December 31, 2010   |No Comments NFL

QUICK KICK: NFLPA Union Reps Speak Out

In expressing a desire not to alienate football fans, Union Executive Committee Member, Brian Dawkins said, “I would think common sense would say at the end of the day, after all the fighting and after all the words are said, we understand who butters our bread.” “That’s where the urgency comes in at.”

Brian, I hate to do this, but us fans are going to steal your priceless line of “we understand who butters our bread,” as the fans’ rallying cry to do our best to prevent the potential work stoppage. I wonder if the owners also agree that it’s the fans who butter their bread?

Read the story here.

December 30, 2010   |1 Comment Issues

The Ghost of Seasons Past

The Ghost of Seasons Past

by Mike Felten

 
The bones of the holiday dinner are cold. The television that we had commandeered to watch our grainy black and white video tape of the Alistair Sim version of “A Christmas Carol” and “It’s A Wonderful Life has been relinquished. The old traditions are boxed and Black Ops blasts from the Xbox. For months children will be hypnotized and our only communication will be a distracted “uh-huh”.

Somehow fond memories of this holiday will emerge.

There was a time when the miserly owners of our sports teams resembled the Scrooge’s and the Potters.  Colonel Rupert treated the great Babe Ruth like chattel. Charles Comiskey arguably pushed his White Sox into throwing a World Series. Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis was instrumental in the prosecution of boxing champ Jack Johnson before he was employed by the old boy’s club to clean up baseball.

As imperfect as these founding fathers were, they paid their taxes and they built their stadiums.

They had a loyalty to their customers and their communities.

A serviceman or woman in uniform could get a ticket to a ball game. They knew that the kid up at Great Lakes Training Base was serving their interests as much as a ballplayer was.

The flag that they waved may have been made in sweatshops that they owned, but they allowed poor folks to salute it.

The ghost of Christmas present points out that our current Scrooges sit in their publicly financed stadiums, want tax breaks and every dollar they can possibly squeeze. They say that they need it for survival.

As a fan, you are played like a cash register. If you sit in a stadium long enough, you will be branded with a corporate logo. Your t-shirt will cost five times its worth. The team insignia is licensed and it isn’t cheap.

The players have organized. They are no longer chattel. When the modern day Potters and Scrooges feel the itch in their palms they look to the fans. They are the ones who have to pay and pay and then pay some more.
There are no “Ladies Days”. You may get a free ball cap with a beer company logo on it. The Cubs give key chains with precious Wrigley Field dirt encased in plastic. Free dirt! Usually it costs $14.95 at the concession stand.
Servicemen and women can leave their uniforms at home. They can buy tickets like anyone else.

Charity is monitored, notated and deducted.

And we pull that MLB or NFL licensed blanket over our heads, trembling in wait for the vision of Christmas future. Will fans be able to afford that new coalscuttle with the team logo?

Or are the kids in the next room playing Black Ops learning the new game? Like a nightmare caused by an undigested piece of bad mutton, the only way that we may afford to see a Super Bowl in person with our kids is by taking out a second mortgage.

Or is a half empty September Wrigley Field a harbinger of things to come? Will the corporations decide that there is a better place to spend their discretionary entertainment budget? Will the beer companies decide that romantic comedies are the best venue for their advertising dollar? Is the cold tombstone of expired television contracts, lockouts, blackouts, tired commentators, athletic misdemeanors and felonies enough to bring about a change of heart?

Mike Felten is an SFC sportswriter fellow. He is a music industry veteran, a performer, and owner of the Landfill Records, the former Record Emporium, navigating the transitioning areas of intellectual property and musicians rights. Born and raised in Chicago, Mike is a long time Chicago Cubs fan and a Oklahoma Sooners booster.

December 29, 2010   |1 Comment Blog, College Football Playoff, Issues

QUICK KICK: Integrity?!? What Integrity?

Ken Gordon of the Columbus Dispatch writes:

On a day when five Ohio State players said they were sorry for violating NCAA rules, Sugar Bowl CEO Paul Hoolahan was unapologetic for pressuring OSU to try to keep the players eligible for the game.

On Dec. 22, Ohio State announced that six players would be suspended for selling memorabilia and/or accepting discounts on tattoos sometime early in 2009.

