Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Major Wager Letdown: US Airways Wagers on Games, Runs out of Money Before the Big One

These wagers aren't only for elected officials, you know. Apparently, some airline employees have some time on their hands and have been getting down and dirty with other terminals throughout the NFL Playoffs. The bad new? The budget's spent and they can't play ball over the Super Bowl.

Chuck Kostelic, US Airways’ station director at Pittsburgh International Airport, is still enjoying the fruits — or, in this case, the crab chips — of the Steelers’ win over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship game.

“I’m eating some right now. They’re good,” Kostelic said Tuesday afternoon.

US Airways’ Baltimore station sent 500 bags of crab chips, a local delicacy, to Pittsburgh after the Steelers knocked the Ravens out of the playoffs on Jan. 18. A week prior, the San Diego station sent boxes of clementines, pistachios and avocados to Pittsburgh after the Steelers gave the Chargers an early playoff exit.

A stationwide bet involving local delicacies is out the window for this week’s game, because US Airways wanted to throw Super Bowl parties for its Pittsburgh and Phoenix stations instead.
They blew the budget on the Championship games?!?! What happened to the fiscal discipline that made this country great. Oh yeah...these are the airlines we're talking about. They're not afraid of a bailout here or there.

Here at Our Civic Pride, we're hoping that a Senator or two will find it in their heart to help the airline out in this time of economic struggles. Maybe slip something into the Stimulus Bill this week?

With no wagers coming up, we're not able to rate the bets, but we're kinda bummed out that we missed covering the previous wagers. We're also surprised that we've only seen a wager from the Mayor's of the two Superbowl towns and not Governors, Senators, etc. We did get a hint of the reason for the delay in this little taunt from the Pittsburgh folks:
No wagers had been set between the Allegheny County and Maricopa County, Ariz., governments as of Tuesday afternoon, said Kevin Evanto, spokesman for Allegheny County Executive Dan Onorato.

“We’re still waiting for our dear friends in Maricopa County to get their acts together. They’ve never had to make a wager like this before because their team has never gone this far, so they’re trying to figure out what to do,” Evanto said in a little pre-Super Bowl trash-talking.
If you see something that we haven't covered, send us a note at OurCivicPride (at) gmail (dot) com and get on it.

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