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My stab at "old-timey" sportswriter style . . .

torbee

HR King
Gold Member
Decided to inject some extra creativity into the column this week. Hope you like it:

Tuesdays with Torbee​

Torbee went a little old school in writing his column this week.





Tory Brecht
Columnist

Editor’s Note: With the Iowa Hawkeyes’ 13-10 pig-winning contest in Minneapolis last Saturday so closely resembling the Nile Kinnick-led Iowa victory over Minnesota 13-9 in 1939, Torbee broke out the Ouija board and communed with ink-stained sportswriters past to pen this week’s missive. Enjoy:

As a rheumy sun set over the frigid gridiron late in the annual tussle betwixt the farm boys of Iowa and the sturdy Scandinavians of Dinkytown this past Saturday, the contest stalemated at 10, the vaunted Hawkeye defense appeared spent.

Crushed to earth for nearly the entire second half by the hulking offensive line of the galloping Gophers, mighty Mo Ibrahim appeared poised to deliver the death blow to a game and gutty Iowa 11. The stadium clock ticked to 5 minutes and 9 seconds as the orbruising tailback hailing from Charm City secured the pigskin under his arm for the 37th time, his searching eyes and churning legs hell-bent for the end zone. Jack Campbell, the chiseled Adonis-like linebacker from Cedar Falls, however, wouldn’t say quit. A prodigious lick to the Gopher ball-toter’s midsection wrested the ball free from the dominant backer, saving a certain score and Iowa’s dreams of a conference championship.

Though the heroic Hawkeyes dodged a dispiriting go-ahead score, their own offensive woes again offered up hope to the gritty Gophers. Signal caller Spencer Petras, who raised eyebrows early in the contest with poised passing, first attempted a dump off to young Luke Lachey, forced into service by the untimely hobbling of stellar tight end Sam LaPorta, but for naught. Another pair of passes fell harmlessly to the frozen turf for the Hawks, who were then forced to punt yet again.

Offered a path to redemption, young Ibrahim dashed 19 yards to the Hawkeye 36 on the first play of the drive. But as they have done all season long, the ferocious defenders from the plains stiffened once more, limiting the now nearly exhausted tailback to a mere single-yard gain on the next play. His understudy, Trey Potts, managed only a pair of yards following, setting up a third down and seven for the Minneapolis squad, desperate to break a 7-year-curse at the hands of field general Kirk Ferentz.

The Greek cannon of Gopher quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis fired toward a well-covered receiver at the 26. Riley Moss, the Hawkeye’s speedy, mustachioed all-American in the secondary, broke on the ball, arriving simultaneously. For a brief moment the oblong object hung in the icy air, only to be plucked by Campbell, who like a thoroughbred racehorse sped down the sideline for what appeared to the mouth-agape, stunned crowd of Gopher fans to be a touchdown.

Alas, a clearly ophthalmologically challenged rube of a game official improperly deemed the hustling Hawkeye out-of-bounds at the Gopher 45, meaning the much-maligned Iowa offense would be forced to secure victory and the pig.

Petras, seeking redemption after a season sullied by boos from his hometown fans, stepped to the fore, flinging a 33-yard pass to a streaking Lachey on the penultimate series’ first play, setting Iowa up at the Gopher 12 yard line with barely two minutes to play. From there, the scion of the Ferentz football dynasty became predictably conservative, this time for good reason. Two bashes into the surging Minnesota defensive line later Iowa met fourth down, and the offense gave way to baby-faced booter Drew Stevens. The youthful kicker strolled onto the turf, the mantle of hero or goat riding on his black shoe, only to have his own sideline – beset with confusion – call a timeout, increasing the pressure.

Nevertheless, the young scrapper was undaunted. Boot met ball, the pigskin scraped the left upright, and Floyd of Rosedale earned yet another season in the sun of Iowa City.
Clearly a story of a fighting team that could have lost, but didn’t, the jubilant Hawkeyes now have their hungry sights set firmly on Indiana’s capital city. Where, if they can once again humiliate the debilitated bugeaters from Nebraska on Black Friday, they will compete for the second straight year to bring home a Big 10 championship.

Several weeks ago, slumping and slouching following a thorough dismantling at the hands of the brutal Buckeyes of Ohio, any Iowa fan could have been forgiven for feeling this was a lost season. That feeling may have permeated the bulk of the state of Iowa, but nary did it enter the locker room or practice fields of the Iowa gridders.

A steadfast adherence to belief buoyed Iowa’s little band of heroes, who never wavered in the face of adversity. A lesson we all should take to heart.
 
Decided to inject some extra creativity into the column this week. Hope you like it:

Tuesdays with Torbee​

Torbee went a little old school in writing his column this week.