But those suspensions won’t take place until next season. Gordon goes on:

[Hoolahan] said athletic director Gene Smith said to him that OSU was trying to push the suspensions back to the 2011 season, and Hoolahan then told Smith how strongly he felt about the players participating in the Sugar Bowl.

“I made the point that anything that could be done to preserve the integrity of this year’s game, we would greatly appreciate it,” Hoolahan said. “That appeal did not fall on deaf ears, and I’m extremely excited about it, that the Buckeyes are coming in at full strength and with no dilution.”

Read the article here.

Nice to know the Sugar Bowl CEO is concerned about “integrity.” What a joke.

December 29, 2010   |No Comments Blog, Issues, NFL

QUICK KICK: Resolution of Labor Strife Will Define Goodell’s Tenure

It is clear that Roger Goodell’s tenure as NFL Commissioner will be defined by his ability to steer the league away from a potentially devastating work stoppage.  Jon Saraceno of USA Today highlighted the Commissioner’s challenge in this article.

Just a reminder to Mr. Goodell that he is overseeing a $9 billion industry, that is wildly successful.  Is it really that difficult a task to help two sides figure out how to equitably split up billions of dollars?  It’s not like we are talking about figuring out how to plug a $9 billion deficit.

December 28, 2010   |No Comments Blog, College Football Playoff, Issues

QUICK KICK: Every Day is Sunny for Bowl Committees

An SFC member brought this column in the Cedar Rapids Gazette to our attention. Sportswriter Mike Hlas starts it this way: “A well-organized license to print money is what this Fiesta Bowl outfit in greater Phoenix owns.” He goes on to point out that the University of Connecticut “will lose somewhere around $2.5 million for the great honor of playing the Sooners in Arizona” while Fiesta Bowl CEO John Junker “pulls down about $600,000 yearly and has helped build quite the profitable, powerful operation here.”

Hlas column captures all that is wrong with the current bowl system. Read it here.

December 25, 2010   |No Comments Blog

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

Sports Fans Coalition would like to wish sports fans everywhere Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays! We are thankful for your support over the last year as we’ve worked to build the organization into the leading voice of sports fans everywhere. We are also thankful for sports, in general. Sports bring families and communities together. Finally, we are thankful for our men and women in uniform, especially those fighting overseas to ensure we have the freedom to watch games and be with our families.

December 23, 2010   |No Comments Blog, Issues, NFL

QUICK KICK: Broadcasters Will Still Get Paid During NFL Lockout

In the event there’s an NFL lockout, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists is assuring broadcasters that they will still get paid the same salary during an NFL lockout. If only the broadcasters stood to lose — as the fans do — maybe we’d see some serious hard nose reporting on the looming lockout.

Read the letter here. (h/t Deadspin)

December 23, 2010   |No Comments Blog, Issues, NFL

Sports are in Need of Checks and Balances

By Scott Weiss

Back in my undergraduate Political Science studies at the University of Delaware in the 1980’s, I was educated about a concept called checks and balances. The United States is comprised of three branches of government — executive, legislative, and judiciary. These three branches serve as a checks and balances system to keep any one branch from wielding too much power. Before you stop reading my post, I will make the tie in to the world of sports.

The problem with sports is that there are only two branches of government: executive (the owners) and legislative (the players). The third branch, the judiciary (the fans) are presently glaringly missing from the equation. The reason that we are staring down a possible work stoppage in the NFL is because the owners and players are running amuck with their power. Without fans providing a voice of reason, the owners and players have lost the ability to make decisions for the best interest of the sports that they run.

Does it really make sense that every time we are at the expiration of a collective bargaining agreement, loyal fans need to be tortured with threats of work stoppages from one side or the other? If fans played a prominent role as the third branch in the process, the potential for work stoppages would be forever taken off the table.

I am excited about the role that Sports Fans Coalition has begun to play as the representatives of this third branch of sports governance. Sports fans just need to join the cause and exert the power that is already in their hands.


Scott Weiss is the Local Chapter Chair for SFC-New York/New Jersey and an SFC Sportwriter Fellow. He has been involved in the sports fans advocacy movement since 2000. He is a life long fan of the Mets, Jets, Knicks, and Rangers.

