She hates revenue sharing, salary caps & the draft, too, but the Pack would be screwed without each.
Joel Send a noteboard - 26/09/2012 03:34:00 AM
I am reminded of that piece Bill Maher did a few years ago about how the NFL works because of Marxism (revenue sharing.)
While I deeply sympathize with the regular refs, who are only striking to preserve defined benefit pensions to which the NFL long ago agreed, I think it would be perversely ironic if those pensions survived only because this call (which the regular refs would almost certainly have made, too) convinced the NFL to deal.
The author of Salons piece DOES have a valid (if somewhat irrelevant) point though: In the Ayn Rand Football League, the Green Bay Packers would have gone the way of the Canton Bulldogs and Massillon Tigers. Without the draft, small-market teams like Green Bay (VERY small-market in the '30s and '40s) could never compete with Chicago, New York of Philly for star players. If you had a CHOICE between playing in a "city" where you had to walk five miles to get a newspaper with coverage of your performance, or a media Mecca that broadcast your prowess to the nation and offered all the luxuries to which you felt entitled, which would you pick?
What if your choice were dictated solely by salary, and the Bears, Giants and Eagles had ticket sales from the countrys three largest cities? In 1940 Green Bay could not have filled venues like the Rose Bowl if the whole town of 102,000 came. Thanks to revenue sharing, however, GB has as much with which to pay players as every other team does. Since the salary cap (which Rand would also have loathed,) owners cannot even supplement that with their own wealth: Each team has $x (currently ~$120 million) to split among 48 players (plus 5 practice squad players.) Anyone who cannot be paid must be released to the highest bidder (if any,) and even if no one takes them they STILL cannot return to the old team unless it can pay them NFL minimum wage (which increases with experience) without exceeding the cap.
It goes without saying how Rand would feel about Green Bays status as the only publicly owned NFL team. It ensures the Packers fans will never know the agony Oilers fans like me (or Colts fans, Rams fans (twice,) Cardinals fans, Browns fans and Raiders fans) felt when our teams owner followed through on threats to leave town unless the city met their demands (usually for new stadiums.) Cleveland residents and Rams fans (which were at one point synonymous) have been especially victimized; the Rams moved to L.A. in the '40s, then St. Louis in the '90s (after the Cardinals moved from there to Arizona, having previously moved TO there from Chicago.) They also saw coach Paul Brown, who led the team from its founding to 7 championships, begin the rival Cincinnati Bengals after owner Art Modell fired him, then a generation later saw Modell move the whole team to Baltimore (who had lost the Colts to Indianapolis in the '80s.) The Rams final move gave all NFL owners lasting leverage in negotiations with host cities, because L.A. has been without a team ever since, and threats to move teams to the nations second largest city are a powerful motivator for current host cities.
Green Bay, of course, need never worry about any of that, because the host city IS the owner, and since getting season tickets requires putting ones name on a list and waiting for hundreds of people to DIE they are assured a large homefield crowd. It is still rank socialism by any measure.
The Green Bay Packers are anathema to everything Ayn Rand believed, but then, so is Thomas Aquinas. Paul Ryan is an... odd fellow....
While I deeply sympathize with the regular refs, who are only striking to preserve defined benefit pensions to which the NFL long ago agreed, I think it would be perversely ironic if those pensions survived only because this call (which the regular refs would almost certainly have made, too) convinced the NFL to deal.
The author of Salons piece DOES have a valid (if somewhat irrelevant) point though: In the Ayn Rand Football League, the Green Bay Packers would have gone the way of the Canton Bulldogs and Massillon Tigers. Without the draft, small-market teams like Green Bay (VERY small-market in the '30s and '40s) could never compete with Chicago, New York of Philly for star players. If you had a CHOICE between playing in a "city" where you had to walk five miles to get a newspaper with coverage of your performance, or a media Mecca that broadcast your prowess to the nation and offered all the luxuries to which you felt entitled, which would you pick?
