Sunday, April 15, 2012

NFL Kickoffs: Enjoy Them While They Last...

On opening night of the 2011 NFL Season, the defending champion Green Bay Packers held off the New Orleans Saints 42-34 in a game that had just about everything.

Two great teams. Star quarterbacks. Offense. A last minute goal-line stand.

And fireworks, like rookie Randall Cobb's electrifying 108 yard kickoff return that dealt a withering counterpunch to a Saints touchdown that had just closed the Packer lead to 28-20 in the 2nd half.

The very kind of play, the league itself was in the infant steps of outlawing entirely.

Now, there's this. The league is still hell bent on ELIMINATING kickoffs, entirely. Yes. Eliminate.
That’s the word from Giants owner John Mara, a Competition Committee member who says the conversations have already started about potentially taking the play that has started every football game in history out of the league for good. 
“We had a lot of discussions about whether we should eliminate it and if we did what we could do in its place,” Mara told Giants.com. “There’s no consensus on it right now, but I could see the day in the future where that play could be taken out of the game. You see it evolving toward that.” 
Mara says the Competition Committee’s top priority is player safety, and that the increase in touchbacks last year coincided with a decrease in concussions. In the eyes of the league office and NFL owners, that proves that moving the kickoff was the right idea. 
What’s unclear is what would take the place of the kickoff if it ceased to exist. Mara says the NFL won’t eliminate the kickoff until it has the right plan for how to get rid of it, but he seems to think the kickoff is just a fundamentally unsafe play.
Because the REST of professional football, tackle style, is INDEED, so "fundamentally safe."

Please.

I mean, I almost need to look around and see if I am reading a cleverly masked re-write of an article from "The Onion."

A sensible thing for John Mara to say would be this: "Of course, we'll always have kickoffs. I mean, it's been part of the game forever. There are perhaps a few additional rule tweaks we can implement, but we're happy with the reduction in concussions from last year's rule change."

But no. John Mara is not sensible. He's fucking insane. Or, more likely, simply unshaken in his belief that the NFL model of pro sports dominance is un-fuck-up-able.

You see, here's what that kind of thinking really says about NFL owners.

1. What do the fans think? Ha. Fuck the fans! They'll keep coming back no matter what kind of shit we do to this game and league. Next question.
2. Can this help us in court, when it comes to concussion cases? Yes? Perfect. Throw it in there.
3. Now, once we make this insanely violent game "fundamentally safe" with all these new rules, can we push hard for that 18 game schedule? Yes? Super. Onward...

Remember the following about NFL owners...

1. Of the 32 owners, only a dozen (maybe) are genuinely sharp, accomplished businessmen. The rest are a motley collection of sons born into the family business, old coots who got their team in a card game, or high level hustlers with very shady ways in which they made the money needed to buy into this ol' boy network.
2. They are afraid of lawsuits.
3. They think this league is unbreakable.
4. They resent paying big money to everything but a star QB. (And some, even that... ahem.).
5. Many have huge mortgages on their team/stadium.
6. They would love to both shorten the lifespan of players (safely, of course).
7. They know the league has no overseas longterm prospects, and few markets left here to exploit.
8. Thus, they can only EXPAND the season in which their product is offered.

So it's all about 18 games. And along the way, if 18 games can HELP prevent another 20% of players from reaching that dreaded SECOND contract (you know the shitty, desperate deals that make Pierre Garcon and Brandon Carr both horribly overpaid at $25 million guaranteed) - then that's a WIN-WIN!

In fact, if the league was offered an 18 game season, in which they could only still TELEVISE and MAKE MONEY on 16 games (like before), guess what? They STILL would take it, in a heartbeat, because it would grind alot of these players into selling used cars that much sooner.

So the NFL Owners "long game" goes like this: TRY to cut down on concussions, while simultaneously looking PIOUS as hell in doing so. Fine a bunch of players for hits made on a split-second of reaction time (that suspension money might shave another 1% off operating costs, bonus!). Build as much legal armor as you can before this wave of lawsuits hits. Weather the storm. Mutate the game as needed, because what are YOU gonna do, NOT watch? Bwah! Sure. Then get to that 18 game schedule thing, and RAM it through, hopefully using us FANS as the suckers to start clamoring for it.

To which, I am sure, some of you are saying: "Sounds good to me, except the getting rid of kickoffs part."

To many, the players are barely literate numbskulls at best. Criminals at worst. To many fans, you TOO think like an owner, and that there's no joy in watching excellent offensive guard work, so why pay them anything?

Most of the players - save for the rare and transcendent talents who can survive this gladiator circus for up to a decade or more, mostly QBs - are just interchangeable parts. And parts that get delivered via a conveyor belt from colleges every spring, 7 rounds-by-7-rounds.

