Archive for the ‘Fiction’ Category
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Trent Edwards: [knocking] Coach, can I come in?
Dick Jauron: Oh, sure, come on in, JP!
TE: Uh, Coach, it’s me, Trent. JP doesn’t play for the team anymore.
DJ: Oh! That’s right. So many players in and out of here, I feel like a doorman at Marshall Fields. Have a seat. I am just going over the playbook, trying to figure out what might work against the Jets on Monday night.
TE: Patriots.
DJ: Exactly! Rod Rust has a good brain, have to watch what he is up to… very tricky man. Best coach in the league if you ask me.

TE: Um… Coach, about the playbook…
DJ: Too confusing? Bit of a brain buster isn’t it!? Holy smokes, hang on to your seats, Patriots!
TE: Well, I was going to say that I was talking to the guys and we were remarking that it seems a little thin. I mean it’s not a playbook, more like a pamphlet, like a long memo or something. There are only 8 plays?
DJ: 16! They can go left or right! Plus we have that hot read audible! As a coach sometimes you have to let your dogs off the leash and make their own choices. I have faith in you, JP! Hot read!
TE: Trent. Don’t you think we could use some more plays, maybe a couple of shotgun formations?
DJ: I’ve been in this league a long time. 16 plays are more than enough. Look at this playbook! My arm hurts just lifting it. I think we will just stick with what’s working.
TE: Working? Our offense is a mess, sir.
DJ: A mess?! We’re good enough for 8 and 8! You know what 8 and 8 is on the Buffalo Bills?
TE: No.
DJ: Employed!
TE: Ah okay… I’ll just get my stuff ready for the flight then. Thanks for listening, Coach. [leaves office]
DJ: Anytime! My door is always open! Now where was I? Rod Rust, you wily old snake! You won’t get me this time!
[knocking]
DJ: JP, is that you again!?
Terrell Owens: Just me, Coach! Terrel! I misplaced me parrot!
DJ: Yellow and Blue? I think I saw him winging around in Turk’s old office. Wow! Your pirate hat is smashing son, absolutely smashing!
TO: Arrrrrrr!
In late August 2008, at the age of 31, I joined the 108th Street Dog-bears, a semi-pro football team based in El Porter, California. El Porter, about 35 miles northeast of Los Angeles, is an overlooked and forgotten town, made up largely of Chinese and Czechoslovakian immigrants—hand-to-mouth, working-class families. There were very few Chinese on the Dog-bears, but our offensive coordinator, Mal-Xi Po—a disciple of John McKay’s I-formation offense—was from the Mainland. He’d spent the first five years of his life in Shenyang, under Mao, before exiting the Red nation–with a flood of aunts, uncles, and cousins–for California.
Mal-Xi would pull me aside during practice and ask questions. “Do you remember those Seattle Seahawks teams of the late 1980s?,” he’d ask, staring into the woods beyond our makeshift, yellowed practice field stationed awkwardly behind a Super Target.
“No.”
“That was a team content to go 8-8 every season. Utterly content. The Dog-bears cannot be like them.”
At the time, I lived in a single apartment with no television. I owned 22 books and a bed. I refused to gather items–I charted my expenses in a ledger. My luxury came in the form of the better-than-decent steaks I kept in my freezer—I’d cook one for dinner every night. grilling it methodically, mathematically.
Every night, I studied Mal-Xi’s 208-page playbook. The day I joined the Dog-bears, I quit the beer. I quit the beer and, to be specific, the rye whiskey that commonly partnered with the beer. I grilled steak each evening, after practice. I ate it along with a baked potato, oven-heated rolls, green beans, tomato slices, and a glass of milk. During my day job at the agency, I dreamt of the steak dinner–and the oven-heated rolls–endlessly.

I dug into that playbook. I memorized everyone’s assignment on every play: we were required to, in order to successfully operate the scheme.
