Tuesday, December 30, 2008

ARE BLACK DOGS A DYNASTY?

William "The Refrigerator" Perry, who was the East Nashville coach pre-dynasty, is shown here at the Dog House following a loss in 2004.


ARE BLACK DOGS A DYNASTY?
Opinions vary across the league

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

At the end of the 2004 NFFA season, the founding franchise now located in East Nashville was in shambles. After a poor start, GM-coach Buddy Ryan turned the coaching reigns over to William “The Refrigerator” Perry. Fridge didn’t win many games, but he did run up an enormous tab at various Nashvegas eateries. The Dogs finished 5-9 and missed the league's initial playoff party.

The following season, Ryan brought in Jim McMahon as head coach. Since then, the Black Dogs have compiled an NFFA-best 42-14 regular-season record (26-2 the last two regular seasons), won four straight division titles, made four straight trips to the playoffs, and won two championships. Add to that, a perfect 16-0 record this season, a league record 21-game, regular-season winning streak, and four straight seasons as the league’s highest scoring team, and it looks a lot like a dynasty from here.

“The only Dynasty I remember in Nashville was a Chinese restaurant,” quipped West Nashville owner-coach Boyd X. Biggs when asked if he thought the Black Dogs were a dynasty.

“As Snoop said, they’re like gangstas rolling through kindergarten,” 12th Avenue owner QCurl Sharif offered. “I’d have to rank them up there with the Steelers, the Niners, and the Cowboys — they’re starting to breathe rarified air. The rest of the league is going have to start walking toward the light.”

“What is behind us does not matter,” Midtown owner Mojo D said. “We’re looking to 2009 and dynasty being spelled die-nasty.”

Fidalgo Island owner Tarik Obobber, whose team has the second best, regular-season record (36-20) over the past four seasons, said, “I’m not interested in history. We’re taking it next year. We’re 3-0 with Warren Sapp and I expect the win streak to continue into 2009.”

One owner, who spoke only on condition of anonymity, said the Black Dogs reminded him a lot of the New England Patriots. “They’ve got an arrogant coach, a high-flying offense, plus, they’re a bunch of cheaters.” When pressed on the specifics of how the Dogs were cheating, he would only add, “Jorge knows.”

For his part, McMizzle refused to join the dynasty discussion, insisting the Black Dogs take it “one game at a time.” He went on to say, “On Jan. 2, we’re going to get back to work and we're going to keep working right up to the opening kickoff of the 2009 season on Sept. 3 at the Smack Dome in Atlanta. And then, on that night, we will begin a vigorous defense of our title because we have every intention of being the first team to put together back-to-back championship seasons.”

Friday, December 26, 2008

BLACK DOGS WIN, EAST SIDE RIOTS

Scenes from the East Nashville victory riots.


BLACK DOGS WIN, EAST SIDE RIOTS

GM Buddy Ryan arrested for streaking, claims he was dosed — again

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

East Nashville not only captured the 2008 NFFA title with a nine-point win over West Nashville in the championship game Monday night, the Black Dogs became the first team to complete a perfect, 16-0 season.

The Black Dogs' unprecedented victory set off rioting in East Nashville which made the riots there when the Dogs won the title three years ago look like recess at an elementary school.

Police cars were overturned, portions of the Woodland Street and Gateway Boulevard bridges were damaged by East side residents vowing to "secede from West Nashville," and one dive bar on Main Street was torched, but police say that may have been unrelelated to the Black Dogs' win. On what may be a related note, Music City Sports Book reported that heavy betting on the Black Dogs to cover the 14-point spread resulted in massive losses for the betting public when the Beelzebubbas pulled within nine points by the final gun.

A number of West Nashville fans filed reports with the police immediately after the game, claiming they were assaulted as they left the Dog House by what one victim described as "East Nashville thugs." Jeremy Wyner said three young men wearing Black Dogs gear forced him into the back of a cargo van and asked him repeatedly, "Who's your daddy, now?" to which he was expected to reply, "The mighty, mighty East side." According to Wyner, the ordeal lasted for several hours.

As in 2005, East Nashville GM Buddy Ryan was arrested in the riots — this time for disorderly conduct, rather than public nudity. He was running down Woodland Street screaming when police stopped him. They asked him what he was doing and he said, "streaking," which, considering he was fully clothed, made them wonder if he was on drugs. He admitted that he was and claimed he had been dosed with some powerful hallucinogen by Saddam Hussein and Jorge Linardo in disguise.

Singer-songwriter and recording artist Todd Snider, the unofficial mayor of the East Nashville who watched the game's conclusion from Commissioner William D. Money's luxury suite at the Dog House, assembled his band outside the stadium to provide musical accompaniment to the rioters. Black Dogs defensive back and game MVP Josh Wilson, whose 23 points included two picks and a sack, joined Snider in singing, "Conservative, Christian, Right-Wing Republican, Straight, White, American Males," which Snider dedicated to "West Nashville Republican mother-[expletives]." Running back Chris Johnson, who tallied 12 points in the title contest, joined in on percussion.

When reached at police headquarters just across the Main Street bridge and asked why the police hadn't quelled the riots, Metro police chief Ronal Serpas said, "I'm not [expletive]ing with the East Nasty. Momma Serpas didn't raise no fool."

QCurl Sharif, owner of the third-place 12th Avenue Bakers, was enjoying a cocktail at 3 Crow Bar with victorious coach Jizzle McMizzle and observing the riots out the bar's front window. Sharif said of the Black Dogs undefeated season: "It is truly remarkable — mind-boggling, in fact. Like Snoop said, they were like gangstas rolling through kindergarten."

McMizzle said the Black Dogs deserved all the credit. "All I did was challenge them to go undefeated," he said. "They're the ones who met that challenge and accomplished something that can never be surpassed, only equaled." Then he paused before adding, "Ave Canes Nigra."

Monday, December 22, 2008

COACH OF THE YEAR ABSENT IN APPARENT WIN

1972 Miami stalwart running back Larry Csonka may have been
implicated in past crimes by former teammate Mercury Morris.


COACH OF THE YEAR ABSENT IN APPARENT WIN
Dogg, Winehouse Witness to Perfection


By John Juan, Shiva-Reuters News Service

NASHVILLE – As the NFFA title game between East Nashville and West Nashville rages, and the 12th Avenue Bakers battle the Atlanta Smack Daddies for third place, Bakers head coach Snoop Dogg has been conspicuously absent.

It has been learned that Dogg, after a long weekend in Miami, arrived back in Music City only yesterday morning, after spending time on a houseboat with members from the 1972 Dolphins team — a team that remains the only one in history to have achieved a perfect season. Of course, the East Nashville Black Dogs appear to be on the threshold of altering that history tonight.

Dogg was reportedly the guest of the Dolphins’ players as a stand-in for West Nashville’s Boyd X. Biggs, whose Beelzebubbas represent the last roadblock in the way of the Black Dogs own perfect season. Dogg felt his assistants could handle the clash with the Daddies, but was quick to point out to reporters in the Nashville airport that he would get credit for the impending Bakers win.

“Last time I heard the head coach gets the W,” Dogg said. “And I damn sure want ‘em. I did feel like it was important for the league to have a representative at the Dolphins’ party. So I took it upon myself to go — actually Amy [Winehouse] came along too. Of course, she’s still down there.”

Dogg, recently named NFFA Coach of the Year, also responded to critics who disagreed with that selection and, specifically, to some sharp criticism leveled at him by East Nashville Black Dogs GM Buddy Ryan.

Dogg was in Miami when he received the news of the prestigious award.

“I’m happy for Buddy and Jim, and the entire Black Dogs team,” Dogg said. “They rolled through the season like a gangsta rolling through a kindergarten. Dat shit is settled on the field. But if Buddy can’t see past his own personal pride in the Dogs and respect how the rest of the league votes on an award like this, then I’d say he’s got his head in the sand … or somewhere it ain’t supposed to be … boom-sizzle!”

“Yeah…these cats [the Dolphins] are out there yo,” Dogg said, continuing. “They might act cool about this perfect season shit on camera, but they got some haters on that boat. Mercury Morris and Mike Kolen and Jake Scott were like eating this black dog man … I mean it was made out of marzipan or some shit but it looked so real.

“Then we all got kinda high on some cognac space brownies and painted each other like that …what’s that crazy story … like Lord of the Flies man and they painted a blow-up doll like Buddy Ryan and put a lot of lipstick on him and then floated him out on a rope behind the boat and — POW! — like a damn great white hit him or some shizzle. Amy and I thought it was a damn gat man ..I didn’t know for shizzle cause we were down below with the Merc Man and one of the Dolphins cheerleaders from ’72 and shit we all hit the floor you know. Mercury started crying and saying crazy things about Csonka and Kiick and how he’d seen ’em kill somebody at a party once.

