Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Muster's Last Stand: The Final


The Rogue Gallery

The remainder of the evening was spent amongst an amalgam of who’s-who in the Tecmo realm. We tended to roam from one television to the next throughout the evening, starting with the Round of 64 where we reveled in defending champ, Jimmy B., as he held on to his title for the time being. I got my first glimpse of Mort, whose unmistakable voice I’d first heard on some three year old podcasts (thank you internets) along with an idea of what the Vogt family brought to the table when Lefty and Bigmv scooped up some victories, while the podcaster himself, Chris Vogt, lost a hard-fought battle over in the Jamie Mueller Region. Lastly, I made sure to saunter over to where Sobhi was handling Bo Jackson from my earlier group on his way to another Madison victory.

As the 64 rolled into 32, Ryan and I were halfway into a pretty delicious pizza if I say so myself, conversing with our Texas pals who also came away a bit bruised with their own 1-2 records. Still, where the pizza didn’t fill us up, the passion for pure Tecmo did, and before long we were cheering on the Miller brothers who were both blazing a trail that began by riding their horses right over our mangled bodies. We also had a chance to introduce ourselves to the gregarious Dotdon, a man whose love for Tecmo can only be rivaled by his love of partying with his homies. Meanwhile, try as we might, we finally couldn’t ignore the cacophony surrounding Tony Orenga as his unorthodox playing style advanced him another round.

Reveling in Chaos
Somewhere between the Sweet 16 and Elite 8, things started getting a bit blurry for me. I’m not quite sure if my body was avenging itself for the night before, but soon enough I was putting down my cab fare on an Eagles/Raiders match-up against some dude whose name I can’t recall at this time. We matched up pretty well, but ultimately my QB Eagles runs got to be too predictable and I was out an Alexander Hamilton. Thinking, if I’m bold enough right now to call it that, that I actually stood a chance of winning it back, I challenged him to a Jets/Cardinals (maybe?) match that started out strong, but started faltering as soon as I distracted myself with the ruckus going on behind the Chet/Mort matchup a few TVs over. My second Hamilton joined his brother in this dude’s pocket, and before he could ask me for another match I was gone faster than Gil Fenerty with a rocket up his ass.

Broke but not broken, I took a stool next to the Matt dude from my group, now known affectionately enough to me as Matt Miller, and watched him gain a few more style points by defeating the number 1 seed from our region and Annual Juice-off Champion, Garbage Gauthier. Around this time I ran into Chris Vogt and told him of my fondness for his ancient (in internet terms) podcasts that got me through some tough work days and helped me find out which ‘Run-2’ play was the best. His Redskins Bledsoe jersey was a topic of much conversation between himself, Ryan and I, something that may have inspired Ryan to finally jump on that Dan McGwire jersey he’s been coveting.

The King is Crowned

And so it came to the part of the night we’d been drinking for, the Final 4 and Championship. There were a few times during the course of the night where I questioned my allegiance to this 8-bit treasure, but those silly feelings were allayed the minute I heard Josh utter that one phrase that we all know from LT’s book: “I’m LT… (say it with me) DON’T FUCK WITH ME!”. If there were ever a group of four guys assembled not to fuck with, it was the Final 4 of this year’s tournament. Nearly dominant in all of their respective games, it finally came down to more or less which jackass could hold on to the ball inside the red zone. The Miller brothers were still alive, but where Kyle was handling Troy's Jets with the Cowboys, Matt was struggling against the Madison surprise, Chet. And in almost serendipitous fashion, the man whose own tournament he’d never won advanced to face a guy who’d put fear into the hearts of juicers everywhere, the Regulator.

The Road to Glory goes through Logan's
We all took our positions to catch the game in action. Despite it having to be held on a smaller screen due to what was described as ‘lagginess’ in the big monitors, we were all able to catch the action—be it on the television itself or the station where QB Browns and Tecmodell were calling the action. And while the game was like any other as far as time, it was one that came and went too quickly in my memory. Kyle, who’d steamrolled most of his opponents all night, looked lost in the midst of Chet’s cool, calculated play. Despite a fumble by Chet’s Vikings, Joey Browner was there to intercept the ball on the next play.

