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Home 2008 Archives for October 2008

Archives for October 2008

Turkey for President

Posted on October 13, 2008 Written by The Nittany Turkey

If you’re even halfway intelligent, you have to be completely put off by the choices for President of the United States this year. Partisanship aside, we have one tragically inexperienced candidate who proposes that his inexperience is a qualification for high office; we have the other candidate in his golden years who can’t quite seem to put his finger on the pulse of the country. They are both U.S. Senators, although one is still on the Earn While You Learn program in that capacity. Senators, as a rule, are career politicians who have spent their lives talking about issues, writing bills about them, brokering deals to pass the bills, and voting on others’ bills. Most of them have never run so much as a candy store, let alone a state or a country. Between these two, you have one opportunist who feels that his destiny is to lead us (and to, of course, gather the spoils of victory), and another who won a war of attrition and seems only half-assed interested in the office he seeks. Both have enunciated pie-in-the-sky programs—their “plans”—which they know are unattainable, but which are great sales tools, pushing the right buttons with the right voters. Both give us round-about, vague descriptions of policies they propose, which they cannot promise to ever be funded, and which, furthermore, will require a compliant Congress to implement. Congress serves itself. At the same time, both have attempted to frighten us about the other. They both shoot for the lowest level, assuming that the electorate is composed of morons who will believe the interminable and annoying TV ads and stump speeches. Alas, our ignorance created both of these candidates, presumably in our image.

If we’re so stupid as to have put forward these two mendacious, opportunistic hypocrites as the entirety of the field for this horse race, we should recognize ourselves for what we are: easy marks. One guy tries to buy our votes by promoting wealth envy; the other guy tries to buy our votes by appealing to our sense of decency and values. One guy panders to pro-abortion whackos; the other guy panders to anti-abortion whackos. It goes on and on. The crap that flies is so transparent that if we don’t see through it, we’ll soon be shoveling it big time. Life with either of these guys will be a shit sandwich—the more bread you have, the less shit you’ll have to taste. That is the way of the world, which I’m telling you just in case you’ve had your head so far up your ass that you haven’t noticed.

Neither one of these guys has made the slightest attempt to abandon the vote buying and pandering to hit at the root of our biggest problems—the abrogation of individual responsibility and the concomitant massive increase in the size of government. We need to be reeled in. Us. All of us. I know, I know! It doesn’t feel good. They’ll take away our toys! The American Dream! Nahhh, we don’t want to be reeled in. We’d rather listen to vacuous promises and be hopeful that we can pass on the price of our denial to later generations. Anyone but us. We need our toys. We need our handouts. We need big government to take care of us from cradle to grave. Corporations that provide the stuff we crave are bad, evil profit mongers! We must be able to sue them to get our money back if things go bad! If we screw up, we need government to fix it for us. That’s it! Free stuff! Down with THE EVIL CORPORATIONS! We need governmental guarantees of safe conduct through life. Death to any politician who has enough balls to tell us that it cannot be so! Yeah, right. Bullshit, people. Those of us with any brains at all know that collectivism is a morally—as well as fiscally—bankrupt paradigm. We know what once made this country great and what will make it great again—the individual. But we need to stop listening to empty promises of quick fixes and find leaders who will lead—CEOs, not civil servants turned salesmen.

At this moment I can think of no politician who could run for president without peppering us with great packs of lies and unworkable feel-good scenarios. Accordingly, I am offering an alternative. I am proposing that you write-in “The Nittany Turkey” on your ballot if you feel as uncomfortable as I do in choosing between the two gentlemen who are running for the office. You want “change”—I’ll give you change. Here are some of my platform planks.