“And that cheerleader like ran with no place to go down there and hit her head like hard man and fell back on Merc and he tried to keep her quiet and just kept squeezin’ her head in this arm lock — like the dude’s still got some guns on him .. So then she got too quiet and Merc freaked and stuffed her out some little window and we heard her splash but I was too shizzled to call out and Amy wouldn’t stop laughing and then Manny Fernandez stuck that big old head down in the hole and said it was just the damn doll … I mean goddamn!”

Dogg then indicated that he felt like he wanted to be with the team when the final gun in Nashville sounded tonight, so he was airlifted — courtesy of President Bush — from the Dolphins party boat by a Coast Guard helicopter and brought back to the mainland, where he later caught a flight back to Nashville. He said Winehouse stayed behind to help get Merc “down off the dragon.”

Sunday, December 21, 2008

FINAL GRADES AND ACCOLADES

Alamo Scouts matriach Meemaw Murrman
is the AWP's "Rookie of the Year."


FINAL GRADES AND ACCOLADES

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

With championship weekend upon us, it is time for the AWP's final regular-season report cards and season-ending accolades.

First, final grades for the 2008 regular season:

• East Nashville Black Dogs (14-0), A+
Perfection speaks for itself. The Dogs recorded the first undefeated regular season in league history and ran their NFFA record for consecutive, regular-season wins to 21 games.

• West Nashville Beelzebubbas (9-5), B+
One of the preseason favorites, the 'Bubbas did not disappoint, in spite of the poor coaching efficiency of Boyd X. Biggs, who contends, "Coaching is all about having talent on the gridiron and unleashing hell."

• 12th Avenue Bakers (8-6), B
No one was talking about the Bakers after the draft, but they rode the league's top quarterback and a high-scoring defense to the first playoff berth in franchise history.

• Atlanta Smack Daddies (7-7), B-
Another of the preseason favorites, and although they won their first division title, the Daddies underperformed.

• Alamo Scouts (5-9), C+
The Scouts were not being discussed as title contenders following the draft. And although they didn't make a return to the playoffs, they finished the season on an upswing, winning three of their final four games, contending for the division title until the final weekend, and finishing as the only team with a winning record within their division.

• Cambridge Animals (5-9), C
Another of the preseason favorites and another team that underperformed. Critical coaching mistakes down the stretch cost the Animals a 7-7 record and a possible trip to the playoffs.

• Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs (5-9), C-
The defending title holders already were facing the infamous "curse of the champion," but thanks to the lowest coaching efficiency in the regular season, the Sea Hogs fell short of a fourth consecutive division crown and missed the playoffs for the first time in franchise history.

• Midtown Mojo (3-11), C-
A season of hope was dashed minutes into the first game of 2008 when the Mojo's all-world quarterback Tom Brady suffered a season-ending injury. A complete nervous breakdown by owner Mojo D. followed, leaving the Midtown ship essentially rudderless, despite valiant efforts by the team's Pompatus of Love. In spite of it all, the Mojo finished with a 3-3 record within their division.

And the 2008 accolades:

The "Mostest with the Leastest" award goes to QCurl Sharif. His name was not the only thing that changed over on 12th Avenue.

The "Leastest with the Mostest" award goes to Dave the Animal. After the draft, pundits were talking about Cambridge as one of the teams to beat. As it turned out, that is exactly what the four teams in the championship bracket did, going 7-1 against the Animals and handing the self-proclaimed, coaching genius all but two of his losses.

The "Triki Bobber Waiver-Wire Whirlwind" award goes to Lex Dominica, who out-Bobbered Bobber, with a double-digit lead in number of transactions over the former king of waiver-wire hyperactivity, working the wire a total of 84 times during the 14-week regular season.

The "Rookie of the Year" award goes to MeeMaw Murrman, grandmother of Alamo Scouts owner Thurman Murrman and team matriarch — and I think everyone knows why: the skillet.

The "Coaches of the Year" award goes to the Midtown Mojo for the most coaching changes ever in a single season — seven and counting.

The winner of the "Make Up Your Damn Mind" award is Tarik Obobber. Obobber may have lost his waiver-wire crown but he still is the lineup king, posting 113 different starting lineups during the 14-week regular season.

The winner of the "Best Game Day Promotion Gone Bad" award goes to East Nashville GM Buddy Ryan for his opening day "Bring Your Dog to the Game" promotion, which resulted in the vicious mauling of all 100 Fidalgo Island fans in attendance.

The "Outstanding Community Service Award" goes to West Nashville's Jorge Linardo for opening not one, but two nightclubs to fill the gap left when the Cherry Bomb Cafe burned down.

The "No. 1 Super Fan" award goes to 12th Avenue booster club president Bill Cheatham for his defense of the team against sportswriter Larry Woody, who he has had pinned down on a 12 South billboard with steady gunfire for more than a month.

The "Horizon award for violence and music" goes to Memphis-based rap outfit, Dr. Krunkenstein for their performance at the Bacchanalia and their links to the attempted assassinated on Commissioner William D. Money.

The "New Hotness" award goes to Miss Lee-Yhn, the Midtown Mojo's Pompatus of Love for her "contributions" to the NFFA in 2008.

The "Buddy, Can You Spare a Win" award goes to the division formerly known as Linardo, which didn't have a single team with a winning record and whose four teams were a collective 20-36.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

‘UNITY’ PRESS CONFERENCE ENDS IN MEDIA RIOT

Commissioner Money poses with President Bush
for photos before yesterday's press conference.


‘UNITY’ PRESS CONFERENCE ENDS IN MEDIA RIOT

Bush asks for calm as reporters hurl shoes at Money

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

It was billed as a “unity” press conference to bring all NFFA owners together to meet President George W. Bush, who is attending the league’s championship weekend in Nashvegas. But the event ended in utter chaos as reporters — along with at least two NFFA owners — began hurling shoes at Commissioner William D. Money midway through a question-and-answer session.

It began quietly enough Friday afternoon, as Money introduced the president, who told the assembled media that he was excited, finally, to attend an NFFA game. “Jorge Linardo has done so much for the cause of peace and injustice that, when he called and invited me to the championship game, I jumped out my chair and said, ‘Yes-s-s!’ and started squealing like a pig. I can’t wait to throw out the first pitch. I hear East Nashville is not much safer than East Baghdad, but I can tell you it’s a lot more fun.”

Bush also noted that he planned to “drop by” Grey Goose Stadium for the third-place battle between the Atlanta Smack Daddies and 12th Avenue Bakers. In a surprise announcement, Bush also said he was going to officially dedicate the reopened Cherry Bomb CafĂ© with club owner QCurl Sharif. “I want to try me one of those Touchdown Tasers™ while I’m there,” Bush said. “Condi says they take hair off your chest.”

While the media was mostly polite to Bush, the mood turned ugly when Money began fielding questions. First, the City Paper’s Dicky Cox asked why Money planned to bestow an award for “Commissioner of the Year.”

“We haven’t announced anything like that yet,” Money demurred.

“Sources say you’re announcing it today,” Cox persisted.

“No comment,” said Money.

“This is a great idea,” chimed in Bush. “I could be President of the Year.”

Then FSN’s Owen Cash asked Money about reports that the commissioner’s office had colluded with the Music City Sports Book to set ridiculously high point spreads — averaging 124 points — for games involving the Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs. “Isn’t it true,” Cash demanded, “that you helped set the spreads, then turned around and bet a million dollars each week on the Sea Hogs to cover? And isn’t it true that you wired your winnings to a bank in the Cayman Islands to avoid taxes? And isn’t it true that you told your fellow owners that the point spread was just a technical glitch in the system?”

“No, no, no,” Money sputtered, but it was too late. At that point, The Tennessean’s Joe Biddle removed his tassle loafer and hurled it at Money, narrowly missing his head. Bush caught a second shoe aimed at Money before Secret Service agents moved in and hustled him out of the room.

Then other reporters began removing their shoes and flinging them at Money, who ran from the room amid the hailstorm of footwear. Among those seen throwing objects were Beelzebubbas Coach Boyd X. Biggs, who later retrieved the pair of Dan Post lizard-skin boots he had tossed, and Smack Daddies owner Lex Dominica, who sources said was resentful that this week’s playoff game had been wrongfully moved from Atlanta.

“It’s kind of gratifying not to be the least popular guy in the room,” Bush quipped later.

Said Sharif, who had been sitting on the front row, “There were so many people in their stocking feet, I thought it was one of my Friday afternoon goodwill visits to the Islamic Center down the street. I’m just glad Furious wasn’t there. I guarantee he’d have been flinging something other than shoes.”

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

MCMAHON: 'WE'RE THE UNDERDOGS'

Questions about inflammatory remarks by Black Dogs GM Buddy
dominated Coach Jim McMahon's weekly media conference.


