King Football: The Season Of Our Discontent

By Mark Esposito, Weekend Blogger

Good afternoon folks, and welcome to the sports holy day known as NFL Sunday. We mostly all love it. The collisions, the sparkling cheerleaders, the feats of athleticism that would have made an ancient Greek Olympian proud. It’s all there – drama, excitement, pageantry, bright colors and morality. Yep there’s bad boys (think Oakland Raiders, Baltimore Ravens) and good guys (anybody named Manning or Russell Wilson) and there’s music – marching bands, pep bands, loud speakers blaring just about any rap, punk, pop, or country song you like depending on locale. Football is king! Long Live The King!

But the king has had better seasons.

From the professional gladiators to the high school gladiators-in-training, football’s morality play has come off the skids. The carefully cultivated image of athlete as hero that echoes through the centuries from the plains at Marathon to an Olympic stadium in 1936 Berlin overseen by a bad man with a bad mustache, yes, and all the way to modern day techno-proficient, thunder booming, firework blasting sports theatres, Football America is suffering.

Maybe it was avarice or a sense of invulnerability or most likely hubris. All of football was riding high early this year. The NFL was enjoying record profits even having the audacity to ask its halftime acts to pay it for the privilege of sweating it out before millions of Americans at home and in person.  It was pushing the Old Man of US sports, Major League Baseball, from the headlines by moving its pre-season draft of players to prime time in … gasp … May, smack in the middle of  baseball season. The colleges had just finished a game of musical chairs and chicken all at the same time and got the venerable, doting NCAA to approve a bowl championship, an acknowledgment of the 5 Big Boy Conferences, and the shunning of anything approaching governing the Big 5.

Yes football was riding high — but there were signs of looming disasters to come.

First, initial disapproval of a three-quarters of a billion dollar payoff of former players in an epidemic of  head injury lawsuits that one judge and lots of players called “inadequate.” Then one of the elders (though he’s only in his mid 50s) of sports, NBA owner Mark Cuban, reminding us like the Oracle of Delphi that there are unalterable rules of  American business and they are porcine-based (here):

“I think the NFL is 10 years away from an implosion. I’m just telling you: Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. And they’re getting hoggy. Just watch. Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. When you try to take it too far, people turn the other way. I’m just telling you, when you’ve got a good thing and you get greedy, it always, always, always, always, always turns on you. That’s rule No. 1 of business.”

Everybody laughed and then turned the volume up so we could hear the latest thud of helmet-on-helmet in the coliseum of our choice. But somewhere in an elevator in Atlantic City, an off-campus room in Tallahassee and a ubiquitous freshman locker room in Sayreville things were getting very “hoggy.”

It hit like a maelstrom. A gossip site called TMZ published a video (here) of Baltimore Ravens star, Ray Rice, punching his girlfriend in an Atlantic City casino elevator. Though Rice drug the helpless women from the elevator in front of flabbergasted security guards all the while claiming that she just had “too much to drink,” the funny bounces of football were just beginning against him. A hushed-up criminal case that died in the graveyard of paper headlines and court record books just went national and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was called before the high council of football owners (which must have looked like the assemblage of the Stonecutters from that classic Simpsons episode) to the hear the song …

Who controls the British Crown?

Who Keeps The Metric System Down?
We Do, We Do…

Who keeps Atlantis off the maps?
Who keeps the Martians under wraps?
We Do, We Do…

Who holds back the electric car?
Who makes Steve Gutenberg, a star!
We Do, We Do…

… and to answer the easily anticipated question: “Who wants to see this go away?”  “We Do,” came the  refrain.

But it wouldn’t go away. What was so easily contained when it was mere paper-borne dry legal allegations became a dagger of misogyny when we actually saw the lightning punch, the head of hair flying back to smash into an elevator handrail and the limp body being carried from an elevator shaft like so much dead meat. It was real and the football fantasy of hero athletes was now  officially broken.

The turmoil continued in the days that followed when a law enforcement official in New Jersey told the press that he had sent the incriminating video to NFL headquarters when the case broke months ago decimating the Commissioner’s claim that he had seen only the elevator hallway video that didn’t catch the punch. An investigation by league lawyers is underway but you’d have to go a long way across Gullible’s Island to find someone who thinks it’s an impartial investigation. The press (and notably Professor Turley’s msnbc bud Keith Olbermann leading the charge from his chair at ESPN University) is calling for Commissioner Goodell’s head, but there the tousle-haired Commissioner sits overseeing the Sunday, Monday and Thursday day and night parade of sports oblivious to Cuban’s warning. In a hastily called  press conference imbued with all the political gamesmanship of  Republican hack, Frank Lutz, Goodell reiterated over and over that we have to “get our house in order.” (Read about that here in an illuminating piece on the sports blog Deadspin). But in what was apparently missed in the spin meeting became painfully obvious when more and more allegations by other players came rolling in: You have to put out the house fire before you “put your house in order.”

