St. Pete Times columnist Gary Shelton apparently had a crappy lunch last week and penned a very negative column about the NFL that appears in today’s newspaper.
Shelton takes a page from THE PESSIMIST and rambles about how fans he knows don’t care about the NFL and carries on that we’re all doomed to watch second-rate football because teams have missed OTA days and minicamps.
What ought to alarm the players, and what ought to scare the dickens out of the owners, is the growing apathy. That’s the real cost of this wasted offseason. Every time a fan turns his head, the Benjamin Franklins in his wallet do the same.
And so it does not go. Bounce around the Internet and you can find dozens of NFL headlines a day, and not one of them says anything new. Secret meetings? Positive signs? Someone else arrested? Both sides are talking, neither side is listening, and what else is new.
You know what ought to be new?
By now, someone — anyone — should be concerned about how good the football will be when the NFL comes back.
The quality cannot be the same, you know. A league cannot sacrifice all the organized team activities and offseason workouts and minicamps without losing chemistry and cohesiveness. The result is bound to be a lessened product on the field.
Joe must disagree with Shelton — at least right now.
First, Joe knows Bucs fans are aching for football and there is no real loss of interest yet in the NFL. Shelton’s off the mark. The non-hardcore Bucs fan, which is the vast majority of fans, hasn’t missed a damn thing yet. These people don’t care about OTAs. They have rippin’ Super Bowl parties, keep their eye on on the Bucs’ draft, and circle their calendars for opening day of training camp.
Second, the hardcore fans may be a bitter bunch right now, but Joe doesn’t know any that are ready to write off their passion — notyet anyway. (Joe also looks at the traffic numbers here and isn’t seeing a dropoff.) If hatchetman Roger Goodell screws up and lets training camp and preseason to get screwed up, sure. But it’s not there yet.
As for the crappy football Shelton claims is a given in 2011, Joe’s not buying that the best football coaches in the world, along with the best players, can’t figure out how to execute on Sundays without OTAs. As Bucs linebacker Scot Brantley always said, the core of football is still “blockin’ and tacklin,'” which isn’t about to change.
Of course, more practice time is a good thing, but Joe thinks coaches and players can adjust seamlessly as long as they don’t miss training camp.
Joe’s choosing to be optimistic about all-things lockout today. Just get the damn thing done in the next two or three weeks. It’s important to note that the $700 million of expected revenue from preseason games primarily all falls in the owners’ pockets, as players are only paid a small stipend — not salary — for those games.
Joe continues to hope that $700 million is enough motivation to get 24 of the 32 billionaires to end this asinine mess.