  1. Mortgage “Crisis”. No bailouts for either bankers or mortgagors. Let us bite the damn bullet now and not pass the problem on to our grandchildren, who will have their own problems to solve. Some people who have defaulted on debts that they entered into knowing full well that they would ultimately have to repay them will and should lose their houses—and perhaps their cars, their big screen TVs, and their Chicago Bears season tickets. These people are victims, alright—victims of their own greed, incompetence, and desire to live above their means. They should have stayed in rental apartments if they couldn’t afford houses, particularly in the overinflated real estate market of this decade. Now they must pay, not be bailed out. Everybody with the hand out needs to be politely told, “You broke it, you fix it!” Or maybe not so politely, responding in kind to their ridiculous demands.
  2. Line Item Veto. This is something that a long line of presidents dating back to Ulysses S. Grant have campaigned for and never got. Why? Congress reserves the right to load up bills with pork barrel crap they use to buy votes from the greedy beneficiaries of that pork. It has become a self-perpetuating nightmare. Let us end it by giving this Turkey the right to strike out any gratuitous add-ons that pollute legislation coming to him for signature.
  3. Energy policy. The solution to the dependence on foreign energy sources either must end or we will become a second-rate nation. It makes sense that we’re doing something wrong if we let enviropussies push us around such that we cannot drill for oil where it exists. There are no such restrictions in place with our international rivals. Russia drills where it wants and China is drilling off Cuba. We’re hamstrung because our politicians don’t have the balls to tell these whackos to shove off. They have far too much power—only because politicians listen to them and take their money—but they do not represent the views of the citizenry. They merely represent thumbs-up-the-ass elites. We haven’t built an oil refinery in 30 years in this country because environmental regulation, among other things, make it a dicey, risk laden venture. We need to provide incentives to the oil industry to increase domestic output, and to diversify into other sources of energy. Natural gas and clean coal technology need a boost. Finally, nuclear energy should not be the subject of fear smears. It works, it is relatively cheap, and it is sustainable. Unfortunately, it takes years to build a nuclear plant and the up-front investment is huge. This is where government can and must help grease the skids for private industry. We need to stop listening to fear mongers and set ourselves on a course that will take us to energy independence. Profits are not obscene. They provide incentives to improve the product and its delivery, as well as accruing to the benefit of all of us who own stock in oil companies, which includes a lot of people who bitch vacuously about “oil company profits.” You want to see chaos in the marketplace and long lines at gas stations? Nationalize the petroleum industry. Ain’t going to happen on my watch. The oil companies do a helluva job managing a distribution system that we take for granted. They deserve credit, not scorn, and they must be encouraged to explore, drill, refine, and deliver.
  4. The “right” to drive. Here’s a radical proposal sure to endear me to teenagers of all shapes, colors, and sizes and their irresponsible parents. Let us start by increasing the national driving age to 19. Let kids use public transportation and school buses. Keeping 16-18 year-olds’ asses out from behind the wheels of cars they don’t have the maturity to drive in the first place will save lives and money. We’ll save lives because studies have shown that the pre-frontal cortex, where responsible decisions are made, is not fully developed until about age 25. Let the little geniuses do their text messaging on school buses, not in their own cars, so they don’t risk MY ass as well as theirs. We’ll save money because parents won’t be obligated to buy Junior or Megan a car when he or she turns 16. There would be an exemption for 18 year-olds who have served or are in the process of serving our country (see #6). If you are responsible enough to fight for our freedom, you’re responsible enough to drive. Meanwhile, we must beef up public transportation. As a society, we just cannot afford cars for our least productive citizens.
  5. Health Care. This is not a responsibility of government and it should not be a responsibility of our employers. Why do we concede something so important to entities that couldn’t care less about us as individuals? Government-run healthcare systems exist in Canada and England, and through them we can see where we’re headed if we go that direction. This is an area in which the left-leaning candidate has it all wrong and the right-leaning candidate has it all right. While it sounds great, the bill of goods sold by the socialist fails when it comes to funding it. We’ve already crossed that bridge with Medicare. The rationing and the squeeze on private physicians’ incomes can only get worse if the scale of social medicine is broadened. Meanwhile, the pseudo-individualist would leave the employer-driven health insurance morass in place with some beneficial modifications. This Turkey thinks he has a better idea, but it doesn’t go as far as it should to place the responsibility squarely back in the hands of the individual, not his government or employer. Competition in the