Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Rafa Nadal - Linking to the Past

I'm still getting through my thoughts about Nadal as a whole, but what's an interesting area I wanted to highlight is just the amount of times I wrote about him. Purely him. Yes, I've written a ton about Peyton Manning, or others, but given tennis is an individual sport, a lot of pieces were truly just about him. This came to me when reposting the "22 memories" article, in that there's a good number of those where I wrote a whole piece around that win. So, for my next Nadal retrospective I wanted to link back to those moments.

2008 Wimbledon - Nostalgia Diaries: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2019/05/nostalgia-diaries-pt-17-2008-wimbledon.html

This one is really memorable because I wrote about watching the match with my Aunt who would die a few months later (she was already quite ill), where I learned at that moment that she was not only a big Tennis fan but a Nadal fan. ALso of course it was the greatest match of all time.


2009 Australian Open - Nostalgia Diaries: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2021/02/the-nostalgia-diaries-pt-25-2009.html

His last title win before the start of the blog - a lot of talk here about the changing of the rivalry and the friendship between Nadal and Federer that started that day.


2010 French Open - The Changing of the (Swiss) Guard:  https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2010/06/there-is-man-in-switzerland-today-man.html

I;m honestly a bit sad I focused so much of Nadal's win here to be about the demise of the reign of Federer. Of course, that was largely true - this was Nadal's 7th slam, and since then Nadal would win 15 more and Federer just four more.


2010 US Open - The Reign of Rafa: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2010/09/reign-of-rafa.html

All about him being the undisputed king. Of course a fellow named Novak woudl rise up right after this, but at this moment Rafa's future seemed limitless. Of course even I probably wouldn't have thought the best case scenario would be thirteen more titles!


2014 French Open - Rafa Nadal - Reaching the Highest of Expectations:  https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2014/06/rafa-nadal-reaching-highest-of.html

I;m shocked I didn't write about the four wins in interim, especially during his dominant 2013 season. Oddly, I did write about him in August 2013, when he beat Djokovic in a stellar final in Toronto. Anyway, I did in 2014, the same time I made a bet with a friend that he would exceed Federer in slams. Of course, he wouldn't win for another three years. 


2017 French Open - La Decima: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2017/06/la-decima.html

As you'll see, I wrote about basically every slam win from here on out. Being Nadal, most are at teh French Open, and most are actually quite similar. All increasingly slack-jawed at Nadal's craziness of racking up titles at Rolland Garros.


2017 US Open - Rafa's Sweet 16: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2017/09/rafas-sweet-16.html

The win over Kevin Anderson was the most lowkey, easy final to watch. There was like zero chance he was losing. Allowed me to get a bit more introspective on teh career and what-not than the match itself. It was a lot about him winning a non-clay slam for the first time in four years.


2018 French Open - La Undecima de Nadal: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2018/06/la-undecima-de-nadal.html

Again, it's basically about "isn't it just crazy that we have a guy who has won eleven French Open titles!?" Also will say that the funniest part here is that I actually didn't watch a second of this Final - it taking place early with me being on the West Coast and it being basically a fait accompli that he was going to win.


2019 French Open - Rafa's Dozen: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2019/06/rafas-dozen.html

Broken record here - him winning a ludicrous twelfth Roland Garros. Let's just proceed.


2019 US Open - Watching Rafa: Emotionally Drained, Completely Energized:  https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2019/09/watching-rafa-emotionally-drained.html

This is probably my most introspective article about a single match. It isn't all that much about the career. About the chase of the all-time record (this brought him to within one of Federer). It was about that magical five hour match against Medvedev. Honestly, maybe my favorite piece I wrote about Nadal.


2020 French Open - Rafa: https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2020/10/rafa.html

Not sure why I went so simple with teh title. This was still during Covid. He throttled Djokovic, who clearly was nipping at his/Federer's heels at this point. It seemed more important at the time.


2022 Australian Open - Rafa Climbing the Mountain:   https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2022/02/rafa-climbing-mountain.html

If not the 2019 US Open one, this might be my favorite. For twelve years I was waiting to write this. For eight years I was financially wanting to write this (the bet with my friend). On the whole, it was a thrill to jsut be able to. Again, I'll always just love the fact that for a small moment in time, Rafa was alone at the top of the slam leaderboard.


2022 French Open - 14 for Rafa:  https://loungingpass.blogspot.com/2022/06/14-for-rafa.html

In the end, not a surprise this was the last one. For those that remember, there was some weird retirement talk during this tournament, largely squared around the resurfacing of a foot issue that first troubled him in 2006. A month later he would get hurt at Wimbledon, pulling out before his semifinal against Kyrgios. Obviously he came back, but was never really right, so in a way the weird retirement cloud at the time of the 2022 French Open makes this more poignant.

NFL 2024: Week 7 Power Rankings & The Rest

Tier I - The "Is it 2025 yet?" Duo

32.) Carolina Panthers  =  1-5  (103-203)
31.) New England Patriots  =  1-5  (83-143)

Not to beat around the bush, but sometimes it's clear that you have to start looking at next year. For the Patriots, they've started that process by ripping the band-aid off and goign with Drake Maye. Just have to hope it isn't a David Carr situation given how bad that OL is. For the Panthers, they've almost done the reverse in essentially ripping the band-aid off as it relates to admitting Bryce Young is a mistake. At least for them they have their #1 pick this year, which very well may be #1 in the draft again. 


Tier II - The "Schadenfreude at its Finest" Uno

30.) Cleveland Browns  =  1-5  (95-141)

It's just so hilarious how bad the Watson situation is in every way. Of course, screw him all the way to hell. I hope they don't bench him because that ownership group should reap every single awful moment that they sowed, and Watson should doubly so get humiliated weekly. If anything, my only hope is they trade some of the good players away. I don't fault the Myles Garrett's and the like for this disaster.


Tier III - The "Just Bad Football" Quadro

29.) Las Vegas Raiders  =  2-4  (109-163)
28.) Jacksonville Jaguars  =  1-5  (113-178)
27.) Miami Dolphins  =  2-3  (60-113)
26.) New York Giants  =  2-4  (96-121)

As we'll get to in a bit, I actually think the upper end of the league is quite strong this year, but the converse is there's a good set of bad teams. The Raiders changed QBs but that hasn't changed their offensive outlook at all. Can they just go and trade Devante Adams please!? For the Jags, it's jsut a top to bottom disaster. I guess there is always a chance Trevor Lawrence starts to play better, which is the one thing keeping me from having them even lower. Similarly, I guess Tua could come back at some point? It is amazing though how awful that offense looks without Tua though. I do wonder if there is a view that the crazy offense has to some degree been very much foudn out. For the Giants - the defense remains quite good but to no one's surprise Daniel Jones cannot lead a fully functional offense. I like a lot of what the Giants have built outside of the QB, but that is irrelevant if they don't cut the cord.


Tier IV - The "Better Luck Next Year" Duo

25.) Los Angeles Rams  =  1-4  (94-139)
24.) Tennessee Titans  =  1-4  (96-110)

Both these teams are probably better than one-win through five games. The Rams are definitely better if they didn't have a cascade of injuries reminiscent of say the 2020 49ers. Technically I guess that 49ers team lost their QB as well, but Stafford is hanging in there. For the Titans, it's been depressing to see how far Will Levis has fallen this year compared to the sprightly QB who could throw a gorgeous deep ball last year. Given it's year one in a new regime, I'll cut them some slack that this is very much not a finished product.


Tier V - The "Depressingly Poor" Duo

23.) Dallas Cowboys  =  3-3  (126-168)
22.) New York Jets  =  2-4  (113-108)

The Cowboys are truly bad right now. Yes, their defense has been fairly decimated by injuries. But still they should not be giving up 40+ in two of their three home games so far. The offense is also a shell of itself, and this is all after their big extensions to Lamb and Prescott. I think we're super close to this being a situation where they missed their chance in 2022 and are playing out the string. My ranking of the Jets isn't really impacted all that much by the Devante Adams trade because the Jets main problems to me aren't materially solved there - their OL stinks and the defense is already showing some holes post Saleh. Maybe it was one game, but the run defense was pathetic. That is a bad combination here.


Tier VI - The "Middling Middlers" Quinto

21.) Arizona Cardinals  =  2-4  (133-163)
20.) Indianapolis Colts  =  3-3  (139-139)
19.) Denver Broncos  =  3-3  (112-96)
18.) New Orleans Saints  =  2-4  (157-147)
17.) Seattle Seahawks  =  3-3  (146-150)

The soft underbelly is a monster at the moment with these five. The Cardinals are still exciting, and I believe in Kyler again but that defense needs a lot more in the DL to make them passable. The Colts are doing basically what they did last year - playing awful football but somehow stringing together a few wins. The Broncos defense will keep them in games, but Nix's lack of progress should call into question a bit Sean Payton's QB development skills in teh 2020s. For the Saints, they have to hope Derek Carr gets back soon, and more than that the defense can start tackling again. The underlying stats will still be good, but that was a very, very troubling game. The Seahawks run defense has to get better or they'll never head above .500. With teh 49ers slow start that division is there for the taking, but the defense that started out well has really started to sag the last few games.


Tier VII - The "Upside Potential" Duo

16.) Philadelphia Eagles  =  3-2  (106-112)
15.) Cincinnati Bengals  =  2-4  (157-152)


The Eagles seem like a mess, what happens when you end 1-6 the year prior and have things like the head coach jawing at home fans. But they're getting the calvary back - Hurts looks good. If not for the freak block FG that was a calm, cool win. They haven't solved a lot of their issues coming into the year, but remain talented enough to sneak a wild card (or the division if Washington cools off...). The Bengals would be a lot easier to get behind if they didn't fool around and lose to what has revealed itself to be an awful New England team. Their schedule remains easy, and the upside is still there. It will be interesting to see if they can build anything off their first decent defensive performance to date.


