Nobody who leaves wants to return
to sportswriting, but the profession has a way of grabbing you and
never letting you escape. I had never been particularly interested in
the genre, but after one of my freelance pieces entitled “John Daly Has
Gout” gained traction, I found myself on the sports interview circuit.
“Rod Beck picks baked beans out of his mustache,” I wrote in my lede
about sitting with the reliever in his trailer outside the Iowa Cubs
ballpark. “Jeff George slices up a steak the same way he slices a
defense.” That sort of thing. I signed up for the pro bocce ball
circuit. I tried to stop a Greg Ostertag slap shot. In one terrifying
evening, I gambled on demolition derby at the Grenlee County Fair with
Phil Mickelson and we ended up fleeing for our lives from a father and
son team driving a half-totaled Chrysler Imperial that attempted to ram
us because Michelson owed them forty grand that he didn’t have because
he lost it all on the horse game. And then I stopped.
After a
few decades, I lost my interest in sports personalities. Sure, every
once in awhile I would get kicked in the genitals by a UFC fighter or
get bitten by a professional biting coach that in order to critique Mike
Tyson’s technique, but for the most part it was boring dinners with
boring people. “Troy Aikman orders the Chicken Kiev.” “Bill Wennington
buys his own McDonald's sandwich.” Etc. So I left the magazine and
transitioned to novels. Here, I was not bound to what athletes said and
did but could finally play in the greatest and most exhilarating
literary space imaginable– my own imagination.
It took months
of research and exploring my own psyche– I abandoned my family for six
months to take a bevy of mind-expanding psychedelics derived from
wildflowers and cacti– and fits and starts of experimentation before
finally releasing my masterpiece called Charlatan-In-Chief: Operation Hole In One: A Clark Craggler Novel.
The book was a mixture of roman á clef, autofiction, magical realism,
and thriller about how distinguished sportswriter Clark Craggler, who is
also secretly an operative with an élite government intelligence unit
where its members are deployed as civilians until “activated” by their
mysterious boss known only as “Magma” in dire national emergency
situations. Craggler goes from writing a tiresome feature on a star
quarterback’s dreadful diet regimen to stop a catastrophe: catching the
sitting president repeatedly cheating at golf. His job is to write an
exposé of the president taking too many mulligans and generously giving
himself lays and even altering the scorecard, which would be designed to
trigger a congressional investigation, but while investigating him, he
gets tied up in a sinister presidential plot to destroy the country’s
golf courses with a piece of secret military technology that instantly
divots acres of pristine greens from low-earth orbit.
Unfortunately, Charlatan-In-Chief: Operation Hole In One: A Clark Craggler Novel
was not the critical and commercial darling I hoped it would be.
Reviewers savaged it. One called it a “masturbatory doofus fantasia.”
Another had the headline “Hole In One” but the art on the article was a
picture of a toilet. The New York Times didn’t even review it, not even a
capsule. It was my first book not to make it onto the bestseller list
after I had easily done it with Speaking Franch: Dennis Franchione In His Own Words and even Of Weis and Men: Charlie Weis on Leadership on the Gridiron and the Boardroom. My publishers told me in no uncertain terms that Clark Craggler would not return for the sequel Charlatan-in-Jail. If I ever wanted to make money writing again, I’d have to start interviewing sports people again.
It
was a soggy, muggy summer day in Lincoln, Nebraska. I pulled up to the
elaborate practice facility and a public relations person took me over
to Matt Rhule’s office. When I walked in, there was no one in his
chair, so I said “Coach Rhule?” He popped up from behind a massive desk
and whipped a little foam football-shaped stress ball at my face.
“Think
fast!” Rhule yelled as it knocked my glasses askew and nearly made me
drop my pen. I looked up, confused and vaguely dazed.
“That’s a
Matt Rule,” the coach said. “Number thirteen. If you can’t think fast,
you’ll be slow, in life.” He sat down and put his hands behind his
head. “That’s the book right there. Matt Rhules. Branding. Writes
itself. Have a seat.”
The
PR assistant pulled down a screen and started fussing with a computer
and then I saw the presentation come up: The Matt Rhules: A Guide to
Success on the Football Field and in Life.
“The Matt Rhules
System. We provide these rules and then some examples from my life or
from Nebraska football and how they apply to people’s lives. For
example, Matt Rhule: Protect Your Quarterback.” The presentation showed a
picture of an offensive tackle pancaking a blitzing linebacker. “In
football terms, it’s the most important part of the passing game. But
people have people in their lives around them that are important. Their
'quarterbacks' if you will. And you need to stop them from getting
blitzed by Issues.”
The next slide clicked over to a black and
white picture of Coach Rhule pointing aggressively. “Matt Rhule: Don’t
let your mouth cash checks your body can’t cash.”
“You get it,
right? We’re going to do a whole book with these Matt Rhules. It’s
branded content. That's where the money is.” He handed me a tote bag
that has “Matt Rhules” spelled out in training tape stuck to it. “These
are just a prototype. Once we get published and up and running, we’ll
have it all: shirts, bags, fuck even diapers. Matt Rhule: Don’t shit on
me.” He looked at me as I stared at him, bewildered. “That’s a joke.
That’s a fake Matt Rhule.”
“Well, that's the pitch,” he said.
“I’ve got some rules. You’ve got to tie them together. Get them from
football to apply to people’s lives or whatever. Publisher said you do
this stuff all the time.”
I tried hard to hide how aghast I was at this comparison. Sure there were some superficial similarities to this and James Dolan: Six Chords to Success
but those ignored the obvious literary merit of that project where I
explored the craft of songwriting and owning one's one fleet of
helicopters. But then I remembered that I had a time share payment and a
lease on a Sea-Doo that I purchased from David Cone, so I swallowed my
pride. “Yes. I work with famous sports personalities and help put
their vision on the page.”