Mal-Xi’s I-formation attack was, in reality, an offshoot of the classic incarnation—something he called the “I Am I.” It was the I-formation only in name, and only for a fleeting moment on the field. Set in play, the I Am I was a devastation to unsuspecting defenses. It incorporated a deeply (overly) complex network of men-in-motion and pulling offensive lineman to create an array of mismatches. We were in a league comprised of men in their early thirties—some in their forties: insurance salesmen, taxmen, factory workers—math instructors. It was an unwritten rule that strategy remain vanilla, but Mal-Xi ignored that mandate. In our first practice scrimmage against the Sun Valley Legioneers, the I Am I generated 248 yards and 28 points in 10 minutes of play. Flustered officials stopped the scrimmage to craft a memo to the league office inquiring as to whether the Dog-bears were in violation of league rules. The upshot: There was no rule against “being better” than the Sun Valley Legioneers.
Mal-Xi maintained a “Master Playbook” with more than 4,200 plays. Our slimmed-down version included the 208 plays I studied over dinner, but Mal-Xi made it clear: “Gentlemen. Do not get complacent—my binder includes another 3,992 gridiron designs that I will unleash at a moment’s notice. We must be students of the game.”
To be continued…

Trent Edwards’ Girlfriend: Trent, I think the phone is ringing.
Trent Edwards: Baby, what time is it?
TEGF: 2 a.m.
TE: The hell?! [picks up phone]… Hello?
Terrell Owens: Trent… Trent it’s me! It’s me baby!
TE: Terrell – why are you calling? Where are you?
TO: I’m outside! It’s stunning out, but cold, just so cold. Brrrrrrr! Do you think I’m sexy?
TE: What?!
TO: Sexy! I mean, do I turn you on as a football player?
TE: What?!
TO: My hands… I have sexy hands, right? I love to catch.
TE: You do love to catch.
TO: I want to catch you. I want to catch you with my large sexy hands!
TE: I know…
TO: I want to grab you and hold you with my hands! I won’t let go. I won’t let go!
TE: With your hands… are you talking about catching the ball?
TO: Let’s wear the same clothes tomorrow!
TE: What?
TO: Meet me at 6 a.m. outside the field house. I got us two shirts with ponies on them! We are the Buffalo Ponies! You are my plow! Oh and little shorts! We’ll be all bunchy!
TE: Little shorts?
TO: Oh they are so tiny!
TE: Okay.
TO: Okay, see you tomorrow, matey! I’m gonna catch the shit out of you!
TE: Bye. [hangs up]
TEGF: Did he say bunchy sweetie?
TE: He did… [sets alarm for 5:30] Hold me.

Drew Bledsoe: Hullo?
Trent Edwards: Drew! Drew it’s me, Trent Edwards, National Football League quarterback for the Buffalo club.
DB: Oh sure. I played there – wait, what time is it?
TE: Um… I think like 11 a.m. your time
DB: Good grief! I haven’t seen this side of noon since Dallas! It’s kind of nice. I hear birds.
TE: Listen Drew, you gotta help! Terrell is making me crazy!
DB: T.O.? What is that fellow up to now?
TE: He’s following me around the locker room! He keeps wanting to go over “the playbook”!
DB: What’s wrong with that? Could be worse… Hello Mr. Mittens! [ruffled sounds of petting cat]
TE: Yeah, but Drew it’s not the playbook! It’s an old issue of Highlights from like the late 80s!
DB: Highlights! The magazine for school children? Which issue?
TE: Which issue? Which issue?!? The issue is T.O. is a maniac! He gets himself all sudsy and then slides under the shower stalls while we are in them! He says that he is the “shower seal” and he “wants to see some fishies”! I mean… what is that? “Fishies”? It’s unnerving!
DB: Is it one of the theme issues? Like about animals? “Barnyard pals”!
TE: Barnyard…? Drew are you even listening? Oh no! There he is! [whispering] He’s wearing a sailor hat!
Terrel Owens: [in background]: Ahoy Matey! Let’s go over me playbook… Arrrrr!
TE [hissing]: Drew! Help!
DB: Say hello to T.O. for me, Trent! Okay, it’s time for Mr. Mitten’s breakfast! Hmmmm… does that sound good Mr. Mittens?!