MCMAHON: 'WE'RE THE UNDERDOGS'
But oddsmakers favor Black Dogs by 14

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

With his tongue firmly in cheek, East Nashville coach Jim McMahon declared his undefeated Black Dogs team "the underdogs" in their title game with the Beelzebubbas from West Nashville, to be played this weekend at the Dog House.

"No, joking, we're the underdogs," McMahon said jokingly this afternoon at his weekly media conference held at fooBar on Gallatin Avenue. "Not only are we going against a franchise that already has one championship ring, but against a team that is making its second straight trip to the title game.

"And we haven't forgotten that [Boyd] X. [Biggs] and the 'Bubbas dashed our title hopes last season."

Warming to the topic, the coach continued. "And of course, the godfather of the NFFA, Jorge Linardo, is pulling out all the stops for the 'Bubbas. Hell, they've even got the president coming in as their guest.

"So over here in the East Nasty, we feel it's the same ole [expletive]. The Black Dogs are getting no respect."

Asked by one reporter if he was referring to the selection of 12th Avenue Bakers coach Snoop Dogg — who had six fewer wins in the regular season — as NFFA coach of the year by the league's coaches, McMahon responded with a terse "no comment."

When pressed on the subject by Joe Biddle, he said, "You know, Joe the Bummer, neither I nor my team give a rats' ass about awards. We've got one thing on our minds, and only one thing — getting another ring, getting some more championship hardware for the trophy case."

Undeterred, Biddle asked McMahon about inflammatory and accusatory comments made by Black Dogs GM Buddy Ryan about Snoop Dogg's selection in an exclusive story published earlier today by the AWP.

"Well, Buddy tries to look out for his boys, and I'm one of his boys," he said. "Beyond that, you'll have to speak with Buddy about it. I don't have a beef with Snoop or QCurl [Sharif] — without question, they have led the Bakers to heights that franchise has never experienced, at least not without chemicals. For that, they are to be congratulated. I wish them luck in their contest for third place.

"But Buddy was right about one thing: This week is about East side versus West side. So to my friend, Boyd X., I say, 'Hoc est bellum. Cave canes pugnaces.'"

Returning to Ryan's remarks, Fantasy Sports News correspondent Arial Mutha-Tafoya asked McMahon if he thought his chances of being selected coach of the year would have been better had his name been Jizzle McMizzle. "It was Jizzle McMizzle," he deadpanned. "But I changed it because it didn't sound gay enough."

Then signaling the end of the conference in his usual manner, McMahon went to the bar and took a sip of the Morning Glory™ margarita awaiting him there.


SNOOP DOGG VOTED COACH OF THE YEAR

League owners voted Bakers coach Snoop Dogg
the 2008 NFFA coach of the year.


SNOOP DOGG VOTED
COACH OF THE YEAR

Edges McMahon, Dominica

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

12th Avenue Bakers coach Snoop Dogg was voted 2008 NFFA coach of the year in balloting by the league owners.

Of the four coaches in the running for the award, Snoop garnered three votes, compared to two apiece for East Nashville coach Jim McMahon and Atlanta Smack Daddies coach Lex Dominica. West Nashville Beelzebubbas coach Boyd X. Biggs received no votes.

"It's humbling, and means more to me than any of those goddamn Grammys, for shizzle," Snoop said by cell phone from Miami. "Champagne and blunts on me."

Cambridge owner Dave the Animal did not participate in the voting, saying he thought it was a prank when he received the notice about the balloting. "I thought [NFFA commissioner William D.] Money was pranking me 'cause I knew I was already coach of the year," he explained. "I saw it on the NFFA website," referring to the league coaching efficiency rankings.

As both owner and coach of the Beelzebubbas, Biggs could have voted for himself, but instead he helped his rival win the award. "I voted for Snoop Dogg," he said by phone yesterday. Mojo D, owner of the Midtown Mojo franchise, also acknowledged voting for the coach of the 12th Avenue team. Assuming his owner, QCurl Sharif, voted for him, it would seem Snoop won with a bloc of votes from teams based on the West side of the Cumberland River.

An obviously angry East Nashville GM Buddy Ryan called the voting "a popularity contest" and said "anyone in their right mind" knows who the real coach of the year is. "It's a Dog, all right, but not one named Snoop. 15 and [expletive] 0; 21 straight, regular-season wins. What the [expletive]? No, seriously, what the [expletive]? Maybe if Jim's name was Jizzle McMizzle he could get the mother-[expletive] respect he deserves.

"And now we learn that this [expletive] is some mother-[expletive] East side-West side thing," Ryan continued. "Well this weekend at the Dog House, the best the mother-[expletive] West side has to offer is going to get their payback for disrespecting the East Nasty."

MIDTOWN MOJO INTRODUCE BARKLEY AS NEW COACH

Mojo coach Charles Barkley sounds off about the Sea Hogs

MIDTOWN MOJO INTRODUCE
BARKLEY AS NEW COACH


by Soren Bernyn, Fantasy Sports Network

In what would appear to be a meaningless game to the rest of the world, the Midtown Mojo introduced NBA All-Star Charles Barkley as the team's coach for the final game of the season. At the happy hour/media opportunity staged at Cabana in Hillsboro Village, Owner Mojo D said "this game has gone from a race to to the bottom to a chance at redemption — a chance to crush and humiliate Triki Bobber, whom I shall henceforth refer to only as 'Bob Hitler.'

"To make that happen, I have enlisted the service of the Round Mound of Rebound — Sir Charles Barkley, his badass [expletive]ing self!" Amid strobe lights and fog, Barkley stood up, pointed into the cameras and stated emphatically: "It is my mission to stamp out all racism in sports; they dissed me at Auburn, so when Mojo D called to say he needed a way to crush Hitler, I said 'Hell, yeah — I'm in!' I have one plan — to whip my niggas into a frenzy so that they will stop at nothing short of the complete devastation of the Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs."

The Sea Hogs are especially hated in Midtown because they — in the words of one Mojo supporter — "are just not from around here." And Midtown loves any excuse to take to the streets, so there is a lot of interest in the game. The local Mediterannean restaurants have even collaborated on a dish that is all the rage this week: Bobber Ghanoush, which is smoked eggplant with crushed lamb testicles.

Questioned about the dish, Mojo D said, "It's delicious — we've had it on the training table all week. Part of what makes it so good is that it's prepared with help from other teams in the league — the testicles are courtesy of [Beelzebubbas' Owner/GM Boyd X.] Biggs, and Meemaw Murrman provided all the restaurants with her souvenir skillets. QCurl even sent over some 55-gallon drums of Touchdown Tasers, and the Animal is providing crystal 'dessert' via the local Cranker Barrel. It's very touching to see these guys who are competitors all season long come together around their shared distaste for the Sea Hogs and their criminally insane owner, Bob Hitler."

In the custom of his mentor Jorge Linardo, Mojo D threw back his head and laughed silently, put his arm around Barkley and headed to the bar.

BLACK DOGS, ’BUBBAS SET FOR TITLE TILT

In route to Nashvegas aboard Air Force One, President Bush jokes
with reporters about the “12th Avenue peace pipe” he received.


BLACK DOGS, ’BUBBAS
SET FOR TITLE TILT

Bong-brandishing Bush to
throw out ' first pitch'


By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

The two teams with the winningest records — the undefeated East Nashville Black Dogs (15-0) and the West Nashville Beelzebubbas (10-5) — will meet in this weekend’s NFFA Championship at Black Dog Stadium. To add even more luster to the event, the White House announced on Tuesday that President George W. Bush would visit Nashvegas for championship weekend.

Bush, who received a special invitation from NFFA founder Jorge Linardo, said he was looking forward to “throwing out the first pitch” before kickoff. Bush will also attend part of the third-place contest between the 12th Avenue Bakers and Atlanta Smack Daddies. Although the higher-seeded Daddies are designated as the home team, the game was moved from suburban Atlanta to Grey Goose Stadium so the president could take in both contests.

The championship tilt promises to be historic for reasons that go beyond the first presidential visit to an NFFA venue. A victory by the Black Dogs would cap an unprecedented perfect season. Whoever wins will join the Smack Daddies as the only teams to claim two NFFA championships.

Along with the written invitation from Linardo, President Bush received a Bakers commemorative bong from 12 South council member Roz Tefarian, along with a bobblehead Shiva like those given to the first 20,000 fans at the Bakers’ last home game. Bush showed the former gift to reporters aboard Air Force One, which Tefarian’s accompanying card described as a “12th Avenue peace pipe.” Bush also told reporters that, at Linardo’s invitation, he had drawn up a special play, which he dubbed “the Wild Bush,” for McMahon to use in the championship game.

“It will take a perfect performance by us to win,” said West Nashville coach Boyd X. Biggs, whose Beelzebubbas before now had never achieved consecutive winning seasons, much less back-to-back appearances in the championship game. “My old friend Mac [Black Dogs coach Jim McMahon] has a complete team with no weaknesses. Obviously, except for achieving world peace, nothing would make me happier than to [expletive] up his perfect season.”