marketplace is necessary to drive prices down. Individuals should buy their own health insurance as we self-employed people have to do. We should be able to buy insurance across state lines, as one candidate proposes. We should dump the whole “managed care” system and allow only traditional indemnity health insurance policies to be written, with no special deals between insurance companies and providers. Everybody pays the same price and deals with the insurance company for reimbursement. The doctor and his staff work for YOU, the patient who pays them, not for the insurance company, whom they presently believe is the true customer. I could write 100 pages on this, but you get my point. As soon as government and the insurance industry stop holding the health care industry for ransom, we’ll get prices down and service will improve. We can provide a governmentally funded (i.e., out of my pocket and yours) safety net for the truly needy uninsured, but this does not mean those healthy young folk who choose to gamble irresponsibly by not purchasing health insurance because they would rather spend the money on clubbing and toys. Those people need to pay the price, because you and I don’t intend to.
  6. National Service. This one will be very popular with parents of so-called young adults. Every lad and lassie will be required to serve two years in service of their country. Pay would be minimal, but they would receive sustenance, lodging, and invaluable training. Military service would be required, as it is in Israel. No exceptions for the rich, only for those unable to serve because of physical handicaps (which will be relabeled handicaps, not referred to as “challenges”). We will no longer have issues either allowing or prohibiting homosexuals (not “gays” – we want that word back as an happy adjective, too) in the military because everybody, straight, queer, or otherwise, will be required to serve. Non-combat assignments will go to those who are not fit for combat.
  7. United Nations. It is time that someone else played host and provided most of the funding for this corrupt and ineffectual institution. We have been royally screwed for too long by an outfit that has evolved into something that bites the hand that feeds it. Spin off UNICEF. They do good work when UN operatives are not siphoning off funds from that program. Abandon “peace keeping” programs where UN troops wind up creating more havoc than peace, raping women and stealing stuff.
  8. The War in Iraq and Afghanistan. Do not pull out until both wars have concluded successfully to the benefit of the region and our interests. Yes, oil is involved, but until we can fully implement my point #3, which could take a quarter century, we need to ensure that our high-mindedness does not cause our balls to be cut off unwittingly. It is nice to talk about global peace, but as you learned in Economics 101, it’s all about resources and scarcity, and we need to get our hands on those scare damn resources. The defense budget pales in comparison with spending on social programs, but without it we’ll obviate the need for social programs.
  9. Living within our means. Yes, friends, that’s how we’re going to solve what has become an economic nightmare. We’re all bitching—which means we’re all fucking guilty! Nice smokescreen, folks. You want government to cover your ass because you were a bad little boy or girl and you got caught? No, baby. You need to be spanked. You’re feeling the sting of that brown leather belt right now and that’s why you’re crying NOT FAIR! Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah! Yeah, ya bunch of pussies. You did it to yourselves, so don’t go crying to momma government to fix it for you. That comes out of MY damn pocket and the wallet is hereby shut! Get rid of your fancy cars, your fancy houses, and your fancy entertainment habits and live within your means for a while. And if you lived beyond your means for a long time and the bill is now coming due, PAY THE FUCKING BILL. That might mean living very low for a while, but you did it to yourself, buddy. And stop taking off work at 2:30 on Friday, damnit! Our national productivity is suffering in this leisure oriented society. We spend far too much money to support dumbass actors and even dumber professional athletes, while Rome burns. This money is just thrown away. If we refused to pay $12 for a movie ticket and $90 for a seat at a basketball game, we’d fix this in a hurry.
  10. Fix our schools. Get rid of teachers’ unions and privatize schools. Pay teachers a competitive salary and require that they have real degrees in real disciplines, not watered-down “Education” degrees. Require real world experience outside the classroom as a qualification for a teaching position. End certification programs that tend to create barriers to people who really have something to offer kids and protect incompetent teachers. End social promotions. Get government the hell out of the classroom.
  11. Stop blaming what happened yesterday. Yesterday is gone. We can’t change it, and it doesn’t matter who did what to whom yesterday. The future is a dream. The only thing we have a hold on is the present, so let’s take the bull by the horns. This will be hard. We will have to endure hardship that no generation since those who lived through the Great Depression and World War II ever had to face. We’re far removed from that type of hardship, but we’ve shown in the past that we can survive it. We need to come together, work hard, make sacrifices, and make this a better country for succeeding generations.