TE: Drew?
TO: [in background]: Arrrr! Put down that modern conveyance, landlubber, it’s time to walk me plank!
TE [sobbing]: Drew please… he has a parrot.
Dial Tone: sustained.
Set for release just a few days after the 2009 NFL draft (you think that is merely a coincidence?), Origins tells the fictional story of the origins of Wolverine– a mutant who seeks revenge against Victor Creed.
What is not being reported by the mainstream press, though, is that Origins is really a metaphor for the life and times of the real Wolverine, draft-nik Mel Kiper, Jr. :

Mel Kiper, Jr. Does Not Cut His Fingernails
When he is not fighting with Todd McShay, Mel Kiper, Jr. is fighting crime. Mel Kiper, Jr. is Wolverine:

Mel Kiper, Jr. Shredding a Mock Draft with His Uncut Fingernails
We will be covering this EXCLUSIVE story all week. STAY TUNED.
Drew Bledsoe
Silver Spur Hotel
Downtown/Lander, WY
Feb. 1997
Dear Mary,
This is the first letter I think I’ve written in like 5 years. It’s been a long time. I’m currently in Lander,Wyoming and feel like I am at a bit of a crossroads these days. I seem to be evaluating my life and it is taking me down some unexpected roads. I visited Clay Brannon (remember him?) in Pittsburgh and we spent some time chatting about you. He gave me your address and I thought I would drop you a line. Drop you a line… what a dumb thing to write.
At any rate, I’m driving cross country and have had a lot of time to think, and I have been thinking a lot about my past relationships, and actually I’ve been thinking quite a bit about you. I never admitted this before but I think I was in love with you, I think I still am. This isn’t a letter trying to rekindle anything, I am quite in love with my wife, and can’t imagine being with anyone else, but what I mean is I think you opened me up to new worlds, worlds that I still exist in. When we were young, you showed me there is so much more than sports, and I think I’m trying to feel that way again.
I was trying to think why we broke up. It was sometime after prom, remember? It was in my father’s car, in your driveway. I broke up with you because at the time I felt overwhelmed with sports and trying to be your boyfriend, but that wasn’t the reason- I just wasn’t mature enough to handle the emotions that you made me feel and looking back I really regret that decision. I know that life would have happened and we wouldn’t still be together, but it would have been better to let it run its course. I think there is a hole in my heart where that relationship should be. Maybe not a hole, maybe it’s an anchor because it’s pulling me down to the floor. I feel like I’m drowning.
So here I am in Lander, staring out my window at a set of mountains that seem to go on forever, though I know they don’t—that on the other side my wife is waiting for me. We have a day planned, we have a life planned. So why am I thinking of you? We dated for 8 months, you were my senior prom date, I am the face of the New England Patriots, and yet I am frozen in this chair thinking about high school. I’m unraveling.
Anyway, I hope you are well. I hear you are married, and have a kid and maybe another one on the way. I’m sure this letter is not something you were expecting, or even want, but here it is. If you feel like it, please write me back, I’d love to know what you think about all this – I have a feeling that in time, this strange space I am in will turn into something else, I might even forget I sent this – but I want you to know that right now as the sun is coming down, that I am thinking of you, and I am in love.
Your friend,
Drew
I am in Lander Wyoming. I feel like I might be breaking down. I am finding it hard to concentrate on anything. I went to get a coffee and then followed a pretty girl down the block. She had on a fleece, and had a blue messenger bag with a NOLS patch on it. She was tall, it was like she walked out of a long Russian novel.
She was breathtaking, confident and true. I wanted to talk to her – what would bring her to this town – what brings anyone anywhere – why do I feel like the universe is getting larger and larger with every breath I take. Every time I feel like I have found my footing on this trip, I wake up and find myself looking up at my life again with new eyes. My own skin is becoming a burden – I am a top athlete in the prime of my life but yet I feel like an old man – like I have traveled for many miles – walking each step – the journey is feeling endless. I thought this trip would be good for me – time to process all the things that have happened this year – to see America through my car window – to listen to local radio – to sample America like a pioneer – but yet it has done the opposite.