Tier VIII - The "Better than Middling Better than Middlers" Quadro

14.) Atlanta Falcons  =  4-2  (149-135)
13.) Pittsburgh Steelers  =  4-2  (124-86)
12.) Chicago Bears  =  4-2  (148-101)
11.) Washington Commanders  =  4-2  (178-145)


The biggest development to me of the Falcons in recent games has been the rediscovery of Kyle Pitts. Now, let's see it against teams not named the Panthers and such, but there's some life there. For the Steelers, I could write the same thing but replace the name "Kyle Pitts" with "Najee Harris", and similarly so the Raiders taking the place of the Panthers in the sense of "prove it against a real team". For the Bears and Commanders, it's all about the rookies. Caleb Williams has feasted against bad defenses these last few weeks - but in reality so has Jayden Daniels for his best games (Bengals, Cardinals). Both are clearly good enough that it is almost assured they won't be busts, but I think there's a chance both come back towards the mean QB performacne for the remainder of the season. Not that this should be seen as anything other than a positive first season for both.


Tier IX - The "They Might Be Great" Duo

10.) Los Angeles Chargers  =  3-2  (91-66)
9.) Tampa Bay Buccaneers  =  4-2  (178-141)

I don't think either of these two are great yet, but have some underlying strengths if they can remain healthy. Particularly, the Chargers defense has played great so far. Granted, against some truly awful offenses, but their starters should be good if they can stay healthy. A big if to be sure. The Buccaneers similarly have such frontline talent if they remain all on the field. The offense is playing like it did at the peak of the Brady years. The defense needs more teeth but some of that is the style they employ under Todd Bowles, especially needing more blitzing to generate consistent pressure. 


Tier X - The "They Are Great" Quadro

8.) Green Bay Packers  =  4-2  (162-121)
7.) Houston Texans  =  5-1  (143-135)
6.) San Francisco 49ers  =  3-3  (162-130)
5.) Buffalo Bills  =  4-2  (165-126)

I don't know what it really says, but my Top-8 teams have seven of the eight teams that played in the divisional round last year, and the other 5-0 team. I'm sure we'll get more variance as we go, but so far these four have all done well. The Packers finally gave Love some protection and it looked all better. The defense has also started getting more pressure. For the Texans, it's a good sign that there are some weaknesses to point to (protection, some accuracy issues) and the team is still 5-1 and clear in that division. For the 49ers, that was a get-right game, while they await even more reinforcements. Purdy is playing great, and I count at lease one of their losses (primarily the Cardinals one) to flukes. For teh Bills, that was a heartening game in the sense they lose that in recent years, with teh hail mary, the bad penalty calls. The heartening part is while they're dealing with some injuries, those aren't long term. More than that though, Amari Cooper is a great fit for what they need on offense for Allen.


Tier XI - The "Revenge Tour" Duo

4.) Baltimore Ravens  =  3-2  (177-149)
3.) Detroit Lions  =  4-1  (151-91)

Twelve years ago, the Super Bowl was between teh two teams that lost the prior year's Conference Title Games in heartbreaking fashion. One of those two was even the Ravens. Not to say that's definitely happening here, but we're on our way in a sense. The Ravens really blew that Raiders game, otherwise their record would better match their actual level so far. Jackson looks great, Henry looks great, and the defense is starting to get more dynamic. For the Lions, I'm really hoping they trade for some edge help, be it Myles Garrett (the Cooper trade at least indicates they may be open for business) or Maxx Crosby, or someone else. That offense is humming, but Hutchinson was such a key element of them being a super bowl caliber defense.


Tier XII - The "Resting Up for the Long Haul" Duo

2.) Minnesota Vikings  =  5-0  (139-76)
1.) Kansas City Chiefs  =  5-0  (118-85)

Boring week in a sense where the two remaining 5-0 teams were both on a bye. Both have nice tests coming up, with teh Vikings hosting the Lions and the Chiefs taking a trip to San Francisco. So far, nothing much to report here.


Looking Ahead to Next Week's Games

Byes: Chicago Bears (4-2), Dallas Cowboys (3-3)

15.) New England Patriots (1-5)  @  Jacksonville Jaguars (1-5)  (9:30am - NFLN)
14.) Carolina Panthers (1-5)  @  Washington Commanders (4-2)  (4:05 - CBS)
13.) Cincinnati Bengals (2-4)  @  Cleveland Browns (1-5)  (1:00 - CBS)
12.) Las Vegas Raiders (2-4)  @  Los Angeles Rams (1-4)  (4:05 - CBS)

I call it "Look far away" Sunday, as


11.) New York Jets (X-X)  @  Pittsburgh Steelers (4-2)  (SNF - NBC)
10.) Tennessee Titans (1-4)  @  Buffalo Bills (X-X)  (1:00 - CBS)
9.) Denver Broncos (3-3)  @  New Orleans Saints (2-4)  (TNF - Amazon)
8.) Los Angeles Chargers (3-2)  @  Arizona Cardinals (2-4)  (MNF 2.0 - ESPN)

I call it "There's better things to do on a October weekend" Thursday, Sunday and Monday, as


7.) Philadelphia Eagles (3-2)  @  New York Giants (2-4)  (1:00 - FOX)
6.) Miami Dolphins (2-3)  @  Indianapolis Colts (3-3)  (1:00 - CBS)

I call it "Weirdly interesting...." Sunday, as


5.) Seattle Seahawks (3-3)  @  Atlanta Falcons (4-2)  (1:00 - FOX)
4.) Houston Texans (5-1)  @  Green Bay Packers (4-2)  (1:00 - CBS)

I call it "The beginning of something great" Sunday, as


3.) Detroit Lions (4-1)  @  Minnesota Vikings (5-0)  (1:00 - FOX)
2.) Kansas City Chiefs (5-0)  @  San Francisco 49ers (3-3)  (4:25 - FOX)

I call it "Undefeated, but not Unchallenged" Sunday, as


1.) Baltimore Ravens (4-2)  @  Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4-2)  (MNF - ESPN)

I call it "Just good ol' fashioned football" Monday, as

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Re-Post: Rafa: 22 Memories for 22 Slams

I'll have a lot more about Rafa in the coming days/weeks. He's the last player that I followed to the degree of obsession that I have painted ont eh blogs side wall. Brodeur and Oswalt retired in 2013. Manning in 2016. Bill Walsh died in 2007. And then there was Rafa, who somehow made it to 2022 as a top player, and 2024 as an athlete. This day was inevitable, and honestly way delayed. You can ask the most ardent Nadal fan in say 2010 and it would seem ludicrous Nadal would be an active player in 2024. But we got that. Anyway, to start, I'll re-post my 22 memories for Rafa's 22 slams. At teh end of the day, I'm so happy that even though it was short-lived, Rafa did have the slam lead for a bit. He was the GOAT for a time, even if he isn't anymore. Anyway, for the first of probably, inevitably 6-8 Nadal posts - here we go.

*****************************************************************************

I admittedly posted this right after Nadal beat Medvedev in the Australian Open. I like the fact that five months later it was already outdated. Let this not be the last entry....

1.) 2005 French Open - def (UR) Mariano Puerta  6-7  6-3  6-1  7-5




I was in Chicago visiting my great Aunt when this match took place. I remember watching it on their small tv in a corner of the guest room I was staying at. Even then something was special about Nadal - mostly his speed and ability to track down ridiculous shots that no one else would even come close to. Overtime many players became as audacious in their defense as Nadal was but then it was new - as were the capris and the muscles and the grunts. The real star match was the semifinal win over Federer in four sets, but here too he was challenged but got his reward: for some reason Zinedine Zidane - a full year before he would rule the world at the World Cup - being the guest of honor handing out the trophy. A great respect and friendship started that day, between those two, and between me and Rafa.


2.) 2006 French Open - def (1) Roger Federer  1-6  6-1  6-4  7-6



By this point Nadal was probably already being hailed as well on track to being the best clay court player ever, but still seeing him lose the first set 1-6 is staggering. He quickly, as in immediately, reversed course rolling Federer 6-1 in the next set. Overtime I came to appreciate this weird foible of all the rivalries of the big-3, that every now and then, even within the same match, one would just randomly put on 'God' mode for a set or two. The last two sets were somewhat forgettable but overall looking back I just love the symmetry of those two 6-1 sets.


3.) 2007 French Open - def (1) Roger Federer  6-3  4-6  6-3  6-4



This was the match that made me, and probably many, think that yeah, at some point he's going to beat him on other surfaces. About a month before this match Federer hammered Nadal at th Hamburg masters. I believe Federer was the betting favorite entering this match for some reason. Instead, Nadal won a calm, if well played, four setter. My memory of the match is somewhat hazy aside from the growing sense that Rafa is just inevitable on this surface and on this court, and finally the French crowd was starting to realize that their favorite boy Roger wouldn't be able to beat him.


4.) 2008 French Open - def (1) Roger Federer  6-1  6-3  6-0



The scoreline 6-1, 6-3, 6-0, will always be my paragon of Nadal's clay dominance. And it was every bit as dominant - with the first and third sets taking abuot 30 minutes each - hyper-fast in Nadal's world. I remember Federer just being passed so easily time and time again, he started going up to the net already with slumped shoulders knowing it was pointless. Rafa ended up winning this tournament without dropping a set -- a feat he would match three more times -- but never at the level of play that he did here. His scorelines against great players is just insane - none much more than when he just eviscerated Federer to a level heretofore unimaginable.