And so, my fellow Americans, look cynically at politicians who offer the same old crap with different labels, particularly those who offer “change.” That’s just a sales gimmick. Either of those two guys will ultimately play the game in Washington just as it has been played for over 200 years. They’ll tell you what they think you want to hear in order to get your votes, and then they’ll do whatever the hell they want—for the benefit of those they “owe” and to feather their own nests and lust for power. I, on the other hand, won’t tell you what you want to hear. I’ll tell you what you knew all along was true but chose not to think about. Now it is time to think about it. Now is the time to DO something about it. Let us bite the bullet together and make this country strong again. Write-in The Nittany Turkey on your ballot November 4!

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Filed Under: General Tagged With: 2008 Presidential Election, Barack Obama, business as usual, change, John McCain, partisan politics, Turkey for President

Nothing to Bitch About!

Posted on October 12, 2008 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Wow, boys and girls! What a great game to stop a cynical Turkey in his tracks! Other than the first drive, this normally curmudgeonly and foul fowl could find nothing to pick on the entire night—and that includes coaching—as the Nittany Lions thoroughly thrashed, if not trashed, the Wisconsin Badgers 48-7 on their home turf. This morning, we’re seeing a lot of sportswriters’ clichés to describe the Badgers’ denouement; however, none could hold a candle to that which was offered by Artificially Sweetened in a text message to me during the game: “I’m watching the Badger creamation [sic]…”—a very apt description from my neologistical protégé.

I mentioned the coaching in my introductory paragraph. (If you can have a paragraph, can you have a parascope? Is the science of writing inscribing paragraphs called paracology? Enquiring minds want to know, but I digress.) Coaching—the bane of Penn State’s road performance for more years than this Turkey wishes to remember—was superb. Wisconsin’s defensive game plan appeared to anticipate Paterno Sphincter Mode. They did what they could to shut down the run, and they were somewhat effective. Finally showing some confidence in his offense, old Joe countered by opening up the passing game. With as many weapons as this team has, the Badgers never knew what hit them. They were down 17-0 before they could even work up a good cheese fart. It was just total annihilation.

The home crowd was never a factor, quietly sulking for most of the game. At The Cave, home theater of the Nittany Turkey and the Mouse Who Ate Xanax, there were many conjectures about which of the featured Badgers and Badgerettes would or would not get laid last night. Most of the worried looking, morose dweebs were not going to get any. We envisioned them crying in their 3.2 beer all night.

While PSU’s potent offense led by Daryll Clark has been the story all season, there have been doubts about the defense. In this game, the defense performed well, forcing four turnovers and holding Wisconsin to only 14 first downs for the game.

You can read all the detailed stats and play-by-play elsewhere. Suffice to say that the Badgers scored their lone touchdown in the second quarter and never got their heads above water. They could have gone home at halftime and been ahead of the game. Anyhow, by now, you know all about the game, so let’s talk here.

I was wrong about the way I thought this game would progress. I predicted PSU would win 23-20. That was predicated on two notions this Turkey held in his birdbrain. First, I felt that Paterno would put the clamps of conservatism on this important road game, playing “not to lose” instead of playing to win. Second, I felt that the PSU defense was not up to the task of shutting down the Wisconsin offense.

On each of the past two occasions on which the Nittany Lions had traveled to Camp Randall, they put a total of three big points on the scoreboard. Last week, at Purdue, they were able to manage only 20 points against one of the worst defenses known to modern man. Given the typical Paterno game plan, who would have thought that Joe would suddenly develop confidence in his offense and turn them loose? I was cringing all week thinking that Joe was developing a game plan in which the punter was regarded as an offensive weapon. Joe surprised me rather pleasantly, and I’m sure he surprised Brett Bielema, too, only not very pleasantly on his end! So there you have it. A 36 year-old upstart outcoached by an old master who is going on 82.

I thought that the Penn State defense could shut down P. J. Hill, as they have shown they can do in the past. However, selling out to protect the run is not a good thing if the opponents have a passing game. I feared that Wisconsin, especially with Travis Beckum being healthy, would be able to exploit the sell-out. They couldn’t, and the Penn State secondary deserves a lot of credit for making it that way.

Even the kickoffs and kickoff coverage were masterfully executed. Kelly kicked several times into the end zone. His leg seems to be getting stronger as the season progresses. Good coverage kept Bucky hemmed in, cowering in his badger hole much of the day.

The officiating was pretty strange. Not that I thought they particularly implemented bias one way or the other, but some obvious instances of holding that were visible to customers in the cheap nosebleed seats were left unpenalized. Penn State was penalized only once for seven yards, while Wisconsin had eight penalties for 72 yards. So, I’m not bitching. Much.