What if your choice were dictated solely by salary, and the Bears, Giants and Eagles had ticket sales from the countrys three largest cities? In 1940 Green Bay could not have filled venues like the Rose Bowl if the whole town of 102,000 came. Thanks to revenue sharing, however, GB has as much with which to pay players as every other team does. Since the salary cap (which Rand would also have loathed,) owners cannot even supplement that with their own wealth: Each team has $x (currently ~$120 million) to split among 48 players (plus 5 practice squad players.) Anyone who cannot be paid must be released to the highest bidder (if any,) and even if no one takes them they STILL cannot return to the old team unless it can pay them NFL minimum wage (which increases with experience) without exceeding the cap.
It goes without saying how Rand would feel about Green Bays status as the only publicly owned NFL team. It ensures the Packers fans will never know the agony Oilers fans like me (or Colts fans, Rams fans (twice,) Cardinals fans, Browns fans and Raiders fans) felt when our teams owner followed through on threats to leave town unless the city met their demands (usually for new stadiums.) Cleveland residents and Rams fans (which were at one point synonymous) have been especially victimized; the Rams moved to L.A. in the '40s, then St. Louis in the '90s (after the Cardinals moved from there to Arizona, having previously moved TO there from Chicago.) They also saw coach Paul Brown, who led the team from its founding to 7 championships, begin the rival Cincinnati Bengals after owner Art Modell fired him, then a generation later saw Modell move the whole team to Baltimore (who had lost the Colts to Indianapolis in the '80s.) The Rams final move gave all NFL owners lasting leverage in negotiations with host cities, because L.A. has been without a team ever since, and threats to move teams to the nations second largest city are a powerful motivator for current host cities.
Green Bay, of course, need never worry about any of that, because the host city IS the owner, and since getting season tickets requires putting ones name on a list and waiting for hundreds of people to DIE they are assured a large homefield crowd. It is still rank socialism by any measure.
The Green Bay Packers are anathema to everything Ayn Rand believed, but then, so is Thomas Aquinas. Paul Ryan is an... odd fellow....
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Last First in wotmania Chat
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Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
This message last edited by Joel on 26/09/2012 at 04:02:45 AM
/NFL: now that replacement refs have cost the packers a win, can we please get the real ones back? *NM*
25/09/2012 05:14:58 AM
- 658 Views
Link? Clip?
25/09/2012 05:27:07 AM
- 647 Views
Let's just say that Gruden used the word "Jobbed" in the live telecast. *NM*
25/09/2012 05:35:08 AM
- 411 Views
Here's a link.
25/09/2012 05:36:56 AM
- 734 Views
Yes and no; that is the link I referenced in my post.
25/09/2012 05:47:07 AM
- 542 Views
youtube link
25/09/2012 07:00:29 AM
- 741 Views
Thanks; that looks like a textbook case of simultaneous possession, which goes to the receiver: TD.
25/09/2012 07:29:28 AM
- 636 Views
pete carroll is a cheating douchebag, you cannot take his word for what happened
25/09/2012 10:59:33 AM
- 899 Views
I did not; I watched the clip: Simultaneous possession, which goes to the receiver.
26/09/2012 01:30:18 AM
- 1242 Views
watch a better replay if you can
26/09/2012 02:38:17 AM
- 704 Views
Have now; still not convinced.
26/09/2012 04:01:23 AM
- 742 Views
also, the pass interference on tate that wasn't called is clear at 0:56 in that clip
25/09/2012 11:27:36 AM
- 707 Views
Tate was looking for the ball, and raised his hands to catch it, not push off Sam Shields.
26/09/2012 01:33:46 AM
- 652 Views
watch a better replay and get back to me on this one.
26/09/2012 02:36:43 AM
- 700 Views
Where did the NFL head office acknowledge that?
26/09/2012 03:52:36 AM
- 812 Views
in their official response to the whole incident....?
26/09/2012 04:14:52 AM
- 934 Views
Fair enough then; the NFLs official position is that offensive PI should have been called.
26/09/2012 04:45:58 AM
- 702 Views
Yeah, if one hand counts as possession
25/09/2012 05:15:37 PM
- 725 Views
Left hand between Jennings' arms and on the ball; right was outside Jennings' arm and on the ball.
26/09/2012 01:38:28 AM
- 660 Views
How have you not seen this play? Are you in a cave? *NM*
25/09/2012 03:57:55 PM
- 349 Views
No, I am in Norway, where NFL coverage is rather limited.