Biggs announced that Memphis rappers Dr. Krunkenstein, implicated in an assassination attempt on NFFA commissioner William D. Money, would appear at a special Beelzebubbas pep rally, performing a new song — “Salary Cap His Ass” — they had written specifically about Money.

Separately, Biggs introduced former Bakers coach Stumpy Legg as the new chief of concierge services at Club Gitmo, where the ’Bubbas’ press conference was held. Legg, who led the Bakers to consecutive losing seasons before being replaced by the late Vince Lombardi in 2004, had been serving as a WalMart greeter on Charlotte Pike in West Nashville when Biggs happened to encounter him as he entered the store to buy a case of shotgun shells. “Stumpy has also been watching film and offering suggestions for the game plan this weekend,” Biggs said between sips of Cuervo Gold. “We’re getting some solid ideas of what not to do.”

Sunday, December 14, 2008

NO MATTER WHO WINS, NFFA HISTORY WILL BE MADE

One of these men will make NFFA history over the next two
weeks (clockwise from top left): Black Dogs coach Jim McMahon, Bakers owner QCurl Sharif, Smack Daddies owner Lex Dominica, Beelzebubbas owner-coach Boyd X. Biggs.


NO MATTER WHO WINS, NFFA HISTORY WILL BE MADE


By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

12th Avenue and East Nashville have gotten most of the attention for their historic seasons, but no matter who wins the 2008 NFFA title, history will be made.

Of course, the East Nashville Black Dogs have already set a record that can only be tied with their perfect, 14-0 regular season. If the Dogs win out, they will not only be the first champions in league history to finish undefeated, but they also will pick up their second ring in four years. Add that to their four straight Jorge division titles and you have to wonder if GM Buddy Ryan and coach Jim McMahon have built a dynasty.

Like the Black Dogs, the 12th Avenue Bakers have already made history of their own by posting the first winning regular-season record in franchise history and by making the playoffs for the first time. If the Bakers win out and claim their first championship, they will complete what has already been a storybook season.

West Nashville owner-coach Boyd X. Biggs recently noted that his Beelzebubbas franchise had made team history, as well. The 'Bubbas registered their second straight winning season and trip to the playoffs, franchise firsts. If the Beelzebubbas win out, they will claim their second NFFA title, joining the Atlanta Smack Daddies in that elite club.

Talk about being under the radar when it comes to history-making, the Smack Daddies won their division title for the first time in franchise history and can claim their third ring in six seasons if they win out. If the Daddies do that, dynasty is their new name.

Friday, December 12, 2008

BREAKING NEWS: BAKERS EMBROILED IN BLAGO BRIBE BROUHAHA

Embattled Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich allegedly
was bribed by Bakers head coach Snoop Dogg.


BAKERS EMBROILED IN BLAGO BRIBE BROUHAHA

Sharif pulls out all stops in NFFA title quest

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

In a widening bribery scandal, federal prosecutors in Chicago this afternoon released a new audio tape on which 12th Avenue Bakers coach Snoop Dogg could be heard offering a bribe to embattled Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich.

On the tape, which prosecutors said was recorded on Tuesday, a voice that sounded like Dogg asked Blagojevich “how much it’s gonna take for the Bears defense to lay down for ma nizzle Drew Brees” — an apparent attempt to bribe the governor to influence this weekend’s game.

When Blagojevich replied, “Two million, one for the team and one for Papa Bear,” Dogg responded, “We goin grizzle, fashizzle. Check for a wire transfer at your banizzle, S-D-O-G insured.”

Prosecutors would not say whether any funds had been transferred to any bank accounts in Blagojevich’s name, though they will be watching the Bears’ on-field performance closely. A big game by Brees against the Bears would greatly bolster the Bakers’ chance of winning their chances of upsetting the undefeated East Nashville Black Dogs.

For his part, Snoop Dogg denied that his words could even be construed as offering a bribe, contending that he merely was asking Blagojevitch, whom he described as a “big fan,” for his views on this weekend’s contest.

When reached in the Alice B. Toklas Suite at the reopened Cherry Bomb CafĂ©, Bakers owner QCurl Sharif said, “One thing I’ve learned from all my years in football is that you play with the field conditions you have. When it’s raining, we have to get a little wet.”

FSN will provide fresh details as they emerge.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

ANIMALS FIRE BROWNIE

Mike "Brownie" Brown, shown here on the day he was named special
teams coach for Cambridge, was given the boot yesterday.


ANIMALS FIRE BROWNIE
Special teams coach blamed for ‘crackhead’ mistakes

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

The Cambridge Animals today terminated — “with extreme prejudice,” said owner Dave the Animal — special teams coach Mike “Brownie” Brown in a move seen as part of an effort to bolster the team’s chances of winning fifth place in the NFFA.

Brown was hired by the Animals last June. In late October, based on what Dave the Animal described as “a heckuva job” (particularly for the acquisition of wide receiver Josh Cribbs), Brown was entrusted with the added task of developing the team’s secret plan to overtake the surprising 12th Avenue Bakers and earn a spot in the top playoff bracket.

“His resumĂ© said he had a lot of experience with the Animals,” said a team official who requested anonymity out of concern for his personal safety. “Dave, who was distracted by Breaking Bad, thought this meant Brownie knew our organization. He didn’t realize Brownie was talking about his background with horse shows. And maybe Brownie misled us a little bit, too.”

The special teams performed well until November, when disastrous lineup errors involving placekickers caused the Animals to lose consecutive games to the Alamo Scouts and West Nashville Beelzebubbas. On Wednesday, Dave the Animal learned of what he described as “crackhead mistakes” and fired Brown immediately.

On his way out of the Animals’ office complex — known to locals as the Cambridge Zoo — Brownie refused to speak to reporters, except to say that Dave the Animal had approved the secret plan and that it had been followed to the letter.

The team official who spoke without attribution said suspicions had arisen that Black Dogs Coach Jim McMahon had authored key details of the secret plan and given them to Brown. The official refused to elaborate on the reasons behind these suspicions.

“I could just spit,” said Dave the Animal, who is said to be channeling his anger into a poem entitled “Paradise Kicked” about the incident. “When Brownie asked about his severance package, I told him, ‘I’ll refrain from severing your damn head. How about that?’”

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

BAKERS TAKE LOW-KEY PLAYOFF PREPARATION

Bakers head coach Snoop Dogg believes
the pressure is all on the Black Dogs.


BAKERS TAKE LOW-KEY PLAYOFF PREPARATION
Dogg, Sharif on Chill Pills


By John Juan, Shiva-Reuters

NASHVILLE — As the 12th Aveue Bakers prepare for this weekend’s first-ever playoff game against the East Nashville juggernaut, special ticket package sales were brisk out of the newly re-opened Cherry Bomb CafĂ©. Head coach Snoop Dogg reportedly has been laying low, in the DoggHouse Studio with Amy Winehouse, just “chillin and letting the vizzle build.”

He has made it a point not to reveal his lineup as of this writing, despite the recent callout by the Black Dogs’ Jim McMahon. And despite a close loss to the Cambridge Animals in the season finale, the coach feels good about his team’s chances.

“I think they might actually be the ones feelin the pressure,” Dogg said, as Winehouse could be heard in a nearby bathroom. “I know the Bakes are takin it all in. Nobody is giving us a chance and man that’s the way Snoop likes to roll — it reminds me of the time some of my Compton chaps rolled on the Crips when nobody thought we had the balls to spray that gas station. The streets ran red that night — and they just might run red again grizzy grizzle.”

Owner QCurl Sharif is following Snoop’s cue as he has tried to downplay the importance of this trip to the East Nasty.

“We’ve seen what they do,” Sharif said. “They beat the daylights out of everyone. Maybe if we punch them in the mouth early — like Friday morning — we can get them on their heels. I’m with Snoop … the pressure is all on them.”

Sharif then noted that the Bakers plan on taking a healthy contingent of fans to the game. The owner himself has purchased a large block of tickets and is selling them for half-price to Cherry Bomb patrons who order two or more Touchdown Tasers with a meal, or to those who order one Terrible Chimp — the bar’s latest tribute to the fallen Furious George. The drink is reportedly built from “precious bodily fluids” and absinthe, thus pleasing to Artemis.

“Hell, we’re providing free rides to the game if people are willing to sleep here Saturday night,” Sharif said. “The first 50 people to show up will be driven to the stadium by Omar Sharif.” The actor has stayed on in an advisory capacity since election night, and has been credited by Winehouse for turning her life around, albeit a circle that has returned her to her addictions.

Sharif also indicated he would be sharing his skybox with Winehouse, Baker fanatic Neil Young and the re-animated Man In Black — Johnny Cash. Cash has been invited to perform the national anthem.

“I think we are going to shock the world this weekend,” he continued. “This is the greatest game in America. How can we lose?”