Paterno has done some bobbing and weaving, to be sure. He sure as hell made us all believe that he would play his typical, constipated road game. Now that the cat is out of the bag, I wonder what is in store for us at the Horseshoe on October 25th! What a game that is setting up to be. But let us not get ahead of ourselves. Major nemesis Michigan looms next week.

The bloom is off the Michigan rose this year. Their latest ignominious defeat was at the hands of MAC power Toledo, 13-10. Michigan had heretofore never lost to a MAC team. The Wolverines are quickly becoming irrelevant, although they still could theoretically win the Big Ten title by winning out from here. However, that ain’t likely, as they have yet to play the three conference leaders, Penn State, Michigan State, and Ohio State, each 3-0 in the Big Ten.

Meanwhile, Wisconsin joins the laggards of the Big Ten at 0-3. A decent bowl game is already out of reach for the Badgers, who at the outset of the season were everyone’s choice to be second best in the conference.

While Penn State was burying Wisconsin, them ol’ #11 Gators was busy knocking the snot out of da #4 Bayou Bengals, #17 OK State handled #3 Mizzou, and #5 Texas whipped #1 Oklahoma, creating a shake-up in the Top Five and opening the door for the Nittany Lions to be sucked into the vacuum created by the free fall of Oklahoma, Missouri, and LSU from the unbeaten ranks. #2 Alabama had the week off. So, the polls came out this morning, and Penn State is #3.

OK, look, folks. The polls still don’t mean much at this juncture. Give it another month and they might. In the meanwhile, let’s not put any BCS speculation carts before any on-field performance horses, OK? (Don’t you love dorks who finish their sentences with “OK?” They’re usually receptionists in doctors’ offices. For example, “The doctor has several patients before you [even though you arrived on time] so it will be a little while, OK?” NO, GODDAMNIT! IT’S NOT OK! Usually, you think it but you don’t say it. You know your place. They know you know. They’ve got you by the balls. But I digress.) Anyhow, let’s not get into these crapola bar room discussions that center around whether an undefeated Big Ten team could go to the Still Somewhat Mythical National Championship (SSMNC) game if there were a once defeated Big Twelve or SEC team contending for that slot. ESPN has been beating this one to death for a couple of weeks now. We all know that the Big Twelve and SEC have conference championship games and that 13th game makes it damn difficult for any team in those conferences to get through a season undefeated. SOME of us believe that the competition is stronger in both of those conferences than in the Big Ten. (This Turkey happens to believe that, at least for now.) Anyhow, there is a lot of football to be played yet for PSU, so why waste our time talking about things that might not even be an issue, and if they do become so, there isn’t a damn thing we can do about it, anyway.

Like my digressions? I’m crazy, you know. I once had a girlfriend who uttered the very same line in a matter-of-fact fashion when I took her for a walk on the beach after dinner. “I’m crazy, you know,” she said. She was and still is. It has been five years since I’ve seen her, but once in a while we exchange e-mails. I got one from her last night during the game. It said, “I live in kind of [a] convent now. I am telling you that because I think it will give you a smile.” Get thee to a nunnery! Good old Ophelia. She’s bonkers and so am I. Perhaps I belong in a convent, too. But I digress.

Here’s the deal. I’m going up to Homecoming. I’ll leave on Wednesday afternoon and will be gone for about a week. I might or might not get around to writing a preview of the Michigan game, but I will give it the old college try. If you make it to the game, I’ll be sitting in the club seats, second row from the top, right behind the goal posts. Look for the red wattles and the large beak.

Penn State will go into that game the overwhelming favorites with probably a wider spread than at any time ever in the past against Michigan. Michigan sure looks dreadful at this point, don’t they?

I’m fading out here.

Good night.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: college football, Nittany Lions, non-Sphincter Mode, Penn State Football, Sports, west coast offense

Badger Badger Badger

Posted on October 9, 2008 Written by The Nittany Turkey

It’s that great time of the fall football season when we get to direct you to one of our most favoritest web sites of all time. This just goes to show you what simple-minded fun this Turkey appreciates. This site evokes some very pleasant mammaries, as I recall some wilderness hikes with Artificially Sweetened in which the only communication was a recitation of the chanting, moaning, neurotic sound track of that cartoon work of creative genius. It has nothing to do with football at all. It is what it is. It is all good, cartoonologically speaking, that is.

So, why am I here? Oh, yes—I’m supposed to talk about the Wisconsin game. So that I shall do forthwith, already.

