I was walking on Harvard St. on the way to the Gophers women's basketball game with Maryland on Sunday afternoon. There were pockets of fans doing the same. I'm a habitual eavesdropper in these situations, curious as to what is on the collective mind of these small samples of Minnesotans.
There were two gents, one in his 60s, the other a decade younger, walking in front of companions. The topic turned to the Packers-Cowboys playoff game, which was closing in on halftime as we walked along.
"The Cowboys were ahead 14-7 when I left the house,'' the older man said.
He took a few more steps and added: "The Packers hit [Tony] Romo low when I was watching, but there was no penalty. If it had been [Aaron] Rodgers getting hit, they would've thrown someone out of the game.''
A few more steps and this: "I think I'd rather see the Cowboys win than the Packers. I'm tired of Rodgers and Green Bay getting all the calls.''
The second fellow agreed with this opinion, and the conversation turned to the weekend's round in the NFL playoffs. The second fellow said he was impressed by what he saw from Baltimore a week earlier, and thought that the Ravens had a good chance.
If his friend was aware that the Ravens had lost to New England a day earlier, he was too polite to mention it.
I can only imagine the affirmation that these gents felt for their "Green Bay gets all the calls'' theory when arriving home later in the afternoon and learning that the Packers had benefitted greatly from the reversal of a call on Dez Bryant's catch/no catch on the goal line.