The fire came bellowing in the door with the horrific pictures of a beaten child’s body. Minnesota Viking star, Adrian Petersen, was the latest NFL’er to come into focus for abuse allegations. (here) Claiming his god-given right to discipline his kid with a piece of tree branch, Petersen was first welcomed as Father-of-The-Year by Viking’s owner Ziggy Wilf and  then declared radioactive as the public outrage grew. Banished to Texas under the care of famed sports lawyer Rusty Hardin (of Roger Clemens fame) , Petersen eschewed a plea deal and is determined to fight to the last man or child to clear his name saying in what must rank as the most obvious fact on the planet: “I am not a perfect son. I am not a perfect husband. I am not a perfect parent, but I am, without a doubt, not a child abuser.” Well, true enough for the first two sentences from the father of six kids by a like number of women. We’ll see about that last sentence.

And the hits just kept coming.  Arizona Cardinal runner Jonathan Dwyer was suspended for allegedly  threatening and then beating his girlfriend and throwing an object at his 18-month-old. (here), Carolina defensive lineman Greg Hardy was convicted in a North Carolina court of beating his girlfriend after throwing her on a bed of automatic weapons. (here). He is appealing that conviction.
It seems some in the league are taking more than talking points from Frank Luntz aficionados. Somewhere along the road, some in the league launched their own “War on Women” and one-upped it with a skirmish against kids. One shudders to think of a more loathsome man than one who berates and then attacks women and children. In the NFL, get charged with that and you get “punished” by being placed on the “Double Secret Probation” list known as  the Exempt/Commissioners Permission List (not kidding on this)  and still keep getting those obscenely big checks.
Oh, the owners said and cried all the right things as their employee took the heat.  At an awards dinner in his  honor, Panthers owner Jerry Richardson spoke out tearfully against domestic violence:
“And when it comes to domestic violence, my stance is not one of indifference. I stand firmly against domestic violence, plain and simple,” Richardson said.”To those who would suggest that we’ve been too slow to act, I ask that you consider not to be too quick to judge. Over the course of our 20 years, we have worked extremely hard to build an organization of integrity…”

Still Greg Hardy played on in that House of Integrity until the public outcry got too big and he was belatedly relegated to the “List.”

Then, in Tallahassee, SEC  .. er Florida … a scandal for reigning Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston was rising from the ashes of a non-prosecution. Florida State University officials, shamed by their handling , mishandling and crisis management (their own crisis not the alleged victim’s,of course) of a rape allegation against the young star were goaded by that right-wing bogeyman, the US Department of Education, into actually doing what they should have done all along – investigate the charges regardless of what the Keystone Cops of Tallahassee did. FSU was also spurred by an investigation by Fox Sports (here) concluding that officials in its police and athletic departments gave confidential police investigative reports of the rape charge to Winston’s defense attorneys three days before the prosecutor in the case got it.

The head start allowed his  defense attorney to get affidavits from Winston’s fellow teammate witnesses that served to exonerated Winston before the cops even spoke to them. Still a hearing is scheduled for Winston on four charges of violation of the school’s code of conduct. A former Florida Supreme Court justice is scheduled to preside at the hearing to remove the stink of the school’s last whack at justice.

For his part, Winston is upbeat despite a theft of crab legs (he says it was an oversight)  and a grudging game suspension for leaping on a student union table and screaming “F–k her in the P—y” before the assembled student body. Jameis just led his team to a big win last night over Notre Dame, so all is right with the world in Tallahassee though the morality play got a little skewed. Notre Dame, you see, the perceived “good guy” of the college world has their own quarterback scandal in star pigskin thrower Everett Golson. Golson  just got back on campus following a well-publicized cheating scandal. No, not the one this year at good ol’ ND in which 5 players were disciplined, but the one last year where Golson was disciplined and then welcomed back as the Prodigal Son. Notre Dame is ranked number 5 in the nation; FSU, number 2. Boola, boola!

