Tony Kornheiser gets very mad when I sit in his chair, pick up his personalized bobblehead from the studio set and shake the doll. In fact, even when I don't have the privilege of sometimes subbing for him on ESPN's Pardon The Interruption, he seems to dislike me -- maybe because I have a full head of hair or, more likely, because I'm intellectually beneath him.That's OK. I am grateful anyway.
I thank him because he did the sportswriting profession proud in his three years on Monday Night Football. Kornheiser technically isn't a sportswriter anymore, having escaped the dying newspaper business like many of us, but when he was hired for one of the most high-profile assignments in sports television, he was dismissed by many viewers and critics as a columnist painfully out of his league.
I'm sure everyone was happy about
I don't think it is crazy talk to consider
Don't ya just love when people who have stained the game in the past come back to wag their finger at players in the present? Well, that' s exactly what happened when Pete Rose
You might have heard that Dennis Miller, the comedian turned Monday Night Football commentator turned political commentator, 
























