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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .


Although he was not part of the first ever Seattle Seahawks first ever Super Bowl win, Marcus Trufant was a member of the team from 2003 to 2012.  He was brought back yesterday on a one day contract so that he could officially retired as a Seahawk.  While in Seattle, Trufant made the Pro Bowl in 2007 and started 125 games netting 638 Tackles, 21 Interceptions with 2 Touchdowns. 

At yesterday’s press conference, current Seahawks star, Richard Sherman and past star Walter Jones were in attendance as was Head Coach Pete Carroll, who Trufant credited with bringing him back for the one day contract so that he could retire as a Seahawk.

Trufant last was with the Jacksonville Jaguars where he was on the pre-season roster, though did not make the team.  We congratulate the Seattle Seahawks organization for this classy move and Marcus Trufant for his career.




Quickly, the Country Music Hall of Fame is becoming the institution to watch.  They have recently announced a new exhibition that will celebrate the career of Kenny Rogers, one of the most successful Country acts of the late 70’s and 80’s. 

On August 15, 2014, “Kenny Rogers: Through the Years” will debut and the career of the “Gambler” will be celebrated.  Rogers entered the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2013 and had multiple #1 albums and #1 songs and had serious crossover success on the mainstream Pop charts. 

Rogers is also a multi-time Grammy Award winner and has acted on television and in movies.  Again, we congratulate the Country Music Hall of Fame for what has been an incredible year.




When the Chicago Cubs held their celebration to mark the 100th anniversary of Wrigley Field, fans, announcers and media noticed one significant absence from the Cubs legends brought back to share in the festivities: Sammy Sosa.

Sosa played thirteen seasons with Chicago where he won the National League MVP in 1998 and had three seasons of 60 or more Home Runs.  His totals as a Cub are impressive with 1,985 Hits, 545 Home Runs, 1,414 Runs Batted In, a .928 OPS and a bWAR of 58.5 and for years he was one of the most popular players in the game and owned the Windy City.

As much as Sosa was revered, the sentiment in Chicago (and Baseball in general) changed.  As his stats declined and the injuries piled up, Sosa became surly and many of the media who once praised him, painted him as a fraud, but did so in two ways.

The first was Performance Enhancing Drugs.  As the public became aware of PEDs, Sosa was one of the players who that alleged to have taken them.  In a 2002 Sports Illustrated piece with sportswriter, Rick Reilly, Sosa said he was never on them and that he would be the first in line should Baseball mandate drug testing:





(From Rick Reilly’s 2002 SI Piece)



"You've said if baseball tests for steroids, you want to be first in line, right?" I asked him last Thursday at his Wrigley Field locker.

"Yes," Sosa replied.

"Well, why wait?" I said.

"What?"

"Why wait to see what the players' association will do?" I continued. "Why not step up right now and be tested? You show everybody you're clean. It'll lift a cloud off you and a cloud off the game.  It'll show the fans that all these great numbers you're putting up are real."

Sosa's neck veins started to bulge.

I tried to tell him how important I thought this was. How attendance is headed for the cesspool. A former MVP told SI that 50% of the players are on steroids. The fans are starting to look at every home run record the way people look at Ted Koppel's hair. And there's the threat of a strike. Something good has to happen. What could be more positive than the game's leading home run hitter's proving himself cleaner than Drew Carey's fork?

Sosa looked at me as if I were covered in leeches.

"Why are you telling me to do this?" he said. "You don't tell me what to do."

I tried to explain that I wasn't telling him to do it, I was just wondering if he didn't think it would be a good move for him and the game.

"You're not my father!" he said, starting to yell. "Why do you tell me what to do? Are you trying to get me in trouble?"

I asked how he could get in trouble if he wasn't doing anything wrong.

"I don't need to go nowhere," he growled. "I'll wait for the players' association to decide what to do. If they make that decision [to test], I will be first in line."

But didn't he think a star stepping forward now, without being told to be tested....

"This interview is over!" He started looking around for security. "Over, motherf-----!!"



Damn, we loved rereading that!

Incidentally, Reilly would go on to say in the piece that he doubted Sosa was on steroids, though in his defense he would later write pieces that he was naïve to the situation, most famously when he wrote about being duped by Lance Armstrong who he strongly defended in many articles.

Reilly wrote that piece in 2002.  Two years later, Sosa played his last game for the Cubs.  In the last game of the 2004 Regular Season, he asked not to play, and left the stadium before the game ended.  He famously denied that accusation, though security footage showed he lied.  Allegedly, one of his Sosa’s teammates destroyed his boombox with his baseball bat to a rousing applause from the rest of the Cubs.  Sosa never played another game in Chicago again.

This is the biggest reason why Sosa was not invited back to the Cubs and this celebration.  A spokesman from the team stated that “There are things that Sammy needs to look at and consider prior to having an engagement with the team.”

Sosa wanted to be a part of it, and has expressed in the past that he wants to see his number retired by the Cubs and in regards to yesterday’s events he had the following to say:

“I should have been there.  I would have liked to have been there.  The Cubs know where to find me and I hope to have the chance to clear up any misunderstanding.”

Players have come back to organizations after severe fallouts, and suspected PED users have even returned to the game in various capacities.  Most recently, Barry Bonds was part of the opening day ceremonies for the Pittsburgh Pirates and worked as an Instructional Coach for the San Francisco Giants in Spring Training.  Sosa’s impact on the Cubs cannot be downsized, and we are very curious to see how this story unfolds.




Shortly after the Country Music Hall of Fame completed its expansion, the Nashville based institution has announced three new inductees in their Class of 2014.

Ronnie Milsap headlines this group as the Modern Era Artist inductee, and is one of the most successful Country Musicians of all time. Starting out as a session musician in the 60’s (he appeared on Elvis Presley’s Kentucky Rain), Milsap also penned some hits for others (including Ray Charles) but in 1972 after a trip to Nashville, he switched his focus to Country Music at the influence of Charley Pride. Milsap would soon after have his first top forty Country hit, and by 1976 he emerged as one of the top acts of the genre.

Milsap would also have crossover success in the Pop world as he blended mainstream elements to his music. He would go on to have forty Country number one hits.

Milsap is joined by Hank Cochran who had seven top twenty Country Music hits. Cochran is more known for his songwriting skills, as he wrote “I Fall To Pieces” and “She’s Got You” which would become major hits for Patsy Cline. Cochran passed away in 2010.

The third inductee is Veteran Era Artist Inductee, Mac Wiseman. Wiseman was a major figure in Bluegrass Music where he began singing harmonies for Flatt & Scrugg’s Foggy Mountain Boys and Bill Monore’s Bluegrass Boys before becoming a very successful solo artist.

The Country Music Hall of Fame was first established in 1961, and this year’s ceremony will be the first one in the facilitie’s new 800 seat theatre. Once we finish a few other projects on this site, we are looking to create a section for this Hall.