Party primary elections in this state are almost always foregone conclusions settled by machine operatives before voters have a say. That’s pretty much the case here tomorrow in most jurisdictions as New York Democrats go to the polls to punch a ballot that won’t have much on it.

But there is an interesting statewide electoral drama involving our sitting governor Andy Cuomo. Registered Dems will have a chance to send a little shiver up his spine. A feisty breakaway liberal named Zephyr Teachout will tally in the neighborhood of 25-percent support from the party’s energized left.

While Teachout can’t beat the machine this go-around, her brilliant time-constrained activist campaign on a shoestring budget has highlighted cracks in the power structure of New York politics.

Cuomo’s attempt to glide effortlessly to a second four-year term has been stymied by an ongoing criminal probe of the governor’s office by the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara.

Bharara has been relentless and successful in pursuit of crooked deals by state government officials from both parties. When Cuomo effectively sandbagged pending corruption probes by a commission he created, Bharara jumped in to see where the scents on the various trails of inquiry were leading when the governor’s office put on the kibosh. The concern is that Cuomo wasn’t happy the stink led back to him – so he dismantled the apparatus that would expose such linkage. As detailed in investigative pieces in the New York Times (and subsequently in a wonderfully written Politico story by the Democrat and former Missouri state senator Jeff Smith), Cuomo could be in a heap of trouble. Bharara went so far as to publicly chastise Cuomo for waging a public relations campaign to make it appear the commission was shut down cleanly. As all this was swirling, Bharara snared Cuomo chum and powerful state senator Tom Libous on charges he lied when asked by investigators about using influence to enrich his son.

The pending question over whether Cuomo – and/or two of his upper level staffers – face punishment from Bharara’s ongoing examination of the Moreland Commission shutdown may not be resolved before Andy starts his second term. Cuomo backers point to significant social and fiscal policy gains during term one to merit four more years.

The disappointment from my perspective has been a disingenuous Cuomo claim he’d clean up Albany. That was his cornerstone mantra on the way in until I guess he started to realize all that campaign cash swelling his coffers is tougher to pull in if you tighten the noose around the quids and the pros and quos.

So, enter Teachout who has no elected office experience. She’s run a great, issues-oriented campaign with lots of direct voter interaction. I like her. She’s staunchly anti-fracking and would revive Cuomo’s Moreland Commssion. She has detailed plans for tightening state law on campaign finance within the constitutional boundaries. Teachout favors a Colorado-style approach to marijuana and she’d seek to block the Comcast/Time Warner merger. She barely met the five-year residency requirement and failed to vote in last year’s NYC mayoral election.

Because she’s viewed as not having a chance, Teachout failed to gain the endorsement of both the Working Families Party and NYC mayor Bill de Blasio. If endorsements took into consideration the stated values of the candidate, Teachout should have had the backing of both those forces. Perhaps her inexperience gave those bastions of the left some pause. My vote on Tuesday for Teachout will be made easier knowing she can’t win. My support for Teachout is designed to send a message to an entrenched politician with an eye on the Presidency who broke the public’s trust – and may someday face criminal charges as a result.

Fordham's Run Game Coordinator/Offensive Line coach Joel Rodriguez (right - with whistle) before Rams win over St. Francis - 8-30-14.

Fordham’s football team strapped on the helmets Saturday for their season opener in the Bronx and completely manhandled St. Francis University. 52-23 was your final. It was 38-3 at the end of three quarters by which time I was already on the D train headed back to Queens.

Fordham and St. Francis (located in Loretto, PA) are both Catholic universities with very long football traditions. With a few gaps, Fordham has been playing football since 1882. This is the 92nd season of football for St. Francis. The way things are going in both the sport of football – and in college athletics – you wonder if either program will survive a whole lot longer.

St. Francis wideout Anthony Abeid hears footsteps before dropping this golden loaf.  8-30-14.

Attendance on Saturday night was announced at 3462. A general admission ticket cost $10 and allows one to sit anywhere in the wings of the tall stands. Capacity at Jack Coffey Field is 7000. Given the space constraints on campus, the venue’s seating is limited to just the Fordham side of the field plus a small set of bleachers behind the northeast end zone. Fordham’s home baseball field (Houlihan Park) blends into the area behind the football visitor’s bench. When you walk onto the campus off busy Fordham Road, you get wowed immediately by what’s called Edwards Parade which is like the quad – or picturesque grassy Frisbee-tossing spot. I arrived in the Bronx about 90 minutes before kickoff, grabbed a chicken parm hero at one of the many delis on Arthur Avenue and sat on a bench on the perimeter of Edwards Parade. It’s not Notre Dame – or even West Point on game day – but it’s not a bad way to experience college football game day without leaving New York City.

The sons of former NFL greats Joe Klecko (Josh) and Tebucky Jones (Tebucky Jr.) both have spots on the Fordham roster. Perhaps the most likely player to play professionally from Fordham is their big starting tight end Dan Light who caught a TD pass in the second quarter.

Both St. Francis and Fordham play at the Football Championship Subdivision level which was formerly known as Division 1-AA. Fordham advanced to the second round of the FCS playoffs last season and appears poised to make a similar type run this season.

-The once-a-week NYC greenmarket in Jackson Heights has devolved this summer into a victim of its own slow-building success. Just in the last few months it has become too crowded, too expensive and too hoity-toity. You wouldn’t notice gentrification’s subtle intrusions in the Heights day-to-day but it really hits you over the head on Sunday mornings at the greenmarket. Most annoying are all the nicely-bred/groomed dogs on long leashes who make navigation of the market a chore. I hereby propose a ban on pets and baby strollers at the Jackson Heights greenmarket.