SAPP WINS FIRST GAME AS HEAD COACH

Coach Sapp dances "The Hustle" with partner Kym before
last weekend's game to inspire his team to victory.


SAPP WINS FIRST GAME AS HEAD COACH


By Bill O'Really, FAUX News

Fidalgo Island — Warren Sapp won his first game as the new Sea Hogs head coach this past weekend in a blow out over the Midtown Mojo. The Sea Hogs ended a four game losing streak with the win.

The Sea Hog players gave all the credit to Coach Sapp who inspired his team to victory by dancing "The Hustle" with his Dancing With The Stars partner Kym Johnson before the game. One of the three DWTS judges, Bruno Tonioli, was a special guest of Coach Sapp and witnessed the pre-game dance routine. Bruno was so turned on he took the opportunity to compare Warren's ''funk'' to a word just one letter off from that: "You ease your way in, build up the rhythm, and deliver a huuuuuuuge climax at the end. Way to go! I give you a Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiine for that performance!"

The Sea Hogs must have been turned on too, as they raped the Mojo 167 to 99.5. The Sea Hogs scored more points than any other NFFA team for the weekend and were named "Team of the Week."

MOJO NAME NEW COACH FOR PLAYOFFS

The latest Midtown Mojo coach, Otto Destruckt, prepares
to administer discipline to the hapless 3-11 Mojo.

MOJO NAME NEW COACH FOR PLAYOFFS


By Soren Bernyn, Fantasy Sports News

In another seemingly inexplicable move,the Midtown Mojo today named yet another new coach. In a brief media happy-hour at Cabana which was peppered with references to classic films, Mojo owner Mojo D announced: "The latest sacrifical lamb — er, coach — is Otto Destruckt, who is the perfect pick for our run through the losers' bracket. I would have loved to keep Otto von Bismarck, but I think QCurl has some work to do on his re-animation process. At about halftime, the coach started re-decomposing, the stench was god-awful, and when his extremities started falling off, the players just left the sidelines. But the Iron Chancellor toughed it out -- he reminded me of the Black Knight in Monty Python's Holy Grail by the end of the game."

The new coach bears a close resemblance to the robot Gort from the original The Day the Earth Stood Still, and Mojo D stated that "yeah, the producers cut him out of the new release, so he changed his name and got this gig. I'm looking forward to his motivational tactics: in his first practice, he chased (TE) Kevin Boss around the field with a laser for Boss' zero-point effort in Week 13. That's the (expletive) I live for — real accountability."

When asked about rumors that the NFFA competition committee was considering pre-emptive fines against his team for sand-bagging the next two weeks in hopes of securing the top draft pick in 2009, Mojo D channeled Captain Renault from Casablanca: "I am shocked — shocked, I tell you — to hear that Tony Soprano considers me capable of such treachery. One look at our record this year would reveal that it is totally unnecessary for us to TRY to lose any game. That said, the number one pick next season would be pretty sweet."

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

MCMAHON NAMES SHAUB TITLE-GAME STARTER

Dissing his team's first-round opponents from 12th Avenue, East Nashville coach Jim McMahon announced that quarterback Matt Shaub would be the team's starter in the championship game.


MCMAHON NAMES SHAUB
TITLE-GAME STARTER


By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

In a conference call with NFFA beat writers this morning, East Nashville coach Jim McMahon expressed praise for his Black Dogs team, which had just completed the first undefeated regular season in league history.

"As you all know, back in training camp, I challenged the Black Dogs to have a perfect season," McMahon said at the beginning of the call. "Well, we made it through the regular season unblemished —which, by the way, pushed our NFFA record regular-season win streak to 21 games — and they are to be commended for that. But now we have our sights set on a 16-0 record and our second championship in the last four years, so we still have unfinished business."

McMahon said that West Nashville Beelzebubbas coach Boyd X. Biggs gave him a little bit of a scare near the end of the game last night, but went on to say, "I have to give props where props are due, and when I look over the results of our 14 games, the only team to come even within single digits of beating us was my ole McBitch, Thurman Murrman and his Alamo Scouts.

"So I have to give it up to ThurMurr for coming closest to derailing our perfect season, but I must add, this ain't horse shoes or hand granades, so close doesn't count."

Also during the media conference call, the Black Dogs coach announced that he was benching quarterback Tony Romo and declared Matt Shaub the starter for the championship game. When asked if he didn't mean the first-round game, McMahon said no. He was then asked if he was overlooking the Dogs' first-round opponent, the feel-good 12th Avenue Bakers. "I'm not overlooking the Bakers," he said. "But I looked them over and I'm not worried." He reminded the reporters that he had never lost to 12th Avenue.

Regarding the game with the Bakers, the coach said he hadn't decided which of the Matts — Cassell, Ryan, or Shaub — would start at quarterback, but reiterated it would not be Romo.

As is his usual custom, McMahon concluded the conference with a message in Latin for his opponent, in this case 12th Avenue owner QCurl Sahrif: "Cave canem."

Friday, December 5, 2008

‘BACK-TO-BASICS’ BACCHANAL DRAWS 200,000

Scenes from a debauch (clockwise from top): Thousands of Bacchanal revelers celebrate the perfomance of Memphis gangsta rappers Dr. Krunkenstein with shouts of "Kill Money!"; ThurMurr spiritual adviser Dave Matthews one of eight consecutive versions of "All Along the Watchtower"; Jorge Linardo godson will.i.am; Amy Winehouse, who was removed by armed guards and taken to rehab.



‘BACK-TO-BASICS’ BACCHANAL
DRAWS 200,000

City in virtual shutdown; ‘Everybody wang chung tonight,’ urged Sharif

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

There were no appearances by Satan or Shiva this year (so far), but by all accounts the annual Bacchanal to the Future topped even last year’s celebration as a spectacle. A crowd estimated at more than 200,000 people jammed Nashville’s Centennial Park and well beyond.

Based on accounts pieced together from the survivors, at least those who were willing to speak about the experience, here is a partial rundown of the day’s events.

The celebration dedicated to “love, music, whatever,” which corresponds to the second meeting between the 12th Avenue Bakers and West Nashville Beelzebubbas, brought much of the city to a virtual halt on Saturday. The morning began with the first annual Half Nude Marathon (in the spirit of the original Greek Olympiad), as 5,000 runners departed from Centennial Park and finished the race at Grey Goose Stadium.


Meanwhile, more than 50,000 people packed both sides of Broadway/West End for the inaugural Bacchanal Parade, which ran from Riverfront Park to Centennial. Police officers who lined the route wore throwback Bakers and Bubbas jerseys over their uniforms. The mile-long parade included Grand Marshals Danny Bonaduce and Susan Dey; the TSU Marching Band; the Hohenwald Zombie Precision Mini-Motorcycle Team; five captured Taliban fighters from Waziristan, shaven hairless and accompanied by General George Washington Leonard; drum major R. Crumb; Billy Bob Thornton as Santa Claus; NFFA owners QCurl Sharif and Boyd X. Biggs; giant balloons of Dick Cheney, Underdog, and the entire pantheon of Greco-Roman deities; the original Delta Tau Chi “Deathmobile”; and others too numerous to mention.

Bonaduce, Dey, Biggs, Sharif and Harry Connick Jr. rode atop ornate floats. Sharif’s ride included a replica of his infamous West End treehouse, while Biggs’ “Waziristan Safari” float was fashioned (if the media kit was to be believed) entirely from human ears. Each threw beads and plastic skulls to the throng, along with what some witnesses claimed were tabs of LSD. These reports could not be confirmed (or denied).

The Bacchanal kicked off in earnest around noon with the ceremonial “birth of Venus,” one of the highlights of each year’s festivities. This year — evidently taking Sharif’s “Nothing exceeds like excess” motto to heart — festival organizers expanded the opening ceremony to include four nude Aphrodites. Susan Dey took the prime spot at the Centennial Park bandshell and was driven by Bonaduce via chariot to the Parthenon. Sharif confidante Amy Winehouse was driven by honorary grand marshal Randall “Tex” Cobb. Country music starlet Taylor Swift was charioted by Hank III, while surprise guest Bristol Palin, seven months pregnant and in full bloom, was escorted by fiance Levi Johnston.

After the four chariots converged on the Parthenon, emcee Haven Hamilton led the crowd in the pledge of allegiance before Bonaduce and Dey fired a 12-pound Civil War-era cannon to signal the start of the music festival.

Winehouse opened with a half-hour set that appeared to be cut short. During her performance of “Rehab,” six armed Metro police officers in throwback jerseys rushed onstage, announced they were conducting an intervention, and seized the singer, who repeatedly screamed, “No!” The crowd, which apparently thought the action was part of the staging, cheered all the louder as Winehouse was led away. Later, Bakers PR maven Faith Popcorn confirmed that coach Snoop Dogg had ordered the intervention. Sharif reluctantly consented after Snoop assured him that Winehouse would be out in time for the Bakers organization’s Dirty Santa party.