The match up was a classic and worthy of a Tecmo Final, with its aerial pursuits and rugged ground game. I’d be better off directing you to videos of the live feed for the expert commentary done on the ground, as I’d admit most of my memory of the actual event is hazed over by the famous Wisconsin Spotted Cow. The third place game between Matt and Troy was equally as classic, if not better, due to the battle of the A-buttons down at the goal line with no time left on the clock. Troy took away third place due to his abilities to wrestle down Mark Carrier, but wouldn’t have had to worry about it had it not been for Matt’s quiet comeback after halftime.

We finished the night congratulating the winners and finally catching Josh to give him our gratitude for diverting us from reality for a few nights. We expressed our regrets on our inability to make it out to the Plaza for the second night in a row, though perhaps, as we’d come to find out, it was best for our physical well-being that we didn’t. We bade farewell to Mr. Knobbe and the rest of the fine fellows we’d come to know over the course of the day, as difficult as it was, with every intention of returning and giving ourselves a chance to meet the rest and hopefully start carving our own legacies on the forever green fields of Tecmo.

If You Ever Go to Leonard, ND…

I’d be remiss if I ended my account without mentioning the most important moment of my day. There was a dude there that I’d been eyeballing all day. Not just for his Boomer shirt and matching headband accessory, but because of the physical and spiritual presence he carried with him. I spent most of the day gathering my wits and liquid courage, finally approaching him when he was seated in a chair, phone in hand, most likely Tweeting about late ’90-s hip hop or the fine swine of central Wisconsin. Of course, the man I’m talking about is the Leonardite. Anyone who’s wasted five minutes of their lives reading my blog knows how derivative it is of this guy, and for that I apologize a million times over. But if I’d known that my own experiment would have caught the eyes and Tweets of the Madison organizers and the Tecmo Repository, I may have tried something a bit more original like Photoshopping Bubby Brister’s head on to the panty shot girl.

Meeting the Leonardite, aka Neil, was, for me anyway, something about five years in the making. I had moved back home in 2007 after graduating with an English degree from the Harvard of the North, the University of North Dakota, getting fed spaghetti every other night by my mom as long as I kept walking the dog, with nothing to do but reacquaint myself with my old Nintendo. Looking for a new spin on Tecmo, the game I’d taken the most liking to, I hit up the old world wide web, and the second or third link I stumbled into was a little story called ‘This weekend, I won Tecmo with the Seahawks’. Before long I had fallen into the rabbit hole of Neil’s site, riveted to my seat up until the infamous Tony Paige handoff (you’ll have to read it here to know what I mean).

The unanswered tweet request heard around the world...of my basement
I’d find myself returning to the site now and again, whether I was sitting at my dead end job or getting hammered on Old Mils in the basement. Knowing that the chances were slim for an encore presentation, despite my attempts at goading another one, I finally, after five years of hoping the season would end differently, decided to blaze my own trail. And now I can only hope that I made it as far as an inch if he went a mile. You can think I’m crazy all you want for lauding a website featuring COM vs COM games and player profiles for guys like Harry Galbreath, but to me it felt like more than that; there was heart and humor attached to something as cold and unforgiving as a game like Tecmo, and for that, I both blame and honor the Leonardite for opening my eyes to the infinite possibilities and eccentric characters that the Tecmo world could afford.

And so, in closing, I'd like to thank those of you who stayed throughout the entirety of my Tecmo account. I know it comes from a newcomer that you most likely don’t remember, and with that it doesn’t carry much weight. But in my eyes, I’d like to think it brings a fresh perspective on something as legendary as the Tecmo Madison tournament. I hope to continue the saga next year, and to hold actual conversations with the guys whose only interaction with me was a good game pat on the back. You guys all inspire, enrage, motivate and disgust me. Take care over the next year, and stay in touch. I’ll be in that corner of the Twitterverse under the handle of @TheTecmoBowl for as long as I’m honored enough to use that title in my name.

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