5.) 2008 Wimbledon - def (1) Roger Federer  6-4  6-4  6-7  6-7  9-7



I wrote a Nostalgia Diaries piece about this game, namely how we watched the epic match across the four and a half hours of gameplay, and multiple rain delays, with my Aunt who would die a few months later. She was a Nadal fan. We entered this one confident, given it came a month after the massacre at Roland Garros, and moreso after Nadal calmly won two sets. But of course Federer rose to the occasion and gave us what will always be known by anyone who isn't a Novak fan as the Greatest Match of All Time. Maybe more than any of these pre-2010 major wins, this one is seared in my mind.


6.) 2009 Aussie Open - def (2) Roger Federer  7-5  3-6  7-6  3-6  6-2



I wrote about this one as well, and the lasting moment will be either the best single point the two ever played, where each hit about two winners before Rafa's outstreched actual winner, or of course Federer's breakdown at the end. Seeing Federer burst into tears was a mix of harrowing and hilarious at the time, but you can understand it. Nadal broke him. In seven months he blasted him embarrisingly on clay, stole his glory at Wimbledon and now beat him on hard court. That said, what has now become a truly close friendship probably started that day too, with Nadal consoling Federer, arm around his shoulders, before publicly reassuring the world that he felt Federer would pass the '14 of Sampras.' How little did we know how prescient those words would be.


7.) 2010 French Open - def (5) Robin Soderling  6-4  6-2  6-4



This was the first of many 'Nadal comes back and wins his first slam after a prolonged injury' wins for Nadal, but to me the most memorable. His injury that forced him out of Wimbledon and made him play at about 80% thereafter was novel, it was scary and seemed to confirm many of the fears or projections many had about Rafa's style of play. But then he came back and won the French Open again without losing a set, and this time doing it by exacting revenge on teh guy that beat him the year before. It wasn't his most dominant run - in truth he had more dominant runs where he lost a set or two - but it was maybe the most fulfilling.


8.) 2010 Wimbledon - def (12) Tomas Berdych  6-3  7-5  6-4



For whatever reason, I have this match taped on VCR then converted to DVD. I have no idea why. It wasn't a particularly close match (obviously) and Rafa seemed so preordained to win it seemed a bit ordinary. His real test was the Semifinal against Andy Murray which he also won in five sets. At this point, Nadal did seem like the best grass court player in the world too - winning it for the second straight time he played the event. Little did we know how much of a horror show he would soon become on grass, for what are still inexplicable reasons given how he turned it around in 2018-19.


9.) 2010 US Open - def (3) Novak Djokovic  6-4  5-7  6-4  6-2



I would posit Nadal's peak as a player was this tournament run. He won the US Open dropping just that one solitary set in the final. He maxed out the one 'weakness' of his game, suddenly smashing 130+ mph serves routinely, including three straight service winners to close out the third set. He never really served that fast again (Nadal claims it impacted his shoulder), but in that moment he had no weakness. How good was he? He dropped serve one time period prior to the final. Every now and then I do wish Nadal brings back the huge serve again. It really made him for a two-week stretch the perfect player.


10.) 2011 French Open - def (3) Roger Federer  7-5  7-6  5-7  6-1



This was the tournament where this Nadal fan finally started to come around on Roger - I even think I wrote something about it at the time. Why? Because Roger beat Djokovic in the semifinals - Novak's first loss of the year. Nadal was 0-4 that year against Djokovic losing in the finals of Indian Wells, Miami, Rome and Madrid. I guarantee Djokovic would've won again, but instead Federer took him out - and Nadal beat Federer as he does. This was a treat though I don't think I ever would've imagined it would be the last fnal between the two for six years.


11.) 2012 French Open - def (1) Novak Djokovic  6-4  6-3  2-6  7-5



Honestly, I don't know if Rafa was ever as content and pleased after a win than this one. He had lost the prior three finals all to Djokovic. As good as Djokovic was in 2011-12, Nadal was like 95% as good, but lost the key matches. Here he won the key match getting a bit of help with rain that came right after he lost the third set. He steadied in the 4th, which I followed on my phone on the NJ Transit heading up to my internship. This was before network was nearly as good to watch it on the phone, so I was maddeningly refreshing the French Open's score app. Not a fun way to watch a final.


12.) 2013 French Open - def (5) David Ferrer  6-3  6-2  6-3



This match took place two days after I returned to the US from my 'Around the World' trip. It was a letdown given the real final was Rafa's semifinal marathon win over Djokovic in a weird mirror version of their 2012 Oz Final epic. That match took place the day I returned, and I had my parents DVR-it. For whatever reason teh DVR failed and when I got home, Nadal was serving for the match. That was quite a welcome-home gift after four months away. People talk about that match being this close epic, and it certainly was, but I'll never forget that Nadal had more winners than Novak, less errors, and won way more points.


13.) 2013 US Open - def (1) Novak Djokovic  6-2  3-6  6-4  6-1



The final took place on a Monday which coincidentally was my 2nd day of work as an adult having started the Friday before. We were at a pasta making class & dinner while it was going on. I wasn't the only one very interested, and I do remember we reached back to the hotel the company put us all up in that week in time to watch the ending getting drunk at the bar in the hotel. It was an amazing first week, and while this wasn't the highlight, it wasn't too far behind. I definitely bonded with a few colleagues over our shared love of Rafa, who pulled off a miracle in the 3rd set before just rolling and finishing off his most dominant year yet.


14.) 2014 French Open - def (2) Novak Djokovic  3-6  7-5  6-2  6-4



Five years after Nadal reduced Fed to tears, he reduced Djokovic to tears here - not as pronounced but every bit as real, as for years of getting closer to beating Nadal at the French, he won a set but then was overwhelmed. Of course, just like how Federer would go on to win three of the next four slams post-bawling, so too would Novak. Separately, it was after this win that I bet my friend the $200 that Nadal would beat Fed. Who could blame me, Nadal was three behind having won three of the last five slams, and Federer hadn't won one in two years. It took seven years, and ten combined slams, but finally I was right.


15.) 2017 French Open - def (3) Stan Wawrinka  6-2  6-3  6-1


The fact that there is this two-and-a-half year gap in Nadal's run will never not amaze me. Same with Djokovic's similar gap from 2016 Wimby through 2018 French. But rise like a Phoenix he did. If any tournament has a claim to match his dominance in 2008 it was this one where he won by similarly lopsided scores, admittedly against lesser players. The final over Stan was also cathartic given his loss to Stan in the 2014 Australian Open final. The real memory for me was it was Rafa's 10th French Open, a fact Roland Garros basically assumed would happen given the vast amounts of '10' signage they immediately unfurled when it was over.


16.) 2017 US Open - def (24) Kevin Anderson  6-3  6-3  6-4



The final was fairly routine here - once again the Semifinal was the real test, this time against Juan Martin del Potro. Nadal look flustered early against Delpo, before rolling off 10 straight games while winning the 2nd and 3rd sets 6-0, 6-3. My real memory of this tournament was actually Delpo's win over Federer, which I watched on my computer in a bar in Wallingford, chatting with my friends. I was about 30 seconds behind which they used to hilariously evil impact. For a pretty mediocre project, memories like that night at that bar will always be with me.


17.) 2018 French Open - def  (7) Dominic Thiem  6-4  6-3  6-2



I think this is maybe the only final on this list that I know I didn't watch any of. I was in Vancouver, and given the time difference it was largely over by the time I woke up at 9am or whatever. It wasn't too surprising. Thiem was a great clay court player, but Rafa was on a roll and beat him rather easily. At this point, him winning the French was basically a guarantee, so honestly I was perfectly fine sleeping in my Vancouver AirBNB while this was going on.


18.) 2019 French Open - def (4) Dominic Thiem  6-3  5-7  6-1  6-1



Things seemed a bit more tricky this time around. Thiem survived a five-set war with Djokovic in the semifinal and really played Rafa to a draw in the first two sets. Then Rafa unleashed a level of clay court playing who would rarely match with its brutality. Double breadsticks to end it absolutely encapture just how great Rafa was on the day. I left thinking Thiem would be the next non-Rafa player to win the French. While that sadly isn't true, I do for sure hope he wins one.


19.) 2019 US Open - def (4) Daniil Medvedev  7-5  6-3  5-7  4-6  6-4


I watched this match in its entirety, sitting in the same old chair we brought over one year from India, barely getting up or moving for the run of its nearly five hours. It was a thrilling match because of how new it was. This was the first time (not including 2017 against Anderson which was a fait accompli) that Rafa was facing a serious contender in a non-French Open final that wasn't Djokovic or Federer. Daniil was excellent. He played excellently. He was the fresher guy in the 5th. But Nadal pulled it out. Around this time, an old college friend nad I started chatting mosly around our shared love of Nadal - or at least that is how it started. I remember furiously pinging DMs back and forth throughout this incredible match, easily the best of his non-historic wins (e.g. teh 21st, his first Wimbledon and Australian/hard court, etc).


20.) 2020 French Open - def (1) Novak Djokovic  6-0  6-2  7-5



This was the sequel to his 2008 massacre twelve years later and maybe more brutal in its efficiency. To see Nadal go 6-0, 6-2, against Djokovic was stunning. He was insanely good in this one, that just ike Federer reacted after 2008, I still remember Novak's post-game speech saying 'well, I guess this is why your are the king of clay'. There's no agument, even after the events of the French Open the following year. You can play the French Open in winter, in a closed roof, all things that were supposedly to Djokovic's advantage, and it didn't matter. The king stay the king.