The Bacchanal grew so large this year that area businesses were incorporated into the official event. The Olympic pool at Centennial Sportsplex was transformed into a giant Roman bath. Twelve new vomitoriums were added throughout the park. For 24 hours, the McDonald’s near the park’s entrance became a Cracky D’s franchise of Dave the Animal. The Valvoline 30-minute oil change shop at the corner of Elliston and 25th reinvented itself as “Saturn’s playpen.” (It was also the site of the day’s first arrests, involving reanimated silent film star Fatty Arbuckle and Black Dogs GM Buddy Ryan, who, according to one police source, “were involved in lewd acts that would have shocked even the Nashville Diocese.”) Ryan later denied any knowledge of the alleged crime, claiming that unknown assailants had abducted him from his East Nashville home and “slipped me a [expletive] mickey as part of an obvious [expletive] frame-up job.”

The day’s biggest new addition involved a Roman chariot race in the newly opened Nashville Hippodrome — a gift to the city from the Bakers and Bubbas — on the west side of the park near 31st Avenue. More than 30,000 spectators jammed into the facility to watch the 40-lap event. Besides Cobb and Johnston, the racers included a reanimated Charlton Heston and Stephen “Masala” Boyd; Dustin Serpas; Charlie Rotier; Jake Lloyd (the child actor who portrayed the young Anikin Skywalker in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace); Danica Patrick (the eventual winner); Hurman Murrman (brother of Scouts owner Thurman Murrman); and Mojo D (who finished last) in the Team Mojo chariot. Actor Nicolas Cage, who had not originally been invited, showed up with his own chariot just before post time and demanded to enter the race. After a brief negotiation, papal legate Giorgio Cardinal Leonardo, who fired the starters pistol, allowed Cage to participate. Tragically, former Bakers coach Vince Lombardi, who had been reanimated especially for the event, was re-killed when his chariot overturned in the fourth lap, after being sideswiped by Mojo D.

The emotional highlight of the day involved a memorial service on the Dionysus Stage for Furious George, the childhood friend of Sharif who died in September. During the service, Biggs quoted George’s favorite poet, Aeschylus: "In our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God." Biggs noted that he had often heard Furious recite these words in moments of reflection on his own life, as the two of them shared evenings of single-malt scotch atop Love Circle. During “Vincent,” performed as a tribute to Furious, Sharif was overcome and had to be led away when Don McLean sang the words, “This world was never meant for one as beautiful as you.” At the end of the service, thousands wept openly as Peter, Paul and Mary invited the crowd to sing along to “Puff the Magic Dragon.”

But the Bacchanal quickly returned to its customary groove when the music resumed with a blast from the shared past of Sharif and George — a reunion performance by the 70s TV band, Lance Link and the Evolution Revolution. Furious had served as the band’s original drummer before their scandalous Isle of Wight concert in 1971. The flower chimps brought the crowd to its feet as they performed their eponymous No. 1 hit and ran through “Eve of Destruction,” “In the Year 2525,” “Love Is All Around,” “All the Young Dudes,” and the folky “Shrimpboats Are A-Comin.” To conclude their set, Link was joined by regular Bacchanal attendee Joe Walsh for a psychedelic rendition of “Rocky Mountain Way” — followed by another Furious George cousin, Felonious Monkey, in a memorable performance of “Straight, No Chaser.”

NFFA GameDay host James Brown took the stage next and ran full-bore through a medley of his biggest hits, capped off by “Sex Machine.” Taylor Swift jammed with Def Leppard before Bonaduce and Dey reinterpreted the old Partridge Family standard, “Heartbeat, It’s a Lovebeat” as a calypso number.

Sir Elton John revved up the crowd with blistering performances of “The Bitch Is Back,” “Madman across the Water” (which he dedicated to “the captives of Fidalgo Island”), and “Burn Down the Mission.”

Longtime Sharif friend Ringo Starr, who followed Furious George briefly as an uncredited session drummer for the Evolution Revolution, dedicated “It Don’t Come Easy” to the Bakers historic breakthrough season, and then sent out “You’re 16, You’re Beautiful and You’re Mine” to Sharif’s housekeeper, Cherry Parade.

Bacchanal veterans Steely Dan stoked the audience further with almost technically perfect renditions of “Black Friday,” “Your Gold Teeth,” “Josie,” and a 30-minute extended jam version of “Boddhisatva.”

Many in the crowd erupted in cheers and shouts of “Kill Money” at the introduction of Memphis rappers Dr. Krunkenstein, reportedly linked to an attempted assassination of NFFA commissioner William D. Money, until Sharif admonished the audience, “That’s not what we’re all about.” The band performed their debut CD, Muscle and Blow, in its entirety, including “She-body Hotel,” “My Li’l Christmas Ho-Ho-Ho,” “Glock of Ages,” “Crunk in the Trunk” and “Dat Stuff Make U Sick.”

In one of the trans-genre spectacles for which the Bacchanal has become renowned, the Finnish band Leningrad Cowboys, backed by the Russian Red Army Chorus, sent the crowd into a frenzy with a freewheeling version of “Sweet Home Alabama.” Afterward, Biggs was moved to comment, “I’ve been to five Bacchanals, two worlds fairs and a goat rodeo, and this was the damnedest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Outdoing even himself, Sharif introduced the duo of Gail and Dale, most recently of The Lawrence Welk Champagne Music Hour, who performed Brewer and Shipley’s “One Toke over the Line” as a gospel number. Brewer and Shipley, longtime Bacchanal attendees who serve on the board of Sod Bakers Grass Care, were guests of Sharif in luxury suites erected atop the Athlon Building.

Throughout the rest of the afternoon, the throng was treated to a succession of stellar performers, including the Drive-By Truckers, Wayne Newton, Robert Plant with Allison Krauss, will.i.am, Dr. Dre, David Bowie and the reunited Spiders, Willie Nelson, Megadeth, Mavis Staples, My Chemical Romance, neo-punkers The Dishonorable Discharges (who serve as the house band at Club Gitmo), and Jack White. Dave Matthews, who serves as informal spiritual adviser to Thurman Murrman, took the stage just after dark and set a record by consecutively performing eight different versions of “All Along the Watchtower” before ending his set with “Cortez the Killer.”

Though there were fewer reanimated performers than in past Bacchanals, the festival organizers emphasized quality over quantity. In fact, perhaps the crowd’s most frenzied reception was for Freddie Mercury, who joined the still-living Roger May in an hour-long set that included “We Are the Champions,” “Fat-Bottomed Girls,” and “Killer Queen.” Biggs joined them onstage for the encore, “Bohemian Rhapsody,” to sing the words “Beelzebub has a devil set aside for me.”

Near the end of the afternoon, Lewis Had the Weed thrilled the crowd not only with their set but with the announcement that the beloved Cherry Bomb CafĂ© would reopen that night. Via projection on a big screen, Sharif said that the first 500 patrons would receive free Touchdown Tasers™, and then proclaimed, “Everybody Wang Chung tonight!”

Meanwhile, word spread that at Club Gitmo at 1 a.m., Jorge Linardo would perform simultaneous same-sex weddings for 16 members of the Cambridge Animals, whose marriages had been placed in legal jeopardy by the recent Prop 8 referendum in California. By virtue of Linardo’s status as a Choctaw holy man, and because Club Gitmo stands on sovereign Native American land, the NFFA founder could legally perform the weddings in that area of West Nashville.

After 12 hours of nearly nonstop performances — including an unprecedented, tri-generational set by Hank III, Bocephus and Hank Williams — the show concluded just before midnight with the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ interpretation of the unofficial Bacchanal anthem, “Thank You (for Letting Me Be Myself Again).” In a special effects triumph, festival organizers provided natural lighting with a twist as 200 volunteers from area churches were lashed to 10-foot-high wooden poles and appeared to be set on fire — an homage to Nero, who used Christians as human torches to light his garden parties. (The effect seemed so real that Popcorn later had to issue a statement to the media explaining that no one had actually been harmed in the display.)

Finally, as many of the day’s performers who could still be located assembled onstage and joined in ‘The Night They Drove Ole Dixie Down” — a staple of the Bacchanal since its inception. To close out the evening, Haven Hamilton and the Mighty Clouds of Joy led the crowd in the traditional “Will the Circle Be Unbroken?”

About this time, however, all hell broke loose. At the encouragement of Sharif, Bacchanal organizers had planned what was billed as a special remembrance of the 30th anniversary of the Jonestown disaster in Guyana. They had not envisioned, however, that the tribute would be hijacked by the Bakers’ Pacman Jones, who held court under a huge tent bearing a sign “Welcome to Jonestown.”