I sat down by a river this afternoon – the sun was shining on the side I was sitting, but across I could see rain, it slowly was coming toward me – I stared up at the clouds, I saw a boat, I saw a dragon, his claws outstretched, reaching for something invisible – is that what I am doing? As the rain came across I realized that I had begun to cry, tears fell down my cheek and dropped to the earth, we are all such a beautiful collection of atoms – why is it so hard to be what our cells so desperately want us to become?
Currently I am in Reno, my first time here. I am staying at the Gold Rush inn in the “suite” – it only cost $80 and it comes with a color, cable ready TV. I headed down to the casino floor and played some hands of blackjack. I was sitting next to an old woman; she had long fingers and was drinking a glass of wine. We talked between hands and she told me she had been living in Reno all of her life – that she has seen its booms and it’s bust, and likes it current
incarnation as a tired old gambling town – a town for the rest of us she called it. She said it had grit. She does not watch the NFL, but is a distant relative of Vincent Brisby – I thought that was astounding. Her last name is Cole, the same as his middle name. It is a family name she says. I told her I thought Vince was a good guy with some talent, but I’m not sure how long he will hang around the league (I am normally not this forthcoming but I was over my 4 beer limit) – she said such is the way of things, and someday I wouldn’t be in the league either – and we should all just enjoy the time we have. After I left the table I wandered the streets for a bit – they felt old – like the beginning and end of the world, almost like Brooklyn – everyone seemed tired, like they had just woken up from a long nap and they felt different but nothing had changed. Things do change though, sometimes it’s just hard to notice, even your soul changes I think, we are not the people we used to be -one day I will be out of the league, it happens to all of us – how will I react? I feel I might be happier – sometimes I feel a large weight on my back, to be a franchise quarterback. Sometimes I feel like I am not in control of my life, my professional life, that is everyone’s lot I suppose – we are all God’s blind creatures, we all feel like we are swimming towards a goal, we struggle upstream, we fight, but really we are all just adrift, flailing our arms in the water, while the current takes us farther down river, and out in the darkness towards God’s unending sea.
I am in Iowa. The sun is down and I just finished an 8 hour drive through America’s heartland. This has been a good trip. I saw some old friends along the way. In Pittsburgh I visited a friend from high school, the backup quarterback; he was living with his wife in a 3rd floor walk up apartment. His wife and kids were very nice to me. After dinner and they had gone to bed we had beers and talked about the old days.He wondered about the life of a NFL QB, we talked about Mary Summers my junior year girlfriend, apparently she is working in a sport marketing firm in Oklahoma – how strange – life takes us everywhere. We had a few more beers and stepped out into the night – we hit bars and drink canned beers that I have never had before like Iron City and Yuengling, we talked to men who had no idea who I am, some NFL fans recognized me and bought us Buffalo wings – people were friendly, very unlike Boston – in Boston I feel like a stranger. I miss the mist of Seattle – the west coast laid back vibe that seems to soften the blow of any wrong doing or hard feelings. I think about the choices I have made – where will they bring me – maybe I should have followed my dream and become a graphic designer, or maybe a shoe designer for NIKE – I was voted best artist in high school, best athlete ironically went to Marcus Ginty – a talented forward on our state championship basketball team – I wonder what he is up too? Later we stumbled back the apartment and when my friend went to bed I watched his wife’s VHS tapes of Sex in the City – what an interesting show – I don’t find Sarah Jessica Parker attractive at all – but I find her enchanting. Tomorrow I leave IOWA and head farther toward the ocean, the sun behind me in the morning, and in the evening it burns my eyes as I drive – I listen to NPR, I lose the station and find a new one, I think sometimes about Steve Grogan, I wonder about my future, my wife waits for me at home, I can’t wait to see her again – we will go to the farmers market first thing – make a huge breakfast, talk of my journey and plan for the things that make life worth living, a afternoon movie, beers with our parents, a long walk while the sun comes down over the Pacific – it is a good world and I am a peace –my choices are my own.