21.) 2022 Aussie Open - def (2) Daniil Medvedev 2-6  6-7  6-4  6-4  7-5



What more to say - I just wrote a few thousand words on this yesterday. The only thing I'll mention is truly how much I expected Medvedev to win. And not even in any weird reverse jinx way. I felt it going in and seeing Medvedev race to a 6-2 first set just compounded that feeling. Which is then to say how gleeful, much like Rafa himself at the end, I was that he pulled it off. The 21st, the 2nd career slam, all incredible memories that can help block out bad ones, and it all crested in the craziest way possible. Insane, as Rafa is, was and will always will be.


22.) 2022 French Open - def (8) Casper Ruud  6-3  6-3  6-0



I'm not going to talk about the injury stuff, or my thoughts on the ludicrous 14. Forget all that. I'm going to talk about Nadal and Ruud, and namely how uniquely excited Casper Ruud was to get hammered. There was a slice of the internet that was upset that Ruud wasn't committed enough and didn't want it enough and all that garbage. You know what? Ruud was right. He's not a nobody, being a top-10 player coming into this tournament. But still, while he will make a good life for himself playing on tour another 7-10 years, he may or may not win a slam. You know what he will have: being the guy who played a French Open Final against Nadal. There is no shame in losing one of those - literally everyone has. He just had the smartness to realize that in losing, you still win because you were there to witness greatness at its highest extent.

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

2024 India Trip: Amritsar

Amritsar was a welcome change because it was the anti-Lucknow. Granted, that isn't always great - the food was definitely better in Lucknow. But man, Amritsar can bring it with sites. From the famous (the Golden Temple) to the austere (the Jailanwala Bagh Memorial), to the educational (the excellent Partition Museum) to the entertaining (the Attari / Wagah border performances). Amritsar had everything going well.

Amritsar also knows this about itself, maybe a bit too much. The are surrounding the main sites are really well laid out, clean, manicured and beautiful - white tile stone streets that are pedestrian only, really nice store signage. It's a glorious center of the city. Go a few blocks outside of that and you get into the bustling, dirty maw of any Indian city. Half of me wishes they gave more of the city that level of attention. But so be it.

I'll reverse the order of how I wrote about Lucknow, to focus on the food first. Punjab is a fairly heavy vegetarian state - some of their most notable restaurants, be it more street food "dhaba" style spots or what gets advertised as fancier versions of classic Punjabi cuisine. Not to say this was bad. Firstly, I had overindulged in non-veg in Lucknow (it is what is best), so getting a couple veg meals was quite welcome. 

The first meal was at Swagtam Dhaba, a hole in the wall type restaurant taht serves basically set Kulcha meals - where you get a Kulcha (regular, or stuffed with onion, cauliflower or paneer; I chose paneer) with two dals, channa and onion pickle. It was a super simple meal, by far the simplest I had on the trip overall. But so good in its simplicity. So many of these Indian street restaurants hide fairly clean, cozy eating areas behind the veneer of dusty, grimy street-faces. You have to see what's within.

The other veg lunch needed no such act of bravery, as I had a meal at Haveli, a reputed fancy, old-style, veg restaurant serving Punjabi classic. The restaurant was a large, two story area, well adorned with classic Phulkari embroidery table runners and tablecloths. The food was graet as well, as I ordered a okra masala fry dish (great, crunchy, spicy), and a shahi paneer curry, which was so smooth and hearty. I can't do veg food day after day, but a couple lunches fit quite well.

Dinner was non-veg (has to be), and it was two similar spaces. Both far out of the city (to which it was a bit tough to get an uber back). Both were large spaces, with tables in lush gardens with ponds, trees, greenery, and a mix of indoor and outdoor seating. It was perfection in terms of a setting. I was indoors the first day, but outdoors the second, under a lovely breeze and fairly cool (for India) night. Both places also had fairly robust menus that combined Western food (e.g. pastas), Chinese food and Indian classics. I stuck, stubbornly so, to Indian food to quite good results.

The first place was called The Bagh, and the second the Elgin Club. The food was probably a bit better at The Bagh, but both were similarly quite strong. At the Bagh, I got a chicken kalbi kebab platter and then a mutton curry - both were presented excellently, with sizable portions as well. The Elgin Club was fairly similar in ordering, getting a mutton chapli kebab, and mutton roganjosh, with a nice roomali roti. The only real complaint was the mutton curry at the Elgin was too bony, but it is what it is.

Amritsar also has a decent nightlife scene, focusing around an up and comign area around Ranjit Avenue - a 4x2 block area Northeast of city center. In that area are multiple developments of 4-5 floors each, packed with restaurants (Haveli was here) and bars and lounges in the like. I went to a couple places, firstly being an outpost of Brewdog (yes, the Scottish craft brewery), which had live music and a really nice tap list. I tried another more local brewery (Brewmaster) which also had live music (seems to be a thing here), and four of their own brews. They were tasty, but contineud the weird aspect of too many Indian breweries serving beer close to room temperature. The final spot was the Liquid Room, which was a nice club, playing pretty great Punjabi music, with cheap, good drinks. Alcohol on the whole is fairly cheap in Amritsar, another plus about the place.

Okay, enough dabbling. Let's get to the sites. The best one is the Golden Temple, a beautiful, pristine, large Sikh temple complex that is one of their most holy places in Sikkhism. The complex has white marble 4-wall exterior, with a large lake with teh Golden Temple (gold leaf over the marble) in the middle. It is gorgeous, it is stunning. It was enthralling during the day, but doubly so when it was perfectly floodlit and I went back during the night (honestly, worth going to it for both). It is a staggering sight, especially with the throngs of supporters chanting, praying and singing, all circumnavigating the square.

Honestly, the site would be architecturally notable even if you remove the actual golden shrine in the middle. The artwork, the detailing, the beauty in the walls and gates and the like on the four sides of the rectangle are nice enough. But then add in the Golden part, and it is really say India's version to the Kinkaku-Ji in Kyoto. Incredible place.

Separately, there are great sights that speak to Amritsar's position as the one of teh first cities on the India side of the India-Pakistan border. Notably, when the British negotiated redrawing borders when India and Pakistan got its independence from the UK, they drove a line right in the middle of Punjab (which exists today as a state in both countries). Millions of Muslims fled to Pakistan, crossing through Amritsar. Millions of Hindus and Sikhs went the other direction. Hundreds of Thousands died. The Partition Museum in Amritsar goes through this in great detail, with rooms talking about the decades of rebellion leading up to Independence and Partition, and then the massacre and fallout thereafter. It doesn't play sides. It tells a true retelling of a harrowing time.

The other notable massacre in the town was at the height of Indian discord with the crown, when they quelled an uprising that killed thousands of Indian rebels in the Jailanwala Bagh area of Amritsar. Today, taht area is turned into a memorial park with more history in four exhibits. These areas are clean, solemn, picturesque and just overall great sights. Amritsar is like that a lot.

The final sight was maybe the most interesting - the Atari/Wagah border (Atari the town on the border on the India side, Wagah on the Pakistan side). Each day there is a demonstration, ran by members of the border guard from both coutnries, right at the border - as in the area near and between two fences. Every day at 5pm, thousands gather (literally, India built a 25,000 seat stadium there - Pakistan is currently buidlign one) to watch the border guards perform, dance, chant, march leading to the joint lowering of the flag. Sure, it is all a bit nationalistic. Sure, the patronage and cooperation in this display here is not representative of the deep fractures between the two countries in reality, but it is still a great time.

As was Amritsar as a whole. Granted, there is better food elsewhere in India. Secretly, I wish you can combine the food in Lucknow and the sites in Amritsar and you get a top tier city. That said, it isn't like the food is bad in Amritsar. It's fine - the veg stuff is unique. The nightlife is good. The sites are great. Amritsar was a great ending to the trip/

Friday, October 4, 2024

2024 India Trip: Lucknow

I had multiple people ask me why I chose to go to Lucknow. Of all the more popular touristy places I could've picked, I scrolled past all of those and landed at Uttar Pradesh's bustling capital. I don't actually remember the genesis of the plan to come to Lucknow. I geuss it was some combination of (a) wanting to stick in Northern India (where I've had more luck from a tourism point of view), (b) direct flight options and (c) the food. Oh the food - even the people questioning my plan to come to Lucknow admitted that the food, their awadhi cuisine, was spectacular. After two days plus one dinner in the city, I can get all perspectives. It definitely isn't the tourism hub, but yes the food was excellent. 

Lucknow is an interesting place. The part of teh city in theory in its center, near to Gomti River, is quite nice. Cleaner than most parts of India I've been in. Really nice architecture. Some stunnign areas, like the Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Memorial Park (more on this later). That area is really pristine. The Center part of the city, which houses some shopping districts, bustling streets, restaurant stalls and the like were about as cramped and sprawling as any I've been to in India (reminded me of Bangalore a bit). The neighborhoods out East with tall buildings are also quite Bangalore-esque. The only real letdown was their main tourist area combined quite nice sights was bustle, gristle and maw outside of it.

The food is quite great. Awadhi Cuisine at a high level mixes some of the Indian food classics - kebabs, curries and biryanis. But they have their own styles - kebabs that feature more minced meat preparations than the normal charred chunks. Biryanis that are flavorful (many other areas take inspiration from here). Curries of the gosht nature that again are mimicked by lots of other parts of India. There are upmarket places, standard places, street places. I went to all three (yes, even teh street places - granted, ones with indoor seating). Lucknow is a foodie paradise - granted many places in India are.

