I'm lucky to do what I do for a living. I get to hold the sporting equivalent of Wonka's golden ticket, an all-access pass to watch the sport I love from the best seat in the house.
Sometimes that seat is on the sideline, from where I can feel the tackles and hear the pain; sometimes it's high above the action, in the commentary box, from where I can see the game unfold and talk about it with some of the best people to have ever played it; sometimes it's in a bar after the match, sharing a beer with people who know far more than me about the game and are always happy to share what they know.
On Saturday, however, I got to sit in the best seat of all: next to my friends Murph, Chris, Bex, Jay and Robert, on the aluminium bleachers of Baker Field, as the 1 train rattled to and from the Bronx behind us and our mates played the game of their lives on the hard and unforgiving turf in front. We were there for our club, for the Old Blue of New York. We were there, and so was every other club alumni who could muster the courage to get a leave pass from the missus for the weekend.
There was one missing, of course. Founder Bill Campbell would have been there, swearing with the best of them, if he hadn't gone and died the week before. Still, Campbell was so in love with his club that he managed one last act of generosity from the other side - he turned on the most perfect blue sky day after a week of Manhattan mist and gloom and rain.
The team must have known he was watching, for they went out and crushed the Life Running Eagles in a defensive display only matched in brutality by old boy Richard Luthmann's merciless cross-examination of the refereeing team.