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A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others)

A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others) The article about the dog who waited by the highway mont...

Friday, November 29, 2013

PACKER COACHING

Note: (Musing follows)

Author Notes about this Blog

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical. 


PACKER COACHING

Well, it is official----the Green Bay Packers must certainly have put together one of the worst coaching staffs in the NFL. While I am certainly not the one to claim any expertise on the X's and O's of football, some general observations are not imaginations. Even when healthy Rodgers has to score over 40 pts to win a football game. It has been that way for several years.  When Rodger goes down the Green Bay football team does not just lose, but loses every game, no matter how weak the opponent. I suppose one could blame it on the quality of the players but that doesn't seem to fit. A good number of Packer players are capable of making outstanding individual catches, runs, sacks, etc. Thus, the general evidence listed here suggests the Packer Coaching staff is incapable of putting together even a modest offensive or defensive game plan.

McCarthy seems, at least on the surface, to be a plodding, uncreative, inflexible, naive coach incapable of using computer programs properly to make adjustments, new looks, or predict opponent plays. He stands on the sidelines with his ever trusty little page of scripted plays and adheres to his carefully planned plays like a grammar school kid reading a carefully scripted speech.

Much as I dislike having a wealthy cabal of owners own each football team, the nonsensical claim that the Packers are a publicly owned team is simply a farce.
There is no part of the Public, whether it be elected officials, or citizens, or stock holders who have the remotest control over who manages or coaches the team.
After all the years of Favre and then Rodgers, what is the Packer record? Two, maybe three Super Bowls. That's it. It is almost like for practice Rodgers and his receivers are the only ones who need practice at all---the rest of the players just show up for the game and use their individual talents as best they can to make tackles, runs, etc. It was the same way with Mike Holgram. Bret Favre made him look like a quality coach.  I would say he and McCarthy are about the same quality. Then Holgram let his phony stature go to his head and wanted more control. He left and no matter where he went was there any football genius at work?

It is noteworthy that every time the Packers hire a coach they never bring in an already proven coach. McCarthy, except for a brief stint as an assistant coach with I think San Francisco, was a high school coach. The Packer executives said they hired him because they were impressed with the play books he brought to the interviews. Huh? these guys are about as qualified to judge play books as I am.
The handful of executives who control the Packers seem to be there for life. They are salaried so the pressure is never there for them to relinquish control over the operation. Packer fan loyalty is like the Chicago Cubs, it will be there no matter what.
Clearly, it seems, these handful of executives do not want to bring in any proven quality coach because they would lose personal control over such a coach. It's a power thing. It's the blind leading the blind except they have been blessed with two top notch quarterbacks.


The problem seems to be that while higher ups recruit excellent talent for the most part (except for the coaches), there is no brilliant game plans by the coaching staff to allow this talent to be used effectively.  Well, Green Bay fans, get out your crying towels, there is no way that you, the public, can force changes on your 'publicly owned' team. Like with so much else in the NFL, what you think you see or get is mostly smoke and mirrors. Who says football can't be a one man team? Up to a point that is obviously not true. What is clearly true is that the best of talent in professional football needs the best of coaches, not coaches plucked out of nowheres to be developed on the job. Green Bay deserves better. 

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Love

Note: (Musing follows)

Author Notes about this Blog

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical. 

Love

I was once asked if there was any topic I would find it difficult to muse about. There is, and the topic is love. Love is a feeling and therefore not definable.  James Baldwin once wrote: "Everybody's journey is individual. You don't know with whom you're going to fall in love….if you fall in love with the wrong color, wrong religion, wrong sex--you fall in love."  I reckon, with enough insight and mastery of language, perhaps one could accurately define why any particular two people fall in love.  Yet even there it is not really transferable. Try at a social gathering to explain exactly why and how strongly you love your spouse or any other designation of your paramour and watch everyone roll their eyes and drift away. It is you who love that person and you cannot create the same feelings in someone else. 