During a rambling spiel, Jones claimed he had been called by God to preach against Commissioner Money and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. Jones then insisted that visitors drink the “Goodell & Money Kool-aid” as a protest against “oppression and corruption.” One by one, spellbound guests drank punch from paper cups that, according to laboratory tests performed hours later, were laced with PCP.

According to several witnesses, it was in the wake of this event that Black Dogs wide receiver Plaxico Burress announced he was going to kill team owner Money, who he believed had ordered his benching several weeks earlier, and inadvertently shot himself in the leg. (Police later took Burress in for questioning about the alleged assassination attempt on Money two weeks ago.)

Nearly 2,000 people who drank the Kool-Aid began rampaging through the festival grounds. Order was restored only after General Leonard ordered his Marine security detail to fire tear gas into the crowd. Scores were injured in the melee, leading Biggs and Sharif to the unprecedented step of canceling Day 2 of the Bacchanal.

“Safety is always our utmost concern,” noted Sharif, without irony. Then he added, “I don’t think we really had anything planned for Day 2 anyway, at least not after our technicians in Hohenwald told us Otis Redding and Marvin Gaye wouldn’t be ready. We were pretty much out of ammo after Day 1. Well, we had plenty of real ammo, of course, but you know what I mean. I just wish we had known the tear gas was coming. A lot of our guests are looking for that kind of experience, and we could have probably gotten Ticketmaster to jack the admission price by another $10.”

BACCHANAL SIDEBAR

BIG WEEKEND IN NASHVEGAS

NASHVILLE – From the heavy beats emanating from the Parthenon, to the reopening of the legendary Cherry Bomb CafĂ©, and the raucous crowd at Grey Goose stadium rocking this year’s Bacchanal game between the 12th Avenue Bakers and the West Nashville Beelzebubbas — NFFA fans were treated this weekend to the best the league has to offer.

Though trailing the East Nashville Black Dogs in the standings as that team races toward history, the two founding franchises fought brutally and then partied like Romans with NFFA fans from across the globe, proving once again that the Bacchanal belongs in the pantheon of our iconic sporting events.

But, the jewel in this year’s crown for Bakers owner QCurl Sharif had to be the victory itself.

“We have long measured ourselves against two franchises,” Sharif said from his private room at the Cherry Bomb, now located in the former John Sevier mansion in Sevier Park. “Those two have been our friends in West Nashville and, of course, the Black Dogs. To be in the mix this year and to have a shot with these two venerable organizations for the championship is exactly where we need to be. We also feel we are a storied franchise — albeit a horror story.”

The re-opening of the Cherry Bomb in the heart of the 12 South district has re-energized the area and the fan base. “We want to thank Metro for keeping this thing under wraps, cloaked as it were as a parks upgrade,” Sharif said. “We’ve removed a certain tree and replanted it in Sylvan Park. This gives us so much more space and I’ve been able to customize some things. I think the new statue of Artemis behind the house was the biggest hit this weekend. We were able to shuttle worshipers and fans between here and the Parthenon without incident in our new Taser Bus.

“I would also like to express sympathy at this time to the families of the three partygoers accidentally killed when the doors opened Thanksgiving night. We have complimentary tickets to our game this weekend with the Animals, and one of those lucky families will be selected to attend our first playoff game.”
— John Juan

Thursday, December 4, 2008

OBOBBER APPOINTS WARREN SAPP AS NEW SEA HOGS HEAD COACH


Sapp shows off his fancy footwork on Dancing With The Stars.


OBOBBER APPOINTS WARREN SAPP AS NEW SEA HOGS HEAD COACH

By Bill O'Really, FAUX News

Fidalgo Island - - In the never-ending game of one-upmanship in the NFFA, owner Tirik Obobber trumped Mojo D's recent appointment of a new head coach with a surprise appointment of his own. Today at Sea Hogs headquarters on beautiful Fidalgo Island, Obobber made the surprise announcement that he was replacing Hillary Clinton as president and head coach of the Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs with football star and former Dancing With The Stars second place finisher Warren Sapp.

Sapp said he was pleased and proud to be the Sea Hogs new head coach. Said Sapp, "Afta dancin' wid dem stars, I kin do anytang!"

Obobber announced that he was replacing Clinton as a result of her being recently named as the new Secretary of State under President-elect Obama. Said Obobber, "Hillary's 4 - 9 record had nothing to do with her departure. A let-down record like that is to be expected after the Sea Hogs won the Championship Game last year. Regardless, I am very happy that my good friend Warren Sapp has decided to take over the helm. His recent experience on Dancing With The Stars will help us greatly. We will need his fancy footwork to get us through the end of the season, even though we won't be going to the Big Dance. There is no one more intelligent and articulate than Warren. If anyone can beat the MOJO this weekend to finish off the 2008 regular season with a win, it's Warren Sapp."

MOJO COACHING CAROUSEL CONTINUES

The freshly reanimated Otto von Bismarck enjoys the
Mojo's victory over the Smack Daddies last weekend.


MOJO COACHING CAROUSEL CONTINUES


By Soren Bernyn, Fantasy Sports News

After the Mojo's first victory in five weeks, team owner Mojo D did the only logical thing: Fire the winning coach, and replace him with a Prussian statesman who has been dead for 110 years. Perhaps "HAD been dead" is a more accurate statement — over the Bacchanal weekend, QCurl Sharif's experiments in re-animation reached a new level of success by bringing back the Iron Chancellor.

Mojo D said in a prepared statement, "The Chancellor and I immediately bonded over the need to instill some discipline in the team, and he made a compelling case for his hiring; plus, he is very hard to say no to and has a fantastic hat."

The Midtown Mojo are assured of a last-place finish this season, regardless of the outcome of their game against the hated Tirik Obobber's Fidalgo Island Sea Hogs in their regular-season finale. "We quite literally have nothing to lose," Mojo D said. "So we'll be throwing anything and everything we have against the Hogs, including a genius strategist like Otto von Bismarck."

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

BAKERS CLINCH WINNING SEASON

BAKERS CLINCH WINNING SEASON
Black Dogs set new NFFA single-season win record

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

In a sign of support for the 12th Avenue Bakers who will have a winning record for the first time ever, Nashville mayor Karl Dean ordered police to block off a large stretch of 12th Avenue Monday night as celebrating Bakers fans took to the street formerly known as the Avenue of Losers.

With their 15-point win over crosstown rivals West Nashville Beelzebubbas, the Bakers picked up their eighth win and will finish the regular season no worse than 8-6. Bakers super fan Bill Cheatham said, "This is better than Vandy beating Tennessee," as he fired a round of celebratory shots at Larry Woody, who is still maintaining his vigil against the 12th Avenue franchise from a billboard overlooking Sevier Park — at this point, largely not by his own choice.

Reached at the newly opened Cherry Bomb Cafe, Bakers owner QCurl Sharif said of finally having a winning season, "I'm vibrating all over, everything I have. And I don't think I'll be taking any medication to stop it anytime soon."

Because of the Bakers' huge media footprint, there's been little notice given to the fact East Nashville broke its own NFFA record for victories in the regular season of 12 set last season. The undefeated Black Dogs notched their 13th win when they took the Cambridge Animals behind the woodshed last weekend for a 40-point whipping and extended their league record for consecutive regular season wins to 20 games.

The final obstacle between East Nashville and a perfect regular-season record is none other than the team that last beat them in the regular season, the Beelzebubbas, who registered a one-point win over the Dogs last year in week seven. According to a source within the league office, West Nashville owner-coach Boyd X. Biggs confided to Commissioner Money several weeks ago that he didn't know who was going to stop the Black Dogs.

Black Dogs coach Jim McMahon, who was also at the Cherry Bomb, said he was "glad the game is in the East Nasty 'cause I'm sure Biggs is gonna try and pull some [expletive]." He added that security for the game will be "the tightest ever at the Dog House." He also noted that fans once again had been asked to bring their black dogs to the game and as many as 10,000 canines are anticipated. That would be 20 times the number of dogs who were at the stadium on opening weekend when 100 fans from Fidalgo Island were viciously mauled.

Friday, November 28, 2008

GAMEDAY CREW BACCHANAL BOUND

The GameDay crew enjoy themselves at a rehearsal this morning at Centennial Park (left to right): Terry Bradshaw, James Brown, and Shannon Sharpe. (Out of frame): new crew member Serious George.


GAMEDAY CREW BACCHANAL BOUND
Reluctant Woody remains stuck on billboard

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

For the first time ever, the crew of NFFA TV’s popular GameDay will set up this weekend not at one of the league’s stadiums, but at the annual Bacchanal in Centennial Park.

The two-day festival — officially dedicated, according to the event website, to “love, music and whatever” — coincides each year with the second meeting of two of the NFFA’s founding franchises, the West Nashville Beelzebubbas and the 12th Avenue Bakers. The game is set for West Nashville’s Hell Stadium near the campus of Tennessee State University.

