Word: bowle
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Odds makers have given the St. Louis Rams at least a 14-point spread in this Sunday’s Super Bowl. When the New England Patriots win two days from now, their victory will rank among the all-time great Super Bowl upsets—almost comparable to Joe Namath and the Jets beating the heavily-favored Colts in 1969 in the greatest football game ever played. The Patriots have been the Cinderella-story of the National Football League season, and we see no reason that its conclusion will not be as stunning as the rest of its chapters...
Quarterback Tom Brady came out of nowhere to lead a previously winless team to 12 victories in 15 games. The second year pro-bowler will get a much-deserved start in the Super Bowl Sunday—he got the team to New Orleans and has earned the right to play for the championship...
...This is the third Super Bowl for the Pats since 1986. When are they going to get some respect as a franchise? Probably when they stop having seasons with one win (1990), two wins (1992) and five wins (1993, 2000). But New England has made more Super Bowl appearances in the last 17 years than the Steelers, Dolphins and Raiders combined (1). It brings up an interesting debate: Would you rather be a fan of a consistent playoff contender that ultimately disappoints or a team that makes a few Super Bowls in between taking a few seasons off, effectively ruining...
...honest, is this game gonna stink? Well, it's the Super Bowl, so we're assuming the most suspenseful thing going on during the fourth quarter is the painting of the guy who drank too much and passed out on the couch. But someone owes us a favor for the Ravens-Giants Super Dud of a year ago, so maybe the football gods will be kind in 2002. The most promising aspect of the game is contained in this fact: The Patriots just took down a Raiders team that flawlessly routed the Jets and a beat a very physical Steelers...
...developmentally delayed and then into researching special schools on the Internet and talking to him veeerrryyy slowwwwly. Or worse, trying to make every conversation a lesson. "Do you want some cheerios? What shape are Cheerios? What color is the box? How many would you say were in that bowl...