And not to be trumped, little brother high school football chimes in with the most horrific scandal of them all involving that hoary football tradition — hazing.  The Sayreville (NJ) Bombers and their legendary coach, George Najjar, winners of three of the past four sectional championships are suspended this season. (here). Seems the seniors have a novel way of team building. Seven of the team leaders including at least one Division 1 prospect (headed to where else Penn State University until last week), barged into the freshmen locker room, shut off the lights and then held down a hapless 15-year-old as one tough guy digitally penetrated the child in the posterior. Then in this temple of male machismo and anti-gay rhetoric, the hero athletes forced the child to place the digit in another body orifice. This little drill went on at different times all week according to prosecutors. The coaches, of course, knew nothing about it (and they likely didn’t though one New Jersey legislator isn’t so sanguine) having spent their time diagramming Xs and Os as the mayhem ensued. Oh, the seniors were charged with maintaining team discipline according to the coach. How’d letting the animals run the zoo work out there, coach?

Misogyny, child abuse, sexual assault, this is the score card for King Football this season. And still the crowds flock in, the money rolls in, and we are off to the game. Is Cuban right? Will football implode as the carnage among victims and their families becomes too much to bear? Will the torches and  the pitchforks just get too close for the King to force His Royal Highness to finally do something? Anything? To protect women, kids and the players themselves the NFL will need more than the spin words of the Frank Lutzes of the world. It will need strong women and men in positions of power to rein in the excesses of male machismo culture and it will need a new script. One with morality placed back in the plot.

Sourced throughout

~Mark Esposito, Weekend Blogger

By the way and for better or worse, the views expressed in this posting are the author’s alone and not necessarily those of the blog, the host, or other weekend bloggers. As an open forum, weekend bloggers post independently without pre-approval or review. Content and any displays of art are solely the author’s decision and responsibility. No infringement of intellectual property rights is intended and will be remedied upon notice from the owner. Fair use is however asserted for such inclusions of quotes, excerpts, photos, art, and the like.

125 thoughts on “King Football: The Season Of Our Discontent”

  1. Actually I hate to disagree with my sister DBQ but football has not gotten rougher over the years. It has become much weaker. I remember when Deacon Jones patented move was to slam his meaty paw against the offensive lineman’s head to ring his bell so he could get to the quarterback. If you do that today you would get the death penalty or something.

    Football has been weakened and watered down over the years. It is no where as violent or tough a game as it was in the 1950’s or 1960’s.

    Where have you gone Jack Tatum? A bored nation turns it’s eyes to you….coo coo ca chew!

  2. BFM, Troy Aikman has a simple solution. As you may know, Aikman suffered several concussions. Go back to the old days of leather helmets and no facemasks. Then, if you lead w/ your head to tackle, YOU suffer the consequences.

    1. Annie – what is this thing you have about meatball sandwiches? Are you for them or against them? Pro meatball or anti-meatball? You have had a meme running for some time on meatballs.

  3. The only way football will be destroyed is if it buys into the politically correct nanny state rules where nobody wins and nobody loses and everyone gets a trophy. Everybody knows what is important in football.

    Covering the spread.

  4. @ bigfatmike

    I agree with you on the head injuries issue for young children. The problem is that people started having their children play football like the big time pros. Tackle football in the full armor regalia when children are just not physically ready for that. Tag football is good. Tackle not so much for young children. There is a similar issue in baseball injuries, especially to the pitchers. Young children whose bones, ligaments and tendons are not yet fully developed.

    Football has also gotten rougher over the years that I’ve been watching. Mission creep. That can be changed by changing the rules, the game play and to uniforms that are less like armor.

    Whether this latest disclosure of violence and criminality will destroy football….I doubt it.

    It is really likely, given the nature of the game and the type of person who is drawn to being a player, that these off the field issues have been going on forever. Men, who watch football and who are fans, are not going to be all that concerned. Women who generally don’t watch can be all concerned but they are not going to have much effect.

    As pointed out. This bad behaviour is not JUST in football or sports. Politics, banking, truckers and in the general population. You always are going to have your bad actors and you cannot blame a whole class of people or an entire occupation on a few bad cases.

    Personally, I don’t watch football, or any other sports except on a rare occasion, so it really doesn’t matter to me. It doesn’t affect my life in anyway. My energies and angst are better spent on more pressing matters.

    My final thought. Keith Olberman always looks really constipated. Someone should send him some Milk of Magnesia.

    1. DBQ – I heard somewhere that soccer results in more head trama than American football.

    2. @DBQ “Keith Olberman always looks really constipated. Someone should send him some Milk of Magnesia.”

      I don’t care what you guys say about Olberman as long as you don’t take his lunch money. That would violate the civility rules and your guys will be in big trouble.

  5. If you don’t buy tickets or league sanctioned apparel or beer or cars advertised on the game you can sit down and check your feminist/pajama boy privilege at the door. Football isn’t for you or about you.