26/09/2012 01:40:07 AM
- 843 Views
While you can hardly blame the replacement refs because they are basically trainees...
25/09/2012 06:05:22 AM
- 817 Views
Now I really want to see this play.
25/09/2012 06:27:42 AM
- 814 Views
Re: Now I really want to see this play.
25/09/2012 02:48:56 PM
- 724 Views
I have still only seen the YouTube clip, but it looked like they both had both hands on the ball.
26/09/2012 01:58:27 AM
- 655 Views
You might appreciate learning that the Lingerie Football League fired some of these refs
25/09/2012 07:19:37 AM
- 729 Views
Tie goes to the receiver - the rule for decades. The Packers benefitted from worse calls last year
25/09/2012 11:31:47 AM
- 754 Views
you probably think greedo shot first too.....
25/09/2012 01:49:03 PM
- 706 Views
Possession doesn't mean squat until you land. Tate had it by then
25/09/2012 03:13:29 PM
- 705 Views
he had nothing until they landed and he tried to pull it away. everyone but you agrees on this *NM*
25/09/2012 03:25:43 PM
- 343 Views
Not so; Cannoli and I agree on pretty much every point involved in this play.
26/09/2012 02:17:01 AM
- 678 Views
They can't reverse that call.
25/09/2012 04:43:28 PM
- 789 Views
the only possible way was to rule it incomplete
25/09/2012 10:42:25 PM
- 766 Views
It was very obviously caught; you can't rule that incomplete.
25/09/2012 11:06:17 PM
- 687 Views
my philosophy is "interception = incomplete" but i think that's only for stats purposes
26/09/2012 12:32:43 AM
- 641 Views
Congrats Cannoli, you are the only person (thing?) in the country who thinks it's a TD *NM*
25/09/2012 03:53:18 PM
- 473 Views
I'm not even the only person in this thread, moron. *NM*
25/09/2012 04:07:48 PM
- 386 Views
Joel hasn't even seen the play, douchebag *NM*
25/09/2012 04:12:35 PM
- 351 Views
I have seen enough of it, and while I did not write Cannolis response, I easily could have.
26/09/2012 02:06:45 AM
- 697 Views
Slightly (very) loopy yet entertaining piece on why Ayn Rand is to blame for all of this.
25/09/2012 05:38:12 PM
- 629 Views
She hates revenue sharing, salary caps & the draft, too, but the Pack would be screwed without each.
26/09/2012 03:34:00 AM
- 650 Views
Here's the proof Cannoli is refusing to see
25/09/2012 05:54:07 PM
- 761 Views
Clearer shot, but stills do not allow us to see where Tates hands were at all times.
26/09/2012 02:10:25 AM
- 565 Views
you can't claim "good ol' strip" *AND* simultaneous catch -- which is it?
26/09/2012 02:35:41 AM
- 999 Views
I do not claim both: I claim simultaneous catch but IF not, then strip.
26/09/2012 03:51:47 AM
- 987 Views
you sure you saw the right replay?
26/09/2012 04:21:57 AM
- 683 Views
Think so, yeah.
26/09/2012 04:58:15 AM
- 804 Views
from another angle -- pun intended
26/09/2012 04:01:54 PM
- 671 Views
There are two separate issues: 1) Was it a simultaneous catch; 2) IF not, was it a strip?
27/09/2012 08:54:52 AM
- 856 Views
your opinion is against pretty much everyone in the world, so..... *shrug*
27/09/2012 03:55:33 PM
- 888 Views
Thanks; I did not expect you to give in so easily.
27/09/2012 10:14:30 PM
- 713 Views
did you even read that article???
28/09/2012 12:35:39 AM
- 725 Views
"his control wasn’t established again...."
28/09/2012 01:08:03 AM
- 1000 Views
wow, what a thorough analysis you sent me either way, you're still wrong
28/09/2012 02:05:24 AM
- 791 Views
Worst calls are made all the time by the regular officials.
26/09/2012 01:23:57 AM
- 661 Views
yes, but not usually more than one per game, certainly not several in a single weekend.... *NM*
26/09/2012 02:39:56 AM
- 357 Views