If it were up to me, I would get rid of football completely.
(Hence the title, “Hopeless Cause.”)
(And don’t talk to me about hockey. Just don’t.
Until there’s a three hundred and twenty pound hockey player with the
speed of an Olympic sprinter.)
Okay, L.A. doesn’t currently have a football team, so my “rooting interest” deficit if it went
away would be zero. But that’s not the
point. Though it could be an explanation
of why I am less resistant about letting professional football take a hike. Where I live, it has already took one, so
there’d be no
“I miss the team.”
You don’t have a team.
“Oh yeah.”
There’d be none of that
nonsense goin’ on. My team done up and moved in 1995. (Sorry for the jargon. I am listening to a blues CD while I’m
writing this.)
Be fair here. Does
having no home team disqualify me from having an opinion on this matter?
“Yes.”
Let’s say the answer is “No” and keep going. I can do that. On my blog, I am the entire Supreme Court, and not only do I rule in
favor of my right to an opinion on this matter, the ruling is unanimous. One to nothing.
Resulting from a combination of pressure from NFL veterans, public relations
exigencies, and (hopefully a modicum of) corporate guilt, after a concerted
effort to get them to do so for years, pro football has finally agreed to pay
out over $765 million in compensation money to settle lawsuits filed by players
who’d been irreparably injured (the most irreparable injury being premature
death, including suicide) after playing of football in the NFL.
The central concern involved brain injuries as a result of
repeated head trauma from violent contact, leading to dementia, Parkinson’s
disease, and other incurable conditions.
There are also issues involving arthritis in the joints resulting from repeated
surgeries, severe neck injuries and a overall inability to bend over and tie
your shoes.
Nobody is immune. Not
the biggest football stars. Not the
short-termer “no names” who give up their bodies playing on “special
teams.” Every former player, I imagine, endure
some residual damage, But thousands of them are really hurting.
Does anybody care about these guys? And by “anybody” I mean us, the fans. The answer to that question would seem to be…
No.
We want our football.
And the fact that it destroys the minds and bodies of the athletes who
play it…
It’s just the price paid for playing the game.
And watching it.
The difference is, the fans’
bodies aren’t ravaged and their brains aren’t scrambled. It’s just the players.
If you’re honest, you cannot ignore our part in the equation. Fans are the reason they play. Think about it. If the fan base goes away, do you think they
would unilaterally continue to do themselves injury? And even if they did, do you think TV would
broadcast the games?
“Despite the massive erosion of the audience, our network
will proudly continue our commitment to bringing the game to whoever still has
the stomach to watch players give up their brains and their bodies for our
entertainment.”
No audience and they keep showing it? In what universe
would that happen? That’s not commercial television. That’s PBS
where they continue broadcasting Celtic music concerts whether anyone watches
them on not. I guess there are a few Celts who tune in. But how many can there be?
If the audience went away, football would be gone, or at
least exiled to pay-per-view, like boxing, for diehards to continue watching
two men punching each other into “greeters” jobs in Las Vegas casinos. And that’s for the winners. The losers go home,
living out their shockingly shortened lives, fingering through scrapbooks, and
watching their brain cells shutting down.
Football is an enormously lucrative business because the
audience, despite their awareness of the toll that “bigger, stronger faster” is
taking on the game’s participants, still wants to watch it, if anything, more
enthusiastically today. Because the
players are bigger and stronger and faster.
There are lots of reasons to watch. The team has your home town on their
jerseys. There is a massive amounts of
betting on games. There are Fantasy Football Leagues. And – and this is what inevitably hooks me – there are incomparable moments of
excellence under pressure.
But we’re watching the players now. We’re not there when
they can’t find a comfortable sleeping position and they’re gulping handfuls of
painkillers.
There’s the point that playing football is voluntary, and
actually the players’ enthusiastic choice.
It’s true. Check them out on
“Draft Day.”
“I’m a ‘First Round Draft Pick.’ I’m gettin’ my head kicked in for sure!”
Is this not, in fact, a free country? Can Americans not do what they want to? Well, no, not entirely. They can’t take drugs if they want to. They can’t ride motorcycles without helmets
(in most places), or drive cars without seat belts.
You argue that the players love to play, their participation
in NFL football being maybe the high
point of their lives. Point taken. But there are soldiers who claim combat was the highest point in their
lives, and yet, we do not deliberately arrange wars for them, so they can feel
maximally fulfilled.
So what are we going to do?
Football is a huge moneymaker.
The fans love it. They players aren’t
complaining. Until later. There’s been some pressure to change the
rules, but you can never take risk of serious physical injury out of the
game. It’s inherent in the process. The rule changes are just band-aids.
AIR CRASH VICTIM: “We hit the side of a mountain, and the plane
blew up. But since I was wearing my
seatbelt, I did not get whiplash.”
The game is the game, and the fans, whose support fuels its phenomenal
success oppose almost all risk-reducing changes.
Here’s a thought, though.
Since we are insistent that football remain the way it is, why don’t the
fans chip in and help pay for the injuries?
I mean, the guy got paralyzed for our enjoyment? Do you not think we at least owe him a couple
of bucks?
If that seems too much, what about signing a simple waiver,
that says:
“We, the fans, are aware that football players regularly sustain
irreparable damage playing the game, and we are pretty much okay with that.”
Football is never going away, and the ex-players will
continue to suffer until they die. But
that’s okay. They’re tough guys. Tough enough, I am sure, to accept the fact
that, though we appreciate and cheer like crazy when they’re on the field, we
do not really care what happens to them afterwards.
1 comment:
Not just football. Horrible injuries can and do happen in gymnastics - and until about ten years ago when they brought in age rules, the top female gymnasts in the world were often under 18. I believe the damage to the players is very substantial also in boxing (not good for the brains to be banged on all the time) and, as laughable as it seems as competition, wrestling.
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