Last year’s Super Bowl was amazing.
The New England Patriots trailed the Atlanta Falcons, 28-3, in the third quarter and across America, football fans were scanning channels to see what else to do with their time.
Then the Patriots scored, to make it interesting. Then they scored again … and again. And when it was all over, the Patriots had completed the largest comeback in Super Bowl history, winning 34-28.
That’s memorable. You know what’s not so memorable? What two teams blew their chances to be in the Super Bowl by losing to the Patriots and Falcons?
This weekend, the big thing in the sports world are the AFC and NFC championship games on Sunday. The winners of those games will go on to play in Super Bowl LII (52) in Minneapolis, the biggest sporting event in the United States.
The conference title game losers? They rarely are remembered by anyone outside of their immediate fan base. It’s because of these stakes that the conference championship games often are playing at a more desperate and higher level than the Super Bowl, which doubles as a party and television commercial extravaganza.
If you don’t have plans with 20 of your closest friends, then venture up to Louie’s Tap House in Roscoe to spend it with a few dozen. On Sunday, beginning at 1 p.m., the bar is having AFC (Jaguars vs. Patriots) and NFC (Vikings vs. Eagles) championship parties. The specials will be $2 Pabst Blue Ribbon pints and … of course … endless, pointless sports arguing.
For the record, as I’m sure fans of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers will tell you, it was the Steelers and Packers that lost the AFC title games last year in blowouts.
Louie’s Tap House is located at 5689 Elevator Road, Roscoe. The phone number is 815-270-1020 or louies.taphouse@yahoo.com.
A special thank you to Alex Gary for writing this Scoreboard piece.
Alex Gary spent 22 years as a sports, business and education reporter and editor at newspapers in Beloit, Wis., and Rockford. He now is the communications manager at Thinker Ventures when he’s not umpiring youth baseball, running the scoreboard at Jefferson athletics, working on his NIC-10 Sports History Book website or hanging out with his two daughters.