Doing the same thing -- watching the Huskies on Saturday and the Seahawks on Sunday -- and expecting to seeing anything different from either offense. Yup. We're all crazy.
Either the ESPN Insider can't understand the problems with his reporting on players said to have abused women or he's unwilling to modify his approach. I'm not sure which is worse.
The firing of offensive coordinator John Donovan is just the start of the soul-searching that needs to happen for the University of Washington's football program.
It's not quite like that movie with two Jean-Claude Van Dammes (Twice the Van Dammage!!!), but it's close. It was fun meeting the other, better looking, more accomplished Danny O'Neil.
Mock their mountain, make fun of their uniforms, but poking fun at academics is a sucker move when you've lost 14 of the last 16 in the series.
The Jags' offense was awful, but then again, so were the Huskies until it mattered most in what turned out to be a pretty good weekend for the local football teams.
Seattle is 2-5 for the first time since 2011, which is also the last time the Seahawks played regular-season games without Russell Wilson being available. This not a coincidence.
The tough thing about being NFL commish is the ethical and moral implications. Specifically: you can't let them get in the way of protecting human toads Daniel Snyder.
The firing of Nick Rolovich was as inevitable as the lawsuit that has since followed, and I refuse to care more about another man's continued employment than he does.
Turns out the Seahawks were only half bad without Russell Wilson. The Huskies, on the other hand, need to consider a switch at that spot or at the very least give Sam Huard some time on the field.
Adam Schefter did something that would get a young reporter fired. That's just a small part of the recipe for success at the front of the hot-scoop parade, though.
Daniel Snyder's lawsuit against a Web site for suggesting a connection to Jeffrey Epstein (among other things) is what led to the emails first being made public.