Tory Brecht
Columnist

Editor’s Note: With the Iowa Hawkeyes’ 13-10 pig-winning contest in Minneapolis last Saturday so closely resembling the Nile Kinnick-led Iowa victory over Minnesota 13-9 in 1939, Torbee broke out the Ouija board and communed with ink-stained sportswriters past to pen this week’s missive. Enjoy:

As a rheumy sun set over the frigid gridiron late in the annual tussle betwixt the farm boys of Iowa and the sturdy Scandinavians of Dinkytown this past Saturday, the contest stalemated at 10, the vaunted Hawkeye defense appeared spent.

Crushed to earth for nearly the entire second half by the hulking offensive line of the galloping Gophers, mighty Mo Ibrahim appeared poised to deliver the death blow to a game and gutty Iowa 11. The stadium clock ticked to 5 minutes and 9 seconds as the orbruising tailback hailing from Charm City secured the pigskin under his arm for the 37th time, his searching eyes and churning legs hell-bent for the end zone. Jack Campbell, the chiseled Adonis-like linebacker from Cedar Falls, however, wouldn’t say quit. A prodigious lick to the Gopher ball-toter’s midsection wrested the ball free from the dominant backer, saving a certain score and Iowa’s dreams of a conference championship.

Though the heroic Hawkeyes dodged a dispiriting go-ahead score, their own offensive woes again offered up hope to the gritty Gophers. Signal caller Spencer Petras, who raised eyebrows early in the contest with poised passing, first attempted a dump off to young Luke Lachey, forced into service by the untimely hobbling of stellar tight end Sam LaPorta, but for naught. Another pair of passes fell harmlessly to the frozen turf for the Hawks, who were then forced to punt yet again.

Offered a path to redemption, young Ibrahim dashed 19 yards to the Hawkeye 36 on the first play of the drive. But as they have done all season long, the ferocious defenders from the plains stiffened once more, limiting the now nearly exhausted tailback to a mere single-yard gain on the next play. His understudy, Trey Potts, managed only a pair of yards following, setting up a third down and seven for the Minneapolis squad, desperate to break a 7-year-curse at the hands of field general Kirk Ferentz.

The Greek cannon of Gopher quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis fired toward a well-covered receiver at the 26. Riley Moss, the Hawkeye’s speedy, mustachioed all-American in the secondary, broke on the ball, arriving simultaneously. For a brief moment the oblong object hung in the icy air, only to be plucked by Campbell, who like a thoroughbred racehorse sped down the sideline for what appeared to the mouth-agape, stunned crowd of Gopher fans to be a touchdown.

Alas, a clearly ophthalmologically challenged rube of a game official improperly deemed the hustling Hawkeye out-of-bounds at the Gopher 45, meaning the much-maligned Iowa offense would be forced to secure victory and the pig.

Petras, seeking redemption after a season sullied by boos from his hometown fans, stepped to the fore, flinging a 33-yard pass to a streaking Lachey on the penultimate series’ first play, setting Iowa up at the Gopher 12 yard line with barely two minutes to play. From there, the scion of the Ferentz football dynasty became predictably conservative, this time for good reason. Two bashes into the surging Minnesota defensive line later Iowa met fourth down, and the offense gave way to baby-faced booter Drew Stevens. The youthful kicker strolled onto the turf, the mantle of hero or goat riding on his black shoe, only to have his own sideline – beset with confusion – call a timeout, increasing the pressure.

Nevertheless, the young scrapper was undaunted. Boot met ball, the pigskin scraped the left upright, and Floyd of Rosedale earned yet another season in the sun of Iowa City.
Clearly a story of a fighting team that could have lost, but didn’t, the jubilant Hawkeyes now have their hungry sights set firmly on Indiana’s capital city. Where, if they can once again humiliate the debilitated bugeaters from Nebraska on Black Friday, they will compete for the second straight year to bring home a Big 10 championship.

Several weeks ago, slumping and slouching following a thorough dismantling at the hands of the brutal Buckeyes of Ohio, any Iowa fan could have been forgiven for feeling this was a lost season. That feeling may have permeated the bulk of the state of Iowa, but nary did it enter the locker room or practice fields of the Iowa gridders.

A steadfast adherence to belief buoyed Iowa’s little band of heroes, who never wavered in the face of adversity. A lesson we all should take to heart.
Solid - especially the official part.
 
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ed1.gif


…”like the time I caught the ferry to Shelbyville. I needed a new heel for m'shoe. So I decided to go to Morganville, which is what they called Shelbyville in those days. So I tied an onion to my belt, which was the style at the time. Now, to take the ferry cost a nickel, and in those days, nickels had pictures of bumblebees on 'em. 'Gimme five bees for a quarter,' you'd say. Now where were we...oh yeah. The important thing was that I had an onion on my belt, which was the style at the time. They didn't have white onions, because of the war. The only thing you could get was those big yellow ones..."
 
Wow, you're leading your division? Is there a conference championship game and if so how badly do you think you'll be sodomized?
 
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@torbee ......I appreciate the lofty language this week
in Tuesdays with Torbee. In a college English class,
my professor once wrote the word "stilted " on my
essay for that week. It reminded me of your article today.
 
