Jan 25

Race and Coaching: Can We Move On?

Every morning, immediately after I have my breakfast, I head to a small, quiet room (with tile floors, a sink, a shower, etc.) with my 9300 Communicator to read the latest news stories on ESPN. Most mornings, I scroll through the articles without much reaction. Football’s football, and my predictions and perspectives almost always vary from the next guy’s. But today, Michael Smith (of ESPN) actually got me riled up; and being riled up on the john is not only unpleasant, but potentially unsafe.

So, Michael Smith, you’re the target of my first “rant” in an awfully long while.

Since I read your article on the race of coaches in the NFL on my 9300, and I don’t have pictures enabled by default, I didn’t have any idea what you look like. In fact, it wasn’t until I dashed to my desktop to begin writing THIS, that I saw your picture, and realized that you’re African American. Immediately, I began to wonder if you didn’t secretly bid for a coaching position with one of these teams, and your rejection was the underlying motivation for the article…I was hoping that was the case, anyway.

When are you people (disclaimer: “you people” refers to you people in the media, not you African Americans) going to stop using the race card as leverage for the front page? The NFL’s policy on minority coaches is fine; I don’t have a problem requiring teams to interview minorities before making decisions. Sure, I think it could be a little more sweeping to be fair to guys like…I dunno…me. Why don’t I get a shot at interviewing with each team? Nevermind, this is going off-topic.

I understand the league’s requirements for interviews, and while I’d find it extremely insulting if I were an African American coach, I’m not. It’s fine. What’s not fine is that you’ve decided to keep score of the number of minority coaches being hired, and evaluating the league’s “performance” from that metric. Here’s my favorite quote from your article:

Minority coaches haven’t gone oh-for-eight on the open job market but rather oh-for-one eight times. The NFL’s not adding to its embarrassingly small roster of minority head coaches was not so much one company hiring eight white men for the same level job. It was more like eight individual corporations each selecting one white man over several worthy candidates, both white and black, for one position.

Michael, I’m confused. Your articles aren’t riddled with grammatical mistakes, you work as a writer for ESPN…aren’t we to assume some semblance of intelligent thought goes into your articles? I recognize that my sarcasm doesn’t do much to prove my point, so here’s a question whose answer will prove my point.

How many white runningbacks are there in the NFL?

Quick, now. You’re about to say Mike Alstott…but he doesn’t do all that much running. I’m waiting. Okay, how about this one instead then…

How many white wide receivers are there in the NFL? You’ll be able to come up with a few more this time, no doubt. But I’ll bet the percentage is lower than that of African American coaches to white coaches. Reason? MERIT. MERIT. MERIT. And yet, I haven’t run across an article from Pasquarelli, complaining that too few white athletes have been given a chance. Well, that being said, why would he? The NFL doesn’t have a policy for THAT.

Here’s another gem from your article:

Look, if you dropped the names of the 10 most qualified assistant coaches in a hat and each team drew, at the very least a few of them would come up with a minority. But it isn’t that simple. We don’t live in a meritocracy. There’s a network in place that, unfortunately, most minorities aren’t plugged into.

Okay, you work for ESPN. You’ve got every sports stat from the beginning of time at your very finger tips, so I’m going to put this burden back on you. Compile a list of statistics to justify your “most qualified assistant coaches,” compare them to similar statistics for coaches who were hired instead, and back up your argument with some fact. Unfortunately, in today’s day and age, I’m about as quick to cite racial discrimination as causation for someone’s unemployment as I am to apply for a head coaching job in the NFL (I’m not planning on applying for a head coaching job).

So now the underlying problem here. By writing the article that you did, you effectively precluded any responsible discussion on the topic; no white guy wants to argue – especially with a black man – about racial discrimination, lest they be labeled a racist. I don’t have a racist bone in my body. Not one. But I like to think that the majority of my bones try to act in a logical way, so I’ll take the criticism.

I want the best coach running my Chargers. If it turns out that that coach is African American, Mexican, or Asian…awesome. I couldn’t care less. I just want to win.

Oh, and in closing: if I were Asian or Mexican, I’d be super pissed. Not only do I not have adequate representation in NFL coaching positions, but I don’t even have a writer representing my personal interests on ESPN.

Jan 22

Google or Yahoo!: I may be voting Yahoo!…

I’ve been a big fan of Google for a long time. In fact, I sometimes pride myself on being an “early adopter” of Google, back in the late 90′s. I used to think Alta Vista was the bee’s knees, and it took some pretty compelling stuff to convince me that Google was better…but I was sold – and the rest of the world followed suit over the next few years.