Cheaply, too.

Remember when Tony Soprano whipped the champagne bucket at that poor underling's head at the Bada Bing for using too much ice?

"Where runnin' a bidness here! Conserve!" (Yes, that's where my soundbite comes from!)

Well, the NFL is just like the Bada Bing.

If you can save a few pennies, save 'em. And guys will keep coming back for the boobie show, even if you are skimping on the ice.

11 comments:

  1. I'm reading a great book right now called "why Nations Fail". If you consider the NFL as a nation, it's current model is extractive with absolute power held by a monarch/dictator. The players had a chance to make it a more inclusive economic and political model, but D Smith caved and screwed the pooch last summer. The NFL cannot sustain itself long term. But I will enjoy it while it lasts.

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  2. Czabe is really trying to have his cake and eat it too on this one. The only outcome that might pass as palatable to him is the one that includes all NFL owners killing themselves and the government taking over the league so as to allow individual players to get compensated the billions of dollars they so deeply deserve for their incalculable sacrifices. Getting rid of kickoffs? Indeed ridiculous but Czabe you're using this as a wobbly platform to espouse your hatred of guys that are clearly just adhering to principles that apply to ALL private business. Manage risk and maximize profit. If they end up driving the train too far off the track, people will jump ship and look for something else.

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  3. That really bites. I see a day coming where a wide receiver will be able to fair catch a pass across the middle. Just get it over with and put flags on them, and I'll find something else to do on Sundays.

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  4. If you get rid of kickoffs, because they are "dangerous", then you ultimately have to get rid of:

    - The Punt: essentially the same thing as a kickoff, guys running down to get one guy and we usually see a massive side-block decleater on some third string linebacker. Yes, there are probably more fair catches, like kicking out of the end-zone or taking a knee, but the play is essentially the same as a kickoff.

    - The Extra Point: 98% success rate, pretty much a waste of 5 seconds and nothing worse than a holding penalty to conduct a do-over

    We're watching the league turn into backyard football by which the ball is placed at the 20-yard line for every new possession and a point is just given to the scoring team. Now, we have turnovers and TDs to review, EVERY TIME. Like I've said before-can't wait for the first fumble recovery for a pylon tipping TD.

    We'll have to wait 10 mins for the 'official' ruling to see the 5-second extra point. Leave the league alone! It's as close to perfect as a sport can get.

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  5. Rumor has it that games in the future will just be animated. This is to prevent concussions and other severe injuries.

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  6. I see a great big wheel, like the Wheel of Fortune is Las Vegas, and in place of a kickoff, we have the "receiving team" spin the giant wheel to see which yard line they start at. Extra slots for yardages near the recieving 20 weighs the outcome towards starting where they they do now. And slots would include a TD for the receiving team, Safety, offsides on the kicking team (respin plus penalty yardage), and turnovers (resulting in another spin to see where the recovering team gets the ball).

    "kick returners" will be valued for their skill at spinning and landing on low percentage, high reward slots.

    I'm working on a mock-up of the device now, and the associated Vegas Style table game for a casino cross promotion.

    No concussions and more ways to bet on the games... it's a win-win.

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  7. Wow Czabe. You have really lost your touch. Your site had been a daily must visit site for me for years. Now I check it about once a week and pass over just about every entry. Who has time to read these long posts? More "quick hits" funny vids, pics, and snickys. Less of your boring repetitive diatribes.

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  8. The diatribes make it worth coming here for, even when I disagree.

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  9. --Mara says the Competition Committee’s top priority is player safety, and that the increase in touchbacks last year coincided with a decrease in concussions.--

    Wait a second. Wasn't there a report not less than a month ago saying almost the opposite. That returns were down but injuries up!

    The NFL is trying to legislate itself out of existence. There is a reason no one watches 7 on 7 in the spring.

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  10. Seriously. How is this for an idea:

    Move the kickoff back to the 30, but move the Line up to the 40, then say that the receiving side of the field also has to be closer to midfield. In other words don't let the two sides have enough distance between them to build up too much speed. You could also say they get no head start behind the line. What's so difficult? Did anyone think this through?

    How can football not have kickoffs? That's not football. At work, people are going to have to stop saying 'kick off a meeting'? it's part of the american lexicon.

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  11. Get real Czabe - they ain't gonna eliminate the kickoff. It's too lucrative for the TV companies. What other thing on TV can go to a commercial, come back for 15 seconds for a kickoff, then go to another commercial? Answer - none.

    Hell I'd LOVE it if they got rid of the kickoff and punt and replaced it with action instead of commercials!

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