How many people have tried to explain to their parents why they love who they love and the parents remain in disbelief? How many times have we heard someone share with us "I don't know what she/he sees in him/her. I sure hope they don't marry". Of course we know that, like any other feeling, the feeling of love can change over time. I suppose, if marriage ceremonies where more truthful the preacher would constantly be adding "at this moment in time do you…….." It certainly doesn't help to say "what God has put together let no man put asunder". What is that suppose to mean?  Roughly half of marriages in this country do not last. Does this mean God has rather poor perception?  We tend to drag God in on a lot of important matters as a means to finalize the course of action, and remove it from any further judgment.  

Some things in life are so individualized and so personal that we need quit trying to generalize about them. If Millicent loves Honschnivel that is the all and end of it. How can anyone else pass judgment on it unless someone in that relationship is not of age? Of course we can love for the wrong reason but we also know it is kind of useless to predict which marriages will last.  Another thing about love: forget the uniqueness of a marriage. Most people, given a free choice, would marry someone else.  We may want to take the prom queen to the prom but chances are that is out of our reach. Marriage is usually some sort of compromise and we marry someone with whom we are a match.  And that match usually takes us down the ladder a few steps. Some say love can be irrational but this defies logic. Love is a feeling, the feeling is quite real, and therefore the love is rational.  It may not last, but at the time it is real and rationale. 

Love, it is often said, is the greatest feeling in the world or the ultimate goal in our personal lives. It may be the greatest feeling in the world, but love often can create varying degrees of stress and even bring ruin to one's life. Love has caused many a person to lose a job, friends, family support, social approval, or bring on mental problems, and cause risky behavior which changes the rest of your life forever. The media is full of love situations which have run amok. On the other hand, there may be truth to the saying "It is better to have loved and lost than to have never loved at all". Love is not an endless period of stress-free eternal bliss. Quite the opposite in that we are confronted rather brutally with our own intransigence and peculiar ways. We grapple with high stakes compromises/tolerances which cannot be solved by "my way or the highway". That works in other kind of relationships as we constantly choose others of whom we are going to stay clear. And vice-versa---there are others who decide to stay clear of us. Love requires change---or the highway option becomes the Waterloo for the love.  

Not all marriages are based on love, but may be marriages of convenience. Sometimes these kind of marriages last the longest. Some marriages begin with love and last as a convenience. Of course kids complicate any marriage in endless ways.

Love lost for factors beyond our control---death, social or family intolerance, financial factors, changing personalities involved, etc.-------- may not be a real total separation. Memories last, and much of the way we think or act the rest of our lives may be dictated by the perpetual influence of the lost love. In this respect the lost love imposed more changes on our own persona/behavior than any other event in our lives. Under these circumstances we are never really alone and the essence of a past love remains a daily companion for the rest of our lives. 


Many of my musings run too long.  Not this one. What more is there to really say?  The only aspect of love that any of us can pose any claim to, with accurate perception, is our own feelings of love toward someone else. And we cannot transfer our feelings in a relationship to others who do not have the same feelings toward the person that we have toward that person. "Live and let live" fits this category perfectly. The world would clearly be a better, more peaceful  place to live if this mentality prevailed.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

NFL Locker Rooms (After this, enough is enough about this topic)

Author Notes about this Blog  (NFL Locker Rooms follows this paragraph)

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical. 

NFL Locker Rooms (After this, enough is enough about this topic)

I reckon an NFL locker room, of all professional sports, is the most stressful. Just the number of players on a team (over 50) and the number of coaches involved (17 or more) and the nature of practice makes team unity, in the ideal sense, rather elusive. Then add the constant turnover of teammates. Then add the kind of possible severe physical injury every time most players step onto the field---game or practice. I guess we can eliminate the punter in this category.  Then add the print and TV/radio media mob, all looking for a story and/or character evaluation. Then add the macho image expected with football. 

In light of the Incognito/Martin soap opera the NFL will likely be forced to instill some parameters for the locker room atmosphere.  When I hear players defend the current atmosphere as unique to 'football culture' it seems a bit outrageous. They don't live off in a vacuum somewhere, and like the rest of us, our national 'culture' expects us to have have certain behavioral standards. Threatening to kill someone, or use ethnic slanders, or binge drinking, or physical assaults as part of life off the field is not acceptable for most civilized citizens. Professional football is big, but not so big they can live off in a separate culture mentality. Those players defending such a locker room atmosphere are pretty dense or maybe just stupid. One said in all seriousness that Martin is 270 lbs and perfectly capable of physically defending himself.  Really? Well suppose someone on the team is 160 lbs?  I know a lot of huge guys who are 'gentle giants', not inclined at all to use their size to settle disputes or get their way of any kind. To me they are a lot tougher than the cowards who use their size to intimidate or assault others simply because of their size.  