The sites are not bad, just a bit varied. The first I went to was La Martiniere College, which has some nice colonial architecture spaced out across a sprawling, beautiful campus. Again, this particular area of Lucknow is really well maintained. Some ways away is The Residency, an old site that housed British troops and then refugees during revolts in teh 1800s. It's in a way more of a large plot of land with almost Roman style ruins, again just super weird for it being in the middle of Lucknow. As a whole, the site areas within Lucknow are well maintained, quite green an open.

The shopping and commercial areas are totally different. Bustling, cramped, buzzing, just a lifeblood of energy that I'm sure many foreigners like (the "colorful India" and all that) but I'm a bit over at this point. Within it were a few hidden gems. The main handicraft offering of Lucknow is Chikankari embroidery clothing, shawls, etc., and there were some really nice shops in the main market street that also offered air conditioning and fresh lime soda while sampling some kurtas. Another I'll get to in a bit but was just about perfect. 

The main sites of Lucknow are a small portion on the other side of the city from where I was staying, a Muslim-heavy area that houses to the main Imbabara (mosque-sites), along with Hussani's Tower and a few other sites. They are all nicely marked, including a wrought-iron & copper map that adorns a city street side which is quite beautiful. The Bara Imbabara was the first site, the more funtionally operational and larger, if a bit simple in its design. The courtyard is beautiful, and the buildings themselves were quite stately. The Chota Imbabara is the other - more lush of a courtyard, more beautiful calligraphy on the walls and sides. Both buildings are really nice - I just wish teh areas outside them were equally so.

The best site, for me, in Lucknow was a sprawling "park" dedicated to Dr. Ambedkar, the Thomas Jefferson come Roger Taney of India. It is truly a giant complex, befit with three different buildings, all impressive in their own way that could figure to be the main shrine in a complex such as this. The least impressive was a large two-dome building with large statues inside. The medium was a long semicircle of columns, statues and sculpture, with a row of elephants in front of it stretching half a km wide or so. The most impressive a weird geometrical pyramid-like thing. From when I arrived a 4:30 through to when I left at 6:15 the floodlights came on and it was truly impressive. This one site was in all honesty not out of place in any top flight city. 

Enough dilly-dallying, let's get to the food - after all it was the reason I came here. We'll start at the low-brow - my lunch at Tunday Kebabi, a place that I had to somewhat steel myself to enter. On the street it's a small road-face charcoal grill and maw of humanity, but behind it are two floors of indoor, super well AC'd, seating area. Nothing fussy, bustling throughout, and tasty. I got a Galouti Kebab (so soft and spicy), a mutton biryani (really nice rice, if a bit too bony with the meat), and a kebab that came basically as a bowl of chili. It was weird at first, but really tart and solid. Just a nice, old fashioned meal in the heart of Lucknow.

To go middle-brow, there was my meals on my last day, first at Naima Khalat for lunch, and then The Mughal's Dastarkhwan for dinner. The dinner spot was ojne of seemingly a chain of Dastarkhwan's littered across Lucknow - they all have a similar logo, name and menu, and it was quite good. Their specialty was Handi curries - cooked for hours in a clay "handi" pot. I got Handi mutton, which may have been the single best curry I had in my whole time there. The mutton just so perfectly cooked and tender. It counteracted the boti kebab which was made the same way (a chili-like consistency) of my kebab yesterday but not as nice.

Lunch as Naima Khalat was perfect. The place was "cooked from the kitchens of Lucknow" with a really nice menu, and a great decor with nice flowery crockery and the like. There was a great craft store next door - the place I walked arond for an hour through various markets trying to fine: stone work, metal work, books - basically non chikankari stuff. The had some more interesting curries (by name) which I tried two, both excellent if a bit too fatty on the mutton.

The final meal was probably my most fancy, and the best - at Falaknuma, a beautiful restaurant on the top floor of the Clark hotel in downtown. The view was great, the decor was great, the live traditional music was great, and the food better than all of that. I over-ordered (intentionally, planning to take some back) but each of the kebab (a mutton galawi kebab), curry (a great chicken curry) and biryani, cooked in a "handi") were excellent. I can't recommend Falaknuma enough.

Overall, I can't recommend the food in Lucknown enough, but I truly don't know if that outweights the slightly above average sites to make it worth a visit. Certainly if it's part of a larger Northern India swing, or like me you've done some of the main sites (Rajasthan, Agra, Kerela, Goa) then sure, why not. Whatever the matter though is, if you do find yourself in Lucknow, just get your stomach ready.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

2024 India Trip: Aurangabad (Ajanta & Ellora Caves)

I'm in Aurangabad because of two legendary (in India at least - but after visiting, I feel confident they should be more known further afield) cave sites, those of the Ellora caves and the Ajanta caves. There are a few other sites sprinkled in, including the "mini Taj" made by Mughal King Aurangzeb (for whom the city is named) for his wife, in a style reminiscent of the great Taj. But I'm here because of those two cave sites.

Leaving Aurangabad today (the day I write this), I can confidently say this trip to a random outpost to see two cave sites is absolutely worth the trek into the middle part of Maharashtra. Granted, a "random outpost" in India terms is still a city of 1.2mm people, but I didn't do much in the actual city of Aurangabad other than go with my hired driver out of the city to visit the caves, or go to a restaurant in the city (twice!). Some of that is the pleasantness of the hotel however.

I stayed at the Welcomhotel by ITC, a high-end Indian chain. The Welcomhotel brand however is their more far afield brand name so while it was perfectly fancy enough, it didn't come with the super luxury (and price tag) of a proper ITC hotels (e.g. the ITC Gardenia in Bangalore). It did however have a nice buffet restaurant that hit the spot arriving at 9:30pm on Sunday night, including a really lovely biryani. It also had a bar that closed at midnight, where I could sip scotch with working wifi and not worry about things like stag entry fees and the like. Anyway, the hotel, including its large king size bed, hit the spot perfectly.

Anyway, let's get to the damn caves. I planned to do the further afield Ajanta caves on Monday (they sit about 110 km away from Aurangabad), and the closer Ellora caves (30 km) on Tuesday, as Tuesday afternoon (4:30pm) I fly out to Lucknow. Of course, I missed one crucial factor, that the Ajanta caves are closed each week on Monday's, and the Ellora caves are closed on Tuesdays. I do a lot of planning for these trips. Granted, less on this trip than others, but I'm disappointed in myself for not picking up on this.

So, both were still doable, but then it made for what won't take a full day for when I have a full day (we compromised by starting at 9:30am), and rushing Ajanta by starting at 7am (the earliest possible, really, since the caves only open at 9am). In the end there was no issue with this, and I enjoyed the relaxed pace of Monday anyway.

I think also this was the right order to see them. Ajanta is a journey - about two hours to get there - but probably the greater marvel, the more enthralling site. I generally like to save the best for last, so in that sense this last minute switcheroo of order, of which I only leanred when my driver explained all this to me when picking me up from the airport, worked out fairly well.

The first site I actually saw was the Mini Taj, which was quite serene, a bit elevated into green lush surrounding Aurangabad. That said, it was very much mini. Not sure if it is the way it was built or just general upkeep deficiencies, but it was nowhere near as glistening white as my mental image of the Taj from my trip in 2001 compares. The place is quite ornate still however, and worth a stop on the way to Ellora, specifically since it isn't really out of the way.

Ellora itself are called caves but the reason we all go there is the giant Kailash Temple which isn't a cave, in the sense there is no roof. However it was a mountain. Both caves are monolithic temples in that they were basically chiseled and then carved out of mountainface. This is almost impossible to comprehend when it comes to the Kailash temple in Ellora. The temple looks like it could sit in any city in teh country and be an attraction by itself - so graet is the carving, the sculptures, the intricacy. We have things like a wall on the outside of the main part of the temple showing all images from the great books of Hinduism. There are four or five different buildings that make up the Kailash Temple, and again all of these were about 1600 years ago part of a mountain. It si truly incomprehensible how they did this. 

There are technically about 20 other caves within the Ellora complex, half hindu, half buddhist. The rest are more like what we think to be caves in that they are actually within the remaining mountainface, with roofs and whatnot, the best of which being a buddhist cave that would really serve as an amouse bouche for what was to come the next day in Ajanta (a fully buddhist monument). Ellora really is the Kailash Temple, but that in itself is probably worth it for how astounding it is.

Ajanta is quite different. First off, they are all caves. Second off, they are all buddhist. Third off, they are either quite a bit older (7th Century for Ellora, vs either 5th and 6th Century or 300-200 BC for Ajanta), and fourth they are way more uncovered. The story goes that a British soldier was tracking a tiger thruogh the jungles of Maharashtra when the tiger took a hideout in one of the caves that were at teh time unmanned for 1200 years, full of growth and muk and whatnot, and this Briton "discovered" them. Of course, the locals were well aware of these thought to be decrepit old relics of a bygone time, but it was still a great discovery, seemingly for the world.

Ajanta has 26 caves, about half of which are important and stable enough to enter. About a third of them are from the first incarnation of Buddhism, from around 200 BC. These are more solemn caves, with vaulted ceilings, and with large Stupas in the middle (basically giant urns). The rest are more "modern" in that they're from 450-600 AD, and have more intricate paintings with all the caves having a buddha in the center. The whole thing is a bit overwhelming.