“Perfect,” he said, clapping his
hands. “We all have our talents. Here’s a Matt Rhule: From Each
According to His Ability, To Each According To His Means.”
“Isn’t that Karl Marx?” I said.
“Then
fix it up and make it a Matt Rhule. It's not that hard.” He handed me a
thumb drive. "Get started and I’ll see you in a week.”
I drove off into the rain to my Lincoln hotel. It looked like I would be here for awhile.
The
thumb drive contained the presentation I just saw (Rhule referred to it
as a “deck” for some reason) and a nearly inscrutable word document
containing various Matt Rhules or at least jumbles of phrases that I was
supposed to shape into coherent Matt Rhules. The rest of the files
were various samples of logos and an MP3 of a Matt Rhule theme song that
he had made himself, affecting a sort of James Dolanish growl-croon.
Several
of the files contained short videos of Rhule whipping his head around
to stare at the camera. “Matt Rhule,” he says in one of them. “Give it
your all or give it up.” Then there is a short guitar riff as he nods at
the camera. That one was not included in the text list. I start to
divide them between Canonical Matt Rhules and Supplemental Matt Rhules.
Day
two. I woke up in my Lincoln hotel and for several brief seconds I had
no idea what I was doing there (I had dreamed that was giving a talk
about my new novel to a large panel except in the dream it was called Air Fraud One: A Harold Chuck Novel
and it was about how the president was somehow concealing being a bear
from the public and was going to eat too many salmon. I was laying into
a person who I immediately understood as being my sworn literary
nemesis by I think also accusing him of being secretly a bear when the
nature of my trip to Lincoln came into depressing focus.
For
hours I stared at the Matt Rhules until the bleakness of my job
overwhelmed me. I could not for the life of me come up with new Matt
Rules, and it was nearly impossible to write stories based on the ones
he had. “Matt Rhule: Always try to win, in football and in business.”
Instead, I started daydreaming where instead of Matt Rhule winning on
the football field, it was Clark Craggler defiantly laying out the
president’s Golf Crimes to a congressional subcommittee. That was what
winning looked like in life and in literature. But Craggler had been
crushed, much like how the Carolina Panthers were crushed by the San
Francisco 49ers resulting in Rhule’s ouster from the NFL.
I could
not sleep at night and I decided to find something to eat. I got in my
car and began aimlessly driving around. Soon, I had left Lincoln
altogether. Something compelled me to keep moving. I drove for hours
and hours. There was no radio, no music, nothing but the sound of the
car and the road and the sight of my haunted eyes in the reflection of
the windows,
The sun rose. I found myself at the outskirts of a park, a federal wilderness area. I left my car and hiked for hours, deeper and deeper into an unmarked wilderness. Finally, exhausted, I stopped and opened my backpack. There it was. Wrapped in some foil, the last of my iboga root that I had bought on a retreat from what I was told would be a shaman but turned out to be a man named Daryl who I later learned was on the run from the FBI for a crime described to me as “dojo fraud.” I prepared the powder and ate a few starburst that were in there as well.
The
forest floor dropped from under me and I began to float through a
miasma of consciousness, not just mine but the very concept of human
consciousness. It is very difficult for me to describe in words what
happened to me on this journey but I entered a mental plane beyond
sanity and beyond the bonds of this physical world and, just as I
thought I would never return and be forced to float forever in a cosmic
goo, I remembered the Matt Rhules. Matt Rhule: I am bound by the laws
of the corporeal. I awoke days later from my psychadelic odyssey. My
legs ached as if I had walked for miles, but I had not moved from that
spot. I gingerly made my way back to the car and drove back toward
Lincoln, stopping only to record any thoughts on the Matt Rhules that
materialized in the shimmers of empty highway. It had come to me out
there in the wilderness– the Matt Rhules were not a simple marketing
gimmick for a football coach, but this goateed oaf had somehow stumbled
onto the central organizing principle of life itself.
I arrived
back at the hotel. It was no longer enough to think of myself as a
literary superstar, but I was now a sort of holy man, a person put on
earth to explain the precepts of the Matt Rhules. For the rest of the
week, I fell into a feverish trance as I made elaborate notes, wrote
hundreds of pages, and added compendia and appendices to the original
Matt Rhules. Matt Rhule: Do not try to “fold” space time into a single
locus, instead try to “layer” it. Matt Rhule: My brain is merely a
vessel for cosmic static. Matt Rhule: Organization and preparation will
score a “touchdown” for the football team or for your small business.
At
last, I felt I had something to present to the Coach. I piled up my
manuscript, which I had moved from the computer to a series of coffee
filters loosely stapled to together in pleasing geometric patterns and
put on my “Rhunic,” a tunic fashioned from hotel bedsheets and left for
the practice facility. No one wanted to let me in when I told them I
had urgent business to disseminate the teachings of Coach Rhule to the
wider cosmos but then when I reminded them I was the book guy they
finally let me in.
“Coach,” I said. “I have sat in the forest. I
have opened my forehead. I have let the Rhules seep into my primary
consciousness and beyond-thought. I am ready to accept them. I am
ready to adopt them. I am ready to show people how to apply them on the
football field and in the boardroom.” I dropped my coffee filter
manifesto on his desk.
“What the heck are you talking about?”
Rhule said as he turned to me (he was looking at emails during most of
my speech). “Oh that Matt Rhules thing. Yeah, I thought about it and
it seems kind of cheesy. Kind of obvious, you know?”
“Hey, you
know what I was thinking now would be really cool? Instead of a book
telling people what to do, what if it was a novel where I caught the
commissioner of the NFL cheating at golf? The Commissioner of Lies, how about that? A Mack Racker novel. You ever think about writing something like that?”
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