In my vast collection of Blood Bowl figures, I have exactly one team of the undead. Their colors are black, red,
and white, and I have them assigned as the Houston
Texans.
Yes, I realize Houston is red, blue, and white (“deep steel blue” as a matter of fact), but my
first couple seasons watching them in the league were on a non-“high def”
television with questionable color. In my mind’s eye, they look black and red,
and I tend to have a pretty stubborn mind’s eye. I have a similar problem with
the Chicago Bears.
But why do I have my undead team assigned to the Texans?
All my Blood Bowl teams are assigned
to one NFL team or another (though the exact teams have changed over the
years…I’ve been playing BB since 2nd edition after all – circa 1990
– and there have been three new franchises and a league realignment since
then), because…well, because I’m weird and stuff. But why undead?
Well, a couple reasons. The original Blood Bowl game (which also based their fictional “fluff” on the
NFL) has two teams one could say are (nominally) based on the Dallas Cowboys: the Darkside Cowboys (a flashy dark elf team owned by a Prince of Darkness type)
and the Champions of Death, an undead
team coached by “Tom O’Landry the Undying.” Well, if the Cowboys are still the
Cowboys, then where do I put the necromantic TX team? How about in Houston
where the NFL sought to resurrect a franchise after the Oilers moved to
Tennessee?
Yeah, that works for me.
Of course, play-style is also a factor in team
assignment, as I’ve blogged before. The Seahawks are orks because
(historically) we’ve been a run-heavy, hard-hitting defense, with a really loud
(“waa-agh”) crowd. We’ve also had an almost complete lack of stellar receivers
the likes of Andre Johnson, Megatron, Larry Fitzgerald, Michael Irving, etc.
Our receivers have tended to be short and stunty, butter-fingered, or mediocre
journeymen types (all apologies to Hall of Famer Steve Largent…one dude does not make for a history of high-flying
receivers).
The undead are one of those teams that don’t have a real
“specialty” type of play; instead they have a resilient team of “specialists.”
Ghouls are speedy receivers and the vampire star player is a near unstoppable
ball carrier, but they don’t have a real “passer” type player on the roster. A
wight usually acts as the team’s QB, but it’s not a “natural” position (they
don’t have any starting passing skills)…it’s just that you don’t want a zombie
throwing the ball down the field to the ghouls.
But the real
stand-out player on the roster (other than the exorbitantly priced vampire) is the mummy. The mummy is a real monster,
and hands-down the toughest standard roster player on any 3rd
edition Blood Bowl team. No, they’re
not ball-handlers; they are simply engines of destruction wrecking lines and
players, leaving the pitch wet with brains and blood. A well-played mummy
against an incautious team will wrack up 4 or 5 casualties and knock-out
another half dozen over the course of the match…and that’s against a standard
strength team. Against the more “breakable” types (goblins, hobbits, etc.) the
number of bodies in the dug-out can get really impressive. Having a starting
Strength of 5 (more than any other non-star player), Mighty Blow, and a burning thirst for vengeance on the living…well, they tend to advance quickly
by racking up star player points.
J.J. Watt is a
mummy, and a goddamn wrecking ball.
My wife is not a gamer, but she has played Blood Bowl on a number of occasions. Why
not...she’s a big football fan, after all. The undead are one of her preferred
teams: they give her the resilience to withstand my onslaughts (I tend to play smashy teams like the orks) and hit
back hard. Actually, hitting hard is usually a secondary consideration for her;
she really doesn’t like it when her players die (she tends to become emotionally attached to pieces that
perform well in a game), and the undead are notoriously hard-to-kill (being
already dead)…so when she does inflict casualties with her mummies it’s almost
a surprise to her. Like she doesn’t know her own strength (“Oh, I did that?”). She was just trying to get the
ball to the vampire.
J.J. Watt knows his own strength and knows exactly how to
use it. I haven’t seen such a dominating individual performance from a single
player against the Seahawks since last year’s game against Peterson and the
Vikings. We won that game, too, but AP was nigh-unstoppable and it was the
Vikes’ other weaknesses that the ‘Hawks were able to exploit. The five sacks
and numerous tackles for losses and QB hits delivered by the Texans were not
all attributed to Watt’s stats, but they might as well have been…it was the
Seahawks’ need to double and triple team him that allowed the rest of the
defense to come free. The Texans were ferocious…and
it started with Watts.
That’s a good team down in Houston and the Seahawks had
to show some high caliber resiliency themselves to come back and wrest the
victory away from the Texans…a Texans team that dominated our depleted
offensive line and moved pretty well against the defense. We’ll see the
resiliency of Houston next week when they go into San Francisco next week; can
they pull it together and get up the emotion they need to take it to the
Niners? Sitting at 2-2, losing at home, and falling behind the Colts and Titans
in the division…can they muster their talent and blow up the defending NFC
champs?
I have a feeling Watt will be out for blood. If he was a minotaur he’d probably eat which ever quarterback loses the match (“Yates! Get ready
to suit up!”). Hell, minotaur or not, I’d be afraid to be in that locker room
if the Texans lose three in a row. You let the mummy off the chain, and who
knows what might happen!
Someone's going to die, and it ain't this guy |
Next up for the Seahawks:
at the High Elves of Indianapolis. Hoo-boy…can the “Legion of Boom” handle the Colts’ high flying offense, bolstered
by new dragon warrior, Trent Richardson? Andre Luck was drafted way ahead of
Russell Wilson…way ahead of everyone, really, being the #1 pick overall. Can
the phoenix warrior out –duel our slippery star goblin? Can the Seahawks get a
couple of our injured linemen back? Another frigging 10am start on the
road...sheesh.
[J.J. Watt stats in
Blood Bowl:
Mummy (M +2, S +1, add Block, Break Tackle, Pass Defense, Tackle)
For other players,
call Johnson a strong, fast ghoul with Catch
and use the vampire Count for Foster. Schaub is a wight with a handful of
passing skills…or a zombie if you’re feeling uncharitable today]
JB, sometimes . . . you're just weird.
ReplyDeleteBut I love you, man! ROFL
Waiting for more. ;)
I know I'm weird, but Blood Bowl players that saw that game will know exactly what I'm talking about. Watt was throwing around 3-bill offensive linemen like they were stuff-toys. It's a tribute to the Seahawks orky stubbornness that they refused to lay down and die.
ReplyDelete[in the Warhammer universe of Blood Bowl, orks aren't nearly the cowards of Tolkien or D&D...it's a slightly different paradigm]
ANYway...I should be blogging about other things soon enough. I was just inspired (and impressed) by what I saw on Sunday.
: )