I've often talked about Machu Picchu, and the weird take my family (mostly my Mom) has that it is super unimpressive given it was built largely in the 1400-1500s or so. She often went straight to the temples in India that are way older and more intricate as an example of why. Well, Ajanta is her greatest asset in that fight. This is also in the hills, the mountains, the jungles. Maybe not 8,000 feet up like Macchu Pichu, but they are deep in the jungle. And they required amazing amount of ingenuity for their day.

The caves have intricate painting work, quite good sculpture work (for their time) and incredible lasting ability - at least assuming the guide wasn't lying about how little of it was restored over the years. It is just an incredible place with such amazing history. It is hot as hell - humidity was about 95% - to the point that I saw Indians sweat (which is rare), but so well worth the drive, the heat, the trek, all of it. Ajanta is truly a special place.

Aurangabad is really as well because it is the entry point for Ajanta and Ellora. It isn't a major city (though has an airport - the one requirement for all the stops on my trip). It had some interesting road, was friendly enough, and the Great Sagar Restaurant had some nice curries and kebabs (honestly, a very nice spot). I hope more people come there, and it returns to the level of tourism it had in the pre-COVID days (the biggest issue is it got a lot of buddhist pilgrims - people who are from countries who have been slowest to open themselves back up). IN the end, I really thank my Mom for pushing Ajanta and Ellora endlessly on me - it worked, and it was worth it.

Monday, September 30, 2024

2024 India Trip: Musings on Mumbai

Mumbai was many things - awful weather, great restaurants, great nights, weird afternoons. It's a city of craziness and largesse, but also way more orderly than say, well, Bangalore. Anyway, enough pre-amble, off we go.

= Let's start off with the one biggest negative - the weather was rough. Mumbai is almost always hot and muggy - even in their "dry, cool" season. Well, it was supposed to be dry but this time it wasn't really dry. I narrowly missed floods on the day before I traveled there, but lingering rain led to a flight delay. Rain off and on throughout on Friday interrupted things and made my time in Bandra less pleasant than otherwise. Even on Sunday, which was largely a great weather day, ended with a torrent of rain as I sat in the airport.

= On the other side, the biggest net postiive in my time in Mumbai was the creation of their Coastal Road highway that, while still unfinished, makes driving up and down from and to Colaba so much easier and more efficient. It's quick, it's limited traffic (no two-wheelers). It's a tunnel that can stand up to rain and wind. The Northern Half is above ground but reclaimed from the sea. The fact that wasn't close to existing in my last trip in 2021 and already ready with some further improvements coming by the year end, is honestly an incredible job by India.

= Mumbai's size and scale, especially vertically, is such a stark contrast from Bangalore. There are real neighborhoods here with different vibes and culture. From the greenery of Bandra, to the colonial-style buildings of Colaba and Fort. To the high rises of Worli and Parel. Mumbai just makes sense as a city.

= The food is excellent. None of my meals save for one splurge (Masque, great menu - will be its own post) were new, but all so welcome. There is such great cuisine here. My longstanding favorite is Mahesh Lunch Homes, which serves Mangalorean food (the Coastal food of my hometown), and it was great as usual. Going with my cousin we got four dishes, all great, especially their "Mahesh Special Curry", in either chicken or mutton, half a white curry, half a red. 

= My two other top repeats were both Floyd Cardoz spots (RIP). O Pedro was great as always - their elevated take on Goan food is spectacular. However, let's talk about Bombay Canteen which was more out there, more inventive, and more playful than when I went three years back. The dishes were audacious - like a oxtail and bone marrow upma, or a macaroni and lamb curry casserole, or the most smoky, beautiful chicken curry I've had. Floyd Cardoz's spirit lives on in tehse great, great places.

= Bandra is a special place - where my late Uncle lived (a normal spot is a quick step out of the cab to take a picture of his building), where we see hills and greenery and trees. Where we have nice cafes and bars and stores. It is places like Bandra that make Mumbai so fun.

= The one area I will say Bangalore has way over Mumbai is the beer culture. Mumbai has breweries, sure, but there are two key differences that keep Bangalore's way above. First is not fair to Mumbai, but they just aren't as lavish and large in Mumbai. There's just no space. The biggest one I went to was Doolally Taproom in Khar, that probably seats about 100 people at various tables or whatnot, which would be a small fraction for Iron Hill. The other is Mumbai breweries had a weird inclination to serve beer a bit too close to room temparature. Just can't do it.

= Finally, Mumbai has actual clubs, but our return to the place formerly known as Luna, on the 37th floor of the St. Regis in glistening Lower Parel, was not the same. Koshoi was in teh same location (though I'm pretty sure smaller square footage) but has leaned into the worst elements of clubbing, especially in South/Southeast Asia - too many tables, too small a general floorspace, too few bars, too crwoded. Luna had some of these things but had a large common area with tables on the sides. Koshoi was way too table heavy. It was a fun time, but not ione worth repeating.

= On the whole, Mumbai is just a city. A proper one. Yes, it is too crowded and yes the poverty and dirt does get to you at times (granted, the raininess amplified both things), but on the whole this is just a city that knows it is, invests in itself like it is - and may the Coastal Road be even better fitting next time.

Friday, September 27, 2024

2024 India Trip: Musings on Bangalore

I'm on a two week trip to India, first week largely about family (Bangalore - and I'll be squarely calling ot Bangalore and not this forced upon Bengaluru - and Mumbai), and the second about tourism (more to come on that next week when that starts). Instead of doing my normal day by day write-ups, I thought to give things a twist I'll move to a rambling, musing style recap of my time in Bangalore and Mumbai, starting with an overview of 5-6 days in Bangalore.

= For years, I've called and considered Bangalore to be a town that grew to fast in wealth and importance without ever really making itself into a city. What I mean by this is the city is sprawling in every direction but didn't have the infrastructure (highways, public transport, sidewalks) to support it. Bangalore has made some significant, meaningful strides. Partocularly their metro system is quite effective and expansive, and their roads leading to important destinations (e.g. the Airport) are better. But in so many ways it still is an oversized town. 

= In that sense, I just don't understand how there is traffic in every direction at nearly all times until about 10pm. How are there this many people, this many neighborhoods, this much just maw. There are umpteen different neighborhoods in Bangalore that all have just so many people. The metro needs to get finished quick but even then I can't foresee them getting a significant number of people away from the roads. It's just an endless sprawl.

= That said, one of the pleasant parts of the trip were going further afield. First to an area called Rajajinagar in Eastern Bangalore, where lies the beautiful Orion Mall, with a man-made lake in the back, and a series of fairly nice looking residential buildings in various stages of growth. Of course, like all things Bangalore the street in front of it is a crazy mess, but this tranquil pond behind it is really, really nice. Someday more and more of these types of set-ups will be there.

= I felt similarly about Whitefield, visiting the much ballyhooed enclave of Western companies to the Northeast of Bangalore. Again, the industrial parks and commercial buildings are beaming, but the roads and areas outside the high security gates and checkpoints, are classic Bangalore (messy, high degree of variance of infrastructural investment, etc.). Within Whitefield though were some really nice malls, nice breweries (more on those to come), and a lot of pleasantness - you just have to leave the road.

= On the brewery front.... 9 years ago on my trip in 2015 I ranked six breweries that I went to on that trip. All six to my knowledge are still open - hell I went to two of them on this trip. But in the nine years in between so many more have opened, all have largely upped their beer-making game, and Breweries have basically over-run Bangalore - in a great way. The most bizarre part is how big, spacious and stunning they all are. More on that next, but I will say the most positive development in teh nine intervening years is how much better the beer has become. Both better and more varied. The IPA revolution took a while to reach India (ironically), but has very much arrived. The ABVs are higher. The beers are crisper. Given these places are selling ambience and decor and space as much as beer, I'm glad they've all invested in having good beer as well.

= The size of these places are just bonkers. The two big ones we went to on this trip were Iron Hill, which calls itself the biggest microbrewery (space wise) in the world (probably a refutable claim), and Byg Brewski - one of a few of their locations, this one being different to the one I went to in 2015. Both of these two were similar in their audaciousness. They easily take up the floorpsace of what could be an office building or high rise residential space. Both are 2-3 floors themselves, with the lower floor having a large (and I mean large) outdoor area, with a pond, seating all aroudn it, open balconies, and so much more. I don't understand how all of these can stay in business. They must have ridiculous rents. There's so many of them, and all are fairly good on beer and food as well. Overtime you think some would just lose thsi competition for share of wallet, but seemingly not yet.

= On the food side, it is impressive how generally good these breweries are with food. Some of the best dishes I had were at Iron Hill, like their various chili fried / grilled meat starters with copious amounts of curry leaf, spices, coconut and other south indian delicacies. I intentionally delayed my curry and biryani eating to later in the trip when I travel to places more known for that stuff, but the chicken chili fry and mutton podi's and masala prawns and all the like were fabulous anyway.

= I finally ate at the Catholic Club. My family in India is members of two clubs in the heart of Bangalore - the Bangalore Club and the Catholic Club. I've been to the Bangalore Club for food a handful of times (including once on this trip as well), but never to the Catholic Club aside from going there for a New Year's Eve event in 2015/16. Well, finally went there and man was it great - maybe one of the best things I ate in my time in Bangalore was a Kerala Paratha (to be honest, not sure waht makes it "Kerala") and Kerala Beef (buffalo). They also had a super smooth nitro stout on draft from Geist brewing. About as good a combo as you can ask for.

