8 of them. Jim Taylor of the Green Bay Packers led in 1962. In 1958, Brown broke Van Buren's record by plenty, with 1,527. In 1963, with the schedule having been increased from 12 to 14 games, he raised the record to 1,863. In 2 years, he had increased the record by 33 percent; within 8 years, by 62 percent.

Simpson arrived in professional football in 1969, with the Buffalo Bills, having won the Heisman Trophy the year before and led USC to the National Championship the year before that. But his 1st 3 seasons were a bit of a struggle. In 1972, he rushed for 1,251 yards, leading the NFL, and the most by any player in 7 years, since Brown in his last season.

The Bills began the 1973 season in a new stadium, in the Buffalo suburb of Orchard Park, New York. It was then named Rich Stadium, and is now named Highmark Stadium. Simpson started off as well as anyone could have hoped for, rushing for 250 yards.

This broke the single-game record of 247, then held by Willie Ellison of the Los Angeles Rams in a 1971 game. In 1976, Simpson would raise that record to 273, but it was broken a year later when Walter Payton rushed for 275. Today, the record is 296, set by Adrian Peterson of the Minnesota Vikings in 2007.

Simpson ran for 103 yards in Week 2, 123 in Week 3, 171 in Week 4, and 166 in Week 5. But in Week 6, he was held to 55 yards by the defending Champion Miami Dolphins and their "No-Name Defense." In Week 7, against a Kansas City Chiefs defense that had once been great but was now aging, Simpson ran for 157. That gave him 1,025 for the season, at the halfway mark. Brown's record of 1,863 and even 2,000 now seemed within reach.

Then Simpson went into a slump. He only got 79 yards in Week 8 and 99 in Week 9. He bounced back in Week 10, getting 120. In Week 11, he got 124. In Week 12, he got 137. That got him 1,584. And in Week 15, he got 219. That gave him 1,803. So, in the season's final game, he needed 61 for a new record, and 197 for 2,000.

Fortunately for Simpson and the Bills, they were playing the New York Jets. Unfortunately, it would be at Shea Stadium, in cold air, with snow falling, on a frozen field. But the Bills were used to that kind of weather back home, so it didn't bother them much -- even if Simpson himself was a San Francisco native who'd made his name at USC, in the steady warm weather of Los Angeles, on the pristine grass field at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The result was not really in doubt. The game was 7-7 at the end of the 1st quarter, by which point Simpson had already surpassed Brown's single-season record, needing just 8 carries to do it. The Bills pulled ahead to 21-7 by the half, including a touchdown run by Simpson.

The Bills led 28-7 after 3 quarters, and the final was 34-14. In case you're a Jet fan who is wondering: For the Jets, who finished 4-10, Joe Namath completed 13 out of 30 passes, for 206 yards, 2 touchdowns and no interceptions. But he also got sacked 3 times.

With 5 minutes left, Bills quarterback Joe Ferguson handed off to Simpson, and he ran up the middle, gaining 7 yards. It gave him 200 yards even for the day, and 2,003 yards for the season. The Bills carried him off the field, and a crowd of 47,740, mostly Jet fans, gave him a standing ovation.

This turned out to be the last game as an NFL head coach for the Jets' Wilbur "Weeb" Ewbank. He had led the Baltimore Colts to the NFL Championship in 1958 and '59. It had been only 5 seasons since he and Namath had led the Jets to win the Super Bowl, but it now seemed very far away.
The Bills also became the 1st NFL team to rush for over 3,000 yards in a season. At a postgame press conference, Simpson -- because of his initials, sometimes called "Orange Juice" or just "Juice" -- introduced each member of the offensive line, who called themselves "The Electric Company," because, "We make the Juice flow."

Let the record show that they were: Left tackle Dave Foley, left guard Reggie McKenzie, center Mike Montler, right guard Joe DeLamielleure, and right tackle Donnie Green. DeLamielleure would eventually join Simpson in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. (Montler died in 2018, Green in 2019. Foley, McKenzie and DeLamielleure are still alive.)

The following season, their 1st season with the "charging" buffalo on their helmets instead of the standing one they'd had since their 1960 inception, the Bills made the Playoffs. Although he caught a touchdown pass in the AFC Divisional Playoff, the Bills lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers, in what turned out to be the only Playoff game Simpson ever appeared in.

In a way, Simpson was unlucky: For all his personal success, as a player, an actor, and a commercial pitchman, he arrived in Buffalo just as the Dolphins were becoming the team that would dominate the AFC Eastern Division, which they remained until the mid-1980s, by which point Simpson was in the Hall of Fame, a sideline analyst for NFL games on NBC, and still doing commercials, especially for Hertz Rent-a-Car, sometimes with golf legend Arnold Palmer.

And he was popular. Still good-looking. Charming. For a lot of people, including myself, O.J. Simpson had been a hero for all or most of their lives.

And if he, rather than his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, had died on June 12, 1994, it would have been a shock, but not the greater shock that we all got. Though it's likely that the awful things he had already done by that point would have come out eventually.

The film The Dark Knight featured Aaron Eckhardt as fictional District Attorney Harvey Dent, who said, "You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain." And he went on to prove it.

The film The Sandlot featured Art LaFleur as the ghost of Babe Ruth, saying, "Heroes get remembered, but legends never die."

O.J. Simpson was a hero. He is a legend. But it's worth remembering that not all legends are heroic ones, or have happy endings.

The O.J. 2000 Game remains considerably more memorable than the one in which the record O.J. set was broken, by Eric Dickerson of the Los Angeles Rams. How much more memorable? This much: I had to look up not only the date, but the year that it happened. And I was just short of my 15th birthday at the time, so I remember it having happened, though I wasn't watching as it happened.

It was December 9, 1984: The Rams beat the Houston Oilers, 27-16 at Anaheim Stadium (now Angel Stadium), and, with 215 yards, Dickerson surpassed Simpson, finishing the game with 2,007. There was 1 more week to play, and in the season finale, he ran for 98, finishing the year with 2,105.

This remains the NFL record. In 1985, Herschel Walker ran for 2,411 yards for the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League. But, just as Dickerson needed a 15th game to surpass Simpson (O.J. still holds the record for most rushing yards in the 1st 14 games of a season), Walker played an 18-game season. What's more, the USFL was not highly regarded. Dickerson himself said, "The difference is, I did it in the majors, and he did it in the minors." The next year, Walker came to the NFL, with the Dallas Cowboys. His peak total in the NFL was 1,514 yards, in 1988.

There have now been 8 2,000-yard rushing seasons in NFL history. Since Simpson and Dickerson: Barry Sanders had 2,053 for the 1997 Detroit Lions, Terrell Davis had 2,008 for the 1998 Denver Broncos, Jamal Lewis had 2,006 for the 2003 Baltimore Ravens, Chris Johnson had 2,006 for the 2009 Tennessee Titans, Adrian Peterson had 2,097 for the 2012 Vikings, and Derrick Henry had 2,027 for the 2020 Titans.

Oddly, while Lewis and Peterson would both eventually break (and Peterson still holds) the record for most rushing yards in a game, neither did it in the season in which they rushed for over 2,000 yards. Simpson did (in 1973) -- and didn't (in 1976, when he raised the single-game record).

For comparison's sake: Jim Brown's highest single-game total was 237; Walter Payton, the 1st man to rush for more yards in a game than Simpson (275), and eventually the NFL's all-time rushing leader, topped out at 1,852 yards in a season; and Emmitt Smith, who surpassed Payton and remains the all-time rushing leader, topped out at 237 for a game and 1,773 for a season.