No Djoke: Aussies tell No. 1 player to leave

What’s with these athletes anyway? Sure sometimes they play loose with the rules—other than golf—but calling a shot in when it’s out or claiming they caught a pass when it hit the turf is one thing.  

 Trying to escape a vaccination for coronavirus is another.

 Do they believe these judgments about health were made to hurt their games?  Is that why Aaron Rodgers spent all that effort to try and con us? Or that Novak Djokovic has given us a lot of  gobbledy-gook that he had a medical exemption?

The man known as the Joker for more reasons than his name, was refused entry into Australia when his flight landed Thursday at Melbourne.

 The No. 1 men’s player in the world rankings was told, basically, “b’gone” virtually as he arrived to defend his title in the Australian Open.

Dokovic is special. As a tennis player. The next Grand Slam he wins, Australia or Wimbledon, U.S .Open, whatever, will be his 21st overall, one more than Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

But Djokovic is also just another member of society, another human in a world where a virus has been running wild and hundreds of thousands have died.

As is Rodgers.  And Antonio Brown. And the rest of the athletes with their explanations and fabrications about avoiding the injection that will benefit millions of others.

Djokivic and his agents and traveling party thought everything was arranged. He’s the star, the last of the generation still in shape and in the spotlight.

Personalities are the lifeblood of tennis and golf. His presence lifts the tournament—as television and fans and Novak know. They want him to be there. Djokovic wants to be there.

But who knows if he will be there?

You can sympathize with Djokovic getting held in the Melbourne airport after a 13-hour flight from Dubai. Australia takes no chances. A year ago some 70 players had to spend two weeks in quarantine, allowed out of their hotel rooms only to practice.

This time, officials never permitted Djokovic to get off the airport property. He was kept in a room overnight, a 12-hour standoff—you can imagine his unhappiness debating the validity of his medical exemption from vaccine.

 One day he had been given last-minute permission to enter the country, in effect being told by the prime minister that, indeed he was who he and tennis fans thought he was—Mr. Wonderful—to revert to persona non grata.

 At one point, according to the New York Times, Aleksandar Vucic, president of Serbia, Djokovic’s home country, got involved. Wouldn’t you have liked to be in on that conversation?

Maybe  president Vucic could work out a package deal that includes Kyrie Irving and the Nets.

Sorry. This is serious business in the Land Down Under where they’ve been remarkably successful against Covid-19 because of attention to detail.

“Fair and independent protocols were established for assessing medical exemption applications that will enable us to ensure Australian Open 2022 is safe and enjoyable for everyone,”  said Craig Tiley,  president of the Open.

Djokovic has always done mostly what he wanted, whether when he was young , imitations of others , to at the start of the virus outbreak in March 2020 holding a tournament in Serbia where nobody was forced wear a mask.       

Others on the tennis tours appreciate his skill but not necessarily his style. Or his leverage as a celebrity.

“I think if it was me,” said Jamie Murray of Britain the doubles specialist, and younger brother Andy Murray, “I wouldn’t be getting an exemption.”

But it’s not you, it’s Novak Djokovic. A problem for opponents, a problem for health authorities.

Maybe the best Rose Bowl game ever

PASADENA, Calif. — It wasn’t for the national championship, but that’s the only thing this football game on the first day of January 2022 wasn’t.

They’ve said the one in 2006, when Texas came back to beat USC, was the greatest Rose Bowl ever, and the most exciting. We’ll amend that contention.

The way a redshirt first-year quarterback from Ohio State amended the school’s and the game’s passing records.

C.J. Stroud grew up in Rancho Cucamonga, about 30 miles east of the Rose Bowl stadium itself, so maybe it was appropriate he would help lead the Buckeyes to a last-second win over Utah, 48-45.

The winning field goal from 19 yards with nine seconds remaining was by Noah Ruggles, but those were merely — merely? — the ultimate points in what had to be one of college football’s ultimate games.

It was a game that dragged before it erupted. Five touchdowns were scored in a three-minute stretch in the second quarter, Stroud responsible for six overall as he threw for 573 yards.

Never mind why Stroud left California, but a year ago as a freshman at Ohio State he never threw a pass, waiting behind Justin Fields, who of course was the No. 1 pick by the Chicago Bears in last year’s draft.

To recycle the line used about winning college football programs, the Buckeyes don’t rebuild, they reload.

But for the first time in eight years, they lost to Michigan in the annual matchup, which is why Ohio State was in the Rose Bowl while Michigan was in the playoffs getting pounded by Georgia.

Be assured, with Stroud back another couple of years, that won’t happen in the immediate future.

On the receiving end of Stroud’s passes were Jaxon Smith-Nigba, with 15 catches for 347 yards and three touchdowns, and Marvin Harrison Jr., the son of a onetime NFL star, with 8 catches for 32 yards and three touchdowns.

How times have changed. Ohio State, where the offense 60 years ago was often described as “three yards and a cloud of dust,” on this New Year’s afternoon ran for 110 yards but passed for almost 600.

Stroud said of his link with Smith-Nigba, “We came in together as freshmen. But me and him doesn’t have a good game without our offensive line. Our backs ran well. Our tight ends blocked well. When you get that combination, you get going.”

Stroud, who also was a fine basketball player in high school, has made it a habit of looking for Harrison. “I call him ‘route man,’” said Stroud. “His routes are amazing, especially against a good corner.”

This Rose Bowl was amazing. Utah was all over the field, but after leading through three quarters, the Utes couldn’t close.

“I’m sure the fans and the networks got their money’s worth out of this one,” said Kyle Whittingham, the Utah coach. “Our guys got nothing to hang their heads about.”

Ohio State has played in numerous Rose Bowls. This was the first for Utah.

“It was a heck of a football game,” said Whittingham.

That it was.