The Wisconsin Badgers (3-2, 0-2 Big Ten) play host to our Nittany Lions (6-0, 2-0) at Camp Randall Stadium on Saturday in prime time on ESPN. Fortunately, there’s a good crew of announcers including Mike Patrick and Todd Blackledge, not to mention one of the better sideline blondes, Holly Rowe, so zbeard and I won’t have to engage in our traditional sound replacement procedure in which we inject the radio broadcast by the ever frenetic and loquacious Steve Jones and the laconic Jack ham into the home theatre system to make it seem like the low-fi, digitally compressed AM radio sound is emanating from my expensive big screen TV, requiring thousands of dollars worth of high fidelity preamps and amps to enact this distorted sonic ruse. Sometimes, though, there is no choice. The Big Ten network typically gives us no choice. ESPN sometimes gives us no choice, especially when Pam Ward is doing the broadcast. Finally, we must always have loudmouthed Steve and speech challenged Jack ready if ESPN/ABC/Mickey decide to pull the plug on one of our blowouts to broadcast the end of another blowout. We must be ever vigilant and quick to react.

Sound replacement most definitely would be necessary if Brent Musberger and Kirk Herbstreit were to be occupying the broadcast booth on Saturday night. Fortunately, they are safely collecting pine splinters this week as ABC covers NASCAR that night. Without needing the aforementioned sound injection, the idle hands time will enable this Turkey to concentrate more on the game than on synchronizing sound and picture via DVR manipulation. It will also facilitate being able to switch over to watch LSU-Florida and OK State- Missouri during the frequent, obnoxiously lengthy commercial breaks and allow this Turkey to take his time cooking his culinary masterpiece during halftime break, as it will now be possible to pause the DVR. This newfound freedom opens up all sorts of possibilities, as it were.

Besides, we’ll undoubtedly want to hear from Blackledge about where and on what he pigged out in Madison. Last year Blackledge started his now famous football food reviews, which became a regular feature of the Saturday football broadcasts in which he is involved. He even visited State College’s own New College Diner last year, and of course, highlighted the “grilled stickies,” those obnoxiously decadent, gooily glutenous breakfast treats that we all got fat on and developed diabetes eating during our time at Penn State. Blackledge travels around in a Maddenesque mobile home so he can get a feel for the local flavors and hot spots. Most of the cuisinolographic fare he lauds is high-calorie, high-cholesterol crap. Last week, he had some kind of huge eggs and cheese omelet thing in Madison, to which Mike Patrick, who had undergone bypass surgery a few years back, made an allusion to Blackledge’s arteries. Perhaps, being back in Madison again this week, he’ll give his cardiovascular system a rest and eat something wholesome. He seems to handle it well, though. Todd doesn’t appear to be getting much fatter than he was in 1982 when he and the Nittany Lions whipped Herschel Walker & Company in the Sugar Bowl for PSU’s first National Championship.

Come to think of it, why would ESPN send Patrick, Blackledge, and Rowe to Madison two weeks in a row? Maybe they put the broadcast crew up in a cheap waterbed motel to save money. I bet those guys have been cheesed to near death by now.

But I digress.

Where was I? Oh, yeah. Wisconsin.

The Badgers have been somewhat disappointing this year. Some of that disappointmentship was due to Travis Beckum’s injury, but essentially, they lost a couple of close games to Michigan and Ohio State the past two weeks. Still, they were expected to be second-best in the Big Ten this year and it doesn’t look like they’re going to be. Last year when they came to Beaver Stadium the Badgers were ranked #19 and they went down big time, 38-7. The Nittany Lions held one of the best runners in the conference, P. J. Hill, to 70 yards. That was last year, though, and that was at Beaver Stadium. By virtue of their defeat by Ohio State, the Badgers are now unranked, but they will be playing at home at Camp Randall Stadium and they will be pissed off over their crappy start in the Big Ten. The #6 ranked Nittany Lions are coming off a 20-6 win over unranked Purdue in which a conservative offensive game plan was painfully evident. Why painful? Because it portends more anal retentiveness in game plans for the tough road games ahead.