For a start, maybe the NFL should start by demanding their players act like adults, not let some of them act like licensed thugs, part of some kind of social gang. What other adult profession throws buckets of gaterade on someone to celebrate an achievement?   What other profession has sophomoric institutional hazing of the crudest and silliest nature?  What other profession dumps bottles of liquor over each other's head to celebrate an achievement? What other profession sends other employees emails so crude and low-life? My heavens, the employees at McDonalds manage a more civilized interaction with each other than some NFL players. Of course not all players are into the 'Incognito culture' aspect of the locker room. It is not like teams do not often know of this kind of personal behavior. Incognito has a public trail of crude behavior since high school. This tolerance is remnant of the long ago Lombardi philosophy that "Winning isn't everything, it is the only thing". Back then I thought that quote was neat. It is not neat, it is pitifully wrong. What other adult professionals trash talk each other at work like some football players do during a game?  This is how one might talk at age 15 on a pick up game in the shadier part of town. How much more sophomoric could this trash talk possibly be?

Why does professional football tolerate any of this adolescent and anti social behavior from any player, on or off the field?  Players make a lot of money and the least that can be demanded of them is to behave toward their teammates and others in social settings with a modicum of civilized adult behavior. I suppose many of these players have been coddled and exempted from behavior for which the rests of us would be punished. They are a part of our culture. No group can go off and claim their own independent culture.  That needs to stop. Most of us don't begrudge pro football players a high salary (up to a point) but to get that high salary a semblance of adult behavior, along with performance on the field should be demanded. 

It is true that the NFL inherits the outcome of permissive behavior for many star football players that has existed since junior or senior high school. Thus, any real solution has to start back then. While this may be true, it is not clear how much this can be changed. Young star athletes in sports like football and basketball represent a gold mine for these programs in high school, college, and the pros. Football and basketball coaches for college teams are paid millions of dollars a year to make sure this young talent drifts to their programs. For most of these young stars, friends are defined by who has their back, or who can make life more exciting and pleasant for them. Most young adolescents have to work for friendships, while these young stars can sit back and pick and choose. Little real contentment ever comes from unearned benefits of any kind. That is just the nature of contentment.  It has to be earned. And many of these young athletic stars will have no need to earn friends until after their athletic career is ended. Then the party is over. He who is satisfied with little is more content than he who has more and wants more. Addictions of most any sort are not conducive to achieving much contentment. 


Professional football is a business and all about money. That is the nature of the beast. Thus, locker room behavior has to be run like any other aspect of football---with rules, close supervision, and monetary penalties. It is rather naive to think every aspect of football can be run like a tight ship and then leave the locker room a player's turf for whatever 'culture' that develops amongst the many 'cliques'  within such a huge pool of players. Of course it is unnerving to think adults cannot manage their own social relationships within the locker room. Clearly, at some social level, many of these 'adult' players are not really adults in any social sense. Professional football cannot put these players under all the pressures inherent in their current operation and not expect some pretty weird social emotions to emerge in a 'free' locker room atmosphere.  The locker room probably can be kept under control.  What can be done to protect the rest of the public from those players who let loose in off the field social settings is a bigger quandary.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

The locker room, Incognito, and T.O.

The locker room, Incognito, and T.O.

Note: (Musing follows)

Author Notes about this Blog

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical. 

The locker room, Incognito, and T.O.  

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football/watch-jon-stewart-weighs-dolphins-bullying-scandal-article-1.1510793

http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-november-7-2013/the-wrongest-yard---t-d-s-o-s-

Terrell Owens has been criticized by his media character assassinators for being very distant most of his career to teammates. He was not, therefore, or so it goes, a very good teammate and did not contribute to the locker room atmosphere. 

