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Tony the
Neanderthal
Siragusa Mocks Harrington, but We Know Who the Real Buffoon Is
By
Jim Buzinski
Outsports.com
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Tony Siragusa is a
big fat idiot.
That’s the only
conclusion to be reached after the ex-NFL defensive lineman and now
Fox sideline reporter mocked Detroit Lions quarterback Joey
Harrington by suggesting that Harrington was somehow less than the
kind of man who should be playing football. “Harrington is gay” is
certainly one inference to be drawn from Siragusa's comments.
 The
dustup occurred after this exchange between Siragusa and Fox
play-by-play announcer Dick Stockton and analyst Darryl “Moose”
Johnston, calling Sunday’s Philadelphia Eagles at Lions game:
"[Harrington] seemed a little different than what I expected,"
Siragusa said of their pregame meeting. "I thought he was a little
bit too overconfident. … Just a different kind of guy. Not a
meat-and-potato guy but a very sophisticated man. That's as much as
I can go into right now."
Johnston:
"More champagne and caviar than meat and potatoes?"
Siragusa:
"Yeah, I wouldn't see him going out and ordering a beer any time
soon to tell you the truth."
Stockton:
"In other words, he may not be your kind of guy, Goose?"
Siragusa:
"He's the kind of guy that's on the other side of the club than I
am. He's over there with the champagne and caviar. And also the
strawberries and chocolate, you know?"
Stockton:
"We get the idea."
Siragusa's rather inane comments ("sophisticated" is a bad
thing?) caused a bit of a firestorm in the Detroit media. Some said
they thought the implication was that Harrington is gay. Others said
they thought it implied Harrington was an elitist, a theme echoed by
Detroit News columnist Terry Foster. Whatever, Harrington fired back
at Siragusa:
"Why am I not his
kind of guy? Because I was cordial in a production meeting? Because
I tried to be articulate? Because I smile when I play? Because I
enjoy myself out there? Because I'm not a ‘Billy Badass?’ "
Harrington said.
"I was raised a certain way. I was raised to be polite, to look
someone in the eye and when they ask you a question, you answer it.
If he's got a problem with the way I play then go ahead and say it.
But if he looks at how I play, I don't think he'd be making those
comments. If he looks at how I work I don't think he'd be making
those comments. If he came to the parking lot and checked to see
who's car was the last one out of here everyday I don't think he'd
be making those comments. It must be nice playing in front of the
best linebacker in the history of the game isn't it?"
This last
sentence was a reference at Siragusa having been part of the 2000
Super Bowl-winning Baltimore Ravens team anchored by the great
middle linebacker Ray Lewis.
An unapologetic
Siragusa refused to speak with the media to explain himself, but had
Fox issue a statement on his behalf: “I think the situation's been
blown way out of proportion, and it is unfortunate that people are
reading way more into this than I actually said," Siragusa said. "I
have nothing personal against Joey Harrington. He is a great
athlete, and I respect him as a player.
"I just stated
that if I was going to start a team he wouldn't be one of the
players I would select. Nothing more, nothing less. It's just my
opinion, and that's what I get paid to do on the sideline. I'm sure
there are a lot of people out there that may think that I'm not
their kind of guy, and that's OK because it's their opinion. I think
it's important to remember that when you have an opinion about a
player -- even if it's negative -- it's not a personal slight."
I’ve always been
impressed by Harrington, going back to his days at the University of
Oregon. He comes across as very articulate yet a bit quirky, a
terrific piano player who seemed well-mannered and yet has what it
takes to play the most difficult position in football. But for
Neanderthals like Siragusa, only those who act like drunken louts
are “real men.”
Whether or not he
was implying that Harrington is gay, Siragusa nonetheless pushed the
stereotype of what an athlete can and cannot be, a prejudice all of
us have to get over. My gut tells me that the Siragusa’s of the
world are becoming an endangered species, even in the macho world of
sports.
It took my
Outsports colleague Brent Mullins to put this into proper
perspective, showing how out of touch Siragusa is in 2004 — women
would much prefer men like Joey over men like Tony.
“Siragusa needs to realize that scoring
with the ladies is greatly increased once you pop the
bubbly. Siragusa is left at the Regent Beverly Wilshire, waiting for
his hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold to come along and take his cash,
believing that to live in the ‘Pretty Woman’ past is his best shot
at an exciting present.
“Meanwhile, Joey is having to beat them off with a stick while he
serenades hot girls on top of his grand piano, Fabulous Baker
Brother's style.”
Sept. 29, 2004
Related:
Harrington's website
Siragusa's
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