I never realized you were Brody Brecht's.....dad? Grandpa?

Or is that just an amazing coincidence?
 
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Not bad, Torbee, not bad. In fact, quite good. I loved it. I'd still be reading the Sunday sports page if the stories were written like that.
 
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Decided to inject some extra creativity into the column this week. Hope you like it:

Tuesdays with Torbee​

Torbee went a little old school in writing his column this week.





Tory Brecht
Columnist

Editor’s Note: With the Iowa Hawkeyes’ 13-10 pig-winning contest in Minneapolis last Saturday so closely resembling the Nile Kinnick-led Iowa victory over Minnesota 13-9 in 1939, Torbee broke out the Ouija board and communed with ink-stained sportswriters past to pen this week’s missive. Enjoy:

As a rheumy sun set over the frigid gridiron late in the annual tussle betwixt the farm boys of Iowa and the sturdy Scandinavians of Dinkytown this past Saturday, the contest stalemated at 10, the vaunted Hawkeye defense appeared spent.

Crushed to earth for nearly the entire second half by the hulking offensive line of the galloping Gophers, mighty Mo Ibrahim appeared poised to deliver the death blow to a game and gutty Iowa 11. The stadium clock ticked to 5 minutes and 9 seconds as the orbruising tailback hailing from Charm City secured the pigskin under his arm for the 37th time, his searching eyes and churning legs hell-bent for the end zone. Jack Campbell, the chiseled Adonis-like linebacker from Cedar Falls, however, wouldn’t say quit. A prodigious lick to the Gopher ball-toter’s midsection wrested the ball free from the dominant backer, saving a certain score and Iowa’s dreams of a conference championship.

Though the heroic Hawkeyes dodged a dispiriting go-ahead score, their own offensive woes again offered up hope to the gritty Gophers. Signal caller Spencer Petras, who raised eyebrows early in the contest with poised passing, first attempted a dump off to young Luke Lachey, forced into service by the untimely hobbling of stellar tight end Sam LaPorta, but for naught. Another pair of passes fell harmlessly to the frozen turf for the Hawks, who were then forced to punt yet again.

Offered a path to redemption, young Ibrahim dashed 19 yards to the Hawkeye 36 on the first play of the drive. But as they have done all season long, the ferocious defenders from the plains stiffened once more, limiting the now nearly exhausted tailback to a mere single-yard gain on the next play. His understudy, Trey Potts, managed only a pair of yards following, setting up a third down and seven for the Minneapolis squad, desperate to break a 7-year-curse at the hands of field general Kirk Ferentz.

The Greek cannon of Gopher quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis fired toward a well-covered receiver at the 26. Riley Moss, the Hawkeye’s speedy, mustachioed all-American in the secondary, broke on the ball, arriving simultaneously. For a brief moment the oblong object hung in the icy air, only to be plucked by Campbell, who like a thoroughbred racehorse sped down the sideline for what appeared to the mouth-agape, stunned crowd of Gopher fans to be a touchdown.

Alas, a clearly ophthalmologically challenged rube of a game official improperly deemed the hustling Hawkeye out-of-bounds at the Gopher 45, meaning the much-maligned Iowa offense would be forced to secure victory and the pig.

Petras, seeking redemption after a season sullied by boos from his hometown fans, stepped to the fore, flinging a 33-yard pass to a streaking Lachey on the penultimate series’ first play, setting Iowa up at the Gopher 12 yard line with barely two minutes to play. From there, the scion of the Ferentz football dynasty became predictably conservative, this time for good reason. Two bashes into the surging Minnesota defensive line later Iowa met fourth down, and the offense gave way to baby-faced booter Drew Stevens. The youthful kicker strolled onto the turf, the mantle of hero or goat riding on his black shoe, only to have his own sideline – beset with confusion – call a timeout, increasing the pressure.

Nevertheless, the young scrapper was undaunted. Boot met ball, the pigskin scraped the left upright, and Floyd of Rosedale earned yet another season in the sun of Iowa City.
Clearly a story of a fighting team that could have lost, but didn’t, the jubilant Hawkeyes now have their hungry sights set firmly on Indiana’s capital city. Where, if they can once again humiliate the debilitated bugeaters from Nebraska on Black Friday, they will compete for the second straight year to bring home a Big 10 championship.

Several weeks ago, slumping and slouching following a thorough dismantling at the hands of the brutal Buckeyes of Ohio, any Iowa fan could have been forgiven for feeling this was a lost season. That feeling may have permeated the bulk of the state of Iowa, but nary did it enter the locker room or practice fields of the Iowa gridders.

A steadfast adherence to belief buoyed Iowa’s little band of heroes, who never wavered in the face of adversity. A lesson we all should take to heart.
I appreciate that you are trying something different. It does feel like you pressed it a little. Good shit Torbs.





Knitpick
(Kf isn't a field general, players are field generals, coaches are generals.)
 
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