The mystery of why T.O. kind of kept to himself is somewhat clearer these days. 
T.O. was raised by his grandmother, isolated from other kids. He couldn't leave the yard and run with other kids because his grandmother told him he was special, that he was better than the other kids, that their behaviors were wrong, their language was wrong, many of their actions were wrong, etc. His grandmother instilled in him that he should never lie, that nobody can be trusted except God, that no one would ever give him anything, he had to take it, that other's would  constantly try to bring him down. He was the classroom tattle-tale since the teacher knew Terrell would never lie. At first the kids beat him up---the first time T.O. ran home to his grandmother but she wouldn't let him into the house and told him to go back and stand his ground. He did, and although back then he was skinny and not all that athletic, he stood his ground and the other kids learned to not do their 'bad' things when he was around or they would get caught. 

Probably as a result of this isolation, T.O. never felt comfortable in social situations. All he really had was a burning desire to be somebody instead of a nobody and a belief that he was special. Despite the romantic notion of some that professional football locker rooms are a clean-cut, tight knit, supportive-to-each-other enclaves of healthy camaraderie, football locker rooms are apparently loaded with cabals of all sorts of 'clicks.'  T.O. would have found most locker room antics unfunny, low-life, and exactly the kind of behavior his grandmother instilled in him was bad. 

I have watched this 'Incognito' stuff unravel and frankly, it is easy to see why T.O. shut it all out. By the time T.O. reached the pros he had bulked up and developed a presence which enabled him to stay aloof without anyone challenging his right to do otherwise. It is not hard to see how a guy like Martin, who had no such a 'presence' would try to go along and the more he did, the worse characters like Incognito behaved toward him and the funnier a lot of teammates thought it all was. Imagine adult men finding hazing each other titilating, dumping large pails of gateraide on a coach in victory adolescent fun, extorting money from a teammate for some kind of 'fun' he doesn't even want to participate in, using vulgar language about each other's family, setting up football meetings in strip clubs, binge drinking elevated to an obnoxious, arrogant stupor---a stupor bound on occasion to generate physical assaults on others, and claiming that all this is just part of a fun football locker room culture. Why it is all even necessary to become a man.

T.O. had his best years when he kept to himself, aloof from locker room antics, and stayed focused on his training and performance. In his last years he made awkward attempts to be more friendly, but it is always hard to be someone you are not.  


The above clips are funny, but  painful for what it depicts. And the saddest part of it is the support Incognito got from his fellow players. I'll take T.O. as a role model for kids any day. Clearly everyone on a professional football team is not part of this locker room culture, but it would be interesting to know what percent are. Listening to other football players defend Incognito and hate Martin is repugnant, at least to me. Martin, to me, is a gentle giant, who should have been left alone and let his stats determine his status on the team---and his toughness. Incognito is not tough---he is obnoxious, foul mouthed, and a dirty player. Given the mentality that starts with the owners and extends down the ranks, the situation is not, I suppose, so surprising. 

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Author Notes About This Blog


Author Notes about this Blog

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical. 

What's wrong with the NFL


What's wrong with the NFL

Note: (Musing follows)

Author Notes about this Blog

This blog was set up originally simply as a file deposit for musings which I sent out to friends. Somehow a lot of people managed to find the URL, and that is ok.  Since the blogs were not originally meant for general distribution most have not been carefully edited.  I may go back now and do the proper editing. I have recently published a book titled: The Meaning of Life.  Anyone interested can find it listed in Amazon.com under the author name Reid S. James. There is a description of the content along with the listing. It was published in late October 2013. Any income from the book will be donated to various 501 category charities. Given the nature of the book, to do otherwise would be hypocritical. Given the original intent of this URL I have never provided an opportunity for any response to these musings. I think I will leave it that way as I don't have the time for a lot of responding to comments by others. These musings are written as food for thought, and do not purport to be anything other than what the blog implies: personal musings. Were I to personally know many of you who visit this URL I sense we would have a lot of engaging conversations. There are too many now for that to be practical.  

What's wrong with the NFL

It has always seemed strange to me that our national professional sport teams, with all the fans and money involved, are turned over to a cabal of very wealthy Americans as some sort of personal play toys with little or no regulations/ limitations on these owners, or protections for the fans/players/cities. 

As usual, with so many American problems of late, the source of the problem here lies with Congress. They are the ones who exempt these rich owners from anti-trust laws, who exempt them from so many normal constraints and regulations of other corporate entities.  