But over the course of the last few months, there have been several instances where I’ve been unable to find what I was looking for on Google. Or, in many cases, that I wasn’t able to find it in the first three or four pages.

On obscure topics, that’s not such a big deal. For instance, searching for something like “open source CRM software review” will return a ton of stuff, but you’re going to have to dig; the most useful results will probably be found on smaller websites that focus on open source software. But if you’re searching for something that you KNOW exists on the web, but whose URL you can’t verify, Google doesn’t seem to do a very good job of returning relevant results in a hurry – and I’m not quite sure why.

Let’s take my company as an example. Searching for the name of my company on Yahoo! will provide you with a direct link to our base website as the number two result; you won’t find it after scrolling through ten pages of Google results. Yet, I know Google’s crawled the site, because I’ve found links to other pages within the site by manipulating the search string. I’d consider this a failure of PageRank – if that’s what’s responsible.

While it’d be easy to just chock this up to bias, I’ve been using Yahoo! steadily for the last several days – and have not noticed a degradation in my results.

I’m considering piecing together a spreadsheet of my searches, and results, by engine. I perform quite a few searches in a given week, so this might be a good experiment. But for the time being, I’m going to continue using Yahoo!.

Yahoo!, Google, search, PageRank

Jan 22

I should work for ESPN

Seriously, though. I should work for ESPN.

For the last several weeks, I’ve been saying that the Denver Broncos are a big scam. Now, what I mean by that, is that they’re simply NOT that good…

…but everyone seems to think so.

Last week they beat New England, right? Wrong. Last week New England beat themselves.

They almost came back and made a game out of the AFC Championship today, right? Wrong. They tried their best to replicate New England’s performance of last week.

But come on, you say. They were 13-3 in the regular season. Yeah, that’s true. But given that the second half of their season was Eagles, Raiders, Jets, Cowboys, Chiefs, Ravens, Bills, Raiders, Chargers, I think you can chock a good portion off that off to schedule (don’t forget, they were 5-2 in their more difficult first half, with losses to the Giants and Dolphins).

So what’s the problem? Jake Plummer is even whinier than Peyton Manning, and greasier than Crisco; oh yah, and he’s got this “choke” valve in his shoulder somewhere that sticks shut most of the time, but opens up when it’s least convenient. Like today.

Remember, Arizona sucked. But he was a big part of that. And for some reason, everyone assumes that “Jake the Snake” is the savior of Denver because he scrambles well.

Uhh…if I spent the first six years of my career running for my life in 120-degree heat, I’d be a good scrambler, too.

And now that he’s got a decent o-line, he’s putting up decent numbers. But I will sit here comparing Jake and Peyton all day long. If someone can come up with a Viagra-type drug for sports performance, these guys should be in the commercials. They’re both quarterbacks you want…until the playoffs.

Sorry Denver, and sorry Jake. Now come on, Bussie…win your Superbowl and go be a commentator.

Jan 18

Podcast Post Poll

I’m considering piecing together a plan for a new podcast, but want your opinion first.

Do you listen to podcasts? If so, do you listen on your computer or on your portable music player? Just a quick “Yes, on my iPod” will do – but feel free to elaborate.

Jan 11

WMF Vulnerability

I sent this e-mail to my friends/family this morning. There was a temporary patch available before Microsoft’s official release, but the MS solution appears to be the best now.

Hey Guys –

There is a fairly substantial security issue floating around on the net right now, and it needs your attention ASAP.

Here’s the deal. It’s not a “flaw” per se, but the way that Windows handles certain meta (image) files. If the image/meta code isn’t constructed properly, Windows allows the file to execute another routine. So, spyware/malware companies are creating incomplete image files, and adding malicious code to their backends that installs nasty stuff on your machine without your knowledge. It’s bad news.

The biggest problem is that you don’t have to download anything. Viewing an image on a website, or receiving one in e-mail is sufficient.

Seriously.

If you’re using Windows XP Service Pack 2, click here to get the patch:

Link

If you’re on 2000:

Link

If, by chance, you’re running 98 or Me…you could be screwed. So far, it doesn’t appear that MS intends to issue a patch for those two…though the guys over at http://www.grc.com are talking about developing one.

Pass it along. This one could get ugly.

-T

 

WMF, Microsoft, Patch