Although the game itself is meaningful for the first time in league history — both teams have clinched playoff spots and are jockeying to be the No. 3 seed, behind the East Nashville Black Dogs — much more attention, as usual, will focus on the Bacchanal, whose confirmed live performers this year include Taylor Swift, the Drive-By Truckers, Wayne Newton, Robert Plant, Allison Krauss, will.i.am, Lewis Had the Weed, Morphine, Dr. Dre, David Bowie, Ringo Starr, Willie Nelson and Jack White.

The GameDay crew includes Terry Bradshaw, Shannon Sharpe, James Brown and a new panelist, Serious George, the famed football oddsmaker who is also a cousin of the late QCurl Sharif confidant Furious George. “It’s the logical choice for us,” said Bradshaw. “There is no place that matches this for excitement on a football weekend. If I survive, it will be something to tell the grandkids about.”

Sharif, whose Grey Goose Stadium has been regularly snubbed as a GameDay location, was less impressed. “To bring this media circus to the Bacchanal is gilding the lily, if you ask me,” Sharif said. “But I’m down.”

One celebrity who apparently won’t be attending the Bacchanal or the game is sportswriter Larry Woody, who remained trapped atop the 12 South billboard where he had vowed to maintain a lonely vigil until the Bakers recorded another losing season. He revised his goal to a “non-losing” season when it became apparent the team could finish no worse than 7-7 this year. Then on Sunday, following the Bakers’ second straight loss, he spray-painted “Mission Accomplished” across the face of Willie Nelson on the board and attempted to descend by ladder. But he was driven back by repeated gunfire from the neighborhood, where Bakers superfan Bill Cheatham has organized a vigilante group he calls “Sheriffs for Sharif” to defend the team and its owner. Police refused to respond to Woody’s 911 calls for help. “I heard a bunch of pops last night,” said 12 South precinct captain Delbert “Vice” Roy. “But knowing the crazy kids around here I’m sure it was just firecrackers.

“One of these days,” he added, “we’re gonna go bust Woody for trespassing, but we’ve got more pressing priorities right now.”

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

MCMAHON: 'ANIMAL STILL SCARES ME'

East Nashville running back Lendale White exits
Coach Jim McMahon's weekly press conference.


MCMAHON: 'ANIMAL STILL SCARES ME'
Running back Lendale White disrupts press conference

By R.E. Porter, Associated Web Press

At his weekly media circus at fooBar, East Nashville coach Jim McMahon expressed confidence that his Black Dogs would run their record to 13-0 this week at Cambridge, but insisted in his opening remarks, "Dave the Animal still scares me."

"The Black Dogs will be traveling again with members of the Tennessee National Guard, who will be providing security for the team while in Cambridge," McMahon continued. "I realize unlike Fidalgo Island, Cambridge is not known as an unsafe place. But we're talking Dave the Animal here, a meth and crack kingpin whose motto is, 'Be wild, be free.' So, we're taking no chances."

At that point, a questioner in the rear of the club asked the coach why he hadn't started [running back] Lendale White all season. McMahon said, "Who asked that question?" As the members of the media directly in front of the coach turned to see who the questioner was, they and McMahon could see that it was none other than White himself.

"Lendale, what the [expletive]?" the coach said. "Get your fat ass back to the team training facility and I'll see you when I return." White mumbled a response, then left though a side door in the rear used for loading in equipment.

Several reporters shouted, "What was that all about." McMahon tried to wave it off, but Joe Biddle persisted. "C'mon, Mac, why haven't you played Lendale? He's scored 11 touchdowns." he said.

"Well, Bid, if you were any good at your job you would already know the answer to that question," McMahon chided. "Will someone give Joe a copy of the team's year-to-date stats so he can see the Dogs have four running backs with better numbers than Lendale." White has fewer fantasy points than Maurice Jones-Drew, Frank Gore, Ronnie Brown, and teammate Chris Johnson.

"But as circumstances would have it, I was actually considering giving Lendale his first start this week, but after this stunt, I don't know."

McMahon deflected a few more questions about the disgruntled White, then returned to the topic du jour: Dave the Animal. "I'm hoping the Dave's kicker oversleeps again this week. Of course, by now you all have realized the Animals would still be in the playoff hunt if Dave had started an active kicker the last two games. This from the self-proclaimed coaching genius who has yet to score any championship bling.

"But whether he fields a kicker or not, I leave Dave the Animal with this message: Quando omni flunkus, mortati." The coach then moved to the bar for the traditional Morning Glory™ margarita, which signaled the end of the press conference.

MOJO CAUGHT, THEN CLEARED

Fugitive Midtown Mojo owner Mojo D as he appeared after emerging
from the Blair Boulevard spider hole where police found him.


MOJO CAUGHT, THEN CLEARED
Memphis rappers apparently behind Money shooting

By Ariel Mutha-Tafoya, Fantasy Sports News

In a whirlwind series of events Tuesday, fugitive Midtown owner Mojo D was apprehended by Metro police, even as new information from private sources appeared to confirm Mojo’s innocence in the attempted assassination of NFFA commissioner William D. Money.

Mojo, who had been on the lam for the past two weeks, was caught after police received an anonymous tip on his whereabouts. A S.W.A.T. team dispatched to the scene found a scruffy looking, heavily bearded Mojo hiding in what police termed a “spider hole” behind a home on Blair Boulevard. In emerging from his hideout, sources said, he defiantly announced, “I am the president of the Midtown Mojo.”

Shortly after Mojo was booked and fingerprinted downtown, he was released based on what police said was “conclusive evidence” brought forward by NFFA founder Jorge Linardo, who, apparently unbeknownst to the authorities, had been conducting his own investigation into the Money shooting.

FSN has learned that, in the days following the incident in which a man in a Mexican wrestling mask wounded the commissioner outside a trendy, East Nashville nightspot, Linardo’s agents rounded up a number of “potential suspects” and brought them secretly to Club Gitmo for questioning. (Because Club Gitmo, located in “The Nations” area of West Nashville, stands on sovereign Native American tribal land, Metro law enforcement officials have no jurisdiction over the facility.)

During “enhanced interrogation procedures,” three of the potential suspects revealed that the shooting of Money was “facilitated” (though not ordered) by former Mojo team mascot Mojo Jojo. According to tapes of the interrogations viewed by FSN, the suspects said that Jojo reached out to the Memphis rap group Dr. Krunkenstein. He told them that “a tall East Nashville honky” who called himself “Dr. Krankenstein” was using extensive samples from the Memphis’ group’s unreleased debut CD, Muscle and Blow, to build his own career as a local rapper. “Are you gonna let your [expletive] get cracka-jacked like that?” Jojo reportedly asked the group.

Jojo then allegedly told the group members where to find Money on the night of the shooting. He even directed the shooter to wear a Mexican wrestling mask, in hopes that police suspicion would fall on the Midtown Mojo, for whom the masks are part of the team’s trademarked identity. None of the detainees knew which of the three members of Dr. Krunkenstein might have been the trigger man.

Interestingly, however, two other detainees cast doubt on whether Mojo Jojo had been involved at all in the conspiracy. According to them, Money — who dabbles in the music business as a sideline to his work as NFFA commissioner, and who sometimes goes by the moniker of Dr. Krankenstein — arranged for the attempted hit himself as a way to generate “street cred.” These detainees added that merely grazing Money with a bullet to the cheek was all part of the plan.

“It doesn’t matter which version is right,” said Beelzebubbas’ community relations director Anton Chigur. “Mojo D didn’t do it.”

Chigur added that Linardo had dispatched his old friend, Dog the Bounty Hunter, to search for Mojo Jojo. The controversial chimp dropped out of sight last week after failing to appear at the Jojo A Go Go, where he was scheduled to emcee a charity dance marathon to benefit orphaned highland gorillas in Uganda. Chigur also said that Linardo was planning to meet personally with the members of Dr. Krunkenstein, who are set to perform at the fifth annual Bacchanal to the Future this weekend in Centennial Park.

Meanwhile, police are seeking to question Linardo’s godson, Beelzebubbas coach Boyd X. Biggs, in the deaths of Mojo coach Otto Pilot and Furious George, childhood friend of 12th Avenue Bakers coach QCurl Sharif. Though investigators believe Furious committed suicide, the case is not yet closed. Late Sunday, Pilot’s deflated body was found with numerous puncture wounds at the Richland Creek end of the McCabe Golf Course. “It’s interesting that both of these deaths occurred in West Nashville, within easy walking distance of Biggs’ Cherokee Park residence,” said police spokesman Don Aaron.

“Biggs will happily make himself available to the police immediately after hell freezes over,” said Chigur in a prepared statement. “The timing of this shows that it is nothing more than someone’s cheap attempt to distract the 'Bubbas from their huge game with the Bakers this weekend and to drain the joy from the Bacchanalia.” Then, with a slight and somewhat frightening smile, he added, “I am confident justice will prevail.”