For a start, even if you happen to have a lot of money and can afford to buy a team, you can't unless the current owners vote to allow you. Wow. Next, these professional football teams don't even pay any taxes. Wow.  But even if they did it is estimated that the taxes would amount to around 9 million because of all the tax loopholes available to them. Since some players make 20- 30 million a year that generates another Wow. 

Only in professional football do you find contracts which are binding only to the player and not the owner. The owner can terminate the player at the end of any season. The player cannot terminate the contract of his own accord. Thus we have weird contracts in which a player makes a certain amount one year, then a little more the next year, then a little more the following year, then a huge increase thereafter. The papers will then read that a player signed a $100 million dollar contract over 6 years. However, after two years the owner can rip up the contract after paying let's say $10 million after two years, thereby avoiding the other $90 million. That's why bonuses exist to sort of soften the potential real consequences down the road.  Non-binding contracts to one party is the kind of roguish unfairness one could expect from a monopolistic enterprise operating outside normal laws. 

Of course it is hard to feel sorry for players who are making millions of dollars a year, regardless of the salary shenanigans. While this is true for the stars, especially quarterbacks, most of the players suffer all the injury dangers of football without these tremendous salaries.  And most players only play a few years. There are players who get their first contract on a gamble by the team. But the owners are smart, they understand this is an opportunity for the player which is limited to their team. So they offer him a 6 year contract starting like at $500,000 per year  and ending at $750,000.  If the player performers superbly, maybe even making the Pro-Bowl, he remains stuck near the minimum player salary level. Inequities in salaries are rampant throughout the league. And yet the owners promote the notion that it is a team game, that everyone looks out for everyone else, blah-blah-blah. The reality is that the owners look out for themselves and the rest involved in the sport do too. The players understand from the git-go that it is purely a business, a dangerous business injury wise, and that they are well paid (compared to most people) pawns on the owner's plantation. In earlier times Professional football players all received the same salary. Maybe then some real team cohesiveness existed. 

The owners do what they want. Who selects the Commissioner? Why of course the owners. The Commissioner is granted all these powers to make decisions about so much in football, but his decisions must favor the owners or the Commissioner is out of his job. Well, one might say, the players have their union. That is true and thus we have a bargaining table which is really unique to football in that there is really no bottom line on salaries or anything else except how much each side gets percentage wise of the huge profits to be made. The owners can't say, "Look, there is only so much money we can spend or we will go out of business. Other corporations have to watch costs.  And the player unions are pretty much under the control of those players benefitting the most from the weird and unfair contract system. 

The biggest problem is this: The bargaining table in a monopoly like professional football should include a representative of the fans and a representative of the cities in which the teams play. And the huge profits available to the owners should really be something which goes to our major cities across the country.  Why should the huge profits from professional football go to select wealthy owners? Why should these select wealthy owners be in a position of black mailing cities to build stadiums for them or they will move elsewhere?  These are national sports, and football is the most popular national sport of all. This logically demands that the fans and the cities in which they play (or all major cities) get the profits instead of individual wealthy owners. National sports should always be run in the national interests, not the interests of a handful of wealthy persons.

Major cities, because of the nature of their inhabitants, have real trouble using property taxes to generate enough money for education, transportation, etc. Football games are played in or near major cities and the income from this sport is huge, and huge enough that major cities could use the profits to improve the lot of their citizens. 

And fans, were they part of the bargaining table, could establish some limits on player salaries, and support players on a fairer contract system, and ensure that at least some game day tickets are priced such that, through a lottery, some fans on the  shallow end of the affluent pool could afford to go to a game. Too many of the game tickets are thrown around by corporations like confetti to themselves and their clients.  And maybe the whole concept of season tickets should be examined a bit so the same affluent people can't go to every game while others less affluent cannot go to any game. 

National sports should be governed in ways which are fairest to all concerned---the players, the fans, the cities, the affluent and the poor. Fans watch football games on TV and the various commentators never hesitate to promote or character assassinate players and coaches, but they never diss any owner for the simple reason the owners decide which networks get which games to televise and at what price. So we always get the required pan shot of the benevolent owner in his skybox accompanied by the required admiring comments by the commentator. The owners, by nature of being an owner, are beyond any regulations, any limits (oh, I suppose if they murdered a player they might be held accountable), any criticism from the TV booth, and from any obligations to cities and fans. 