= Overall, Bangalore is a very vexing city. I will never stop going there as long as I have close family living there. I did see a marked return on the infrastructure investment of things like the metro. As always, once you get inside a building it is generally pleasant and modern. But the city remains so maddening with its overlooked sidewalks, and the urban sprawl. It is still an oversized town - few skyscrapers of any note. You can argue there are six city centers, but if you can argue tehre are six city centers that really means there are none. As nice as the breweries are, I still don't know if the answer to the question of "Would you come here if you didn't have family here?" is a "yes".

Friday, September 20, 2024

Musings on a Breaking Bad rewatch

Breaking Bad is probably my third favorite show of all time, behind just The Wire and Arrested Development. But in a way it trails those two by a lot. I've rewatched The Wire about 5-6 times since finishing it for a first time in 2011 (granted, only on two of those did I watch Season 5 - honestly, better than I remembered). I've seen every episode of true Arrested Development - e.g. the three FOX seasons - way more than that, though mostly watching them in random order at night. Breaking Bad? Well, going into its final eight episodes (Season 5.2 as I may reference it), I rewatched everything up to taht point. The finale was in 2013, and I think I may have rewatched it once in the intervening years. But definitely not in the last 4-5. Definitely not while I was watching Better Call Saul religiously. So, about three months ago, when it reappeared on NETFLIX, I thought I would fire it up again. So, as I start this in the middle of Season 4, here are my rambling, musing-ish thoughts.

= Season 1 is truly slow. It was known at the time, adn the slowness got us used to how much of the series would be thereafter, but man was those first 3-4 episodes slow. I started watching Breaking Bad originally right as Season 3 was airing, so I never watched Season 1 at the time. I knew going in watching it would be slow. But I have to say, it really does set the tone so well.

= As a whole, the show is a lot funnier than I remember it being - and not just the Jesse and Walt interactions (though more on that in a bit). Mike is far funnier than I remember. Marie is much funnier than I remeber. The random characters are funnier than I remember. Many of the great dramas have a bevy of comedic moments (The Wire similarly so) but for a show that got so into plot, and exactness and moments and, well, drama, Breaking Bad does comedy so well. I want to point this out now, before 

= On the Jesse and Walt part, the good news is the interactions between them were funnier than I remember. The sad part is I had this weird nostalgia for the RV era of the show, before Gus and the Superlab and what-not. Well, it turns out there is way less time in the actual RV than I remembered. Of course, it is the central scene for epics like 4 Days Out ("Wire...!") but for some reason I thought the RV was in like every other episodes. On the funny side, a perfect encapsulation of this is when Walt goes to Jesse to tell him in his drunk/high stupor that the police are investigating Gale's murder. he responds with just a perfect delivery of "uh, duh.". So simple, yet so effective.

= Jesse's house turning into a drunken, hellhole happened way later in the series than I remembered, but I should've realized it was, as it aired aroudn 2011. That summer, one of our friend group had his parent's house to himself in the summer (they were in India). He is a great guy but also has friends that say engage in stuff (pot, mainly). We lived in that house each weekend for a month, really getting the place messed up. Drinking, pot, cigarettes, pizza. It was great. We called it Jesse's House. Those were the days, man.

= What strikes me this go around watching the show is the show's love of fairly lengthy monologues. There are so many, and they are all uniformly so good. Even more than I remembered, it is amazing how many of them are done by Aaron Paul - like his emotional, caustic return to the Narcotics Anonymous 12-step group, when he tells the Problem Dog metaphor. It is amazing work. But in reality, Skylar has more monologues than I remembered as well. The acting is so uniformly amazing on this show, but what elevated it is how much the show did to showcase that.

= One area that plays more fantastical, and to be honest a bit worse, on a repeat viewing is just how insane and convoluted some of the set pieces and situations are. There are so many dues ex machina's and perfect alignment of the stars. Sure, we realized that in the initial Heisenberg moment where Walt blows up Tuco's office and somehow walks out of a fiery building perfectly unscathed. Like none of this is realistic. It's amazing. Some of it are the greatest moments of intense drama in TV history, like the parking lot shootout by Hank. When it is at its best, nothing can top it - but it's basically superhero stuff at times.

= As I reach the back half of Season 4, I'm already a bit sadeneed about what's to come. While the final season of Breaking Bad, particularly the second eight episodes, is universally revered, my main issue with it is I never bought Todd and the Nazi's as a big bad, or at least one that could control Walt the way they did (until of course the finale). Walt stood up and one against the Tuco's, the literal Cartel, and so much more. Anyway, that's to come - my hope is that Breaking Bad Season 5 is better on rewatch the way The Wire Season 5 has become for me.

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

NFL 2024: Week 2 Power Rankings & The Rest

32.) Carolina Panthers  =  0-1  (10-47)

Man, that was about as bad as it gets, and it already was so bad. I hate to say it, but it seems pretty apparent Bryce Young just doesn't have anything yet. Maybe there's a future, but I think it is far more accurate to say that Drew Brees was just a once in a lifetime player. The worse part really was how awful that defense looked as well.


31.) New York Giants  =  0-1  (6-28)

Daniel Jones needs to be benched. Or I guess if they're going after whoever would be the presumptive #1 pick next year, maybe keep playing him. He's squarely in David Carr territory of just seeing ghosts and being too far gone at this point. The rest of the team is hard to even make judgements on based on how limited that QB is.


30.) Washington Commanders  =  0-1  (20-37)

Jayden Daniels was more poised than I expected, but he really needs to find a way (or I guess the coaches do) to get Terry McLaurin the ball more. The real issue with the Commanders is their defense, which may be one of the worst in the league though. Not surprising, given their fire-sale last year and change of schemes. I guess if there's one positive it would be Jayden will get a lot of passing downs.


29.) Las Vegas Raiders  =  0-1  (10-22)

The offense had some life early but that ended quickly. I wasn't expecting much better - Aidan O'Connell is just too limited at this point. I give another week or two until Davante Adams starts itching for a trade - and to be honest the Raiders should absolutely give him what he wants and get some picks in return. The defense is quite good, but also interesting to watch if Maxx Crosby's quietness was more a result of Joe Alt being great or some age creeping in?


28.) Cleveland Browns  =  0-1  (17-33)

Yuck. I truly hope they just cut / bench Deshaun Watson. Well.. actually I don't want that because I want them to go down in flames even more than already.


27.) Atlanta Falcons  =  0-1  (10-18)

They better hope Kirk Cousin's performance was more rust than a new normal. Also nice to see that even with Arthur Smith gone they still can't maximize the talent around Cousins. Might be nice if they gave any help to their tackles instead of letting TJ Watt basically ruin the entire game. 


26.) Tennessee Titans  =  0-1  (17-24)

For three quarters, I was ready to start considering if the Titans are sneaky playoff contender. But then it all unraveled so spectacularly. Will Levis threw just an atrocious pick. The run game went fully away. The Titans to be honest should ahve won that game, but even then, ahd they won 17-13 or so in an ugly game against the Chicago, I don't think I consider them all too differently. 


25.) Denver Broncos  =  0-1  (20-26)

The positive is the defense is still quite good, and has some serious upside - at minimum it should keep the Broncos in most games. The downside is Bo Nix seemingly can't throw the ball more than 10 yards. Granted, a lot of teams ahd that issue in Week 1 - especially the rookie QBs, but Nix was just so gun-shy, even when he had time. The Broncos gave him OK protection, and he was just so skittish. Hopefully for their sake that is something he can grow out of over time.


24.) Green Bay Packers  =  0-1  (29-34)

The ranking here reflects the knowledge that we'll be struggling through Malik Willis for a month or so. If it gets a bit longer than that we ahve to really worry about what had become a bit of a darling darkhourse NFC contender. That said, even prior to the injury, I was seeing some issues. Their ballyhooed defense was struggling against the pass. Love was more inaccurate than he's been in quite a while. They have talent, but without Love it will be tough to tread water.


23.) Indianapolis Colts  =  0-1  (27-29)

It was one of thsoe games that you wonder how the Colts only lost by two, but also feel they left a good 10 points out on the field. Richardson needs to get more accurate, sure, but there is so much potential there. He reads defenses well, and makes the right decision, but man does he throw too high. Defensive pass rush is great, so it was so surprising to see them just gashed on the groudn. That shouldn't be a recurring problem - we would hope.


22.) Arizona Cardinals  =  0-1  (28-34)

I picked them to get the #7 seed, and I feel better about that prediction today, especially with them moving the ball fairly well, Kyler looking really composed, and Marvin Harrison Jr. having no impact so far. The defense isn't great but gets pressure. Kyler really does look composed and better in that offense.


21.) Cincinnati Bengals  =  0-1  (10-16)

The Bengals just don't start seasons well. Then again, this was probably the best Week 1 performance of the last three years. They were way too conservative (again) against the Patriots, but also moved the ball fairly well. If not for a barely bobbled TD and the fumble at the two yard line, they probably win that game. The run defense has to improve however. That was distressing.


20.) Jacksonville Jaguars  =  0-1  (17-20)

Man they blew that game. The protection issues were present the entire game. Lawrence made some amazing throws, especially the second TD throw. Of course he should get rid of it quicker also, but they just couldn't block. The DL was excellent but corners can't let guys get behind them so much. A lot to like, and in a vacuum we wouldn't expect them to beat Miami in Miami, but when you are two yards away from giing up 24-7 and get outscored instead 13-0 to end the game, it very much hurts.


19.) New York Jets  =  0-1  (19-32)

There's a good chance I'm overrating the Jets here, because I think that highly of a motivated 49ers team playing at their best. What's uplifting about the Jets is that Rodgers arm looked perfectly fine and he has a good rhythm with Wilson. What's dispiriting, and maybe in net terms, more worrying, is that the Jets defense needed to stay at a Top-5 level for the equation to work. They certainly didn't look anything close to that on Monday.


