| ESPN.com: Page 2 | [Print without images] |
Sean Penn arrived just as the Sheriff was leaving for Las Vegas to endure harsh anti-terrorism training -- and I had a dark feeling, even then, that these two absolutely disconnected events would somehow combine to cause trouble. ... Which was true, although neither one of those things were as traumatic as the bizarre arrival of Princess Omin to my home. That changed things dramatically.
Our gambling situation went all to pieces, as it usually does when you start betting with strangers who have no sense of values and don't mind losing heavily. People who don't speak English and pay their gambling debts by selling relatives into slavery are always loaded bazookas. I could have handled Penn's arrival and the Sheriff's departure with no trouble, under ordinary circumstances, but when Fate added a fine young Arabian woman to the mix, my gears began to grind. I felt my brain wandering. A little confusion
can be interesting, in the Oriental sense, but too much of it with no apparent end is demoralizing.
There was a time, not long ago, when I looked forward to the Sunday NFL games with a certain giddy expectation, like a vacation coming up. But no longer -- not after the 49ers failed to cover, and the Raiders blew up right in front of my eyes on Sunday night like swollen sheep. They were beaten and disgraced.
Whoops. Lighten up on the bombast. Stick with the facts. ... OK. The once-mighty Raiders defense was ripped to shreds by a second-year running back from Alabama named Shaun Alexander, who sliced and stomped through the fourth-toughest run defense in the NFL for 266 yards and utterly intimidated the Oakland linebackers. They were shamed like animals who urinate on themselves.
![]() | |
| Seattle's Shaun Alexander ran over, around and through the Raiders defense. |
| BUY THE BOOK | |
| Click here to buy Hunter S. Thompson's new book, Fear and Loathing in America : The Brutal Odyssey of an Outlaw Journalist. |