It is not likely to change since so many of us need these games to add some excitement to our lives. Were all of the above to be logical and correct, reality is another story. Ok, granted, but there was also a time when certain people had to sit in the back of the bus and that reality got changed. 

Professional football, along with basketball, has turned the term student athlete into a farce. There are no minor leagues in football and thus any high school student blessed with enough ability to play football has to, if necessary, pretend they are college material. Many universities make huge profits from football and basketball while the college athletes are told to act like they are as poor as any other student. 
Why in hell should a young man who is an excellent football player and a poor student be required to attend a college or university and be both. Anyone remotely aware of how much time it takes to train and practice for college football or basketball is aware that even good students cannot find adequate time for their studies and for a poor student this would be an impossible task. But everyone involved pretends otherwise and through an array of gimmicks, manages to create the illusion that these poor students who are excellent athletes are also legitimate college students. The solution is simple---in the absence of minor leagues let colleges and universities recruit athletes for their athletic teams and each athlete can choose whether he/she wants to take any courses or just a couple. If you want to give a break to a prospective athlete who is a weak student then guarantee him enrollment after his athletic career is over, whether his career be a short time or a long time. 

There is always this talk of team unity and good teammates and how each athlete should help and be a support base for all other teammates. When is the last time in football management kept an athlete on the roster because he was a good teammate? If this is such an important factor a lot more 'potentially' great teammates should try out for teams. Every player on the team knows it is his own stats which determine his salary and whether he is first string, second string, or is retained on the team. Of course most teammates get along like they do on most any other jobs. Particular individuals may simply have to tolerate each other.  Many really good athletes who had the ability, the focus, and the determination to be great were on teams precisely because the could perform well on game day. Dennis Rodman, Allen Iverson, Terrell Owens come to mind amongst many others. 

Whether players are a good citizen is another matter. People who engage in repetitive criminal acts should not be eligible to play on national sport teams. 
And it should not be up to the owners to decide this. With owners greed invariably trumps fairness. In some states a person with a criminal record cannot vote but is entitled to play sports and make millions.  It ought to be reversed, a convicted criminal (of certain kind of crimes) should still be allowed to vote but not participate in professional sports. It is hardly surprising that the owners, most of whom are ancient relics from a much earlier culture, would decide drunken binges, physical assaults, and so on are tolerable up a point, while smoking marijuana can result in dismissal. Marijuana is certainly not a performance enhancing drug, at least not if it's potential to reduce the stress that comes with professional football is ignored. In professional football, the owners can run out of the sport a Ricky Williams and tolerate players with a history of violence until the courts finally put some of them in jail.  There is no law whatsoever that football owners must put marijuana on the list of drugs to be tested for. From a medical standpoint there is no comparison on the toxicity of alcohol and nicotine compared to marijuana. But the owners like the image of being considered so pure and tough about 'proper' activities.

One of the most annoying characteristics of Professional football is the blatant disingenuous almost daily pronouncements from the Commissioner and his henchman. 'Best interests of football' really means 'best interests of the owners', 'Best interests of the players' means "Best interests of the players to follow what ever policies the owners dictate' and "Best interests of the fans" means "Best interests of the owners to pile up more money via the same way politicians pile up more votes----via slick propaganda and manipulation of fan/voter prejudices. They even brag that one of their teams is a publicly owned team. Really, in what way does the public have any control over the team? The stocks are worthless, have no value, and I am not aware of any single public official who can impact on the operation of the team or any mechanism whereby the residents of the state can exert any control.  So just who is this public?  Still, the model is a vast improvement over the rest of the teams. 

One thing is for sure. Professional football cannot go on much longer on two fronts: the injury situation, with players today much stronger, bigger, and faster, than ever before; and no enterprise can exist with little regulation, no limits, and no competition for too much longer. Greed that has no limits, no regulation to define when 'enough is enough', and an arrogance that comes with any monopoly will bring professional football down with time and the 'emperors' will end up naked in their pretenses.