December 22, 2010   |2 Comments Blog, Issues, NFL, Uncategorized

Why Did CBS Cut Jerry Jones’ 60 Minutes Comments on NFL Lockout?

by Brian Frederick

CBS – one of the primary broadcasters of NFL games – served up a 60 Minutes profile of Dallas Cowboys’ owner Jerry Jones last Sunday. The piece was largely flattering with most of the criticism aimed at Jones’ failings as a general manager in recent years. (Jones is the only owner to serve as GM, as well.)

The piece addressed Jones’ rise from being the son of a grocery store owner to being owner of the most valuable sports franchise in America. Forbes recently estimated the club to be worth $1.8 billion. Jones bought the club in 1989 for $150 million.

Clearly, Jones knows how to turn a profit. Which is why his comments during the 60 Minutes interview on the looming NFL lockout should have garnered more attention.

Problem is, CBS didn’t air them. Rather, CBS included them in its online “Overtime” feature, which was likely seen by only a tiny fraction of fans.

Consider this question from reporter Scott Pelley: “I think the first thing fans want to know from Jerry Jones is – Is there going to be football next year?”

Before we get to Jones’ answer, this question needs to be asked – if the first things fans want to know is whether or not there is going to be football, why didn’t CBS air this question and Jones’ response? CBS made absolutely no mention of the looming work stoppage.

I’d like to think that 60 Minutes wouldn’t pull any punches – though they have before – but undoubtedly, executives at CBS had to consider how to handle the looming work stoppage considering how vital the NFL broadcasts are to their network (and indeed to 60 Minutes, which has to depend on NFL viewers sticking around for it).

The other alternative would be that Jones’ comments about whether there would be football– again, what every fan wants to know – were cut for content reasons. Perhaps they didn’t fit the narrative the producers were trying to tell about the pull yourself up by your bootstraps entrepreneur. Of course, that would make the comments he did make about the economics of the game all the more relevant.

Or maybe the producers didn’t think Jones’ comments about the possible loss of the 2011 NFL season were easy enough to follow or sexy enough or controversial enough. But that’s the storythat Jones and the other owners can’t effectively explain why a lockout is truly necessary.

Perhaps they didn’t think Jones’ comments fit into the story of the owner who is going through the “year from hell.” But their profile was largely sympathetic, with Pelly pointing out that “there’s always next season.”

BUT THERE MAY NOT BE NEXT SEASON. AND JONES MAY BE, IN PART, TO BLAME.

Whatever its reasons, CBS did its viewers and NFL fans everywhere a disservice by not airing Jones’ response to the question of whether there would be football. (Okay, they get some credit for putting them in an “Overtime” segment, but even that report was flawed, claiming Jones “spent $1.2 billion on his new football stadium.” In fact, the city of Arlington owns the stadium and contributed $325 million to build it. (Both facts should have been mentioned in the piece that aired.))

So here’s what Jones said: “What you need to do is address a car wreck years before it gets there. That’s when you can do something about it.” When asked by Pelley to explain what the “car wreck” was, Jones said: “Basically, the model that we have does not work. The economic model of the NFL that we have, relative to the players does…not…work.”

Jones emphasized those last words as if he was hoping to singlehandedly change the (true) perception that the league is the most profitable in the world and has never been more popular.

Pelley also asked: “Do you think [a lockout] would be disastrous for the game?”

Jones: “No. I do not. But I know that the sentiment is not to have a lockout.”

Jerry Jones said a lockout would not be disastrous. How is that not news?

At the very least, it would be totally disastrous for the fans.

During the interview, Pelley said to Jones: “You know most fans think that this idea of the possibility of a lockout is an argument between billionaires and millionaires that leaves them out. And no one’s looking out for them.”

Well, Mr. Pelley, someone is looking out for them — Sports Fans Coalition. Is CBS?

Brian Frederick is Executive Director of Sports Fans Coalition. You can email him at brian@sportsfans.org and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/brifred.

December 22, 2010   |No Comments Blog, College Football Playoff, Issues

QUICK KICK: Mountain West Still Hoping for BCS AQ Status

There are two ways to read this article in the Denver Post — from the perspective of someone who has been immersed in the BCS issues and can follow the details of what it will take for the Mountain West conference to be on the same playing field as the traditional power conferences, or from the perspective of the rest of us, who throw our hands up in the air and yell, “What the hell?” This is the state of college football?

Read the article here.

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