
Originally Posted by
Henry Burris
NO 18 game schedule. It IS hypocricy as noted to want safety, but to display them for 2 more games, when the current system is working just fine. Fans don't like preseason? They don't make money off of the tickets? I seem to recall that the Cowboys/whoever Hall of Fame game this year got a higher rating than the world series. That means, televise more, and split the revenue if need be. I've no sympathy for the Owners, not because they make more money, but because they fought against giving older players with dibiliatating injuries some kind of income to help them. That'd be like the army not giving a soldier who lost a leg in combat some kind of benefits, due to the trouble he'll have in finding income after the army. Also DO agree that the salary cap for rookies needs to be in place, because that will drive up parity (remember 2005 when nobody wanted to trade up, because they didn't want to spend $$$$$ on players? Well, teams with higher draft picks won't have to worry about not getting a good deal when trading down). Ultimately if the NFL decides not to have a season, I doubt there will be as much backlash as there was against baseball or hockey; people will just watch college ball that much more.
A few things:
1. preseason ratings are about 40% less than reg season even for HOF game, and the reg preseason games not shown antionally much worse-So yes its a huge 300 mill+ difference by having reg seaosn vs Preseason, and if players want higher salaries only way to support that is to go to 18 games
2.Its the players own union, not owners , that screwed the players on the pension plans and medical stuff. And the union leaders screwed their own ilk, with bad advice like telling them to take lump sum or early retirement at 45 instead of 62, and when they lived to 60's realized screwed.. For instance, herb addelry gets $128/month, becuase he took a lump sum and stated benefts at age 45.. Ditka played same time Period gets close to $100,000 in his pension because waited until 65.. So whose at fault? not the owners, but the union and players themselves in many cases
http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_6777202
At a news conference during Super Bowl week to announce the formation of the Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund, a foundation started by former Packer great Jerry Kramer for the benefit of players in dire need, Joe DeLamielleure stepped up to the podium and bluntly stated, "The NFL pension (stinks)."
League officials were incredulous. DeLamielleure had experienced a family crisis unrelated to football that led to him taking his pension at age 45. Many of the former players raised sympathy by pointing to the $126-a-month pension Herb Adderley received until his recent 25 percent bump. What they didn't say is Adderley not only took his pension at 45, but took a partial lump sum of his pension.
Adderley entered the NFL in the same 1961 draft as Ditka. Both finished their careers in 1972 with the Dallas Cowboys. Ditka, through coaching, endorsements and TV work, could afford to take his pension at a much later age, and receives an annual payment of nearly six figures.
The 45-year-old retirement option was removed in 1993.
"Some exercised unwise options," Henderson said. "They had all sorts of reasons, but they made a choice. Why criticize the pension plan?"
One reason so many players in the 1970s took the early retirement option was former union boss Ed Garvey was quoting studies that said the life expectancy of NFL players was about 55 years. The notion has been debunked - too late for guys such as Adderley, DeLamielleure and several members of the 1977 Broncos. "I was one of those guys who, when I was contemplating taking it, nobody lived to 55 to take it," said Craig Morton, who quarterbacked the Orange Crush teams. "Why not take it? Now they have a lot of things to keep us living longer."