18.) Los Angeles Rams  =  0-1  (20-26)

Hopefully Nucua is out only the four games, because they have a chance to be quite good. I think very highly of Detroit (as you'll see) so palying them to OT while taking on some injuries is a very impressive loss. Stafford looks excellent. Kupp looks fully healthy. If Johnson can give them a reliable third option, they can be a scary offense. The defense is no-names but push the pocket. Good team, tough loss.


17.) Baltimore Ravens  =  0-1  (20-27)

They remain really good on both sides of the ball. I have a standing rule to rank the defending champs #1 until they lose, but even without that I probably have the Chiefs at #1, so makes perfect sense I have the team that played them close on the road as my top 0-1 team. Lamar looks shifty and good. The two TE sets can be dominant. The OL needs to play better, as does the linebacker group without Pat Queen. Some issues to iron out, but this is still a really good team.


Ranking the 1-0 Teams

16.) Chicago Bears  =  1-0  (24-17)

It is hilarious that they draft Caleb Williams, a dynamic player with a ridiculous arm, and win a game with pure Rex Grossman / Kyle Orton 2005 type bullshit. The Bears just stay the Bears. They won't get two defensive / special teams TDs each game. Williams probably also won't be that scattershot again. He does have a special arm.


15.) New England Patriots  =  1-0  (16-10)

If they can run the ball that well, and not turn it over, and get two freak turnovers each game... well maybe if they can do all of that they can win 6-8 games. The OL is still a problem, and the defense is sound but also has no depth. This was a classic "you get shit on all offseason and come out and rally behind your coach" but I just don't see i lasting.


14.) Pittsburgh Steelers  =  1-0  (18-10)

They can't keep doing this man. They can't keep just grinding out just abhorrent, unwatchable games where their defense overmatches some shit offense like that. They somehow did it to 10-7 last year despite being outscored for the season. I can already see that same bullshit happening again. This must end.


13.) Minnesota Vikings  =  1-0  (28-6)

My only real hesitation is we went through this just three years ago with Sam Darnold, as he went 3-0 in Carolina and then the clock struck twelve... There is more talent around him here than there was that year in Carolina, but that's more about the offense. I do want to see how this rejuvenated Flores-led defense plays against defenses that aren't QB'd by the Daniel Jones's of the world.


12.) Seattle Seahawks  =  1-0  (26-20)

I wrote in the first section about how well the Broncos defense looked, and the Seahawks better hope that performance was more about the Broncos defense, as their offense for the first time in a while looked a bit scattershot. Geno was off target a bit. The OL had issues. The defense stepped up though, and if anything that seems like Mike McDonald already has them playing at a faster pace than anything from last year.


11.) Los Angeles Chargers  =  1-0  (22-10)

Harbaugh baby. Harbaugh. Why did we ever think this would go any differently. Yes, if they get injuries to any of their top defenders (Bosa, Mack, Samuel) it may all fold like a house of cards, but right now those guys are healthy. The OL is playing well. Alt looks like a star. Herbert still throws short way too much, but it seemed like it all made sense for once.


10.) Miami Dolphins  =  1-0  (20-17)

It's funny because Tagovailoa ended up with ~320 yards, but I am worried about the offense. That was a game - perfect weather, etc. - where last year Tua gets 400. This was more boom or bust than I'm sure they want to play. The OL is a problem. Luckily for the Dolphins, the defense seems to have firmed up nicely. Man having Jalen Phillips back is such a help. The secondary played better than I expected as well. This is a good team, but maybe some latent predictability may stop them from being a great one.


9.) New Orleans Saints  =  1-0  (47-10)

The Saints were DVOA darlings headed into the season. Not to say anyone thought they would be great, but maybe the best in the NFC South. Well, for one week it looked that way. Carr looked confident. The DL was playing out of their mind. Granted, all of that is hard to judge because the Panthers might just be a special type of bad.


8.) Tampa Bay Buccaneers  =  1-0  (37-20)

The Bucs were the team DVOA didn't love, but a lot of that is expected regression and/or injuries. Well, injuries can and will come for any team, but that offense might just be good enough to withstand some of that. The OL protected well (granted, against a pretty miserable front). Mayfield looked confident. Mike Evans is still a monster. They still have to me the highest ceiling of any NFC South team.


7.) Philadelphia Eagles  =  1-0  (34-29)

That was the good Eagles. That team still exists in there. Hurts looked to be playing in rhythm. Devonta Smith had his best game in a while. The OL held up even without Kelce. The defense is missing true game changes - the DL has to get a better rush to sustain their play week to week. This isn't a great team yet, but given how many were predicting a bit of disaster to come, this was a promising start, a deserved victory against what was seen as a great test in Green Bay.


6.) Houston Texans  =  1-0  (29-27)

If their OL can run block like that, this might be a special team. Then again, they have to block better as well. Also maybe block punt rushes as well. The Texans maybe only won by two but showed startingly few weaknesses (other than again the OL in pass pro). Stroud looks to be picking up right where he left off. Diggs is playing ball for now. All is well in Houston. Also new uniforms look sharp!


5.) Buffalo Bills  =  1-0  (34-28)

The pass rush has to be better. It came on as the game went on - with Greg Rousseau having a standout performance, and Von Miller doing more in that game than the entirety of last season, but it has to be more consistent. The Cardinals dominated TOP early because of that. The offense was quite good - what a shock, Josh Allen is still amazing. This team needs that defense to be better though, or at least more consistent.


4.) Dallas Cowboys  =  1-0  (33-17)

The Cowboys are good for 6-8 of those types of games per year, where they look absolutely incredible. It is nice to still see that with new coordinators and some new guys - and somehow even I'm nostalgic for Zeke Elliott being back! On the whole, the real Cowboys will show their worth in their ability (or lack of ability) to remain consistent week to week. At their best, they're still amazing.


3.) San Francisco 49ers  =  1-0  (32-19)

I hate how familiar the top of this looks compared to last year, but that's what happens when the preseason favorites not only (1) are all the top teams from last year, but also (2) win. The 49ers looked excellent. The pass rush was better than I was expecting - not giving Rodgers much time. The OL was excellent against what is a great Jets front as well. Kyle remains an unparalleled playcaller. Depth will be an issue if injuries pop up, but this is still just a stellar team.


2.) Detroit Lions  =  1-0  (26-20)

You leave that game thinking "this is the amazing offense we've heard so much about?" but then you realize the Lions had the best success rate on offense of any team. The OL showed who they were in that OT. Goff looked good, with really just one bad throw on the pick. Jameson Williams being a bigger part of the offense can take them to a higher level. What really impressed me though was the coverage at times. Yes, Kupp went off, but 110 yards on 22 targets isn't all that bad against one of the best receivers. They do need a bit more from the pass rush, though.


1.) Kansas City Chiefs  =  1-0  (27-20)

The champs are my #1 till they lose, but even then I do think this is the best team in the NFL. Or at least the most complete. There is no real weakness here - especially with Xavier Worthy at least giving defenses more to worry about deep allowign for more to happen underneath. The secondary remained excellent even without Sneed, which was my only real concern. Karlaftis was a bit quiet - pass rush could get better I guess, but that is the definitions of picking nits.


Looking Ahead to Next Week's Games

Ranking the 0-1 vs 0-1 Games

6.) New York Giants (0-1)  @  Washington Commanders (0-1)  (1:00 - FOX)
5.) Las Vegas Raiders (0-1)  @  Baltimore Ravens (0-1)  (1:00 - CBS)
4.) Cleveland Browns (0-1)  @  Jacksonville Jaguars (0-1)  (1:00 - CBS)
3.) New York Jets (0-1)  @  Tennessee Titans (0-1)  (1:00 - CBS)
2.) Indianapolis Colts (0-1)  @  Green Bay Packers (0-1)  (1:00 - FOX)
1.) Los Angeles Rams (0-1)  @  Arizona Cardinals (0-1)  (4:05 - FOX)


Ranking the 0-1 vs 1-0 Games

4.) Los Angeles Chargers (1-0)  @  Carolina Panthers (0-1)  (1:00 - CBS)
3.) Pittsburgh Steelers (1-0)  @  Denver Broncos (0-1)  (4:25 - CBS)
2.) Atlanta Falcons (0-1)  @  Philadelphia Eagles (1-0)  (MNF - ESPN)
1.) Cincinnati Bengals (0-1)  @  Kansas City Chiefs (1-0)  (4:25 - CBS)


Ranking the 1-0 vs. 1-0 Games

6.) Chicago Bears (1-0)  @  Houston Texans (1-0)  (SNF - NBC)
5.) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1-0)  @  Detroit Lions (1-0)  (1:00 - FOX)
4.) New Orleans Saints (1-0)  @  Dallas Cowboys (1-0)  (1:00 - FOX)
3.) San Francisco 49ers (1-0)  @  Minnesota Vikings (1-0)  (1:00 - CBS)
2.) Seattle Seahawks (1-0)  @  New England Patriots (1-0)  (1:00 - FOX)
1.) Buffalo Bills (1-0)  @  Miami Dolphins (1-0)  (TNF - Prime)

About Me

I am a man who will go by the moniker dmstorm22, or StormyD, but not really StormyD. I'll talk about sports, mainly football, sometimes TV, sometimes other random things, sometimes even bring out some lists (a lot, lot, lot of lists). Enjoy.