Last year, with blind idiot savant quarterback, Anthony Morelli, Paterno opened up the game plan, peppering Wisconsin’s secondary with deep passes. On the road, however, he clamps off the rectum and keeps the passes short and safe, and the runs inside instead of out. I know you’re sick and tired of hearing about “Sphincter Mode,” a term invented by Bob Flounders or David Jones of the Harrisburg Patriot-News. ( I forget which of them actually wrote it, but it doesn’t matter as they’re essentially Flounders-Jones in my mind. Coupla cynical bastards, just like your old Turkey.) Nevertheless, as long as it remains a reality of the conduct of away games, it is a prime suspect in the abysmally ineffectual road record against ranked opponents. So, this Turkey continues to cajole, to beg, to plead with the stubborn Paterno to open it the hell up! Let Sonny Boy Jay unleash that mighty Spread HD! We saw what even a dick like Morelli could do against Wisconsin last year with the long ball. Let’s jump out to an early lead and have them playing catch-up for a change. Please, Joe, none of that sit-out-the-first-quarter-with-three-and-outs-while-the-opponent-scores-twice crap! I’d rather listen to Brent Woody Musberger’s commentary or sit for three hours with my thumbs up my ass listening to our most favoritest web site than to go through yet another play-not-to-lose performance. Open it the hell up!

P. J. Hill is back again this year. It seems as if he’s been there long enough to be Professor Emeritus, but he’s only a junior. He’s carried the ball 108 times for 512 yards thus far this year, an average of 4.7 ypc. However, he’s not the only dangerous runner in Wisconsin’s backfield. Newbie redshirt freshman John Clay was impressive against OSU, and he gets the ball a lot, too. He has averaged 6.7 ypc. Whereas Hill is a 5’10”, 236 lb bowling ball, clay is a huge, muscular 6’2″, 237. As if that’s not enough, frequently used speedy sophomore Zach Brown can burn you on the outside. The Penn State defense is going to have to be at least as good against the run as they were last week against Purdue, when they shut down Kory Sheets.

The quarterback position has been a problem for the Badgers this year. Senior Allan Evridge hasn’t lived up to expectations as his quarterback rating has steadily declined through the year. He’s had four interceptions thus far, including two disastrous ones against Michigan and another against Ohio State. Wisconsin head coach Brett Bielema has stated that Evridge will start on Saturday, but he hinted that if Evridge screws up, he might be pulled in favor of junior backup Dustin Sherer. Sherer has only thrown two passes this year, but the bright side for Wisconsin is that he’s made two completions for 28 yards. He did not play against Michigan or Ohio State.

As you might recall, Wisconsin has senior Travis Beckum, a tight end sized beast who is used like a wide receiver, but still lines up at tight end. Due to injury, Beckum did not play the first two games this year, but the 6’4″, 235 lb behemoth is back. In the Ohio State game, he had six receptions for sixty yards. Last year, Beckum wound up just short of 1000 yards. Keep an eye on #9. He’ll figure in a lot of plays. He’ll also figure strongly in the NFL Draft next spring.

The remainder of Wisconsin’s young receiving corps is big and solid. Their problem has been in not having a stud quarterback like John Stocco to throw to them. Last year, 6’5″ Kyle Jefferson burned us with six receptions for 124 yards—as a freshman. This year, he’s back as a sophomore; he had two receptions against Ohio State, one of them a 35-yarder. The leading receiver, sophomore David Gilreath, has 14 receptions for the year. Junior Garret Graham is a big 6’4″, 235 lb whose body size will give PSUs secondary fits. Size is also a forte for sophomore Lance Kendricks. He’s 6’4″ – 227 lbs. These guys will be a handful for Davis, Sargent, Wallace, Scirrotto, Rubin, and Astorino. It is fortunate that Stocco is long gone, or it would be worse.

So, once again, the defense better show up. Wisconsin can pound Penn State’s depleted defensive line and linebackers with an incessant running attack behind a huge and effective offensive line, wearing their asses down and opening up the pass. Their big receivers will tax the back four. Throw in Beckum and the need to cover him with linebackers, and the defense will have a tiring day, much subsequent whirlpool time, and they can be expected to suffer at least a couple of costly lapses.

Meanwhile, Penn State has some injury issues hanging over from last week, but they might not be as bad as originally anticipated. Both Mickey Shuler and Jordan Norwood are listed as probable for Saturday.

