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Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Thu October 31, 2013 8:23 pm
by Electromatic
Is it time to put the draft thread up yet?

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Thu October 31, 2013 8:25 pm
by red calzolaio
Electromatic wrote:Is it time to put the draft thread up yet?
For us Bills fan, yea.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 2:54 am
by Mecca
that Gio Bernard TD was tecmo

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 8:18 pm
by Green Habit
Green Habit wrote:If things continue as they are into Week 13 (and of course that's a big if) they need to flex out NYG/WAS and replace it with DEN/KC.
KC/DEN got flexed instead. :thumbsup:

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 8:23 pm
by elliseamos
Green Habit wrote:
Green Habit wrote:If things continue as they are into Week 13 (and of course that's a big if) they need to flex out NYG/WAS and replace it with DEN/KC.
KC/DEN got flexed instead. :thumbsup:
i don't understand what that means.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 10:45 pm
by dkfan9
i wonder how many nfl games have ended on a safety in ot

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 10:58 pm
by Green Habit
elliseamos wrote:
Green Habit wrote:
Green Habit wrote:If things continue as they are into Week 13 (and of course that's a big if) they need to flex out NYG/WAS and replace it with DEN/KC.
KC/DEN got flexed instead. :thumbsup:
i don't understand what that means.
That game is going to be on SNF on Week 11 instead of GB/NYG.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 10:58 pm
by Green Habit
dkfan9 wrote:i wonder how many nfl games have ended on a safety in ot
Three.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Fri November 01, 2013 11:38 pm
by Kral
How depressing Thanksgiving nights gonna be this year with Pitt-Baltimore :gomez:

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 4:15 pm
by surfndestroy
This was new to me regarding the NFL as a charity.

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/201 ... decadence/

New York — It’s Halloween, the last day of October, so now football players will stop dressing up. You may have noticed them, decked out from helmet to ankle spats in bright pink accessories. This is because a few years back, the National Football League started going pink in October, breast cancer awareness month. A monster of merchandising, the NFL dresses its players, coaches and referees in pink, and then sells pinkwear to raise money for the American Cancer Society. And where the NFL goes, boys of all ages follow, so the Canadian Football League does the same, and one sees university and high school players who go pink in October. The campaign, recently broadened to include other’s women’s cancers, no doubt does raise awareness, as the NFL’s marketing machine is second to none.

Yet, as is often the case with the NFL, things are not exactly how they appear. According to Business Insider, when a fan buys NFL merchandise, 50% of the purchase price goes to the retailer, which is rather standard. Of the remaining 50% wholesale price, the NFL takes a quarter of that as a royalty ($12.50 on a $100 item). In the case of Breast Cancer Awareness gear, the NFL then donates 90% of that royalty ($11.25) to the American Cancer Society.

All of which might seem generous enough; the NFL is giving most of its share. Except that one of the most popular places to buy NFL merchandise is on the NFL’s own website or in football stadia and team shops, in which case the NFL and its teams are the retailers, and therefore are entitled to the retailer’s 50% take of the entire price (which would be $50 in the case of a $100 item). In the example above, the American Cancer Society would still get its $11.25, but that would be a small fraction of the NFL’s total take. Given the propensity of the NFL to create alternative uniforms in order to sell more merchandise, a cynical sort might suspect that the breast cancer campaign is less a public-spirited initiative than a clever rigging of the system for the NFL’s benefit.

The NFL knows something about rigging the system. The NFL headquarters over on Park Avenue is an impressively luxurious, high-tech six-storey complex. It doesn’t appear to be the HQ of a non-profit institution, like, for example, Christ Church Methodist a few blocks up the street. (NFL commissioner Roger Goodell earns $29-million a year.) On Sundays, Christ Church offers a dinner for the homeless. On Sundays, the NFL receives billions for the broadcast of its games. Both the Christ Church homeless dinner and the NFL are tax-exempt non-profits. In 1966, the NFL’s lobbyists got Congress to add “professional football leagues” to the category of tax-exempt charitable institutions, like food banks and orphanages. In America, nothing is too unjust, nothing is too craven, nothing too brazen, when it comes to shoveling public dollars and privileges to the millionaires who play football and the billionaires who hire them.

I am a football fan. So too is Gregg Easterbrook, a gifted journalist and noted author on public policy, who writes the best weekly football column for ESPN.com, “Tuesday Morning Quarterback.” His recent book, The King of Sports: Football’s Impact on America, chronicles the game he loves. The opening and closing chapters show the game at its best — deliberately so, Easterbrook tells us, for the chapters between are a tale of corruption, deception and exploitation. Abuse of political power by the NFL; abuse of taxpayers by the super-rich; abuse of young men by college football programs; abuse of health, from concussions to obesity: For those who love football, it is a sobering look the unlovely parts of our game.

“Until public attitudes change, those at the top of the pro football pyramid will keep getting away with whatever they can,” Easterbrook writes. “This is troubling not just because average people are taxed to provide subsidies, and special government favours are granted so a small number of NFL owners and their families can live in great wealth, as modern feudal lords and ladies. It is troubling because athletics are supposed to set an example — and the example being set is one of selfishness. Football is America’s game. Should the favourite sport of the greatest nation on Earth really be one whose economic structure is based on inequality and greed?”

America is no longer the greatest nation on earth, thanks to its decadent culture and various other reasons that have nothing to do with football. But the fraudulent excesses of football are a fitting symbol for all the rest — because the NFL has become the fallen nation’s bread and circuses — not just in October, but year round.

National Post

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 7:30 pm
by red calzolaio
Bill Cowher getting testy.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 7:53 pm
by red calzolaio
Lolz at the Bills starting an UDFA.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 8:40 pm
by Harry Lime
oh my god, Adrian Peterson. That run was badass.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 8:51 pm
by BurtReynolds
so frustrating watching a perfectly good team suck on the road. i cant understand it.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 8:52 pm
by BurtReynolds
and whats up with Carolina suddenly not sucking?

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 9:43 pm
by Green Habit
BurtReynolds wrote:so frustrating watching a perfectly good team suck on the road. i cant understand it.
I didn't watch the game--how on earth did the team that got blasted 49-9 by the Bengals beat the Saints?

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 9:49 pm
by Green Habit
Also, can we please push the start to the late games to 5 PM Eastern? I'm getting really sick and tired of missing the first part of the supposedly "featured" late games because one of the early games goes to OT--no matter how sweet it was seeing Shanny beat the Chargers.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 10:28 pm
by Electromatic
red calzolaio wrote:Lolz at the Bills starting an UDFA.

The Falcons are starting 2 on D and possible 2 or 3 on offense, the rest shouldn't have been drafted either

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 11:01 pm
by red calzolaio
Electromatic wrote:
red calzolaio wrote:Lolz at the Bills starting an UDFA.

The Falcons are starting 2 on D and possible 2 or 3 on offense, the rest shouldn't have been drafted either
UDFA QB much different, and terrible planning/decision making.

Re: 2013 NFL Season

Posted: Sun November 03, 2013 11:01 pm
by Kral
Phil Simms: the greatest Tom Brady ball washer the worlds ever seen.