  6. Mespo, there will always be strong pushback by those who desire to align themselves with the ones they perceive to be powerful, regardless of how vile they or their organizations are. What does it say about our society when we see people who are misused or abused and we stand by, or even cheer such activity? It doesn’t speak well to our own humanity, our own decency, as human beings. What happened to principled people? Are they going to be the next victims of the powerful bully class, who will go to any lengths to shut them up? Not if principled people stand strong, stand together and let their voices be heard. Changing the culture of entrenched behaviors can be tough, but it can be done.

  7. The NFL sounds similar to other places and venues were violence and misogyny toward women has been allowed to proliferate for quite sometime. When the owners of the organizations don’t speak out and change the culture eventually the scandals come to light. Good people are outraged and they protest. Those people are the ones who won’t stand by and watch, the principled and brave enough to risk being ostracized or disciplined, these good people do speak up, to right wrongs, they are the real heros in our society of bullies. Eventually if such organizations aren’t seriously changed they will implode just like the NFL.

  8. Paul, I watched some of the game last night w/ your Sun Devils impressive victory over Stanford. Do you ever go to your alma mater’s games?

  9. I have to wonder if anyone actually watches Olbermann. And I would make the claim that that real football is college football, not the over-hyped professional game.

  10. What trooper and Penelope said. I have heard people want to ban boxing all my life. Nobody puts a gun to your head and says, “Box” or “play football.” The lawyerization and nanny state will turn us into a bunch of metrosexuals like our President if we don’t stop their assaults on choice. Liberals love “choice” when it comes to abortion, but when it comes to almost everything else, they want to tell us what we can eat, drink, play, etc.

  11. What a load of hyperbolic crap. You could just as easily pick out the various misdeeds of Democrats, like Ted Kennedy and his family, and then thump your chest and proclaim:

    “Misogyny, child abuse, sexual assault, this is the score card for the Kennedys and the Democratic Party. And still the crowds flock in, the money rolls in, and we are off to vote for the Democrats, again.”

    http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/addiction-in-society/200805/the-top-seven-kennedy-sex-scandals

  12. The only way football will end is if the nanny states outlaws it and kids don’t play it anymore. That could happen. The fascist liberal nanny state might outlaw it.

    Or we can do what every other business did when they have dangerous jobs.

    Hire illegal immigrants.

  13. Olberman hates the Yankees because Chuck Knoblauch flung an errant ball and hit his mother in the face one day when we played the White Sox. He never got over it.

  14. I think we are living in the beginning of the end of football, at least, as our national sport.

    I don’t think the end will come from the relatively few criminal bad actor players or even from the administrators who cover for them.

    I am betting the end will come from our revulsion over head injuries and related cognitive difficulties. That belief rests on two guesses. The first is that the nature of head injuries, the soft tissue brain colliding with the skull, mean that there is no technology that can offer significant protection. The second is that as our ability to diagnose cognitive difficulties improves we will find that football is even more dangerous than we now realize.

    Lots of parents will accept the risk of a sprain or a broken bone. But what parent will accept the risk of diminished mental capability in their child – for a game.

    It is only a matter of time. But football is over.

  15. What trooper York said. This is an elitist polemic. Olbermann is a disgrace to the human race. He’s on ESPN 8. A narcissistic, crazy, hater. Olbermann ripped Jeter on his final day just because the Yankees dissed him @ Old Timers Day. He has been fired from every job he ever held. Anyone who thinks Olbermann is worthy of admiration has serious problems.

  16. America must compete in math and science with China and other leading industrial nations. We can not compete if our public colleges and universities are not cutting the mutarde. And they are not. I do not care if Penn State beats Ohio State in football. I did care when Penn State administrators paid a blind eye to their secular pedophile priest. College graduates from the athletic programs can not read or write. Money is spent on stadiums and athletic dorms instead of on math and science. Bye, bye, Miss American Pie, drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee was dry.

  17. Football will not implode because of a few bad actors. Because of a few criminals and thugs who act the way that criminals and thugs do. They need to be punished to the fullest extent of the law. They need to get what’s coming to them. Good and hard.

    Feminists and pajama boy cocoa sippers like Olberman will wet their panties but the vast majority of fans don’t care. The people that buy the tickets and the beer at the stadium don’t care about this. There have always been criminals, thugs and drug abusers in sports. From Ty Cobb to Paul Hornung to Lawrence Taylor to Pete Rose….criminals have always been players. Thats the way it has always been and thats the way it always will be.

    This is just a fart in the wind.

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