As for Wisconsin’s defense, they held Ohio State to 17 first downs and a total of 327 yards in their 20-17 loss, but they couldn’t handle Beanie Wells, who ran for 168 yards. They gave up only 144 yards passing to the Buckeyes, intercepting Terrelle Pryor once. It is this Turkey’s hope that PSU’s offensive line will continue their solid performance, allowing Evan Royster to ring up some Beaniesque numbers. I just hope that if we see some success in the running offense, Paterno doesn’t completely shitcan the passing game in favor of the ground game. I have to believe that the temptation to do so is always there in the back of his mind when playing in someone else’s stadium.

Let us hope that we see a better damn performance than we did the last time the Nittany Lions traveled to Camp Randall. In that 2006 game, offensive anemia was in evidence and Paterno’s leg got broken on the sidelines. No, we don’t need nonna dat shit! Now, we have the Spread HD and just the right quarterback to run it. The Dow is tanking, we might get a socialist government, and this Turkey increasingly wants to find comfort in small things. One small thing I would take great comfort in, before I have to sell my big-screen plasma TV and the house it sits in, would be a big win against Wisconsin. So, open up that damn Spread HD and beat the crap out of these Badgers.

It ain’t going to be easy. Wisconsin sure as hell does not want to start off with an 0-3 Big Ten record. They’re at home and they’re pissed off. This has all the earmarks of a grueling game. Once again, I’ll beat a dead horse. We need four quarters of football from the Nittany Lions, on both sides of the ball.

These next three games against Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ohio State are the season. No more “tests.” These will be tough, smashmouth football games. It all starts at Camp Randall on Saturday night. You eternal optimists out there want a run at the still somewhat mythical national championship (SSMNC)? Then you better hope these Lions play ’em like they mean it, one at a time, all four quarters, with no first quarter lapses and no bridling of its potent offense. That is the way it worked for them in 1994 and that is the only way it can work now. We’ve already got dicks like ESPN’s Craig James posing season ending scenarios with Penn State finishing undefeated but with once-beaten SEC teams being favored to play for the SSMNC game instead because he thinks the Big Ten is a much weaker conference. He’s not alone in that line of thinking. While James is a total asshole and a long-time Penn State hater, you can be certain that with one loss Penn State will be completely out of the national championship picture—just as they would have been if they had lost that game in Illinois in 1994. Accordingly, even though the SSMNC game is still a serious longshot, they need to be able to open up the offense and play relentlessly—they need to put points on the board and they need to impress pollsters. No matter how scientific the BCS rankings purport to be, there is still a human element—a lot of Craig Jameses out there. So, Penn State has to consider that it is in a competition in which the rules are different. It is no longer good enough to win all one’s games. One has to win convincingly. If one’s conference is regarded as weak, such as the WAC typically is, one can indeed go undefeated and still not make enough of an impression to rise to the top of the BCE. So, the Nittany Lions will absolutely have to open the gates and let the bulls charge. Run up the score. Play to win, instead of not to lose. The defense might be far from perfect and the Lions might not be able to cover kickoffs worth a shit, but there is no doubt that the Spread HD offense is potent enough to put lots of points on the board if it is allowed to. In words often attributed to the late, great Vince Lombardi, “The best defense is a good offense.” We don’t need to see any 6-4 road games like the Iowa game of a few years back. Make those scoreboard numbers spin like a lathe, damnit, boys! Prove yourselves worthy of playing in that SSMNC game.

OK, so now, the weekly feature that most of you have been waiting for, and almost no one agrees with. Yes, friends, it’s time for the Official Turkey Poop Prediction. What is a Turkey to do? This is the Big Ten game of the week, and the gamblers have been favoring Penn State. I suppose, on the strength of Penn State’s record thus far and the humongous stats they’ve generated, it is reasonable that they should be favored. However, Wisconsin is pissed off and if they lose this one they will have lost two home games on two straight weeks, and three games overall in three straight weeks. If that ain’t a reason for a proud bunch of guys and a feisty young coach to be ornery and ready to kick some serious ass, I don’t know what is. So, these Nittany Lions better be ready and better play their asses off. The current spread is 6 and the over/under is 47. That suggests a final score of roughly 26.373 to 20.29836. Penn State just barely beat the 13.5 point spread last week in its 20-6 victory over Purdue. This week, they’re not going to beat the spread unless they open up the game plan. I don’t think they will. Still, I’m going with Penn State, 23-20.

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The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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