A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE
ON SUPER BOWL
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Bryan
Burwell works for HBO sports and writes for the Sporting News. This
is an article from the St. Louis Post Dispatch written while Dick's
is the sort of bar-restaurant ideally suited for Super Bowl week mischief,
because it has a down-and-dirty roadhouse feel to it. The
waiters, waitresses and bartenders are charmingly
rude, and the wood floors are covered with sand and all sorts of
indistinguishable debris. The
clientele on this evening is a fascinating mix of twenty-something college
kids, thirty-something conventioneers and 40-something Super Bowl high-rollers. Yet
there was one table in Dick's courtyard Tuesday night that was noticeably
different from the others. There were six young men
at the table and one young woman, and while they were drinking like everyone
else in the room, there was something all too serious going on at this table
that let you know that their thoughts were a long way from the mindless
frivolity of Super Bowl week. Maybe
it was the close-cropped "barracks haircuts" that gave
them away. All
the men's heads were cut in that familiar look of a
professional soldier, skin-close on the sides, and on top a tight shock of
hair that resembled new shoe-brush bristles. "We're
Marines," one man told me. "And tomorrow
we're boarding a ship for . . . well . . . I really can't tell you where, but
you know." Of
course we knew. In less than an hour, they would
report back to a ship docked along the One
Marine was saying goodbye to his wife. The others
were not so lucky They all just sat around the table, throwing back beers and
wrestling with the sobering uncertainty of the rest of their lives. "We're
going to war and none of us knows if we're ever coming back," said
another Marine, a 28-year-old from On
Super Bowl Sunday, the men of MALS 29 will be watching the game from the mess
hall of their ship. "That is, if we're lucky
and the weather is good and it doesn't interfere with the satellite
signal," said the Marine with the bald head and burnt-orange shirt.
"But I gotta tell you, I'm not that big a sports fan anymore.
It's going to be the first pro football game I've watched in . . . I
can't even remember." Why
is that? "Well,
here's my problem with pro sports today," he said. "I
don't care whether it's football, basketball or baseball. Guys
are complaining about making $6 million instead of $7 million, and what is
their job? Playing a damned game.
You know what I made last year? I made
$14,000. They pay me $14,000, and you know what my
job description is? I'm paid to take a
bullet." When
he said those words, it positively staggered me. Fourteen
thousand dollars to take a bullet. Not
a day goes by that I am not reminded of what a wonderful life I lead.
am paid to write about sports and tell stories on radio and television about
the games people play. But sometimes, even in the
midst of a grand sporting event, something ha Fourteen
thousand dollars to take a bullet. As
I sit here writing from my hotel room, I can look out my balcony window and I
see a Navy battleship cutting through the It
was only 12 hours ago that I was sitting at the table with my guys, buying
them beers, and listening to their soldier stories. The
Marine from But
today, that friend is more of a stranger to me than that Marine sitting over
there, who I've never met before tonight. That's
why they call it a Band of Brothers." The
little Marine in the orange shirt lifted his glass toward the Marine from "That's
my brother over there, and I'm gonna take a bullet for him if I have to." He
said it with a calm and jolting certainty. There
was a moving, but chilling, pride in his words All
around them, people were drinking, shouting and laughing. The
college kids and the conventioneers and NFL high-rollers were living the good,
carefree life. Across the street, a storefront that
was vacant two weeks ago was now filled with $30 caps, $400 leather jackets,
$40 mugs and $27 T-shirts with the fancy blue and yellow Super Bowl XXXVII
logo embroidered on it. From
every end of the streets of downtown Suddenly,
the Super Bowl didn't seem so important anymore. ~Sports
Columnist Bryan Burwell
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